,A., ,4... ilinrlSß)a,' 1 - ;"znifi'it' '' ,- ,:;6•1‘ , . . , . . . , 1 ~ m. .... ,•,, E. B. HAWLEY, Proprietor. §uointio Sado. LITTLES & BLAKESLEE, Attorney* and Counsellor* at Law. Offiee the one beretolore occupied by !LB- & 4.1. P. Little, on Wain - lama. Montrose, P . (APHIS). IL M. LITTLI. 010. n LITTLIL Z. L. BLILLISLLL. g. MCKUCIII. 0. C. FAVII.M. W. H. mcc.. FAUROT & CO. Dealer. In Dry Good*, Clothing, Ladles and Wyse, fine Shoes. kleo, agents for the great American Tea and Coffee Company. [Montrose. Pa.. ap. CHARLES N. STODDARD, Dealer In Boots and Shout. flats and Caps. Leather and Flndlnlys, Mato Street. nd door below Seerle's Hotel. Work made to order. and repairing done neatly. Mastreae. Jan. 1,18:0. LEWIS KNOLL. SHAVING AND HAIR DRESSING. • Shop In the new Poatofileo hnilding, where he will be found ready to attend all who may want anything told. line. Montrose. Pa. Oct. IS. 1383. P. REYNOLDS, AUCTIONEER—SeIIs Dry Goods, and Merchardte—also attends at Veadues. All orders left at my house .111 receive prompt attenthm. [Oct. 1. 1169—tr 0. M. HAWLEY, DEALER In DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, CROCKERY Hardware, Rata, Capp, ilootp.Sboes, • .•-• • Made Cloth tam Punta, OM, etc., New Milton!. Pa. • . h. 413. DU. S. W. DAYTON, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, tenders his milers to the citizens of Great Bend and vicinity. Offiene est his residences. opposite Bunn= Hons., Sr% Deed vitiate , . Sept. Ist, [S'9.—tf LAW OFFICE CIUMBEItLIN & McCOILUK. Attorneys and Coun sellors at Law. Office In the Brick monk over the Bank. Plontroee Ann. 4. 1969. Caaantanaxs. . J. IL hicCoaark. A. & D. R. LATHROP, DEALERS in Dry Goods, Groceries. mockery and glassware, table and pocket erdiery. Paints, oils, dye stuffs, Bats. boots and shoes, utile /cattier. Perfumery dte. Brick Block, adjoining the Bank, Montrose. [ August tt IMA.—tf A. LLTIIIIOP. - • D. B. Lauuror. A. 0. WARREN, ATTORNEY A . LAW. Bounty, Rack Pay. Pension. and Erem co Claims attended to. Mee fir 007 below Boyd ' s Store, Idontrose.Ps. jAn. 1, 'GS. W. W. WATSON. ATTORNECT UT LAW, Montrose, re. °Mee with L F. Fitch. , [Montrose, NI. C. SUTTON, Auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, Priendevllle, Ps C. S. GILBERT, 411.u.c.Iticazzoor. 'Genial Bend, P. TT. dB. apgl Mt( AlEll EL V, V. El. ALVlZt.i.t>22.oo3r. Aug. 1, 1130, Addrons, Brooklyn, Pa JOHN GROVES, FASHIONABLE TAII OR, Montrose, R. Shop ov. Cbandler's Store. AP order, In Ent-rue atyl ...Ming done on short nollea and warranted to dt. w. w. swim, CABINET AND MAUR iteaurpecTuusus. - P• 01 tallith street, Montrose, Pa. Arrz. 1. DO. H. BIIBUITT, DILLIJIRIn Staple and Fang Dry Goods, Crocker) Itardwire, boa, Stoves, Oro es. Oils, and Palma, boots and Shoes, Haut Caps. Furs, Metal o Rubes eiloweartea.Proslelolla.r.:r... New Milford, Pa. DR. E. P. HIVES, ass perinsoestJy located at Friendsvllle for the Fins pose apts.:tieing medicine and surgery in all It. brasebas. Be may be found at the Jackson House. 011iee boars from Ba. at- to P. m. rriendscille. Pa.. Aug, 1. 1869. STROUD & BROWN, . FIRE &MD LIPS tasua.orcu ACIMPS. toislnesi attended to promptly. on lair terms. Office Snit door comb f • Montrose not.e.L . wet g l. side o. Public Avenue. o Mendrose, Ps. [Au. 1. teak. BnAnian SMtoon. Cruz:ass L. Buolni. JOHN SAUTTEIt, EZSPECTPULLY announces that be is DJW =to ant all kinds of Darnents in the mos. stile Style, te flt with elegnt, nd wan. Shop overthe Post OMee. llontroas,Tß WA[. D. LUSH, ATTOILVIN AT LAW. Dloutroee, Pa. Ofßee appa site the Tarhell House, Dear the Court UM*, Aug. 1. 193A—tt DR. W. W. SMITH, DEMIST. Rooms over Ployd d Corwin', and ware Stara. Od boars from.) a. m. to p. m Kontrose, Aug. 1, 199.—tf ABEL TIBUELL, DRAM In Innos, Patent Medidnes. Chemical. Liquors, Paints, s,Dye Muffs. Varnishes, Win MOM Grater' Glass Ware, Wall and Window Pa. per, Stoae.Ware. Lamps. Berereee, Machinery Oil.. illases. Guns, Ammunition. Knives. Spectacles Waahes, Panes Goods, Jewelry, Perth re. beteg Mae of the most EIMOCTOUP. and "minable collection' of Goods In STIOOIRILOOOS C 0..- Matiblisbed In 15118. (Montrose, Pa. D. W. SEARLE, Arrortray ATLAW. rafts clear the Stare of A. Lathrop, In the Brick Block, Montrose, Pa. [Berta DR. W. L. RICHARDSON, rairsicum a SURGEON. tenders ht. profesehanat services to the Citizens or Montrose and vicinity.— Mike at tits realdonne. on the corner east of Say,. Mom Foundry. Virg. 1. 186 n. DR. E. L. GARDNER, Feriumen 81:11161:0151. Montrose, Pa. and imperial attention to diseases of the Beast and Longs and all Beretta] diseases. Otfloe over W. B. . Weer Boards at Searle's Hotel. tee:. 1. ille3 BVR%S & NICHOLS, ADM - 10 Drugs, Medicises. Chemicals, Die go ass, Paints, Oita, Varnieh, Liquoin, Biters. Fano' sn_ues,Patent Medicines. Perromes7 and Toilet Ar ticles. • EirPresertpttons earerally componoddL- . . Peelle Avenue, above bearle's Hotel. Montrose, Ps A. B. Booms, - Aston lcltcuos.s. An. 1. 180. DS E. L. HANDUICEL, illYslcLas a 13118GE01 1 1. res —patthlly tenders bl• zn i = i sal . serriees to th e clams of PrtendsriDe Mos Intheolnee of Dr. Leo Ilosards of i. , Ans.l,2MM. -PROF. MOURIM, Ins Mel niatter.. returns bt. thanks for the tge . ct i hiTtlthat boa enabled hlm to set the hen Inte'nt time to ten • the whole story. bat come and eee Ibt yottteetee 111T'at, the Old Stand. No loud liateth* snowed In the shop. Mail tn. MI - AroylsTaY. Wee Inward °Mot Tee obscrEbow,th °Pother dental work sbotthltall at the affix* ante t wbo ore ins p Parlo do r alll n &o p n i t to th m rw o M n I thnotiot. setts of teeth cool& Oyer. or aluminum plate • Vith il lireetou's cast conspoeltion t the two tatter referable to allWitokatper tutothuries aaw used tor to Ones. arrow, perilous ovulated, and made to grow in satand shape. .rbe advantage of Midair work done by perotanenthr 10- ailed and responsible punier, must be apparent to all. MI wort watueauxl. Please call and examine mos+ bwoot=te work at oar 0111CO3 COW Boyd a COD fiud- W. W. MOTU m BUM& Altd. i& sees.—tf GOLD JEWELRY. Isv o rd .w isswanfil. mum. Rods fonsa. The liousekeeper's Tragedy. One day, in I wandered, I heard a complaining, And saw a poor womamthe picture of gloom ; fibe glared at the mud on her doorstep ('tans raining), And this WWI her wail as she wielded the broom. "Oh, life in a toil, and love is a trouble, And beauty will fade, and rtches will flee, And pleasures they dwindle, and prices they double, And nothing is what I could wish it to be. There's too much of worriment goes toe bon net; There's too much onnuting gam to a shirt ; There's nothing that pays for the time you waste on It; There's nothing that lasts tI3 but trouble and dirt. "In March It Is mud ; slush In December ; The midsummer breezes are loaded with dust; In Fall the leaves litter ; In muggy September The wall-paper rota and the candlesticks rust. There are worms in the cherries and slugs in the roses, And ants in the sugar, and mice in the pies; The rubbish of spiders no mortal supposes, And ravaging roaches, and damaging dim It's sweeping at six, and its dusting at' i seven ; Its victuals at eight, and its dusting at nine ; t's potting and panning from tea to eleven; We scarce break our fast ere we're planning to dine. " With grease and with grim, from corner to centre, Forever at war. and forever alert, No rest for a day, lest the enemy enter; I Tend my whole time in a struggle with dirt. " Last night, in my dream, I was stationed for ever On a little bare ide in the midst of the sea ; My one chance of Ilfe was a ceaseleas endeavor To sweep off the saves ere they swept off poor me! •' Alas! 'twas a dream—again I behold it ! I yield! I am helpless my fate to avert r She rolled down her sleeves; her apron she folded; Then lay down and died, and was buried in dirt. !Medical Revenge. I loved her and she knew it well; She'd make a careful diagonosk, And gave me likes naughty belle, Her smiles in very little doses. 1 sent her notes and little rhymes, With bottles of bar father's tonic ; And I had told her many times 1 loved her—so the case was chronic. She ortened me-1 need hardly say That oft In anguish 1 would leave her; Aly love would ebb and flow each day— A sort of intermittent fever. I used all remedies I knew— Took stimulants and then tried lees; But no refrigerants would do, The case was one eternal crisis. I had a rival--woe is me ; The fact I must, perforce, acknowledge— A. hommapathist was be— A wretch who - never passed the college; And though I often call him quack. lie used to say how much I taught him ; But laughed at me behind my, back, With her—l knew It, for I caught him. We were good friends fn outward gabse. For in the village we were fixtures ; And to such heights did friendship rise. We even took each other's mixtures Of that arrangement rd the best; His globules were a harmless present; But the poor fellow oft confessed My compountik were by no means pitman t. We used to take long walks with her— We two who loved her to distraction; And pleasant smiles her lips would stir— To us 'twas hardly satisfaction When Incompatibles agree, And soda isn't riled by acid, At that time—not till then—shall we Agree to love her and be placid ! Eio things went on—the end drew near ; They came one °somber thee was prouder. He said in fun that he felt gueer— ! I rose and waved a &lam Powder, A powder Wrapped in. papas two I gave him in the loved one's presence, He took the white one, then the blur, And died a death of effervescence 1 BREVMES. —" What's in a name?" A principa l upholder of giving women " fair play n England is named Playfair. —An Indian from the far West, .a dreadful savage, wonders how it is that almost all our women are hump-backed. —lt is said everything finds its proper element, but when a man drinks like a fish be seldom takes to water. —A female preacher married a couple in lowa lately. 'At the end of the cere mony the minister kissed the groom. —The Japapse clergy pause every 6f teen minutes in their discourse, and say to their congregation, "Let as have a smoke." —" Follow your nose and you are sure to be right," may be good advice, bat it is not every one that cares to be thus nosed around. ' —Subject for a debating society— Which can cause the most misery to an audience, HoKean Buchanan or the Hutchinson family? The substitute for the ballot box is the cradle. Give women one of these pie ces of thrnitum and they fill not desire the other. —An Illinois grale-digger, who buried a man named .Button, seats bill to his widoy as follows: ".,Ttstakollosubst. MONTROSE, PA., 'WEDNESDAY,• AUGUST 10, 1870. VAIIIEITES. —A belle does' nt always give the best one to society. —What soup would eannilrals prefer? The "broth eta boy ?" ' •• - —The kind of punishment Greeley fa cors—paper hangings. . —The girl of the period's favorite eve ning hymn (him) her lover. —Forney says "The Senate is sound." It is pretty much all sound. —When riding on a donkey, what fruit do you represent? A pear. —lf you wish to see a woman go off like a flash, just accuse her of using pow der. —One way of giving a man a chance of rising in the world. Knock him down. —The bachelor has to look out for number one—the married man for num ber two. —To keep warm of a cold day, women double the cape,land men double the horn. " Young ladies of the lower parlor," is what the kitchen girls of Boston call themselves. —A nigger minstrel ought not to be stiff-jointed ; neither must he be without bones. —The beginning of wisdom is to know nothing. Au uncommon number of peo ple are around just now who have appa rently just begun. —Mothers used to provide a switch for their daughters from the nearest bush ; now the daughter gets her own switches from the hairdressers. —ln Paris there is a current saying that where a Frenchman spends the francs an Englishman will spend twenty, and an American fifty. —A member of Sorosis wants to know why, since New York has a City Cham berlain, it shouldn't also have a City Champermaid Y We give it up. —Considering that the Pacific Railroad is to become, the medium for transporting tea eastward, we presume the track is laid with the T nail. —lt is generally supposed that old ocean allows a free passage to eveerybody, yet it is a fact that there are thousands of dead heads at the bottom. —Be careful how you mortgage to the devil. his notes are all payable on de- ! mand, and there is no telling when he ' may take a notion to foreclose. • —At Louisville a burglar tied a cork screw to the end of a pole and pulled through a broken window the clothes of a sleeping occupant of the room, securing I the pocket money. —Brigham Young is going to set out I two hundred thousand fruit trees, tutu() • we thought fig( bad enonghpf the nursury ! business - already. " = -. ..,—A cynicol pedagogue giceslt:' - us his opinion that ladiesuppeir -to 'treat their waistsl as vulgar frictions—to be reduced to the lowest terms. I —lt is maintained that the most inter-' esting natural sight that a glazier can contemplate, is the gleam of early day breaking through the windows. —A Yankee, describing a lean oppon ent, said : " I tell you what, sir,lhat man don't amount to a sum in arithmetic— add him up and there's nothing to carry. —Mayne Reid has declined to read his own writings in public. This reminds us of the chap who declined the nomination of Mayor when nobody had thought of his running. —There is absolutely no law against holding up lampposts and corner houses., but young and old who engage in the work-late at night should understand that it is quite unnecessary. —There is said to be in organization of blood-thirsty young females in lowa, the object of which is to intimidate men to discontinue the habit of waxing their moustaches—they tickle so. --Paley quaintly observes that the dif ference between the rich and the poor is simply this. The poor have plenty of ap petite, but nothing to eat; the rich have no appetite, bat plenty to eat. —The champion old man who is in the habit of mowing fifteen tone of hay per day, has turned up thus early . in the sea son in Indiana. lie is organizing for the the nest season. —lt is said that in France there are at least fifty actors and actresses who pre tend to be children of the ~, ,r eat Rachel. If Rachel is " weeping for her children," she will have to shed a " right smart" lot of tears. —What more precious offering can be laid upon the altar of a man' heart. than the first h.ve of a pure, earnest, and affec tionate girl, with an undivided interest in eight cornor lots and fourteen three-story houses. --A country editor returns his sincere banks to some unknown friend for thir- ty sticks of storewood left at his house. Subscribers are also requested to leave their names with the wood so that it will not get mixed, and the proper credits can be given. —An inmate of the Middlebury, Vt. jail told members of the Young Men's Christian Association, who proposed hold ing religious Cervices there, that they might come whenever it was convenient ; they would always find them at.home. '—There is a boy living in Woodward township, Lycomiog county, seventeen years of age, who is six feet eight inches high, and weighs over two hundred lbs. And there is a girl in Middlebury town ship, Tioga county, fourteen years of age, and weighs four hund lbs. —A Pennsylvania negro went to.sleep with his bead on the railroad track, the other day. A baud-car came along and ran over him before it could be stopped, The nem, however, only complained of having Ueumniked up, and demanded the price of astir Wit; or he would sae the Ceeporadottnader the civil tight* NIL glioctilautem Itichntond , * First Calamity. THE BURNING ON THE THEATRE IN 1811— THE TERRIBLE PANIC AMONG TILE SPEC TATOR§ AND A.DORRIBLE LOSS OF LIFE. The following account of the burning of the Richmond Theatre on the night; of Dec. 27th, 1811, will be read with mourn ful interest in connection with the details heretofore given of the occident in the Capitol building in April last. We quote from the Richmond Enquirer of Due. 28, 1811: In the whole course , of our existence we have never taken our pen under a deeper gloom than we feel at this moment. It falls to our lot to record one of the most distressing scenes which can happen in the whole circle of human affairs. The reader must excuse the incoherence of the narrative ; there is scarcely a dry eye in this distracted city. Weep, my fellow. citizens; for we have seen a night of vioe, which scarce any eye had seen, or ear bath heard, and no tongue can adequately tell. How can we describe the scene ? No pen can paint it; no imagination can conceive tt. A whole theatre wrapt in Names—a gay and animated assembly sud denlythrown on the very verge of the grave—Many of them, oh I how many, precipitated in a moment into eternity— I youth and beauty end old age and genius I overwhelmed in one promiscuous ruin—l shrieks. groans and human agony in every shape ii -that is the heartrending scene that we are called upon to describe. We sink under the effort, Reader, excuse our feel ings, for they are feelings of a whole city. Let us collect our ideas as well as we I can. On Thursdiry night a new play and a new afterpiece Were played for the bene- I fit of Mr. Placide. Crowds swarmed to the theatre—it was the fullest house this season—there were not less than 600 pres ent. Thepiay went off ; the pantomine began, the first act was over. The whole scene was before us, and all around us was ; mirth and festivity. Oh, God! what a ) horrible revolution did tree minute pro duce. The curtain rose on the second act of the pantomine—the orchestra was I in full chorus, and Mr. West came on to open the scene, when sparks of fire began to fall on the part of the stage, and .Mr. Roberson came Out in unutterable dis tress, waved his hand to the ceiling and uttered these appalling words: "The house Is on fire." His hand was immediately stretch lid forth to the persons in the stage box to help them on the stage and aid their retreat in that direction.' This is all that We caught of the stage, and the cry of lire, lire, passed with elec tric velocity through the house—every one flew from their seats to gain the lobby and stairs: The scene baffles all descrip tion, the most heart-rendiug cries pervad- ; ed the house: "save rue ; save me,' wives , ask` !r for their Joisleinds ; females and I children shrieking, white the garnering element came rolling on, its curling flames and column of smoke threatening to de vour every human being in the building.; Many were trod tinder foot. Several were thrownt back from the windows, from 1 which they were struggling to leap. The'. stairways were immediately blocked up: the throng was so great that many were raised several feet over the beads of the rest; the smoke threatened an instant de- struction. We cannot dwell on this pie- ture. We saw—we felt it—like others we gave ourselves up for lost. We cannot depict it.. Many leaped from the windows of the first story and were saved. Chil dren and females and men of all &scrip- Lions were seen 'to precipitate themselves on the grotmd'below. Most of these es- i taped, though several of these with bro- . ken legs and thighs and contusions. Most, ; if not all, in the pit escaped. Mr. Taylor. the last of the musicians that quitted the orchestra, finding his retreat by the back- i way cut off, leaped in the pit, whence he entered the semi-cireular avenue which leads to the door of the theatre, and found it nearly empty. He was the last who es allied front the pit. How melancholy that many who were in the boxes, above and below pushed for the lobbies. Many. as has been said, escaped through the windows; but most of ‘them had no oth er resource . thaii to descend. the stairs. MaUy escapediu this way, bud so great was the pressure that they retarded each other until the devouring element ap proached to sweep them into eternity. Several who even emerged from the build ing were so much scorched that they have since perished. Sortie even jumped front the second story windows; some others had been dreadfully burnt. .The fire flew with a rapidity almost be yond example; within ten minutes after ut caught the whole house was wrapt in, flames. The colored people in the.gallery, I most. of tffen4 eseaped through the stairs cut off from the rest of the house—some have no doubt fallen victims. The pit and boxes had but ono common avenue only through which the crowd could es ewe, save those oily who leaped through the wiudow. But the scene which ensued it is impos sible to paint—women with disheveled hair, fathers and mothers shrieking out for their children, husbands fur their wives. brothers for their sisters, filled the whole area on the outside of the building,. A few who had escaped plunged twain in to the flames to save some dear object of their regard, and they perished. The Gov ernor, perhaps, shared this melancholy fete. Others were frantic, and would Faye rushed to destruction but for the hand of a friend. The bells tolled—al most the whole town rushed to the fatal ot sp. The flames must have caught to the scenery from,some light behind. Robert son saw it when it was uo longer than his: arm. Young saw it on the roof when it fintburst, through. Every article of the theatre was, consumed, as well as the dwelling house next to it; but what is wealth m conaparison to the valuable lives which have gone forever? The whole t own i s B hronsied in woe. Heads of fam ilies extingoished forever. . Many ,and many is the house in which a chasm has been made that can never, be filled . up. We cannot dwell on this picture.. The .Enquirer was in mourning for several ilays.and business as a . general , ihh i rmavolputded. tholuno Dec. 31, 1811, is published biographical sketches of Gov. Smith and other promi nent Virginians who lost their lives by the conflagration. The whole number who had perished in the flames or died subsequently of injuries received was sev enty. The particulars of the sad disaster occupy many columns in the Enquirer of December, 1811, and January, 1812. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN A Brief Discourse Upon n Deadly Enemy of the Boys. [Never put off till to-morrow what you eau do day after to-morrow just as well Franklin.] This party was one of those persons w.hum they call philosophers. lie was twins, being burn simultaneously in two different houses in the city of Boston. The houses remain standing unto this day, and have signs upon them worded in ac cordance with tho facts. The signs are considered well enough to have, though not necessary, because the inhabitants point out two birth places to the stranger anyhow, and sometimes as often as sever al times in the same day. The subject of this memoir was of a vicious disposition, and early prostituted his talents to the in vention of maxims and aphorisms calcu- fated to inflict suffering upon the rising generation of all subsequent ages. His simplest acts also were contrived with a view to their being held up for the emu lation of boys forever—boys who might otherwise have been happy. It was in this spirit that he became the son of a soap-boiler; and probably for no other reason than that the efforts of all future boys who tried to be anything might be looked upon with suspicion unless they were the suns of soap-boilers. With a malevolence which is without parallel in history, lie would work all day, and then sit up nights and let on to be studying algebra by the light of the smouldering l fire. so that all other boys might have to do that also or else have Benjamin Frank lin thrown up to them. Not satisfied with these proceedings, he had a fasbion of living wholly on bread and water, and studying astronomy at meal time—a thing which brought affliction to millions of boys since, whose fathers had read Fmk pernicious biography. His maxims were full of animosity to ward boys. Now-a-days a boy cannot fol low out a single natural instinct without tumbling over some of those everlasting aphorisms and hearing from Franklin on the spot. If he buys two cents worth of peanuts his father says, "Remember what ranklin said. my son: 'a groat a day is a penny a year,'" and the comfort is all gone out of those peanuts. If he wants to spin his top when he is done work his father quotes: "Procrastination is the thief of time." If he does a virtuous uc tion he never gets anything for it, because "Virtue is tlll its own re arcs." And boy is noUCa to death and deprive of his natural rest because Franklin said once, in one of his inspired flights of ma lignity : "Early to be•d and early to rise, Makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise, as if it were any o'Jject to a boy to be healthy. wealthy and wise on such terms. The sorrow that maxim has cost me through my parents experimenting on me with it tongue cannot tell. The legit imate result is my present state of general debility, indigence and mental aberration. My parents used to hare me up before nine o'clock in the morning, sometimes. when I was a boy. If they had let me take my natural rest, where would I have been now? Keeping store, no doubt, and respected by all. And what an adroit old adventurer the subject of this memoir was ! In order to get a chance to fly his kite on Sundae' he used to hang a key on the string and Sundae, on to be fishing for lightning. And a guileless public would go home chirping about the "wisdom" and the "genius of the hoary - Sabbath-breaker. If anybody caught him playing "mnmblcpeg" by him self after the age of sixty, he would im mediately appear to Is• mithering out how the grass grew—as if it was any of his business. My grandfather knew him well, and lie says Franklin was always,' fixed—always ready. If a body, during his old age, happened on him unexpected ly when he was catching flies, or making, mud pies, or sliding on a cellar door, he would look wise, rip out it maxim, and walk off with his nose in the air and his I cap turned wrong side before, trying to appear absent-minded and eccentric. He was a hard lot. Be invented a stove that would smoke your head off in four hours by the clock.'. One can see the almost devilish satisfae tion he took in it, by his giving it his name. He was always proud of telling how he entered Philadelphia for the first time with nothing in the world but two shil lings in his pocket, and four rollsof bread under his arm. Slit really it was nothing. Anvlody could have done it. To the subject of this memoir belongs the Minor of reeommending the army to go back to bows 1111(1 arrows in place of bayonets and muskets. 1-Ic dbserved with his customary force that the bayonet was very well. under circumstances; but he doubted whether it could be used with accuracy at long range. Benjamin Franklin did a great many notable things fur his country, and made her young name to be honored in many lands as the mother of such a son. It is not the idea of this memoir to cover it up. No ; the simple idea of it is to snub those pretentious maxims of hiss which he worked up with a great show of origi nality out of truisms that had become wearisome platitudes as early as the dis persion from Babel, and also to snub his stoves and his military inspirations, his unseemly endeavor to make himself eon spicuons when Ire entered Philadelphia, and his flying kite and fooling away his time in all sorts of such ways, when he' 'Might to have been foraging for' soap-fat, 'or constructive candle. I merely desired to do away with somewhat of the prevail ing calamitous idea among . the heads of families that Franklin acquired his genius by moonlight, and getting up in the night instead of waiting until morning like a Obristian,and. tiutt this programme rigid ly infliettutwillAtake a Frunklin•of every VOLUME XXVIiiwNIIMBER.O% father's fooL It is time these , gentldinen were finding out that these exclable ec centricities of instinct and conduct are only the evidences of genius,, not the er ectors of it. I wish I had been the father of my parent's longenongh to Make them comprehend this truth, and than: prepare them to. let their son have an easier. time of it. When I was a child I had t 9; boil soap, notwithstanding my father. was wealthy, and I had to get up early and study geometry at breakfaist, and peddle my own poetry, and do everything just as Franklin did, in the solemn hope that I would be a Franklin some day. And here I am.—.lfitrk Twain, in llto Galaxy. " Taller Dogs." MARL; TWAIN S DISTORT OF TILE FOUNDER OP TUE FAMILY AND RIB ILEUM When Ncah disembarked at Ararat he had scarcely touched the pier when he proceeded to tally his FELBf4eDseys: He hod just checked his last item in the list-a Mr. and Mrs. Bedbug—when the cring ing figure of a quadruped came sneaking down the gang plank with his tail be tween his legs. " Drat it, if there ain't that "slier dog!" says Noah, aiming a vicious kick with his brogan at the brute. But with a facility born of a long and bitter experience, the bnite dodged the projectile, and ejacula ted " ki-yi," which is Syriac for "declined with thanks," or " not for Jo"—be disap peared, while Noah, who had his sea legs on, was made to recover his equilibrium, on the back of his head. Noah arose, and, in accordance with the style prevalent among the patriarchs, be proceeded to soothe his affronted dignity by pronouncing a variegated anathema upon the yaller dog, which had character istically sneaked unobserved on board, in the confusion of putting to sea, and cal}- sized theCaptaitaat 'the first port.. He cursed that dog in body, limb, hide, hair • and tail, and all his generation, relations. and, kindred, by consanguinity, and his heirs and assigns. With this curse sticking to him' like a revenue stamp, the, yaller dog.canti,lielp being cussed. don't try, to help it He is an Ishriiaelite among dogs. Be receives the most oppressive eminesieg,in the form of brickbats, boots and hot wa ter, which makes his life an animated tar get excursion. lie boards around like a district school teacher, and it is meal time with him twenty four hours in the day.— 'l'he rest of the time lie bankers after something to eat. He is too omniverous fur an epicure. Cram him at Delmonico's and he would hunger for dessert at an Albany boarding house. He can't be utilized. Ile is too dead. As a swill cart locomotive, a hunter, or a sentinel, he is an ignominious failure.— The dog churn was a stralagic attemptio employ his waste energies, but butter had tor most, ne...2.5" 1 . ;. perenasion. No srausa,o maker dared foreclose his lien on the yaller dog, lest his customers transfer their patronage to some less au dacious dealer. lie has escaped the saus age maker. He always manages to belong to a rag ged, tobacco chewing, whiskey drinking master, whose business is swapping dogs and evading the dog tax. Ile is always pervaded with a liang-dog expression of guilt, and when retributive tin ware is fastened to his tail he flies " from the wrath to come" with a terrible sincerity. The yeller dog is—well to speak in ital ics, he is a slough. The Direct of Diet. Dieting is 'usually considered. to inn the Same thing as a kind of temporary starvation. The idea which the educated physician attaches to the tertri,,ii ions regulation of the quantity and quali ty of the food, according to the circum stances of each ease. A healthy 'Man may diet himself to keep well; an invalid ihav diet with a view to the recovery of his health •, yet the things eaten by the two will widely differ in their nature!, bulk and mode of preparation. A vast multitude nro suffering hourly' by the horrors of dyspepsia ; no two are precisely alike in all points, since there isl an endless variety of combinations a to. ate, set, occupation and temperament— let dyspepsia is always brought bu by over irregular eating; it could be banish ed from the world in a generation if the children were educated to eat properly— that is, moderately, regularly and slowly; the parents who do this will their chil -1 dren a greater good than by leaving them large fortunes, which in three eases out of four foster idleness, gluttony, and eve ry evil thing. As the rich can get anything to eat or drink whenever they want it,' they, with I indulged children, bring on dyspepsia. by eating irregularly, and without an appe tite. The poor—those who have to work for a living—induce the horrible disease I by eating too rapidly and at miseasonabh I boars ; mainly by eating heartily at sup per, and going to bed within an hoer r or two afterward. _ _ In the heyday of youth and manly vig or there nmy' not for a time be 'noticed any special ill•effeot from anch u fmtetice —in truth, it is at first inappreciable; but it is cumulative, and impossible not to' manifest itself at some time.'" " • r- ff -.lt. is Stated that Gen. Sigel is 'get ting ready and will lead 20,000 Germans in a descent on.:tlic Erncli coast. If so, it is a .violatiou of,tho neutrality laws and our stupid President will be called : upon to interim.. if Germans or.. Frenchmen wish to volunteer they eau do so bygoing to their respective countries. Organized expeditions from this country, on either side, should not and probably will not. be tolerated. Charles Diokens lived longer than Shakspeare. who died at 53 ; than Byron,. who died at 37 ; than Thackeray, who died at 52 ; than Burns, who died_ at , 37 and was oneyearyoung,er than gaeaulay , who died at 59. ••- • —One of our Wryer's vaatures to.aasert thatt aourting ia not Otogetlmo 10tor of love. • • vac. mms is . tinntict4 There is tumult In the helmet", There's clockin' on the tint Ts this a fore! proceedia l o ' , , - .0r b't A 14,0' 00 Methints ntAiftlq ' What's thhi? Some actirgn hetet "The ;Peelle' Haut' cotivestito-!.. - Nith . rooster need splielir." Lash 1 what a fearfhl tate ; nt stand here by the door 4— An ancient hen is doglike, And 'nod she has the Boer. Her neck looks lather wlthered 6 Fier feathers much decayed; That net) . Is slightly redder Than when she was a maid. Out spoke thbi ancient layer—. Her voles was thin and shrill— My sisters, 0 my sisters; This row ,nriU mak' me UI: Ye ken rm'no` a chicken, "I'm twenty-one the day"— "Her twenty I—eic a lee-er I heard O wee hen say. "The subject of my lecture Is on oor rights, ye hen— 'Tie time that we were crowin', As sure as PM a hen. Too long has we been hatchiu' For Ither 14iople's shelve s The time's arrived, my sisters, To hatch eggs Gor ootsela.• "Shall we gie n' oor scraplns , To feet azdtttir's , And line him drawl& mere us A stoppin' o' oor jaw? Let us be slaves one longer, For better let us die"— "I want to be a rooster," heard a'malden cry. 'I hate the stuck up monsters, Whasutd, and Fame. and fret: : 0 And think that we pair females.' ' Are only ituule'to pet ' _ rhapk..guidttess.llummnrer ' Lit Yet listened to their crow"— vmlMentise?' remarked ."Ye never had A beau." "When we shall hae Senate, Composed o female brains, To legislate on bonnets, And regulate our trains, We'll hoe oor lawyers: doctors, Our commerce and oor trade, And cut the horrid monsters"- ' "Don't see It," said our meld. "Of course we can't ignoretb!ntli Altho we cease their yokel We'll keen some bonnie roosters Wha'neither drink nor smoke. Noo hand round • the saucer; We've finished for tacky.- - Three chick ' r female sufl"ktge - 1.4.1111.0 Upon the spar below An ancient spyin' rooster Sot up an awfu' crow— " Gang home, ye clockin granola, Ye've pot per wark to do—. • • Gang haute and mind the chickato.- A-cook-ailoodle-do r A lahlnlsh • Legand. It is an old legend of - the Ithin'ethat every,Spring when the juices of the- vine begin to start and vine-dresser goes forth to, his , . work' !luta On). bruP l 4 o 4 Charlernagin; winks yearly ttp and &Min rurieng his , vine'yerds, scattering his sings on the'gtirderfs and flelds;" So the peasant goescherrilr forth to train, -and -prune and plant,: thinking all the while how* well his work will please his . , great sovereign. The larger the vintage and the more copious the flow of sparkling wine, when it is pressed from the tortured I luscious fruit, the more he considers the King has blessed him. Re know it is but an idle legend. But the husbandman who goes forth in God's love and fear and plants and BOWS that which will be b blessing to mankind, , may know that hitt SOvereign-fioes .walk vp and.down his fields and scatter. hlessinp. He can pray with a clear conscience for such a blessing, for he knowi he is &ring &good work. He is planting that Which will feed the hungry, and add comfort and cheer to the hearthstone. But who can .ask God's blessings on products rail ed only to be brewed into nauseous beer, which should sink its partaker to the brnte's level; or on beantilields of waving grain, which are raised only to be de vonn:d by the worm of the still ; or eve 9 on beautiful clusters of purple grapes, which are only to be "trodden in the wine press? Oh, it is better to eat our dry crust than to fare sumptuously every day on money earned in such crooked ways. Such fields have no blessings of the Master upon them. 'Prosperity attending them is only a seeming good. Soon it will end in `the blackness of despair. 4111. Salutary Filects of Laughter. Laughter' is always acknowledged to be very healthy and especially helpful to the digestive organk ond lately. it mils . to -have had; exceptionally benefloent *Acta. A Scotch paper, reported a few week! "since that a farmer couvnlsed by the rid bi° ration& of Lard Pundreary, as inter , 'pretelby Mr. Southern, had nnualiekue . an obtrusive !half isovereign which •SUM successfully resisted, the persnasiva art at scientiiio.surgeons in Edinburgh; „ and an lonian paper now records a 110211'00. less salutary result achieved by - similar rums on an old Bengal 'Many ! This veteran was at the point of death, owing to an abscess in his liver, : when, I fortunately for him, he read, a !Teich of the commander-in-chief expressinghis be. lief in liie ahaohite perfection of-tho . na dye. army in India, as at resent; organis ed. The reenitwas a. fit of laughter that the, abscess gave , and his life was saved. Nr"Dad; have you been tollormuse nm said a ten year old boy. "No, my son.", "Well go, and mention 'my . name `to the 'door-keeper, and he'll take you round and show you everything." `Young .folks grow most when in love. it inortleottion: eigb4. 1011404141 .11D r;d)