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They will be entitled to 4 . , .mined exclusively to their business, with raii. g.- of change. ... \ ]■, rtising in all ease- exclusive of sub- u ,.j in to the paper. Ron i HINTING of every kind in Plain andFaa .. done wit ii neatness and dispatch. Hand- kg, Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va i -tile. printed at the shortest notice. The I OFFICE lias just been re-fitted with Power iU't ••! ry thing in the Printing line can 1 in tie most artistic manner and at the .i TEIOIS INVARIABLY CASH. Irkrtttl "XVrtni. [From the New York Citizen]. AMERICA TO IRELAND. BY JAMES A. CLAKK. i not I'm get thee, Old Ireland, now :1 d.iv-stai illumines thy borders, of .submission expires in a vow , 11. as thy girdle of waters ! . ,-j t!u Shamrock are flourishing here, i, , h"ii"i the heroes who bore them, - i; ' i:. Mulligan, Corcoran and Meaglier, :1k l- ••! lire wt lit before tliem. ■t the Lion is heard in the night, • i. drinks from the depths of thy fountains ; .tries a pluming their pinions for flight • i t tli. crag- ol Columbia's mountains ! ~iil fall on tin- Lion with talons of steel, W! a. the vnv-civ is raised by tlieir brothers ; id strike, end tilt power of the tyrant shall v ; tie pangs be lias meted to others ! [reel ... t tl: time when the spirit of Moore, tin tl. pie bo ze, moved in thy bowers, umcd • vi i v garden and glen of thy shore i it bl u-suim I with liberty's flowers! : j.. iiish ii t U'i'.v lor the Summer of Song, Lo! the autumn wind over thee rages ; • tii! is ai>- all r.-iidy, the reapers are strong, \ml tin y rush to the harvest of ages! •Ik I:, ill' thy -olden hc.il- ntitigl. s with gray. And thy blue ey.-s ale swimming in sorrow : the millions who mock at thy Visions to-day. Will vie-v thee in wonder to-monow ; i i shalt rise from the anguish now rending thy i i ill hark the shorter with scorning, [breast, . \ night shall be lit by the Stars of the West, ,t breaks into Freedom's full morning! pbfrlUmcmts, rHE BATTLE-FIELD OF GETTYS-' BUKG. 1 • .LI UIC AND AC TUATE PIC'TTKE. / ,• Editor of the Press: .-p.: I have just returned from a visit to ys irg, and •! you choose to accont i.y ii a long ramble over the field and it wiiiit a participant in the battle has - iy, well aud good. In the main, "1 i tie story as 'twas told to ine but it mi to say anything new* upon a theme •ily haekuied. You newspaper people ..ive. I know, what most people have a . if—long articles; therefore, "for) your readers should grow skittish," j ■ o.ive my full permission to abbreviate, j or omit, tit your pleasure. As-1 tg this article, then, to have escaped ! i'e - J your waste-paper basket, start | ine on litis line November morning, .i the Einuiettsburg road, for our com-! iiiuii itud guide we have Captain A. F. I • a\ mi l, a gallant and accomplished young | iliver, who served all through, from York- i ; wn to lVtersbui'g, and for nearly two! r.-ars on tiie .stall of Major General Hum phreys. A! out a mile on we halt. The Captain > \ iw | I >i-gin to feel at home. me take ;tn observation, as these leti - vo'ic not here then. All right, I've got w. Do y.u see that big walnut on the i o\( r there? That was Gen. Hum-; ys headquarters on the morning of i .-lay, July 2d. Almost worn out with ! inarching, 1 was aroused from my | aiy i iv..uac at daylight, and ordered to \ 1 filghniaii's regiment—the 26th ; ■>; vania—on picket along here. La th- day, the right of our division, j - brigade, held this brick house. Fur-, i ■! ova was posted Tnrnbull's battery, I low that barn, stood Lieut. See-i id -till further towards our left the ' - ..I Birney's division, under Living-I a a tli, Randolph, Clark and \\ inslow. j a them all, for never were guns • '■■• l more beautifully. All suffered i '; i\—Seeley's especially. He had y 1 man or horse left standing, and j niseif severely wounded. He was a • uit -fficer, and had risen from the; ■-* X ivv go with me into that orchard. • A • ' t-> find a certain apple-tree which 1 :i - a reiidezvouse during the day for i lli-'i-rs and out orderlies. Atone pc '•t.inding under it, with Captains . hrey ; and McClellan, a shell exploded B't •-, killing thn •• of our poor order- - ■ sides striking my h use." \\ e found •■'"••—Us limbs were shattered, and the !'entirely gone. 5- ut 2 o'clock the whole 3d Corps " "'it in line-of battle over the open i 1. and a more magnificent spectacle ' 'o .i.-, valor rolling on the foe,' 1 never ■-s'.'d. Awny over on that bare spot • " ; iig ground the rebels had planted two with which they enfiladed our in", fairly sweeping it from right to I-' id ! how they pitched it into us ! i k'Mree'.s's infantry debouched from A 'ls, and in a short time all around vv are standing—to the right, left h :| nt—along this road, through that bard, away down toward Round j, ' h'.iirs the battle raged. General s ivas wounded near that large barn. I r*. tneiiiber this spot of ground. • heiiind that stone-fence, that 1 • " nil red to post Colonel Burling's ! I, y " Gn my way back, 1 passed the ■ 'a. !!. gt., then commanded by my Lieut Col. F. F. Cavada. It had ■ ""ii ordered to an advanced position •' ." ' |he road. 1 road up ancl shook with my brother. "Good-bye Fred, d lor yourself; you are going* into a ■" and are sure to cateh it." So it th-'rx i' U o ''Gh, io conneotioa with , ' ' oiuisyivania, Col. Tippin, had a A hgm (,} amj | uß [ heavily. Mv i E. O. (i(K)lalien, Pnblislior. VOLUME XXVI. brother and his brigade commander, Gen. Graham, were both taken prisoners, the latter severely wounded. 1 never saw the rebels fight with such diabolical fury. The most murderous fire- canister, shrapnel,and musketry—was poured into their very faces us it were, but nothing stopped them. The 3d Corps, those heroes of Chancellorsville, and other bloody fields, led by Birney, Hum phreys, i>e Trobriand, Ward, Graham and Oarr—never fought more heroically. A word of criticism here. At one period of the battle, Birney, being hard pressed, called upon Gen. Sykes, in command of the sth Corps, for assistance. Sykes had been or dered to aid the 3d if called upon, but he re turned for answer that he " would be up in time—that his men were tired and were making coffee !" They did come up in about an hour, and, says Gen. Warren, in his testimony, " the troops under General Sykes arrived barely in lime to save Round Top, and they had a very desperate tight to hold it." And again of the operations next day. " When the repulse took place, Gen. Meade intended to move forward and as sault the enemy in turn. He ordered an advance of the sth Corps, but it was car ried on so slowly that it did not amount to much, if anything." Gen. George Sykes is a brave man, but entirely "too slow," so at least Gen. Grant seemed to think, for in the subsequent reorganization of the Army of the Potomac, the services of "Tardy Geo.," No. 2, were dispensed with. The oth, as a Corps, has a glorious record, and never failed to fight bravely when properly han dled. To resume the captain's narrative. "As the afternoon wore on the pressure became greater and greater, until at last our whole corps, with the exception of Carr's brig ade and a few other regiments, were hurled down the slope, broken and discomfited,the rebels following in hot pursuit. Our losses were frightful. In our division, of 5,000 men, or loss was nearly 2,000." " Well, Captain, you saw must of the heavy light ing done by this army, tell me, were you ever in a hotter place than this?" "Never but once —and that reminds me of a little story. In the attack upon the enemy's po sition at the first Fredericksburg, our divi sion was ordered to storm the heights. As we were preparing to move, Gen. Hum phreys—always a very polite man—turned round to his staff, and in his blandest man ner remarked, ' Young gentlemen, 1 intend to lead this assault, and shall be happy to have the pleasure of your company.' Of course, the invitation was too polite to be declined. Tiiat was the roughest place I ever was in, and I can't conceive, even to this day, how any of us ever got back 1 alive." Our division lost nearly 1.100 men in about fifteen minutes. In this clump of bushes my horse received a second wound, and fell dead under inc. I managed to scramble over the ridge, where our men were being rallied, and soon after the sun went down and the rebels were beaten back beyond the load." " Capt. Chester, of our military family, was seen to go down in the melee, and after night-fall a party started out in search of him. We found him near that large flat rock, alive, but greviously wounded. His horse and faithful orderly both lay dead he side him, and across his legs a rebel sol dier, whom he had killed with his revolver, while in the act of plundering him of his watch. He was taken up tenderly, and conveyed to the hospital on Rock creek, where lie died next day. " With heavy hearts we now set about the task of burying such of our poor fel lows as were within reach. Always the saddest of a soldier's duties, it was pecul iarly so upon this occasion, for all felt that the rising sun Would bring with it a repe tition of this day's horrors, and that, per haps, at this hour to-morrow, some com rade might be performing this same sad of fice for us. ' "Few aud short were the prayers we said. And we spoke not a word of sorrow. As we steadfastly gazed on the face of the dead, I And bitterly thought on the tnorrme." In the course of the day we paid a visit ! to Mr. S her ley's house, where we were niost hospitably received. This house stands about the centre of the field, and is riddled, from garret to basement. Traces I of the conflict are to be seen on every side, ! including the hist resting-place of many ! poor Southerners. Mr. Sherfey's barn was j burnt during the figlri, and some of the j wounded who sought refuge there perished ; in the flames. " These," said Mrs. Sherfey, I producing some tin cans, "contain peaches j that were growing in our orchard over; there at the time of the battle. These are ! my trophies." In the front garden grows ! the beautiful shrub known as the " burning bush," luxuriant with its crop of bright red j berries, typical of the blood shed at its ! roots. " Take some of the berries with j you and plant them," said the kind old la-! dy ; " they will grow anywhere, and will 1 be pleasant mementoes of Gettysburg." We next made our way to Little Round | Top, where we had the pleasure of meeting j Colonel Batchelder. This gentleman is en- i gaged in collecting the details of .the bat tle, and will, no doubt, produce a book of equal interest with his great map. I was sorry to hear him say that he intends des ignating this as " Weed's Hill," in honor of the general who fell on its top. Honor to t.ie memory of the brave man in some other way, Colonel, but don't seek to change this | name. As " Littl; Round Top " it has al-' ways passed into history, and so it will be ! known forever. There are few finer views of the whole field than from this point, and here took place the closest and most san guinary fighting of Thursday. In front and to the right the sth Corps had a heavy thing of it. On the height fought two of the noblest soldiers of the army, Vincent! and Rice. The former laid down his life here, the latter at Spottsylvania the year after. All the little stone walls thrown up between the huge boulders are still here. In fact, nothing is changed. Would that this could be said of other parts of the field. Inscriptions upon the rocks mark the spots where Vincent and Ilazlett fell. Here, too, at the early age of twenty-five, fell that accomplished soldier, Col. O'Ronke, of the 150 th New York. Graduating at the head of his class, two years before, he was at once assigned to duty in the field, and soon became distinguished for his reckless and impetuous courage. He was struck while mounting upon a rock gallantly animat ing his men. Fortunately, the extreme left was field by that splendid regiment the 20th Maine, then under the command of TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., DECEMBER 14, 1865. : Col. Chamberlain, afterwards one of Sheri i dan's heroes of the Five Forks. Firing | away their last cartridge, Chamberlain or j dered his regiment to charge down the hill, and succeeded in clearing its sides i with the bayonet. The remarkable ledge !of rocks known as the "Devil's Den," di | rectly opposite Round Top, was occupied ' by the enemy's sharpshooters, one of whom J had a safe position within the cleft and picked off our men with fatal accuracy. The face or the boulder behind which lie lay is covered with marks of the minnies sent at him. One even " went for him" clean through the crevice, but missed. He was finally dislodged by a charge, and es caped through an opening to the rear. Seven muskets, it is said, were found in his ; hiding place. There is room enough for f fifty. On the slope in front of this den lie | bleaching the bones of rebel dead, washed j out by the rains. The scene of Crawford's | charge, with our superb Pennsylvania Re ! serves, was to the right and in front of i Little Round Top. Brigadier Gen. Zook ! and Colonel Jeflards—the lattrr of the 4th I Michigan—were killed in the field beyond. | Col. Jeffards was killed by a bayouet ! thrust, while gallantly holding up with his J own hands the colors of his regiment. Near ; that ploughed field, charging at the head lof his brave " Bucktails," fell our Chester I county neighbor, Col Frederick Taylor, j No death in the whole army was more sin i cerely mourned. "Mauy the ways that lead to death, hut few : Grandly; and one alone is glory's gate, Standing wherever free men dare their fate, i Determined, as thou icert, to die—or do!" We now proceed along the line held by us on Friday, Co!. B. politely acting as i guide. In that little grove, close to our lines, fell the rebel General Barksdalc on Thursday. This violent, brawling rebel | started in search of "hit rights," and this little pile of stones here marks the spot where he is presumed to have found them. It is said he was drunk when he started on the charge, and this may account for his j headlong, reckless bravery. True or not, "the story's still extant." Here in the i thickest of the fight, exposing himself like a common soldier, the gallant Hancock rc | ceived his wound. That advanced line of ; works was held by the Vermont brigade. It was commanded by Gen. Stannard, who subsequently gave an arm to the cause on the James. A pile of knapsacks, just as they were unslung, still lie mouldering here —on one the inscription " 16th Ver mont " is still visible. Even now the debris of battle—hats, shoes, cartridge-boxes, bayonet scabbards, canteens, Ac.--lie scat tered all over the field. Next we come to the position held by the " Philadelphia Brigade," composed of the 69th—"Paddy Owens' regulars the 72d, Baxter's Zou aves, and that splendid fighting regiment, the 71st, or California, commanded origin ally by the lamented Baker, and subse quently by our gallant fellow-townsmen, I Colonels John Markoe and K. Penn Smith. | This brigade—veteran fighters, every man 1 of them—was led upon this occasion by a gallant New Yorker, Brigadier Gen. Webb, ; and nobly was the honor of both cities sus- i tained. Would that 1 had it in my power I to particularize all the organizations con- j spicous for courage and conduct in this great battle, but that would be to mention , almost every regiment, battery and squad- j ron engaged. From here we have an ex- i cedent view of Seminary Ridge, the line of ! woods whence the rebels issued, and the beautiful level fields over which they swept 1 in their grand charge. This certainly is i the most magnificent battle-field in the | world. The heights of La Belle Alliance j and Mount Saint Jean in some respects re- j semble our Cemetery and Seminary Ridges, 1 with the same gentle, undulating valley in- i tervexiing ; but at Waterloo the principal ! road runs at right angles, while hero, par- ' allel with the position. Speaking of the j bombardment which preceded the charge, , that experienced soldier, Gen. Hancock, : says : " It was the most terrific cannonade ! I ever witnessed, and the most prolonged." j A rebel eye-witness describing it, says : 1 " I have never yet heard such tremendous J artillery firing. The very earth shook be- j neatli our feet, and the hills and rocks j seemed to reel like a drunken man. For one hour and a half this most terrific firing was continued, during which time the shrieking of shells, the erash of falling timber, the fragments of rock flying through j the air, shattered from the eliffs by solid shot ; the heavy mutterings from the val- ! ley between the opposing armies, the I splash of bursting shrapnel, and the fierce I neighiug of wounded artillery horses, made i a picture terribly grand and sublime." At- j ter this came the charge. Our eighty guns, planted on the crest from Cemetery Hill to j Round Top, "volleyed and thundered," and, I when the infantry joined in the chorus, so terrible was the tire that tore through them that the rebel columns presented the extra ordinary spectacle of ten thousand men playing at " leap-frog !" In spite of every effort, tin; flower of Lee's veterans, directed by tried leaders such as Garnett, Armstead, Kemper, Wright, Posey and Mahone, failed in.carrying our position, although at one or two points they charged up to, and even over it. " What other than Southern troops would have made that charge?" Ay, sir, but what other than Northern troops would have met and repulsed it ? Northern en durance, upon this occasion was too much for Southern impetuosity and dash. "There swung the pine against the palm." In the j hi oody ruck hundreds of their best officers ! went down. It was the turning point ofi the grand drama, and with the sun, on that 3d day of July, went down the sun of "the Confederacy" forever ! Although known as "Pickett's charge," (Jen. Graham, whom I met here yesterday, informs me that Pick ett himself was not in it. He describes him as a coarse, brutal fellow, and says he treated him with the greatest inhumanity after the battle, whilst wounded, and a prisoner in his hands. The rebel corps ; commanders either did not expose them selves as freely as our own, or they had better luck, for none were hit, whilst we lost one, Reynolds, killed ; and two, Han cock and Sickles, wounded. The story told in Hlacforood, by Col. Freemantle, of the British army, who was present, may help to explain it. He says, that carried away by excitement, lie rushed up to Long street, who was sitting on a fence "quietly whittling a stick," whilst watching the charge, and said, " Gen. Longsireet, isn't this splendid ; 1 wouldn't have missed it for the world !" " The d—l you wouldn't," REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. replied Longstreet ; " why don't you see we are getting licked like h—l !" We now crossed the Baltimore pike, calling on our way at the small frame building, on the Taneytowu road, used as the headquarters of Gen. Meade on Friday. This will al ways be a point ol great interest. The house is sadly shattered, and the poor widow who owns it complains bitterly of her losses. " When I comes home, my house was all over blood ; the 'sojers' took away all my coverlits and quilts, two tons of hay, they spiled my spring, my apple trees and every ding." She says a couple of hundred dollars would be a great help to her, and thinks she should get "from some veros." Sure enough, why shouldn't the poor woman get it? In the garden of a cottage in the little village of Watertoo the visitor is shown the monument erected over the Marquis ol Auglesea's leg, and the poor peasant has made quite a little fortune by exhibiting the boot cut from the leg, and tlie table upon which the amputa tion was performed. This hint might not be thrown away upon a more enterprising person, but 1 doubt if this poor, old, frowsy German woman will ever profit by it. To the right of Cemetery Hill was stationed the battery so furiously assaulted by Hays' brigade of Louisiana Tigers. The lunettes and traverses remain undisturbed, and grass-grown. The little eminence in front was held, and with distinguished honor, by that con scientious and patriotic soldier, Brigadier Gen. Wadsworth. The* works thrown up by our men on Culp's Hill are still to be seen, except such portion of the timber as is being removed by* the owner of the ground. Only think of the meanness of the man who is pulling to pieces these monuments, and converting the timber in to fence rails and cord-wood ! The effect of the furious lire poured upon Ewell's swarming columns is visible enough.— Hardly a rock or a tree in front of these works has escaped. Many of the trees are covered and scarred with bullets as high as fifty* feet from the ground. There was "wild," as well as deadly shooting here on that fearful Thursday night and Friday morning. Along this rough, rocky hill fought our own Geary, oud that distin guished Rhode Islander, Brigadier General Green. Five months after, at the desper ate midnight battle of Wahatchie, in Look out Valley, this indomitable fighting officer only* added to the laurels already gained at Autietam and Gettysburg. An inscription on a tree blose by tells the story of a large mound in the ravine below : " To the right lie buried forty-five rebels!" From here we struck across to the scene of the first day's fight. In the following communica tion to Governor Curtin, General Cutler tells us how the battle opened : "I owe a duty to one of your regiments, the 56th,aud its brave commander, Colonel J. \V. Hof mann. It was my fortune to be in the ad vance on the morning of July Ist. The at mospnere being a little thick, I took out my glass to examine the enemy, being a few paces in front of Colonel If., he turned to me and inquired, ' Is that the enemy ?' My reply was ' Yes.' Turning to his men, he commanded, ' Ready—right oblique— aim—fire !' and the battle of Gettysburg was opened. The fire was followed by other regiments instantly, still, that battle on the soil of Pennsylvania was opened by her own son?, and it is just that it should become a matter of history." Here is the ground fought by our brave cavalrymen, under Pleasauton, Buford, Kilpatrick, Farnswortli, Merrit, Custer and Gregg. Never, in any preceding campaign, had the cavalry of this army rendered such dis tinguished and invaluable service. To meet the enemy was to overthrow them, until, at last, it was only with the greatest difficulty that Stuart could get his men to stand at all. The next point reached was the scene of the bloody* though unavailing struggle of the Ist and lltli Corps. The marks of battle still abound, but the inter est centres in the spot where Reynolds was killed. The General was nearly up with the skirmish-line—no place, say military men, for a corps commander ; " but that was just like John Reynolds and he had just dispatched several of his aids, Capts. Baird, Rosengarteu and Riddle, on some special duties, and was himself watching the deployment of a brigade of Wisconsin troops, when the fatal bullet, fired by a sharpshooter, struck him in the neck and he fell off his horse dead. Poor Reynolds ! "There liavo been tears ami breaking hearts for thee.'' We now stand in the National Cemetery, on Cemetery Hill. Who can stand unmoved in this silent city of the dead. Here repose the precious offerings laid upon the altar of the country by the loy il States. Ordinarilly the filling uu of a cemetery is slow work— the work of years. Three, dags sufficed to Jill this.' And what is the reward of those brave men for their weeks of weary march ing aud days and nights of fearful fighting! "Two paces of the vilest earth !" Here they lie, "those demi-gods !" of the rank and file. "Unknown !" "unknown !" the on ly epitaph of hundreds. Yes, here they lie. "massed" with beautiful military preci sion, rank upon rank, as if awaiting the order to appear in review before the Great Coniuiauder-iu-chief of us all ! "Up many a fortress wall They charged—those boys in blue ; Mid surging smoke and volleying tint I The bravest were the first to fall— To fall for w ami yoe Who can ever forget those terrible days of July. That period of agonizing sus pense ? And when the news did come, Oh, how that sad catalogue pulled upon the heart strings ! Reynolds, Zcok, Farnswortli, Card, Weed, Jeffards, Taylor, Arrowsniith, O'Rourke, Lowery, Cross, Hazlett, Vincent, Devereaux, Williard, Adams, Miller Period of honor as of woes, What bright careers 'twas thine to close! Mark'd on thy roll of blood what names. To Freedom's memory, and to Fame's Laid there their last immortal claims!" So ends my story of Gettysburg. PHIT.ADELHHIA, Nov.. 1865. (I. ,1. 1 the receipts. The actual annual cost h i tin collection of the customs amounts to three and one-half per cent of the receipts, which is ranch helow the cost of collecting the customs ill Great Britain. Among the ar ticles from which the internal revenue ol the United States is derived it may be in teresting to enumerate the following : Bank dividends, £3,987,200 ; railroad divi dends and interest on bonds, $3,258,404; in surance companies, $1,725,170 ; salaries i persons employed by the government, $2,- 837,333; revenue stamps, $11,172,302 —be- ing more than double that of the previous year; licences, $12,605,091; incomes, $20.- 577,340, or about six millions more than in 1804. Of the amount collected from in comes in 1803 $279,333 wore returned at five per cent upon incomes above t n thou -1 sand dollars, 8172,770 at three per cent up ion incomes of less than ten thousand d -i lars, and $3,037 upon incomes from Unit*- i States securities. Of that collected in 'O4 $6,913,834 were returned at live p"r ce; . $7,930,070 at thice per cent, and 876,373 at one and one-half per cent. (Ji that col lected in 1805 $801,941 w< i- returned l ten per cent, $9,934,748 at live per cent, $9,797,245 at three per cent, and $133,402 at one and one-half per cent The receipts from iron and steel, in the various n>rms specifically named, were $9,219,713, -i i nearly six millions more than the previous year ; from refined petroleum and coal oil. : $3,047,212,1 eing an increase of about sßoc ; 000 over 1864 ; cigars. $3,079,44$ tobacco, $8,017,119; fermented liquors, $3,747.0'Ji : distilled spirits, $15,995,733, or trvay ti.i teeL millions less than the previous y ar The Commissioner devotes a considerable portion of his report to explaining way the • the receipts from distilled spirits, w in | tax of two dollars per gallon, ar - - inn i 1 less than they were when the tax u- ; ■ ! ir I sixty cents per gal on. Tiie receipt- f r j the current fiscal year are "estimated t< reach $272,000,U00, ti about sixty u>illi< - more than last year. The Commissioner suggests an alteration in tin- mode of ap pointing assistant assessors, nrg. s an in crease in their compensation, as well as in that of the clerks employed in the Liter, t Revenue Bureau. An additional allowance for office rent is also recommended Tin Commissioner suggests several amendments in relation to stamp duties,tin- duties ol th Tax Commissioners, and other cii uige. A the law, whereby doubtful points , m bi definitely settled FUN, FACTS AND FACET!®. " It is never to late to mend," as the >ld laily said when she sat vj> until 12 v. m. i •-! - her husband's stockings. \\ HV is the letter It the embodiment ! every American patriot's wish :—Bt-canse it is tV end of war and the commencement i-t ii ,iii ■ "Do you like codfish bails, Mr. Wiggin Mr. Wiggin, hesitatingly : - I t allv don i kn>-. Miss ; I don't recollect attending dm-. '' " Pa, how many legs has a ship A ship lias no legs, my child." "Why.pa, tL•• jmjiei says she draws twenty feet, and runs befor- th, wind." It was told Lord Chesterfield that -. lady, who was a great teimagant.was married to .. gain, - ster ; on which his lordship said "that cards brimstone made the best match, ■. " " What do you ask for that ariich in quired Obediali of a young Miss. "Fifteen -hi] lings. "Ain't you a little dear ?'' "Why L replied, blushing, "all th, young linn t, II me A voi xo man in conversation one ev< nil g chanced to remark, "I am 110 prophet!" "Tru,. replied a lady present, "no profit t- yours, 't' • i any one else." A I'leaveland paper advises tin- ,*.ui ties to "close the rum holes." 8 m- p> >pi. do it as often as they shut their mouths. He was a poetical chap who describes ladies' lips as the "glowing gateway of beans, p.-ik sourkrout and potatoes. " It brooks are as poets cali thein.tl:,- mest joyous things in nature, what are they ,dw .. - "murmuring" about ? Tiit: lies of unhappy marriages arc en. t tie.-. A man s boots sometimes becomes light through absorbing watei- :h>. man tu-v, An old bachelor is a traveler on lit, 's railroad who has entirely failed lent: kc tin ; j, connections. A man that everybody knows to be a liat may perhaps be excused lor lying, it se. u;s ; him a vast deal of good, and nob. uy my Lin Ann Maria Ltory was man Ad to B Short. A very pleasant w y >.f n-.Aii.i- . St. . Short." lit; that would have no tioublc in this world must not be bom in it. Oi'PoßU'NlTiEs, like eggs, must hat, od when they are fresh. Thk husband that di vonivd his \\ ii, witii kisses tonnd afterwards tb ,i sii- ,ii- n, ,-d v. ith ( him. A tJfAKEK intending t. drink a glass ,1 ; water, took up a small tumbler of gin. 11, did not discover the mistake a ;til lie got behind tie j door and swallowed the dose, when he lifted both ; hands and exclaimed : "Verily, 1 have taken in wardly the balm < -i the world's p< oplc. What will Abigail say when she smells my breath : | "My dear .Julia," said one girl to another, "can you make up your mind to marry that editor, Mr. Snuff?" "Why, my dear," Julia replied, "I i believe I could take him at a : " * Ff.w more appropriate'epitaphs than tie common Latin one of ".>Vmd /' i "I aiu what thou slialt be, I was what th>u : i t An iukeeper observed ti postillion with only one spur, au,l inquired 111, reason. Why. what would be the use of anothei - ' said th-- | >•- tilhon, "If one side of the horse goes the other i can't stand still. Shrewd was tin- reply ol tin- it. - r. win. on being requested by a dervish to it liim ai -. vor, saiii. "(In cut' condition I will - whati-ver you require. "What is that : "Never t.> tsk ie. for anything-" At Nr Isabee —Beatrix will you have some bread and butter.- 1 Jb-atrix —"No! Ai - t Isabel— "Is that th, way to answ.-i ? No what Beatrix "No bread and butt- . A person's character depends ag- ,! i • : upon his bringing up. For instance, a man who - lias been brought up by the polio seldom 1 ens out respectable. A year of pleasure passes lik, a tinting bree/.e, -ut a moment of pain seem .:i ag, of pain. The light of friendship is like tin- light of phosphorus —Been plainest when all around is NUMBER 29.