U u n A Etootcu to politics, fitcrnturc, Agriculture, Science, iUoralitn, aub (Sencral SutcIHgcncc. VOL. 27. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY; PA., AUG. W, ISC8. NO. 20. Published by Theodore Schoch. Two doUn r yrsir in drnncp-nnd If not tid before the end (lhe yeur, two dollars anil filfy Ct. will be rhAi?rl. fa pper4?cnntirtiied until allnrrcaiasesare natd, crHheiorrtion ofUie Editor. KX.drertieineiitsofone qure ff (eight linen) or Wftv one or three insertions 91 50. Etrh additional IftveWiAR, iQ cents. Longer ones in proportion. I JOB PRIftTINC:, OF ALL KINDS, Biccuted in the highr-il Mrl? of the Att.and onthe most icuson ble terms. : - HI. D. COOLDAlGDf Sign and Ornamental Painter, V; SHOP ON MAIN STREET, Opposite Woolen 3iHi, ; STHOIJDSDIJRG, PA., 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 etantly on band or supplied to order. June II, IS68. ly. Drs. JACKSON & BIDLACK, : PHYSICIANS AKD SURGEONS. DRS. JACKSON &. BIDLACK. are prepared to attend promptly to all calls of a Professional character. Office Op- j posite the Stroudsburg Bank. t April 25, 1667,-tf. r c.w. seip, Tm7d7 Physician and Surgeon, STROUDSBURG, PA. . Office at his residence, on Main Street, nearly opposite Marsh's Hotel. All calls promptly attended to. Charges reasonable. Stroudsburg, April 11, 18G7.-tf. DR. D. D. SMITH, Surgeon Dentist,! - Office on Main Street, opposite Judge 1 Stokes' residence, Strocdsbvro, Pa. I CT Teeth extracted without pam.Q August 1, 1867. Js Card. The undersigned has opened an office for ' th.3 purchase and sale of Real Estate, in j Fowler's BuiMing, on Main street. Parties having Farms, Mill, Hutels or other proper ty for sale will find it to their advantage to call on me. 1 hive no agents. Parties must see roe personally. GEO. L. WALKER, Real Estate Ageut, Stroudsburg, Pa. .A. Card. Dr. A. REEVES JACKSON, Physician and Surgeon, BEGS TO ANNOUNCE THAT IIAV ing returned from Europe, he is now prepared to refcume the active duties of his profession. In order to prevent disappoint ment to persons living at a distance who ; may wish to consult him, he will be found at his office every TilUlusUAi ana oai UROAY for consultation and the perform ance of Surgical operations. Dec. 12, 1507.-1 jr. WM. W. PA IX. J. D. HOAR. CHAELES W. DEAN, WITH VM. W. PAUL & CO. Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in BOOTS & SHOES. WAREHOUSE, 623 Market St, & 614 Commerce St above Sixth, North side, PHILADELPHIA. March 19, 1808. tf. Itch! Itcli! Itch! SCRATCH I SCRATCH! SCRATCH! USE HOLLIXSHEAD'S ITCH k SALT EIIEIM 0LHLM. No Family should be without this valoa tl medicine, for on the first appearance of the disorder on the wrists, between the fin ger, &c, a alight application of the Oint ment will cure it, and prevent its bring ta ken by others. Warranted to give satisfaction or money refunded. Prepared and told, wholesale and retail, y ... W. IIOLL1NSHEAD, Stroudsburg, Oct 31, '67.) Druggist. J.JLANTZ, DENTIST. )fm Has permanently located hira- (Yv Nself in Stroudsburg, end moved UJHI'his office next dow to Dr. 8. Walton, where he is fully prepared to treat Hie natural teeth, and also to insert incorrup tible artificial teeth on pivot and plate, in tqe latest and most improved manner. Most persons know the danger and folly of trust g 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 eoi.ie failures out of a number of eases, and if the dentist lives at a distance it is frequently put off until it is too late to t$ave the tooth or teeth as it mav be, other wise the inconvenience and trouble of going eo far. Hence the necessity of obtaining the .services of a dentust near home. All work warranted. Btroudsburg-, March 27, 1862. DON'T FORGET that when you wint -any thing in the Furniture or Ornamental line that McCarty, in the Odd-Fellows' Hall, Main Street. Strouda burg, P., is the place to get it. Sept. 26. B LANKS OF ALL KINDS fur Sa!e at thin Office.- ALMOST AT THE TOP." A Soldier on Seymour-Speech of Gen. Woodford. At the Academy of Music, in Brook lyn, the other evening. Gen. Woodford, wl io was evidently suffering from a re - ut sickness, was received with cnthusi-j cent astie cheerinjr. and notwithstanding his weak bodily condition, spoke with intense energy and fire. We regret that our limits exclude the whole speech. We make some extracts : ''I wish I could justly close these words without reference to Horatio Seymour. But fidelity alike to history and to my old comrades in the army, living and dead, compel ' that I should speak of one passage in his his tory. On the Fourth of July, 1863, when Governor of the State, he stood at the Academy of Music, in New York, and in a most elaborate address apologized a like for slavery, the South and the Re bellion. He had no word of cheer for the patient man who was bearing the na tion's sorrow (cheers) in the Capitol at Washington. He bad no word of en couragement for our gallant soldiers, who that very hour were grapping with Lee in a life and death struggle among the hills in Pennsylvania (cheers and cries of "You're right") ; nothing but icy sneers, but i old calculations, and but illy concealed sympathy with treason. Thank God, at that same hour Meade gave the lie to his elo quent sophistry as he hurled Lee back in terrible defeat . from Cemetery Hill and Round Top at Gettysburg, and Grant's cannon made strange echo to his coward ly but concealed appeals for compromise and surrender as Vicksburg' s host cast down their flags in defeat. "A few short days passed, and on July 13 of that same year the terrible draft riots broke out in New York city. I charge that these riots were the natural, logical and almost necessary results of his speeches, his teachings, and his public of ficial acts. And then when the storm had gathered, he addressed those mad dened, brutalized rioters as his "friends," and besought their patience by the plea that be had sent his Adjutant-General to Washington to hez that the draft might! be suspended. (Laughter, hisses and cheers.) When the tidiDgs of these riots and of Seymour's conduct and speech teached m with my regiment, I was toil ing aloDg a dusty road of Maryland in pur suit of the retreating rebels. Fainting under the terrible heat, some falling and even dying by the wayside, our men were still pressing on. "The loyal arms had been victorious at Gettysburg, and we had heard the glad news irom lcksburg. He were weary, bat still we co aid see the end and the Vic- tory drawing nigh. Like thunder from a clear sky f ell the tidings of this coward ly uprising at our own homes against the government and the flag. Strong. men wept with shame and rage.. Firm lips closed in a fiercer wrath a they whisper ed the news down the ranks, and muskets were gripped with a vengeful feeling such as we had not known before in skirmish and battle. Could we have filled that day in 'o Broadway there would have been a bloody reckoning, and short work would have been made with His Excellency's special friends." A sudden movement was here visible through the whole audience: an instant afterwards an electrical cheer burst from!?,11' amnS ?,a nr8t aul'e8' 10 Pa8S UP every part of the building ; many people stood up, and handkerchiefs and hats were waved at the speaker. We had left home to fight your battles, and we felt that you were bound to tax yourselves, if need be, to your last dollar to pension our widows, to succor our wounded, and feed our little ones. We were there just as much for your sake as for our own, and we felt that when our ranks grew thin wo had a right to rein forcements j that you were bound in hon or to send us your young men and your strong men, even if your old men and boys had to work your factories and your women had to till the fields. We were terribly in earnest. We were fighting re bels. We meant to stand up to our work, and we very solemnly intended that you should stand squarely up to yours. 1 (Cheers.) How reverently we thanked God, when the good Lincoln and the lion hearted Stanton said the drafs shall be enforced. And how we cheered the sol diers who where sent from our midst to enforce the law and uphold the honor of our flag against the Nothern mob. "You can now understand how we sol diers feel towards his Excellency, Horatio Seymour. In the hour of our sorrow and weariness he had no encouragement for us, no faith in our courage, and no faith in the final victory. Now in our triumph, when the flag steams out on every brezze i ii i ? i ana an our iana is one again, we nave no the tide"tbat is 8weCping everything be need for thee, Horatio Seymour. Let fore u for GrtQt aod fc0,fax 1Ie kea the burners of orphan asylums, and deserter, and the skulker from the dra twine laurels for tby brows; we will 6tandcoffeo iUilTed Mturliutioo papers, but it by the old flag, all battle-scarred, butglor ious iu victory, while we follow the grea t captin of our armies, our own Ulysses Grant ' "At the battle of Jookout Mountain, as following the line of fire, our surgeons climbed up the hilly steep, they met four soldiers coming down and carrying in a blanket a shapeless mass. Laying their burden tenderly down, they asked the doctor to look at their wounded color ser geant. His shoulder and forearm had been torn away by a shell. "The surgeon knelt, and putting the hair back from bis manly brow, asked) "My brave fellow, where are you hit 7" J A motto for the Blair family : "United we His eye unclosed for a moment, as ho faint- jtand." ly answered: "Almost at the top." "No,' Tlie Fort Wayne (Ind.) Gazette announces no, my good man, whereabouts are you Ge" TJJ"!ae8 R Stecdman repudiates Sey- ' ijt . . . . ' mour and Blair. . nuuuucu i ..-igaia ms u viutr eve uucu-i J : vs i i: . "i i I ed. again his Palo libs moved, and he whispered : "I was almost at the top, sir, ! bearing the flag, when the shell struck ! me. One moment more and I should j have been clear up' He gave one gasp, .and bis brave spirit was gone forever. Exclamations. I "And so. dear friends, it is with us to- day. We arc almost at the top. In faith and love we have carrried the dear old flag for four long years of struggle, un til now we are above the clouds, fighting as Joe. Hooker fought up in the clear sunlight of absolute justice and right. Only once more close up the ranks. On ly once more pass up the mountain slope, and we shall plant our dear old flag clear up on the mountain top of a final victory for liberty and the rights of man' Let any true soldier, or soldier's friend, or lover his country, read the above, and then rote for Horatio Seymour, if he can ! W Ready Responses. The following reply to a life insurance circular, requesting information as to the health and habits of an applicant, was re- iceived at a prominent life insurance of-tral ficcs in Hartford: -7 ! Since two years after I was born. 2. hat are his general habits f In winter, red flannel shirts and blue beaver: In summer, a straw hat canted to one side, and nankeen trowsers very loose in the legs. 3. What is his profession 7 Congre gationalism 4. Has he ever had fever and ague ? Had a fever last summer, when the ther mometer was at eighty, but it was no great shakes. 5. Has he ever had heart disease f Yes, but was cured of it by Rev. Dr. Hawks years age. 6. What state was he in when you saw him last ? The state of Michigan. 7. Has his application 'ever been re jected 7 Yes, once promptly by a lady. 8. What age do you consider him 7 Old enough to know more than he does. 9. Does he smoke or shew 7 He smokes when be chooses. 10. Has ho children 7 Yes ; two nephews. A Shrewd Southern editor says : "The popularity of Seymour and lilair is some thing like the fever and ague it cannot be found in any place where particular inquiry is made for it. In the settle- ments, where the "shakes" are supposed to have a lodgment, the people inform in quircrs that they do not have them there, but the inhabitants of another place which they designate have them "awful ly." So Eastern Democrats declare that their ticket, though not strong here, has great popularity iu the West , and Wes tern Democrats, while confessing to Dem ocratic disappointment in that section say that their ticket will run well iu the East. A justice of the Peace, who has but re ccntly assumed the dignity of that impor tant office in one of the mushroom towns on the Union Pacific railroad, was called me gum or innocence ot a mau arrestee! for murder. The following colloquy con stituted the examination Justice "Darn you, sir ! did you kill that man. Prisoner "Yes, sir.". J ustice "Was any one else present at the time 7" Prisoner "No, sir." Justice "Then as it will be impossi ble for thecourt to prove your's guilt, you are discharged. . As a person was shooting swallows at Osbaldick a few dajs ago, he fired at and wounded one, which fell as its wing was broken, to within a few feet of the earth, when another swallow flew directly un derneath, and bore it gently up. After having attained a considerable elevation, the bird underneath withdrew its sup port ; but finding that the bird was sink ing again to the earth, it resumed its sta tion, and onee more raised it in the air This was done several times, till at last the bird flow away, as if it had not been hurt at all its companion followed. This is as remarkable an instance of attach ment and sympathy in the feathered tribe as we ever heard of. Ilon. Wm. . Wallace, Chairman of the Democratic Committee, publishes an addreas calling upon the copperheads to wake up and make an attempt to turn . . m ml 1. HOW long have you known rnaiine ltepuuneans on me x acinc coa are . . jiure u ior uram ana voiiax. ne maaes .e no allusion to the copperhead frauds in Jei Luzerne last year, neither does be say that he is prepared at present to furnish 7 is understood that he is to make use of the same means to carry the State that were so efficacious in electing wood, . Shars- Brick. Pomcroy denounced all the B lairs, and Frank P. Blair, Jr. in parti cular, as political mouutebanks and men of no character or standing. "Brick" now supports Frank P. Jr. for Vice Pre sident. "Birds of a feather flock together." There is no hope for Democracy this fall. A. J. Donelson is out for Sevmour. We un derstand that Donelson claims that he once ran for Vice-President wi more. ith a man named Fill- The Boston Pot--t. Democratic, says : The names of Sevmour and Blair have ran like wild fire from hill to valley, all over the land." That's a correct figure down hill all the time. The Chicago Post says : There is a hiatus in Grant's history pay the Democrat a. : That may be, but it is nothing compared with the hiatus he made in the Democratic partv at Vicksburg in 1863, and at Appomattox in 1865. . It dosen't become Frank Blair to prate alout the carpet-bapsrer?. There has been no time rince the Blair faruilv could crawl that each member of it lias hot Wen in Washington, ear-Iet-bat in hand, clamoring and begging for office. . It has been discovered that horseradish and sweet-oil a tablespoonful of this mixture as often as it can be swallowed and retained on the stomach, together with a poultice of the rime over the wound has proved a prompt and perfect cure for hydrophobia. The Hon. John S. Carlisle, formerly of West Virginia, and United States Senator under the restored Government, now residiutr in Balti- more, declares emphatically for Grant and Col- !! 'try th:iT Mr. Carlisle, a c f T?,.,,iki;,., st-. rw Committee of California, writes to the Congressional Republican Ere cutiyt Committee making preparations for an energetic canvas., and that they believe Grant and Colfax will carry that fetate by 10,000 majority. - m To Destroy Warts. Dissolve as much common washing soda as the water will take up ; wash the warts with this for a minute or two, and let them dry without wiping. Keep the water in a bottle and repeat the washing often, and it will take away the largest warts. Recent explorations thow Northern Minnc Fota to be perhaps the most remarkable elate region in the world. The slate ridge is some twenty odd miles in length and six in width. In one place are mounds of slate coverning a large extent of territory, which have the ap pearance of a city, there being streets, houses, and towers of regular ehape, the whole presen ting a most singular and interesting appearance. At one point in the SSt. Louis river is a large Island of pure, workable slate, towering above the surface of the ttream to a hight of seventy five feet. Mrs. Betscv Eodgers of Newburg, Mas Lai followed the business of picking berries for 70 years. She will be 95 next month. The New buryport Herald says : "On her birthday she proposes to walk to town a half dozen miles with the same old berry bas&et on her arm, and walk back She ought to have a public recep tion by her old friends and patrons. She be longs to a tough and long-lived race. Her mother reached the age of 97. There are oth ers of the same sort in By field. We saw an old woman the other day who had lxcn picking berries all day in the hot sun, walking over two miles to her work, who was 81 year. old, and whose child was over 63. She told us that she had walked to town to sell 1'crrics.and walked back a journey of ten niiles six diOcrent times this season." Farm Items. The lest time to buy a farm is in August and September, for then the poor spot appear One of theliest farms in Kansas is the Gover nors. His wheat 4crop amounts to 10,000 bush cls. The farming land" of Nebraska increases in value at the rate of a million dollars a month. June 1, in Australia, grapes and apples were gathered, and Winter had set in. It is said that cattle -can bo raLed best on sand stone, and fattened best on lime stone land. The only animal if it is an animal, which will eat the Colorado )otato-bug and not get sick is the striied snake. In hot weather milk is worth more fed to calves, whirli are to be cows and oxen, than made into butter. A single pair of caterpillars, if lot alone, will strin the leaves from a young orchard in a few weeks. They need as much watching as politi cians. Now that the wheat crop in Australia has failed, they proiosc growing hops to use up what little barley they may raise. An acre of fresh water is more profitable for fish growing than ten acres ofgood6oil for gram growing. Western wool-growers get five cents a pound for their wool more than Eastern growers, be cause they make so many complaints. The Pennsylvania Agricultural Colleirc has only 13 students, and it is a failure. Other like colleges fail, ami all because they have no teachers who understand farming. The Rev. Father Cabley, President of the great Catholic University of Notre Dame, was in tho procession which escor ted Mr. Colfax from the depot to the Fair Grounds, on his recent rcceptiont at South Bend, thus giving evidence that he Cat holics of his homo resent the base Demo cratic fabrications, in regard to the as serted hostility of Mr. Colfax to the Catholics and foreigners. The St. Joseph Mo. Herald, spcakinS of the distrubancc created by democrats at the reception of Gens. Grunt and Sher man in that city last week, says , "In the noisey mob hooting and yelling insults at bens, brant and Sherman, we recognized . . a tne same boisterous eicincut which pas- sen a resolutions at meeting in the Court House in 1861, that no'appoiutee of Mr Lincoln should ever occupy St., Joseph Fust-Office: the same element that raised a Reblc flag at the foot of Felix st. and killed the commerce of the city dead as a door nail for four vears: the identical ele ment which tore the flag from the roof of the Post-Office, aud threatened with death any man who dared insult the chivalry of the South by unfurling the banner of his country.. Grant acts, Seymour talks, and Blair blows. The Beetles In Utah. The Austin (Nev.) Reveille of June 13 gives the following description of this for midable and dreadful plague. Utah is not only plagued with locusts, but with an insect called the "elephant beetle. A reliable person who returned from the neighborhood of Salt Lake last week saw myriads of them covering the earth with their shining, brawnish black bodies, and destroying everything which they met in their path. Even small animals, he was informed by the ill-fated residents, did not escape the voracity of the horces: their bodies were crowded upon, and worried, and wounded cruelly with powerful anten nae until they fell ' down exhausted by their struggles and loss of blood, when they were fastened upon by thousands and devoured. The entire carcass of a sheep was eaten and the bones picked clean in two minutes, and a quarter ; and it is said that a dead ox would be gob bled up in a quarter of an hour. So fer ocious arc these giant beetles that mothers are afraid to let their children go out of house unattended by a grown person. In the frequent bloody contests the wounded are uerourea on the instant, uur in formant says they are about four inches long, with legs three inches long; their antennas are stiff, sharp, and full four in ches long; they have a short tail armed with a powerful horn, and their slfells arc so hard that the weight of a man scarcely will crush them. They are very frisky at times and jump with the agility of fleas. No other species of the beetle possesses their faculty of uttering a loud sound, which, made by thousands of them at otfee, resembles the braying of a band of jackasses. Their noise terrified the horses of our informant and his companion, who could not be kept upon the plain, so great was their fright. On one occasion while they were riding in a valley that was black with beetles, and crushing them under their horses' hoofs, when their hard cases would crack with a report like a rifle, the fierce insects showed a disposition to at tack the horses, and fairly drove them out of the field. We were iuformed that a scientific man in Salt Lake City was collecting specimens of this formidable elephant beetle for transmission to vari ous learned institutions of the country. The Astors of to-day. The Astors will probably hold their prop erty for many generations to come. Wil liam B. was trained by bis father to the style of business which had gained his fortune and increased it. Since the death of John Jacob Astor the business has been couducted in the same style that marked it bc&rc hedicd. William B. Astor has two sons, John Jacob and William B. jr. They hive been care fully trained to the same style of business that distinguished their ftthcr aud grandfa ther. In the little one-story building on Prince street, looking like a small jail with the iron bars in front, the father and two sons can be seen daily taking care of their immense estate. The sons are quiet and re ticent like their father. No bank clerk goes to his business more steadily than do they. At a given hour m the morning they enter their office. At a given hour, arm in arm, they walk down Broadway to Wall street. Between two and three they can be seen re turning from their down town office, lhcy arc seldom separate. They are capable, in dustrious, economical and pre-eminently de voted to business. Should their father die to morrow, everything would be taken up just where he left it, and all his plans would be carried out. nor wou'd any change be mode in the mode of doing things during their lifetime, The utmost care was ta?n of their uncle John Jacob, who died the oth er day. Every wish of his father in regard to him was scrupulously carried out. His fine residence on Fourteenth street, with its garden occupying a whole square, with his coaches and horses, were preserved to him to the last. . It is rare that three generations of men exhibit such characteristics. Thrown into offices, its commanding position would make the Astor House a source of revenue such as it can never become as a hotel. But the wishes of the founder, though dead, stil prevail, and a hotel it willbe, probably, du ring the lifetime of its present owner. Bos ton Journal. The Democrats attempted a ratfication meeting at DccrfielJ, Oneida County, a few rods from Gov. Seymour's door, a few days ago, but only ten or fifteen men came out. The meeting adjourned with out even a cheer for Seymour. But some of the Governor's "friends," having be come intoxicated, went into the street and commenced abusing peaceful citizens, two or three of whom were knocked down and severely beaten. Oa their way home, however, they met several sturdy brick makers, whom they ordered to hurrah for Seymour. This they refused to do, when an assault was made upon them; but the brickraakers proved to much for these "friends," and several of the rioters were severely and righteously puuished. . A fond father the other day, wishing to form an alliance between his stupid son aod a fine young lady of his acquaintance, sent him to her mother with tho follow ing note : "Dear Madam ; Allow me to present my Bill for your acceptance." The lady sent the tpoouy back to his father with tho following reply : "Dear Sir : Your Bill is vetoed." Tho Democracy of Maryland had a Seymour and Blair ratification meeting last week, at which a negro was murder ed. Good, sound Democrats 1 Jeff, Davis supports Seymour and Blair Quite natural ho U opp i treason odious I oscU to uukiug Blue Blood. A naval officer, writing from "Off Cap St. Lucas," gives an anecdote of one who duriog the war was a great favorite with the North Atlantic squadron,, a thorough seaman, navigator, and gentleman, some what erratic, perhaps, but enthusiastic, and excellent company. On one occasiony while ashore ia Newbern, he visited a lady who was somewhat aristocratic ri her pretensions. The lady engaged ia conversation, and in the hearing of sever al became quite eloquent about "blue blood." "New, you, my dear M. said she, "you must be of our set Let me see; ah, yes! your family are from the Surry Berkley side,I presume. Was- your grandfather General 7" "Xd, Madam," was the reply. "But. your father; he " "Madam," said our tar, "you are quite wrong; my father wa.. hung, and my mother was a washer-wo man !'. Further genealogical inquirj The Southern Vindictaor of Pine Bluff, Ark., warms the people of that Stater "not to be misled by lying Radical emis saries, it says : We desire our Democratic friends to Ee- wary how they listen to the voice of ther Radical rrcss. Since the Presidential nomination a movement has been set on. foot to prejudice the Southern mind against Gen, Blair. It is published for the country that he is the individual who, when Postmaster-General, refused to al low Democratic papers to come South.- This is vile fabrication an election trick to carry out their infamous plan to further persecute us. It was Montgomery and. not Frank P. Blair who was the corrupt Postmaster-General. How will Montgomery Blair like tho compliments of his present bed-fellows? And what will Frank think of this attack upon his brother 7 Rancid Butter. To a pint of water add thirty drops (about half a teaspoonful) of liquid chlo ride of lime. Wash in this two and a half pounds of rancid butter. When, every proticle of rancid butter has come in contact with the water, let it stand au hour or two; then wash it well in pura water. The butter is then left without any odor, and has the sweetness of fresh butter. These preparations of lime have nothing injurious in them. We copy the above from one of our ex changes, the editor of which says: "We forthwith obtained some of the. most rancid butter, and it wasbad enonglr for any stomach that had more sensibility than a wagon wheel. We doctored it aaf per recipe, and when placed on the table along with the new, good butter, very able judges could not distinguish which was the new butter. Here is a fact worth, a year's subscription to a paper." James Parton, in an article on lc7c- anVs Monthly, cutitlcd "Don't be amere Money Machine," fays: "Among twenty men who can make a fortune you will hardly find more than one who can found a family. It is when I think of the chil dren of the men who are called successful, that I feel how profoundly foolish those, men among us are who devote their whole time and the whole force of their natures to business. How strange to expend life in accumulating the means of living, and forget to live !" A man callinghimself a "professor' dvcfi tUed an entertainment in Sl Louis the othe n'ght, at which he was to expose the mys teries of spiritual manifestations, allow himr self to be shot at with pistols, and let the audience in to all the secrets of jugglers. After appearing before the audience and requesting those who desired to shoot at hixa, to prepare their pistols, he went behind the stage curtain and that was the last of him. He obtained about $200, and left his hall rent and printing bills unpaij. A witness in a late divorce case lept saying that the wife had a very retaliat ing disposition; "that she retaliated foe every littlo thing." "Did you ever see her husband kiss her 7" asked the wife's counsel. 14 Yes sir, often." "Yes, what did she do on such, oeca- sions 7 "She always retaliated, sir." (Great laughter, and wife triumphant.) A warrant for the payment of tho pur chase money for Alaska, in the sum of $7,200,000 in coin, was on Saturday sign ed by the Secretary of the Treasury and transmitted to Baron DcStocckl, the Rus sian Minister. The draft for that amount. payablo in New York, was signed ' by Gen. Spinner Saturday morning and a receipt given therefor by the Russian Minister. A little up town five year old, who was hungry one night recently just at bed time, but didn't want to ask directly for something more to eat, put the proposi tion in this way, "3Iamma are little child ren who starve to death, happy after they die 1" A good big slico of bread and butter was the answer. i - "arr t t a 1 i The Schenectady Evening Star put . . i! - : . i u - r tno l'euiuuruuu uuiuiuues at mc ueu v its column, and directly underneath say "Tho Road to Ruin." Sinco the new Georgia Senator, came out for Grant and Colfax, the Ptmocratio party in that State has becu rapidly rua a"tu dowu bill n n