- -itJ-U-t -- -.-.jtoi in mi ITI n , , .i.iiii nwiinwin mmmm i, I I II Ml Mumil m lA-iu Mm,L. xac LM.m.:uumwm l l. uu jj iiuul I juij , .I.,,.,- SJcuotcb to politics, Citcvatuvc, Agriculture, Science, iltovality, anfc eneral 3fntclligjcucc. VOL 15. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. APRILS, 1355 NO. 22. Published by Theodore Schoch. TERMS Two dollars per annum in advanrcTo iollars Rnd u quarter, half yearly and if not paid lie lore the end of the year. Two dollars and a half. No papers discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at the option of the Editor. ID Advertisements not exceeding one square (ten lines) will be inserted three weeks lor one dollar, and twenty-five cents for ercrv subsequent insertion. The charge for ouc and three insertions the same. A liber al discount made to yearly advertisers. ID All letters addressed to the Editor must be postpaid. J OH PRINTING. Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and ornamental Type, we aro prepared to execute evciydesciiption of Card, Circulirs.nill Heads, Notes. Blank Receipts Justices, Legttl and other Dinnhs, Pamphlets, &c. printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable erms, AT THE OFFICE OF THE JEFFERSOXIAX. COURTING IN CONNECTICUT. 'Twas Sunday night in Podunk valley, In clear cold wintry weather; Josiah Perkins and his Sally , . Sat by the fire together. 1Tvaa no new-fashioned iron case, With fancy work adorning, But a real old-fashioned tire-plucc, On purpose made for warming, : The crackling wood in fearful blaze Around the room was throwing. It's heat in bright and ruddy rays, And on their faces glowing. The apples by the chimney rug 'Were slowly getting warmer; The cider in the pewter mug Was bubbling in the corner. A wooden settle firm and good Their loving forms supporting; 'Twas made of seasoned white pine woodj And just the thing for courting. At one end Sally stuck like pitch, While Josiah seemed to fear her; But after a while he gave a hitch, And got a little nearer. Sal cast her eyes down looked quite tame, Though very sweetly blushing: While all the blood in Josh's frame Seemed to his face a gushing, He hitched again and got quite near He could not then resist her; He called her his own Sally dear, Then bashfully he kissed her. "Good gracious!" she gave a start from him, Her anger did not smother She said44 If you do that agin, Now Josh Til tell my mother." They soon made up, and she came back, And calmed her agitation; When last I saw them through the crack, Thcv were kissing like tarnation! Amusing. of the Albany Thc editor Ilegiatcr, having been disturbed by an assemblage of cats under his window, thus gives vent ,: ;,wi;nn;nn i . pie to change the Constitution when they pinch me, and kick me, but I stood it all But those cats, in our opinion, are in Hke. a rcduccd tem in requiriDg citizen- for the sake of the Dimmycratic party. danger, and we warn all who have any &c, . After they had rolled me over, striped me interest in them cither present or expect- j These things arc not sought after as ith paint and the lash, and-tried my pa ant to look to them. We have been con- ' mere shadows, nor arc they the dreams tainco completely, they stopped." ' , t . , with which visionaries amuse themselves, "Can you keep your tongue still ?" ask- strained to watch for hours, when we ougut , , . . , . , . i :,in , but which do no harm; they are Benously ( ed tne guide. to have been asleep. A e have heard the jDCUicate(j principles, earnestly instilled, "Yes sir," said I boldly. clock striko twelve, one, two, at intervals for the propagation of which there exists j "Will you know nothin' all your life?" in their performances, and have been ' several chief and many minor societies to , "Yes sir," I said. tempted to the use of terms not to be , u,uipu.u. r 3 r -,l!,riiMic rrtrlr nr niiT of flip. iouuu iu uuj , standard sermons of the day. We havo dropped many brickbats among them, ; . 3 ,..nA iimm t !. n n u-r wasted more wood upon tucm man wc are able to spare, have taken cold by ex- posurc to the night air, become hoarse by ; 1 1 T-, hollowing ""Scat." Wc have exausted our loose pieces of brick, the smaller sticks of our wood pile and our patience. In view of all these facts we submit that there is nothing left for us but to move ; ourself, or move those cats, and we shall ly thirty years of age, and is still grow- . ....!? OL - 1 1 if i 1 f not move, n c have prepared a double- . barreled gun, a full supply of powder and , u b , x i j i percussion caps, and m our opinion some body's cats will go home some moonlight ' night, complaining of feeling unwoll. If ( they do, wc must be held harmless. J 7 'Now girls," said our friend Mrs. j Partington to her nieces the other day, "vou must Pet husbands as soon as pos- eible, or they'll all be murdered !" "Why so aunt?" inquired one. 'Why I sec by the papers that we've got almost fifteen thoueand post offices, and nearly all of them dispatch males ev ery day let the Lord have mercy on us , . poor widows," and the old lady stepped quiouiy to mu loosiog-giats 10 put on ncr new cap. Interestjng Domestic Discovery. It was Napoleon or Madame dc Stael frjbp said "if you scratched a Rus sian -you would find a Tartar uudcrneatb." Jones, of Marylebouc goes further than ihis, for, he says that ho has only got to scratch his wife, and he catches a Tartar instantly. Punch. From the N. Y. Journal of Commerce. The Progress of Infidelity. It is most earnestly to be denlored that so few who are born in this land, and love American traditions. are awaro ot the rapid hatred of Christianity and its con comitants which inspires the vast numbers l .. : : i4.r who are yearly increasing our population from the continent of Europe. We do not speak of the convicts and paupers that arc smuggled into our ports from Genoa, Hamburg, and Trieste; but of the oo tens of thousands of Germans who from year to year come from provinces of Eu- ropo completely panthcized, and with whom freedom is considered synonymous with the downfall of the kingdom of the Redeemer. We called attention some months ago to the fact that large numbers, 4 who have come of late years to this coun j try, are disciples of the anarchist school of Heine, according to whose creed, j "there can be no true freedom until Chris tianity is bloodily abolished," i. c. until a persecution by Infidels of Christians is j instituted, with ends similar to those of Dioeletian or Snnor. Wn abownil tlmf. n- lections had been made to turn upon the ' single point whether prayers should be ( offered to God in our Legislatures, wheth er the Lord's day should be kept and re ' ligious oaths be maintained. One of the most influential German pa ' pers in this city published simultaneously ' articles warning the better class of Ger- mans, of whom there are so many in our ' city, against eneouraging theso excesses. ; Our remarks were republished in various parts of the United States, and we trust ' ed that a good result might be produced. Since then, however, another anniversary has recurred of the birth-day of Thomas Paine, and it has filled our hearts with ' shame to learn how the natal day of this ; great enemy of Christianity has been cel ebrated. The German language consti- tutes a barrier which prevents the most of our people from imagining what takes place behind the screen of that unknown , tongue. The Teutonic dialect insures the I existence of the Anti-Christian legions, whose large numbers are rc-inforced con ' tinually from abroad, as a vast seorct eo- ciety to which none can have access who do not go through an arduous painstak ing apprenticeship of study, which in the ; ond leaves them, when initiated, only a ; moDg the first class of novices. Yet its . members are easily naturalized, become ! as speedily citizens of these States, ear- rying Atheism to the polls, and receiving the homage of demagogue politicians to ! obtain a few miser able suffrages. A few of the "reforms" demanded by the "Freimaenner" so they call them selyes who havo set up Thomas Paine as their apostle, and who strive to gain strength to revolutionize free govern i nient by the establishment of the tyranny of anarchy, are: abolition of the laws for the observance of the Sabbath; abolition of oaths in Congress; abolition of oaths upon the Bible; no more prayer in our Legislatures: abolition of the Christian SyStems 0f punishment; abolition of the Presidency, of all Senates, of all lawsuits involving exnense; the right of the peo- J aunureuBoi moubanu oi loregners nflTiHatPrl vehn nrn in fonefnnf. rnm. amiiateu, wno arc in constant corn- mun,Cation with each other and act in concert, and who are beginning to be felt in every corner of the land, but particu- lady in the West, where their efforts are j . J ofJforcipn in?roducSl bv them. : A Tall Nurse. The Maine giantces, Silva Hard', is a ! native of Willton, in Franklin county, Me., is seven feet six inches in height -ic rnf nor non fhnn tlnciTT t nf rrsifl three hundred and thirty pounds is near inS She has heretofore maintained hcr- il 4" FJ 01 a nurse, having the reputation of being a mQ&t cxceilcut ouc. but for a few montbs past, her health has not been good enough for her to practice in this vocation, ,Wo assured that she nover,as nurse, takes an mtant m her arms, but always 1 holds it in her hand. Placing the head up- on the end of her fingers, its feet extend towards her wrist, and with the thumb and mtlc fiuger elevated, she forms an j of her band being quite equal to the whole I length of an infant. She is unable to pass ordinary doors without stooping a good deal and it is said for convenience she usually puts her thimble and other littles upon the casing over the door, instead of upon any lower object, as table or desk An amusing incident is told or her, which runs in this wise, and which is said to be strictly true. While sho was pass ing through tho kitchen of a farm house .one day with a large pan of milk in each hand, her hair caught upon a hook which projected two or three iuches from the ceiling, and held her fast. She could neither stoop to set the pans down, nor raise her hands to disingago her hair, and was compelled thus to remain until her ' cnos brought others to her assistance. Eastern Portland) Argils. Know-Nothings Exposed. The following is Mr. Cauliflower Smith's experience in lookinr ud "thcin Know - Nothings." Smith's purpose was to ex - pose, explode, annihilate the Urder. Head what he says about it : ! My first idea was to find a Know-Noth ' T T u .1 4i " ing. I know'd I could do nothing till . found one. that was sartin. Well. I cay- j orted around considerable, as cute as , possum, as ounnin' as a fox ' good many privately if they did and, of course, l lied considerable in gittin' around them. Well, all I got out of 'em was "I don't k?wwt" so . . " W I had to change my tack. I goes to one of 'em who did'nfc, . him that I know'd I was an old sinner. but I wished to repent in sackcloth and asues, anu n ye a only get me into tne Know-Nothings, I'd show, by zeal in the cause, the sincerity of my repenteuce. He looked afc me riaht. strnifrU. fnr snm Know notinn' and I tell'd him that I was -Llt)er nine and tnone, now flow treely(to get a cloalc wuicli tie bad purchased. , revolutionary pensioner in Shandaken-, gittin tired of the old dimmycratic wayjevery winter; ice is unknown in Rome, Ho was observed to enter some premises 1 namod Barthcltny, now in his 99th year, of doin things, and I intended to with- tand tue waves of the Euxine dash their near but returned almost immediately, 1 yet hale and vigorous, cultivating the lit draw now from popular life, and devote mtry foam uncrystalized upon the rocks, j and in a hurried manner inquired if the tie spot around his humble tenement with my deolining years to my country. I told i Somc have ascribed these climate changes countryman had five dollars about him 1 his own hands and drawing his own fire- . time, and then he seemed to think I was,aSricultare an(1 wc aro certain that noj sincere. He ax'd me it 1 wanted to jme right off, and I told him yes. Then he ax'd me to meet him by the Hospital at 10 o'clock that night, and he would take me to see the elephant. "You seo how long-headed I am Mr. Chairman; I know'd I could come it over 'em if I only parsevered, and did'ut I do it? He met me at 10 o'clock, and he took and blindfolded me, for he said wo hadn't fur to go. He told me I must not only know nothin' but I must say nothin', until the hull thing was through. We walked on a pretty smart distance, 1 reckon nigh on to a mile, when he give me a devil of a pinch on ray arm, and ho sez, 'Now look out.' I felt kind o' queer, I tell you, for I was goin' it blind alto gether, but my prospect for Recorder was at stake, and you may reckon it sort o1 served me up. ''He took me down stairs, and then through a celler then through a long pas sage way. Right thar in that passage way he told me to give him all my mon ey. I obeyed him of course, though I didn't like to part with it. Wc walked along the passage till we como to a door when he gave me the signal. It was two raps. The door opened, and thar were some fellows whispering. Directly a voice said ' bring in the repentin' sinner,' and I was led forward. I heerd 'em talk in' all around me, and sometimes they would pinch me. They stripped me stark naked, leavin' nary astich on mo but my stockings. 'Do you repent old sinner V said one to me. 'Yes,' said I gittin' down on my knees. Whack ! cum a lash right acrost my bare hide, raakin' mc squirm. 'Get up,' said the feller that had been talkin' to me, 'that's no position for an American citizen.' Then he gave me two more whacks with the lash, and put a heavier blindfold around my eyes. " Then the Know-Nothings all com menced singing the Star Spangled Banner; while the guides led mc around the lodge room. Some would tickle me. and some . -6- .u. ,, tinued Smith ."and T saw that T Was "Where ?" inquired all "In Deacon Johnson's stable on Canal street." A Good Old Age. There is living in Plymouth Township an aged lady named Peggy Lerch, and known generally as Peggy Lark. She is of German extraction, born in New Jer sey, in the German Valley, on the 15th February 1751, and is now in her 105th year. She moved to Wyoming fifty-six years ago with her husband who has been dead fifty years. She is dear minded, and of memory, and loves to talk of old times. On her 103d birth-day she walked over to Capt. Wallers to dine as she had done for several years, a distance of more than half a mile. This year she was unable to do so, having fallen and hurt her side. Her sleep is good except at times dis turbed by a cough which troubles her. She remembers seeing General Wash ington, and has a clear recollection of c vents of tho Revolution. Her father, Michael Pace, died many years ago at Northmoreland, now in Wy- oming Co, at the advanced age of 103 the Englishman to sit on the other side of years. He paid her a visit before he died, 1 the barrel, and remarked that "there was and told her she might live to his age. an equal chance for both," set fire to the She said sho hoped not, "And now," she 'match. The officer retreated in a hurry, sayg, "I am a year older." j when Old Put laughed at him, saying A brother recently died in Northmore- ."You arc ju&t as brave a man as I took land, aged nearly ninety." y0u to be; this is nothing but a barrel of We visited the aged lady, and found onions to try you by; but you don't like her sitting by a comfortable stove with a the smell." book on her lap. She reads small print ( without spectacles, but thinks old age( yQ once heard of a young lady who is hard, and has but few pleasures. was requested by a bachelor somewhat Mrs. Murphy with whom she lives is a niece and the old lady spoko of her as very kind, and the niece said the aunt was 'always pleasant and contented and no : trouble. HVXriWyr Times. Changes of Climate. Tbefollowing, from the Scientific Atncr ;zc";' contains some interesting faet3, and , treats of a very celling subject, worthy of uaieiui investigation : History informs us that many of the; countries of Europe which now possesses. I.vcrJ U1"d winters, at one time experienced severo co'u during this season of the year a!Tue Tiber, at Home, was often frozen o- I ax'd alver antl snow at one time lay for forty purchase them, if the owner would deliv- idn't belong, daJ3 in that city. The Euxine Sea wasjer them at a grocery store, which he a- frozen over every winter during the time 01 '-'via, ana the rivers lluine and Kuonc.had driven about a couple of blocks.whcn I III r " i uscd to be froznn so deep that the ice sua-.the tamcu loaded wagons. The waters of the I M l. - 1 II J- 10 agriculture : tue cutting uown oi aenee forests, the exposure of the upturned soil to the summer's sun, and the draining of great marshes. We do not believe that such Sreat changes could have been pro- duccd on the climate of any country by' as could have been rro- such theory can account for the contrary cuange or cnmate irom warm to com ( the hand of the unsuspecting potato mcr winters which history tells us has taken! chant, and entered the side3 entrance of place in other countries than those named, the house he had previously been in. Greenland received its valleys and moun- After waiting upwards of five minutes, tains ; and its east coast, which is now in- the countryman proceeded to make in accessible, on account of perpetual ice quires, and discovered that hi3 quondam heaped upon its shores, was in the elev- J acquaintance had passed though the yard enth century, the seat of flourishing Scan- into the back alley in the rear. The ame dinayian colonies all trace of which is WM then evident, and the victim drove now lost Cold Labrador was named 1 in- back to market a'sa(J bufwiser mi nnV orthmC,D' Wh01 V1?; e?f ! A' 'nus a handful of small change. D. 1000, and were charmed with its then j Short,y aftenvardSj a 8imgar trick was mud climate. played upon an unsuspecting indiuidual The cause of these changes is an im- who WM standing with a load of hay. portant inquiry A pamphlet, by John, A man an3werirgtue description of the Marry, civil engineer, has recently beenbofore.Mncd sha?per purchased the load published in London, in which he endeay- of h and droyc Elm ors to attribute these changes of climate street to the changeable position of the magnet- niu ttmm j in 10 poles. I he magnetic variation or de- tQ tbig ouge and faefc ft t'funk of clination of the needle is well known. ei. jj At the present time it amounts in London to 23 degrees west north, while in 1G58 the line of variation passed through Eng land, and then moved gradually west un til 1816. In that year a great removal of ice took place on the coast of Greenland; hence it is inferred, that the cold meri dian, which now passes through Canada and Siberia, may atone time have passed through Itally, and that of the magnetic meridian returns, as it is now doing, to its old lines in Europe. Rome may once more see her Tiber frozen over, and the merry llhinelander drive his team on the ice of tho classic river. Whether the changes of climate mentioned have been caused by the change of the magnetic meridian or not, we have too few facts be fore us at present to decide conclusively; but the idea, once spread abroad, will soon lead to such investigations as will no doubt remove every obscurity, and settle the question. iAmusing Duels. A work on "Duels and Duelling" has recently been published in Boston, which contains far more amusement than one would expect to find in such a volume. The case of Major Hillaa and Fen ton, in Ireland, iu which the former gentleman was shot, is an illustration. The Judge in summing up the evidence, said to the jury: "Gentlemen, it is my business to lay down the law to you, and 1 will. The law says the killing a man in a duel is murder, and I am bound to tell you it is murder; therefore in the discharge of my duty I tell you so; but I tell you at the same time a fairer duel than this I never heard of in the whole course of my life !" Two physicians, by the name of Mead and Woodward, fought in England, and the latter slipping, his opponent exclaim ed "Take your life." To which the prostrate Galen replied, " Anything but your physic." " Old Put," one of the heroes of tho revolution, was very odd also in his ideas of tho code. lie agreed to meet a Brit ish officer at a specified place and hour, without seconds. When the Briton re paired to the spot he was greeted by a shot from "Old Put" lying in perdu a bout thirty rods off. Whilo "Put" was reloading, the officer approached and asked. "What arc you about? Is this the conduct of an American officer and man of honor?" "What am I about to dol" replied the general. "A pretty question to put to a man you intend to murder! I'm about to kill you; and if you don't beat a retreat in less time than it takes old Health to hang a tory, you are a gone dog." Tho officer fled. The old wolf hunter accepted another challenge from a British officer. At the appointed time and spot the officer found him seated near a barrel apparently of gunpowder smoking a pipe lie asked advanced in years, to take a seat upon his knee, while in a crowded sleigh, "No, thank you," said she, " I am afraid such an old seat would break down with mc." " J A new kind of Roguery. A trick was perpetrated upon two , honest countrymen last Monday, which proves that there is something new at teasi in roguery under tuc sun. As James Mahoney was standing in market, with about half a cart-Joad of potatoes, he was accosted by a respecta-. ' ble-looking man, who, after a little-cbaf- ' feriug about the price, finally agreed to verred be was the proprietor of. They I. a . - " - - countryman was asked to stop while his companion went to a house hard by J T , which he'd let him have until thev arrived ' at the store. j j I bavu't got so much," said the coun- trymau, drawing out what change he had, I ' n.l.TnK o mmmJ t x.iir. i.- l d,.n which amounted to between two and three dollars. Well," said the purchaser, "let me have that," and he forthwith took it from Shortly returning, he asked the vender of hay if he had five dollars about him; "I want to pay it to the woman of the house," said he, "and I'll give you a gold piece when we get to the store." The hay man thought it a good chance to get one of Benton's mint-drops for a rag, and willingly handed him a five dol lar Indiana bill. "Hold on," said the stranger, "perhaps I'll have to get you to help me out with the trunk." The man did hold on, and might have been holding on till doomsday, for the ac complished sharper had vanished through the back entry. Both parties entered complaints at the stafion-house, but no clue could be form ed which might lead to the detection of this ingenious victinuzer of hay and po tatoes. Cincinnati JLnquircr. Ponce De Leon's "Fountain of Youth." One of the most remarkable natural curiosities of Florida, is Wakulla spring, a miniature lake in the vicinity of Talla hassee, which is constantly fed with pure cold water from the unknown depths of a marine river : " Taking a narrow path, we passed through some dense underwood; and sud denly we were standing on the edge of a basin of water, about one hundred yards in diameter. It is almost circular. The thick bushes were growing to the water's edge, and bowing their heads beneath its surface. Wc stepped into a skiff, and pushed off from the shore. Some immense fishes attracted my attention, and I seized a spear to strike them. The boatman laughed, and asked how far I supposed they were beneath the surface. I answer ed, 'About four feet.' He assured mc that they were at least twenty feet from me, and it was so. The water is of the most marvellous transparcuoy. I drop ped an ordinary pin in water forty feet ; deep, and saw its head with perfect dis tinctness as it lay on the bottom. As we approached the centre, I noticed a jagged, grayish, limestone cliff, beneath us. It was pierced with holes ; through these o penings we seemed to look into unfath omable depths. The boat moved slowly on. Wc hung trembling over the edge of ! the sunken precipice, and far below it lay a dark, yawning, unfathomed abyss. From its gorge came pouring forth with immense velocity a living river. "Flood upon flood hurries on, never ending, And never will rest; nor from travail be free. Like a sea that is laboring the birth of a sea." "Our little boat floated ou anelcment as transparent as the air above, seemed hovering midway between two worlds. "Pushing on just beyond this mouth, I dropped a ten cent piece into the water which is there one hundred and ninety feet in depth, and saw it clearly shining on the bottom. This seems indeed incred ible. The water must possess a magnify ing power, for if such a piece were lying at the foot of a tower 030 hundred and ninety feet in height, it could not bo soen eo plainly from the summit. We moved on toward the south side, and suddenly perceived the water,the fishes, which were darting hither and thither, the long flcxi- ble roots, and the wide-bladed, luxuriant grasses upon the bottom, all arrayed i in j tho most Ibrilliant prismatic hues. The ( gentlo swell occasioned by tho motion of our skiff, gave to tho whole an undulating motion, around Death like stillness reigned a- All seemed magical and unreal The boyish dreams, which I used to have after reading the Arabian nights' Enter tainment, were actualized. A more fairy like scene I can scarco conceive. " J be Indian- name for this is beautifully significant. VWakulla mean 'the Mystery,' It is said that fho Spanish discoverers of this fountain nlunf- ed into it withjalmost frantic iov. The supposed that they had found the long: sought 'Fons. Juventutis,' or Fountain of Youth, which should rei'uvenate them af ter exhaustless marches and battles,." Providence Journal,. An Election Fact. There is a veteran wood from fho fnrpsf;. IWfhplmv is a Democrat, and prides himself in never being absent from the poll. His wife, whols the iunior a trifle over half a cen- i itm. j t c . lury, is u uigr auu uaa oneu ineu iu detain him on election days but the rcso- lutions of old 99 were generally, as tri umphant as the famou3 Virginia one of '93. For the operations of this year the cunning woman had conceived a famous idea. The election came on the 6tb, she well knew, and what does she do but pre sent the old ventern with a bouncing young son on the 4th I Kurse3 are scarco in Shandakcn, patriotism and paternity bad a sharp struggle, but in the end Democ racy was floored, for Batbelmy staid home to rock the cradle. Roundout Courier. A Man Bnrned Alive. It is our painful duty, this week, to re cord one of the most sad and fatal casu alities which has happened in our vicicety for sometime past. A stage driver of one of the line of sta ges between Tidioute and Franklin, as-we are informed, was taken with the small pox a few days since, and was conveyed to a shanty about a half mile this side of Tidioute, where he was left to the tender mercies of a man who was hired to take charge of him for the consideration of a pint of "whiskey !" This man, for some reason or other, absented himself from the shanty, for about half an honr, and when ho returned, found it almost wholly consumed by fire, and all that was left of the poor stage driver, were his scortched and crumbling bones. How the fire orig inated is unknown ; but disease had sto len away so much of the poor man's strength, that he was unable to drag him self from the building, and consequntly fell a victim to tho raging element. War ren (Pa.) Ledger. The newspaper is a law book for tho indolent, a sermon for the thoughtful, a library for the poor. It may Btimulste the indifferent, it may also instruct the most profound. BSsT'Men scorn to kiss among themselves, And scarce will kiss a brother: Women oft want a kiss so bad, They smack and kiss each other! JG-'Thc Holly Hock has faded, Polly; The sun-flower's lost its hue, Yet sure as I live, by golly, I see no change in vou. CSfThe true picture of despair is a pig reaching through a hole in the fenco to get at a cabbage lying only a few in ches beyond his nose. JCSTA Western editor, in speaking of a concert singer, says her voice is delicious pure as moonlight, and as tender as a three shilling shirt. JXIF'Thcrc is a man in this vicinity said to bo so opposed to Catholicism, tnat ho won't travel on cross roads. jgST'A street preacher has appeared in St. Louis, proclaiming that he is Joo Smith, the prophet, raised from the dead. Loving Husbands. A St. Louis cd- itor, complains that the married men sit in church with their arms wound loving ly around their wives, a practice that con fuses tho bachelors and takes their minds from the contemplation of serious things. IQ3 A western editor thus delivers himself : Wc would say to the individ ual who stole our shirt off the pole, whilo wc were lying in bed waiting for it to dry, that we sincerely hope the collar may cut. hid throat. JjjSomc malicious parsons assert that tho letters M. D. which are placed after physicians names signify Money; Down. Our imp, Mont, says theymeau, Man Destroyer. A young man on being requested' to dance the Scotch reel with a couple of sour looking old maids, objected on toft nd that pickles did'nt agree with him. 0 ' Why is a married man like a can dle? Because ho Boruetimcs goes out a night when he oughtcat tov 1 5; -f -SI 1 .1 i 1 -1 1 t