. , . 1 •;.1.rj . J,111 . Y 3.:r1.1:5 •.:I1 1 . . . , . . ' .: ' . s. . .) ' ' . (:: ; • • ' ' i C RA ; . , _, • ~... :.! , It 3 ~ . . ' ' T . , , . ". ,•' • . 1 . . . •,, . J. . r . . . .. _, . . . . E. B. HAWLEY, Proprietor. §usintso Carib. LITTLES & 111LAIKESLEB, m=orrt dame at TAW. Ocoee the one ceelligeft by U.B. O. P. Little, on Ilieln Week liestabee, Pa. (April 10. I. &Lem& " 610. r. MILL B. a IILAWMIUM B. ICKINTLI. C. C. Facreoe, W. 11. McCann. i11ie1k1632113, rAusar ac CO. Dealers In Dry Goods, Clothing, Ladles and Misses Ise Mines. Mao, agents for the great American ..renew Cadres Onapsuy. [Montrose. Pa., ap.1:76, CHARLES N. STODDARD, Dealer In,Boota and Shoal. Hata and Capt. Leather and ?Wings Wain Street. VI door below Searle'. Hotel. Work lathe to order, and repairing done neatly. Maktaosa. Jan, I. MO. LEWIS KNOLL, BRAVING -AND HAIR DRESSING. Obey In the new Postale., building, where he will be karat ready to attend ail who may saint anything In Ids Rms. Montrose, Pa. Oct. IS, ISM P. REVNOILDS, AUCTIONEER--SelleDry Goods, and Iterebas Meads at Vendlin. MI olden left at my home will maitre preempt attention. bet. 1, Itall—tf 0. N. HAWLEY, DEALER In DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, CROCKERY Broderare, Hate, Cap, Boota.Khoes, Reedy Made Cloth tag, Paints, Oar, ere., New Milford, Pa. Pent. 8, 'GO DR. 8. W. DAYTON, IPAYSIMAN - 1. BURGEON, tenders ht. Perelees to the enlaces of Great Beod and vicinity. Office at bin residence, oppoalte Barman House, 0 . 1 Bend Tillage. Sept. ISt. t ,'—ti LAW OFFICE rnalangatnir a moCOLLILTM. Attorneys and Cnon• senors at. Law. Orace In the Brick Block over the Bank. [Montrose Ang. 4. it •. Ltuaaasu.ttt. . - J. B. McCot.t.ca. A. & D. R. LATHROP, DEALERS in Dry Goods, Groceries, crockery and glassware, table and pocket enticev. Patois, oils, dye stak►, Hate. boots and shoes, eolr leather. Perfumery be. Brick Block, adjoining the Bank. Montrose. Magnet a, ha39.—lf A. Lannon, - D. H. Laumor. A. 0. WARREN, ATTOILIWET A . LAW. Bounty, Back Pay. Pewter,. and Brew on Claim. attended to. 0111 re d oer below Boyd'', Store, Montrore.Pa. [Au. 1,'69. W. W. WATSON, ATTORNEY UT LAW, Montrose, Pa. Other with L P. Pitch. [Montrose, Aug. ,I, IS/Z. 31. C. SUTTON, Auctioneer, and Insurance Agent, sal MI Pelendevtlle, P.. E. S. GILBERT, 41..ta.coldlerarttsez". Great. Bend, Pa. 171. Ig. sale Pitt AMA ELV, Q. MI. ..A.111.13410131.002". Ayr. I. JIM. Address, IBTooklyn, Pa 3011% GROVES, 11SMONABLE TAROS, Montrose, Ps. shop over Chandler's Store. Ali orders tilled In first-rale style. a amine done on short noUrt. and warranted to W. W. SMITH, cwaltrurr AND CHAIR MANUFACTIMERI3.—IrnoI wr Ilali area. / 1 1.!Arose. PL. law. 1. MS. B. BURRITT, DILLLEIttn Staple and Fancy Dry Good.. Crockery laardware, Iron, Stoves, Dra VI. 01Is.and !Paints, Bootrand Shoes. Hato & Caw , . Fury, Buffalo Robes. areardei , Provisions. GA., New Yilford, Pa. DU. E. P. HINES. lac permanently located at !Mandeville for the par PON of practicing medicine and moray in all its brandies. He rimy be bland at the Jackson Bonne. Wild hour. tram a a_ as., to tt p. m. PrlitadarWa. Aug. 1. 1169. fiTROUD It BROWN, TIRE AND LIFE I:7I3:JAA SCE AGENTS. Al! business attended to prompti), on fair terms. Of. d rst door north of • Moran.. Hotel," west l oldo rablle Aryan., Montrose, Pa. • surnos srtonn. - - ILlturctits L. Drumm JOEL'S SAIITTEII, sursrearruLLY anoonnees that he is 0.,w pit pared to eat all kinds of Garments In the zoos. bahlonable Style, warranted to St with elegance Ed seas. Shop over the Post Orem. Montrose. Pa. WM D. LUSH, •TTO&ABY AT LAW, Montrose. I's. ,Oftleo oppo. stveltio Sobel' House, nom the Court if se. An=. 1. 11169.—tf DD. W. W. SMITH. DENTIST. Dooms over Boyd i Corvrin's Bard ware Stem Ocoee boars from ll a. go. to 4 o.m. Montrose, Ang. 1, 1659.-11 _ ABEL TERRELL, D RALIK In Drugs, Patent Dedicines„ Chemicals Liquors, Mute. Giin. o lv Studs. Tsrnh'he.• Win ' Glass, Groceries, Glass Ware, Wall and Window Pa, per,Eitoneurare, Lamps. Kerosene. lisebintir Olio, Gunk Ammunition, Knives, Spectacles Drashes, Finer Goods, Jewelry, Perin ,• -r, La.— being tone orate molt nomerods, extensive, and valuable collections of Goods In Susquehanna Zstabllshed In 160. [Montrose, Pa. D. W. SEABLF, ATTOMMET AT LAW. office over the Store of A. Lathrop, to the Beek Block, Montrose, Pa. [aurG9 DU. W. L. RICiIARDSON, PISTSICL&N & BURGEON, tesulers his profession.] ferried to the eltistrus of lionnose and vicinity.- 015ce u his resitlenee, coo the corner east of Sayre & Brow. laundry. (Aug. 1. 1e69. DR. E. L. GAD.DICER, PIITSICLUir and BIIIIGEON. Montrose., Pa. Miser .*pedal attention to disease* of the Heart and Lamas and all itnegical diseases. °Moe over W. B. Dun., Batas at tleatle's Hotel. [Aug. 1. IBM DITIONS & NICHOLS, Das. 4RB A a Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals. Dye s! ads. Pa Oils, Varnish. Liquors, Spices. Fancy set.crea, Pate Medicines, Perfumery and Toilet Ar ticles. gsrPreareptleas carotally compounded.— Pantie Aventie,above tlearle`a Motel, Montrose. Ps A. B. Bawls, .. Amos Mimosa. Aug. 1, ISO. DR. E. L. HANDRICIE, PETIIICIAN & SURGEON. respectfully tender* hi professional services to the citizen of Priendoelll. and eictutty. israllee lothe office of Dr. Lee , Boards at J. llosford's. Aug. I, UM. PROF. MORRIS, The Hayti Barbee. returns hie thanks for the kind pat - mane thralls, enabled hlat to pet the best ma—ft ! ba I hwy . 's& time to tell the whole stony. bat tome and see Ow news tOdrlst the Old Stand. Ito toad Isadditp In the shop. [April ta. 11370. DENTISTRY. those in want of false Teeth or other dental work sheen! lan at the Mike of the retweribens. who are pre pared todo all kinds af work Meets line on abort o• Pertkitler *lteration paid to making foil and l setts el teeth we gold. s&er, or aluminum plate ; Westaa's etc companies' ; the two latter reeDnable to an of limerbewer sabslanoes now used for dental prates. seramentglatnettel regalred. and made Moon to nattall slap& The adweetags t wans e itt, 7 ,k. dorm by Perwilorrollio• ailed and eurpcsalides must be appareled to All went Plane call and examine coed. maw aphis wort at air tam. over Boyd* Co's bard oars Mote. W. W. SMITH BBOTHEIL Hontram, ura.—tr GOLD JEWTF;LEY. • IStormal _lagspfiapstly. aoatronltow. ft, Rim. ABEL TVERELL. fort', foram 0,114414211• I, WomtemaPit Eiftilsla DX G. V. LTOX. Why b all this ceaselea clamor, Swelling (mild through tan Wad ? Why was raised that atarlees banner, Flaunting by bustle hand? Behold! what means, so bold haeribed, That " Woman's Rights," Immndifled I Listen the Interpretation, Outflowing from Sorosis, dread : " Woman would Improve her station, By assuming man's Instead. Not only equal, but excel As would prove the sequel well." " Doctor, Lawyer, Judge ar Jury, AU offices perfbrm with grace ; Politics, harangue with fkrr3r, Aspire to Congress—no disgrace— In brief, dethrone fell terror's reign, And the world redeem again." And each this creed, its test and tenor, From viragos, who lead the van In wild crusade,•and saint and sinner, The chastest white, and black, and tan May Join all with magic wand, And flying colors—happy land ? Woman, pure angelic woman, how expressive is the word, Something more divine than human, Language sweeter who has heard? Woman, beautithi, lovely, true— Woman, wise, and as mcdest too, He for valor, contemplation, She for sweet, attractive grace." England's bard thus on relation Of man and woman, and the place Assigned to each by Nature's God, Which disobey and feel His rod. Woman, not that thou art lower, And in creation less than man, Do I thus thy rightful power Deny, to change the present plan, For I would give all their due, When profit would thereby accrue But sure, because far more relined And delicate thou an, than he, Endowed like him with noble mind, But different in quality ; Bence, "Womanaßighta" would thee abuse, Ulyases' bow thou couldat not are, Oh ! woman, them heed no appeal, TWA would thee turn from home, sweet home, ILO heaven designed It for thy weal, Nor spurn it and unsheltered roam. Remember Eden's fruit and fa!l, And touch not this, nor ruin all. Nearer Home. One sweetly solemn thought, ('ome to me o'er and o'er— I'm neartw home to-day Than ever I've been before. Naves' my &thee' home, Where the mansions be; Nearer the great white Throne— Nearer the Jasper sea. Nearer the bounds of life, Where we lay our burdens down ; Nearer leaving the MU, Nearer gaining the crown. But lying darkly between, Winding down through the night. In the dim and unknown stream That leads me at last to light. Closet, &we: my steps Come to the dark abysm. Closer . death to my lips Posses the awful chrism. Father, perfect my trust, Strengthen the night of my faith ; Let me feel as I would when I Mad On the rock of the shore of death. Feel as I would when my het Are slipping on the brink ; For it may be Fm nearer home, Nearer now than I think• VARIETIES. —The back door bell--a pretty kitch en maid. —Calico scrap books are a young fern ine freak. —Working on the Duca—running a medical college. Blunderbuss—kissing the wrong wo man. —A good role—back your friends, and face your enemies. —lron is a tonic when 2,400 lbs. of it are taken at once. —Yun (=not preserve happy domestic pairs in family jars. —Song for the herring fishermen : 'Roe brothers, Roe.' —A son of a gun is supposed to be one of the old stock. —Does a large mouth constitute an open countenance. —The man who carries everything be fore him—the waiter. —The two kings that rule in America , jo-king and smo-king. —One that an importunate office beg gar am always get—" get out." The most useful thing after all in the lung run—breath. —When are some comic papers sharp est ?—w h en they are filed. —Paper moslin—any attempt to re strain the freedom of the press. —Of all the laws of trade none find greater WI:1r than the buy-laws —The dearest on earth—the store where they do not advertise. —Why have widows the right to flirt ? Because the Bible says the widow's mite. —Justifiable atingirudging a friend the right to laugh at our expense. MONTROSE, PA., WEANESPAX, . NOV.: _.9, Pistelintous. Murk Toren on the new Crime. This country, during the last thirty or forty years, has produced some of the Most remarkable cases of insanity of which there is any mention in history. For instance, there was the Baldwin case, in Ohio, twenty-two years ago. Baldwin from boyhood up, had been of a vindictive, malignant, quarrelsome nature. He put a boy's eye out once, and never was heard upon any occasion to utter a regret for it. Ile did many such things. Rift at last he did something that was serious. He called at a house, just after dark, one evening, knocked, and when the occupant came to the door, shot him dead, and then tried to escape, but was captured. Two days before, he had wantonly insult ed a helpless cripple, and the man he af terwards took sweet vengence upon, and with an assassin bullet knocked him down. Such was the Baldwin case. The trial was long and exciting; the com munity was fearfully wrought up. Men said this spritful, bad-hearted villain had caused grief enough in his time and now he should satisfy the law. But they were mistaken. Baldwin was insane when he did the deed—they bad not thought of that. By the arguments of counsel it was shown that at IWO in the morning on the day of the murder, Baldwin became insane and remained so for eleven hours and a half exactly. This just covered the' case comfortably, and be was acquitted. Thus, if an unthinking and excited corn- munity had been listened to instead of the arguments or counsel, a poor, crazy creature would have been held to a fearful responsibility for a mere freak of mad ness. Baldwin went clear, and although his relatives and friends were naturally incensed against the community for their injurious suspicions and remarks, they said let us go for this time, and cense sequently did not pnnsocuto. Tlso Hold wme were very wealthy. The same Bald win had momentary fits of insanity twice afterward, and on both occaasions killed People he had grudges against. And on both these occasions the circumstances of killing were so aggravated, and the murd ers so seemingly heartless and treacherous, that if Baldwin had not been insane he would have been hanged without the shadow of a doubt. As it was, it requir ed all his political and family influence to get him clear in one of the awes, and cost him not less than 81,000 to get clear in the other. One of these men he had notoriously been threatening to kill for twelve years. The poor creature, hap pened, by the merest piece of ill-fortune, to come. along a dark alley at the very moment that Baldwiu's insanity came up on him, so he was shot in the back with a gun loaded with slugs. It was exceeding ly fortunate for Baldwin that his insanity came on him Just when it did. Take the case of Lynch Hackett, of Pennsylvania. Twice, in public, he at tacked a German butcher by the name of Bemis Fiddlier, with a cane and both times Feldner whipped him with his fists. Hackett was a vain, wealthy, violent, gen tleman, holding blood and family in high esteem and believed that a reverent respect was due his great riches. He brooded over the shame of his chastisement for two weeks, and then, in a momentary fit of insanity, armed himself to the teeth, rode into town, waited a couple of hours until he saw Feldner coming down the street with his wife on his arm, and then, as the coupleparaed the doorway in which he had partially concealed himself, he drove a knife into Feldner's neck killing him instantly The widow caught the limp form and eased it to the earth. Both were drenched with blood. Hack ettjocosely remarked to her that as a professional butcher's recent wife, she could appreciate the artistic neatness of the job that left her in a condition to marry again, in case she wanted to. This remark, and another, which he made to a friend, that his position in society made the killing of an obscure citizen simply an "eccentrcity" instead of a crime, were shown to be evidence of instanity and Hackett escaped punishment. The jury were hardly inclined to accept these as proofs, at first, inasmuch as the prison er had never been insane before the mur der and under the tranquilizing effect of the butcherin g had immediately regained his right min d—but when the defense came to show that a third cousin of Hackett's wife's step-father was insane, and not only insane, but had a nose the very counterpart of Hackett's it was plain that insanity was hereditary in the family and that Racket had come by it by legiti matel inheritance. Of course the jury 1 then acquitted him. But it was a merci ful providence that Mrs. Hackett's peo ple bad been afflicted as shown, else Hackett would certainly have been hang ed. However, it is not possible to account for all the marvellous cases of insanity that have come under the public apace iu the last thirty or forty years. There was the Durgin case, in Is ew Jersey, three years ago. The servant girl, Bridget Durgin, at dead of night, invaded her mistress bedroom and carved the lady literally to pieces with a knife. Then she dragged the body to the middle of the floor and beat and banged it with chairs and such things. Nest she opened the feather beds and strewed the contents around, saturated everything with kero sence and set fire to the general wreck. She now took the young child of the murdered woman in her blood smeared hands and walked off through the snow, with no shoes on, to a neighbor's house, a quarter of a mile off, and told a string of wild, incoherent stories about some men coming and setting fire to the house; and then she cried piteously, and without seeming to think there was anything sug gestive about the blood upon her hands, her clothing and the baby, volunteered the remark that she wag afraidthese men had murdered her mistress! Afterward, by her own confession and other testi mony, it was proved- that the mistress had always been kind to the girl ; Conse quently there was no revenge in the murder, and it was also shown that the girl took nothing away from the burning house, not even her own shoes, and con sequently robbery was not the motive. NoW the reader says, "Here comes that same old plea of insanity again." But theseaderhas deceived himself this time. No arch plea was offered in her defence. The judge sentenced her, nobody per secuted the Governor with petitions for her pardon, and she was promptly hang ed. There was that youth in Pennsylvania, whose curious confession was published a year ago. It was simply ts conglomeration of incoherent drivel from beginning to end—and so was his lengthy speech on the scaffold afterward. For a whole year he was haunted with a desire to disfigure a certain young woman so that no one would marry her. He did not love her himself, and he did not want to marry her, and yet was opposed to anybody else's escorting her.' On one occasion he de clined to go to a wedding with her and when she got other company, lay in wait for the couple by the road, intending to make them go buck or kill the escort. After spending sleepless nights over his rulling desire for a full year, he at last attempted its execution—that is attempt ed to disfigure the young woman. It was a success. It was permanent. In trying to shoot her cheek (as she sat at the sup per table with her parents and brother and sister)in such a manner as to mar:its comeliness, one of his bullets wandered a little out of the course, and she dropped dead. The very last moment of his life he bewailed the ill luck that made her move at the critical moment. And so he died apparently half persuaded that some how it was chiefly her own fault that she got killed. This indict was hanged. The plea of insanity was not offered. The recent case of Lady Mordannt, in England, had proved beyond cavil that the thing we call common prostitution in America, is only insanity in Great Britian. Her husband wanted a divorce, but as her cheerful peculfaritirs were the offspring of lunaey, and consequently she could not be held responsible for them, he had to take iscr :wain. it is sad to think of a dozen or two English iJorus taking advantage of a poor crazy woman. In this country, if history be worth any thing to judge by, the husband would have rented a graveyard and stocked it. and then brought the divorce suit after ward. In which case the jury would have brought him in insane, not his wife. Insanity is certainly on the increase in the world, and crime is dying out. There are no longer any murders—none worth mentioning, at any rate. Formerly, if you killed a man, it was possi ble that you were insane; but now, if you kill a man, it is evidence that you are a lunatic. In these days, too, if a per son of good family and high social stand ing steals anything, they call itkleptoman ia and send him to the lunatic asylum. If a person of high standing squanders his fortune in dissipation, and closes his career with strychnine or a bullet, "tem porary aberration" is what was the mat ter with him. And finally, as before not ed, the list is capped with a new and curious madness iu the shape of whole sale adultry. Is not this insanity plea becoming rather common ? Is it not so common that the reader cotfidently expects to see it offered in every criminal case that comes before the courts ? And is it not so cheap, and so common, and often 80 trivial, that the reader smiles derision when the newspapers mention it? And is it not curious to note bow very often it wins acquittal for the prisoner? TAtte ly it does not seem possible for a man to so conduct himself, before killing another man, as not to be manifestly insane. If he talks about the stars, he is insane. If he appears nervous and uneasy an hour before the killing, he is insane. If he weeps over a great grief, his friends shake their heads fear that he is "not right." If, an hour after the murder, he seems ill at ease, preoccupied and excited, he is un questionably insane. Really, what we want now is not a law against crime, but a law against insanity. There is where the true evil lies. And the penalty attached should be imprisonment, not hanging. Then it might be worth the trouble and expense of trying the General Coleses and the General Sickleses, becamev juries might lock them tip for brief terms, in deference to the majesty of the law • but it is not likely that any of us will live to see the murderer of a sedceer hanged. Perhaps. if the truth was confessed, not many of ns wish to live that long. If I seem to have wandered from my snhjeet and thrown in some surplusage, what do I care ? With these evidences of a wander ing mind present to be debarred from of fering to customary plea of insanity? - - --.... AO ....- --- Patting up Stoves. We do not remember the exact date of the invention of stoves, hut it was some years ago. Since then mankind have been tormented once a year by the dif ficulties that beset the task of putting them up, and getting the pipes fixed. With all our Yankee ingenuity no Ameri can has invented any method by which the labor of putting up stoves can be lessened. The job is as severe and vexa tious as humanity can endure, and gets more so every year. Men always put up their stoves on a rainy day. Why, we not know • never heard of any exception to this rule. The first step to be taken is to put on a very old and ragged carat, under the impression that when he gets his mouth full of plaster it will keep his shirt bosom clean. Next, the operator gets his hand inside the place where the pipe ought to go, and blacks his linger, and then he carefully makes a black mark down the aide of his nose. Having his face properly the victim is ready to begin. the ceremony. The head of the family—who is the big goose of the sacrifice—grasps one side of the bottom of the stove and his ••wife and hired girl take bold of the other side. In this way the load is started from the woodshed toward the parlor. Going through the door the head of the family will carefully swing the door around • and jam his thumb against the doorpost. This part of the ceremony is never othit ed. Having got the family comfort in place, the next thing is to .find the legs. Two of these are left inside the stove since the spring before. The other must be hunted after twenty-fire. Aninntea. They are usually found under the coal. Then the head of the family holds up the other while other two am fixed, and one of the first two falls. oat. By the -time the. store is °nits legs he is reckkow, and takes off his old coat regardless' of his linen. Then he goes for the pipe and gets two cinders in his eye. It .don't make ' any difference bow well the pipe was put .up last year, it will always be found. a little too short or a little too long. The. bead of the family jams his bat over hiss eyes and taking a pipe under each arm, goes to the tin shop to have it fixed. When he comes back he steps on one of the best parlor chairs to see if the pipe tits and his wife makes him get down for fear he will scratch the varnish off the chair with the nails in his boot heels. In get ting down he will surely step on. the cat, and he may thank his stars that it is not the baby. Then he gets ECU old chair and climbs up the chimney again, to find that in cutting the pipe off, the end has been left too big fur the hole in the chimney. So lie goes to the woodshed and splits one side of the end of the stove pipe with an old axe and squeezes it in his hands to make it smaller. Finally he gets the pipe in shape and finds the stove does not stand true. Then himself and wife and hired girl move to the left and the legs fall out again. Nest it is to move to the right More difficulty now with the legs. Move to the front a little. Elbow not even with the hole in the chimney, and the bead of the family goes again to the woodshed after sonic little blocks. While putting the blocks under the legs, the pipe comes out of the chimney. That remedied, the el bow keeps tipping over to the great alarm of the wife. Head of the family gets the dinner table out, puts the old chair on it, get his wife to hold the chair, and bal ances himself on it to drive some nails in the ceiling. At last he gets the nails in to the ceiling. Drops the hammer on his woe 6 neaa. dt lan lac gcto bhe driven, make a wire swing to hold the pipe, hammers a little here, pulls a little there, takes a long breath and announ..cii the ceremony finished. Job never put up any stove& It would have ruined his reputation if he bad. The above programme, with unimportant variations, has been carried out in many respectable families during the last season —Mark Twain. Our Mother. Round the idea of one's mother, the mind of a man clings with fond affection. It is the first deep thought stamped upon our infant hearts when yet soft and capa ble of receiving the moat profound im pressions, anti the after feelings of the world are more or less light in compari son. Even in our old age we look back to that feeling as the sweetest we have through life. Our passions and our will fullness may lead us fur from the object of our filial love; we learn even to pain her heart, to oppose her wishes, to violate her commands ; we may become wild, headstrong and angry at her counsels or opposition ; but when death bas stilled her monitory voice, and nothing but still memory remains to receapitulate her vir tues and good deeds, affection, like a flower beaten to the ground by a past storm, raises up her head and smiles among her tears. Round that idea, as we have said, the mind clings with fond affection; and even when the early period of our loss, forces memory to be silent, fancy takes the place of rememberance and twines the image of our dead parent with a garland of graces and beauties, and virtues, which we doubt not she poss essed. Advice to Young Dien. Seize every moment for improving your mind. Be careful in choosing your compan ona To whatever occupation you may be called as a means of obtaining a liveli hood, determine to understand it well and work heartily at it. Accustom yourself to act kindly and courteously toward every one. Carefully avoid all extravagant habits. Determine to possess a character for honesty. Cultivate a strict regard for truth. If your parents are living do your ut most to promote their comfort and happi ness. Recollect your success in life must de pend upon your own exertion& Respect religion, and do unto others as you would they should do unto you. Shim the tippling shop, the billiard room, and other vile dens of vice and ob soen it v. Be ie m pera te in all things.. Be specially regardful of the Sabbath, and on no account desecrate it. Make yourself useful. Above all things preserve a clear con science. Unless already hardened by crime its gentle proinptings will guide you aright iu the paths of duty and hon or. .W - Lost wealth may be restored by industry, the wreck of health May be re gained by temperance ; fommiten knowl edTe by study; alienated friendship smoothed into forgetfulness; even for feited reputation won' by penitence and virtue; but who ever again looked upon his vanished hours? Whoever recalled slighted years, stamped them with wis dom, or erased from heaven's record the fearful blot or wasted time ? —According to the recent statistics the average Englishman measures between five feet six inches and five feet seven in ches, and weighs 145 pounds; the Irish man is about - the mine height, but 'Weighs only 138 pounds, while the Scotchman is an inch taller, and weighs 155 pounds. —At an agricultural hone trot in Scctuton, Pa., last week, the driver of one of the horses was thrown from his . sulky, while his horse kept on: his wa y. Be gathered himself up,' 'took a short' p,ut across the ground, intercepted his horse, remounted the sulky, and 'won 'the treat and the race. „ . . . DIUMBER, '44 07, .. • - i IncF, Es- —why i s a wor4 out Aboel like ancient ; Greet:et ~.Icceinse it MICE' had a Solon. Lavere are goods iteantetr,'' for etteu 'ID the eteriniest:areather they *teatime" otrtau meek& ' : —A bill-iiostei inayllo. described as a man who dicks to' trisirles4 and whose businesd it le, to atibk: —A Western graveyard yields cucum ber& Its occupants both cumber and cumber the ground. —Why cannot a gentleman legally p 0.7- sess a short walking stick ? Because it can never be-long tohinl. —The World says ;. "liaving iniceess fully invaded all, branches, woman now wants to take the stump... —The Bonartes were originallypoOr, but the first Napoleon- eve each of his brothers a crontespiecestoitart with. —Wh,y are buries in cold. weatherlike medial some gossips ? Because they are the bearers of idle tails. —To prevent beer from going sour— introduce two cabmen into your cellar, and give them the key to your cask. —Sheridan says that the Prussians treated him Ithidly. Any one that treats Sheridan comprehends his weakness. —The Press—lt ex-presses truth, re dresses error, de-presses tyranny, and op- presses none. —What is the difference between a church organist and the influenza ? One stops the nose, and the other knows the stops. —" We know a girt' says some one, "so industrious that when she has noth ing else to do she sits and knits her brow. —Thera are many important opera tions on foot of which the public knows nothing—those of the chiropodists, for instance. —A literary man on retiring into pri, vale life said that his connection with the press had thawed, and resolved itself into adieu! —Mrs. Partiugton says that since the invention of the needle gun, there is no reason why the women shouldn't fight as well as the men. —lt is reasonable to suppose beer was made in the ark. The kangaroo was seen to go in with hops, and the bear was al ways bruin. Volage, who is a single man, la gen really considered honest, but says there are times when hie fingers itch to hook a dress. —A young lady lately dismissed her sweetheart for wearing a superfluity of beard. She said he was a great deal too hirsute to suit her.- —A young man in Indian, wbile out hunting a few days ago, succeeded iu bagging his mother-in-law, whom he mis took perhaps for a deep! —Censure is the tai a tnan pays to . the pablie for being eminent. —Mrs. Partington says she gets up ev ery morning at the shrill crow of the chandelier. —A happy wedded couple in Indiana weighed just 1,000 lbs. —A sagacious philosopher has discov ered that if the earth really ho hollow, we all hve upon a mere crust. —ln English hotels the women ser vants carry up the luggage, while the men carry up cards and ninon errands. —A revenue collector in Missouri re cently tried to collect fifty cents a head in a ball room—the tax on hops. —Miss Kate Field is ahead of most young ladies. She has 101 engagements on band ; 100 to lecture, and one to get married. —A person who is too nice an observer of the business of others, like one who is too curious in observing the movement of bees, will often get stung for his curiosi ty. —Carpenters and masons get fifty-four cents a day in the cities of Sweden, but fifty cents will buy more in Sweden than five times that sum would in this coun- —The young men in Cincinnati are greatly interested in the orphans since the uncle of a young and beautiful girl in the asylum has died and left her $50,000. —A date young wife says "When I want a nice snug day fill to!myself, I tell George mother is coming, and then I see nothing more of him until one in the morning." • —None enjoy life so little as those who have nothing to do. The active only have the true relish of life. He who does not know what it is to labor knows not what it is to enjoy: —A Philadelphia woman earns her liv ing by fainting -in front :of -large ktores and hotels, into which she is carried. A hpurse is made up for her, and she is sent ome in a hack. --Crebillion the younger once said that a really flue woman never reaches her trne loveliness until she is at least thirty. There is encouragement for women to tell the truth about their ages. —The following epitaph may -ho aeon on a tombstone in a cemetery in Kittery, Maine : " I lost my life on tle raging sera ; A sovereign God does as he please— The Kittery friends they did appear, And my remains they buried hero." —lf a man sleeps soundly, has a good appetite, with no unpleasant reminders after meals the bodily habits being 'rep. lar every day, be bad better let blinself Edon, whether be is big as w, hogshead or thin ow u fence MIL —k 'philanthropist at Albany boa two ceeded in, reducing the priee.of ,cabbages in•that city f0i41.1,12: to sBFler, hundred :by the discovery of a i)bisonoms w_orm:up. 'on the leaves of some speebbens selected from the suburban gardens. Qpg,sf the most. brutal auldegrnding kinds of punishment is that : Aftieted by tbe' A WM bet - 14,1101in head After itntiiisonment, bat Aloes rakafteraloggitig. • The' faith' liavilt a kiting tehind . !which sunlit; tmeilly. YOu may heal thelacerated.flesir,linkdie scars remain., I have seen meg. 4sg4. but I niker saw anysoo44 res:ult . fr9m.f.h 4 , E 1 ; 1 4" ishment. 'OW the contrAry; hirdens the man, makes him.gloomrand 'morose, closes his heart to every`. kindly •feeling, destrays his faith—if he ever bad any—in the goodness of his fellow man, and ulti mately sends him to bis'graire to hide his sears there. We were mustered oneevening to wit ness corporal punishment which was to be inflicted on a private soldier for habi tual drunkenness„ and making_away with his regimental necessaries. He was a stout tine looking fellow 01-er six feet in height, broad shouldered midtMuscular. He was stripped hare from the waist up ward, and his hands were fastened Up to the gratings in front of him. Nearly eight hundred men were drawn up in a hollow square. The commanding officer gave the word. - "One !" said the drum major. The cat descended, and nine small Pur ee streaks on the prisoner's back showed its effect. "Two !" "Three!" At the fourth stroke the blood spurted out and ran down the prisoner's back in little puddles. After twenty-flee lashes had been given, a man with fresh cat pre pared to inflict the other half. "T wen ty-six !" The cat descended with fearful force. Pica of skin stuck to the lash, the blood flowed in strwms, and the pristiner's back looked like a piece of raw bleeding flesh. At the forty-fifth 'stroke the prisoner fainted. The assistant snrgeim adminis tered a Stimulant. which revived hirmand the remaining five were given. During the trying ordeal the prisoner uttered neither cry or groan, but his face was deathly pale, and his eyes dull and heavy. As his guards lead him away to prison to undergo the remaining portion of his sentence—eighty-four day's imprison ment with hard inbor—he raised his eyes to the thee of the commanding officer,and muttered, "If ever -I have the good for tune of going into action, antler your command, I'll shoot you or be shot.— Three years in the British army. Tho following article from the Syracuse Courier in reference to balloons and carrier pigeons is quite interesting : The siege of Paris, strangely revives olden times, by suggestion. Since the fall of semimythic Babylon, the annals of war show no bombardment of such a city on Paris. 'the gay and - splendid capital of the world to day reproduces the scenes of old feudal days and the harsher exper iences of the middle ages. We are re minded by the spectacle now presented at Paris, of King Richard's war upon the fortified cities of the Saracens, and the endless sieges of medineval cities and ba ronial castles. Paris to day seeks to de fend itself on the inside of its surround ing line of exterior forts. The mortar and cannon 'are substituted, by modern warfare for the old battering rams. The besieged. meanwhile, seem to be pretty effectually shut out from the rest of the world. Balloons and carrier pigeons con stitute their only means of communica tion with the outside world—the one thing of modern growth, the other dat ing from remote antiquity. - The carrier doves owe their value' as messengers to their strong preception of locality, and their still stronger love of home. Very rarely is one found so dull as not to find. his way home by a direct line. Thrown np from places hundreds of miles away these "winged messengers" circle two or three times around the immediate point of departure, then dart away. impelled by the airy pinions which the Psalmist longed for, "the wings of a dove," and fly like an arrow to its - mark, straight through the pathless fields of air, to the spot from whence they were taken, Car rier pigeons in Europe have been known to fly ninety miles in an hour! In our own country, pigeons from the rice fields of' Georgia have been killed in this State with the fresh rice still awaiting digest ion in their crops; showing that they must come that great distance within eight or ten hours. The art of pigeon training is carried to the highest perfect ion in Belgium, unless we except Turkey. flow opportune for General Bernina, if ho had but a few carries pigeons bred in Paris, to let loose to the air to convey to the belea"ured capital intelligence of his wishes! Such a precaution, which the be sieged in the old Roman wars and in the middle ages were sure to take, would _ have been of countless value to France to day, The balloon is at the sport of the winds. The carrier pigeon seeks always his home. Modern strategists might well derive a saving lesson from antiquity, in cultivating the carrier pigeon, Common Phrase In the Far West. In a mining camp in California when a man tenders you asuile 'or invites you to take a "blister," it is etiquette to say, 'Here's hoping your dirt'll pan out gay.' In Washoe. when you am requested' to, 'put in a blast,' or invited to take your regular 'poison' etiquette admonishes you touch glasses and says "Here's hoping you'll strike it rich In 'the lower level! And in Honolulu, wheif your - Melia rho whaler asks you to take a 'lid' with him, it is simply etiquette to say; ilfert.4 eigh teen bewared barrelk 'OlO ut 'drink hearty' is universaL "This 'is the orthodox reply the world - over., On the Missi!seppi river they taii , ,very Oradea] view of the ceremony, and say to their friends, 'won't you come and 'wood up thus implying that strong po- Wiond supply the toed of life. In eh& eta times, a false notion prevailed that inibitions would prevent one from taking that disease, and a mailer style of lulu ' Cation was, Tot's disinfect! 'This may 1111 voll be offset by a mention: k ori the' illes tern bar room salute you, 'won't you histe in some pizen ?'—Ezehaxge.