- ' . i ii i i ii i i rrr irn r i m m n n nrnnini iipb mum mi immbu ' ,ir, .lia i , J.UII JlBILlliUegmfaW1- !tJ.'i. u. J mi iu.Jw. i i j j l 1 i1 iL jw. i 1 1 ' mj..,, nj,.. .mo, ui ii X3ii-JL!ULi- J I I II I IJHB-li.km.LI AM 111 limilllHII fcgg.milLIJLJLailJLtt 1 - . - 1 SJcuotci to politics, jCitcmturc, Agriculture, Science, illoralitn, nnb cncral Sntclligcnrc. VOL 15. STROUDSBURG, -MONROE COUNTY, PA. APRIL SI 1355. NO. 21. Published by Theodore Schoeh. TERMS Two dollars per annum in advance Tuo iollars and a juartcr, half yearly and if not paid be lore the end of the year. Two dollars and a half. No papers discontinued until all arrearages arc paid, except at the option of the Editor. IC Advertisements not exceeding one square (ten lines) will be inserted three weeks tor one dollar, and twenty-five cents for every subsequent insertion. The charge for one and three insertions the same. A liber al discount made to yearly advertisers. IE7 All letters addressed to the Editor must be postpaid. JOB PRINTING. -Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and ornamental Type, wc are prepared to cxccuteevcry dcsciiptionof Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes. Blank Receipts Justices, Legal and other Blanks. Pamphlets, Ac. printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable crins, AT THE OFFICE OF THE JEFFE2RSONEAN. MAKE YOUR MASK Iq the quarries do you toil, Do you delve upon the soil ? Malic your mark. In whatever path you go, Tn what place you stand, Moving swift or moving slow, With a Orm and honest hand, Make your mark. Should opponents hedge your waj, "Work by night or work by day, Make your mark. Struggling manfully and well, Let no obstacle oppose ; None right shielded ever fell 13y the weapons of his foes Muke your mark. "What though born a peasant's son Good by poor man can be done Make your mark. Peasant's garb may warm the cold; Peasant's heart may calm a fear; Better far than hoarding gold, Is the drying of a tear Make your mark. Life's as fleeting as a shade, Marks of some kind must be made, Make your mark Make it while the arm is strong, In the golden hours of youth ; Never, never make it wrong; Make it with the stamp of truth Make your mark. -fr T A good story is told of a justice of the peace, not many miles distant from the county of Essex. Several young men were brought be fore him for trial, on the charge of being engaged in a riot. The evidence was, however, insufficient to convict them, and the judge addressed them somewhat as follows: "Young men! I find that the evidence is not strong enough against you to prove a riot; but you have Icon so cam'd pro lane, I shall fine you for that!" An old Dutchman who had recently joiued the temperance society, was taken .Vick, and sent to the doctor to prescribe .for him, who ordered him to take an ounce of brandy per day. The old chap overhauled his arithme tic, and found in the tabic of apotheca ries' weight that eiuht drachms make one ounce. " Mine !" said the Dutchman, "datis de temperance for me.. I didn't get but six drams before, and now I gets eight." Auout Babies. Just hear what the Buffalo Republican sa'S about babies : "To keep children from crying, as soon as the squallcr awakes, set the child up, jiropped up by pillows, if it cannot sit a lone, and besmear its fingers with thick molasses. Then put half a dozen feath ers into his hands, and the young one will sit and pick the feathers from one hand to the other, until it drops to sleep. As soon as it awakes more molasses and more feathers, and in place of never-astounding yells, there will be a silence and enjoyment unspeakable." Jones stepping up to a gentleman who was engaged in conversation with about a dozen others, said "It seems to me 1 have seen your phys ognomy somewhere before, but I cannot imagine where." "Very likch'," he replied; "I have been thc keeper of a prison for upwards of twenty year?."' A Knotty Point Settled. A cav iller in our vicinity, the other day, says thc Lowell Courier, tried to put down his opponent with this question: 'If Noah id send out a dove that never returned, Jhcrc dm It M 'WJy retorted thc unyielding anlagosft gurP0SC omc body shot it.' - i J&ST There arc about seven nUliiOS pores in thc body of a man of ordinary size. If these were joined lengthwise, a tube would be fornicd twenty-eight miles long ! Time, well employed, gives that health' and vigor to the soul which health j and retirement afford the body. The strongest kind of a hint! A young lady asking a gentleman to see if one of ber rings would go on his little finger. THE WIPE. There's many a shaft at random sent, Kinds mark the archer never meant ; There's many a word at random spoken, May sooth or wotiud a heart that's broken,1 1 ' M. - , . i i any is the jest the young man sub- .met to who does a "wooing go , and-some- times even does he speak lightly of the nviting process of the heart which is to make him whole ; but it is better to tn- ne witu tuc iigntmng, or a magazine oi powder, than to woo a termagant or w i : !. r . .., - ., ' ouce for all, to go with us in the journey of life to take to the heart a fair one .. ' and find we have wed charmer that sought us as a pray IS to be rCffarUCa as the direst calamity that can befall "ft hu- man being. Human nature is like a landscape, pleas - c ...... . ant to look upon only in a certain light ; 1 x-r 1 1 . -xi , . 1 beautiful but with an ugly unpainted back that is sometimes turned to view. 1 he world is not all made up ot love, and marncu 1110 is nice a picture tair ana and happiness; neither is married lite all , ir ' , . , ,. . , . a honeymoon, and it is better to be true to nature, like painting a picture, than to . depart too much from it for the sake ot effect. 'Iho wife in thc truest sense is but a, . . . . ; iart os man. Each separate, is but a fragment of existence between which there tucicj ted, they is a strong affinity, and when uni form a whole. In chemistry we often see thc combination of ultimate elements for mm 2 a bony ot great streugtn ; due let- adverse mhueuccs be brought to bear, and up from the union of individual particles; j but strike a blow aUta heart and it with-' crs, and the winds strip it up, and it tot-' tevs and falls, to moulder again into earth. So too, if. when the ultimate elements ot human existence have been once united the affinity between them becomes weak ened, and tliey repel each other, and sep arate ; then like the tree, they may en dure for ajwhile thc blast,but sooner or later, the heart w 11 die out, hope will find nutriment and vanish; and desolation will cease to mark the spot where they once xisted. How tew ot those who arc uni wedlock ever cmov the lull measure bapincss that is meted out for their ac - ceptauce. The affections spring up in good l-vl 4-1. a r n rkf nrAnnH tr nnlf 1 t'lfnM soil but they .are not properly cultivated where the soil is deepest, tares grow most speedily. The young wife is a tender plant, and needs the fostering care of ev ery day devotion. This is at her com mand. No one is more sure of their re ward, than the truly affectionate wife. Thc husband cannot always be the lover by profession he may at heart but he has something else to do. LTow many a young wife mistakes this for. indifference, and thus opens her heart to the decoying words of thc artful tongue, and finally meditates thoughtless of the consequen ces that if, perhaps, she had chosen dif ferently, it would have been better. When one such thought as this entered the heart, love, hope and happiness flee, and distrust, indifferencc,or jealousy take their places ; the genial glow of affection's flame, is quenched, and thc fireside grows cold and cheerless. It is hard to re-kindle tho fire that has once gone out upon the hearthstone of affection the flame that is fed only by fuel from loving hearts when these have grown cold and for bidding. Better, indeed, would it have been that they had never met. Wrho doces not say that thc "preventive is easier than the euro ?" But who shall point it out ? It is the work alone of the heart ; and the two hearts concerned must work out, unaided, the problem of happiness or sown with a light heart, but the harvest! hearted girl informed him that her fath must be reaped in bitter tears. jer was tho committee-man, and also in- Show me the wife that is blind to her I formed him what questions would be put mizerv. husband's faults and I will show you a happy woman ; and a mau who has lessjhe expected to gain the good graces of to answer for, than were even the truth believed. If Ruth could say to her husband's mother : "Wither thou goest I will go : and where thou lodrrcst I will lodge thv people shall be my people, and thy God j board in his family. Whereupon the old my God; where thou diest, will I die, and fellow assumed an air of much conse there will I be buried ; the Lord do so to'qucnce, and asked thc same questions that to me, and more also, if aught but death Sally had informed her lover that would part thee and me;" how much more should ! be asked : the young wife cleave unto her husband, 'Do you believe in the final salvation of anu auiao uy u lonuuu. outu uuuui . -, n8ercd tho vonoff be the declaration upon the altar where! 'Most ccrta.nl, answered thc young j the twain are made of one flesh. In love, .man. .. . hone, hanniuess and sorrow, alike, thevi should be as one heart, and-pnde and . . ambition should never enter the mind, on ly in, and for each other. And now, dear reader, I have laid be fore you for thc most part, the unpainted side of the picture, but let it not thus bo j presented in his own dwelling, but keep before you always that which is beautiful Vinrsi nil fViittrro lj o ri 1-mlntr. Tfnutt Tmiv nal. In Itally you will sec a man breaking up his land with two cows, and the root of a tree for a plough, while he is dressed in skin with the nair on. in xiomc, vi- uuu " I . , nnri Uresdcn. 11 you uirc a man 10 saw TTn nfvfi He mils nnfi end of the saw on the ground and the other on his breast, and taking the wood in his hand, rubs it against tho saw. It is a solemn fact, that in Florence, a city filled with tho triumph of art, there is not a single auger, ana 11 a carpeu - tcr would bore a hole he,ydocs it with a red hot poker. '41 hedocsi od ohahorsoXg Jlai", f Ctt county. I,..,,: J ,,f r. mo secluded ,ild " ! Sf M,fXrb0forohim 1Ic was oncc d,D"2 "V1.0 American . ., from any other human ?".! B?m- .B 'Lbit'ation. A tfipcobiuA rose above "No Little Girls Sow. TTprn U n nlmrniino- littln enrmon. bv a lady correspondent : 'Wlmt lms Wnmn nfnll tlifi Utile aids o rr it np it.;. uunu"uaio: uui otto uiuui vi J bisque waists and J fl l watch nJdi tho streets or attending ju - partics; but aas a Htlle girf is a J ,b bou , r. ,.r. . t -i. " I Till I I V" I 7 1 li.lHllfi III ! liW 11(111 i lntr uavs anu nisuts succcca eacu otner 1 1 lit ; with astonishing rapidity, a ntteen mm utes recess, affording plenty or time tor . , c , J,. , nm I weeks of play-house-life; and to whom a neat nlnin nrincrliam dress and sun-bonnet . , . , , ,L . ... , . . . . , x, bnnnf'fs thnt will nnf br ?ninrfrl if t.liOV i arc wet in river or brook, and aprons It lUUY , sfrnnrr nnniinrli h to brine home any quanti- , - 0 . - f V , , ffl ff kcts; good strong shoes that will come off c rioTT TOiion m . , with ease on a warm summer s aay, wnen , fc cool brook tempts tbe warm feet to , tbemselves in wate instead of , ., , . . , . , , , , ' rude treatment, j Well! .fc ig fa d thc facc of Httlc ... Wnmfl WrW fivt:nftk. rnLrft be goiue waati;g tbeir sweetness 1,1 11 1 11 1 i 1 1 ill. 1 1 . 1 ( . ' , , . , ',' a 1 l'ji nuiui y iuuv uiuuiu . not villages. Afc.an wben Jittle ls uscd t0 be!gree upon a greater numoer 01 aiumini, d d u see tbum decbed)by thirty, than all his predecessors taken nil fh; finnr,r nrx.iin cf rnof : Where - fln ,rnpa nc tu00 nro: flirts? AvQ th wim fcQ albw guch Jhm drcga-irby little Miss . , aa ,.;ki . , ihfi wnnr ; w silft TC;n hn a.!and a chapel have been built. IlJUOt UUI) UC UO J IwUI j 1UUUI lblc'to outvie ber present spicndor when i and lot, for tho use of a Professor, and COmes out." Dut in this go ahead seven acres of land for recreation grounds 1 " ' aTtt- rii nnow w'and wash house have been purchased. ajiU. iJUUlU llliH lUX-miuu talk uuuiu , - to accomplish her desire." 1 he Recitation and Lecture Rooms, have -As theie are no little girls, so there enlarged and seated, and a Portrait will bo no young ladies; for when Miss Gallery has been commenced I he Lorn leaves the school she is engaged, S00n ardy poplars, which formerly disfigured marries and takes her place in the ranks the public grounds of the College, have of American matrons. How will she fill j been removed, and their places supplied ! 1.1. X . Juv.... t I. a a1 m ll, a nnl. ill A her place: for. how and when has she t , . found time to prepare for life's duties? ted inf Wonder if it would not be a good plan to! ure ot;x i? 1 : :u. ifnrn nr.r o nw Innf Win wlfl, MiAm in jse and see if ifcis' notpossible to have ' been Sreatly improved and enlarged, and , a darlinfT little creatures, full of funthc cntire front of the College grounds i C . . . I lino rnnrerA V tt ciilicf on fill 1 r'rvn and glee, who can run and jump without fear of tearing flounces, and finally have a set of healthy young ladies, upon whom tho sun has been allowed to shine, and active exercise in the open air bestowed an abundant supply of life and energy. Unite a healthful body to thc highly cultivated minds of our American wives and mothers, and they would be the ad miration of the world, instead of being pitied for their fragility." Home Journ al. The "Will and the "Way. A young collegian, itinerating in the State of Vermont, fell in company and also in love with a very pretty girl, thc daughter of an old curmudgeon, whose brains were made of saw-dust, hog's lard and molasses, but who, upon account of the spaciousness of his farm, had been for many years at the head of the school committee in the district. The collegi an's attachment to Sally, (for that was the old fellow's daughter,) was so over powering, that all the logic and philoso phy he had learned in the school was, compared to his force of argument, as chaff in a hurricane. But not having the wherewithal to winter in thc country with out resort to employment, he intimated to Sally that he should like to keep the school in the district; when the kind to him, and how he must answor them if her father, Accordingly, on Sunday evening the young man of classical lore informed tho old ignoramus that he would like to take 1 charge of their school for the winter, and - 1 . . 1 ,T SI 1 I 'Do you believe mat uou ever niaue;" t , 1. rm x r u another man equal 10 j-iiomab deiicrbom 'Mnrtfiimv Tint ' 'Can you spell Massachusetts?' 'Yes, sir.' 'Well, spell it.' Thc young man spelt the word very distinctly, when the father turned to his 'Did he sncll it' daughter, autt saiu T frill. Rnllv?' MM,n ,rrtl, mnn nnmrnfiirtPfl lis sf inn . the next da?. II ow he and Sally made J " I 0utis another story. xQ Choice. Tho wicc. 1 ho w voraing ITf U?UIlly N y Mrro ror tells a story of judge Ghani- 'jw n ' f nf ih tirt-Av lift wmilH t iQ rcplicd tho biggest, by thun- d(jr ,', . , xiou oouftui j x u-ua.tj, vvftn, when dried and lit by thc tail, burn like' a candle ! College of New Jersey. Wc take the following interesting let- to this distinguished literary institution. It is written bv a Graduate. cj The appearance of the last triennial 'catalogue of this institution, may remind 'its friends, that an epoch in its history , has been attained. I refer to the tenm- I nation of the Presidency of Dr. Carnahan, 'whifih had ntoii fnr the. nrnrieriino- ai - - i - a years. As we live in a progressive age, it may be well to inquire, what has been tho progress of that college during that Presidency. In 1823 when Dr. Carnahan came in- to office, tho Facultv consisted of a J Pres- idnnr. nnrl ViVr. lPRirlnnf. n Prnfoss or of 1 . ' " Mathematics, and two Tutors, (total I 5.") Vuen he ret-rd 185 tho faculty w aa composed of a President, Vice President, ( ro .luodcrn six IWessors, three Tutors, a Teachor of 1 -. ! Oology, (totalis.) In logue for the year 1823, tnames of 125 students Modern Lancuaccs. and a Lecturer on the anual cata thcro were the In that of 1854, the names of 254 students. The whole number of graduates to the nresent time, (107 Years) is 3,390. Num- bcr of graduates before 1823 (16 years) 11680. From 1823 to 1854, inclusive. ''31 vears1, 1710. 7 - ' oi years inu, 00 uat iT. oaruauau as President has conferred the first de- 1 n ' nr I' HAfi lint tocetner. do mucn ror tne recora. Aside from this numerical increase, it may be stated, that during the same term of 31 years, the East and West Colleges, a Professor's House, a Refectory, two large and Commodious buildings for the accommodation of the Literary societies, A houso Wltu uawve -iuts iiu, tue uau, iuu maple, and tho tulip poplar. The Libra- 7 ha.s received annual additions. I he chemical and Dhilosonhical anDaratus has cnemicai ana punosopuicai apparatus uas has been enclosed by a substantial iron fence. All these erections, improvements, pur chases and expenditures, have been paid for, without any aid from the State. In deed, from the beginning of the chapter to the end.of it, the State has done next to nothing for thc College. The legisla tive vote of 600 pounds New Jersey cur rency, made in 1796, to Nassan Hall, seems to have exhaused all liberality in that behalf. Although the College has been tho means of bringing hundreds of thousands of dollars into the State, and has helped to make the name of that State, illustrious at homo and abroad, yet she, the State, quietly pockets this revenue of glory, to to say nothing of dollars, and has contin ued to do so for a hundred years. God save the Commonwealth ! For her liber ality to her literary institutions surely never will. Betray not Confidence. For once that secrecy is formally upon you, it is implied a hundred times by the concurrent circumstances. All that your friend says to you as a friend, is intrusted to you only. Much of what a man tells you in the hour of affliction, in sudden anger, or in any outpouring of his heart, should bo sacred. Iu his craving for sym pathy he has spoken to you as to his own soul. To repeat what you have heard in so cial intercourse is sometimes a sad treach ery ; and when it is not treacherous it is often foolish. For you commonly relate but a foolish part of what had happened, and even if you arc able to relate that part with fairness, it is still likely to be misconstrued as a word of many meanings, in a foreign tongue without thc context. There arc few conversations which do not imply some degree of mutual confi dence, however slight. And in addition to that which is said in confidence, there is generally something which is peculiar though not confidential which is ad- dressed to thc present company alone, nofc tQ tbcir . It r i i. " IIIM.I III, 11)1 I, Ill-Ill. illlll I I II : V (III l AIM I. ted to understand it rightly. -j - The Water Lown (Wis.) Democrat gives thc following illustration of Western trav el : A Cottasc on Runners. Last Satur- day our attention was attracted to rather a strange looinng venicic ior tins part ui I tit. 1 ore 1 ?i .1 Wisconsin in lo.ju, wnen rauroaus aiu li tout to intersect each other. Quite a fair ' ll. 1 1 1. l.Anlninlr IVIl Sizeu liousc was ouservuu iu nuoiunij mo ving through our streets, drawn by four A pair of heavy, stout oxen. Itvas,in fact n ninnnnr's ll n nioneor's dwelling, with its furniture 1 - j- (onri inmnfps. nn n ioiirnev to some new pipe-cuiinncy the roof, out of which a volume of smoke was rolling. he interior was divided into rooms. Around thc fire somo half a dozen young heads were crowding, for it was pretty cold, while thc who was dis- charging her domestic duties, apparently engaged in getting dinuer- Fancy Agrictiltiire. At an immense expense we have engag ed the pen of a practical farmer, who will, from time to time, give us matter for the Agricultural Department. To Break ui a Farm. Early in the spring, as soon as you have laid in a sup ply of the best ploughs, harrows, rakes, hoes, &c, employ an overseer, ajid spend the balance of the year at the Springs if you are a fashionable, if not go trotting around two or three counties, trying to see if there is any possible chance of get ting thc nomination for the next August canvass. 13y these means your farm will be pretty well broken up in a surprising ly short time. Cheap way of Fattening Hogs. Turn them into your neighbor's cornfield every night. HOW TO CUKE BOTTS IN A HOUSE. Shoot him. If your laud appears worn out and 0 verworked, you may be sure you have harrowed its feelings too much. To .get the most work out of your hands keep them out of your pockets. How to catch Weasels. Run after them. If your hens do not lay well and easy, the best thiug you can do is to adopt some mode of getting their head off their stomaches. The plan of the lady who, in similar circumstances, put her hens under a barrel, and kept them there until they came to terms, is not admired. How to raise Geese. Send your daughters to fashionable boarding-school. If kept at home they will turn out ducks or "little stupids." To Raise Corn. "Wear tight boots. Keep your children out of the orchard while thc buds aae bursting, they might be hurt. A very laughable instance of a Luna tic's Cunning is given in a late English provincial paper. A parish officer, with the proper order, 'was taking him to the Asylum at Lancaster, but they passed one night on the way at an inn. Very early in thc morning the lunatic got up and searched the pockets of the officer, where he found the magistrate's order for his own detention; which, of course, let nim completely into the secret. "With that cunning which madmen not uufrequently display, he made the best of thc way to tho asylum, saw one of the keepers, and told him that he had got a fellow down at Lancaster, whom he wouldbringup inthecourse of thc day, ad ding : "He is a queer fellow, and has got very odd ways. For instance, I shouldn't wonder if he was to say I was the madman, and that he was bringing me 1 But you must take good care of him, and don't be lieve a word he says." "Thc keeper promised compliance, and the lunatic walked back to the inn, where he found the officer still fast asleep. He awoke him, and they sat down to breaksast together. " 'You are lazy fellow, to be sleeping all day ; I have had a long walk this moruingj'said the lunatic. "Indeed!' said the officer; 'I should like to take a walk myself, after break fast; perhaps you will go with me ?' "The lunatic assented; and aftor break fast they set out, the officer leading the way toward thc asylum, intending to de liver his charge ; but it never occurred to him to seo whether his order was safe. "When they got within sight of the a sylum, the lunatic exclaimed : "What a fine house that is I" "Yes, said the officer ; '1 should like to see thc inside of it.' "So should 1 1" replied the lunatic. "Well, I daresay they will let us go through it; I will ask,' was the response. "They went to thc door; the officer rang the bell, and thc keeper whom the lunatic had previously seen made his ap pearance, with two or three assistants. The officer then began to fumble in his pockets for tho order, when the lunatic produced it, and gave it to thc keeper, saying : "This is thc man I spoke to you about. You will take care of him; shavohis head, and put a strait-waistcoat on him !" "Thc men immediately laid hands on the poor officer who vociferated loudly that thc other was the madman, and he the officer ; but as this only confirmed thc story previously told bv the lunatic, it did not all tend to procure his liberation. He was taken away, and became so in dignantly furiousthat thc straitwaLtcoafc was speedily put upon him, and his head was shaved sccundan artem. "Meanwhile thc lunatic walked delib erately back to thc inn, paid his reckon ing, and set out on his journey homeward. The good people iu tho country were of course surprised on seeing the wrong man return. They were afraid that tho luna tic, in a fit of frenzy, had murdered the officer; and they asked him, with, much trepidation, what he had done with Mr. Stevenson, which was thc officer's name. "Done with him I" said thc lunatic, 'why, I left him at the asylum, as mad as a March hare ! "And this was not far from thc truth ; for thc wits of tho officer were well-nigh upset, by his unexpected detention and subsequent troatment. "Further inquiry was forthwith made by his neighbors, and it was ascertained that thc man was actually in the asylum. A magistrate's order was produced for his liberation, and he returned home with a handkerchief tied round his head, in- stead of thc covering which nature had bestowed upon it. Thc unfortunate. offi cer has been tho standing joke of tho neighborhood ever since." BgIn France, to kiss a lady with whom you are uot at all intimate, on meeting her, is very common; especially is this the case if she be a married lady. Not oly the members of the family, but all tho guests expect invariably to salute thc la dy of thc house on coming down in tho morning. But though the modest Amer ican may, perhaps, escape the ceremony on ordinary occasions, yet on New Year's day it is imperative. On that morning, says a Paris letter writer, I came down to my coffee about 9 o'clock. I sat. down quietly, bidding Madame a ban jour, as on ordinary occasions. But I was not to get off so easily. In a few moments she was at my elbow, with 'Mons. B., I am veryjingry with you.' I expressed, of course, a regret, and ignorance at having given her offence. 'Ah,' said she, 'you know very well tho reason. It is because you did not em brace rac when you come down this morning.' Madame was a lady of perhaps 28, with jet black, glossy hair, large lustrous black eyes, and a clear, fair complexion. She was ver beautiful; had she been plain I should have felt less embarrassed. She waited as though expecting me to atone for my neglect; but how could I before the whole table! I sat all this timo trembling in my scat. At length Mad ame said: 'Mons. B., cmbrassez moi.' Thc worst had come. I arose trembling ly, put my white, bloodless lips all greasy with butter and wet with coffee (for in my embarrassment I had dropped my napkin) to those of Madame. This was my first French kiss. . i.. 1 m ...... Thc Vinegar Faced Gentry. That very able and ubiquitous sheet, 'An Exchange Paper,' gives the following very plain statements, which wc com mend to thc afflicted : There is a class of men in every com munity who go about with vinegar faces, because somebody feels above them, or because they are not appreciated as they should be, and who have a constant quar rel with what they call destiny. We hate such people. They are a nuisance and a pest. They make all within their influ ence uncomfortable. These men have usually made a grave mistake in thc es timate of their abilities, or are unmitiga ted asses. Whenever this fault-finding-with one's condition or position occurs, there is always want of self-respect. If you arc a right down clever fellow, wash the wormwood off your face, and show your good will by your good deeds. If people 'feel above you,' why, return tho compliment and feel above them. If they turn up their noses because you are a mechanic or a farmer, or a clerk, turn up your noses a notch higher. If they swell when they pass you in the street, swell yourself. Deliver us from the whining fools who go around like babies telling how folks abuse them, and whining be cause society will not take them by the collar and drag them into decency. jjgflloracc Greeley gives the follow in confession of his faith in a letter to the Christian Ambassador. 'I have for thirty years earnestly hoped and believed that our Heavenly Father will in His own good time, broke the whole human race into a state of willing and perfect reconcilistion to himself and obe dience to his laws consequently one of complete and unending happiness. I be lieve that the moral character formed in this life will be that in which we shall a wake in the life to come, and that many die so deeply tainted by lives of trans gression and depravity, that a tedious and painful discipline must precede and prepare for their admission to the realms of eternal purity ond bliss. Believing; the ordinance of the Lord's S'jLppcr, as now celebrated among 11?, a fearful im pediment to thc progrea and triumph of tho prinsiplcs of tots abstinence from all that can intoxicate, I have for sometimo past felt it ry duty to abstain from it awaiting and hoping for the day when Chridtians of eycry sect shall realize that the blood of our Saviour is not truly rep resented by thc compounds of Vila and poisonous drugs commonly sold hero as wine, nor yet by any liquid essentially alcoholic, therefore intoxicating.' 'Do you mean to insinuate that I ! lie, sir?' exclaimed a fierce looking must ached gentleman to a raw Yankee who , hinted some slight skepticism to one of hi3 toughest statements, 'No mister, not at all only it kind o' strikes mo that 1 you are tarnel saving of thc truth.' ESSTho first piece of artillery was fn- veuted by a Ucrman, soon alter thc m ! vention of gunpowder, and artillery was ! first uscd by thc Moors at Algesiras, in ' Spain, in tho sioge of 1841. A free library has just opened at Sand Lake. Contents eight Almauaoa and tho Troy Directory for lb'51. If Sand Lake keeps on, it will have to be fenced in that's ! nil. I XSirTho cost of the United States army and navy is SSrOOOjOOO per annum. - j cWhy is a school master like a chair I Tl 1 1 11 maker; isecauso ue canes oquqhis.