IS PUDLISnED EVERY TUESDAY, BY . W. R. DUNN. D.Tlce In Kriox's Building, Elm, Street TERMS, f2.00 A YEAR. No Subscription received for a shorter period than thrue months. rlii'l i tin Correspondence solicited from nil parts of the country. No notice will bo tukuu ot aunonymous communications. Marriages and Dutith notices Inserted gratis. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. TIO N EST A LODGE NO. 477, x. o. a-, t. I TecU every Wednesday evening, at 8 ill o i clock. W R. DUNN, W. . s. C. T. M. W.TATE, W WEWTOIf PBTTIS. MILKS W. TATB. PETTIS & TATE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, t Im Street, TIOXIXTA , P.4 . Isaac Ash, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Oil ntv. Pa. Will practice In the various Courts of Forest County. All business entruwted to kit ears will receive prompt nttouti n. in iy W. W. Mason, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OmcoonElm Street, above Walnut, Tionesta, la. C W. Gilflllan, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Franklin, Ve nango Co., Pa. tf. N. B. Smiley, ATTORNEY aT LAW, Petroleum Cen tre, Pa. Will practice In the several Courts of Forest County, R5-ly W. P. MercilUott, Attorney nt Low. A NT REAL. ESTATE AO EXT. TIONESTA, PA. 27-tf CLAR.K A FASSETT, A TrORXEYS AT L Air, WARREN AND TIDIOUTE, PA. THE UNDERSIGNED havintr associ ated themselves together In the prac tice of law. oiror their professional serv ecs to the pubiic. Business promptly a'tended to In n'l 'ho courts of Warren, Forest and adjoining counties, JUNIUS R. CLARK, D. D. TASSETT, Warren, Pa. Tiiliouie, Fa. Tionesta House. 11 T ITTEL. Fronrlctnr. Elm St, Tio- VI. riiiwt u 1 at t tin mrmt.h of 11m rrnpk Mr. Title has thorouuhlv renovated the . Dletclv. All Im patronise him will be j loncsia .louse, ami ro-iuriusncu n nmi. well entertained at reasonable ratoH. 20 ly .1 i FOREST KCLSk., DJ1 LACK P ROrn I ETOR. Opposite . Court House, Tionesta, Pa. Just opened. Everything new and clean ami fresh. The bent of liquors kept constantly on hand. A portion of the public patron-1 aire Is respectfully solicited. 4-17-lv Holmes House, flMONESTA, PA., opposite the Depot. A C. D. Mable, Proprietor. uoou nta tf. bling connected with the houso. Syracuse House, rTMDIOUTl'. Pa J. A D Maoer, Tropic A tors. The houso has been thoroughly refitted and is now in tlio first-class order, with the best of accommodations. Any nrbrmaiinn e.onerninir Oil Territory at this point will bo uhoerluliy turuislicit. -ly J.AD. MAUEE, Kxch.inge Hotel, T OWER TIDIOUTE. Pa.. D. 8. Ramk- J dkki.A Son Prop's. Tliis house having been reliteil is now tlie most desirable stop- ing place in Tidiouto. A good Billiard too.n attached. 4-ly National Hotel, TRVIXETON. PA. W. A. Ilallenback, Proprietor. This hotel is Nkw, and is - i)w open as a Hint class house, situate at e junction of the Oil Creek A Alleuhenv tiver and Philadelphia A Erie Railroads, pposiUi the IV'Mt. Parties having to lay ver trains will nnd this the most conven ent hotel In town) with first-class aecniu oodstions anil reasonable chamcM. tf. Dr. J. L. Acorrib, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, whohas had ti fteon years' experience in a lare ' ana biiccchhiui practice, will attend all Professional ( "alls. Otllce In his Drng and Orocery Stoiu located in lidiouto, near 'I'idioute House. IN HIS STORE WILL RE FOUND A full assortment of Medicines, Liquors Tobacco, I'luars. Stationnry, Glass, Paints, Oils Cutlery, anil line Groceriea, all of the best quality, and will bo sold at reasonable rates. 11. R. RURGESS, an experienced Drupr List from New York, has charge of the More. All prescriptions put up accurately. it. SLOAN & VAN GIESEN. BIjACKSMITHS . AND VT AG O N - III A K E R S. Corner of Chureh and Elm Stroots, TlbNESTA, TJ. This Arm is prepared to do all work in Its line, and will warrant everything done at their sheps to u'wo butisliiction. Par ticular alteuiiou given to uoitsi:-snoi5(., fiive them a trial, grot it. and you will not re 13-ly. JOHN A. DALE, PRE T. OHN A. PROPtR, VICE PST. A. H. STEELE, CASHR SAVINGS BANK, Tionesta,, Forott Co., Pa. Tills Rank transacts a General Ranking, Collecting and Kxcl.ane llusiue,s. Drafts on the Principal Cities of the United Hlau-s and Europe bought and sold. Gold and tsilver Coin ami tjovernmont Securities boiu-lit und solil. 7-jO llonds convertect on ti.o ioo.it favorable terms. Intore! iillowtd ou lime dujiosits. Mar. 4, tt. JOB Wi'ItlC neatly exi st rpssonalil rate-i 'v.. J a'- this oitico Forest " Let us liave Faith VOL. IV. NO. 33. rnw, nmitunnK. ru T A. 1TRTOHT. ((. UKO. W. P IHIt'lMiK, Bust M'ift4tr. THE SUPERIOR LUMBER CO., MANUFACTURERS OF Pine Lumber, Lath, Shingles &c. Mills on Tionrsta Creek, Forest Co., Fa. Yards k Office cor. Hi k Bail Bond SU., PITTSBURGH, PA. KPtt'AliD UITIIKIIK1K. B. D. D'THRIDOK FORT PITT GLASS WORKS. Established A. D. 1827. QITHEUQGE & SQK MASrFArrtmKns of Ditliridge's xx Flint Glass PATENT OVAL LAMP CHIMNEYS. AND Silvered Glass Reflectors. These chimneys do not break by heat. Ask for Dituridoem. Tako no other. DITI1RIDOE A SON, 25-ly. Pittsburgh. Va. Acn Ilonrdiup; House. MIW H. S. II U LINGS has built a larRe addition to her house, and la now pre pare I to aci'onimoclateanumberof pornia- nent boarders, and all transient ones who ; nuiv favor her with their patronage. A ; it'mh! stable has recently been built to ao- i !... .I. f ..,,,(. l-l, ...' ren.-ouaiio. ite-oueneo ou r.uu oi., oppo site S. HasU-l's store. iil-ly Jos. Y. Saul, PRACTICAL Harness Makor and S'ld- i iller. 1 nreo uoors nortn oi iiouncs House, Tionesta, Fa. All work is war ranted, tl. XOTICE. DR. .1. N. ROLARD, or Tidioute, lias retumsd to his practice alter an ab sence of four months, spent In the lift pi talsnfNew York, where will attend calls in his profession. Olllce in KiireKa I'rug rsioro, ao ooor ibovo the bank, Tidioute, Pa. 4ttf GREAT EXCITEMENT! at the Store of D. S. KNOX, & CO Elm St., ionesta Pa. We are In daily receipt oi the srgpst tad MOST COMPLETE stock GROCERIES nutl . PROVISIONS, EVER BROUG HT TO THIS MARKET BOOTS & SHOES ! FOR TIIE MILLIONS! which we are determined to sell regardless of prices. AND House Furnishing Goods, Iron, Nails, Machlno tools, Agricultural Implements, Ac., Ac,, Ac, which we oll'or at greatly re duced prices. FURNITURE! FURNITURE ! ! of all kinds, PARLOR SUITS, CHAMBER SETS, LOUNGES, W1I ATNOTS, SPRING REDS, MATRES8ES, LOOKING CLASS, ICS, Ao., Ac, Ac. In ENDLESS VARIETY. Call and see, 71 D. S. KNOX, A CO. WASTE! Men and Women seek lii'r a pond piivinu b.is'iie to sell our 11 lustruted, historicid, bioKruphU-kl, reli pious mil aL-ri .uipural works, hend sb up lor full particulars how you can makc41e0 to f-:'0-J per month. K. It. TREAT, Pub lisher, so.5 ll.i,:i.l ay, X. Y. SM-41 that Right raakoa Might ; and TIONESTA, Tho San Franolaco Town-Crior. There 5 no one tiling more rhararv toristic of California tint n the &m t'ranchro Knn-Lttter ; and the chief tiling which lini imparted its rharao teristiu flavor to the New Letter, anil given it its peculiar reputation, ia the Town Crier. With this preliminary, we introduce the Town Crier as he shows himself ia the Newt Letter oi recent dates: Chinese are receiving instructions in Sunday Schools at Olyinpia. JCx. So they are here. The instruction i giv en by the white pupils just outside the school house, and is commonly im parted with a brick. The parents of the double bahy, which recently died in Boston were in sulted by an oiler of six thousand dol lars for the remains their darling. Tim proposal was indignantly rejected, i'hey demand ten thousand. The Call says the world will go by us ere long, ami our relics will not lie worth tlio price of Gro-wood. We sup pose our ne.ghbnr alludes to corporeal relics: our rpiriluul relics will be worth considerably more than fire wood, because they will burn lunger, and with a more intense hear. The newest and sweetest thing in suicide is to go out to the sepulchre of your boy, who was slain by a tumbling edifice, and tipple strychnine out of a clamshell. To Mr. Lewis Beach the public is indebted for this beautiful Conception, and to this DOttUtllUl COD- ceptioil the devil is indebted for a nice. fu "O" A gentleman in the wholesale liquor line ud vertices that some persons have been circulutinir the falsehood that his whiskies contain loreii;n and un- wholciotnc matter, ami adds: "To those ncciiatonied to use these whiskies the slander neetls no refutation. ' True; they rest quietly in thuir peace ful graves, and the idle tale of the tra ducer impresses them not. A correspondent says there is some where a law. which punishes the chil dren for the crimes of the father, even unto the third ami fourth crcnerutiou : and he wishes to know when it was en acted, and where it may be found. We do not know ; it sounds very much as if it might have been passed by the last. California Legislature, against the Chinese; but we don't think, that any one who voted for it can ever be reelected. Here is an unimportant but interest ing part of the description of a 'l urk' ish beauty who is sojourning in New York temporarily it is to lie hoped "She has the eves of a houri, n Inn. ml shaped, deep and dreamy, and bril liant, white teeth that lauL'li as she lnuifhs." Sweet Venus, what a nice girl I It would bo worth a thousand year at ones hie to own her. What delight to see one's own face mirrored in those eyes ! What bliss to minister to her wants! For example, to insert slices of bacon betweea those laughing teeth. A convival party, sixty-five yenrs bad fell otf the wharf the other ni.'!u and sputtered lustily for succor, which he finally obtained. He was pulled out very much collapsed as to figure, and quite low m temperature. When the oilicers w ho made the rescue learn ed his age, they put a bold face upon the matter and claimed to have known it all the time. They were not believed, of course, and have been unmercifully guyed for soiling their clothes and wet ting their feet to save a man who will probably die in less than five years anyhow. At the city of Horse Prairie (we suppose it is a city) in Illinois, a child. while sleeping peaceably with its pa rents, was so operated upon by the teeth of rats that it has died. Parents may take a bint from this how to man age these predatory rodents. Smear the youngest pledge of afl'ectioi: with buue, and expose it in somo rat-hauut- oii .ullui Tn inun U'lwtra ti-uita i ru used, impaled baby might advantage- ously supersede toasted cheese. lr bait. We hail not thought that these vermin the rat had Such degraded tastes. An American officer in the service of the Khedive saVs a Georgian girl of the highes typo of beauty may be purchased in the Egyptian market for two thousand dollars. If this turns out to be true, it is probable that the good people of Cairo will be thrown into u fine rage by the presence of the 'Jown-Ciier. We have long thought this girl selling business might to be written down, urn) if some philanthro pist will give two thousand dollars to the cause, we will go over and do it. We shouldn't be in Egypt twenty-four hours before we should ferret out. the guilty parties who have girls for sale. A son of Martin F. Tupper, the au thor of "Proverbial Philosophy," lias been killed by being run through the body with a loaded wtigou. Happy felliwl no longer can the sneering world tnui.t thee with thy parentage! No longer will young maids turn aside their eyes at thy appruch.aud barefoot id urchins liuil upon thee uddied eggs uuj a tempest of dead cats? No iuor; Republican. in that Faith lot us to the end, PA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1871. shall old mm spread their palsied hand acrnw thy pate slid warn thee against proverbially philosophising! No more hIihII suspicious beldames cry nut to their daughters "Martha, drive in the peese; here comes old Tuppcr's boy r Virgil Williams, the artist, is arrir- cd in town. Visitors to the art gallery it Woodward's Gardens will regard his advent with some apprehension. And so, for that matter, will visitors at the Fair; the few weeks of the ex billon Will be amply sunicient for this eentlctnan to kn. ck olf a half acre of I Iindscape to alllicl us. lie possesses somo merit as an artist, but it is hard to tell whether it lies in landscape or marine painting ynu never can tell his cows from his hips, except when they have their talis exalted, when the sbseenn of spars betrays their charac ter. Even then they mav be mistaken for schuone.s scudding under bare poles. "The Princess Louisa is put down is a 8 old. and she and her mother have hud many a conflict. She was mar ried to tiie Marquis in order to give her a home elsewhere, and they have quarreled every day since." Whcu we see a newspaper with this para graph in it, we feel that iis editor is one of Nature's noblenn n ! one who enn nevr, no tiever, bo bnueht bv British gold, nor silenced by British bayonets! one who will submit to be loru in pieces before he will bow down to the tyrants of Europe! one who will speak Ins mind it it overturns every tottering throne in the IM1 World, and hurls every crumbling dy nasty into everlasting oblivion 1 At present we uro feeling that way toward the editor of the Call. A physician in Kansas is entitled to honorable mention for personal clean' liness. The other evening he took a razor and made an excavation in the neck of his littlo girl. He then treat ed his wife the same way. These died. Our h tro then obtained a large pan, set it on the floor, lay down with his head in it and sawed asunder all that he coud get nt in his own neck. The pan caught all the blond, and both the floor and his raiment were unsullied. The body is said to have had the clean transparency of very young veal, but the head having lopped down into the, pan was considerably gummed up. We recommend in all similar cases the use of a small rack to sustain the pate when its guys and stays have been cut away. For the memory of the late John Hidd, of Illinois, wo entertain the liveliest contempt. Mr. Kidd recent ly dispatched himself with a firearm for the following reasons, set forth in a letter that he left behind : "Two years H20 I discovered that I was worthless. My great failings are insincerity of character and sly ugliness. Any one who watched me a little while would discover my unenviable nature." Now it is not that Mr. Kidd was worthless that we hold bis memory in reproba tion ; nor that he was insincere, nor sly, nor ugly. It is because possessing these qualities he was fool enough to think they disqualified him for the duties of life, or stood in the way of his being an ornament to society and an honor to his country. That's what makes us despise him. The women teachers in our High Schools have had the superhuman audacity to petition for an iuccrease of salary sufficient to make their re muneration equal to that of men per forming the same labor. We do not envy the mental condition of these teachers yet to learn that they ore fe mule in sex. Are they blind to the fact that their stature is considerably less than, tu.rs, end their muscles, as a rule, not so largely developed ; that they are beardless, nnd wear their hair long; that their flesh is no ft, apd in many cases even flabby? Let them onc6 realize these and all kindred anatomical difT-reuces, and then dare to assert that persons who are essriitial- nl unlike should be equal in salary. The Petition is prepo-terous are they. 1 hey might as we 1 nnd so try to draw out Leviathan with a hook, or bind A ret urns and his sons, ns con vince an enlightened Board of educa tional mules that there is any sense in their demi.nd. We nri fatigued of them the rascally, insolent, misgnid ihI, well meaning, interesting, i.ice, sweet, lovcuble darlings ! Give them whatever they want, ou antique duf fers of the J loan, or wo shall make it very warm indeed for you. Tea growing is now carried on in the varrioiis parts of the South with con siderable success. A gentleman in Wilmington, Nort'u Carolina, has sue-ecB-fiilly iaied plants and cured tea, which be claims cannot be exellcd in flavor by the imported article. lie obtained the plants from the. Agricul tural Bureau of the Patent Office, pre vious to the war, and their number hus increased every year, the latter plants being fully equal in every respect to those first grown. Successful exper iments have nlso recently been made in South Carolina and Tcnuessee. "We know a girl", says some ono.so indtMtrious, that.when she has nothing else to do she sits and knifs her brow." dare do our duty as we understand The Riga For False Diamonds. The badge of a Ring official is a ilianiond breastpin almost always i false. Only King leader, can afford to i Morning Pout in four days, and Gener wear real gcm. Yet every messenger, I al Christie made a similar assertion ; at 145 a month, who flirts about the I but is not known how far eithsr of new Court House and City lla'l, wears them verified this statement. Robert glittering jewels, which the uninitiated i Dillon could repeat in the morning and perhaps the wearers, believe to be real stones of considerable value. It is not uncommon to see diamonds or w hat purport to be such iu the ears of shop-girls and in the bosom-fronts of stable-boys. The consequence is that this class of jewelry, expensive when real ami gaudy when false, has been given np by tho msj rity of honest tolk, pearls beieg Worn" instead. Artificial diamonds are made of a peculiar glass called strass. This glass lies a priqierty of refracting light in the same way ns the diamond, and its iminuftcturd has been carried on to tuch perfection that an ordinary ob server cannot distinguish gems made of it from tho real diamonds. After a few years these diamonds tend to rrystalize, so that in tin years they bo come turbid and lose all their luster. These stones however, can always be distinguished by a practical lapidary by various tests, such as hardness and peculiarities in cutting. Diamonds are also imitated by a system called "plueksge," in which a very thin slab of diamond is cemented to some stone, such as quarts or white topaz. Other real stones, such as zircon and topaz, w hen they are colorless, or only slight ly colored, are passed off as diamonds. It is generally supposed that diamonds are white, but they are of all colors. False diamonds are made altuovt en tirely in Paris, Alaska and California diamonds are only quartz or rock quartz. The number of ftlse gems in use is immeise. l'rol. lggieston ot t.)lum bia College examined last year a larre gem, supposed to be a ruby, fora lead ing house here. He concluded from optical examination that it was glass. It came ostensibly from New Granada, and had been scut to Paris r.nd pro nounced real. In London suspicion was thrown on it. It was very per fect even the flaws were imitated. Tho Professor was shown in Paris last year a bill of 500 francs, paid by nn American lady, who is famous for her diaraouds, to a manufacturer of bogus gems. His opinion is that this lady has two real diamonds, and that the rest, which would be worth f 1,000,000 if real, could nil be bought for the 500 francs. The nmjority of diamonds in this country now, are used in mechan ical work. As there is a tariff of ten per cent, nn these goods, and as a great deal of smuggling is done in con sequence, there is no official account of the gems imported, and it is impossi ble t.) estimate the number now here. The above fucts about false dia monds, Ac, if generally known, would have the effect of diminishing the wearing by Americans the real dia monds, just as imitation gilt jewelery is now diminishing the use of real gold ornaments among people of good taste i c i ....i. : and refined culture, niuco it is evi dent that none but experts can dis cern between real and bogus gems, the real substantial citizens may very willingly leave the use of this Juhiou glitter to those of tho city's officials who needed a'l Hie polish that they can in auy way ucquire. V. '. Tri bune. The Bret Ilurte style of woman is appearing in France it seems. A For eign correspondent writes : "A Com mtinist woman was sentenced to lie shot. She was taken out aril ftation. ed against a wall, a largo crowd of street peoplo gathering around to wit ness the execution. Just as the soldeirs were about to fire, she raised her hands with the words, "Un inMaiil." The soldiers paused. The sunimi hud on a good outer garment; this she took off, and seeing a woman iu the crowd in raj.'s, went up to her and said, "Tuk this ; it is a pity to spoil good clolhes." Then sho returned to her place and was shot. Such was the last unselfish thought of a dying petro leue, and such the heroism which in spired the troops of Versailles iu deal ing with a fallen foe. For. Cor. A novel scheme 'u p.oposed bv the Milwaukee YolkJreund. This is an organization of tingle men for the establishing of a joint stock hotel for their own accommodation. Tlu man agement of the im-titutioii Is to be in the hands of a board of trustees, and the great object the association i. to foru inti un economical home for unmarried men, securing for them also un asylum in rase of sickness. The movement ia a good one, uud, if successful, worthy of mutation, The Louisville Courier-Journal re murk: "The Pittsburgh, Woman Suf frage At- oi iulioll informs the world that 'mail isonlv an imperfectly shaped woman. Uoes inn r. v. n. n. menu to siiv that 'un imperfectly developed wonia:i is a man ?' " A Vn Yorker contemplates rui.in ostricU for the sake of their (lathers. If these birds should become comiuou us domestic fowls tiny will solve the great question: "What is to bo done with the old tin cans? ' it." -LINCOLN. $2 PER ANNUM. Curiosities of Memory. " John Kemble used to say thai lie could learn a 'whole nun:bir of the six columns ot a newspaper he had read over night. During tH repeal debates in the Hoiiss of Commons, thirty-seven years ngn.nne of the me n btrs wrote nut his speech, sent it to the newspapers, and repeated it tn the house in the evei.ing; it was found to be the same, verbatim, as that which he had written out. John Fuller, a land agent In Norfolk, could remem ber every word of a sermon, and write it out correctly after going home; this was tested by comparing his written account with the clergyman's manu script. Scaliger cculd repeat a hun dred verses or more alter hearing mem read a aincie Uma. ereuoca could repeat two thousand words on hearing tlicra once. Mafliabecchi, who liud a. prcuigiorj inemoi'-', wa3 once put to acovere teat. A gontismnn lent him a m&nusci'ipt, w hich was rend and returned. Th9 owner, somo time afterward, pretending he had lost it, beggi d Mugliubecchi to write out ns ir.uih r.3 l:e coul.l renumber; where upon he wrote out the whole essay. Cyrus, if some of the old historians are to be credited, could remember the name of every soldier in his whole ar my. There was a Corsican boy who could rohearw forty thousand words, whether Ben3c or nonomo,as they were dictated, r.nd then repent iheu in tho reversed order, without nskir.sr a sin gle mistake. A physl-jkn of Massa chusetts, about helf century ago. couui repeat tho v.hoij ci 1 t'.r.itiisa List" without mistake, ait'iough he had not rcati it tor twenty years, Euler, the treat mcthenini.cian, when he became blind, could repc.t the whole o. Virgil's "JSneid," and could remember the first line ind tho .a.-L line ou every page of tho particular edition which lie had been r.ocu toiued to lead before he became blind. One kind of retentive memory may be oonsidend as the result ot sheer herd wo, k, a determinatin.i tnvard one particular achievement, without refer ence either to. cultivation or to meuo ry oa other subiecis. This is frequently shown by persons iu huiublo life in re gard to the Bible. An old beggar laan et Stirling, know a some forty years ago ai Bliud Aleck, afforded an instance of this. He knew the whole of the Biole by heart; insomuch that, if a sentence were read to him he could name hook, chapter, and verse; or, if the book, chapter and verse were named, he could give the exact words. A gentlemen, to test liiu, repeated n verse, purposely making ona verbal in accuracy ; Aleck hesitated, named the place where the passage is to l3 found, but at the same time pointed ;tit the verbal error. The same gcr.itlci.mil asked him to repeat tho ninetieth . verse of the seventh chi'.pter of the i book of Numbers. Aleck aluiort in- ' ., ...i , stautly replied. "There is no s.icli verse ; that chapter has only eighty nine, verses." , . The following dm'njue on "sharp shooting" quietly took p!aco betweeu a Vigiuian and a Yankee pi' ket: "I say, can you fellows shoot?" "Wall, I reckon we can, some. Down in Mississippi v.e can knock a bumble bee off a thistle blow lit three hundred yards." "Oh, that ain't nothing to the way we shoot up in Vermont. J belonged to a military company there with a liuiidrrd men in each company, and we went out for practice every week. Tho capl'u draws us id single file and sets a barrel of cider rolling dow n hill, and cech man takes his shot ut the bung hole ns it turns tip. It is after ward examined, and if there is a shot that l ill n't go into the bung hole the member w ho mibscd it is expelled. I belonged to the company ten years, and there uiu'l been nobody expelled yet. In one of tlie Ohio towns, a citizen had rendind himself obnoxious to the rest of he community, so be was placed in the bands ot a vigilance committee which ,..udo this report: "We took the thief down to the rivei. made a hole in the ice and proceeded to duck him, but he .lipped through our hands and hid under the ice. All our i Iforl to entice him out failc.1, and he hus low retained his imiut of advantage some hours." "What a traveler you have become!" exclaimed an r.ugliliiuan on meet in a lc jUciii.iii al i oiiMmitinopic. "lo l. II you the truth," tut the frank reply, "1 am obliged In run about the world to keep ahea I of my it.aiacUT. The moment it overtakes me I am ruined; but 1 tloii't care who knows me to long us 1 travel invyin'o." The United Stales, it is said, will be u heavy purchaser at sale of rare ami valuable books to take place ia Is.ndou some nine during tho present 1 month. 1 he books ill bo added to ! tho Coiign sii dial Library, and Mr. Spolford. Librarian, is ih.w making a selection lioru ti.o calAno of books ' to Im sol I Rates of Advertising. Onflqaare(l ineli,) one Insertion.. ..it m One Square " one month a 00 One Square " three months... W One Square . " one year 10 Two Square, one year '8 00 Quarter Col. " 09 One " " 1W w Business Cards, not eeeedlng one Inch , In length, $10 per year. Legal notices at established rates. These rates are low, and no deviation will be insde, or discriminstlon among patrons. The rates ottered are sucn, will make It to the sdvantaneof men dot business in the limits of the oirculation of tlie paper to advertise liberally. A presiding elder of the United" Brethern Church, while preaching, was much annoyed by persons talking and laughing. He paused, looked at the disturber., and said: "I am always afraid to reprove those who misbehave in church. In the early part of my ministry I made a great mistake. As I was preaching, a young man who sat just befor me was constantly laugh ing, talking and making uncouin grimaces, i paused ana anminister ed a servere rehuke. After the close of tha service one of the official mem bers came and said to me. "Brother .you made a great mistake. That voting man whom you reproved is an idiot. Since then I have always beea afraid to reprove those who misbehave in church lest i should repeat thai mis take, and reprove another id'ot." Dur ing the rest of service, at least, there was good order. A story is told of a certain man and his wife who were almost always quar reling. During their quarrels, their only child (a boy) was generally pres ent, nad, of course, heard many ot his father's expressions. One day, when the boy had been doing something wron?, tho mother, intending to chaB. tise him, called him, and Baid, "Come here, sir, what did you do that for?" the boy, complacently folding hia arms, urtl imitating his father's man ner, said, "Sea here, madam! I don't wish to have any words with you!'r Two young princes, the sons of Archduke Charles of Austria, had a warm dispute in the presence ot no less a per3nn than that of the Emperor himself. Greatly e-cited, one said to othar, "You nro gicateat ass in Vien na'." Highly offended at a quarrel ia bis prunes, the Emperor interrupted thorn, saying, with indignation, "Come, come, young gentlemen, you lorget that 1 am present." A letter from Knob Noster, Mo., mentions a singular physical phenom enon occurring there. It says a con tlnus.1 rain has descended for two weeks from a cloudless sky.nnd confined to a space oF only twenty feet in diameter. 1 lis phenomenon has been qnservea by many persons, and the writer asks for a scientific explanation. St. Louit Democrat. An Oshkosh hackman, the other evening, drove a voting lady up to the wrong hnuie. 'the mistaVo was not discovered until after she had cor liially kiiseda young gentleman who had cemo down to the gate to meet the new airivel. A fellow, in an oblivious siate, took up his lodging in the street. He awoke next morning, and, straightening him self up, looked on the ground on which he had made his couch, and said, "Well if I had a pick-axe I would make up my bed." A wit being told that an old ac quaintance was married, exclaimed, "I am glad to hear it." But reflecting a moment, lie added, in a tone of com pasBiou and forgiviness, "And yet I don't know why I should be, he never did mo auy harm." A sexton being very familiar with a physician, was asked whether he had entered into partnership with , him. "Oh yes,"said he, "we've been together for some time; I always carry the doc tor's work home when it Is done." "It is strange," muttered a young mnn, as he staggered home from a sup per party, "how evil communications corrupt good manners. I have been surrounded by tumblers all eyeuing, and now 1 am a tumbler myself,"' The New York World abandons Tammany for a moment to suv : The three foot railway tracks are likely to remain a peculiarly Ameuean institu tioiis, since it is evident that they can never make a narrow gauge abroad. "Excuse this bit of sarcasm," said Smith t Jones, "but I must say that you are an infamous liar and scoinlrel. "pardon this hit of irony," said J;mes to Smith, as he knocked him over with a poker." Jones says that he first met his wife in a storm, took her to the first ball in a storm, popped the question in a storm, married her in a storm, lived hie subsequent married life in a storm, but buried her in pleasant weather. Thcro was once-an independent obi lady who, speaking of Adam's naming all the animals, said she didn't think he deserved auy credit fur naming the pig-uuy oue would know what to call him. Iu response to an inquiry of scien tific publication: "Whence come fleas?" a western journal says it does not care a pickle, but wouiu naeio snow nio in thuuder they go when you go for them. "Now, then, children," said a par irb Mbool iiiistirss, showing her pu pils otf on examination duy, "Who love all men?'' "You, missus," was the unexpected auswer. A local poet indicted a sonnet to hi J Mistress entitled "I kiss her sub rosa." The coinpositer knew better tbau that, and set it up iu printer's latin, "1 kiss. I her ruub UueU." The je. it that jivtS r'!1 ! CO ji.