i- Ocuotcir to politico, Citcrahtrc, Agriculture, Science, iilornlitij, muj .(Seatcol - Sntdltgcucc. - 1 s. ; ' VOL. 33- STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., JANUARY 27. 1876. NO. 34. mTJTn 1 I 1 'i polished by Theodore Schoch. T,t) J.illir a rear in a'lv.mv and1 if rot Tu;''-,r? tli.' iMi lof tit year, tw.. dollars andlifty ri: till i; clurJ1'!. r,B si i-a-wr .li-ntnr'-t until a'l arrearage are '" '.'t th- notion of th Kditnr. piil. 'Y;k!,rti .,nn'f of 'inan f 'ei sht tin! or i.. L ' !.. .: ' ;i.Mit iil-."-T nnii in pro n'luiiu. JOK IMJIXTIXG OF AM. KINl'S, . .,tl in thu lii--h.'t sty!. of the Art, anl on the ei,Mted m "1nl,1reas,)IK,t,i.. terms. D Surgeon ucinisi. in Tav n!i tier's now bniMinjr. nearly opposite V7a' .i . i;rlr is. aiiiunistercd tor crtactiiiif whVn dVird. i - " Jati.C.'TtVtf. D U. R. BRUCE JOHNSTONE, Homoeopathic Physician, KefUence: Benjamin Dungan, Cherry Valley, SI OS HO E COUNTY PA. !i 13, 1S7-5. ly. puTix wis i&iiiKiiurr, Physician, Surgeon and Accoucheur, Sand Cut, Wayne Co., Pa. j.j promptly attended, to tl.iy or night. (jiar?-s moderate. -la.v J-'. '7o-tf. D U. IlOVt AIIO IVVTTERSOX, Pajiioan. Sar-jeon and Accoucheur, O.Ti .-? 1 R?-ilciice, M.tiu street, Stroud l'ir. I'r, in the Imiliiin formerly occupied br Dr. Prompt attention given tocalls. j- 7 to 9 a. ni. Oice hours - 1 3 p. m. ( 6 "bp. in. April l-i lS74-ly. D PnVSIlMN. SLT.GE3X AND AlTOlTHCl'R. In the ol 1 oMii"? of Dr. A. TJveves Jark.on, re'ideuce, crnr of Sarah anJ Kranklin street. STROUDSBURG, PA. D VVID S. LEC, Attorney at L.av, 0'ie n vr a'v.ve the ''Strouilsbarg House Sra Li-tmr.'. Pa. G.'nrct!."i promptly mrule. 0,:obrr . 174. 31 till i- 415 Xirt Thirl Strrt, PHILADELPHIA. Z-zt l ntcs, 75 per day. "55 HENRY SPA UN, Prop'r. L. R. SNYr.ER. Cl-.-rk. N'jv. i74. Ci. WILLIAM S. REES, Surveyor, Conveyancer and Esal Estate Agent. Farzs. Timber Lands and Town Lots FOR SALE. f:7!' r-i'-nr!y opposite Atnerican Houes f 1 i! 1 .1 - r l.low the Corner Store, i'-il i.?7.;-tf. DR. J.LANTZ, Srfirnv Mcon TTr a t nr'XTTTCTi . Oik : orT..- r.n M.iiti street, in thp scon t.ry ; v 'A : ' k u :i linr. u.-arly Mite th l- u r - il .ii.c. a!nl he flat. rs iiinwif tliat bv pizi)-l-tnvr.f,vjr,! ami the tmr-t taru.-st and ' nt i.in io ail :n:itt-rs iwrtaininsr to tiis pro---ti. 'i::.! h-i-f.,!lr a'.lv to p. rf'..rm n!! .rx-rat ions .3 ti: c.n;: hur ;u tlie most car-!'ul uu'i a'illfol usu- ;".a! v:T,ti:.n -irfn to arin7 the Natural Teeth ; 'u -;;ti- invrti'.ri of Artificial 'J.f.i n Iil..ii?r. s:.v-r. r (.'oruiuuous Gums, aud n.rfcct fits iu ull j.i :i..urt.J. lyrvT.i ltr..w th rrett f l!y and dans-r of cn "o i".jj th .;r wurt tu tlie inexperienced, or t those liv- A Ijril 13' 1S74 tf- DOt you Know tliat J. II. McCirty jc S'tns nre the only Under r ;, troU lbur: who understands their 'i,;ll,v If not. attend a Funeral managed tT a-iy other LVL-rtaker in town, and you ::iv eth.. proof of the fact. Juae Is, 74-tf j A.OTIlCR TUOI'UY i ur the ESTSY COTTAGE ORGANS! nee wirriorand lautifulif fl iM-nt. s f;ir ecliiwed their 'con Inished in- ,r'i'i:.t. ...,: . .... 1 oonipetitor in i Mttness and tieiicacv ol tone, to 'nrrv f,!i U.e first ariJ OI1v- pnw.nn ( ?xl,ihitors of ree.1 i)rpm at the Monroe Or'''1 r'1' or Pr'e 'st address "' l J. Y. SICJAI-XS, PAPER IIAiSR, GLAZIER AND PAINTER, MOXKOE STREET, ear!J oppos.te Kautz's Blacksmith ishop, Strocdsbiro, Pa. Wu, Un,Ierfi?ned Wf" respectfully in tht 1 'e cit!zfns o! Stroudsb.irg nd vicinity ofpa, 18 ",,w ,ljI1y prepared io do all kiu.ie promiT 'zing anJ Painting, ill L ya"dat -'lori not.ee, and that he ill i 1 ",lor notice, and that Wr col,4,lanly on lund a fine tock ot p ic.'s. The patronage of the oublir. 7 Krfiered. fMav 16. 187'2. I MfiSOi TOCICT A Famous Hunter's Death. Mautixsvillk, Pa., Dec. 21. James liloom, his brother Jose atid Jack son Frailey, cf this village, went out r -cently to hunt a hear which had been te?n on Welsh Mountain. They did not return at nurht, as it was expecte i they would, hut it was .-supposed by their friends that the bear was giving them a Ionj chase, and tlie three men being experienced hunters and woodsmen, no uneasiness was felt as to the result of the hunt. All the next day passed, however, without anything being seen or heard of the hunters, and a blind" ing snow storm having prevailed all day, accompanied by a heavy wind, a sense of uneasiness began to be felt in the village. That night turned off bitter cold, and the uoxt morning broke with the thermometer four degrees below zero, and the wind in creased to a gale. The hunters had not yet returned, and their friends and families, now thoroughly alarmed for their safety, began active preparations to search for them. Twenty strong and hardy men. working in the lumber woods, and river men, volunteered to scour the mountains and swamps in the direction the hunters had taken. The party of men who in turn went to j seek the hunters, whom the circumstances plainly indicated had met with some catas trophe, started into the wood at the extreme northern end of the mountain, and separat ed in pairs so as to take in the whole area of the ridge. The snow that had fallen on Thurslay covered the ground on the level about six inches, but iu every open space where the wind was not fended off there were drifts from two to four feet deep. The men marched in this wav for about a mile. i occasionally lit in j: a sruti off, but receiving i " ' - n.) response. At the end of the above distance their progress was interrupted by Little Tamarack Swamp, around which they were forced to walk, going in opposite directions and meeting on the other side. No sign of the missing hunters was found about the swamp, and the partv nirain separated in pairs. Two of these, William Shearer and George Walker, went off obIi'"juely down the lace of a rather steep encampment of the mountain. They reached the bottom of the hill near a small alder swamp, and were about to ascend again when their attention was called to a little nmund of snow a few rods ahead on the edge of the swamp. Going toward it thev saw before reaching it that it was the body of a man snowed under. Hurrying on to the spot they lifted up the body ait J were horrified to find it to be that of Jackson Frailey. From his throat down his cloth ing was torn almost completely off him, and his fiVsd terribly lacerated. The ground upon which he lay was covered with blood and he was deal. It was evident to the mcu'that the wounds he had received were not the direct cause of his death, but that he had 1 e 'n overcome bv loss of blood and the cold, from which he died. There be ing no sign of a struggle where the hunter was found it was concluded that he had been hurt in some other part of the woods, either in a hand-to-hand contest with a bear or a wild eat, which he had wounded while it was at bay, but failed to kill. Dy the firing off guns others of the searhing party were summoned, and three of them were sent back to the village with the body of the unfortunate hunter, and the search was contiuued. From the fact that no track leading in any direction could be found, it was plain that Frailey must have received his wounds before the snow fell, and was probably trying to reach some place of shelter. For nmre than a mile further on nothing was found giving the siighest indication of the spot where Frailey had his fatal contest or throwing the least light on the fate of his companions. Finally however, the re mains of a fire, but built before the snow, was found. A little further on, but to the left a quarter of a mile, another of the party found a rifle standing up against a tree. Both barrels were empty. It was identified by a brother-in-law of one of the lost hunters as Frailey's. A search was made in a circle among the laurel's and underbrush for some distance, and from a hollow, drifted two feet with snow, was ex humed the body of AN IMMENSE CATAMOUNT. It was shot behind the left shoulder and had cuts about its head and had a stab on it made with a hunting knife near its heart. It was now clear that the men were at the scene of Fraily's encounter with the animal which had proved to be a catamount. ly scraping away the snow near where the rifle was found the hunter's knife and other accountremeuts were disco ved. The knife was covered with blood, as was the ground several feet around. The only explanation that the men could give for the rifle stand ing up against the tree was that Frailey had probably discovered the animal in a tree as he was passing along, ready to spring, and had shot him. The catamount had fallen to the ground and stunned by the fall, lay as if dead. The hunter, being one of the suret shots in the region, not for a moment doubting that he had shot the fierce brute in a vital spt, placed his rifle against the tree, and had stepped up to take a closer view of his game. While viewing it, and probably stooping to turn it over, the cata mount had revived, and, with the ferocity of its kind, sprang upon the hunter. In the contest that ensued the hunter received his terrible injuries, but succeeded in inflict ing fatal wounds on the catamount, but it had crawled away some distance before it died. Frailey was a famous hunter and was known tbroughoat the State as the "Doer Slayer" and the -'Ximrod of the Conewago' A few days before his death he stated that hi had killed in his life over 2,000 deer, 2 0 bears, 20 catamounts, J panthers and nmberless wolves and foxes. In his tenth e r he killed one bear and six deer. II is experience in the woods embraced many hmd-to-hand contests with bears and wounded bucks, from all of which he came out victorious, and his body was covered with scars, the result of these battles. He was only -40 years of age, but had followed the calling of hunter and trapper for 30 years. The Life and Death of Worlds. Prof. Proctor delivered the second of his series of lectures at Stein way Hall, N. Y., a few evenings ago. His theme was the "Life and Death of Worlds." He commenced by recapitulating the points made in the first lecture concerning the birth and growth of worlds, and had stop ped at the epoch of life upon this earth. From this position lie advanced to the general facts concerning all the worlds of the solar system,-claiming that though it was not possible to regard them all as alike, yet that they resembled each other in cer tain conditions of structure, just as all animals did in certain things affecting life. There were differences of a very material kind between the planets. It could not be doubted that the larger ones must have been hotter at their formation than the smaller. It was reasonable to assume that the larger planets Jupiter and Saturn, had not yet done growing had not completed their formation independent of the accre tions which they derived from meteors and other external sources of growth. But besides that probability, there was the certainty th.it they must be very much hotter than the earth, because they not only had more heat to start with, but part ed with it more slowly. The heat was given off from the surface, but the internal heat was out of proportion to that which was lost. This had been demonstrated by making two globes ot steel, one four times the size of the other, then heating them red hot and placing them where they might cool gradually under perfectly enual condi- tions. The experiment proved that the heat contained was iu proportion to the cube of the mass, while the heat given out from the surface was ia proportion to the square. Therefore, J upitcr and Saturn not only had more heat, but cooled more slowly. The diameter of Jupiter exceeded the earth twelve times, and when it had contracted to an equal density, having now only a density about equal to that of water, its diameter would exceed the earth seven times. Therefore, as the life of a world was confined to the time when animal life could be supported upon it, and that de pended upon its internal heat, the life of Jupiter would exceed that of the earth seven times. The earth would be com pletely denuded of living organisms before Jupiter took on the stage of life. That grand planet had not yet come to the cool ing process, but when it did, the period would be ten times longer than that of the earth, which was 320 millions of years. Though it might be assumed that all the planets underwent the same series of epochs, the nebulous stage, the sun stage, the cool ing stage, the life stage, and the last one of death, they were not synchronous by any means. At this present moment Jupiter has rut yet entered on the cooling stage, the earth is in the period of life, Mars of decrepitude or the last stage of life, and the moon is dead. With regard to the forms of life that have been or will be upon these worlds, that is a matter of conjecture purely, the probabilities being that there would be essential variety. But as regards the structure of the plants, it was reason able to assume from analogy that all were alike in their elements. The spectroscope had shown that the elements of the sun were present in the earth. Now, if one planet contained the same elements as the central body, the sun, it was a fair presump tion that all the otheres did also. Here the room was darkened, and the solar spectrum was exhibited, and after that a prism from the vapor of incandescent iron, the demonstration being that the vapor of iron was in the solar body. Another slide presented the planets, giving an idea of their relative sizes, and this was followed by one giving the satellites of Jupiter, and still another giving the satellites of Saturn. The Professor said that the life of a planet depending upon its size, that of Mercury must be the shortest, as it was the oldest. It was a mooted point which was the younger, Jupiter or Saturn, but they were uudeniably tlie youugest of the solar system. The eight satellites of Jupiter presented a singular resemblance to the arrangement of the planets round the sun, and this was heightened by the lings which were a sort of zodiacal light. From this point the lecturer progressed to a consideration of the planet Mars which he si-oke of in the period of extreme old age. This he con sidered proved by the scanty bottle-necked seas which were shown by various slides. These were compared with the abounding ocean of the earth, and Prof. Proctor an nounced that as the earth parted with its heat its mighty oceans would assume the same appearance. This would be done by the water soaking into the interstices of the interior when the heat had sufficiently de parted to allow of this. From the considera tion of this gloomy prospect the lecturer proceeded to show slides of the moon and to expatiate upon its desolation. The lecturer concluded with the declaration that living organizations having ceased on the proaller planets would appear on tbe giants, and having there an immense field and great duration of time, would be able to progress incalculably ; last of all, when life perished in them, the sun itself would be come the theatre of life, and after its decay and death, a still more central, sun would be the next fitted for the purposes and develop ment of life, and so on endlessly. And he said that perhaps what seemed to us death was not death but another and higher life, just as night is not darkness absolute, but only a calmer, purer state of nature. "The New Boy." He made his appearance at one of the Union schools in Detroit the other morn ing, and, arriving ahead of time, he pre vented any feeling of loneliness from seiz ing him by licking three boys and riding the gate off its hinges. He went in with the crowd when the bell rang, and, finding no empty seat, he perched himself on the wood-box. When the children repeated the '-Lord's Prayer" in concert the new boy "kept time" with his heel, and wheu they came to sing he argued that variety was the spice of song, and attempted to sing one of his own one about a gentleman named Daniel Tucker, who dreamed that he was dead, and so forth. The teacher warned him to keep still, and he replied he wouldn't come to that school if his musical qualifications were to be overlooked. When school finally opened the teacher secured his name and began asking him questions in order to find out how he should be graded. 'Can you spell ?" she asked. "What kind of spelling ?" he cautiously replied. 'Spell -house,' if you please." "Frame or brick house ?" he asked. "An kind of a house." "With a mortgage on it ?" "You may spell 'man' if you will," she said, giving him a severe look. "Man ?" "Yes." "I don't care much about spelling 'man' this morning, but I will this afternoon. I've spelled it with mv eyes shut." "Do you know your alphabet ?" she asked, changing the subject. "Never had any !" was the prompt re ply. "Do you know anything about reading?" "I read like lightning ?" he answered. She handed him a reader and said : "Let me hear 3-ou read." "Bead right out loud V "Yes." "I'm afraid it would disturb the child ren," he whispered. "Go on and let me hear you read." He looked carefully at the page, scowled his brow, and read : "If I was a lame boy and didn't get any peanuts in my stocking Christmas, dum my eyes ! but I'd make things jump around that house next morning !" He handed the book back, and the teach er then asked : "Bichard, how many are three and three ?" "Three and three what ?" he inquired. "Anything." "It's a good deal according to what it is," he replied, as he settled back. "I know that three and three cats don't make a dog ?" "Did you ever study geography, Bich ard ?" "Yes, mam." "What is geography ?" "It's a book." "Is this world round or flat ?" "Hills and hollers?" he replied. "Bichard, can you write ?" "Write what !"' "Can you write your name ?" "I could, I suppose ; but I've got my name without writing it." "Can you write a letter ?" "Who to ?" "To any one." "Yes, 1 could, if I had any money to pay the postage." "Well, Bichard," she said, in despair, "you'll have to go into the lower room if you want to come to school here." "I druther stay here." "But you can't." "I'll bet you this knife agin ten cents I can." She took him by the arm to remove him, but he laid his hand on her shoulder and said iu a warning voice : "Don't get me mad, now, or I'll let my self loose." She called the principal down, and as he approach the boy he commanded : "Boy, what are you doing here ?" "Gitting educashun !" replied Bichard. "You go right down stairs now 1" con tinued the principal. "Well, down't sass me, for I was never here before !" replied Bichard, slowly mov ing his legs as if he meant to get down. The principal took him by the collar and jerked him around, got kicked on the shin and bitten in the wrist, and finally landed the young student on the walk. "Xow you go home ?" he shouted as he tried to recover his breath. "Am I educated ?" inquired Bichard. "You seem to be." "Gimme a diplomy, then." "You clear out or I'll have you arrested." "Hain't I a scholar in this school no more ?" "No, sir." "Who owns this school house?" de manded the boy, "No matter yem clear out." "Will yon come out iu the yard bra where you can't hang to anything?" asked the boy. "Begone, I say?v "Don't draw no Derringer on me !" warned the boy as he backed off, "nor djn't think 3-ou can scare me with any of your bowie knives r The principal walked in and shut the door, and after the new boy had stood there long enough to show that he wasn't afraid he turned and walked off, growling to him self: m "I'll git the foreman of No. f! to pound that fellow afore he's a week older !" AN AFRICAN CITY. Peculiarities and Characteristlss of Zan zibar. Like nearly all Oriental towus, Zanzibar looks immensely better from the sea than it does upon close inspection. Com ing from the south, the vessel has to wind slowly through among numerous little coral islands, green with stunted trees and bush, where, even with a man in the chains, the navigations is difficult, not to say perilous. Once inside, however, and you cast anchor in as beautiful a road-stead as ever ship was moored in. Very imposing too is the front of Zanzibar, which faces you. The waters of the bay are pellucid and clear, and rip ple on sands as white as snow. Along the .beach are the warehouses and dwellings of the wealthy English-speaking merchants, the palatial homes of the wealthier citizens, the houses of all the different foreign con suits each with its own flag flutterin" gaily in the breeze, and in the centre topped by the blood red ensign of Arabia, is the proud palace of the Seyyid Burgash. When you land, the first thing that will strike you, if a stranger, is the extraordi nary number of negro boys, with little more dress than a m.:rniaid, that will request, in tolerable English, the honor of being your guide for the day. The next thing 'that will strike you is that it is much warmer on shore than on board, and you will naturally put up your umbrella as 3-ou saunter after your 3-outhful guide. Some of the streets, 3-ou will be surprised to find, have neither doors nor windows, for the best dwelling houses are built around an open court, the windows, are rather air holes, opening on to that. The3' are built on the heat-resisting principle, the walls being many feet thick and of solid masonry. Every floor, even, is of great thickness and composed of wood and stones and lime and the roof is flat, and forms a delightful retreat in the cool of the da", when the sun is getting low in the horizon, and the gloaming breeze begins to blow. The shops are mere open sheds, where, amid his wares, squats the Hindoo or Banian merchant, calmly chewing opium or smoking his hubble-bubble. If you need refreshment -ou can have it at the fruit stalls ; pineapples, mangoes, citrons, oranges, pomules, guaves, green cocanuts ; anything in fact, except apples and gooseberries. The streets are narrow, winding and quaint ; and some of them, the bazarr for instance, very picturesque. The' are crowded to excess with Arabs, Banians, Hindoos, Per sians, Somali Indians and slaves of ever sort and shade ; but the atmosphere is not such as that which hovers around Bimmel's shop in the Straud, especially near the fish market, which is devoted principally to sharks and blue-bottle flies. There is many and many a strange sight to be seen ; every thing, iu fact, tells you that you are in the midst of a savage though peaceful people. It is a treat to watch the gold smith at work, or the sandal-markers, or toy manu facturers ; and it is a great treat to see a Parsee school. The school-room is a raised open shed ; the scholars, to the number of forty, fifty, or more, all squat on the floor, each holding a camel's shoulder-blade by way of slate ; then they are such sweetby pretty children, dressed in little jackets and trowsersof red, -ellow and green silk, with long, dark hair and loving C3'es, that, you cannot help but to stop and admire them. Bog Raisin A hog raiser and pork packer in Iowa gives the following statement as his experience in the business : "He has demonstrated to his entire satisfaction, that after his spring pigs had reached about three hundred pounds they ceased to grow with an3' profit. His pigs on the first of January weighed nearly as much as they did on the first of February, notwithstand ing he had kept up the feeding. He is a great advocate of taking good care of hogs. He would never shut up his hogs more than five weeks before he wants to market them. His food early in the fall was pumpkins, steamed and mixed with mid dlings, the proportion being about one half a bushel of middlings to forty gallons of steamed pumpkins. His object was to develop the bone and musels of the hog without adding fat. This he continued three months and then put them in a close pen and fed them meal and middlings steamed. After shutting them up for five weeks they gained two pounds a day until they reached three hundred pounds aud then ceased to grow to any extent." He was a man of dissolute practices and irregular habits, and he lived here. He groaned in his sleep, and his wife arose to light the lamp. He beheld a vast display of striped stockings, and then murmured to himself : "Iv'e got 'em sure this time." "Got what ?" she inquired. "The delirium tremens. I'm seeing an imals of all kinds. I've just seen a zebra.u She turned down the light, aud th uie- rtofrrla ilia as? UWJUWfJil. . i i - A Golden Girl. There is a "servant'"' inrV living with a family in Detroit, says the Free Pi ts., who wouldn't be. permitted to., change places if S10 per week. would bes any inducement for her to stay.- She makes it her speckd duty to meet all agents at d beggars at the door", and to dispose of them without the least annoyance to the family.- She has a rul. to meet each ease, and .her rules are per fection. 1, The : door r beil never fools her. She can tell a-caller's ring from a beggar's ring as certainly , as the bell is touched. When she .opens the door and finds a man with a red goatee, having a clothes-wringer in his hand, she clien't wait for him to hem and haw and .say that .his clothes-wringer beats sdl the other wringers ever made. She gets the sTarf by 'saying : "You seem -like - a decent, respectable man, and as a friend I-Warrr ou that the owner of the' house saw -vou coma up the stcS and he rati into the back yard to un chain his Russiau biood-hutiud. The man with. the red goatee slings that wringer over, his right shoulder and can ters out of that. neighborhood with his teeth on edgj and cold chills playing tag up aud down his: back. The n'ex one may be a young lady, who boldly inquires for the ' lady of the'house, and has' a new kind of face-powder to sell. "Vou can go in;" whispers the girl, "and I will stand' at the door 'so as to rush in when you call. If the mistress asks 3-ou to taste anything, boware : of poison. She may not have her revolver with her this morning, and I guess it will be safe for you to go in. "Why why?'' stammers the young lady. "Go right in ; she may not be danerous." "Never mind. I'll call again. I'm in a hurr" : And that settles that ease. The next is one of those chaps who go about with tears in their e3'cs, willing to work if work can be had ; but never find ing any work their health will permit them to do. ,. . . ' "Madam," he says, as she opens the door, "for. Heaven's rsake let me work at something long enough to earn a slince of bread?" ' ' She motions for him to go around to the side door and is there to let him in. She hands him an ax weighing seven pounds, with a straight handle, points to three or four big knots which have become almost petrified, and very softly says : "You look hungry, and as soon as you split those up I'll give 3-ou the best meal you've had in a month." She goes in and. he spits on his hands, looks at that old ax and then folds his lit tle tent and slips through the gate like ti shadow of fate. Then the little girl who canvasses for the orphan asylum vings the bell. She is met with a smile and the hired girl says : "You poor little thing 1 I pity the or phans and I'd like to give you some money. If you will get the ma-or to come here and say it is all right I will give you three cents." The little girl thoughtlly. pursues her way and., another case com-js, is met and disposed of, and the mistress of that house is never disturbed or annoyed. A Woman's Trick. Dr. II. J. was one of the able, talented and eccentric surgeons of the last century. liis practice emlnaceJ a large circuit, and his fame extended to everv Part of the State. The doctor was one morning sitting in his otnee, poring over some medical work, when a loud rap at the door aroused him. "Come in," said the doctor, and an old lady hobbled into the apartment, who seemed the very embodiment of dirt and negligence. "Doctor," said she. "I've got a dreadful sore foot -can yon help it !" "1 will try let me see it. The old crone proceeded to divest her "understanding" of the apology of a shoe with which it was covered, and displayed to the astonished doctor a foot and such a foot ! "My goodness !" exclaimed the doctor, throwing up both hands in amazement; "what a dity foot !" La! doctor, 3'e needn't be in such a wonderment about it ; there's dirtier feet than that in the world, I'll warrant a3'e, and dirtier feet . than that iu your own house, as proud as the j'oung ladies, 3-our daughters, are for all that ;" and t'-.e old hag cackled forth her pleasure at the doctor's astonishment., "Womau I if you can find a dirtier foot than that iu my house, I will give you a guinea, and cure your foot for nothing." "Pon honor I" uv the beldame. "Pon honor," cried the doctor. The woman stripped off the other stock ing displayed .1 foot that beggared all des cription, grinning in the face of the astonish ed doctor, exclaing : "Gae me the guinea ! I knowed it ; I washed t'other 'fore I came here." -.-' - Little Willie, having hunted in all the corners for his shoes, at last appears to give them up, and climbing on a chair, betakes himself to a big book on a side table. Mother says to him : "What is darling doing with the book?" "It ith the dictionary- pap lookth in the dictionary for thing?, and I am looking in it to see if I can Cud my shoes." 1: ? ; . -, . i Young men are aot to think themselves j wise enough, as drunken men ar to think theraselvta feaber.enougt. -. , .- t I: . J