THE JEFFE RSO N I ATT Bcuotcu to politics, .fitcrotnrc, agriculture, Science, 4ttoratit, nub tncral Sntcllig encc. VOL. 25. Published by Theodore Schoch. TERMS Two dollnrs a year in advance and if not piid tf re the end of the year, two dollars and filfy ct. will be h;irgpd. No p;iper discontinued until allarreuiagesare paid, except at the option of the Editor. E7A'lvertisenie!!ts of one sqmire of (eight lmcfOor JeJ. nnc or three insertions 1 50. Each additional iiicrtion, SO cents. Longer ones in propoition. JOB PREXTIXG, OP ALL KINDS, fxecutcd Inthe highest ytyle of the Arl.and onthe most icasori tble terms. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, AND GENERAL CLAIM AGET. STROUDSBURG, PA. Office icith S. S. Drchcr, Esq. All claims against the Government prose cuted with dispatch at reduced rates. 03" An additional bounty of 100 and t)f $50 procured for Soldiers in the late War, FREE OF EXTRA CHARGE. mQ August 2, 1660. DJl A. REEVES JACKSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Begs leave to announce that, in order to prevent disappointment, he will hereafter de vote THURSDAY aud SATURDAY ot j each week exclusively to Consultations ! and Surgical Operations at his office. Parties from a distance who desire to con sult him, can do so, therefore, on those days. Stroudsburg, May 31, 156G.-tf. Furniture! Furniture! McCarty's flew Furniture Store, DREHER'S NEW BUILDING, two doors below the Post-office, Strouds fcurg, Pa. He is selling his Furniture 10 percent. less than Easton or Wa'ehington prices, to say nothing about freight or break age. May 17, lSGG.-tf. INING-ROOM FURNITURE in Wal nut, Oak and White Ash, Extension Tables, any size you wish, at McCARTY'S new Ware-Rooms. May 17, 15GG.-tf. IF YOU WANT A L.UUD I'AKLUll Suit in Rose, Mahogany or Walnut, McCARTY has it. May 17, 16G6.-tf. IF YOU WANT A GOOD MELODEON, from one of the best makers in the Uni ttd States, tolid Rosewood Case, warranted 5 years, call at McCARTY'S, he would es pecially invite all who are good judges ot Music to come and test them. He will sell you from any maker you wish, $10 less than ihose who sell on commission. The reason is he buys for cash and sells for the same, with less thin one-half the usual per centage that agents want. J. II. McCARTV. May 17, ISGG.-tf. NDERTAKING IN ALL ITS BRAN ches. Particular attention will be given to this branch of the subscriber's business. He will always study to please and consult the wants and wishes of those who employ him. From the number of vears experience he has Lad in this branch of business he cannot and j will not not be excelled either in cityor country. Prices one-third le3 than is usual ly charged, from J to 73 finished Coffins al ways on hand. Trimmings to suit the best ilearse inthe country. Funerals attended it one hour's notice. J. II. McCARTY. May 17, 10G.-tf. . Saddle and Harness Manufactory. The undersigned respectfully inferms the citizens of Stroudsburg, and surroun ding country, that he has commenced the above business in Fowler's building, on Elizabeth street, and is fully prepared to furnish any article in his liue of business, at short notice. On hand at all times, a large stock of Harness, Whips, Trunks, Vah'ccs, Car pet Bays, Horse-Blanket?, Bella, Skates, Oil -Cloths, dc. Carriage Trimming promptly attended to. JOHN O. SAYLOB. Stroudsburg, Dec. 14, 1SG3. Gothic Hall Brag Store. Wi 1 1 in in EI o 1 1 i h ca d , Wholesale and Retail Druggist. STROUDSBURG, Pa. " Constantly on Laud and for sale cheap for cash, a fresh sup ply of Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oil, Glass, I'utty, Varnish, Ker osene Oil, Perfumery and Fancy Goods; also Sash. rSsiBfs mad Doors. Pure Wines and Liquors for Medicinal purpose. P. S. Physicians Prescriptions care fully compounded. Stroudsburg, July 7, 1801. TIN SHOP ! The undersigned begs leave to inform his friends and the public generally, that he has flow opened a 27.V SHOP, on Main street, near the Stroudsburg Mills, opposite Troch & Walton's, formerly R. S. Staples' Store, vhere he is prepared to' manufacture and sell at wholesale and retail, all kinds of Tin, topper and Sheet Iron-Ware. ALSO, fclon s Stove jo aud Elbows. Old and second band Stoves bought and Sold, at cash rates. 04-S7 paid for Old Lead, Copper .and (r Roofing, Spouting and Repairing promptly attended to and warranted to give satisfaction. Cull and see for yourselves. WILLIAM KEISER. fctroudslurg, Dec. 8, 100. CO M M ONcTlAI RSofaTl kinds, Cane Flag aud Wool Seats; Dining, Bar K.'rn and O-ffice Chairs, with or without Cushions, Rocking-Chairs of every descrip tion at McCARTY'S Wurc-Rogme. Vay 17, l"?GG.-tf. For the Jeflersoman. TO MY DAVQHTER, ELLA, On her Twelfth Birth-Day. BY. A. B. B. Twelve years already gone? Do now face the teens! Am J thus hurrying on To adult's sober scenes? If this be so each childish thing Away for those more wisdom bring. To books, to thought, to play Apportioning well to each Let me arise each day Myself to learn and teach; Not satisfied unless each night Shows an advance in wisdom'a liht. My motto, Onward," now, Xot hurrying years agone, But, with an earnest brow. Pressing to catch the dawn That streaks the morning of that day Where Knowledge sheds her honored ray. I welcome struggle, toil, So high a point to gain, Not daunted, no recoil, Else Mottoes are in vain ; But, firm in purpose and in aim, No hindering cause e'er yet o'ercame. Then welcome, fuller years, I to my part respond. Not harboring doubts or fears, Though these may circle round; J trill in early years secure The real though the false allure. Water Gap, JY6. 8tb, 1SG7. Oh! Well I Remember! - Oh ! well I remember How sadly I tore v The first checkered apron That ever I wore. How I boohed and bellowed And flooded with tears, When my mother gave me A box on my ears; Then a big piece of pic for the damage she'd done To her dearest, her darling, but' good-for-naught son. Oh ! well I remember (They are fresh in my mind) Those little trousers, All buttoned behind; How I played in the puddle And daubed them in dirt How my grandmother shook me Till I screamed villi the hurt, But promised to buy me a nice sugar toy, If I'd but remember to be a good boy. Oh ! well I remember My advent to school How I got cn the dunce-llock, And felt like a fool; IIo-.v I pulled out the paper From Emily's curl?, For which I was planted . On a scat with the girls! 'Twas punishment fraught with confusion and pain, But, oh ! I should like to be put there again. Oh! well I remember When older I'd grown, I had to spread clover As fast as 'twas mown ; And the finger of fincy Still points to the churn, And the hated old grindstone, 1 dreaded to turn ; Fori churned and I turned till as weak as a cat, And sweat till as wet as a water-soaked rat Oh! well I remember The old sorrel mare, That look roc to meeting, - To mill and to fair I rode her a plowing Till lender and sore Became mypoor " t'other," . And I couldn't ride more; But o'ten times since I have heavily sighed To think of the "horse" that I daily must ride. A New Way of Getting a Drink. A good joke is told on one of our clev er saloon keepers, which is too full of genuine humor, " under pressing circum stances," to be lost: A short time ago a representative of the Green Isle stepped into the saloon of tho person above alluded to, and with a coun tenance full of inquiry, said: " 44 An' bare you got any good rye whis ky?" " Yes, very good; the best in town," said the saloon man. 44 Au' have you got any half-pint bot tles, uiy good man?" " Yes," was the reply. " An' will you please to fill one with your Lest rye whisky for me?" " Of course," said the obliging dealer; and after reaching for the required flask and spendiug a full half-hour in cleaning it, repaired to the cellar, drew half a pint of his Bourbon, and presented it to the gentleman in waiting. " Pat" took the bottle, raised it to hia lips, swallowed about half of its contents, aud then, after making the appropriate face over it, said in a very confidential tone:. " Will you please sit this to one. side till I call for it?" The saloon keeper, 44 eaaelling a large sized rat trap full of small mice," carefully stowed away the half-filled bottle. The fellow nover called for it, but took this novel way of obtaining a drink. . , A number of seamstresses in Pari have been suffering from violent colic, attribu ted to putting the sewing silks they use in their mouths. The silk being soliLby weight, u adulterated with sulphate of lead to make it heavier, hence, its delete rious effect. STROUDSBURG, MONROE The Friend of the Friendless. The State of Pennsylvania pave to Gen- era! Jackson over fifty thousand majority ior l resident. 1 he whole Commonwealth ov-l'UJtu uuuiuuu iw iue nerneiuai swav ot mat school ot politics thenceforth; and the young citizen of our State was a bravo man who, in those days, for con science' sake, refused to float with the current. About that time a young lawyer from New Endland settled in one of the south ern counties of the old Keystone. Being gifted with .unusual powers of intelcct and filled with high and proper aspira tions, many wondered that he did not be come a Jackson man, and he carried on the wave of popular applause to the high est post of honor in the land. Ilad selfish ambition been the ruling passion in his mind, doubtless he would have joined his fortunes to those of the dominant party, and thereby,at the expense of his principles, have reaped the ephe meral harvest of partisan triumph; but his was a different mission, and self was made to kick tho beam by the weighter matter duty. At that day the whole country was ruled by the twin sisters of oppression Ignor- ance and Slavery. Scarcely env man dared risk his reputition, who desired offi - . J l.T i?i! 1 1 l n cial position solely for the public good, by espousing the cause of the poor and downtrodden as against the power of wealth and caste, even in republican A merica. When it was not only unpopular to be an Abolitionist, but actually dan gerous to life, the career of this young man began, amidst a people living in a border county, who had daily intercourse with slaveowners living on adjoining es tates. Separated only by an imaginary State line, the prejudices of those living north of that landmark the far-famed " Mason and Dixon's line" were as strongly developed as were those of their neighbors living to the southward there of. Nothing saved him from being caste aside and being trodden under foot of men but his own high-toned, manly dig nity of character and a 'heaven born zeal for tho right coupled with marked elo quence of utterance, which enabled him, not only to convince all who listened to his earnest appeals for the friendless of the honesty of his own convictions, but, in many cases, to convert former enemies into lifelong friends. His first experi ence in connection with slavery, which was rapidly followed by others several case3 of which I propose reciting, which have never been published was in this wise: - Being eDgaged as counsel in several importaut suits in one of the courts of Maryland, he learned that a poor girl was confined in jail for the purpose of be ing sold at noon of Saturday of the first week of the frrrr n tifirt. nf n n nefrjfn but who was believed to be free. On learning that she had no after her rights none of person to look the local mem- bers of the bar caring about attacking the prejudices of the day, or of going into a fight, for no fee or hope of reward, against one of the wealthiest and most powerful families in the county, which claimed her this bold young man, from a neighbor ing State, volunteered his services. When an interview was brought about j between him and his new found client, he wa3 utterly amazed to find her to be as white as he was himself. lie took hold of the case with all the energy of his ar dent nature, and, after a desperate strug gle with the abloit lawyers in that bar, he succeeded in rescuing the poor from the clutch of slavery. rrirl on Several years thereafter, while. going from his home at Gettysburg to the city of Baltimore, in his own private carriage, he stopped at a hotel on the route for dinner. The bar-tender a bright, intelligent-looking young man evidently a son of the landlord from the striking resem blance drove the horse to tho stable, and the young lawyer walked into the parlor. Soon afterward a beautiful young woman came in and addressed him thus: " Oh! sir, you are the man who saved me from a life of slavery and misery; can you not also save my poor husband Irom a similar fate?" Upon inquiry, he learned that she who stood before him was the same in whose behalf he had labored at the court of that same county a few terms prior thereto as already narrated. ' Who, is your husband ? and what can I do for him?" he asked. " lie is the young mau who took charge of your hcrso," she replied, " and his father the landlord, is now about selling him to a soul driver." " Why, that young man is white!''" " Yes, sir, I believe Jie is; but he is a slave." Just then an open buggy was driven in front of the house, and our friend re cognized its occupants to be the landlord and a notorious slave-dealer, from the ci ty of Baltimore. Overhearing a remark which fell from the lips of the former, he discovered that the statement of the wo man was true, and that no Fule had yet taken place.. He immediately called the bloated old publican aside, and asked him " What he was proposing to sell doubt- less a favorite horse?" No," said the brute, " I want to sell that boy." 11 Nq, certainly not; Le is your own son." 41 Yes, I know he 13 my own sou; but I have made up uiy mind to sell him. I t-old two brothers of. his nnd a sister, and I will sell him. I aui going to the races COUNTY, PA., FEBRUARY U, 1867. next woek, and must take with me five hundred df11nr nnit T finva nnln nna Viiin. drrd and fiftr in1 Will Coll Vlitn f,r t rr J hundred and 'fifty dollars. 1 am offered three hundred and forty; but I must i liarft rh in nmmmf " Come, come now; I will the one- half, and you give your son the other half, and we will manumit him." " No; I must have the full sum." " Very well, I. will give you two hun dred dollars, and you give him one hun dred and fifty." " Not a bit of it. If you want him I will sell him to you as soon as to the slave dealer, for he has been a faithful boy, and i Deiieve that it you get him you will set him free " 'him " I want him only for that purpose, and I am pleased to hear you speakincr of ;him. lie ousht not to bo seDarated from his wife. The money you get thus will do you no good. One week at the races, where you are sure to lose every dollar, will be poor consolation for inflicting life long misery on these two poor creatures. Come, I will give you three hundred dol lars and you give him fifty." ' Vn nn nt T .M t 1 T -i' 1. ; to it. ' "v, uv. x uau aaiu Ik uuu J. sum I must have the whole amount. No gentleman!) would think of goin the mm wiili ! tlmn fim iinn,i to I - " .uw-bUUU U V 11 UUUi I - - dol- !lars, and I must have the full amount. 44 I will make you another offer. I will give you three hundred and twenty five dollars, and you give twenty-five." 44 No, I wont; and I am tired talking to you. That dealer is going to see an other 4 boy and if he buys him he will not want mine." 44 Now see here that man wants your son to sell South for the purpose of mak ing money on him. I only want to set him free. I will give you as much as he offered you three hundred and forty dol lars." 44 There now you Lid the same sum, and I will put him at auction between you; and I must knock him down to the highest bidder." 44 No; if I buy him that man must not know that we are talking on that subject till all is arranged. You remain here till I send for the clerk of the court, and, I will give all you ask." The clerk was sent for; the papers made out; the money paid down, and the son of a Maryland father was made a free man by the money of a Pennsylvanian lawyer, and slavery thenceforth owed him a debt which she has now nearly paid by her decease, but which will not be fully cancelled until every vestige of the foul wrong is forever banished from tl the land of the free and home of the brave." The people of Adams county, feeling the necessity for the services of this cham pion of friendless humanity in the halls of legislation, sent our friend to Harris burg to represent them in the Assembly. While there he exerted all his influence and efforts to promote the welfare of the people of the State, without regard to creed, party or. complexion. A bachelor on the owner of large estates, which would be, and which were heavily taxed to raiso funds to educate the children of other people, he is the recognized father of the admirable system of free Echools which now exists in his adopted State. - This system will remain, while time lasts, an imperishable monument to the disinteres ted benevolence and far seeing wisdom a3 one of Pennsylvania's best and ablest cit izens Thaddcus Stevens. A Pointed Illustration. A correspondent of the Milwaukie Sen tinel says that the following colloquy re cently occurred between a noisy, brawl ing democratic politician and a quiet, ob serving republican. It hits the nail on the head, and is too good to be lost: Democrat. I demand to know, sir, if the States lately in rebellion are in the Union or out of the Union. Just auswer that, if you will. liepuilican. The question is well il lustrated in your own personal history. Four years ago, you united with the church here; and if I am rightly inform ed, you have been rather a hard member to manage; and lately charges have been preferred againstyou for downrightmiscon duct, and you have been suspended until your case can be examined, and your fit ness for membership determined. Now, sir, I demand to know whether you are in the church or out of the church. The democrat appeared to see the point aud left. Here is the U. S. Supreme Court : Tho best faces intellectually are those of the Chief Justice, Miller and Nelson. The latter has an especially keen look, with his mobile nervous features, his long gray hair, bushy eyebrows, and keen, rest less eyes. Miller has a noble brow. Davis has a heavy, ploding look, a lawyer great in the books, but slow in digestiou, by whom revolutions whirl while he is cogitating, and thus leave him stranded like some clumsy saurian who has left its story in tho rock. Field, of California, is a remarkably obstinate looking man. That is his marked trait. Grier is a fat man, unwholcsotnely eo. Wayne, the Southern Judge, has a good face. Clif ford looks as if in a state of hybernation, and Swayne has tho appoarauce of a care ful ponderous thinker, adevourerof books, but not a reader of men. The face of tho Chief Justice is the loftiest and noblest of them all. A woman in Michigan asked for a vorce from her husband because he fused to wear a mustache. dire- NABSY. If- -7.. Tf Ct T . ur. j.yasuy ij$says a sermon, out is in terrupted ly a Xioqer, who is Aided and Abetted ly the Perverse Joe Biyhr.xns, only a quarter onto my wife, only an- Post Offis, Confedrit X Roads, .e,St onto my daughters, only a sixteenth' (Which is in the Stait of Kentucky.) Coato my daughters children, an there's January 10, 1S07. ) . lyt uv niggers in this ycr visinity wat I wuz rekested a wCek ago to preeeh 1 ?wroortHn ptV;-rJ9k.kund or thensiX" discourse i-mm fi,- -I JLu i. nui ty-fouTth part of it hangintoem. Guv and highminded Guvncr Bramlette used -waiwu Hl, VI lis 14 LUC UUU1C with such crushin force in his last annual message, to wit? Tv-; i 7 O ' JL I U I 1IU juouiiareu Changs his spots or the Etheopian bis skin ?" and alluz feeling anxious to do wat I kin for the cause, I did it last nite, or rather essayed to do it. . 1.1 Anil rirf I at ma .....1. il.i'it i aint a more devoted people in Kentuckv1 monUl Jr bcm immensely condemned, than them lambs ez composo my flock. iCXpe P10?1 ansers. or r:itliCr 1 It wuza tcchin site and one wich filled Su?rdlaQ and pertcctor do." my the sole with joy to see cm pour out uyL, hornjandtosee Pennsbackcr, whichownes tho distillery, stoppiu work to come ; but the most cheerin and encouragin sign to me wuz to seek Dekin Pogram, who wuz a playin seven up for the drinks with El der Slathers, at Bascom's, lay down his hand when he hed high, low; and jack in it, and hed only three to go. 4'EIder, there's the horn. Let us to our dooties. 'Ligion must take the front scat uv tcm p'ral matters," and sighin ez he cast a parting glance at his hand, he strode rc solootly to the saDktooary. I opened by readin the follerin from Gov. Bramleett's message : 4'The nigger is the inferior uvthe white he lacks the power to rise. Ontil the leopard kin change his spots, or the Ethi opian his skin, all efforts to repeal or nullify God's laws will be unavailin." 4,My brethrin these words is words uv wisdom, and fur cm let us be thakful. The skin uv the Ethiopian wuz inflicted onto him for the express purpose ur dis tinguishin him from his brethrin, those servants he wuz condemed to be, for all time, ez a punishment for the sin uv Cain or the imptoodence uv Ham, wich, the Democratic divines lieven't settled on. With the black skin he wuz given all the other marks uv inferiority. He wuz cust with long arms, immense hands, flat nose and bowed legs, and that their mite be no mistake in the matter, he wuz given wool instead uv hair halleloogy. 44Ah, my brethern, wat a blessed thing for U3 is this Ethiopian ! What a consola tion it must be to yoo all to know that thcr is a race below yoo, and how blcssid the refleekshun that they . can't change ther shin, and by that means git above you ! I hit a f Pft inmfnrf wa nriv Irnni the skripters. aumww tawv W IM .WAV 11W UiUII 11 U1U Wat horror it wood who is snorin be so osrram. peacefly. "Drcamin, sweetly drcamin, the happy hours away," cf when the Soopremc Court decides the ablishin amendment uucon stooshnel, and he gits his niggers back again, if ther shood be a new dispenaas hun aud niggers shood be permitted to change their skins ! Wat sekoority wood we hev for our property 1 Some mornin he'd wake up and find em all white per sons, which it would be unconstooshnel to wollop. "My brethern ther hez been many ef forts to change the skin uf the Ethiopian, or rather thcr hez bin many who wanted to. The Boston Ablishnists hev tried it, but wat hez bin the result ? Aint they niggers yil, and aint they still the degrad ed wretches they alius wuz ? I paws for a reply." I made this latter remark becoz, and only becoz it sounded well, not that I bed any idee that anybody wood reply. I amagino my surprise at scein a gray-headed nigger, wich hed bin, doorin and after the fratrisidle struggles, employed in the Freedtncn Burow, rise, and remark that he hed a word to say onto that pint There wuz a storm of indignashun, and the impudent nigger, who wuz so sassy ez to prccsoom to speak in a white meet in wood hev bin sacrificed on the spot hed not Joe Bigler, who wuz half drunk, drawd a ugly looking navy revolver, and remai kin that he knowd that nigger that he hed more sence than the hull bilin uv us, and he shood hev his say. 4'Ef," sel this recklis Joe, 4cf lie beats you, Pcrfessor, truth is truth ; let's hev it. Ef he don't, why, it's all the better for you. Ef your Websterian intellect kivcrs tho ground, all rite ef hia pon derous iotellcck gets the best on't jist rite. 4Out of the mouths uv babes and sucklins.' Elder, I go my bottom dollar on this sucklin. Speak up, venerable there won't none uv em tech you," and and he cockt his revolver. . "Beggin pardon," ted the uiggcr, "1 agree with voo. Perfesser, that the Ethi opian can't change his skin himself, but docs the scriptcr eay that it can t be chang ed for him ?" 'A user tho venerable babe," sed Joe Bigler, pintin his revolver at me. 'I can't say that it does," sez I. "Very good," retorted the nigger ; "Iicznt there a change bin a goiu on iu Kaintucky from the beginnin ? My moth er wuz ez black cz a crow, I'm considble lighter; my wife's a half lighter than 1 am; my gal's children is a half lighter than their mother, and I want to known wat Guvncr Braruletta's got to say to that? The white mau ain't got no cuss onto him, hez he !"- 4'Speak up, Perfesser the euckliu wanta yoo to bo prompt," said Joe Big ler I answered that he bed not that it wuz plied onto Ham or Caiu and thuir dtjctudeuti, uud uubody else. NO. 47, 4iVery well, then," scd the nigger, chucklin all over, 4,cz I am only half Hani or Cain (wich you hcven't decided,) than uv coarse there s only a halt a cuss onto I 1 4 . 1 . . . ; ner Bramlette also sed ; T.v? ,.!8Saf n z gers being degraden coz twuz their na : V1"1' U,VA " lua- uaicasnea woodenfc 1 f,, v vLU i "Perfessor," sed the tormentin Bigler, wich hed just wisky cnuff into him to be 1 ugly, "I must remind yoo that the par- tikcler babe and sucklin out uv whoso r fU5er?a um s,u S lt tCnCr UV "Ef that s troo, why don't the mulla tres come up faster? Ef its the natural stoopidity uv the nigger, the white ain't effected by it, and the mullato only half. I are 'quainted with the heft of the pec' pie afore me, and I'll bet my last year's wages,- wich Deekin Pograia ain't paid yit, that half uv em can't read any mor'n i. 'Pears to me I'd like to hev Guv nor .bramlette take the load off us, for a- year or two and see whether we'd rise or' uot. A e raoutn't, and then agin wa mout. But I ruther its a leetle too much to put a millstone on top uy a man and then kick him for not gettin up." 44Bully !" sed Joe Bigler. 4'Go on ! gc on !" "It ain't just square playing to make all sorts uv laws agin our risin, to flog us for heving speelin books, to make it a penitentiary offense to le'arn to read, and to burn our skool houses, and then, be cause we ain't just ready to enter college to insist on't that we are naterally incap able. And above all, ain't it preesoomin a little to charge it cnto the Load ? Aint' yoo mistakin your own work for hizzen I 'Praps ef Guvner Bramlett's father hed bin flogged for wantiu to learn to read, and Guvncr Bramlett's mother hed him brought up ez a field hand, and the sacie- strategy hed bin practiced on Guvner" Lramlett s grand-father and great-grand father and great-great-great-grandfather- and h"i3 jrreat " 4lIIold on, venerable," said Joe Bigler, "don't enumerate.. Jest say his ancestors, -back to the identical time when they wuz slaves to them Normans, which held its progenitors jist ez closely ez yoorve bin held, and it'll be sufHshent. But go on." "I plead guilty to the big hands, flat nose and bowed leg3. Possibly the first nigger hed em possible not. Ef Guv nor Bromlctt's father, and his grandfa which is to say ancestors hed bin kept at the hce, his bauds wood hev been ez big' ez mine ; cf they'd borne burdens forever1-' his legs wood be bowd, and ef her noses hed him pcrpetooally smashnt, hizzen wood be flatter than it is." 4llcv yoo eny more questions to put to the Perfesser ?" sed Joseph. 4No," . replied the Ethiopian, 4I her sed my say." - "Then," said this Bigler, wich wuz gee-' ting more and more reckless every minit, "I dismiss this congrcgashua, with this remark, that that nigger is under my pro tection care, and ef a single lock uv his wool is disturbed I shel feci it a solium but painfull dooty devolvin upon me, to' put a ball into the carcass uv each uv the ofiishils uv this church, commencin with the Paster, and contmum all the war down to the scrible. Git !" And pell mell the congregashun piled out one over another. It will be necessary to dispose of Joe Bigler seuiewhow. lie lost what proper ty he hed in the war, and is becoming exceedingly loose in biz talk. lie can't be tolerated long. Petroleum V. Nasdy, P. M.r (Wich is Postmaster.) and likewise Pro fessor uv Bibhkle Politicks in the South ern Classikle Military Institoot. Making Other A mother who was in the habit of ask ing her children " bafore they retired for the night, what they had done to make others happy, fouud her twiu daughters silent. The question was repeated. " I can remember nothing good all this day, dear mother; only one of my schoolmates was happy because she had gained the head of the class, and I smiled on her and ran to kiss her; so she said I was good. That is all mother." The other spolp timidly. 14 A little girl, who sat with mo on the bench at school, has lost a littlv brother. I saw that, while she studied her lesson, she hid her face in her book and wept. I felt sorry, and laid my face on the same book and wept with her. Then she looked up and was comforted, and put her arms arouud my neck; but I do not kuow why she said 1 had done her good." " Come to my.arms, my darling !' said her mother: 44 to rcioice with those that rejoice, and weep with those that weep, is to obey the blessed IJedccmcrl' The terms of service of 15,000 troops enlisted in 1S01 in the regular army ex pire during the current year, aud the War Department will Gil thtir places by fresh enlistment. About 12,000 mea' have been recruited since October 1, and if enlistments contiuue in the sauso ratio, ihe minimum strength of the army will Le reached iu about three mouths. Condemn you thiuk. no man fW not th inking as