imam- :um.* Tas Itsroursa is plaided assrplintris say Itozals& by E. O. tkossaA, SS $2 Pea I annum, tri drama: • ,", esesediss Mesa linos are inserted at rem caw pet line ibr drat insertion. and amps= per line for imbsequent insertions. Breda iiadiastitt; carted babes Ilarriages sad Dada, trill be olierged,waras awn per list imam*, insertion. An neolidiesset Asseelatioissi eonuenniestioni of United ea I aterest,and melees of lliselsgea ll t= etoeediag firs lines, are diarged p er ihte. 1 Tem Q mo. mo. Ralf One 'Johann, $lOO $6O $4O 1. SO U One Square, 15 10 ' 114 estray,eantion. Lost and Pound, andotbes advertisements, not eseeeding 10 lima Ad g ords= s 4 41 1 Br esli acnerses Bram& 00 Auditor's Notices A 60 Business Cards. Ave lines, yees)..s 00 Merchants and others, edwartisdng their business, will be charged $l5. They will be entitled to 4 calm. confined frododre• iytothedrbininessorithprivilagedquatter ty etuinges t OP- Advertising in all cases exclusive of subscription to the mar. - SOB PRINTING of ma kid. la Ma and Farley colon, dons with seeinees sod. dispatch. Handbills, Bleak% Clads. Pm- Wets, de., of everyvesiety esdetileiptin ted at the shortest notice. The Orme - boa *lbsen re•Atted with Presses, and every thing- In- the Printing ine can be executed in the inostiatisths manner and at the lowest rates. TERMS INVARIABLY OABIL eaxbL tIEORGE D. MONTLNYE, AT. N.A TORNEY AT LA W--011ee corner et Main and Pine streets, opposite Porter's Drug Store. MISS E. H. BATES, M. D. (Graduate of Womaiis Mealiest C ollege, Philadelphia. Class 18k.] Office and residence No. it Park street Owego!. PartionUr atten tion given to Diseases of Women. Patients visited at their homes It requested. Kay ZB.l++6B. WT. DAVIES, Attorney at Law, • Towanda, Pa. Office with Wm. Wet klus, Esq. Particular. site: NMI paid to Or flhems, Court business and settlement OT dece dents estates. U & MORROW, Attorneys ..L.TI at Law, Towanda, Penn!". The undersigned having assotiated themselves togeher In the practice of Law, offer their pro. services to the public. ULYSSES IiEIiCUB P. D. MORROW. %web 9, 1566. iAytucK & PECK, Arrourzirs Law. Micas Patton Block,Towanda, Patrick's block, Athens, Pa. They may be asulted at either place. n. w. PASSIM, apll3 ET B. IicKBAN, ATTORNEY & AA.. COUNSELLOR AT LA W, Twat qa, Pa. Particular-attention paid to business n the Orphans' Court. July 20. 1868. ENRY PEET, Attorney at Law, TOWI4I ia, Pa. jan27, 66. LID WARD :OVERTON Jr., Attor kuney at Law, Towanda, Pa. Mice In the Court House. . July 13,1865. JOHN W .111 X, ATTOBNEY AT LAW , Towanda, Bradford Co. Pa. General Intrumnce and Real Rylate agent.— Bounties and Pensions collected. N. byelaw; ln the Orphan'. Colin attended to promptly and with care. Office Mercer's new block ncrth aide Public Square. 0ct.24, '67. JOHN N. OALIFF, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Towanda, Pa. Particular at- Mention given to Orphans' Court business, Con., veyancing and Collections.. air Office at the Registers and Recorder's oDice--soeth of Court Douse. Dec. 1.1864. P. KIMBALL; Licensed tioneer, Pottersville, Bradford Co— Pa. tenders his serylcvs to the public. Satisfaction guaranteed, or no pay required. All orders by mall, addressed u above,' will receive prompt attention. Oct. 2, 1867,-4lm DR. C.• P. GODFREY, PHYSICIAN AMD Suzann, has permanently located wt Wyalusing, where he will be found at all times. ap1.16'68.6m.• DR. T. B. JOHNSON, TovANDA, PA. Having permanently located, often his professional servlces to the public. Calls romp Lly attended to in or out of town. Office w ith .1. DeWitt on Main st.-eet. Residence at mr a. Humphrey's on Second Street. April 16, 1.668. VT HERSEY WATKINS, Notary lI VT • Public is prepared to take Depart. ttotrs,' Acknowledge the Execution of Deeds, nrtgages, Powers of Attorney, and all other fastraments. Affidavits and other papers may *De sworn to before me. Office with G. D. Montahye, corner Main and Pine Streets. Towanda, N., Jan, 14, 1867. PARSONS & CARNOCHAN, AT TORNEYS AT LAW, Troy, Bradford Co Practice in all the Coarts of the ooanty. Col talons marls and promptly remitted. a. s. PAItsONS, - dl2 w. li. caarroonax. IR.. PRATT has removed to State Al street, (first above B. 8. Russell & 'Co's Rrea ). Persons from a distance desirous of con mg him, srill,be most likely to find him on ..-u.) )1 each week. Rspecial attention will p.:i. en to surgical cases, and the extraction of 'las or-Ether administered when desired. July 1 , , INGti. B. B. PRATT, H. D. H.. U. WESTON, DENTIST.— LI office in Patton's Bloeli, over Gore's Drug an Chemleal Story. ljan6s .filtS. T. F. &. WM. A. MADILL, I- , PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, (lice and madame Wysoz, Pa. Dr. T. P. .vin he consulted at , iore's Drug Store T , wanda, every Saturday. Dr. Wm. A. Mad 'II will give especial attention to diseases ~t the Rye. Etc. Throat and Lungs, having 111 Lib' a specidity of the above &classes for the past right years. T. F. ■•DII.L. N. D June 11.1.848. ESJ . M. PECK, X —TTORNEY AT LAW, Towands, -All business intrusted to his care wtp receive prompt attention. Of f ice in the race Lately occupied by Miriam & Mor row, aouth.of Ward House, up stairs. July 16,1868. DRS. MASON & ELY, Physicians Sisrgeons.-office on Pine street, TO• wands, at the residence of Dr. lamp. Particular attentien given to diseases of Wo men, and direases of Eye, Ear and Throd. KARON, N. D. DILNRY starts ZLT,III. D. April 9 Di g% LIP WPC MEEKS-AUCTIONEER. 1:1 AU letters addressed to him at &pi Ilan, ill-afford Co. Pa.. will receive prompt attention. FRANCIS E. POST, Painter, 2bte• anda, Pa, with 10 years exwience, b eon. fi lent -be can give the best satisfaction In Paint ag, Graining, Staining, Glazing, Papering..osc. ell - Particular attention paid to Jobbing in the nuntry. April 9, 1866. I K. VAUGHAN—Architect and •.• • Builder.—All Hods of archltefitaral do - gas furnished. Ornamental work in Stotts, Iron and Wood. Ocoee on Nab istreet, over Co.'s Bank. Attention given to Eta eai inch as laying out of f""", - April 1, 186 .-17. 1 J. NEWELL, COUNTY SURVEYOR, ()rya, Bradford Co. , Pat, winlnvfaPt l 7 attend to all business in his line. Particular attention .vett to running and establishing old or= lines. Mao to sarxeying or all wipe I ids as soon as warrants are obtained. m 717 I? B. FORD—Licensed Auctioneer, I: • TOWASDA, PA., will attend promptly to all bananas entrained to him. Charges moderate.. Feb. 13, 1668. WB. KELLY, .Deraist. Office over Wickham & Black's, Towanda,Pa. All the various Myles of work scientifically done e i I warranted.' Particular attention la (Ailed to the Atkin:dem Bane for Artificial Teeth. which la Minaily as good as Gold Mad fee superior to either Rabbet or Silver. Plain call and examine specimens. . Chloroform or Ether 'admisumered under di. rectioa of a Physiaan when desired. Aug. 6, 1867.—tf. ItEAL ESTATE AGENCY. H. B. ticEELN,_ REAL ESTATE AGENT, iigera.t.tie following Puma, Coal and Timber Lands for isle : Pine Timber lot, S mike from !Towands, c s taining 53 acres._Prico $1,323. Perm in Asila, containing 136 acres. Good boadings. Vndera duo state of culthrstion. Mostly Improved. iPricc 36,000. Pare. In West ihrlington—on Gm Creek.— Sew house and barn. Under s fine state of cal • ivotion. 95 acres. Pries $5.4 50 - Frankllt. All under good caltlirs -11 .9'. Good buildia.te • For sal/ assP seceral Teti dm 'table ilonma.andLotain V,Araada. A ►arse tract aril /Lands in 11op comity Timm* July 18 57., :- E. O. 61-00pIeWq, IgNttoliisher. VOLUME XXIX. • WARD HOUSE, tifIVtANPA, PA. v Oa Nola Street, maw the "rut ; Souk 0. T. SKIM Proprietor. Oct. 8, - 1- • -A m BRIQAN 1110 TEL, TOWANDA, PIA., • . - _ Ilaiim et suchased this well him Hoteloa , I hail rehuoished lid minted .ftida it tlt every ocerreateaos for the Wrocoanasilw. dos *MI whom:y yadvalas me. No pike be spared to wak all ylessaat lad ~ N. l 86. J. S. TATTSBliars. ELWiILL• HOUSE, i9wriNixt, Rath 0. WU.OOI. Having leased this Haase. is now feeds to ic on:mandate the ?maim pnbila No pains nor expense TM be ens as to eve iatitection to those who easy give bin a call. alriforth side of the =Ups, salt of iferear's new block [now pußLio DRA / Y. The subscriber having purchased fbe Mai 1' kumerly owned by O.W. Debtor. informs the public that be M pr , M t IeIP MA T I kinds of wont in his line and win attend promp tly to all orders. Household goods easefully handled. Charges reaeonable. ; G. I„:AusonD. Towanda, Junel .188 k. I, I YES' , MILLI Myer, Foster 1 Co., will deliver Plow, Feed, Meal Graham Flour, oraz te thing else their line In any pa t of the . Customers will Lind an rder Book at the store of Fox Stereos, liercur !rn Co. All or ders left In Bald book will be promptly attend ed to. Any Inquiries In regard to deluding, or .otber business of Lb, MIII, entered In slid Book, will be answered. FOBTER & Towanda, June 11168.—tf. I OLOIkiON COOPER tHfab remov ed from the Ward Noose and ham opened SHAM° AND HAIR DRESSING SALOON Two doors south of the National Hotel, and adjoining Patton's Block, on Main Street, in "the basement. This shop is open Constantly from 6 a. m., to 9 p. m.. to accommodate aL that *ill favor him with a call. Two expert? enced workmen in this , saloon, always ready to watt on customers in • satisfactory manner.— Gents and Ladies Hair Cutting in :the latest fashionable style. Bums booed and met ready for use and warranted to suit, Ornamental Hair Work. Switches, • Waterfalls, and Carla, made to order. Wigs made and repaired. Towanda. Aug. 18, 1868.-44' I= THE UNDERSIGNED HAVE A. opened a Banking House 'hi Mrdtiun• der the name c; G. P. litifileN fit . They are pre ma to drat, Bills of Ex change, and make collections in New York Philadelphia, and ail portions of the Gaited States, as also England, Germany, and Prance. To Loan money, receive deposit, , and to do a general Banking business. G. F. Eamon was' one of the late fine ef Laporte, h son it f Towanda, Pa., and his Imola( ge of the Co., inisinear men of Bradford and afiicolmag Cmlnties,snd hating been in the banking business for about fifteen years. make this house a desirable ,one, through which to make collections. G. F. MASON, Towenda, Oct.. 1, 1866. A. G. MASON. BRADFORD COUNTY H. B. McKWI, Rm Been AGINT Valuable Farms, Mill Properties, City and Torii Lots for sale. Parties having property for sale will dad It to Ows advantage by leaving s 'description of the same, with terms of sale at 'this agency, as partieir are constantly enquiri & M nglor hums Aci B. cKBAN, Beal &state Agent. 'Office Montanye's Block, Towanda, Pa. - Jan. 29, 1887. HARDING & SMALLEY, Having entered into a co-partnership for the transaction of the PHOTOGRAPHIC business, at the rooms formerly occupied by Wood and Harding, would respectfully call the attention of the public to several styles of Pictures which we make specialtie Soler Photographs, Plain, Penciled and C o lo re d, Opaitypes, Porce lain Pictures, he., which we claim for dankness and brilliancy of tone and Artistic flank ems sun be excelled. We invite all to tumble. them as well as the more common kinds of Portrait& which we make, knowing full well that they will bear the closest inspection. This Gallery claims the Wheat reputation for good work of any to this section of country, and we are de termined by ■ strict attention to business and the superior quality of our work, to not only retain but increase its very ewetabie repdtalion. We keep constantly on hand' the best variety of Frames and at lower prices than atany other establishment in town. AlsO Paseepartouts Card. frames, Card Easels, Holmee' Stereo. scopes, Stereoscopic Vies, and verything else of importance pertaining to the business. Give us an early call, • - M. 11.--Solar Printing (or the trade on the most reasonable terms. D. HARDING, Aug. 29.'67. F. Sid ALLEY. A. CARD.—Dr. VANBLIBURK has ob tained a License, as required, of the Goodyeat Vulcinate Company, to Vulcanize Rubber as a base for Artificial Teeth, and has now a good selection of those besatifhl carved Block Teeth, and a eupenor article of Black English Rubber, which will enable him to sup ply ail those in want of sets .olf teeth, with those unsurpassed for beauty an natural ap pearance. Filling, Maniac, Correcting Irreg ularities, Extracting, and all operations be longing to the Surgical Department ;skillfully performed. Choloform administered for the extinction of Teeth when desired, an article being used for the purpose in which he has perfect confidence, having administered it with the most pleasing results during a practice of fourteen years. Being very grateful to the public for their liberal patronage heretofore received, he would say that by strict attention to the wants of his patients, he would continue to merit their con fidence and approbation. Oftios in Beidleman's Block, opposite the Means House, Towanda, Pa. Dec. 20, 1867..-3 m. Cl= TWENTY-FIVE YEARS EXPERT DICE IN DENTISTRY. J. B; Sinn, K. D., would reepectfully inform the inhabitants of Bradford Gooney thAt he is permanently located in Towanda, Pa He would say that from his long an d su ccessful practice of TWENTY-FIVE YEARS duration he is familiar with all the different . styles of. work done is any.and all Dental Establishments' in city or country, and is better prenared than any other Dental operator la the vicinity to do work the best adapted to the many and dthrent cases that present themselves. oftentimes*. to the Dentist, as be understands the art of making his own artificial teeth, and. has facilities for doing the same. To those requiring ander sets of teeth be would esU attention to his new kind of work which:eonidsta of porcelain for both plate and teeth, and forming s continuous gam. It is more durable, more natural' Isis , and much betterted to the inn( any ether kind of work adap .' Those in need of the matt are invited to calPand examine specimens. • Teeth filled to last for blears sad oftentimes for Ufa.— Chloroform, Ether, and " Nitrous Oxide " ad- ministered with perfect safety, as over four hun dred patients within the last four years can tes tify. Office in Piston's Block. 'CARRIAGES I CARRIAGES I LT TUB • BURLINGTON CARRIAGE EMPORIUM The sutscriber would inform his friends and the public gensadly, that be has now on hand, and LI prepared Se build to order. ~ OPEN AND TOP BUGGYS, Democrat led Lumber Wagons, atj reduced prices. I have my shop. insding a m en te i r4= re lr=h tie .ree t r sige lr differ. - FIRST CLASS AMMAN CS. I would'infOns the public that I bare secured tbseervicea of Mr. JAB. W. TIINIBON, formerly ot 'Waverly, who hal charge of the Patties Department, we am nor prepared to do all kinds of Paintlag, -having just remised the largest and - best selected sleek or, palate and varnishes ever brought Into the county. Ord ers sollcitatand all - 11rork- mauled.: Repair lug dons on the most reasonable teems —NOSTRUM VOBBIIIMER. April 113, iscs.—sme. CHOICLTLIUCCO AND CIGARS , at Coopelts Clea,ll'tom i - .. ,- ;f1:. 1 1-s,- f ~,., . Bali k., :\ I ' . ' ". '". 1 i . ..i t .. Eiii ea*. ! SPECL&k NOTICE. REAL ESTATE AGENCY, toul. 23. 1868 .:r.;;1 Mil =I I I Ntittied (FOe the ikedloeil kuntarm iroa lIT LOV!U A. Sweet 13ansmis jai Het oiledi placio of rad, Bar mlBl7 tread Oho *Unroll !Winn That deaf siamberbigibteist: I 1 ircrir sad to thbdi Wog-blush xi 1 Which she solo 4 work of leaf sad Nrni--4111 too Are Med evu4s oFe I Hot aU unlike the tfamdeut j That springs witkhrthe h . AO smiles s maul,/ o'er To die of sorrow'S dart. Ho more the busy him; of • . Resounds is leadtias bow , • reFel Igo thysiTlied fn • • rThrough all MS buqpiid Ito Ho song-bird wakes !the dro For all are hubs& or fled ; And sad winds eisult throng be" i 1 - IA dirge for 8141;44 dead! • Alt! summer's au! speak Her admit pussel : of rest— Haste on, old,Wi4tet i r, bring And fold it o'er breast Crek, A 41100,411t0 A WO I R, "r"- !VI " 6 . i X,BP'en 1 Douglass ! lin the ri hie Mier. At the greet; Repub can mass meeting in Raleigh,. N. ~ Sept. 18, Robert M. Doughim made the follow ing speech.: ii i Imow-CrrtzFxs : Tho gh it may appear presumOon in o e so young to attempt to dieches ques ions which tank the energies , and abi itics of our greatest stateeln ; yet, feeling in thie vital streg le on hich 1 be lieve the futurelprosperit if riot the very existence tef Our coon y depend, it is the duty-4 every on ~ young or old, to exert hie' *most i defence of our sacred catnip, II obey our call. This is probably the fi t time' n 1 our nation's history tha a young man has had the! opportu ity of ap pearing beforel la; popula gathering as the advocate id a Int y national party—a party' . that is g verned by no sectional_ interests o partizan prejudices, but whose otto. is our Whole country,lwhose ete al princi ples are equal - rights and Trial laws. I do not look upon this as a canvass which will deaide the airier in Which the government o the coun try shall be administered, but as an issue on which! will de pen the vital' question, "Sh a ll Iwe 'ha e a coun try 1" ) I Sincerely be,ieving in Us, I shall not attempt to 4041 with minor ques tions of domeple, policy, but shall Mime at once t the mainnes, Un ion or disunion; peace or ar. What satisfaction doe the true patriot derive Ifroin the doption of t his dearest theories of g vernment, if in the adoption of tho theories, begins the ruin pf the lanbe fondly ~‘ hoped they would ;lead to eatness ? Laws founded !even upon Divine in spiration would be usele if there were no country fin them o govern. What theatre ie there r the dis play of the energies of a" ouug and aspiring citizen , jest en ring upon the important! deities of life, in a country torn by 'ivil stri el' Well has au eminent "iiherican tatesman remarked : st There is 0 path of ambition ripen to the in a videil and distracted country' r " To prove that I the re peace or war, eve ;have on to Frank P. Repir'e lettel with a 'view to his nom-- subsequently c.ild'ortied b fact of his nomination b • tion al Democratic onvent Blair, in hislietter,Jiays " There is blot due wit; the Governmet aid the and that is fort the Presid. declare these acts ball and pel the army tp undo its u at the Smith, disperse the . State governMente, allow people to reorganize thei ernmente, and elect Sen • Representatives.!' I Of course apy Stternpt subvert the government Of these Southern States by j force ' Would le . to war, as the Governor aid all o her State officers, civil ird Military, are sworn to obey, supp• rt, Land defe .d the con stitution of the State of • rth Caro lina ; and We iwilltdefend i ' Further do*n Thair says : ' "We . must restore the Constitu tion before weean restore the finan ces, and to de this we intuit have a President whit Will emit the will of the peopleby tkamplin into dust the tumrpatiOn of Cong ' , known as the reonnetrnction act . I wish to stand before the ' conve tion upon this issue,'but it iis . one hick em braces.everythiag else at is of vales in its large end com rehensive results. It is the t one ' thi g that in cludes all that is worth a contest, and without it there is ii hing-that gives dignity,! &Into, or v lue to the struggle. . i I 1 i • On this issue lft was .. ominated. If any further roof needed to show the rev olution spirit of the Conservative party, it old eaei -ly be found in the !violent aran,gues we daily hear around us, eir bitter persecution of Union men and their unrelenting hatred of the orth and its loyal people. tt 1 The bitterness - towards men, who pro ye true to t plea, and Whn ao ; not bo submission to the spine lutaghty aristocrats, self judges of tionOr and maral li front experience. ' Though from one of the eldest - this State, and horn- and raised in Rockingham co . 1 my return nearly; two ye my natife plaCe, f*as de a Yankee. andtenerall with a the mildneSs and • i to one of that detested r withstanding Inty inni. as f ity ac"n 4 14 3 1.71;:e1 the . • l• o . 7 - l . i ~_ TOiVM)A, BRADFORD, COUNTY, PA., OCTOBER 15,1868. birth of .my' hither, whose native State, Vercumat,-with her thirty thori sailict majority, so 'nobly_ leads the yen ;-and I may add, could neverfor fi..v; his dying efforts in defence of s country. peaking of him, and feeling that whatever importance any, words of, mine may have is derived 'from the name I bear, and the affection many still feel toward one who through life proved himself theseople's friend, a few words concerning my father may not be deeMed inapprop riate.— It . was with feelings of surprise, and I must add of indignation i .that I Saw his name inscribed upon 'one of the transparencies borne in the late Con servative procession. I thoughtlhat common decency at least woull have „prevented them from dragging from ,the tomb the name of a man whom they had betrayed and 'denounced' through life, and after his death, whose orphan children they had- per muted. ID softly o'er bloom, sweets While gazing upon that name I re membered the time when those same men declared , him a traitor to every principle of honor because he pre ferred his country to his party, and bitterly denounced him for Lie efforts to rally the people of the West for the defence of the Union. I remember all these when I am declared a degenerate son ; and for every quotation they give me from his speeches I will give them a doz en. When the Sentinel parades a septen& concerning a _white man's government, I would remind them of his dying, words. When the wife bent over the scarce breathing form of the expiring o,stesman, and asked if he bad no message to send to his children, " Tell them," said he, in a voice rendered almost inaudible by the near approach of death, " to obey and support the Constitution and the laws of the land." This . soremn in- woodlands Illy o'er shroud, I=l junction I intend to obey. When I see Myself personally abused by the Conservative press, on account of my political sentiments, and called a traitor to the State in which I was born, I would recall to their recol lection the times when I was de dared an alien enemy. , About the year 1862, a bill was filed summonieg Thomas Settle (now Associate JO tice of the- Supreme Court) and R. A. Ellington to Greensboro, to shoW cause why they should not surrend er the property of Robert M. and Stephen A. Douglas, alien enemies of the Confederacy ; and when I am de nounced as a Yankee and carpet-lag ger, I would remind them of their of forts to drive me an' exile from my native State, and render Me a string- er to the soil that gavo•me birth ; as, however, I have inherited my fath er's name, and his principles, it is natural that I should inherit their animosity. Novertheless, it is strange that these men, his bitterest enemies in life, should now claiM to be the truest exponents of his iprinciples ; but not more strange thin that they should now assert theMselves the beet friends of the Constitution of the United States, and the infallible interpreters of its provisions, after they have sacrificed hundreds of thousands of lives and thousands of millions of treasure to trample into the dust that sacred it:W.ll=mA. Such is their consistency, and such it is throughout all their political principles. If a white Republican addresses a crowd of colored men, expressing his honest sentiments, in structing them in their rights and duties, and advising thetins a 'friend, that action involves social equality, and is disreputable. High-born conservatives, however, can mingle .promiscuously ,among colored men at barbecues, 'eat from the same sheep, and drink from the same bottle, and they deserve the praise of their fellow-citizens. If a colored man, following his honest convictions, voter for the best inter eats of hie race, and as - all his higher instincts prompt him, he is totally unworthy of the ballot, and is even unlit to dig a bare subsintence from the bosom of the common earth. If, on the other hand, that colored man proves a traitor to his race—votes to consign himself, his wire, and his children to a condition worse than Issue is y to refer , written Lion, and the very the Na on. to restore nstitutiou t elect to void, com urpationa • rpet-beg' 1 the white own gov- I , tore and slavery—for they all say that the ,condition of au old free negro wa worse than that of a slave—he is respectable, and his swarthy hand is worthy of grasping the sweetest flowers, plucked by the snowy fingers of Carolina's fairest daughters 'By reference to the columns of the &an- dard you will learn that in the town of Chapel Hill, of. classic fartfe, the ladies, to testify their admiration for the eloquence of a colored Conserve Live orator, presented him, with an elegant boquet. of flowers. I have no objection to this. The flowers were their own, end they may give them to whom they please ; but I claim the right, as long as I observe the restraints of public decency, of deciding upon the propriety or impro priety of my own conduct. The time has gone by when one man was bet ter than another - because he happen ed to be born in independent circnm •stances, and henceforth virtue and intelligence alone shall be the crite ria of merit. Nothing more *Clearly shows the utter helplessness of the so-called Conservative cause, and the political degradation to which the party has descended, than tfie means employed to insure success ; since they are afraid to leave the re sult with the unbiased vote of the, citizens of the State and country.— Any than who, by refusing .employ went to all who will not swear to vote the Democratic ticket, and this is doneepenly all over the entire State, attempts to starve a colored man in to Voting against his deliberate con victions and the best interests of his race, is. less worthy of the ballot than the. negro whom he influences.; Consider, then, the difference be: tween the candidates—Seymour, . for mer Governor of New York, and Grant, the conqueror of the rebellion It is true that Seymour may be the more fluent speaker, that is, may find more to talk about ; but when Gen eral Grant has anything to say, he is pretty generally understood ; since, ozinsteace, as hie--A! immediate and Northern it princi in selfish of these instituted y, I know _ ;I d e a' niilies . j of partially t 7, upon ago to aced as received t dun ce. Not 'Thy, and fathily, rapitan 'Aneonditional surrender? The 6412 :or I lmow hy reputation, the latter persoutliy,, General Grant hat not tie quilities requisite in • hero of 1 I 1 - -;: 1 ) 1 , , , i . 1 1 1 1, =MI romance:; bat the very fiat that his mind is so equally balanced that no one trait: predominates, ezdept, haps, his' invincible firmness and de votion to •ardstitutional liberty, the bhu to calm the domestic troubles O of the country which his sword has saved But I have no fears of the - result. I have too much csinfidlince In the intelligence and patriothno of my fellow-eitisens of North Carolina, and of the entire Union; With this implicit trust, I look forward to the 4th of. March next, when Grant and Colfax will take their seats, as the inauguration of a new era, when peace and plenty will smile over the entire countr, , ,,healing' the breaches made by the late cil war, while the, old flag will once more wave in tri umph over a happy And united land. Inns or Beautr.—The ideas of beauty are as various as the philoso phers who have writtt n about or the people who . have admired it. Plato would not admit its existence except in the mind. Leibnitz held 'that it consisted in perfection. Burke pre tended that all objects which have the power. of rebate g the nerves are beautiful. - Sir Joshua Reynolds was of opinion that beauty was media l i crity ; and Hogarth taught that it was nothing bat a crooked line. . Nations are I ' as much at variance _with each otheli on the subject as the philosophers the Chinese think that a woman who hobbles on a pair of club feet is the perfection of female beauty; and the fashionable Thibe tan woman does 'not deem herself presentable until she has daubed her face with a thick black paste, " a good deal like conserve of grapes." The "'ludo() dames stain their nails black with henna ; and the Japanese their teeth with a dye of the same color. The Hottentot beauty is es teemed no beauty at all until she had fattened herself up to at least fifty stone, and hasyeached such a devel opment that she can suckle her baby over her shoulders and carry the rest of the faMily upon her natural bee tle. The Peruvian squaw is deemed of no account in society until she can show an ear with : : a hole. in it big enough for her admirer to pass his arm through up to the shoulder. As for the Americans—we do not allude to the indigenous tribes of savages--they reverse the Hottentot standard - of beauty, With them thin ness is in as high a repute as blub ber with their African sincere, and . they. will pare themselves down to impalpable shadows with as match diligence as the latter will bloat themselves into oleaginous fulness. The Hottentot women are s aid to give their skin and flesh extensibility by constant kneading and to cram themselves - with pounded maize soak ed in mare's milk, in order that they may swell out ito the desired fatness; arid the Ameri cans pinch their bodies even to the crunching of the bones, with-jackets of steel or corsets, and Breach themselves with a mixture of chalk and vinegar that-they may he reduced to the fashionable tenuity.'' A Glazer Azsours.—A very large and brilliant aerolite has recently fallen in Cheatham county,- Teams-. see. A party of men at work in the fields about 19 miles' from Nashville, at'about one u'clock, on the 12th of August, were startled by a pale red glare that seemed to overspread the clouds just north of the zenith, the rest of the heevena being at the time darkly overcast. Suddenly they saw a white object fall obliquely from a brilliant teem:l-like aperture, the sides of which seemed to be a jagged clouds intensely luminous. The ob ject descended at an angle of from 10 to 15 degrees from the perpendic ular, and struck the earth near by with a terrific, noise and with such tremendous force as to shake all the surrounding country, and to' loosen and throw down trees from the rocky, hillsafea adjacent. It struck upon a seamless ledge of limestone about three !feet in' thickness—rending it fur a distance of fifty feet and throw ing the fragments in every direction for •many_rods. At the point of con tact, the ruck when first visited was covered with' a fine, white, floury paste, and from the aperture steam ascended, and the place was so hot that no one ,could approach it for three.days. At the end of that time, the ground having become cooled by showers, though a ~.very high and dense column of - steam continued to arise, a gang of men was set to work to dig out the celestial missile. Af ter -working through the ledge which had already been sufficiently " bleat ed," they found the aerolite at the depth of 20 feet in blue clay It was still hot, and covered with a film oz ide (the 'flour paste was . probably some of the °Fide); and was of a cow ical shape, the point downward, with an altitude of about seven'feet and a base circamferete of ten feet. The Smithsonian ins Ration has made a bid for it, and the. Tennesseeans are also moving to have it kept at their own. State capital. This body is one 'of the smallest that fill the interplan etary spaces,' the comets being the largest According to the latest as tronomical theories, the sun is kept hot and luminous, by the heat gener ated by colliAion with - -such bodies. PARTING WORDB.—A lady parting from, her husband a few days Since ,in the cars at 'Albany was overheard \by the pissengers to utter the follow, lug paragraph all in one breath : "C 3 .id bye, Write to me every day,\vron't you ? I'll expect a letter three times a week any way. Take good cat: of my Sunday school• class, for I wan t it when I come back. If . Miss , Smith4sxlls don't give her more than fifty cents k for we have to sup• port our own bbnich, you know.— Don't forget: o bAng my silk dress and my other sho4.\ Come as soon as you can. Goodbye. Don't forget your cane, and let your' moustache grow." \ A gent man on board a ate mboat asked the man who came to collect inch esge-money if there was any danger bob leg blown up, ar the steam made a horrid noise. “Not the least,"l said sharp collector, "OWNS you mew to pow your rm." - 'MOTTO for late.. auolire buirititateiliM Royla • - or DlOnlicamoir nom Air ovum. Mr& • Thompson's White Ware. Mr& Thompson stood by the kitch en table paring potatoes 'for dinner. Something was evidently •wrong - with the little lady, for therawas an unmistakable air of ."spite" in the way she tossed the potatoes into the pan of cool spring water, waiting there to receive them. It' was's sal. try July day, and through the opt a window came the sound of mowers whetting their scythes, blended with the call of the robin, and the faint notes of the cuckoo in the shaded wood. But it only irritated Mrs. Thompson, indeed, everything irrita ted her that day. Looking out from the back door, one saw a lovely land scape,with broad reaches of meadow ' landfringed with-- graceful belts of birch, and softly rounded iountains lifting their velvet foreheads to the White, fleecy clouds that Went sailing across the exquisite ether, like huge drifts of thistladown. Bat this also irritated her ; everything' could be • beautiful save-her life, and that was cold, and rade, and barren. Bat to commence at the beginning ; Jane Lawrence had been an unusually romantio girt. She had always fan cied she would marry some famous artist or scholar, who would take her to Romeand Venice,where she would live in.s perpetual dream of beauty. She so loved beautiful things 1 Per haps all women do, and perhaps that is the reason so many barter love for gold. But contrary to all her pre dOnceived notions, she married Robert Thomp son, a plain, practical farmer ; and instead of Italy, she went to the old homestead which had been the abode of the Thompsons for generations. And instead of lounging in elegant studies, or gliding down storied riv ere in picturesque gondolas,she made butter and cheese, raised poultry, cooked dinners in the long, low celled kitchen for three or four great, brown habded men, quite a contrast, you will admit. ' If slik could have had things a lit tle different,she wouldn't have miudr the mirk so much. If she could ha e had soft carpets, and tasteful furni ture, and books, -and pictures, and flowers, 'to be sure, she had a little strip under the south window, where a sweet briar grew, and pinks,sweet: william grew, and marigolds blue sowed in their season. But they were so old fashioned ; and she pined for the rare and elegant plants she had seen in conservatories snd public gardens. But Robert Thompson would ne soon' think of buying the moon, as flowers. And though his wife earned them a dozen times over it - never entered his heart that she did. Indeed, he gave (1) her twenty :five dollars fall and spring, to buy her clothing, 'and wondered vaguely where it went to, and if she had not got some hoarded away somewheres. As to books, there was the Family "Bible, with the records of all the Thompeons for three generitions.— Then there was Fox's Book of Mar tyrs, and Pilgrim's Progress, and an English Reader, which her Thompson had when he was a boy and went to school in the little red school house upon the "pine barrens." Besides, there was the Report of the Board of Education, Law, and Resolved ; Patent Office Reports, and a pile of the Farmer's Almanacs for twenty years, besides any amount of docn meets upon the beet and most im proved breed of cattle; the theory of under draining, rotation ofi crops, grass and forage, culture, etc., etc. What could any reasonable person ask tor more than that ? And as foe pictures, there was "From the Cradle to the Grave," an allegorical pictured, printed in colors, with a descriptive couplet attending each, particular stage of the -journey ; a ,sampler which his • mother had "worked at eleven years of age," andia very of fecting- scene illustrative of "The Lovers' Parting," wherein a very red cheeked damsel in puffed sleeves, short waist, and a very low neck,dis solved in the arms of her departing swain. - Certainly Mrs. Robert Thompson must have beep very hard to please. but this particular day it was quite another thing that troubled her. The 'Faterville -Sewing Circle and Ladies' Benevolent Society" were to meet at :the farm house the next Friday, and 'Mrs. Thompson had set her heart on la new set of white ware on this occa sion, and that morning had broached the subject to her husband. "What's the matter with these dishes ?" he asked, pointing to the "mulberry and white" plates, which Mrs. Thompson was washing. "They are all out of date to begin with, and half of them are cracked, or-broken ; besides there isn't any near enough of them to set the table." • "What has become of the china ? Mother used that when she had coin- PabY." t"lt won't' look well on the table, tth the mulberry cracked as it is." "I guess the victule will taste junt as well out of 'em b anyway." "But we really need the dishes, Robert. There has not been a dish bought since I came here, twelve years ago, and—" "They'll do just as well for twelve year's to come. You wouldn't have thought of it, if it hadn't been for the Sewing Circle. If they can't come and eat out of such dishes as we've got, they are welcome to stay away." And he took down his hat to go back to his mowing. There were tears in Mrs. Thomp son's eyes, but she 'crowded 'them bravely back, and tried bard to stew dy the tremor of her voice,as she said, pleadingly : "Please to give me the money to get them, Robert. , Grover has got' some'real pretty Ones--and cheap, too ; I can get all I shall need for four dollars." "Well, I guess Grover 'lt keep 'em for all me. I've got no four dollars to spare," turning to go out. "By the way," looking back from the door, "Jones and Lee and Hubbard will be here to dinner, and perhaps to supper. We want to get down all the south meadow today, if we can. .Grass is stout this year, there's a Uird more on the meadow than there was last year. And oh, Hubbard wantsix pounds of butter tonight, 1 ' don't forget \t‘i have it ready ; and with these words he went Out, leav ing his wife to her long, weary day's work, - darkened and made distasteful -by , disappointment. She was both grieved and angry. was a little thing, perhaps, but it is the little things of life that delight and annoy. Life looked very bare and homely to Jane Thompson that summer day. With all hei love of ease and beauty, and symmeti7, how rude . and coarse and hard looked all her surroundings. It was only one long, montimons round of homely toil, unrelieved by any of the little sweetness and gra ces that might make even toil pleas ant. She clid noteofton think of it ; but remembered that day, with the `faintest little stir of regret, that she might have been far differently situa ted •, end as she looked •up to the OM) , French cottage on the hill eni-- bowed in a perfect forest of blossom ing vines, and caught the cool gleam of urn and fountain, something very like a sigh trembled. on- her lips.—: "Squire Burnham's wife didn't have to beg for a paltry four dollars, • that she might be able to set a table de cently,'"i she thought bitterly. And then, as people do .when they . feel aggrieved, she remembered a score of other things equally needful, and equally within . their means—for Robert Thomps not a poor man—which had bOen churlishly . re-, fused. There was the parlor carpet, it was half cotton, and faded' add threadbare at that,, and the paper on the wall had been there:fiver since she was a child, and was stained where it had leaked down last win ter" and yet. Robert said it "was well enough for what little they used it," and absolutely refused to get either. And so of scores of other things which she remembered that morning as she toiled through all the king sultry forenoon, with an aching head anddiscouraged heart: What did it matter to her if the grass was heavy, and butter. Up to forty cents a pound ? It only brought her more a harder work, and no rec ompense save her board and cloth ing. She could earn more than that in any other man's house. • "Well, bhe bad no business to Mir ry Robert Thompson," she said mood ily, to herself, her slender wrists aching from beating over the butter for Hubbard, "everybody always said be was close and shrewd, and proph esied that be would be rich some day—what did she-care for riches, if they didn't 4o her any good—didn't make her• life any fairer and softer ? —She was not fitted to be a farmer's wife—and yet she ha_ loved Robert Thompson l" . She said this savagely, as if she was disgusted and, angry with herself 'for it. And yet Hubert Thompson was not an unkind man—only thoughtlees.— He was a type of a large class of men—more especially , farmers—who do not feel in themselves the need which a W 0030,01 more (esthetic nature demands. Absorbed in his stock, his crops and his politics, he did not realize that his wife needed, and had a right to, a. few of the things that, with her peculiar organ ism, were as much a need of_ her be- ing as the food she ate. And so, as the years ran on, they grew farther and further apart; he getting more and more absorbed in grain, and growing more careless of looks and culture, and more thought less and less tender -in regard to his wife's tastes,, or toils, • while she grew bitter, and despondent, and irritable. Robert Thompson was a little in clined to fault finding and nut being at all of a sensitive temperament him self, he did not know how keenly. he wounded his wife ; and when, some times; she gave back a bitter retort, he wondered What it was that soured her disposition so, for he remembered she used to be called (mutually sweet tempered. All through the 'Ong forenoon Mrs. Thompson had nursed her wrath:— Robert was aelfish,and unreasonable, and she did not care who knew it. She would not "have the . 'circle' meet there, and set the table with that•old fashioned china, and that stained and cracked mulberry—no,not for twenty Robert Thonipsons. The rooms were shabby and out of date enough mercy knew ; and her thoughts reverted to the pretty, tasteful homes of her friends, where she had met on 'circle day. Fifteen minutes before . noon, awl full that time before dinner would be ready—for they were usually a little behind, and Mr.- Thompson always wanted hii dinner boiling hot—Mrs. Thompson saw four tired, hungry looking men coming up was the orchard. The table was not Bet, and she hurried quickly about it. Just then Frank and Charlie, her two boys, came rushing in from school, each shouting "Mother, ,mother," and each 'wanted something "right off." She felt tired and wearied; and out of temper, which was not helped by her husband's impatien t— _"Why isn't dinnerready ? I told you we Were in a hurry today. If r hadn't anything to do all the forenoon but get dinner,l'd try toget it before "tight" A bitter retort sprang to her lips, but just then Charlie cried out— "Oh, mother, mother I just look at my new copy. I ain't going to write b, ab's any more ; I'm going to write sentences just like Frank. Just you read it, mother. The teach er said I must get it by heart, and always remember it" Mrs. Thompson 'glanced up, laying the plates as she-read, "A soft 'an ewer turned' - Away wrath, but griev ous words stir up anger." It was not that it was new, she . had read it scores of times, but something in its • appropriatnem that fell like a cool hand upon her. heated pulses.' "I will have it ready . in a moment, Robert," she said, quietly. He looked up ; evidently he _bad not expected just that reply„, f or if the truth Mist be told,he hid thought more than. once that forenoon of his wife's reined ; not that be thoight of granting it, but that he expected that she would, as he termed it sulk over it." ' "I say, boys," he waid, as they went into, the cool north , room for their dinner, 'tit don't seem here is it did dOWn-in the meadow. A woman OS per Anatun, in AdvanCe. IMM UM has -an easy time of it; she den% know wrist hot weatheris." Kra. Thompson, wilting on' the table with a scarlet face, did not re ply ; but Hubbard gave Jones a queer Kik out of the corner of 'his eye, as he half glanced at her. "Why didn't you set the bolter in the! stove You might as well. Ido not believe there's any need of having the butter like - this,if it is warm wee ther? he bowled. "I toxik it out of the cellar since you came in,; but, I wilgo down and get some more s if you think -I bad better," was the pleasant reply. "No, memo mituti Well I declare why didn't you boil this meat! It is as hard as a rock. Not much lfiie, that I bad at your house, Hubbard. .Your wife Itnowschow to cook a din ner that's fit for a king?' "I tried .to have it nice, Robert," Mrs. Thompson said, struggling hard to choke down rising sob as well as an angry, word. The . men did not speak, and Thompson finished his dinner with a thoughtful face. Sy and by he grew to watching his wife's l face ; there was something in it he Could - not un derstand: He .looked down at the "mulberry and white," it did look old and dingy beside the white table cloth; he wondered he had never no ticed it before. He went out into the kitchen, bow hot and stifling it was I • A vague _ idea that it wasn't such a Comfortable place, after all, flitted through hie mind. He went out towards the barn, the sun was hot, 'but there was a fresh breeze - blowing from the south; and the meltwere lounging in the shadow of the barn. never, pitied a woman so in my life," Hubbard was saying ; "she' works like a slave, and - don't.even get 'thank ye' for it? "She'd never ought to have married MTh. Thompson, replied 'Jones ; "delicate, sensitive little thing like her. However, be won't mike money out of her blood and boner many years I don't think. 1 never ,saw a woman rim down so fut. She looks as faded as the old house that hasn't seen a drop of paint since old sand father Thompson bad it fixed up for his second wife." "And Jennie used to like to have things - nice so well ! She'ebetter have married Squire Burnham—l wonder if she isn't sometimes sorry" "Was she?" The thought came crushing like a bolt or fire through heart and brain of Robert Thompson. She might have married Burnham, he- knew, and then he remembered how proud 'he bad been that she had turned &dm the handsome young squire, to marry him, and came to the old homestead to take care of his invalid mother. And how tenderly she had done it too ! He stoki noise- lessly -away from the unconscious talkers, and started at a quick pace down - the street. Mrs. 'Thompson had washed and pat away-the last dish, when the sud den•sound-of wheels coming• into the yard, sent her to the door. , "I've brought down that ware,Mrs. ThoMpson," said the brisk voice of Grover, as he sprang to the ground, and lifted a large basket carefully from the wagon. • "But I didn't order them, Mr. Gro ver," she gasped, in a-. frightened voice. only -said perhips I—" "Ok . lt's all right. Mr. Thompson came up this noon and ordered them. I thought, you didn't send' him, for he didn't seem to , know what be wanted, only- he gave me ten dollars, and told me to bring what - was necessary.. I have brought yon a tea and dinner set, including three dozen plates. If there is anything you don't like, I'll take it back, and make it all right." •!`Oh, I shall like- them, I know," she said, .trying hard to control her voice. "Well, I'll leave the bask.* and Robirti can bring it up some time," he , said; springing into the wagon and driving off. 1 Then: ane Thompson sat down on the floor beside the basket of crock ery and cried as if her heart would break. They were magical - tears, too, Ur they washed all the weari ness and _despair from her face and the shad ow frojn,her eyes and heart. Shelorgotithat etre was tried,or that the day was hotfbut went to un picking and washing her new treas ures, singing 'softly to herself the while. She put somenice clean pa. pers on the shelves, and then she folded some and cut them in scallops and put them, over the edges,- and then she arranged her beautiful ware, with its falling sprays of convolvulns and fuchsias, standing off every few minutes to admire it. I doubt if M rs. Squire Burnham was ever so entirely happy in her life I- She bad got everything arranged and stood in the pantry door with a bright happy smile in her eyes and on her lips, -when voice—it was a trifle husky—said, close beside her : "What is it Jennie Is" . (he used to call her that in the old days, before the hardness or indifference came be tween them.) "0, Robert I" taking a step 'toward him. He opened his anus and drew her close to his heart, kissing her as fondly and,, tenderly as he ever had in the days of his courtship. "Forgive you Y 0 Robert I I never , was so happy in My life 1 ..I have beeli to blame too ; I havan't-- lies you have," ale interrupted: you have ," , -,....- "Ifiti've - been an angel compared with me. live made a lave of yon, but you shan't work so iny more: Jones' Laura- is coming up to morrow, to help you till after haying, and then PIT make permanent engagement." "0, Robert, I can t get along now t I feel just as light siva bird." . "And you are dlmost," he said, smiling a little sadly into her eager face. - "No ; Lam able to hire some one to help you, and I am Ong to: by the way, I saw. Leeds this noon. It's a dull time just now, and so I thought I'd give the poor fellow a job." 4 'V Robert I - You 't going to—" "Ain't /?" he said easingly, laugh ing It her enth • -. - .'Are, you really,. b ent —goingio have the house paw T" "Every squire inch of board. Jen. pie, inside and out . And when you get over the surnames work, you can be - looking up something to ,brighten ~ up the old place _ a little. . 1 N BRE' 21 . ' Tosco ST ill Sumßan—Tobacco grows something like cabbages,but never saw none of it boiled, illthoufb I have eaten boiled cabbage and wo ws on it, I heard men say that cigars was given , to them -on election day for no th ing,was cabbage leaves. Tobacco stores are mostly kept by wooden lojuns, who stand at the doors and try to fool little boys by offering theta a bunch of cigars,which are glued into Injun's hands and Is made of wood - .7 - also. Hogs do not lice tobacco • neither do L I tried to smoke a lu once, Ind it MOY me feel like psZM Salts. Tobacco wasinvented by a man named Walter Raleigh. • When the peoPle first saw him smoking they thought he was a steamboa& and as they-.had never ewes steamboat, were frightened. My sister Niulcy' is a girl - I don't know whether she likes tobacco or not. There is a young man named Leroy whecomes to see her. He was standing on the steps one night, and be bad a cigar in his mouth, and she said, "Leroy, the Perfume 'agreea ble." Bat the• nest morning• when, my big brother - Tom lighted-his pipe, Nancy said : Get .out of the house, you horrid creature, the smell of to bacco' makes me sick." Snuff is Injun meal made - ont of tobacco. I took a little snuff and then I Sneezed. - The end. _ . • As Alan= Taratrr.—From the annual occurrence of rains, meteoric showers, and' the explosions of steam boilers in various parts of the coun try, Professor Jioomus suggest's a ye- , ry uncomfortable theory, in regard to the safety of the earth itself. He thinks it not impossible that suffici ant steam might NC generated in the burning centre of the world to blow the whole globe to pieces. A volcan ic eruption under the sea, or near it, like that of Vesuvius, now in pro gress,. may at any moment convert _ the earth into a huge steam'boiler, by letting the water in upon the ten- 1- tral fires, to be followed, for aught we knoir, by anaxplosion.thatalsall rend it apart, and send the Tragmenta ca reering through space as small plan. • eta or meteors, each bearing off some . distracted member or members of the human family, to make, perchance, new die s overies. and acquaintances in other parts of the planetary sys tem now revolving with us. So that -the final catastrophe may, after, all, be only a boiler explosion on a mag nificent scale of grandeur and des-- truction. • • - • Timm-Thought engenders thought. Place one idea upon paper—another wilrfollow it, and still another, until you have written a page. You•can not fathom your mind. There is a well-of thought There - which has no • bottCm. The more you draw from it, the-more clear and fruitful it will- be. • - If you neglect to think yourself, and use other peop!e's" thoughts, giving them utterance only, you will never know what you are capable of.. At , first your ideas may- come in lumps, homely and shapeless ; but no mat ter—time and perseverance will ar range and refine them.- Learn to think and you will learn to write; the more you think, the better you express yotit. ideas. A VOW little. boy, after, giving everybody a good-night kiss, kneeled at his mother 'a side to say his even ing prayer. Hie mother had that day been teaching him the piece commen mencing : "You'd scarce expect one of my age," •kc , and these verses were running tbrouglrhis mind.- He commenced the prayer as follows : Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the L ord my soul to keep, it I should 'chance to fall belowDemosthenesior Cicero, don't view me with a crick-, et's eye—" "Stop, step," said his mother, dthist isn't a part of the prayer." "Yes it is," the little fellow replied ; "Yeti, itis, mamma ; don't view4ne with & cricket's eye." FUN, FACTS AND FACETIig: BEAT can travel faster than cold anybody Can catch cold. - IT is both better and safer tq grow in love than to fall in love. &sew% nutmegs may be a small crime,,but it might lead to a grater. Sous ladies use paint as fiddlers du rosin—to aid them in drawing a beau. Most of the shadows that cross oar path through life are caused by our stand mg in our own light. A writer in the Paris Figaro says all women are devils. They are devils most l men like to be pasessed o GVLIMEITH must have b en think ing of the "Grecian bend"' whe: he wrote : "When lovely woman stoops to tally," • A clergyman, after marrying a couple, made a prayer over them, conclu ding : "Forgive them, Lord, therlinow not what they do." A young man generally give's a lock of his hair to his sweetheart before he marries her.=After marriage she sometimes helps herself.-and don't use scissors. "Mir opinion is," said a philosoph ical old lady of much experience and obser vation, "that any man who dies upon wash ing day does it out of pure spite.'. JOSH Buinics was not teu miles out of the way when he flung this off : "Men who have a grate deel to do with bosses seem to demoralize far more than the hoe see do." EOM A well-known author hang up ; ' his stocking in jest last Christmas Eve, and his wife, very much in earnest, put a baby in it ; whereupon the author said, "My dear, darn that stocking." "I say Pat," .said a Yankee to an Irishman, who was digging in his garden, • "areyou gging out a hole in that onion bed ?" " No,' says Pat, "I am digging out the earth and leaving the hole." Tat folloWing edrertisement peals in a Canada paper : "Will the gehtli-, man who stole my melons last Saturday night be generous enough to returri c me ~a '- e few ?" of themeds, as they are a choice van ti JvssoLD • went to a party at w bleb a Mr. Pepper had assembled all his Jerrold laid to his host, on entering the room : "My dear Mr. Pepper, how glad you must bo to see all your friends mns- AN elderly Pennsylvania womail, with her .datighter, looking at - a marble statue of Girard in the college building, the other day, startled the bystanders by a caiming : "La Sally, how white he was !" Tax pulse of young lad lea - general iy beats stronger in the palm of the hand thin at the wrist. Skis curious fact in phys.4l - has been frequently °tumuli by young men of an ineestigatiag turn of mind. • A -.cotton thread manufacturer, who ! by accident, got a cut across his nose. haring, no• court-plaster at hand, stuck on Ids_ proboscis one of his gum tickets tin which was the usual information, "Warran ted 350 yards long." -- • Tar clerk of a cockney church cently made the following announcement to the• "You are desired to at tend a mes • in . the vestry, at four o'clock, to consider on the best means of eeti!ig the chunk and to digest other matters.' - To be free fromAilike is money; to be free from the rage of perpetually buying something new is s oat& MUM ; to be content With What we poems constitutes the palest and most certain of riches.