u y '1 fl.Tr?"'- 7 1 1 1 H M H H UJ lJJL Scuotci to i3o!tiic0, jCitcvaturc, agriculture, Science, iHoralitn, aui cncval Sfotclligcncc. R.Q AMI A IT VOL.27. Published by Theodore Schoch. fi TERMS Two dollars A jrrar In advance anil if not I Piu ociorc me end ottiic year, two dollars ana filly tt. will be charprd. No p.tper discontinued until alSarrcaiagcsorc paid, cxrept at the option of the Editor. lL".Vdvertisemcnls of one rjnrcof(eigl.l lines )or icii.onecr inret insertions 5 I 50. IS.uli additional 4iaertion, id cents. Longer ones in propoition. joc puawxirvG Or ALL KINDS, Executed in the highest i-tyle of the At t, and on the most reasonable terms. Drs. JACKSON & BIDLACK, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. DRS. JACKSON &. BIDLACK, arc prepared to attcnJ promptly to all calls of a Professional character. Office Op posite the Stroudaburg Bank. April 25, lSG7.-tf. DrT D. D. rbmTM, Surgeon Dentist, Office on Main Street, opposite Judge Stokes residence, .Stroudsbirg, Pa. OCT" Teeth extracted without piin. August I, 1967. .A. Card. The undersigned has opened an office for the purchase end sale ot Ileal Estate, in Fowler' Building, on Main streel. Parties having Farms, Mills, Hotels or other proper ty for sale will find it to their advantage to call on me. I have no agents. Parties must sec me personally. GEO. L. WALKER, Ileal Estate Agent, Strcads-burg, Pa. S. HOLMES, Jr. ATTORNEf-AT-LAW, AND GENERAL CLAIM AGENT. STROUDSBURG, PA. Office, one door Lcloic llory's Tin Shoji. All claims against the Government prose cuted with dispatch at reduced rates. OT" An additional bounty of 100 and of 50 procured for Soldiers in the late War, FREE OF EXTRA CHARGE. -lQ August 2, 166. .A. Card. Dr. A. REEVES JACKSON, Physician and Surgeon, BEGS TO ANNOUNCE THAT HAV ing returned from Europe, he is now prepared to resume the active duties of his ; profession; In order to prevent disappoint- j mcnt to persons living at a distance who i may wish to consult him, ho will be found at his office every THURSDAY and SAT URDAY for consultation and the perform ance of Surgical operations. Dec. 12, liG7.-l yr. WM. W. TWL. t. D. HOAR. CHARLES XT. DEAN, with WM. W. PAUL & CO. Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in BOOTS & SHOES. WAREHOUSE, 623 Market St., & 614 Commerce St. above Sixth, North side, PHILADELPHIA. March 19, ISGS. tf. I tcli! Itcli! Itch ! SCRATCH! SCRATCH! SCRATCH! IHILUNSIIEAD'S ITCH & SALT EKEl'M GHTME ST. No Family thould be without th?3 valua ble medicine, for on the first appearance of the disorder on the wrists, betwecu the fin gers, &c, a Blight application of the Oint ment will cure it, and prevent its, bring ta ken by others. Warranted to give Eatiefaclion or money rctunded. Prepared and tolJ, wholesale and retail, by - W. HOLLINSIIEAI), Stroudfburg, Oct. 31, '07. J Druggist. -XI. I. COOJLISACJGEI, Sign and Ornamental Painter, SHOP ON MAIN STREET, Opposite Wovlai Mills, STKOUDSIXUKG, IA., Respectfully announces to the citizens of Stroudsburg and vicinity that he is prepared to attend to all who may favor him with their patronage, in a prompt and workman, like manner. CHAIRS, FURNITURE, &c, painted and repaired. - PICTURE FRAMES of all kinds con stantly on hand or supplied to order. June II, 16G8. ly. J. DENTIST. Has permanently located him- ksclf in JStroudtsburg, and jnoved hi? office next door to Dr. S. Wulton, where lie is fully prepared to treat the natural teeth, and al-so to insert incorrup tible artificial teeth on pivot and plate, in tip latest and mont improved manner. ' Most persons know the danger and folly of trust ing their work to the ignorant as well as the traveling dentist. It matters not how much experience a person may have, he is liable to have ome failures out of a number of cases, and if the dentist lives at a distance it is frequeutly put ofl" uutil it . i too late to eave the tooth or teeth as it mav be, other wise the inconvenience and trouble of going to far. Hence the necessity of obtaining the services of a dentist near home. All work warranted. Stroudsburg, March 27, 1602. DON'T rOR(arr that wlnii you want any thing in the Furniture or Ornamental line that McCarty, in., the Odd-Fcllowa' Hall, Main Street, Strouds burg, Vi , it the place to get it. (Sept. 0. NASBY. The Chicago Convention Jlr. JTasLy Attends it and jets on a heavy disyust -1 Lecture on Democracy Post Offis, Contedrit X Roads, (Wich is in the Stait uv Kentucky,) May 124, 1803. I wuz at Chicago one day, and that one day satisfied me. My ears wuz stunned with 'rors for Grant ; Whichever way I turned ray eyes I saw nothing but Grant badges and Grant medals; the bands wuz all playing uv the Star Spangled Banner and sich, and even the street organ grin ders hed attooned their lyres to the same Albishun melodies. On my arrival I askt a vishus boy (wich I knowd waz Dimckratic, from the fact that his little shirt wood hev hung out uv his little pants cf he'd hed any shirt), cf he cood show me where the Ab lishun Convcnshun wuz a holJin itself. "Ccrtinly I kin, my old buffer," sed he. "It's in that ycr bildin," pintin, ez he spoke, to a ruthcr gorgu3 edifice with a steeple to it. I entered it, and wuz surprised, not on ly at the fewness uv the delegates on the floor, but at thcr pccoolycr appearance. They didn't look like delegates to any Convention I hed ever attended. Thcr noses wuzn't uv the color I hed ben ac customed to. They wuz all solemn look in chaps with gold spectacles, black coats, high foreheads and white ncckcrchcrs. "Is this," thot I to mypelf, "the unifrom delegates wear at Kcpublikin couven ehens ?" At this part I turned to a man sittin besides me, and in an undortone askt wich wuz ahed cn the last ballot, Colfax or Wade 1 "Sir," Ecd he, "are you a Johnson post master?" "I am," sed I defiantly. "How didst determine that pit V 'By yoor breath," sed he. "Yoor mistaken jn the place, my friend. This is a Methodist conference." That wikkid and perverse boy hed in- tcuslijclly deceived me. On mv return we wuz a settin in Pas- corn's u discussin the nominashens. Deekin Pogram wuz indignant, "Good Heaven I" said he, with horrcr in his .sainted face, "Kin it be that nicn. perfes sin nashncl views wood offer sich an iu sult to Kentucky ez to nominate Bich a man ez Grant, who, sword in hand, de vastatid her fertile fields and piled , the bodies uv her nootral sons who resisted his advaucc mountains high ? Kin it be that" , "Easy, ' Dcckin," replied I, '."stiddy! stiddy ! Don't take posishen rashly. It ain't improbable that we may hev to nom inate Hancock or some other soljcr. ' In that event but I've sed enuff." "Well, at all evence," Bed the Deekin, "its a most hoomiliatin thing to hev thrown in our faces a infamous proposi ehen to pay a debt inkurrcd iu a infamous attempt to subjoogato us to pledge our lnher tn mv a debt unconstitooshuallv in-i kurrcd and un " ; "Pcckiu," sed T, "yoor zeal I do ad- anu "aJ ouly reached his majority a low mire, but yoor rcely indiscreet It may' months before.' His family were wealthy, be found necessary in order to carry Noo and powerful, and .Mr. Clay entered York to nominate Pelmout'a man, who UP0U wliat seemed destined to prove a will bee pledged to'lhis very thing. Go a.1?081 brilliant career in public lite. Py little slow " the war he lost all his property, and is "Well, however that may be, it's a D.ow racd with asthma and consump burnin shame to throw into Kcntuckcy's tlon- lc w,as d,n3 through tho coun facc a Abolisbnist-two u? cm in fact :try a borscback, seeking by the change anj . of climate and cxeitcmcut to better his 1 : J "Dcckin," (I Fpoke this time severely) 'vnnr vow in, iuitoI tn.i .nr. It s ro- .-.. ! .i r.' siblc, and I may say probable, that that'?0.' he KaiJl noble patriot, CheelJustis Chase, who av? txi WurL lul hez biu a friteful Abliohuist, aud who, cf be tuue, Will, for vbvua reasons, make us STrvOUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., JUNE swallcr at the beginin a porshen uv his heresies, may be our candidate. Say no thin, Deekin, that yoo'l hev to take back." Fcelin that rite here wuz a splendid chance for an improvin discourse on the nachcr, objicks, and aims uv democracy, I opened out onto cm. ''Dimocrisy," I rcmarkt, "is distin guished checfly for its elasticity in adap tin means to ends. One worn! snnnnsn .that Past-Offis is itschccfcnd. In one sense it is. Dimocrisy is willin to sacri- i lice any thing which it hez for Post Ofiis. j It might raise Deekin Pograci's ire to sc jest the nominashen uv Hancock, on ak- kount uv his slawtcnns, or Dclmou t can didate on account uv his insistin on pay ing on the jNashnel Debt, or Chase who , hcz bin in his day suspected uv bcin i tainted with Ablishinism. But my brcth . ring let it be remembered that success is :thc main objick. Success is wat Dascom wants, that I, bcin continyood in offis, may hev the means to pay for the likker 'I consoom, and to avoid the necessity uv' ; bein continyoorlly rekested to chalk it i down, which practis he esteems disgustin, and. one wich greatly increases his labors. jCapt. McPcIter wants success that he may continyoo to hev Assessors, Collec tors, and Kcvenoo ofSscrs with which he kin divide the profits uv the S2 tax on the whisky ho makes, and Dcckin Po grani wants success that ho may hev his niggers agin or a least that he may hev priviliegc of hirin em for S i per month, deducting 25 cents per day for each day's absence, without no Burow offiscr or oth er military catrap hangin about to molest or make afraid. Success 13 the main pint. and cf Hancock is the way, walk ye in it ef Chase or Seymour is the way, walk ye ditto, for with cither uv these men all these things we'll hev. When they come to us they lccvc thcr former selves be hind. Put mcThinks I hear one say, Han cock is a soljcr, Seymour a anti-rcpudia-tor, and Chase a Ablishnist ! What uv that 7 They may be wat they like when they go into offis assosiashen with us fetches em sooner or later. Kin yoo tech pitch and not be defiled ? Doolittle, Co wan, and Dixon wuz Ablishnists. When they split from Ablishnism tho minit they fell into our embraces they became ez satistactory Dcmokrats cz I cood wish. The road down is a easy one to travel. It's easier to slide than to climb, wich is the reason why so many more arc damn ed than saved. Democracy, like Pas com's new likcr, hold3 r. man when it gits him. Johnson waz a good cnuff AbolUh nist till he called onto us for hcln, and then he wuz lost. Let Chase stay with us a wccjc, and nc d lorgit all ideas, yoo bet. Shood yoo poke his eld that sil- vcr pitcher at lam the niggers give him m at Cincinnati, for defendin a fugitive, and he d swear like Peter he never saw it only diffcriu from Peter in that he'd stick to it. And there is no goin back, for the principal one3. Ther remorse kind o'drives cm deeper and deeper, till they finally arc worse than cz tho they originally wuz uv U3. Let us, my brc thrin, never reject any help we kin git. Let it come in any shapo and from any source, it'll finally assimilate to U3 and be uv us. Remember, Johuson, Cowan, Doolittle and Dixon swore, when they started at Philadelphia, that they never cood 0 into the ranks uv the Dimocrisy j in a year they wuz siakin speeches for us in Connecticut. Ez I concloodcd my remarks, my cir cle all agreed that it wuz safe to take whatever we cood git from the enemy, and we retired, I fcelin that whatever other localifics mite do, the Corners wuz safe. Wat an outrage it U, though, that the Ablishnists nominated sich a man for Vice-President ez to make Grant perfect ly safe from bcin removed cz Linkca wuz. Ef he's elected he'll serve out his time sure. Petroleum V. Nasby, P. M., (Which is l'ostmastct.) A Ruined Rebel. , A correspondent of the Chicago " Tri bune " says: " I saw on the streets of Nashville; yesterday, an attenuated and emaciated form belonging to a man who filled quite a large space in the public cyo during the war. It was none other than Cle ment C Clay, one of the commissioners of the rebcb abroad, and the companion of Mason and Slidcll in their negotia tions with France and England. Clay was the man who was met by Horace Greeley, at Niagra Falls, towards the close of the war, the two ostensibly coming to gether for the purpose of arranging for some sort of peace. The negotiations were all futile, as will be remembered. " Clement Clay wa3 one of the most rcmarkublo men in the South at the breaking Out of tho war. lfn had iiif,t been elected from the Iluutsvillc. Ala- baraa,' district to the National tongrcss, ill 1 . . r caltu. lie lives in lluntsvillc. still, and 'Practices law. vc arc a i noor Iuiks riav"v-VJ ,a" poor OU13, a fiicud of living.' " aud or a .Maine has 70,0'J'J farmers. The Peabody National Medal It will be remembered that at the last session of the Thirty-ninth Congress the l'residcnt of the United States wa3 au thorized to present to Mr. Gcorrrc Pea- body a gold medal, in consideration or his beneficent gift of over a million dollars to the South for educational purposes, to be applied without regard to color. It has just been completed and received at the State Department, and is decidedly the handsomest and most unique affair ever made in this country, and as a work of art surpasses any medal ever present ed by our government heretofore. It is three inches in diameter and a half inch thick ; on the front is the profile of Mr. Peabody in alio relievo, and on the re verse the fallowing inscription : "The people of the Uuitcd States to George Peabody, in acknowledgment of his beneficent promotion of universal educa tion." It i3 mounted on a base, and to the right of the medal arc two palmetto trees in gold, six mchc3 hih. around which is ivy, emblem of friendship. To the left of the medal is the figure of benevolence, with one hand resting upon the medal, holding in it a spray or laurel, and with the other pointing to Mr. Pea body. Under the palmetto trees arc two children, one reprscnting a white child and the other a .black, and white child pointing to benevolence and the black the one to himself, es if saying, "Am I, too, to be educated ?" The base is six inches long, three-fourths of au. inch thick and one one-quarter inches high, and the whole work is of solid gold. In the rear of the medal, resting upon the base, is a perfect globe, which revolves, and around this arc books and various instruments representing tho progress of civilization and education. On the front of the base is our national shield, executed in enamel. The medal is enclosed in a handsome cabinet of ebony and bird's cyo maple, lined with purple velvet, the top cf which revolves when the medal isplaccd upon it, thus exhibiting it without placing the hand upon it to change it3 position.- The cntirff work was made with tools and not struck from a die. It is a most beautiful piece of workmanship, and is greatly ad mired by all . who have seem it. On Thursday it will be exhibited to the Cabi net, after which it be placed on exhibi tion in the Capitol. tzhi)ijton Star. The Sexes and Amusements. It may be laid down a3 a general rule that amusements which separate the scxc3 arc dangerous. I would not press the truth too narrowly and literally; but undoubtedly it is a general truth that where women seek their amusements in one way by themselves, there i3 in both ways a tendency to degeneration and temptation. God meant that man and woman should live together, work to gether, and in all the functions of life civil, social, religiou3, artistic and intel lectual co-operate with each other; and their mutual relations arc harmoniz ing and balancing, and no where else moro than in the seeking, and prosecu tion of amusements. I believe that boys and girls should go to school together. As they sit together in the household, so I think they should sit together in our temples cf learning. Colleges should not be for all men or all for women; but tho same buildings aud the same professors should be provided for both in common. And as it is in crerv thinn tU should bo in amusements There is much greater liability to temptation and im morality, where amusement is sought in the isolation or separation of the sexes. Therefore, all exhibitions of pictures and statues, all provisions for recreation, all institutions for public amusements, should be such as to enable pcoplo to go in groupes and families. 1 do not think amusements can be good generally, in a community in which a man is ashamed to take, his whole fam ily to them. If their is any thing you would not like your wife and children to participate in with you, the presumption is that it is wrong; and if there is any thing you would like them to participate in with you, the presumption is that it is right. And this might be made a rule of judgment far more widely than it is now. II. Vf Ihtchcr. Failure of Weston, the Pedestrian. Postox, June 4. Weston, the pedes trian, who began the task of walking 100 miles in 23 hours, at Riverside Park, yes terday afternoon, accomplished ouly i)0 miles in 22 hours and 52 minutes, and lost the $4,000. Payne of Albany, who started to walk 70 miles at the same place, while Weston walked the last 87 of his tramp, on a wager of $500 a side, com pleted the distance in 18 hours and 42 minutes, being one hour aud'lS minutes inside of time. About 5,000 wilucsscd the walkers this afternoon, and the pedes trians were urged on by a brass band. Considerable money changed hands. A .milkman in New York dropped some money while crossing the ferry, and the scrip was conveyed by the wiud to tho East River. A byttandcr consoled tho vender of tho lacteal with thcrcmark that " what comes by water generally goes by water." Salt Lake City requires young men to marry at ID or pay three hundred dollars fine. In Sc-arcy, Arkansas, a pair of twin girb were Loru a IVw d.iys ng' each bav in tr ' Clil V litJC Lb. 18, 1863. Tctcr Cartwright, who is an attendant of the Methodist Conference at Chicago, is a most notable character, and is thus sketched by a correspondent: "lie is now aDout eighty four years of ago, and has been an effectivo preacher for sixty four years, and served in the office of pre siding elder for half a century. He has attended every General Conference since the first organization of Methodism in America, except two. He is one of the few links that connect the hcroio age of Methodism with the present. Some men became eminent by culture, gathering through years of toil the lore of buried ages, but some heaven-appointed leaders arc born great, and to this clas3 Peter Cartwright, who in his day was a really great man, belongs. When in his prime, he was about five feet ten inches in height, with a compact, symctrical, sinewy form, black hair slight ly curled, a round, well-poised head, and dark, piercing eyes. His face was, and still is, strongly marked with intelligence, will, power and energy, and in an early day, when his voice was clear, powerful and musical, he wa3 a prince of camp- mceting preachers. lie is now too old to participate much in debate, yet few who know him would even now care to stir the old lion, for fear his paw might still be pointed. In the early years of his ministry he was bold even to rashness, if it did not sometimes border on roughness. It is said that he was once prcachincr in Nashville, Tennessee, to a very crowd ed congregation, when an unusual stir about the door disturbed the congrega tion and annoyed tho preacher. A min ister sitting in the pulpit said to him in at apologetic undertone, "Brother Cart wright, Goncral Jackson just came in." "Well," responded Cartwright, "who is ucncrai dackson f it he don t repent he'll be damned as quick as a Guinea nc- ro I I his was said in so loud a tone that Jackson heard it, and next day meet ing Mr. Cartwright in the street, he said to him : "bir. if 1 had an army of ten thousand men of your courago I could whip the world." A Country Girl in Beecher's Church. 41 At first I thought he was a farmer, he told us so much about sowing and har vesting. Then, when he talked of train ing, roses and pruning grape-vines," I changed my mind, and concluded he was a cardener: but soon after he described printing, and made it so plain, I decided that he must be a printer after all. The queerest thing about it was that he should know all the folks up at Cross-cut Cor ners, and be able to describe them so ex actly. When he, spoke of people who think every thing they have is just the nicest and best going, 1 thought of Huldy Tucker, and when he described those wno Dciievc they arc in a state ot per fection, and can't do wrong, I knew he must mean Deacon Pcttigrew. I was so much interested in all he had to say, I did not think of any thing else, except once, wncn my mougnis new to doei. 1 so longed to have him there beside me ! For I want Joel to love Sunday; and I am sure he never will unless he sees, as I have, how beautiful it can be made, and what a good, happy, cheerful thing such a religion as Mr. Beecher's is. The con gregation looked so interested, so eager to hear all he had to say, I do telieve they would have stayed till night, if he had chosen to go on preaching. I did not notice a single girl chewing caraway seed, or a single boy using his jack-knife on the back of the pew. Deacon Spiccr, eighty-five years old, always goes to sleep and snores between our Parson's Hin man's " fifthly" aud " sixthly;" but the old, white-haired men at Mr. Beecher's looked just as wide-awake as tho young ones, and I do believe everybody went away feeling better, and kinder, aud more resolved to lead good, true lives than when they came." Independent. At a meeting of the Iowa Radical Con gressional Delegation the other day, the lollowing resolution was passed : licsohed, that ... Old Crimes w dead, that mean old soul, We'll bury him to-day lie never hall set foot again On the soil of Iowa. Old Grimes dead, the poor old u., He ne'er was worth a dime; lie chiseled us on Monday last, We'll chL-sel him next time. We'll bury him fo deep, deep, deep, That when old Gabriel sounds The trumpet of the jubilee, Old (i rimes will not lc found. Earthly Treasures. When Sheridan had bought a beauti ful place, ho invited old Dr. Johnson to go and sec it. The stern old cynic went, aud looked through the house and library, and tasted the wine from the cellar, and walked into tho garden, and said noth ing; and Sheridan said to him: "Well, Doctor, what do you think of it 1 " " Ah 1 " said hc,,"thcso are things that make death terrible." Jefferson Davis's trial has been again poeponod uutil October. As during that month the country will bo in very heat of the Presidential canvases, it is hardly to be expectod that cither judges will be found to hear or counsel to argne this case, delayed already uutil it has lost all iutorc.it Mr. Davis will, iu all probability, Lc tiaLufcncd as a loacy to the incoui inir Ai;iint.!trjtir?i NO. 12. Something Interesting About the Locusts, Mr. Daniel Lehman, tho. messenger at the York County National Bank, informs jthc editor of the "True Democrat" that' the locusts made their appearance in 1817, on the 23d day of May in 1S34, about the same time, and iu 1851, on tho 26th of May. Ho has ascertained tho fact, too, that the most of them arc now about five inches below the surface of thV earth, and their protracted stay 13 attri- duicu to the continued' wet weather. Manv of them have died in the trround on account of the frequent' rains, and' we may justly conclude that they win, by no means, be as numerous as in form er years. In 1817 Mr. Lehman made the following experiment: He took some- of the small branches whera the cirrs" had been deposited and wrapped thenv carefully up and laid them away and did not open them until 1831, when the lo custs made their appearance again; and then by the aid of a microscope discov ered that the cgg3 were dead and had never made the least advance toward incubation. In that year he put a quan tity of the eggs in a bottle and corkcot it up and did not examine its content again until 1851, when he found the re sult the same the eggs were dead and had made no progress towards hatching. Prom this it i3 well established that the eggs of the locust must come in con tact with the earth before they will ad vance towards life that the soil is es sential to the development of the life giving property they contain. By frequent experiment Mr. Lehmarf has also ascertained that the locusts never descend farther than six feet into the earth, which is an entire refutation of tho fallacy that they pass entirely through it during their long abscence of seventeen years. What they live on, or how they subsist, in their self constituted grave; whether they increase or multi ply, or remain, to all intents and pur poses, dead all this time, we believe, has never been ascertained. Thcso singular insects are certainly the most wonderfof of all natural phenomena, and should ba made a special subject of study. Their coming &nd going is an object of interest for the curious and scientific, and cer tainly teach a lesson which has never yet been fully and satisfactorily explained. The Celestials. In his eloquent speech at the San Francisco banquet, Mr. Burlingamo frankly explained what he and his col leagues in the Chinese embassy expect tV accomplish. He said tho. embassy was largely due to the adoption 01 1113 co-cperative policy; the policy by which the representatives at Pekin nf; me - treaty powers " act together in al discussions with the imperial government 1 uuuer tuis POllCV. he said, trade has n. creased from $82,000,000 to $300,000 - rrr . - ' uuu; steamboats have been multiplied, railroads have been built, light houses have been erected; hundreds of foreigners nave Decn taken into the civil service of Ch ina; Wheaton's International Law has been adopted a3 a text book of the cm pirc; Christian missions have advanced from tho Yellow Sea to the great plains of Mongolia; and now the imperial gov eanmcnt has determined to seek closer re lations with Europe and America. " The embassy," said Mr. Burlingamo, " means progress. It means that CWina will havo her questions stated; and, conscious of her own integrity, she is willing to sub- mit ner questions to the general judgment of mankind. It means that she intond" to come into the brotherhood of nations. It means commerce; it mcan3 peace; it means a unification of her own interests with the whole human race." This is glowing language, but that is no rcasou for pronouncing it exaggerated. Mr. Burlingamo is certainly better able than we arc to interpret the motives which in uueuecu uic a ciiin caoincc to give hinr his appointment, and to forecast the re suits which will flow from their act. A At all events he has the good wishes of all the civilized world for his complete suc cess in tho exceptionally important work which he has undertaken. Jones was, or believed he was, near his death, and tho doctor calling, he held a long and earnest conversation with him about his chances for life. "Why, man," said the physician; " you arc likely to die any hour. You have been living for tho last fifteen ycars without a constitution lungs gone; liver deceased, and all that sort of thing." "You don't mean to say," replied Jones, qucstioniugly, "that a man cau livo fifteen years without a constitution V " Yes, I do," retorted the doctor, " and" vour arc an cxamrde " " Then, doctor," and a bright smile if luminatcd the ralid face of tho doomed man, " thcu, doctor, I'll go it ten yearn more on the by-laws," aud ho did. A Numerous Progeny. Mrs. Regina Paul, who died near Orwigburg, Schuylkill Co., Pa., on tho 30th of April, aged 00 years, 4 months and 18 days, was tho mother of 14 child ren, 110 grand-children, 287 great grand children and over 300 great grand-children. Wooley, the coutumactious witness, is a thorn in Democratic flooh at Washing ton. If is he compelled to tell what he did with all the money he handled, there will j bo a liciucuJon-. Cutter among the Copper. b.fvl ll.i-.'V' n n