6. Scuotcb to politics, itcratuvc, VgvicnUuvc, Science, illovalitn, anb fficncual ntslligcucc. 71 VOL. 34. i imuu.iwi in mi -phi mi. FuMishcd by Theodore Schocb. TrlMTwn -loll ;irs a year in advanrn and If not ril: ! !)!' ri! thn end of the year, two dollars ami fifty Lt w ill k'-li.ir;-l. K.i N 'ai'T di-vontinuod until all arrearages are . t Om nut ion of tho Editor. P 'V? V l .-'Tti-. .'ini'iits f on; s.'iaiv of (ei?M linos) or mi r tli r-" iticrtins si .:. Karh rdditional iu- rtioti, ") c l:',r "s "", proportion JOII .X'RIXTIXG- OF ALL KINKS, Executed iu the? hiu'li'-t stylj of tlio Art, and on tho most reasonable tonus. 1) U. NATHANIEL C. MILLER, Physician and Surgeon. O.Ece and residence: Corner Main and Pocono Street, Strocdsbukg, Pa., Office hours from 7 to 8 a. ni., 1 to 2 and 7 to S p. iu. Oct. lS7C-tf. J. II. sssrs.i', 33. S3. svin.l djor h.'lv.r Ttnnictt House. Ttssidrnoe ;ri! ilur n-,".t of llii-ksiie ij.iaktr Church. tfiicc h r- S t-) 9 a. in., 1 to 5 p. in., t to 1 p. iu. , X ty C", HTTi-t!. I'lj.Visiciiia and Surgeon, STROUOSEURG, Pa. o-l f r;i r!y occupied by Dr. Sip. Rsid?nee with .1. H. Mi!! r, "n- d.-jr lrbw t!i? Jfrrjoiiiati UiHce. it;!i, . h nrs, 7 to U to :i and G to 9. M.ir !1, 1 ;. t;'. D O Ti -s in K'inst'-r's now buil linj, nearly opposite th S.i-;j !?.iu!c. aunniULrvd for exlacting i i: !i '1 '! r 1 . s-rjjl.ocri, i'a. Jan.0,6-tf. D riiysinw. sr."C3X ad aitmituecs. 05.., I., i'iin ! M -d' r.w b-jtMin?. nearly -p-p,.;- t;, o M i:ii:o. i:iivncv u J'arali Mrt-et, (v.- l"i .11.'. :;n. AJioi-sioy at laiv, One (1 or alt ive the "Stroud-'burg iloiiFe," ir l-'i irir, la. f.iikvtioin proitiptlv maile. O ,-:,)!kt J2. 1?74. T. Eal Estate anl Insnranne Agent and CONVEYANCER. r..'.'- a -vi -c.V- nn.l Ctr.i':nnc'tng in all its Ir.i ulie- currj-i!lj am! promptly attemled to. X;'; j '!'.': I '.:(. taken for of .'cr State. O.'i.v, ::ist!er's Crick Iimlin?, near the II. K. U.-ji .t, i: VT STItOL'DSDURG, PA. p. o. r.-- j i. Se ;e !i i.jr J ;, l.TT. tf. WILLIAM S. RSSS, Sarvsyor, Conveyancer and Eaal Estate Agent. Paras. Timber Lands and Torn Lots FOR SALS. 01"e nnrlr oppo-itf An'.orlran IIoucs 2 i i ) r r.v the Corner Store. Unroll 2), li71-tf. DR. J. Li A N T Z, SURGISON & MECHANICAL DENTIST. 1:11 fin his n.!W on ;.!-;ii! stn-i-t, in the sc-ond story -'f L . V.t!t.-.n'! brick t..:il ii'itr, iK-aily o;(prjite the a:r ..i-i, , ;r il us,-, a 11. i !i- ii.il -i liimdf tlxit by oi.-rh-v -ars m-i'.rit pr;i;'ii..-o and the n:ot carn'-st and f '.r'f;iUiiii'iiiii'p all niaiti'1'9 pi-rtai :ii:i'J to hi pro-l-r;.,ii. (i; :(t i, r ijiy a';l '. to ).rf'roi all pratin i 1 th J -iit.tl iiiiff in the mo-t curcl'iil a:id skillful snau-nt-r. pe-,!;il ".t'.-vition rivon to caving thf Natural Tt'Ptli ; aKi. to ;V? i:'-!ii..n of Ariiticial Trl!i on P.ul.tfr, 0'i! l.i!v'i'iiir ron!inuo:is iuni, and perfect fits in all i II -Nil r.-:. M .t pr knn th-,4 ',T"at folly and danijpr of en t noting thi'ir wjrk.t:j lUc iai-xpcricncrd, or to those li v-In-- at a d:?tai"'. April 13, 1S74. tf. Opposition to Humbuggery! Tli mi l'T-.iRi'd hen y anu-ni!-s that h" liaj re "i ii -j ii.-s- at the oldtand, u-i.t lor to Kn.-tr's i;r!ii;!.' S;.M Main .street, troudsburtf, I'a., and vs m.iy jireparcd to accoinmodat all in want of BOOTS and SHOES, vrM in latent Ktyln and of $rool material. Ilepair 1 proiiipilv attt-iiU'd ti. (iive nie a call. PAPER UAKSER, GLAZIER AND PAINTER, MONROE STREET, Nearly opposite Kautz's Blacksmith Shop, SStrol'dssl'ug, Pa. Tlie unfiersigncd vvould respectfully in form the citizens nf Stroiidbiirg1 and vicinity that he is now fully prepired to do all kinds of Paprr Ilannrinjr, (Jlazin anJ Paintinjr, promptly Htid at fchort notice, and that he keep constantly on hand a fine t-tock ol Pper Ilangincrs of all descriplions and at low prices. The patronage of the puhlir J earnestly solicted. May 10, 1872. Dwelling House for Sale. A very desirable two story Dwelling House, contsin JA in wen rooms, one of which Is suitable fV- VTk for a Store Room, situate on Main street. iJJJJif iu the JVroiih of .Str judsbur. The ilijitSJ '""ildiug is uearlv Dew, and ev-ry part terc' "f i t i u &xd condition. Kor terms c, at this office. fDcc.9, 187o-f. JOB PRINTING, of all kinds neatly ex J ',uted at this orcce COMPROMISE BILL. Following is the text of the bill : A Bill to provide fur and regulate tlie counting of votes for President and Vice President, and the decision of questions arising thereon, for the term commen cing March 4, Anno Domini, 1877. lie it, enacted hy th? Snmtc and House, of Rcinu xciitativcs of (he United Sidles of America, in Congrats assembled That the Senate and Hovse of Representatives shall meet in the hall of the House of Represen tatives, at the hour of 1 o'clock Past Meri dian, on the Crst Thursday in February, A. 1). 1S77, and the President of the Senate .shall be their presiding officer. Two tel lers shall be previously appointed on the part of the Senate, and two on the part of the House of Representatives, to whom shall be handed, as they are opened by the President of the Senate, all the certificates and papers purporting to be certificates of Electoral votes, which certificates and pa pers shall be opened, presented, and acted upon i:i the alphabetical order of the States, beginning with the letter A. and said tel lers having then read the presence and hearing of the two houses, shall make a list of the votes as they shall appear from the said certificates, and the votes having been ascertained and counted as in this act pro vided, the result of the same shall be de livered to the President of the Senate, who shall thereupon announce tlie state of the vote and the names of the persons, if any, elected, which announcement shall be deemed a sufficient declaration of the per sons elected President and Vice President of the United States, and, together with a list of the votes, shall be entered on the journals of tlie two houses. Upon such reading of any such certificate or paper, when there shall be only one return from a State, the President of the Senate shall call for objections, if any. Every objection shall be made iu writing, and shall state clearly and concisely, and without argu ment, the ground thereof, and shall be signed by at least one Senator and member of the House of Representatives before the same shall be received. When all the objections so made to any vote or pajier from a State shall have been received and read the Senate shall thereupon withdraw, and such objec tions, shall be submitted to the Senate ibr its decision, and the Speaker of the House of Rej resent. a tives sh.il! in like manner sub mit such objections to the House ot Repre sentatives for its decision, and no Electoral vote or votes from any State from which but one return has been received, shall be rejec ted, eicept b" the affirmative vote of the two houses. When the two houses have voted, they shall immediately again meet, and the presiding officer shall then announce the dtcisicn of the question submitted. Skc. 2. That if more than one return or paper purporting to bo a return from a State shall havebv.-C!J received by the Presi dent of the Senate, purporting to be the cerlilicatcs of Electoral votes given at the last preceding election Jbr President and Vice President in such State, unless they shall be duplicates of the same return, ail such returns and papers shall be opened by him in the presence of tlie two houses, when met as aforesaid, anil read by the tel lers, and all such returns and papers shall thereupon be submitted to the judgment and decision as to which is the true lawful El.-ctoral vote of such State, of a commis sion, constituted as follows, namely : Dur ing the session of each house on the Tues day next preceding the first Thursday iu February, 1S77, each house shall, by viva voce vote, appoint five of its members, who, with the live Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States to be asserlaincd as hereinafter provided, shali constitute a commission for the decision of all epiesrions upon or in respect of such double returns named iu this section. On the Tuesday next preceding the first Thurs day in February, A. I). 1S77, or as soon thereafter as maybe, the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States now assigned to the first, third, eighth, and ninth circuits, shall select iu such manner as a majority of them shall deem fit, an other of the Associate Justices of said court, which five persons shall be members of the said commission, and the person longest iu commission of said five Justices shall be President of .said commission. Members of said commission shall respec tively take and subscribe the following oath: "I, do solemnly swear or affirm, as the case may be) that I will impartially examine and consider all questions submit ted to tlie commission of which I am a member, and a true judgment give thereon, agreeably to the Constitution and the laws, so help me God." Which oath shall bellied with the Secre tary of the Senate. When the commission shall have been thus organized, it fhall not be in the power of either house to dissolve the same, or to withdraw any of its members, but if any such Senator or member hhall, die, or be come physiciully unable to perform, the duties required by this act, the fact of such death or physicial inability, shall be by said commission, before it hiill proceed further, communicated to the Senate or IIouss of Representatives, as the case may be, which body shall immediately -and without debate proceed, by vieu vaec vote, to fillallplaeeso vacated ; and the jierson so apjioiiited shall take and subscribe the oath hereinbefore prescribed, and become a member of said co mmission. And in like manner it any of said Justice of the Supreme Court shall die or bcex.ine physicially incapable of perforni iug the duties required by ' this act the other of SjH Justice, members ''of the said STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., FEBRUARY 1, 1377. commission, shall immediately appoint Jus tice of said court a member of said commis sion, and in such appointments regard shall be had to the impartiality and freedom from bias sought by the original appoint ments to said commission, who shall there upon immediately take, and subscribe to, the oath hereinbefore prescribed and be come a member of sud . commission to fill the vacancy so occasioned. Ail the certificates and paper purporting to be certificates of the electoral vete of each State shrill be opened in the alphabetical order of the States, as provided in section 1 of this act, and when there shall be more than one of such certificates of papers, as the certificates and papers from such State shall be opened -(excepting duplicates of the same return), they shall be read by the teller, and thereupon the President of the Sente shall call for objections, if any. Every objection shall be made in writing, and shall state "clearly and concisely, and with out argument, the ground thereof, and shall be signed by at least one Senator and one member of the House of Representa tives before the same shall be received. When all such objections so made to any certificate, vote or paper from a State have been received and read till such certi ficates, votes and papers s) objected to and all papers accompanying the same, together with such objections, shall be forthwith submitted to said commission, which shall proceed to cotieider the same with the same powers, if any, now possessed for that pur pose by tlie two houses acting separately or together, and by a majority of votes decide whether and w hat votes of any such State are the votes provided for by the Constitution of the United States, and how j many and what persons were duly appointed electors in such State and may therein take into view such petitions, depositions and other papers, if any, as shall, by the Con stitution and now existing law, be com petent and pertinent in such consideration ; which decision shall be made in writing, st;;trng briefly the ground thereof,aud signed by the members of said commission agree ing therein, whereupon the two houses shall again meet, and sueh decision shall be read and entered on the journal of each house, and the counting of the votes shall proceed in conformity therewith utiles, upon objection made thereto in writing by at least five Senators and five members of the House of Reprcsntatives, the two houses shall separately concur in ordering other wise, in which case such concurrent order shall govern. No votes or papers from any other State shall be acted upon until the objections previously made to the votes or papers from any State shall have been finally elisposcd of. Sec. That while the two houses shall be in meeting, as provided in this act, no debate shall be allowed, and no question shall be put by 'the presiding officer, except to either house on a motion to withdraw, and he shall have power to preserve order. Six. 4. That when the two houses separate to decide upon an objection that may have been made to the counting of any electoral vote or votes from any State, or upon objection to a report of said com mission or other epuestion arising under this act, each Senator or Representative may speak on such objection or question ten minutes, and not oftener than once, but af.cr such debate shall have lasted two hours it shall be the duty of each hou.o to put the main question without further debate. Sec. 5. That at such joint meeting of the two houses seats shall be provided as follows : For the President of the Semite, the Speaker's chair ; ibr the Speaker, im mediately upon his left ; the Senators in the body of the hall upon the right of the presiding officer ; for the Representatives, iu the body of the hall not provided for the Senators; for the tellers, Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of the House of Repre sentatives, at the clerk's desk ; for the other officers of the two houses, in front of the clerk's desk and upon each side of the Speaker's platform. Such joint meet ing shall not be dissolved until the count of the electoral votes shall be completed and the result 'declared, and no recess shall be taken unless a question shall have arisen iu regard to counting any such votes or otherwise under this act, iu which case it, shall be competent for either House, acting separately in the manner hereinbefore pro vided, to direct a recess of such House, not beyond the next day, Sunday excepted, at the hour 10 o'clock in the forenoon, and while any question is being considered by said commission, either House may proceed with its legislative or other business. Sec G. That nothing iu'this act shall be held to impair or affect any right now existing under the Constitution and laws to question, by proceeding iu the judicial courts of the United States, the right or title of the person who shall be declared elected or who shall claim to be President or Vice President of the United States, if any such right exists. Sec. 7, That said commission shall make its own rules, keep a record of its proceed ings, and shall have power to employ such persons as may be necessary for the transac tion of its business and the erxccutioa of its powers. . . An inebriated individual fell ' dorn a flight of stairs the other night, and a pas serby, fearing him seriously injure, ran to pick him' up. Rut the man majestically staggered to his feet, and in response to the proffered aid, roared out, "Now you jess let me 'Joue. i; WaJi' "o slobberrin around mc. I alius como down that way." , : (ljA man Tfhri is captured bya pretty girl is frequently a miss-taken man'; Evening at Horns. ' The long evenings ' now at hand will bring to every well-managed home tlie ques tion. "What shall we do for entertainment?" No household is properly conducted where in there are no hours set apart for recrea tion, and the evening hours are best fitted for this duty. Duty may seem an inap propriate word applied to amusement ; but he who neglects it fails to .cultivate that part of himself which very greatly brightens his own life and that of 'his fellows The nan who never condescends to amusement is like dry timber compared with a living tree crowned with flowers and fruit. Rut the day has well nigh passed when apol.jgies are needed for enjoyment, and when rccrertions are considered at best as venal sius. Human nature has happily been to) strong for ascetic creeds ; tlie now wine would not remain confined in the old bottles; and the qnestiou is not . may we, but how shall we best amuse ourselves. Just a word here to the faithful, patient, loving and conscientious parents who will ingly extend their hours of toil through the day and into the night, and who cannot, they say, fii.d tirnj for anything but work. Rotter a hundred tinns that there be a few dollars less fbr the children, less of fine clothing, or of dainties on tho table, than that young people, wearied with the eternal round of work, should pine for freedom away from home, and lose no opportunity for escaping where there is something tv enjoy ; should learn the sweets of forbidden fruit, and away from the loving influences of home should be led to folly, dissipation and ruin. There is no important work to be done at home than to amuse your chil dren and yourself; take time for it, as yoa do for preparing the food or mending the clothing. Joining the children in passing the evening hours will freshen your own life, make you more companionable and sympathetic with them, inspire and streng then their confidence, yud make it unneces sary for them to go abroad for their enjoy ment. Children ma' and should feel that there is indeed no place like home. Among the first of home attractions is music. If the piano or organ cannot be af forded, the flute or violin may ; and at any rate there may be singing, which is best of all. Music books are cheap, and any one who can learn to talk can learn to sing. Among the happiest recollections of after years will be the hour when all voices were blended in the evening song, when discords of feeling were soothed and banished, care was forgotten, and for a little time a higher life was lived. The home reading circle should be made attractive with bright pa pers and magazines. Let each be permit ted to make selections, and all encouraged to remark, criticise and comment. It will greatly aid the art of conversation, which in these days certainly needs cultivation, and save immense waste of breath over trash and scandal. Then there' are plenty of entertaining games. Those who fear the lnliuence ot cams an'i tliere arc objec tions to their use, they arc too fascinating can find plenty of unobjectionable games especially designed for home use. The good old "stand-bys," checkers and chess, will have an honored place. Such amuse ments intcrspered occasionally with a regu lar "gale" of romps to give vent to youth ful spirits, will do for the rooms of many a household, now somber and glum, what a woodbine or a clinging rose does for the weather bearcn porch make it berietiful and attractive and teach the children to love their home. Hard Time3. Peter Ilagcrman devoured Ins breakfast with a wonderful relish, drank nearly all the coffee from his wife's cup she had left to cool, and with her only clean handker chief in his pocket started out boldly in ?carch of work, leaving his kit of jewelry tools behind him. Passing a bank he step ped in and asked the President : "Do you want an assistant here, cashier, book-keeper, or collect er ?" "Any experience in the business ?" "No, but I'm handy at anything?" "Do not want help all full." Then he went out and along another street until he came to a newspaper office when he entered to ask of the proprietor : "Do you want an editor ?" "No, have all we want." "Will work cheap." "Have you had any experience in the business ?" "No, but I know when I see a good thing in a newspaper and cuu cut it out. I am a careful reader." "Wrhat salary do you wish ?" "Am uot particular the best there is to be had." . "No use for editors." "Rut I am out of a situation." "Well, look around and find one. That is the way dogs find bones and men find plaers." "Well, I don't want any common place." - "The good ones are generally filled." "1 woii't accept a poor one one that is not firstrdass." ' "Then you had better wait till there is a demand for inexperienced meoi.for first class positions." . ! I .! Then Peter Ilagcrman went out and rolled at ten pins t ill . near m.tdnight, and he went home asked hh wife to go out and find some sewing or embroidery, or . music teaching to earn enough to pay for their board, the times were so hard,' and the next Jay tried billiards, aud feasted on an other lunch counter. He will soon have a 'situation-and VgoiftWi" ' Tlie Petrolum Situatio: The Titusville Ihrnld contains a review of the petroleum market for 187d, iu which it says : The 2.500 new wells put down only served to increase the average production for the year to a figure less than 1,(HJ0 barrels per elay over that of the year previous. This falls very short of the increase of consumption. As to the stock on hand, there has been a large increase, although the final contest between the exporters and refiners, which began early iu September and continued for about sixty days, prevented a further draft of at least half a million barrels during the vear, and which, muat necessarily be taken during the early part of the year, in additiou to the usual demands of the trade. There is at present only about two months' visible supply in the whole oil region. Tlie num ber of producing wells is now nearly G,tiU;.) against o,o(iU this titn-a last year. They are locU:d promiscuously upon almost every available farm known in the oil r gion. aud the year failed to develop any nev fi 11 of production. Here and there poils have been struck of more or less magnitude, but they have not brought to light any new field, and all are located with in the limits well defined two years ago. The production for December last was but a few hundred barrels more than the same month in 1S75, and the average for the year was but slightly iu excess of the i previous year, and this, notwithstanding the unprecedented devclopement aud increase in the numoer of producing wells. A year ago the region was suffering from a want of capital, while at present twenty five banks in the region are holding, ac cording to estimate, not far from 67,000, 000 of mjney belonging to producers and operators, most of which is waiting invest ment in oil. Under the greatly improved condition of a flairs it is reasonable to expect that the year lo77 will show even better results than the year 1870, and that our important and valuable staple win not be spirited away without something like an equivalent being left in its j lace. . Slicder. Never use a lady's name iu an improper place, at an improper time, or in mixed company. Never make assertions about her that you think untrue, or allusions that she herself would blush to hear. Vv hen you meet with men who do not scruple to use a woman's name, in a reckless manner, shun them ; they are the very worst mem bers of the community ; men lost to every feeling of humanity. 31 any a good and worthy woman's character has been forever ruined an 1 her heart broken bv a lie, manu facturcd by some villain, and repeated where it should not have been, and iu pre sence of those-who little judgment could not deter them from circulating the foul and bragging report. A slander is soon propagateel, and the smallest thing deroga tory to woman's character will fly em the wings of the wind and magnify as it circu lates, until its monstrous weight crushes the poor unconscious victim. Respect the name of woman. Your mother and sisters are women, and as ou would have their fair name untarnished, and their lives unimbittereel by the slanderer's bitter tongue, heed the ill 'our own words may bring upon the mother, the sister or the w ife of some fellow creature. Tlie Saxaeity cf Wild Geese. The large flacks of geese which are con stantly passing over the town are frequently shot at, but they generally fly at too high an altitude to be reached by the leaden mi.-siles. Sometimes, however, the shots take effect. The other dav we were watch ing a flock flying southward, when the re jwrt of a gun was heard and we observed one of the geese begin to fill slowly. The others, perceiving that their comrade was wounded,- uttered shrill cries of distress, and about a dozen of them flew under the wounded bird, huddling together so that their backs formed a sort of bed upon which the wounded one rested. They buoyed it up for some time, the ot! ers meanwhile looking em and manifesting their concern by uttering loud. discordant shrieks. Finding that their companion was unable to longer accompany tin in in their flight, they abandoned hhn to his fate, and he fell to the earth and into the arms of an expectant Chinaman. An-ahcira (Cu.) Gazette. . . . Ix view of the many accidents that occur from slipping on the ice some of them fatal, others terribly painful we give tho following suggestion whLh appeared in the etilumns of the Philadelphia Ledger: "From the leg ef an old woollen sttekiug or from an old felt hat cut pieces the shape and size of the front sole of the shoe. With dissolved gum-clastic (India rubber), purchasable in fifty cent boxes at any rub ber goods store, toat the sole and stick the woollen material thereon, and you will have a reliable creeper at a cost of less than two cents a pair. The gum renders the leather impervious to dampness, and the wool can not be made to slip on the smoothest ice." '''' - ; The Turks have a rather severe way cf punishing delinquent tax-payers. It con sists in tying them to a treo, and then pour ing down from a respectable height, on their henels, bucketfuls of cold water; then whip ping and caning t hern on the strength of what is left of them. A species of cruci fixion practiced consists in tying the delin quents iu such a manner that they are left liugjring in thcir-arms-big pieces of wood, Arranged ia the form of a cross. ' 1 NO. 34. 'J "IF, ifciil'.-JSJ A Dutchman read somewhere that money doubled itself by compound interest every fourteen years, ifirwas put carefully away and left . untouched. The guileless Hol lander at once dug a hede in the cellar ami buried four hundred dollars, packed in a teakettle. This was fourteen years, ago, lart Wcdnesd ay. On that day he arose at four o'clock in the morning and dug up his cash with the confident expectation that it bad increased to eight hundred dollars. His disappointment was great ; nd whm his friends talk to him about mathematics now he expresses the opinion that "Dem arithmetics iah all a lie !" A GKArmc idea of the demoralized condition of society in South Carolina was furnished to Cengrcssm in Abbot at Charles ton the other day. An old darkey, wiio was trying to build a fire in his room, was so slow that the Judge asked h::u what the matter was. The reply w:is prompt' and comprehensive : "Fact is, Judge, that day is no coal down stairs. It's no use talking, dis country is gvl:i2 to h L as fast as it kin ; 1'se been up and down de alley, and stole all de wood I could find, and in de present demoralized condition of society, I can't do no better." Tin: champion li.ir of the State is in our county jail. A kind-hearted clergyman asketl him how he came to be iu there. The fellow said, with tears in his eyes, that lie wr,s coming home from prayer meeting and sat down to rest, fell asleep, and while he was asleep there the county built the jail around him, and when he awoke the jailer refused to let him out. Tliere was indict ments against him in every county west of the Cuadaloupc, and he has ahead' served out one term at Iluntsville. Sa.i Antonki Herald. A good anecdote is told of a honse-pani ' ter's son, who used the brush dexterously, but who had acquired the habit of putting it on too thick. One day his lather, after having frequently scolded him for lavish daubing, and all to no purpose, gave him a severe flagellation. "There, you young rascal," after performing the painful duty, "how do you like that ?" "Well, I don't know," whined the bey, in reply, "but it seems to me you put it ou a thundering sight thicker than 1 did." A Ualtimoke policeman found a family in :ru awfnl plight. Every member had been stricken with scarlet fever, and three children had died, not of the disease, but of starvation. There was not a morsel of food in the garret, and every available arti cle of furniture or clothing had long before been v.awned. The wife was abed, uncon scious, and the man had stretched himself on the floor to die. This case has incited an organized effort to succor the destitute of that city. A Tort Jehyis clergyman who recently dissolved his connection with his parish, at the close of his farewell sermon in which he told his side of the church quarrel, gave out the hymn for tlie choir and congrega tion to sing. . The tune was played, when the choir and congregation skipped, the hymn and sang, "Praise God from ail bless ings flow." "Women have been able fighters in war ; have managed commercial enterprises ; have painted, writteJ, plowed, shoveled in coal, governed kingdoms, inspired great social enterprises ; and there is no reason why they should not preach, if they can save souls. There is one thing, however, that a woman cannot do she cannot decently sharpen a lead pencil. Tins is tho season when tlie falling icicle smites the spinal summit of the unsuspect ing pedestrian, and interrupts the flow of those buoyant spirits that makes him feci "like a morning star." Some of our citizens iuclined to havo home amusements. The' pay the fine for having icy sidewalks, and then sit by the window nud watch people going past on tneir ears. Young Lady "Oh, I'm so paid ycu like birds ; what kind do you like Lest ?" Old Geut "Well, I think a goose, with plenty of stuffing, is about as nice as any." Joux II. Hull, Clerk of the Select Council of Allentown, has a daughter one year old, 23 inches in height and weighs fourteen ami a quarter pounds. Are blacksmiths who make a living by forging or carpenters who do a little counter fitting, any worse than men who sell iron and steel for a living? Lady visitor : "My dear, do you know if your mamma is engaged?" Little Girl of the Period : "Engaged ? Rless you, why she's married '.'' The young man who wrote and asked his girl to accept a "bucket" of flowers be came a little pail when she said she wood eu ware it. A grocer, had a pound of sugar returned with a note stating : "Too much sand for table use, and not enough for building pur poses." An effurt is now making to separate Lu zerne county into two parts, the new coun ty to bo called Lackawanna. The excuse a base ball nine j ut up for non-appearance- on the field was that the "pitchax was fuil" r