1 . ... -ri-- iiHT v' . . r"v:" 1 ' ' '''''V, JDcwiri to ftolitirs, literature, Agriculture, S-rinttt, illorality, anb nteral ttclligcnc. . i VOL 19. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. JUNE 7, IS60. NO. 90 Published b? Theodore Sf.hoch. mnnc T,!rtiioo k,.; j rr,.rt dollars and a quarter, half yearly and if not paid be ItiUiUO. ..wuuuiuo uiiuuill ill UUtiiilUl; 1. y fore 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. lETAdv-ertisements of one square (ten lines) or less, ons or three insertions, $1 00. Each additional inser ton. "25 cents. Longer ones in proportion. JOB PRtflTTIffG. Having a general assortment of large, plain and or namental Type, e are prepared to execute every lc scription of Cards, Circulars, Hill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts, ".h'lMpK ted with nottness and aespatcu, on ra.isoiidi)ie terms at this office, j. Q. DUCKWORTH. JOHN HAYN To Country Dealers. DUCKWORTH & HAYN, WHOLRSALE DEALERS IN Groceries, Provisions, Liquors,&c. No. 80 Dey street, New York. June 10, 1859. ly. The Girls and the Wives. Some body has written the following about the girl?, and set it afloat: God bless the girls, Whose golden curls Blend with our evening dreams. They haunt our lives Like spirit wives, Or as naiads haunt the streams. Thoy soothe our pains, They fill our brains With dreams of summer hours; God bless the girls, God bless their curls, God bless our human flowers. The wives, we think, are quite as de serving of a blessing as the girls; there fore, we submit the following: God bles the wives, They fi!! our Irises With little bees and honey; They ease life's shocks,. They mend our socks, But don't they spend the money? When we are sick They heal us quick That is, if they shouid love u-; If not, we die, And yet they cry, And place tombstones above us. . Of roguish girls, With sunny curls, We may in fancy dream; But wives true wives Throughout our lives, Are everything they seem. Wouldn't Own Up. Joe Stetson was a wild, frollicking fel low, who spent most of his time in drink ing and spreeing, wbile his wife poily, was left at home to do tbe ohores. Upon a certain occasion Joe left home to bo baok as be said, that night. Xiht eatno,f but about sunset Joe came up in the' worst condition imaginable his clothes; dirty and torn, one eye in deep mourning, and bis face presenting more the appear ance of a piece of raw beef than anything else. Polly met him at the door, and no ticing his appearance, exclaimed : "Why, Joe, what in the world is the matter ?" ''Polly," said Joe, "do you know long Jim Andrew's ! Well, him and me had a fight." "Wbo whipped, Joe!" asked Polly. "Polly, we bad the hardest fight you ever did see I bit him and be hit me, and then we clinched. Polly, ain't sup per most ready ? I ain't bad nothing to at since yesterday mornin'." 'But tell me who whipped, Joe ?" ask- ed Polly. "Polly," replied Joe, "JL tell yer you A", A ana c m dnVtt. 9 Q lltm ) TlH TUP n.Ar AA kp ih a floht 8S him and meittu" iiuuupKUBBB mmtJU had. When he clinched me I jerked ieaTV? ac?.mPaniea4lDJ D,e loose from bim, and then gin bim three! hf-hnP1. balf-despainng mother--or four of the most sufficientest licks yer J wfb,oe0 0D,J h?P 8 10 .a tb.er f. bellf ever beam of. Polly, ain't supper taost'f br 0tt cco in the justice of t, , J . j j) j tho God she worshiped, and in the noble ready 7 I'm nearly starved." , , ,.ri . n l t- j :n ? counsel, wbo, without hope of fee or re "Do tell me wbo whipped, will you V , ' , j T n r r . j ward upon eartb, had undertaken tbe "Poll v " said Joe " vou don't know cau.e-took his seat in tho prisoner's box, nothing about fibt n' I tell 2 le& with a "stony firmness" listened to nothing about ngbtm . I tell yer we, J lou t HKe tigers, we rouea, and we ronea,'"" -""'"6 Vi luu ,uu"',u'v'u" and we tumbled first him on top and 8at quietly by, while tho large auditory then tbe boys would pat me on the sboul-jloked 0D him as thougu wondering what der, and holler, Oh, my I Stetson 1' We be could saJ ,n defence of one whose guilt gouged, and bit, and tore up the dirt in'eJ "garaea as certain, lbe exaroma- Seth Runnel's grocery yard wuss nor two on 01 w'tneseos ioj ineatatc was begun, of tbe WOfjding of happiness and grief in wildbulU. Polly, ain't supper ready ijanda well-arranged mass of evidence, thig life Tho ohants and songs and I'm very hungry." circumstantial and positive, was mtro-:gees of merry ono8 to.day wiU be broken "Joe Stetson I" said Polly, in a tone. ed, which seemed to impale tbe pns- by waila to.morroW for tb0 sod will be bristling with anger, "will you tell me 'r bcJ0Ild tbo Pf "J'J of extrication. iled on tho breast of somo wo thought who whipped I" i The COUDScl for lhe deeil3e propounded QOt 80 near the gravo. Wo read who "Polly," said Joe, drawing a long but few questions, and those of a charao- aro marrjed and wish them joy; a lino be sigh, "IMkred!" :ter which excited no uneasiness on tho low is the reCord of death, and wo say il part of tbe prosecutor merely, m most mourDfaHyf peaoe to their ashes. Sorrow Q , . L -j , 'capes, requiring the mam witness to be treQ(jB on the heefi of j0J songg aro huBh. -ae-Some years ago a drupgist used to defioite a8 t0 time and place. When the ed tQ0 footM ofJdeJath. taaghs are be great on stunning advertisements of evidence of tbe prosecution was ended, broken rudely; voices, no matter how mu wonderful panaceas that would cure any- Lincoin introduced a few witnesses to re- Bioa, are 8tif,'cd in a momerjtnever a- vuiug, iuc aurora orea,iB io pimple." One Sunday morning tbo good druggist saw suspended over the door of msnlace of bllEiness a larofi VilanlrsnnlrA- to which was appended a placard that r - o frora a child four years of age, by two doses of Coastoek's Vermifuge. Abe ' lilHCOUl. j - 'Tbrillinff Episode in the Life of oorrcsponueuce or tne uieveiana .Loader, rose, while a deathly silence pervated the As a Western man, I wish togi?o vent, vast audience, and in a olear but moder to my enthusiasm over tbe nomination of ate tone began his argument Slowly and the Hon. Abraham Lincoln for President, carefully he reviewed tho -testimony, of tho United States. Mr. Lincoln, or 'pointing out tbe hitherto unobserved die "Old Abe," as his friends familiarly call oropanoies in tbe statements of the prin- hitn, is a self-made man. A Kcntuokian . by birtb, he emigrated to Illinois in his plain and plausible he made to appear j having pierced the carotid artery'; the vie- facturo astronomical instruments, and i boyhood, w here he earned his living at orooked as a serpent's path. The witness tim had been for some time wasting away docks and watches, which are copied af the anvil, devoting bis leisure hours to' had stated that tbe affair took place at a ' by disease. Tho landlord was one of the ter European models, probably intro- 8tudv HainS chosen the law as his fa- n- if. j j l: . -j.. ture calling, he devoted himself assidu - ously to bis mastery, contending at every step with adverse fortune. During this period of study, be for sometime found a home under tbe hospitable roof of one Armstrong, a farmer who lived in a log bouse some eight miles from the village of Petersburg, Menard County. Here, clad in homespun, with elbows out, and knees covered with patches, young Lin coln would master his lessons by the fire light of the cabin, and then walk to town fnr fhf nnrnoRo rf rpnlffitlnn TKio mnn ; Arm8trorj was himse)f ' b t he 8aw j the genius struggling in the young student and opened to him his rude home, and opened to him bia rude home, bid him welcome to his coarse fare. How Lincoln graduated with promise, how ho has more than fulfilled that promise, how honorably he acquitted himsolf alike on the battlefield, in defending our border settlements against the ravages of savage toes, and m the balls of our national le gislature, are matters of history, and need no repetition here. But one little inci dent of a more private nature, standing as it docs as a sort of sequel to some things already alluded to, 1- deem worthy of reo- ord. Some few years since the oldest son of Mr. Lincoln's old friend Armstrong, tbe chief support of his widowed mother the good old man having some time pre viously passed from earth was arrested on tne coarge oi murder. A young man had been killea during a riotous melee, in the nibt time, at a campmecting, and one of his associates ttated that the death wound was inflicted by young Arm strong. A preliminary examination was gone into, at which the accuser testified so positively that there seemed no doubt of the guilt of the prisoner, and therefore he was held for trial. As is too often the case, the bloody act caused an undue de gree of excitement in tbe public mind. Every improper incident in the life of the prisoner each act which bore the least semblance of rowdyism each school-boy quarrel was suddenly remembered and magnified, until they pictured him as a fiend of the most horrid hue. As these rumors spread abroad, they were receiv ed aB gospel truth, and a feverish desire for vengeance seized upon the infatuated populace, while only prison-bars preven ted a horrible death at the bands of a mob. The events were heralded in the county papers, paiuted in the highest col ors, accompanied by rejoicing over the certainty of punishment being meted out to the guilty party. The prisoner, over whelmed by the circumstances under which he found himself placed, fell into a melancholy condition, bordering upon despair; and the widowed mother, looking through her tears, saw no cause for hope earth! v aid At this juncture, the widow received a letter from Mr. Lincoln, volunteering his services in an effort to save the youth from the impending stroke. Gladly was bis aid- accepted, although it seemed im possible for even his sagacity to prevail in such a desperate cae; but the heart of the attorney was in his work, arfd ho set about it with a will that knew no such word as fail. Feeling that the poisoned condition of the public mind was such as to preclude tbe possibility of impanneling as impartial Jury in the Court having jurisdiction, he procured a change of ven ue, and a postponement of tbe trial. He then went studiously to work unraveling the history of the case, and satisfied him self that hi client was (he victim of mal ice, and that the statements of tbe accu ser were a tissue of falsehoods. When the trial was called on, tho prisoner, pale . i-i-.i t i move 8ome erroneous impressions in re- g8rd t0 tD0 previous c ent wh0 though some sharacter of bis ou- what rowdish, bad, i i :.:!,' aot. arjd to show that a greater degree of OevQr UeeU UUUWU VU vuiubjiu a iwuuo nnA nA ihnn il mrianr! nnd tho jdeceased. The prosecutor felt that tho oase was a olear one. and bis opening ' sneeoh was brief and formal. I c JLincoio a oipal witness. That which had seemed (certain hour in tho evening, and that, by l :a f k:i.i u:: t. jtho aid of tho brightly shining moon, he Baw the prisoner inflict the death blow with a slung-shot. Mr. Lincoln showed that at the hour referred to, the moon had not yet appeared above tho horizon, and consequently the whole tale was a fabri cation. An almost instantaneous change seemed to have been wrought in the minds of his auditors, and the vordict of "not guilty" was at tho end of every tongue. But the advooate was not con tent with this intellectual achievement. His whole being bad for months beon bound up in this work of gratitude and mercy, and, as tbe lava of the overchar ged crater bursts from its imprisonment, so great thoughts and burning words leap ed forth from the soul of tho eloquent Lin coln. Ho drew a pioture of the perjurer so horrid and ghastly that the aocuser could sit under it no longer, but reeled and Btaggered from the Court-room, whilo the audience fanoied tbey could see the brand upon his brow. Then in words of thril ling pathos, Linooln appealed to tho ju rors as fathers of sons who might become fatherless, and as husbands of wives who might be widowed, to yield to no previous impressions, no ill-founded prejudice, but to do his client justice; and as he alluded to the debt of gratitude which he owed tbe boy's sire, tears were seen to fall from many eyes unused to weep. It was near night when he concluded by saying that, if justice were done as he believed it would be boforo the sun Bhoald set, it would shine upon his client a freo man. The Jury. retired, and the Court adjourn ed for tho day. Half an hour had not o lapsod, when, as the officers of tbe Court and the volunteer attorney sat at the tea table of their hotel, a messenger announ ced that tbe Jury had returned to their seats. All repaired immediately to the Court-Houso, and while the prisoner was being brought from the Jail, the Court- room was filled to overflowing with citi zens of the town. When tho prisoner and his mother entered, silence reigned as completely as though tbe house were empty. Ine toreman of the Jury, m an swer to the usual inquiry from the Court, delivered the verdict of "Not Guilty 1" The widow dropped into the arms of her son, wuo littea oer up, ana cold ner to look upon bim as before free and inno cent. Then, with the words, "Where is Mr. Lincoln 7" he rushed across the room and grasped the hand of bis deliverer, whilo his heart was too full for utterance. Lincoln turned his eyes toward the West, where the sun still lingered in view, and then turning to the youth, said, "It is not yet Bundown, and you aro free." I confess that my cheeks were not wholly unwet by tears, and I turned from tbe af fecting scene. As I oast a glance behind, I saw Abraham Lincoln obeying tho di vine injunction, by comforting the wid owed and the fatherless. D. Beware ofthe Boosters. Cbickon fanoiers who are in the habit of teasing a pet rooster at feeding time, should be made aware of the fact that the spurs often contain dangerous virus. We clip the following from an exchange : "Recently as Mr. Harris, of Marble head, Mass., was feeding his fowls, a well grown cock suddenly flew at him and struck one of its spurs a short distanoe into his leg just below tho knee. Mr. Harris thought nothing of tbo occurrence until a day or two afterwards, when he started to walk some distance from homo, when bo was seized with such a pain in his log that he could not prococd and was obliged to be taken home in a wagon. Since Tuesday night of last week, he has not been able to Bleep a wink, and all tho time be has lain in agonizing pains. On Thursday evening he became delirious, and all night continued crowing at tho top of his voice. Tho sufferer has had the best medical aid, but nothing has ton ded to relie7? h sufferings, and his oase now adored hopeless. Mr. Harris ia a .oung man twenty yeors of auo." iSf Reader, did you ever notice imme diately after tho "marriage head," that the .0bituary" notice followed? Typical -: tn hn hnarli hv nn hnlnw. K?iT'n n!nn tVinf taUnm n Tiinun nf mv mind!?' exclaimed a certain young lady j - liiw uuuu imiuh . j renlied the uncle, "vou have none to spare." Science Aiding Justice. The facts embodied in the following narration, in connection with a recent murder trial, show tho value of scientific acquirements and are of excoeding inter est to a large olass of our readers: A traveler was found dead in his bed. one morning, at a country tavern. His throat was cut at the side, the instrument most influential and highly-esteemed per- t . ? . b,J . r- Bons in the neighborhood, was extensive- ly and well connected, and bad a large pouter's and cabinet makers' tools arc al and interesting family. Having been so equal to any of European manufao soen very late at night passing through ture. They are said to be very qaick in tho hall into which the traveler's door o-' observing any improvement introduced pened, the suspicions of certain persons ' by foreigners, make themselves master of were aroused; and upon being taken into it, and copy it with skill and exactness, custody, a penknife was found in his pock- Their coinage is well stamped, as they ot, with apparent blood stains on tbe are good die sinkers. In wood, no poo largo blade, and something similar on tbe pie work better, and in lacquering they ivory handle. Tho knife was placed in excel the world. Other nations have at- the hands of an expert physiological chem- ist, ior examination. Tne stain was found to bo of blood and not of iron rust or paint, as it contained albumen and an imal fiber. Tho blood on the ivory han die contained a large amount of iron, that on tbe blade, comparatively little. As human blood contains ten times as much iron as that of animals, it seemed certain that tho knife in question oould not have entered a human body; still there was a doubt, because in slow disease there is a groat doficit of iron in the blood, which deficit is a not unfrequent cause of death. But as the blood on the ivory handle had tho full amount of iron for a man in vigorous health, it seemed to show that there were two different kinds of blood, one human certainly, the other possibly so. Hence another mode of inquiry was proposed. Tbe blood of animals and men crystallizes, but in different forms that of man represented by a perfect square lengthened oubo, called prismatic; that of animals, by the cube, tetrahedal as several-sided hexagonal. This analy sis entirely removed the doubts connected with tbe proceeding, for it demonstrated that the blood on the blade was that of a lower animal, and that on tho handle was certainly human. A third line of investigation was pur sued. All the inner surfaces of the-human body are covered with a glairy-looking fluid called "mucus," which is differ ently constituted, according to the part of the body from whioh it its taken. As ob served through a microscope, that which is found about the upper part of tbe throat presents tho appearance of a pave ment of bricks or square pieces, bcDce it is called "tesselated." Tho mucus from some parts is conical, looking like a pay ment made of round pieces, flattened. A third kind, coming from the intestines, seems hairy, cilliated, waving as the tops of long grass under the influence of the wind. Examining the blood on tbe han dle which was now known to be that of a human being, it was found not to present the pavement-like appearanoo, but it did clearly show tho wavy lines; it could not, therefore, have como from the throat, and as the traveler had no wound except that on the throat, and as tbe blood on tbe blade was clearly animal blood and not human, no part of tbe blood on the knife could have beon that of the unfortunate traveler, and therefore the landlord was dieoharged, when he gave the following statement: Some days before, wbile out hunting, he killed several squirrels, and stooped to cut a switoh with a knob at tbe root, on which to string his game: tbe knife ! slipped as he cut upward, and it penetra ted tbe abdomen. In his haste bo wiped the knife oloan with some leaves, olosed the blade, and in attempting to put it in to bis pocket, it fell on the ground; he picked it up and directed his steps home ward. In a few minutes one of the squir rels slipped off; he pierced it through with his knife, strung it on the switoh, and had not used the knife since. This was plausible, and he showed tho wound, not yet entirely healed; but this could oasily have boen made to answer an objoot The physiologist therefore proposed as a mere matter of ourious interest, to exam ine the blood on tbe blade and also that on tbe bandlo. That on the handle was wavy, cilliary, with tho largest amount of iron, showing that it must have beon from a man oi robust beaitu ana tno mucus , lt , , , .. i from tho abdomen is always cilliary and j of robust health and tbo mucus never tesselated. Again, the blood ad hering to a knife penetrating a living body coagulates that entering in a body al ready dead never does. The blood on the blade, already shown to be that of a mere animal, was now found to bo in coagulablo. Hence, tbat on tbo blade was shown to bo tbo blood of a mere an imal already dead; that on tho handle was tbe blood of a man in vigorous health, and could not have come from the throat, and almost certainly oamo from tbe abdo men. When the knife fell on tho ground, tho handle touched somo of tbe loaces with whioh it had just been wiped. Thus the obain ofovidenoo for the landlord's innocence was unbroken and perfect. Tho real culprit was subsequently found, tried and executed, confessing bis guilt. m .9 It is certain that in tbe progressive march of Boionoe and art tho unohangea- hU Uwh nf nature will be hotter under- stood correcting the errors and fallacies - o - of human judgment; and tbe testimony in fnrm. ing ber opinions and enabling her togive ber decision tgith her eyes open Japanese Industry. The Japauese are industrious and in genious people. Nearly all the useful metals are worked by thorn with great skill, especially iron, cobpor. cold, and i silver; and they possess an art in tbe com bination of metals for beauty and effect unknown to other people. Their sword blades are admirable. Tbev also manu- duccd by the Dutch. Their mirrors are n- ...j m, - metallic, and very beautiful. Their ear tempted in vain to imitate and equal them, owing cbieny to tbe material necessary in proparing thewood, which is the gum of a tree known only to themselves, called the varnish tree. Occasionally specimens of their lacquer work, through the Dutch residents of Dezima, have found their way to this country, but it is said the best samples are never sent out of the kingdom. They manufacture glass, both colored and uncolored; and their porce lain is both delicate and beautiful, beyond all rivalry. Paper tbey produoe in abun dance, and principally from the bark of the mulberry tree. It is of different qualities, and somo of it is as soft and flexible as our cotton clotb, for whioh it might be mistaken, and is used for hand kerchiefs and other domestic wants. Tbey mako silk, the best of which is ru- perior to that of China, and is said to be woven by criminals of high rank, who are confined upon a small unproductive is- night betore, and the nest day Isold it to land, deprived of their property, and you. That night I drew it back home, made to support themselves by their la- j sold it to you-nest day, and sol kept bor. Tho exportation of these silks, it is on until you bought your own log twen said.is prohibited. As a substitute for cot- , ty-sevon times!" ton cloth, as before remarked, in the i "That's a liel" cried the mad Judgo, manufacture of which thev have little running to his book, and esaaining his skill, tbey use tbeir coarse, spungy pa- per, which is quite as useful and durable. As they have no sheep or goats, tbe man ufacture of woolens is unknown among them. Yery littlo leather is produced in Japan, owing to the Budhist superstition referred to in a former article, which makes those manufacturing or vending it outcasts from the rest of the population, It is never used for shoes or other cover- ings for the feet, such being mado from plaited straw, for tho lower classes; the nobility and dignitaries wear slippers made of fine rattan slips, neatly plaited, The ragged appearance of their feet fre- miflnrl nffnrds .1 ridinnlona contrast to the splendor and richness of the other portions of their picturesque costume. IV. Y. Express. ScllercLtTlS Dr. Steveus says if ten pounds of sour dough were made into bread, in which was one ounce of saleratus to sweeten it, tho carbonic acid to raise it would bo soparted, and the alkali (which is poison) loft in tbe bread. A person in traveling through the western and Southern States, where they use an enormous quantity of potash in their corn bread and short cakes, and in the northwest where they maue -miu-risings ana use an inorai- nate quantity of soda and pearlash, will find it is tbe uniform experience of pby- sioianB tbat tneir patients sutler irom some acute anu curonio irritation u mo mucous tissues of tho bowels, and it is al most impossible to raise tbo pationt unless somo one can give them yeast bread. Every housewife knows how to cake effervesced broad by tbe use of saleratus and croam of tartar. The gas which rai ses the bread by this method is generated by tbe same substances, and by the same means of effervesence is produced in what we call soda powders. It is a lazy way of making bread, and as it leaves the tar trate of soda and potash in the food, .it ; should not be practiced by any wife or ; mother who desires to maintain the health ' of her family. Within tbe past ten years, we have bad "baking powders" "self-rai-1 sing flowor," and may others, and ninety families in a hundred use some of these. The effect is tho samo as far as lightness . , , . . i,ofnnnQ nrft is concerned, but foreign substances are ' . . , . . ItUUbUt - UJUIV1UUU Z - ----- - and its dyspeptic tendencies. Scientific Americati. A cow belonging to John Iverson, of Ownsco Village, Cayuga county, N. Y., gave birtb to a calf having two distinct and well formed heads, four ears, and but one neck. Tho head branched off from tho neck a few inches below tho ears. Both mouths were perfectly formed and seemed to have tbe necessary appurtn- ances for tbe mastication and disposal of food. The passago for food from the mouths, like the two heads, appeared to join in one whero the heads joined tho neck. Besides tho malformation above noticed, the calf had four full formed hind lees, i was otherwiso natural, hav ing a body and too front logs in all res- peots similar to natural calves It lived but a few moments after birtb, as owing to its wonderful and unusual formation it . r . i become necessary iu UU1 nrnmaturelv. Mr. IverSOU- 083 nau 11 stuffed. and it is flow preserved in alUits deformity. The Judge's Saw Log. In the village of W lived a man who had once been Judge of tho county, and was known all over' tbe county by the name of Judge L . He kept a store and saw-mill, aud was always suro to have the best of a bargain on his side, by which moans be gained an ample com petence, and some did not hesitate to call him tho "biggest rascal in tho world." He was very conceited withal, and used to delight in bragging of his business ca pacity when one was near enough to list on. One rainy day, quite a number wore seated around tbe stove in the store, and he begun as usual, to tell of bia great bar gains, and finally wound up with, "Nobody ever cheated mo, nor they oan't, neither." "Judge," said an old man in the com pany, "Iv'o cheated you more'n you'ovef did me." "How so?" asked the Judge. "If you'll promise you won't go to law about it, nor do nothin', I'll tell, or else I won't; you are too much of a law char acter for mo." "Let's hearl let's hear?" cried half a dozen voices at once. "We'll bear, you out of it co on." "I'll promise," said the Judg, "and treat in the bargain if you have." "Well do you remember that wagon you robbed me of?" "I never robbed you of any wagon, I only got my own!" exclaiaaed the Judge. "Well, I mado up my mind to have it back, and ' "But you never did!" oriod the Judgo. "xes I did, with interest, too:" "How?" thundered tho now Judge. enrased "Well, you see, Judge, I sold you, one day, a very pice pine log, and bargained with you for a lot more. That log I , stle off your pile, down by your mill, tho log accounts, "you never sold aic twenty seven logs of the same measurement." "I know it," said the vender of pino longs. "By drawing it back and forth, tuo end wore on, until it was only ten teot long juat fourteen feet shorter than it was tbo first time you bought it; and when it got so short, I drew it home and worked it up into shingles, and then. I concluded I had got my money back and in niy pocket." The exclamation of the Judge was drowned in the shouts of the bystanders, and the log-drawer.found the door with- out tbe promised treat. To see a mad man you have only to ask the Judge if he ever was shaved. An Irish. Understanding. "If I catch yee3 near my bouse again, T'li k i. I Uicua jvui utoa, jo m:uai, aaiu'uuo Irishman to an other. i uat vou asked mo Yourself." j 3Qt j didn't ask yee3 io make love to 1 mj wjf6f y0U scoundrel." j t haven't made lova to vour wife: von aro laboring under some mistake." j "Don't tell me that now; didn't I sco I y0U wjd my 0WD ejes trying to soma tho blarney over her?" I "But I tell you I didn't do any such tnjD. j don't osro that for vour wife." giving his fingers, a snap at the words, oDOr that." "Yces don't care for her, hey? She's as ffood a woman as von arc. anv da7. vo ; d,rtv blackguard, and if yees speak dis- respectful uv her, I'll bo after tachin' yo bother manners." A Knotty Question. "Sally Jones, have you dona tbo sum I sot you?" "No, thir; I can't do it." "Can't do itl ashamed of you. Why, at your age I could do any sum tbat was set me. I hate that word 'oan't;1 for there is no sum that can't be done, I can tell you." "I think, thir, that I knoth a sum you can't thifur out." "Ha well, well, Sally, let's hear it." "It ith thith, thir: If one apple cautbed the rnim of tbo whole humau rath, how many tbutoh will it take to make a barrel of thweet tinder, thir?" "Miss Sally Jo, you may turn to yourparsoa lesson." "Yetb, thir." The Com Grub, Tbo corn crop baa soveral fomidaVIe enemies to contend with, and am sag them is tho grub, whioh sometimes literally' de stroys whole fields and frequently dama ges the crop seriously One of the "best and most judicious remedies perhaps tbe best over suggested i tho applica tion of salt a soon as tbe plant makes'ite appearance above ground, prepared aid used in this way: Take one quart com mon salt and three parte plaster or gjp sum, and apply ubout a taWo-spetrfel a round each bill, and it will be found to be a sure protection. Tbe mixtureshotld not come in contact with theyonag piata as it may destroy them. This method has been tried over and over agniu Uy some of tho best farmer of Pannftjtvania, Delaware, and ?ew Jersey, ami when properly applied has never Jailed to bo perfectly successful. fThe editor of the Louis-Hio Jour nal advises -young ladje to 'remember that oraugqs aro net apt to be j rizvti af ter being squeezed a fe tit." s