... . n tt PUBLISHED STEntf, TCE8DAY, t v?. n. DUNK. -HTloa In Kjiox'e Bulldlnffi Eln Street. TERMS, fZOO A YEAR. No Subscriptions received for a shorter period tlmii throe mouths. Correspondence solicited from nil parts of the country, No notice will bo taken of anonymous c-utnnunicatlnns. Marriage and DoalU notice Inserted gratis. Vv DUSINZSS DIRECTORY. TIONKSTA LODGE, NO. 477, I. O. Of. T. Meet every Wednesday evening, at 8 o'clock. W. R. DUNN, W. C. T. M. W. TATE, W. H. . wsw-roif nnn, milks w. tat. PETTIS A TATE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, mint jBrert, TIOXESTA, PA. Isaac Ash, ATTOMNEY AT LAW, OH Tit. Pa. Whl pra 'tioo In the various Courts or Forest County. All business entrusted to ill pure will receive prompt attcnti n. M It W. W. Mason, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Dfflptnn Rim Street, above Walnut, Tiwiexta, I'a. C W. Giinilan, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Franklin, Ve nango Co., I'a. tf. N. B. Smiley, ATIORVKY aT LAW, Petroleum Cnn tre, I'a. Will practice in Hie svoral Courts of Forest County. H6-ly W, P, Mercllllott, Attorney n t Law. AND BEII, KMTATI3 ACSI3XT. TI OX EST A, I'A. r-tr C.l ARK.t F.13SETT, A 1' TO It X1-: YS AT LA TT, M ARI.KN AND TIDIOUTE, I'A. TH"! VN t'KHSrXi:i havlnir associ a'od themselves together In tlm prac tics of l.vv, ollVr tliir professional serv cos to the pu'ilic. Rnaiiics1! promptly amended to !n all Mm co iits of Warron, Forost and adjoining amnti., JC:"IU3 R. CLAEZ, D. D. FAS3ETT,' Vtaxi'ii, Ta. TiU.oiUe, Pa. . Tioru a'.a Hnusc M.ITTKL, Proprietor, Kim St.. Tin s' iieUn, Ph., ntJhc mouth ifthacreek, Mr. title has thornu till v retvv itod the Tionesti 'loiinn, and re-fum'slM-d It om pletelv, Al1, wh pn'mnlxn him will he well vu.'rtdned at rmsonate rstcs, 20 1y FOREST KCl.SU, Dm, VCK PROPRIETOR.. Opposito . Cou'-t llmnd. Tloncsta, Pa. JiiHt ojieno I. . Everything new and clean and fredi. The best of lienors koi t constantly on hand. A pordnii of the public pair ri-el-. rtapoctt'iilly solicited. 4-17-lV H Mimes House, a '1 OX EST A, PA., opposite the Pcpot. C. !. Miibio, Proprietor. Uood Sta bling romiei'lod with the Iioiiho. tf. Syricusa House, T'DToUT , P., J. A I) Maori-:, Propic-tor-. The house has lieen thoroughly roliltod ami Isn iw in the lirst-clas order, with t!i best of '!. mi in' tu ion-t. Any nibr.iuidon C'lneerninir ijl Territory at this point will bo chcerfiillvturiiishcd. -ly J. AD. MAilKR, Exrhiri;e Hotel, I ('Wi:R TirI'l!TE, Pa., D. S. Rams J hki-.i. X Sos Prop's. This house having lieon relil 'it is now the mostdosiriiblestop. oin'j pla-vi in Tidiouto. A gomi Uilliard It'io.u altadied. 4 ly National Hotel, XRVINETON, PA. W, A. Hallenback, Proprietor. This hotel is Nkw, and is . iw opu as a tlrst claws house, situate at I'e.luiirtion of tho OH Creek A Allegheny t vcrand Plilhulelplila fc Erie Rail nlii, ppoKitu the lcxt. Parties havimr to lay ver Iruins will liud this the most eonveii ent hoUil in town, with nrst-class aoooni iiHlutioiis and reasonable harurns. tf. Dr. J. L. Aooiri''', OHYSICIAX AND StIKlKOX, who has I had ItttiM'ii vciirs' experience in large slid kiiisdssi'iiI practice, will attend all Professional Calls. Olllce in his Unix ",c' iJroccry Storo, located in l idioute, near "J'idioute House. IN 1113 STORE WILL BE FOUND A full assortment of Medicines, Liquors Tobacco, Cigars, Stationery, tJlass, Paints, oil Cutlery, and lino tiroi-eries, all of tho ties! quality, and will be sold at reasonable rates. 11. It. 1117 It(J ESS, an experienced Prmr iiiHtfrom New Yoi'H, has charire of the itoro. All prescriptions put up accurately. tf. . Cin!N VAN RIFSFN BLACKSMITHS AXD TVAOON-MAKERS. " t' .Comer of Church and Elm Streets. TIOXESTA, PA. This linn is propaied to do all work in 'its line, and will warrant everything dune a: their ih ps to (live PatiuluoUiui. I'ar licaiUi attention given to jiostsii.hiior.ixfj, ftiyetUwtt atrial, and you will not re gret it, ' W-ly. JOHN 1, DA'.I, PRE I T. OHN1. waoeiR, VICE PRt ST. A. H. STEELE, CASHR, TIOITBSTA SAVINGS BANK, Tionesta, Forest Co., Pa. Th!s llenk transoi.. a "oneral Tlrmkiiifr, t'olloctiiiK and Exchange lliwiiseHS. limrts on the Principal Cities of the 1 ' it.wl Ulolna lil k'uflllie llOlltrllt Ulltl holll. liold and Silver C',in and I ioveinnii'iii Securities onuulil anu mhi. i-.m in ci avei teil on mo inosi mvoruoic rius. jnturest allowed uu time depiits. Mar. 4, It'. (il'U- illHli fur luo l''orvt liepuLilicru O It will pay. Forest' "Let ua have Faith VOL. IV. NO. 35. K- V. D.THltlUUK, Trow. UF.O. W. IM1 II It 1 III' I R. The superior lumber co MANUFACTURERS OF Pine Lumber, Lath, Shingles &c. Mills on Tionrita frtck, Forest Co., Pa. Tardi t Office cor. 2d k Bail Road Sts., PITTSRUnGH, PA. KDWAHD DITKRIIKJK. S. D. 0ITHRIUOI FORT PITT GLASS WORKS. Eslablished A. 1. 1827. DlTHfllB6E.& SQN, MASUFxnTRERH or Dithridge's xx Flint Glass PATENT OVAL LAMP CHIMNEYS. AND Silvered Glass Refloctors. Theo chimneys do not brak bv lioal. Ask for TrriiiUDOK. Take y othei1. PITI1RIDGE A SON, Pittsburgh, Pa. 25-ly. Xcw Itonrdln Ilounte. 1 TIH. 8. S. IIULINCS has built a lariro i'l a Ulition to her house, and is now pro- . pared to aiKnitnodateanuinberof perma-w nent boaiders, and all transient ones who may favor her with their patronage. A 1 IK'Mid stable has recently been built to ac- ' c iniiii'idiilo tlm horses of ituests. Charges reasonable. Itesidenco on Elm St., oppo site S. Hamlet's sUno. - Itl-ly . Jos. Y. Saul, PRACTICAL Harness Maker and Rad I tiler. Throe diHirs north of Holmes House, Tloneata, I'a. All work is war ranted, tf. NOTICE. DR. .1. N. BOLARD. or Tidlotite, has ' returned to his praetico after an ab sence of four months, spent in the Ho. pl talsorNew York, whero will attond calls in his profession. Olllce in Eureka liruir Store, 3d door ibove the bank, Tidi'iute, Pa, 4htf i GREAT EXCITEMENT ! at the Store of D. S. KNOX, & CO., Elm St., ioncsta Fa. Wo are In daily recolpto, the srgpstsnd MOST COMPLETE stock jitoci:itir nnl IKOVISIOX.S, EVER BROUGHT TO THIS MARKET BOOTS & SHOES ! FOR TIIK 1 MILLIONS! which we are determined to sell regardless of prices. AND House Furnishing Goods, Iron, Nails, Machine tools, Agricultural Implements, Ac., Ac,, Ac, which we otlcr at greatly re duced prices. :o: , FURNITURE ! FURNITURE! ! of all kinds, PARLOR SUITS, CHAMBER SETS, LOUNCES, WHATNOTS, SPRING HUliS, MATRESSES, LOOKING GLASS ES, Ac, Ac., Ac, In ENDLESS VARIETY. Call and see, 7-tl D. S. KNOX, A CO. W A1'TKI .Menaod fl'iimcr. seek ing a (vhI pnyin? business to sell our '!. helriU'd, liisioiical, bioK'sphlial, ro 1 jiions and ai ii'oliurul works, send stump lor full pariicnlars how von can makeal. 0 tofUNipcr iii'Mitti. E. it. TREAT, Pub WUor, Wo Broadway, X. Y. VH-it that Right makes Might ; and TIONESTA, Relative Rank of Cities. The cities of New York, TliilaJul- J hia, and Brooklyn maintain the saint; relative rank us to population tlinl they did in 1800. There has been con siderable shifting of places, ainoiift those that now constitute the remain der of ihe twenty foremost cities ol the Union. ring the last decade St. Louis lias ascended the scalo from the eighth to the fourth. Chicago, in a similar proportion, Changes from the ninth t the tilth. Baltimore, which in 18G0 was the fou rib, retrogrades to the sixth. Boston pursues the same direction, from the tilth to the seventh. Cincinnati retires a step, from the etYtmh to the eighth. New Orleans talis back from the sixth to the ninth. Sun Francisco, taking a noble, for ward leap, vaults from the hfteeuth to the temh. Butt'alo lags behind from the tenth to tho eleventh. Washington makes a slride from the fourteenth to the twelfth. Newark, New Jersiy's thriving mo tmpnlis, drops, nevertheless, from the eleventh to the thirteenth. 1 Jjouisville, twelfth in rank in 18G0, is now argued tu the loinloeiiili. Cleveliui'l, foil." steps forward, mounts from the nineteenth to tin fifteenth. Pittsburgh alone retains the same relative rank now as then, the six teenth. Jersey City rises from the twentieth to the importance of the seventeenth. Detroit recedes fro n the seventeenth to the eighteenth. Milwaukee from the eighteenth to the nineteenth. Albany, which was, ten years ago, the thirteenth, now takes the old place o" Jersey City, twentieth. Tell ua not iu idle jingle "marriage i.s an empty dream ;" fur the girl is dead that's single, and things ure not what they set-in. Life is real, life is is earned, single blessedness a fib; "Man thou art, to man rcturneth," has been spoken of the rib. Nut enjov inent aud not sorrow is our destined end or way, but to act that each to morrow finds us nearer marriage-day. Lile is long ai.d youth is fleeting, aiid our heart, though light and gay, still like pleasant dminb are beatuijr wed ding marches all the day. In the world's broad fields of battle, in the bivouac of life, be not like dumb, driven cattle be a heroine a wile! Trust no future, howe'er pleasant ; let the dead past bury its dead; act act iu the living present, hoping for a spouse ahead. Lives of married folks remind us we ran live our lives as well, and departing, leave .behind us such examples as will tell"- such ex amples that another, wasting time in idle sport, a forlorn, unmarried broth cr seeing, shall take heart and court. Let us, then, be up and doing, vtith a heart on triumph set; still 'jontriving. still pursuing, aud each one a husbai.d get. The Fincastle (Va.-) Herald Ravs a lively trade has sprung up in acorns in the last few weeks, the price fr good acorns ranging from 25 to 35 cents per bushel. For fattening hogs thev are louml nearly as good as com. This recalls the history of a farm near Baltimore which bad been sold th.ee times, aud of each sale had come back to the seller's hands in discharge of the mortgage for unpaid purchase money. Sooti atier he had sold it the fourth time he visited the properly and found the purchaser's wife anil children gathering acorns. Killing home the gentleman called out to his son. "The old place is gone at last" and it was. The purchaser has grown wealthy off the land where others had tailed, by the practice of an industry which would not even let the acorn crop go to waste. If th" parallel holds in the case of Fincasile, then Botletourt connty, Virginia, in beginning to gave her acorn crop, has set out upon the path of prosperity and wealth. A penniless young lawyer a?ked a millioimire for his daughter's baud. "I shall give my child a hundred dollar on her wedding-day," answered the merchant. "It is a prelty little sum, enough to provide breakfasts for the family. Now will you have the kindness to tell me how you propose to furnish the dinner?" 'Oh, for that matter," returned the unabashed youth, "those who have break f'ut toil so well- will not utcd an dinner at all." It has been ascertained that there are but 2,000,000 cannibals in the world, and the number is rapidly de creating, not on account of u deficicu cy iu tl e supply of their peculiar food, but owing to the yearly increasing bad ness of its quality. It is aid that some tribes have lately abandoned it iu. disgust, aud have taken to rattle snake. Wo itre informed that the Roths child fa.nily is about to "celebrate the eel leiuiry ot thdhikinj house to which it owes its Tnrtuho." Would it nid bo more correct to desciibe the celebration as a Jcwbilecf . Republican. in that Faith let us to tha end, PA., TUESDAY, DECEM B E R 4 187 1 A Tale of San Francisco. Hospitality is a virtue, but abuses of its privileges are so common that one is tempted to regard it as general ly better in theory than in practice. That is to say, it is a virtae to be ex ercised with caution, and of the truth of this opinion a Mrs. B., of San Fran ciso, has been disagreeably convinced. Mrs. B is described as one of those la dies moving in the "best circles," and lately sue was informed by letter that a beautiful and accomplished niece of an intimate friend was about to make her a visit. Glad to welcome an east ern belle, Mrs. B. determined to omit nothing that could render her stay pleasant. In due time Georgie Mande- ville arrived, and her beauty, her rare accomplishments, and, above all, her luxuriuiit golden tresses, became at once the theme of conversation amoni; l-.t.' r, I i i ra. me can r rnucisco uacneiors. 1 ne story is easily guessed : fehe came, she saw, he conquered. A wealthy broker of fered the fascinating niece Ins hand and heart, and being fortunate in his suit, pressed for an immediate marriage Mrs. B. rejoiced, und to her rejoicing came the anxious i.icce. What should she do for a trousseau T she had writ- leu to her banker, but it took time to receive money. Of course Mrs. B. was only too glad to advance the ne nssary Uo.lXK), and a nisiiMiificeiit nr ray of laces and other goods was at iWiss Georgie's disposal. Meantime, having told her predicament to her belhrothed, he too had handed his check for a like amount to his ensla ver. As they say on the etagp, "Exit Georgie; enter police." A trunk of cust off clothing and a profusion ol golden hair was all that the fictitious niece but clever swindler had left be hiud her. A good story is told of a rather ver dHiit agricultural laborer, who having by hook and crook scraped together fifty dollars, took it to Ins employer, with a request t.i ti ke charge of it for him. A year after the laborer sent to another friend to know what would be the interest oti it. He as told three dollars. "Well," said he, "I wish you would lend me three dollars for a day or two. My boss has been keeping fif ty dollars for me a year, and I waul to pay him the interest for it." "I am triad," said the Rev. Dr. Young to t.ie chief of the Little Otta was, "that you do not drink whisky, but it grieves me to find that your peo nle use much of it." "Ah, yes)" replied the chief and he fixed his eye im pressively on the doctor, which com muuicated the reproof before he ut tered it "we Indians use a great deal of whisky, but we do not make it." "How do you feel with such a shock ing looking coot on?'' said a young clerk, of more tailors' bills than good sense, one morning. "I feel," said old Roger, looking at him very steadily with one eye half closed, as if taking aim at his victim "I feel, young man, as if I had a coat on which has been paid for. I hope you may enjoy .the luxury some time." A white-haired old negro preacher in New Orleans thus addressed one ot the meetings of the disatisfied colored folks recently: "What vmi gruniblins about T Yer all better off dan ye eber spected to be. Did yer link when Massa Linkum guv ye yer freedom he was gwine to buy tickets in the Louisi ana Mattf Lotiery for yer besides?" Some fathers are too hard-hearted for anything. A man scolded his twelve-year-i Id sou fully five minutes the other day because the child used his (the futher's) best Sunday razor, to open oysters with. We don t see how the razor could hurt the oysters any how. A parsimonious sea-captain, an swering the complaints of his men that the bread was bad, exclaimed: "What! complain of your bieul that is made frmu Hour? hat do you think of the Apostles? They ate 'shew bread,' mude from oil boots and j Bhoes." A lady having accidentally broken her smelting botile, her husband, who ius very petulant, said to her, "I de clare, my dear, every thing that be lungs to you is nre or le-s broken." "True," replied I lie lady; "for even you are a little cracked." The following notice appears on a bridge at I nver, Colorado: "No ve hicle drawn by mora than one animal is allowed to cross this bridge in op posite directions at the same lime." The editor of a couutrv paper re marks that half the people who at tend musical entertainment 1m his town "don't know the diHereiine be tween a symphony and a sardine." Said a gardener to a friend who bad a very rubicund countenance, "Pray gaze oter my garden wall for a little while ; my cucumbers are very back ward." An Irish student was once asked what was meant by posthumous works. "They are such works." said Paddy, "as a man writes afler he is dead." Advice to mothers A switch iu time saves nine. dare do our duty as we understand if--LINCOLN. Shakspeare and the Bible. A writer in Oliver Optic's Magazine has made a collection of curious par allel passages which show the famil iarity of the great dramatist with the Scriptures, and account for the com mon saying in resrard to many a famil iar quotation : "It must be found either in the Bible or Shakspeare : " II , umeiio. -jtuae am i in my . peecn. Bible. "But though I be rude in speech. M 2 Cor., xi.. 6. Witches in Macbeth. "Show his , eyes and grieve his heart." 1 tt:i.i nr , uiuie. VOiisuuie mine eyes, anu grieve mine heart. 1 Sam. n, 33. Macbeth. "Life s but a walking snanow. 1,'it .. . mine. -iiian waiketh in a vain show. Pg. xxxix., 6. Macbeth. " We will die with harness on our backs. Bible. "Nicaner lav dead in his harness." 2 Mac.,xx.,28. Banquo. "Wo tu tiie land that is Bible. "Wo to thee, oh laud, when thy king is a child." Eccles. x.,16. governed by a child." Tiir.on of Athens. "Who can call him his friend that dips iu the same dish ?" Bible. "He that dippeth his hand with me in the dish, the same shall be tray me." Two mem hers of the West Virginia Legislature lately took a sleeping car at Grafton. The cars were crowded, anp the two had to sleep together. One wa? fat; the other was lean. The fut man snored, and the leau one had to Juy awake. At about midnight the insomnia legislator could no longer stand the stcntorions breathing of his mate, and he anno and sat by the fire. An old lady entered and wanted a place to sleep. 'Go to my berth,' said the sardonic lean one; 'I left my little boy there asleep. I shall sit up. I must think of legislative things.' Ku the old lady went to her berth, disposed of her garmeuts, and laid down. Presently tin- 'boy' kicked. Then the 'ady pat ted him on the back, and said: 'Lie Rtill.sonny ; pa said I might sleep along with you.' 'Oh, no!' ma red the bison a boy no more, but a bison : Thun der! who are yu? I ain't a boy 1'ni a member of the West Virginia Legis lature.' The lady then went into a swoon; nor could ehc.he aroused until the tavmau had promised her that he would have the lean one impeached. The drill inspector iu an English regiment one of the old stamp of martinets rgeants who was the ter mr of every recruit aud the remorse less tyruht of the awkward Kquud. was putting a firing party through the fune ral exercise. Having opened the ranks so as to admit the passage of (he sup posed carriage between them, the in structor ordered tho men to 'rest ou their arms reversed.' Then, by way id' practical explanation, he walked slow ly down the lane formed by the two ranks, saying as he moved : 'Now, I'm the corpse I Pay attention I Having J readied the end ot Hie party, he turn ed and regarded them steadily with a scrutinizing ,;ye for a moment or two, and then remarked, in a most solemn tone of voice : 'Your 'auds is right, hikI your 'eads is right; but you 'aven't cot the look of regret that you ought to 'ave;' Sophia, a six year-old pet, after look ing thoughtfully at the new moon a little while, turned to her uncle and said : 'Uncle Will, I can see God's thumb nail. That id it.' sue added. minting to the narrow crescent; 'and can almost see God's thumb.' At another time she found a shelless egg uiiuer the currant bushes, and, in a high stale of excitement, brought it in and showed it to her aunt. 'See auntie,' said she, 'what I found under tL' a currant bushes! And I kuow the old lien that laid it, I'm just going to put it back iu the nest and make her liuish it.' The High School of Spri:igficld, Ohio, graduated the youiig ladies of Us last class in calico dresses, as pleas ing tu the eye of taste as to the hand of economy. This was hi ought ubout by the thoughtful suggestion of the superintendent and the hearty ac quiescence of the girls themselves, ou the only ground on which high schools can long be perpetuated, namely, tlt.it beiug supported by luxation they must be open to all classes iu society and coiiitr their advantages upon the poor est of their pupils, without preemption by fushiou or creed, expenses or auy ttiing else. Some paper says: "Texas has a new game in curds; one holds a revolver, the other holds the cards. A coroner holds the inquest." In case any one should wish to try the game, und finds the instructions not sufficiently full, we may add that the holder of the cards "turns up," and tha: the firer of the revolver "cuts." Iu New York, wo presume, the coroner would hold the stake, iu the interest of the next jtlode tt when he turus up. A concsi ltd young parson once said : 'This morning 1 preached to a o ngre tion of usses!' '1 thought of that,' re torted a lady, 'when you called them your blovJ brethren.' $2 PER ANNUM. American Women. This is what Dr. Holland says on the subject of the physical condition of Americun Womeo : There are other s:gns of improvement iu the Ameiican, and these relate mainly to the feuialo side of the nation. Tlm i man has long been regarded by Euro r-"B me mosi oeautitui woman in the world. This t.he is aud has been for twenty-five years, without a doubt; und as the circumstances of her life become easier, her labor less severe,and her education better, she will t more beautiful still. America never pos seseed a more beautiful generation of women than she possesses to day, and there is no doubt that the style of beau ty is changing to a nobler type. The characteristic American woman of the present generation is larger than the characteristic American woman of the previous generation. It conies of bet ter food, of better clothing, better sleep, more fresh air, and less of hard word to mothers during those periods when their vitality is all demanded for their motherly functions. V vmimn say that the remark has been made py onservers thousands of tunes during ing the past summer, at the various places of resorts, that thev had nevr seen so many large women together be ore. indisputably they never had. Mocking a Minister. Ct ubasson relatis a laughable anec dote of a Gibraltar ape, which he broutrht ud tame, and wlii.di I,..m... so attached to him as te be desirous ot occompanying him wherever he went, so that when lie had to p -rtlirm the di vine Service he was under the neeesitv of shutting the ape up. One day, how ever, me animapeseaped and followed ins masier, remaining perfectly quiet Until tha RArmnn karroo T I ... - - Vv... VUIICII forward, and overlooking tlm rUi.ir imitated his gestures so grotesque!) "that the whole congregation was con vulsed With lauchier. Omhnaion sur prised aud displeased at this ill-timed levity, reproved his auditors for in uttention; and on the obvious failure of his reproof, he, in the warmth of zeal, redoubled his gesticulations, and vocueraiions. 1 hese the apo so exactly imitated that all respect for their pas tor was swallowed un iu tlx ceii bu fore them, and the w hole congregation burst into a loud and continued roar ot la: ghter. A frieud of the preacher in length stepped up to him; and, on learuiuir the cause of this hilnritv ; was with the utmost difficulty that he could command a serious countenance while he ordered the ape to bo taktu away. A correspondent of the St. James Magazine cites a.i instance, which tic cuired as late as twenty five yeurj ago, of a couple married with the church key instead of a weddinjr rine. Th re appears to be some doubt as to the valiuityof this substitute, but in point of symbolism, at any rate, a church key is surely, in comparison with a marriage ring, the more suitable in strumeiit of wedlock. A boy aRked a certain preacher if he would have a light. No, child,' said the Doctor, 'I am one of the lights of the world.' I wish then,' replied the boy, 'you were hung at the end of uui alley, for it is a very dark one.' 'You must not play in the street with the boys now, my dear; you are seven years old said an old lady to her grand child. 'But, graudma, was the innocent reply, 'liie older I grow the better I like the boys.' A German porter and a French girl were married iu Hartford last week, af ler forty-eight hours acquaintance. Neither of them understood the language of the other, so it will be some little time before they cuu fight iu peace. A clergyman once posted the follow ing notice on the gate of the church: "Found, two hats in my strawberry bed. The owners can have the same by proving property." We don't be lieve the owners wiil call for litem. Mrs. Mala prop, who was early left a widow, has an obliging neighbor to whom she applies iu al! her little difli cullies, one of those handy men who can do any tiling and ever) thing; she calls hiiu her Teetotum. Auntie 'Well, Lucy, I suppose vnii 're pleased with the new hubv?' Lucy 'No, I ain't. Auntie 'It will such a nice play fellow tor you.' Lucy 'How can it be a p'.ay-lellow when it's a giil.' A young man in the street being charged with laziness, was asked if he took it from his father. 'I think not,' said the disrespectful sou, 'father's got' all the laziness he ever had. 'Our children will have an immense tax on their hands,' said a gentleman. 'O, horrible!' exclaimed an elderly la dy. What a blessiug we have nails ou ours.' ' "This is capital ale," said ail old to. per, "see how lung it keeps its head !" "Ay," said a by stander; "but consid er how soou it takcaaway yours!" A uuiversal waut-sWnt of moa-y. i;Siii mmuiiimmmit- m -tt Tin f Rates of Advertising. One flqnare(l Inch,) on Insert Ion.... fl OneS'juare " one month I Of One Squire "- three months... 8 09' One Square " on yae.r 10 00 Two Squares, on year 14 00 Vuartr Col. " SO ov Hair " no or) One " 10e 0- Business- Cards, not exceeding one Inoh In length, f 10 per year. Legal notices at established rata. These rates are low, and no derlatiet will be made, or discrimination amonir patrons. The rates offered are such, sa will make it to the ad vantage of men dol business in the limits of the circulation ot tue I'rtDer to advertise liber all v. Deal Gently. What a world of happiness and 1or this would be, were we all to obey this simple command 1 A few Word of love and kindness are more sure to guide the erring in the path of right, than a lifetime of harsh dealing. Sis ters, deal gently with an erriug broth er, l.ir the kind words of a loving sis r ter are sweeter far than mu.-io in s brother's ear. Brother, listen and obey the commands of a loved sister. It you are traveling in the downward path, I admonish you, hear the gentle words of a sister. Her words may fall unheeded now, but perhaps when the voice of that loved one is hushed, when she can no longer plead with you, her gentle and loving admonitions will haunt you day and night, and the pleasure you sought for will net be louml until you seek and travel in the path that she has pointed out to you. . I have often thought, were wives to deal more gently with their husbands, husbands to treat their wives in a like manner, there would be thousands of, happy homes where now misery reigns. Should it be the lot of any young la dy to he weddel to an intemperate, husband, deal gently, for you will Bey er reclaim him from the paths of vice by dealing harshly. 'Indeed you are very handsome,' said a gentleman to his lady love. Toon I pooh I said she, 'so ycu would say it you did not think so.' 'Ana so you'd think if I did not say so he an svt ered. "Susie," said a mother to her little daughter of five summers, "what would you do without your mother?" "I would put on jtst such a dress ss 1 pleaseed, every day," was the prompt reply. Come here, you mischievous little rascal you 'Won't you lick me, fath er?' 'No.' 'Will you swear you wou'tf ' 'Yes.' 'Then I won't come, father, for pa i son Atwood says that he who swears 1 will lie ' The fall and winter crop of female lecturers bids fair to be very heavy. All sorts of subjects will he introduced. 'How to keep down the family' is an nounced by a beautiful Iudiana lady of 25. A cross bid bachelor says, "The reason why women do not cut them- selves iu two by tight lacing, h be i cause they lace around the heart, and that is so bard they cannot effect it,' , Penelope Ann, an old maid, hearing her cousin, Jerusha Jane, complaining of chaped hand, said she wished she , had them, for she hadn't hud a chap on her bauds fur twenty years. ' A man com ting a young woman was int. ruga ted as to Lis occupation. 'I am a paper-hanger on a large scale-, he replied. He married the girl and turned out to be a bill-sticker. An Elmira editor, speaking of the marriage of a brother quill, says: 'It's sad, however, thU parting with old ; friends. One by one they drop off aud d uble up "Women, wake up!" exclaims the Revolutiou, and an indolent rural ed- itor adds: "Yes, and turu out and . make a fire and put the lea-kettle ou." . A modern thinker says tlmt "many ' people will be astonished when they get lo heaven to find the angels laying na schemes to be made arch-angels. A French wit said of a man- who was exceedingly fat, that uature only made him to show how the human skin- -would stretch without breaking, A sick man was told that hit wife would probably marry again. 'Alt right said he, 'for there will be oo -man to lament my death.' A Veteran merchant says that al though his clerks are very talkative during the day, they are always ready lo shut up at uight. "Pa, isn't that man in what they call the spring, time of lite?" "Why, my son 7 "lecause he looks so very green. A gardener's wife made a pin-rusinn out of a Spanish onion, but she fouud it brought the tears into ber needles eyes. You talk of your troubles, but yours is not such a hard case as mine, as ibe oyster said to the fisherman. Among the lart things out in pa thetic song are "My Darling's Shoes." T Jey are out at the toes. 'I am receiving my back rations at the soldier said wheu be was flogged for stealing beef. No dust affects the eyes like gold dust, aud no glasses like braudy glasses. A Western gentleman advertises for a 'self supporting wife Is it for a garret window to suffer room attic paues? 'Do you keep accounts, Dick ? 'Yes, I rcckou.' The cup after the cup that cheers--The hie cup. A b!ack bird A raven hue officer. Au attached couple Oystor abell. 1 ;