rsr: IDcuotcJ) to politics, iterature, 3gvt culture, Science, iHovcilitn, nno cncval intelligence. VOL. 13. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. AUGUST 4, 1353. NO. 41. I I'll I I l m ltillisliccl ly Theodore Schocli. TERMS Two dollars per annnuni in advance Two dollars and a quarter, half yearly and if nut paid be tore the end of the year, Two dollars and a half. Those who receive their papers by a carrier or stage diivcrs employed by the proprietor, will be charged 37 1-2 cents, per year, extra. No papers ditcontinued until all arrearages arc paid, except at the option of the Editor. lO" Advertisements not exceeding one square (six teen lines) will be inserted three weeks for one dollar, and twenty-five cents fot every subsequent insertion The Charge for one and three hiicitions the same. A liberal discount made to yearly adtortisers. ID All letters addressed to the Editor must be post puid. JOB PRINTING. Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and ornamental Type, we are prepared to execute every desctiptionof Cards, Circulars, Ui II Heads, Notes, Hlank Receipts JiiMioes, Legal and other Htunks, Pamphlels, Ac. printed with neatness and despatch, oa reasonable terms, . AT THE OFFICE OV THE JEFFERSON a A nr. From the Knickerbocker. Railroad Adventure The car was full of passengers, I can't recall the number, IFor I had but just awakened from An unrefreshing slumber, "When a lady, who sat facing me, Directly met my eye, But turned away immediately, And smiled I know not why. When youthful folks who strangers arc Arc seated face to face, In the silence of a railroad car, A grave and formal place, Their wandering eyes will sometimes meet By some strange fascination, And they cannot keep their faces straight, Though dying with vexation. Simpletons there doubtless are, "Whose mouths are always stretching, But the guileless mirth of maidens' eyes And dimpled cheeks is catching: First she laughed and then I laughed I couldn't say what at ; Then she looked grave, and I looked grave, And then she laughed at tluit. She endeavored to repress her mirth, But couldn't hold it half in, Por with face concealed behind a book, She almost died a-laugbiug. She pouted when she found her lips Determined on a smile, But 't was very plain the preUy rogue "Was laughing all the while. Thus happily the moments flew To me, at least, of course, Though, when site saw me smilling too, It made the matter worse. And when, at last, I left the car, I caught her laughing eye, And had one more good grin before I tore myself away. 'Mine inn' I sought in saddened mood, And with feelings of regret: Those brilliant eyes, I felt assured, I never could forget. And when arrived, valise in hand, I paused I can't tell why Before a mirror on a stand, And gazed with curious eye. My cravat was turned half round or more, And sbocked was I to find That my hat was badly jammed before, And the rim turned up behind! Then while in haste my room I sought, I swore along the stairs That I would not again be caught A-napping in the cars. jj-Every young man should remem ber that the world will always honor in dustry. The vulgar and useless idler may look with scorn: his contempt is hon or. A man famous for hunting up enigmas philosophized thus: "What strange crea tures girls are. Offer one of them good wages to work for you, and ten chances to one if the old women can spare any of her girls; but just propose matrimony, and sec if they don't jump at the chance of working a life-time for their victuals and cloths. A queer way of estimating things. The Boston Mail man, who has had a vast amount of experience in the business, says : The most insipid thing in the world, is to kiss a pretty girl in the presence of her mother. To be realized as it should be, 1 this sort of confectionary should be taken j in t be dark, hven a candle is unneces-1 eary, for there are very few who can't ! Jind tbeir mouths, even m a coal cellar. To Keep Tires Tight Ox Wheels. A correspondent of the Southern Planter gives tho following method for keeping tires tight on wheels : Before putting on the tires fill the felr loes with linseed oil, which is done by heating the oil in a trough to a boilin" heat, aud keeping the wheel, with a stick through the hub, in the oil for an hour. JMic wheel is turned round nntil felloe is kept in the oil an hour, every Fearful Energy. The following picture of the fearful en ergies of our people in pushing every worldly enterprise to a dangerous ex treme, is drawn with a master-hand. It is extracted from a long article in the Presbyterian Quarterly Review, under the head of 'Young America Head pause and reflect! 'There is in this country a consuming passion for gain. The nation is mad. It rushes with incredible avidity after speculations, or works sixteen hours a day that it may have the means of a senseless profusion and a glittering frivol ity. Never was there a less avaricious people. Hero foreigners fall into their great and enduring error. The nation in this, as in every thing, is extravagant as no people ever were from the begin ning hitherto. This can be shown in many ways for example, our imports last year wero upwards of two hundred mil lions of money, and this for a young peo ple of only twenty three millions, who have not yet cut down a hundredth part of the primeval forest trees, or broken up more than a fragment of the prairios that have been accumulating rich vegetable mould since the flood. Ave tried to pay for these imports, and so sent abroad every production of the soil that Uurope would take, and then added nearly forty millions of specie, and still the balance of trade was tens of millions against us. These immense imports, in great par, arc a consequence of our extrava gant living. In the old world and in ancient times a few nobles and mer chants were princes, and the masses were humble and frugal perforce; but here is a whole people struggling to be not only po litical soverigns, but to live in luxury liko the peerage of England. Our re marks have neither an aristocratic nor a democratic bearing. We do not think the glory of a man is to live in a fine house with glided furniture, of which the eye tires, and with an array of servants who arc endlessly troublesome. If any body choses to claim an equality with the peerage, we have no quarrel with him. What we arc saying, is that no country, can physically support hundreds of thous ands of palaces, and that the extravagance which desires it is madness and folly. Whether there ought to be any palaces costing money by the hundred thousand, we are not deciding. It is difficult for our theology to reach this evil, for a mode of thinking beneath, like the those convulsions of which geology tells us, up heaves theology, and the seething mass forever takes new forms of struggle, en- ; tcrprise, competition, luxury, corruption. It is a miserable ambition to toil oneself to death, not to have, as Wordsworth ex presses it, 'plain living and high thinking,' not to have a happy, cultivated, and re fined family around one, not to have the j appliances of a pleasant sociability with friends and acquaintances, not to have j the mean3 of intellectual improvement, or j of enlarged usefulness, or of a wide inter- course with the noble and the gifted; but j merely to appear highly respectable, to j make the show of being rich, to fill rooms scarcely ever used, with costly furniture, to crowd a house once or twice a year with a mass of people whose claim to the 'best society' rests merely on their keep ing up the same appearances. Yet this is the object for which, in great part, ur ban America labors and toils, to which it sacrifices a thousand things of far more importance. Fashion tyranizes over men as well as women, and conventionalities that no one really likes, freezes up the life-blood of the nation. The result is almost incredible, when one fairly analy zes the life of our people. They alter nate between solitude and crowds. - They fill the streets and jmblic vehicles; they crowd churches, lecture-rooms, concerts, theaters; they jostle each other on change, in business places, and along fashionable walks; they whirl around in the intoxica tion of the dance, or exchange inane coin- pliments with hundreds of people at a or a party. The remainder of their is fc in solitudc afc . and , , ..... ,. ' . those who dlslike tblS crushlDS publicity can scarce find a medium between that and solitary reading or the society alone of their own family. Is there not a morc excellent way? Is there no such thing as moderation 1 Is tho common sense which was claim as our characteristic to have no influence in moulding the man ners of our people? Must we forever senselessly imitate foolish foreign man ners? Mustmenlive inthemostcostlylux- in-iT until tiivin zinf nf fmir "nil r TiiiNinARS j and then hide their heads in some ob- scurc placcj as if) though still honest men, they had done some shameful deed? In a word, is it possible to have moderation and common sense pervading in our land? 'Internal improvements are character istic of our time, and within reasonable i limits nobly characteristic. But no one can be even casually acquainted with the operations of the country without seeing ! extravagance here also. Posterity, wc may be assured, will look with amaze ment at these times. - The velocity of a railway train may be fearful, and 'ctby custom wo forget the immense speed. At the city of Dayton, in Ohio, wc found recently constructed and constructing ncarlv a dozen railroads. At Indian napolis, in Indiana, the case is still more extreme; and at Chicago, in Illiuois, fair ly wearied out, wc gave up trying to un derstand the projects. Some of these Men are toiling to invent 1 r I 1 X w new piaua lor uusiuuss aua to upeu m;v avenues for trade. An American, wc heard, has just taken a contract to cut pine spars in Oregon for the Dutch navy. The only question touching a railroad to the Pacific is which of half a dozen routes shall be taken, and two years more may witness three or four roads, thousands of 1 1 11 1 i 1,1 c' . 1 ,',thc following table of the population of commenccu almost simultaneously. We have reccntlv heard that a lot. thirtv-five feet by seventy-five, was rented in an . i r... ., i i ii mi . f . thousand dollars a year. The earth is J moving at a xeariui velocity arounu tnc sun, anu yet we seem to be standing still. A rate that to an Anglo-Saxon seems slow to a man of any other race mingles earth and sky together, and turns his brain into idiotcy. 'The increase of lunacy in this country is another frightful indication of the mad extravagance of the people. No wonder 1 indeed that in a single new State they ' have built or are building three lunatic asylums. The whole land will be a lu nutic asylum if from some quarter, from experience or observation, from states manship or scholarship, from the pulpit or the Bible, wo cannot learn some de-, greo of moderation. The lawcr speaks until he is exhausted, and recruits per haps with firery stimulus of the worst kind, though called by some foreign nam;e the merchant comes home too much worn J out at night to converse with his family and lays himself on a sofa until he is roused to go into a deeper sleep in his ' chamber; the young and delicate girl is ' driven through a system of education in-! tensely rapid and exciting, without any j suitable physical exercise, and then fades every remaining vestige of rose in her check, by late hours and unceasing dis- sipation, to break off suddenly and seuse- lessly, shortly after she i3 married, from all society and labor until she is scarcely able to walk, in work that, if things were regulated in a more reasonable way, might and would be done mainly by ser vants; tho young man alternates from exhausiing business to exhausting revel ry; and the minister of the gospel works ceaselessly and with intense exoitement until he destroys his bronchial tubes and hopelessly shatters his entire nervous sys tem; and whoever will not work at this fearful rate is thrown aside us 'behind the times.' One asks, in terror, whether this is the infancy of a country; and if it is, what kind of a nation will tumultuate 0- ver this land when two hundred millions j of people shall be living to and fro from ' the Atlantic to the Pacific? If these I things are done in the rrrecn tree, what shall be done in the dry? Our next proof that the nation is mad will hardly be questioned. It is drawn from the fearful recklessness in regard to human life. On a recent Western tour we passed over the Baltimore and Ohio railroad a day or two after two passenger oars had been precipitated over a bank, and rolled over and over four times be fore they reached the bottom, a distance measured along the slope of eighty feet; some eight or ton of the passengers being killed.. We saw the wrecks of the cars at the foot of the embankment as wc pas sed by the spot. One morning on the same tour, we took tho train of the Mich igan Central railroad from Chicago and after passing along it eight miles were directed to leave the car in which we were and pass to another. In reaching the latter we passed by the wreck of two cars aud an engine. Theevcningbefore the train of the Southern railroad had run into an emigrant train of the Central. The dead and maimed bodies had been taken to Chicago, but there had not been time to clear away the wreck. Sixteen dead bodies were taken from the ruins. As we were passing into New York on the New York and Eric road, on the same tour, a passenger handed us the ac count of the Norwalk destruction, near I:' " x'z" i.:n-.i v ,i' nicy persons uemg aiiiuu uy tuu ui iwug of the cars into an open cbasm, in tue eunnl flinf flirt flrflW of the bridge was open. These were but', o,.- Mn;,inn0 ; -nno-Jv thn i utnu nut. uwrniuw ' uvluj same period. The Ocean-Wave steamer was burnt on Lake Ontario and two were destroyed in California with a fearful loss of life; and two buildings fell in at New York and Buffalo, because no doubt too insecurely built. This is positively frightful. The most valuable earthly thing is human life. It is that which is guarded by thc;wiui expensive ioow, uequumiy "f-; distress, and, addressing the horse, ha most awful sanctions. This wholesale , tected aud announced before enough is'sa;(J) in a piaintivo tonc,'Dar, now, you slaughter must ucccessarily diminish its issued to well pay the printer, 'ihc part miscrablc brute, sec what you've done! sacreduess and murder more rife. Uut, viewed as is unquestionably the truth, ; only as one of multitudes of indications of a reckless extravagance characteristic , i ; oi America. ic uccomes sua more serious. If we are right in believing, as we surely o . c J " uu UilJ .uv ol. itiififfn nnn ivnrtvfi r r inn win nor. nnr O ' readers agree with us that something should be done?' The Great Cities of the World, Population of the Principal Cities iu Eu rope and North America. 1UUO UUUIUUOT i ; some of thc iarest cjt;os iu Europe and We compile from Weber's Volks-Kal-! already destroyed much of the'aid asscci-' pound of meat, roast or boiled, 4 cents; a, ender (People's Almanack) for the ycar'ation might furnish in the detection of third of a pound of bread, 1 cent; half a 1 1 q .q t.;,-;, n ,i o,:n 'im. .,t-r:.... ninr, ot wind, i a cents; a uiaie oi veneiiA- uuuuuuy at ijcncio ,auuiuu uilis. a. uu uuuuwntiiui. uatiiu" i 1 i i- a Torfh Amnriea. As tho. Hermans are.ivith lir.l.ln inrrnnnit.v ' proverbially accurate in their statistical statements, it is to be presumed that this table may be relied upon as correct. Aslnoartof the engraver has yet proved a .. ? 1 i c u x. x i ? i v Z 1 i a matter of curiosity aud reference, the barrier to such tricks. Not only is the table may be worth cutting out and pre - serving : London, Paris, Constantinople, New York, St. Peterburg, Vienna, Berlin, Naples, Philadelphia, Liverpool, Glasgow, Moscow, Manchester, Madrid, Dublin, Lyons, Lisbon, Amsterdam, Havana, Marseilles, Baltimore, Palermo, Home, Warsaw, Leeds, Milan, Hamburg, Boston, Brussels, lurnin, Copenhagen, Bordeaux Venice, Pesth, Prague, Barcelona, Genoa, Cincinnati, New Orleans, Bristol, G hent, Munich, Brcslau, Florence, llouen, Belfast, Cologne, Dresden Stockholm, Rotterdam, Antwerp, Cork, Leigc, Bologna, Leghorn, Trieste, ; Ko nigs berg; Sheffield, . The Hague, Leipsic. . Oporto, Malaga, Dantzic, Frankfort, Madgcburg, Bremen, 2,3G.141 ; 1,053.202 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 1G 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 7SG 990 522,7GG. 477 W 441 W ' ! ,mo q, -jvvj-x a - w t vy 249,325 241,500 222,800 200,000 195,257 189,054 1SO,000 172,3S2 1G2,5G7 152,000 151, 43S 148.754 120,788 132,208 135,000 133,140 130,927 12G,5G0 125,000 124,161 120,000 120,000 11G.71G 110,343 115,000 112,410 10G,77G 105,000 102,154 100,255 99,GG0 92,210 91,277 90,823 90,002 88,800 80,480 77,585 70,107 , J: 34 31 j 35 i 6 37 33 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 40 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 5G 57 58 70 840 70'lDG 74.530 59 GO 01 G2 G3 G4 G5 GG 00,003 5S.010 59,550 5G.G90 53 15G President Pierce and Gen. Scott. It is said, in the Urystal Talacc, last 'J liursday ( when President Pierce met Gen. Scott hc shook him warmly by tho hand, and said:' "Ah, General, I never expected to meet you on tho same plafformV Of course, both laughed heartily at the joke YVPTlm Scientific American states, on reliable authority, that "if at two feet a- , , bove the throat of your chimney you large the opening to double size, for the space of two feet, then carry up the rest as at first, your chimney will never smoke, fisgy- The Commissioners of Dauphin county are about erecting a new Hospital JD3 Valuable coal deposits have re- ccntly been discovered in Minnesota. The Skill and Cunning- of the Makers of Bad Money. The following is from a chapter on 'Bank Note Counterfeits and their ltcmc- 'dv ' in Hunt's Merchant's Marine for . -j i . r. 'Of late the arts of the counterfeiter uuuiuoriuiwjr have been turned to a comparatively new branch of the profession, ilie couu- : i i 11- i Jterfeiter, the educated in his calling, and pnnce among the rascals of his clique still finds his trade lull of danger and difficulty. Ihc most ingenious of thc race, in many cases, and their work, if i not themselves detected long before a 'good circulation' is Their jworic ottcn prepareu i itu great care anu i . T .! i 1 eir iril,JU iueui "3 'alteration of bank bills, presents them jwnu unequaueu aiuacuuus. mui no ' necessity for tools nor any of the lmple- 1 mnnto nf flir nlrl f;i sliionoil p.nnnfnrffiitpr. . "i requiring only a lew casny oocameu i i i i , ? c k nsmnnns :i nm; m;mi.v in " "J.: " - ZCZ :.. ihuuuu. u w nuuti u.? r . i . .1 cd. In these alterations, the engraver, ! instead of being a hindrance, ia frequently i of decided service to the counterfeiter. In many instances, using the same die and vignette indiscriminately for tho small; denomination of one bank and the large i w ! J 1 L J O , advantage of th 1 pleasure, a die or ! nomination of another. To these altera- 1 tions the notes ofall banks arcsubject, and 'prominent die that denotes the denomin are exchanged. If the raver uses large letters, these disciples of Lucifer jfer; themselves use a similar letter for bills not provided with a preventive. Black . . L -. . . -. . . i i i is fact, and clipping, attics, 2 cents. A plentiful dinner may be a word from one bill, tueretorc, had lor ii cent3. ine same ation entirely abstracted, and a new one ' ' "V . wu fiml nnninr wiMi r-mml fnm'i t.v i went where there were sick, he healed i. " i i nn,iiitisaa tiioui?n uc maue a mariv in "strinfts. nUhnnrrl, nfc fit of rrood service, , ; a" o ' oO'i,-;u4 ; IIJ ..v, 3G7 800 'retard them in the profession they so 350'000!perseveriuirly continue to practice, and! Wooolthc work Joes on, filling their pockets, ! 260000 ' and fleecing many an honest laborer orj orissn! tradesman. Yettheresecms tobecompar- , ' atively, little effort to prevent such trans-1 astions A thorough organization among bank crs, and a fund provided for the purpose of detecting the countefeiter, an effort to use but one, and the best kind of bank note paper, to increase the number and variety of engravings so that the same vig nette shall not appear upon the issues of different banks, or at least upon notes of different denomniation; then lessen the number, and make morc uniform the reg isters' signatures at the State department; these things, and others that may here after be suggested, would do much to make the busiucss of counterfeiter more difficult, and assist in his detection. To prevent the alteration of bank notes a; simple remedy exists, yet untried, and which wc have the confidence to believe might, if thoroughly tested, prove a per fect preventive. Ihc bank teller detects the worst alterations from as5ociation,and!demaud, the legal operation of which is if the prominent engraving of a note is precisely the same as if the endorser had well remembered, he will not be deceived j drawn an inland bill of exchange upon though the pasting process be done with , the greatest degree of nicety. If, for in stance, the vegncttc of some ono dollar bill is known to be a blacksmith, the first glance of the engraving will convey to the default given to the endorser. the mind its value, let the apparent de- nomination be what it may. If, then, the A strictly orthodox old gentleman engraver, in making up the plate for a I'm Massachusetts, returning home one one dollar note, uniformly compose the , Sunday afternoon from church began to vignette of one, and only ono prominent! extol to his son the merits of the sermon object; the two, three and five in like:" I have heard, l'rauk, said he, "one ot maimer, always of two, three and Ovcii the poorest judge of money cannot be de-, 1 ccived with regard to their value. The prominent objects; the ten always ot more omuiu a, w"iuau j. t tlinn fivn nild t,ll( twftnlv of more than ! ricd me to the gates of heaven. " fon. n innitnr what these obiects mav be' think., replied Prank, "you had 08,308 .fifty, the hundred, and the thousand dol- 60,000 ,lar note do not circulate so generally and 05,870 arc a.ways received with more caution, 02,000,80 that alterations of the kind arc coin- . panmvcly uncommon, in oruer to maicc still more secure, every engraving iargo,atcr and QUC ;nt of Lct it fer. or small at the end or between the s.g-, mcnt aDj for w-ek aml J0U nature, should also denote the dcnomina-; ... , . , f v:netrar. tion, until to alter a bill will be to deface j its whole appearance. In engraving the different denominations of a bank, the vignetto oi tne one suouiu always. oeltai,0 smallest in size, tho two, three and five )0ar gradually increasing, the ten covering ...jder one-half of the length of the bill, and the fifty and hundred the whole extent. By this arrangement the cnirravcr may add much to the beauty of a set of engravings and need uso neither the large red lotter.-i nor tho heavy border, which so mar the en-'general appearance of tho bank note. We believe that thus, by the help of as- soeiation, a preventive against all bank- note alterations may be obtained, and wo ' none vol to sco tue pian icsieu uy en- gravers and new banking institutions.' A pure white robin has been found in a nest near Lewisbnrg, Va, A similar , 'bird has been seen at Monroetown, Pa. Knacked into the World Again. A pious old negro man, in the employ ment of a worthy citizen of tiiis county, i.a u iuw wccks aro act to ploughing a r . .uuw Sunu. J'iVcry iuvt rmtrrll TM.-ff rtP 1 c ieet tue piougu would hit against a rock 'or stump. The horse. (lnl, n , , . , . moreover, w.xs li;ml tQ starfc bim nP i.i ?., V. -. "6lwi ,J1 wuifwj uau u u am nine oi it, . am, hig . and t;ence wcrc 80TCrel ' ' tcstc(L Afc Jast fch b tQ . J Tho altercations between him and his became morc violcufc at cvery frC3h occ.lsion for uinff him in motbu airain FinalI in momJnt of fre hc s oro at the horse in a terrific manner. A mo- ,ment. rcflcctionj however filled him with You've jes gone and knocked me , b k j t fch world a ain v right Low Rates of Food in France. T, - i. ,.i i , - nnil pan fonfl nav he nttorneil. ivhrin ita , j 1 oblc. for the supplv of food to the work- i mi I 'll . mg classes. J-uc Dui uing anu uienbiis were purchased with the subscriptions of some wealthy citizens. Each member of the society pays an entrance fee of 40 tents, and tho following prices for the principal articles composing a meal; a ciuart of soup 2 cents: a quarter of a cents, which is often paid by the workmen ' for a much less copious meal. Suissiblc Remarks. The Rev. Henry Ward Beechcr in his them ; where there was actual want, hc jcreatea ureaa,anc created bread, and came dow' to their Take the gospel to : ihc miserable outcasts of our city, and no m can Pach it unless he does more. . it u ia thniifrh hr m?iIn a marie in the tho sanu, ana cne nrst uue wahues it away. 1 -j .1 c i i 1 . T !i . "P l i v, cospei, anu tue nuner oi tac . - - . rp, . man makes hlm wrget it. I here ba great deal more gospel m a loaf of bread sometimes, than in an old dry sermon.- If 1 S to man and brmS brea(1S and clothes, and medicine, this will give him a correct idea of the gospel one which Valuable Application. For wounds received from old nails, or cuts occasioned by broken glass, peacli tree leaves, well steeped and applied to the wound, will give immediate relief. By thickening the liquid from which thcr lcave3 have been taken with meal or branf a good poultice is obtained, which will keep moist for hours. In case the leaves cannot be obtained, a tea ma'de of young twigs of the peach tree, and thickened will do as well. Endorsing an over-due Note. -The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has lately decided that the holder of an over due Note can demand payment of it whenover he chooses, and the endorse ment of such a note is to be considered ! as if made upon a new note payable on the maker, payable at sight. Lonsequent- ly the cnuorser is liable only upon proot ot demand upou the maker within a rea sonable time, and immediate notice of uwiguuuiaiamuiia uunw- VI. 11 ell I better have dodged in, for you will never get j another such a chance !" To mahc primc ViHegfU.lL covrcs- dcnl of the 0hio Cultivator vouch, thfl nicrit of the followi recipe for fe. . . Tak(J mlx olK. , f inol" lhreo llon, 0f ra5n mrjii vou i.ave ?omo catsup!' askad a cntieinan of Aunt Prisoilla, at a dinuer me, no ' Klio rnnltAil ivlf.li n. I am lontl ot cats m tneir 'nacc. bu(, s -IU c0.-r.soup V should as soon think of cat soup The goutlcman did not urge her. To Suhlue a Qtprruni ftosc. It U snid in tj10 Qhio Cultivator that a buck t pan eiiann-o the de-1 would cost more in Pans, probably lo or two of water given a horse to drink just( b0fbre riding him, takes from him all disposition for capering, aud reuders him perfectly sedate. What is that dog barking ait' aakwl n fop whose boots were polished more, than his ideas. v 'Uny, repiioti a d)mikoi, u. he sees a dog m yonr beet. U6 T'l iiiiifin iTTtllhftliiiMirr ir . i i iwajjiii fill i rr'irv