&!ic forest gkpuWta. is rrnisiiKi) kvkuy tuksday, hy , W. R. DUNN. Drgcfki Kiox'a nullUingi Eiir Street. Rates of Advertising. Ono Square (I Inch,) nun Inertlon - $1 'irt One.Ni)Unro " one inonlli - - a 00 tne H'iinro " three months II 00 Ono Square " ono year - In no v 1 i i i f i i 1 OREST KEPI Two Squares, one yenr i 1", 00 Qunrtnr Col. ' " - . Half " "... - 60 m Ono " " - - - - 100 00. BLICAN TERMS, JU.OO A YEAR. No Subscriptions received for n Hhorter period than throo months, i Corrcspond-moo solicited from nil part oftho country. No notlcn will betaken ol' nnnouy moils communications. Marriages nml Death notices lnsorlod Tratls. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Business Cards, not exceeding one inch In length, $10 per j enr. " Let us have Faith that Right makoa Might ; and in'that Faith lot us to the end, dare do our duty as we understand it"--LINCOLN Legal notices nt established rnlcs. Those rates am low. nnd no deviation will bo ninile, or discrimination among patrons. Tho rates offered are such, sa will make it to the advantagoof men dol, g business in tho limits nftho circulation of VOL. V. NO. 10. TIONESTA, PA, TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1872. $2 PER ANNUM. tho Miner to advertise liberally. . NKWTOJI PETTIS, MFI.US W. TATK. PETTIS A TATE, ' ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Hl Street, TIOXKtlTA, PA. i Isaac Ash, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Oil City, Pa. Will iiraHleo in tho various Courts of Korost Coiintv. All business entriiHtoil to kit oaro will receive prompt attention. 10 ly D. W. CLARK, (COMMIMSIONKIl'a CI.K11K, FOIIKST CO,, PA.) JIEATj EST ATI AGENT. HOUSES nnd Lots for Ralo nnd RENrp Wild Lands for Halo. J- . I have superior facilities for ascertaining tho condition of taxes and tax deeds. o.. and am thorcforo qualified to act Intelli gently as agent nt those living at a uis tanco, owning lands In tho County. OMIeo In Commissioners Room. Court Itouso, Tionosta, Pa. 4-41-ly. P. W. CLARK. Kiw. niTiininnr.. Prut. 1). DlTlllllUtiK, TreiM. T. A. WHIOIIT. Hnft. uko. w. niiiiitmuK, Bu.liiuu Hftlifttfer. Ooorn A. Jroki. Hnwkvlllo, r. W. W. MuoA, : TlotM.lt, . . Mason A Jenks, ATTORNEYS AT I, AW. Olllee on F.lm Street, almvo Walnut, Tionosta, Pa. A TT lA ll!l C.W. Gilfillan, TORNEY AT LAW, Franklin, Vo- ingo Co., l'u. tf. J.' R. HA HUH, ' 1. I. FASSKTT, HAKllIS C FASSISTT, Attorneys at Law. TituavUlo Penn'a. "PRACTICE In all the Courts of Warren, Craw rord, torosl ana cnango i oun ties. ' 4!)-tf THE SUPERIOR LUMBER CO,, MANUFACTURERS OF Pine Lumber, Lath, Shingles &c. Mills on Tioncstn Creek, Forest Co., Pa. Yards k Office cor. LM It Rail Road Ms., PITTSBURGH, TA. Patrick Henry. W. P. MerclUiott, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR AT LAW Tionosta. Pa. Offlc on Klin Street, The nrol'cssional services of the Hon. H. T. Jxhnson can bosocured through mo 1!' in anv business entrusted to me hi fcmrm Co, Collections promptly attended to. Also Real Estato Agent. Jos. Y. Saul, PRACTICAL Harness Maker and Sad dler. Three doors north of Holmes House, Tionosta', Pa. All work is war ranted, tf. FIIW ARD niTliniDOK. K. D. DITHRinOE . Tlonesta House. " TT ITTEL, Proprietor, Elm St., Tio '-" 111. nesta. Pn.. at thejnoiithof thocroek Mr. IUlo has thoroughly renovated the Tionosta House, and ro-furnished It eom- Dletelv. All who natronlzo him will be well entortained at reasonable rates. 20 ly FOREST HOUSE, DI1LACK PROPRIETOR. Opposite Court House, Tionosta, Pa. Just opened. Everything new and clean and frosh. Tho best of liquors kopt constantly on hand. A portion of the public patron age la respectfully solicited. 4-17-1 V Holmes House, nIONESTA, PA., opposite tho Depot. x C. I). Mame. I'roprietor. uoou ma- lilliid cunnoctod with tho house. tf. Syracuse House, miDIOUTK. Pa.. J. fe 1) Maoek, rroplo- i. tors, Tho house has boon thoroughly refitted and is now in tho first-class order, with tho best of accommodations. Any nforination concerning Oil Territory at this point will bo cliocrnilly runusiiou. -ly J. AD. MAUEE, Exchange Hotel, T OWF.R T1DIOUTE, Pa., D. S. Rams- 1j iikki. A Son Prop's. This house having lienn relltod is now tho niostdosirablostoii- iilng phuic in Tldioute. A good Milliard too.u atTched. 4-ly FORT PITT GLASS WORKS. Established A. D. 187. MAKUFArTUKKnS OP Ditliridge's xx Flint Glass PATENT OVAL LAMP CHIMNEYS. AND Silvered Glass Reflectors. These chimneys do not break by heat. Ask for DminiDOES. Take no other. DITHRIDGE A SON, 2."-ly. Pittsburgh, Ta, ew Hoarding House. MRS. S. 8. nULINGS has luilt a largo addition tii her houso, and is now pro- iiarod U aciiimodateaiiumberol perma nent boarders, nnd all transient ones who ijiay favor her with their patronage. A good stable lias recently been built to ac commodate tho horses of guests. Charges reasonable. Rosuloiico on tlm est., oppo site S. Haslet's store. ia-ly National Hotel, TRVINETON. PA. W. A. Hallenback, . Proprietor. This hotel is Nkw, and Is ,iw open as a'ffrst class house, situate at Dlc junction of thoOil I'reek A Allegheny ttivernnd Philadelphia A Erio Railroads, pposile tho Depot. Parties having to lay vcr trains will find this tbe most couvon- nit hotel in town, with Urst-class accom- iiodatious and reasonaiuo uiiarges. ii. Acom.b, suroeo: had fifteen years' oxporiencoin a largo .nnd Buccisriil uractice. will attend an f Professional Culls. Ollico in his Dru and FLOUR, (drocerv !iore. loeateu in imiuuiv. nuw Tidiou'te Houso. IN IIISSTORE WILL HE FOUND - A full assortment of Medicines, Lhiuors Tobacco. Ciirars." Stationery, (ilitss. Paints, Oils, Cutlery, and tine Urocerios, all of the best quulity, and will bo sold at reasonable rates. . II. R. RURflESS. an experienced Drug' nistCioin New York, bus charge of tho Store. All prescriptions put up accurately, tf. JONES HOUSE. CLARION, TENN'A.; S. S. JONES - - - Proprietor. T"lf .T nHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, who ha 1 GROCERY AND PROVISION STORE J.V TI0NES TA . GEO. W.BOVARD& GO. HAVE ust brought on a complete nnd carefully selected stock of GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, and everything necessary to tho conipleto stock of it first-class Grocery House, which they have opennd out at their establish ment on Elm St., first door north of M. K. Church. In tlio Atlantic for July, Tarton be gins his story of Patrick Henry. His narrative begins in October, 177G, when Jeflurson having resigned bis scat in Congress nnd having declined tbe mission to France with Franklin and Deane, set himself to the work of reform in his own Stato "a slovenly, slatternly old England in the woods, where tho abuses and absurdities of the old country were exaggerated." Ihcro is a clear account of the abuses which Jefferson and his friends Bought to do away, and prominent among these was the intolerance of the estab- ished church, which Mr. Parton illus trates by the case of three, Baptist preachers who wero arraigned as "dis turbers of tho peace," before magis trates who were determined to convict them. Patrick Henry rode fifty miles to defend them, and the following ac count is given of his performance it was more than a upeecli on that oc casion : He entered the court house while tho prosecuting attorney was reading tho indictment. He was a stranger to most of tho spectators, and, being dressed in a couutry ruanuur, his en trance excited no remark. When the prosecutor had finished his brief open ing, the new-comer took the indict ment, and glancing at it with an ex pression ot puzzled incredulity, began to speak in the tone of a man who hal heard something too astonishing for belief: "'May it please your worships, I think I heard read by tho prosecutor, as I entered the house, the paper I now hold in my band. If I havo rightly understood, the King's attorney has framed an indictment for the purpose of arraigning and puuishing by im prisonment these three lnoilet.sive per sons before the bar of this Court for a crimo of great magnitude as dis turbers of the peace. May it please the Court, what did 1 hear read 7 JJiu I hear it distinctly, or was it a mis take of my own ? Did I hear an ex pression as ot a crime, that these men, whom your worships are about to try for misdemeanor, aro charged with with with what?' "Having delivered these words in a halting, broken manner, as if his miud was staggering under the weight of a monstrous idea, he lowered his voice to its deepest base ; and, assuming the profoundest solemnity of manner, an swered his own question : 'Preaching the gospel of tho Sou of God I' "Then he paused. Every eye was now riveted upon him, and every mind intent; for all this was executed as a Kean or Siddons would have perform ed it on the stace eye, voice, attitude, cesture. nil innccord to produce tho should bo free, free to worship God ac cording to tho Bible. In vain wore nil their sullenngs and bloodshed to subjugate this New World if we, their offspring, must still bo oppressed and prosecuted. But, may it please your vorships, permit mo to inqure once more, For what are these men about to be tried f This paper says, For preaching the gospel of tho Saviour to Adam's fallen race 1' "Again he paused. For tho third time he slowly waved tho indictment round his head ; and then turning to the judges, looking them full iu the face, exclaimed with the most impres sive efTect. 'What laws have they vio lated?' Tho whole assembly were now painfully moved and excited. The presiding judiro ended tho scene by saying, 'Sherilf, discharge these men." A New Detective. COFFEES. SYRUrs, TEAS, JNO. A. DAI.K. rml. t. T. D.V1.K, Cubler. TIOUESTA SAVINGS BANK, Tlonesta, Forest Co., Pa. This Rank transacts a General Ranking, ( 'nllnctinir nnd Exchange Rusiness. Drafts on tho Principal Cities of tho United States and Europe boughtandsold. Hold and Silver Coin nnd Government Securities Isiught and sold. 7-30 ltonds converted on the most favorable terms, I ntere.it allowed on time deposits. Mar. 4, tf. Lloyd & Son, WATER STREET, TIONESTA, PA. OPENED .an extensivo SPICES, SUGARS, FRUITS, HAMS, LARD, a xd rno risioxs or all kinds, at tho lowest cash prices. Goods warrant ed to be ot tho best quality. I uu ami ex amine, and wo belie vo we can suit yon. Jan. 0. 'Ti. AVE JUST Stock of f LOUR AND FEED, GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS,! AVhlch thev offer to the public at rates as low as ran be ottered by any omer estab lishmentin town." Givo us a call beforo purchasing elsewhere. ' 40-aia. LLOYD & SON. -SLOAN & VAN GIESEN. BLACKSMITHS 'and W AG O N - M AKE R S. Corner of Church and Elm Streets, TIONESTA 1?.A. This firm U prepnrod to do all work in its line, nnd will warrant everything done at their shops to jrivo satisfaction. Par ticular attention rivon to jioitsiKiioi:ixcj, and you A. 91 1 11 A V 1a i : ! Mr. Samuel Roll, of V. E. SchmerU it- Co.. Wholesale Hoot and Shoo Manuliiciur era. 31 Fifth avenuo. Pittsburgh. Pa., has been afflicted with chronic rheuniatish for thntv vears. from his riirlit hn to liis toot, having to use a crutch and a cano, at times so Dili ii Ui l as to utterly tncaiiacilato nun from attending to his business. Having tried every remedy known, without eilect, except Giliiland's Pain Killer, ho was linallv induced to try it. A second apblica tion enabled him to lav nsido his crutch. nml a third ollectod a permanent eurn.-Mr, Hell is a nonular and well-known citizen is a living monument of tho etl'ucaoy of that great medical discovory, Giliiland's Pain Killer. Tho afflicted should ask their grocer or druggist for it, and try its won ilerful power. Mr, Gillilund, we under stand, wants a respectable agent In every town and county lor it. ine principal oi fieo is at 72 Third Avenue, Pittsburgh Pa, . 31-4t THE BOOT AND SHOE STOBE. TF YOU WANT a perfect fit and a good 1 article of Hoots and Shoes, ol tho linen workmanship, go to II. I.. McCAXCE'N, 39 CENTRE STREET, OIL CITY, PA, .SO-Satisfactlon guaranteed. 2-33 tf. .Give thein a trial, grot it. will not ro-13-ly. JUBSCRIHEfurtho Forest Republican ' it will psy. AGENTS WANTED Bound canvass. ing book SENT FREE! of postage on receipt of 75 cents, and ex. culsive territory granted on the PICTORIL HOME BIBLE. Contains ovorlMKiillustratioiis, Isa com, plcte Library of Hihlicnl Knowledge. Ex ccllsall others. In English and German Win, Flint ,fc Co., Phiia., Pa. utmost possibility ot effect. Amid a silence thai could bo lelt, no waved the indictment three times round his head, as though still amazed, still un able to comprehend the charjre, 'I hen he raised his hands and eves to heaven arid in a tono of pathetic en ergy wholly indescribable, exclaimed Great God ! "At this point, such was tho power of his delivery, the audience relieved their feclintrs by a burst of sighs and tears. I ho orator continued : " 'May it pleaso your worships, in day like this, when Truth is about to burst her letters, when mankind are about to be aroused to claim their nat ural and inalienable rights, when the yoko of oppression that has reached the wilderness ot America, and the unnatural alliance of ecclesiatical and civil power, are about to be dis severed at such a period when Liber ty, Liberty ot Conscience, is about to wake from her ulunibcrings, nnd in quire into the reason of such charges as I find exhibited here to-day in this indictment ' Here occurred another of his appalling pauses, during which ho cast piercing looks nt the judges and at the three clergymen arraigned. Then resuming, he thrilled every hear er by his favorite devico of repetition : 'If I am not deceived according to tho contents of tho paper I now hold in my hand these men are accused of preaching the Gospel of the Sou of God! He waved the document three times round bis head as thouijh still lost in wonder ; nnd then, with the snmo electric attitude of appeal to Heaven, he trasped, 'Great God 1' "This was followed by another burst of feeling from the spectators ; nnd ngaiu this mnstcr of cd'ect plunged in to the tide of his discourse : " 'May it please your worships, there are periods in the history ot man when corruption and depruvity have so-Ions debased the human character, that man sinks under tho weight of the oppressor's hand becomes his abject slave. He licks the band that smites him. He bows in passive obedience to the mandates of the despot; and, in this state of servility, bo receives his tetters of perpetual bondage, liut may it please yours worships, such day has passed. From that period when our fathers left tho laud of their nativity for these American wilds, from the moment they placed thoir feet upon the American continent lrom that moment despotism wus crushed, the letters of darkness were broken, and Heaven decreed that man An exchange tells of a marine dis aster where three seamen "bit the dust." A Ualilui'uia newspaper prints the following touching obituary: "Philip Hanscomb was driving a team loaded with powder up the Bierra Nevada Mountains. One of the kegs dropped from the wagon. Tho Sierras stood it well enough, but tho miners who come from a neighboring ranch were unable to nnd Mr. Hanscomb or the team. A Nashville young lady has three educated cats, one of which, when the door-bell rings, rushes to tho room of its mistress and indulges in various joyous gymnastics ; another wakes its mistress at ten precisely, and, blessed creature, allows no ono to arouso her beforo that hour ; he also goes to his mistress when a caller arrives.and bites her if a lady has come, or mews loud- ty it a gentleman has presented him self j the third cat pltiys the piano, and all three catch rats and mice. They havo a new way of treating the broken legs of horses, which ought to be generally known. A valuable horse, in Hartford, Conn., "had his leg broken a short time since. The leg was carefully set bv an experienced surgeon, and was covered thickly with plaster. hen the plaster "set or hardened, it kept the limb as immova ble as it it had been made or iron. Thus treated, a broken leg, it is assert ed, will knic together in a brief time and become as good as ever. Of all tbo hotels in tho world the very oddest is a lonely one in Califor nia, on the road between can Jose and Snuta Cruz. Imagine ten immense trees standing a few feet apart and hollow inside; these nre tho hotel, neat, breezy, nnd romantic. Tho lar gest tree is sixty-five feetnround.and is that bureau of Bacchus whercfrom is dispensed the thing that biteth and stinrcth. All about this tree is a gar den of flowers and evergreens. The drawing-room is a bower inadoof red wood, evergreens nnd niadrona branch es. For bed-chambers there are nine ercat hollow trees, whitewashed or papered, nnd having doors cut to fit tho shape of tho holes. Literature finds a place in a learning stump, dub bed "the library." If it were not for that same haunt of Bacchus, it is cer tain that the guests of this forest es tablishment would feel like nothing so much as dryads. A poetical writer has said that some nicu move through life as a band of music moves down street, flinging out pleasure on every side through the air to every one, far and near, that can listen. Some men fill the air with their strength and sweetness, as the orchards in October days fill the air with the scent ol their ripe Iruit. some woraeD cling to their own houses like tho honey-suckle over tho door; yet, like it, nil the region with the subtile fragrance of their goodness. How great a bounty and blessing it is so to hold the royal gifts of tho soul that they shall be make music to some, fra grance to others, and life to nil ! It would be no unworthy thing to live for, to make tho power which wo have within us the breath or other men s joy ; to till the atmosphere which they stuiid in with a biighlness which they cannot breathe for themselves. The Frankfort Yeoman te'l this "Onco upon a time a young Kentucky d- phvsieitiu, who had bee.i regularly e j i.:. i'..: m.i , UCUICU JOT ills iiuiu?aiuu, naa laiicu iu the bedside of a patient that he had been attending with his best caro for some time, but who obstinately grew worso and worse, until his end seemed very near. 'Doctor,' said the sick mau, 'I am dying I am certain I am dying, and I believo you have killed me.' Tho doctor seemed to think very earnestly for a moment or two, and then quite gravely and seriously re plied : 'Yes, I seo thnt you are dying ; and, on reflection, I believe that you are riirht I believe that I have killed you ; but I here take my oath that if God will lorcive mo lor having unin tenlionally murdered you, I will never murder another 1 will never give an other dose of physio professionally as long as I live. And he kept his oath; he at once quit medicine entirely; turned his attention to the study of law: obtained a license iu duo course, aud, after a few years' successful prac tice, became ono of tho moot eminent circuit judges of that day in Kentucky uow, nearly lorty years ago. Some time ago, being in company with a medical man whom I will call Mr. B., we fell into conversation on the uses of the microecopc, in the man agement ot which he was an adept. Now," lie said, "1 will tell vcu a story of what happened to myself; ono which I think well illustrates the im portance of this instrument to society, though I was put in a very unpleasant position, owing to my acquaintance with it. I have, as you know, given a ereat deal of attention to comparative anatomy, especially to the structuro of the hair ns it appears under the mi croscope, lo the unassisted eve, in deed, all hairs appear very much alike, except as it is long or short, dark or lair, straight or curly, coarse or line. Under the microscope, however, the case is very different: the white man's is round, the negro's oval, tho mouse's apparently jointed, tho bat's jagged, and so on. Indeed, every animal has hair of a peculiar character ; and, what is more, this character varies according to the part from which it is taken an important circumstance, as will appear from ray story, which is this : I once received a letter by post, con taining a few hairs, with a request that I would examine them, and adding that they would be called for in a few days. Accordingly, I submitted the hairs to the microscope, when I dis covered that they were from the human evebrow. and had been bruised. made a note to that effect, and folded it within an envelope, ready for the person who sent tnein. In a few days a stranger called and enquired wnein- er I had made the investigation. "Oh yes," 1 said ; "nero iney are, ana you will hud them ana their description in this envelope." banding it to him at the same time. He expressed himself as being much obliged, and oflercd me a lee, wnicn however, I declined, telling him that I could not think of taking anything for so small a matter. It turned out however, of more consequence than had imagined, for within a week I was served with a subpoena to attend as a witness to a trial lor murder, llns was very disagreeable, as I have said but there was no help for it now. The case was thus: A man had been killed by a blow from some blunt instrument on tho eyebrow, and the hairs sent to me lor examination had been taKen from a hammer in tho posses-ion of th susnected murderer. 1 was put in the witness-box. aud mv testimony inai "tho hairs were from the human eye brow and had been bruised, was just the link in tho chain of evidence which sufficed to convict the prisoner. The jury, however, were not easily satisfied that my statement was wortn anyming and it required the solemn assurance of the judge that such a conclusion was within the reach of science to convince them that they might act upon it. Ono juryman in particulai an old iarraer was very naru 10 saiisiy. "Does thee mean to say," said be "that thee can tell the hair of any an iinal?" I answered that I would not take upon myself to assert positively that I could do so, although I believed I could. Well," said ho, "I'll prove thee." The prisoner, as I sain, was convict ed, and I went home. In a busy life of extensive practice I forgot all about my obstinate old farmer. About two years afterward, however, a person, an utter stranger to me, called upon rao with a few hairs screwed up in a piece of paper, w hich he asked me to exam ine aud report upon. "Is this auother murder case I i in quired: "for if so, I will havo nothing to do with it. 1 have had enough oi that sort of work." "No no," said he, "it is nothing of the kind. It is only a matter of curi osity which I should be very much obliged to you it you wouiasoive; ana if you w ill do it 1 will call or scud lor tho result of your examination in a few days' time." Having received this as surance, I undertook the investigation. When ho was gone and 1 had leisure, I put the hairs under a microscope, aud soon discovered that they were taken from the back of a Norway rat. Two or three davs afterward, as I was sitting iu my room, an old farmer looking man was ushered in. "Well," said he, "has thee looked at them hairs?" "Yes," I answered, "and I find that they are taken from tho back of a Norway rat." "Well, he exclaimed, "so they are. Thou hast forgotten nie, but I have not forgotten thee. Dost thou recol lect the trial of murder at L. assizes? I said I would prove thee, and so I have, for them hairs came from the back of a rat's skin my son sent from Norway. So the old gentleman wos quite sat isfied with the proof to which he had put me, and I, as you may suppose, was well pleased that my skill aud sa gacity had stood such a queer proof as tins, ana more conviuccu tuuu ever oi the value of the microscope. Hero the doctor ended his story, which I havo given, as nearly as pus sible, iuhisowu words, aud upon which I believe that a thorough dependence may be placed, Leap-Year Felicities. 'Eli Perkins" ba3 undergone matri monial proposals at the hands of one of his lady friends, aud ho has this to say about it : First,! called upon my linuid-eyed runette friend, Miss Sallie Morris, of Madison Avenue. Now 1 ve spent a (rood deal of money on Miss Sallie for o- . .. ... operas, bouquets, Delunonico lunches, etc. I've been trying hard for two years to win her affections. .bast night, lull ot love and hope, 1 rang old Morris s door-bell. In a mo ment, Miss bailie was by raysclt on a retired sofa. After speaking of the coming opera, 1 lelt her velvety hands touch mine. Do you know, Mr. Perkins," she said, looking me straight in tho face, 'that to-day is our proposing day: "Well. 1 suppose so, 1 remarked, looking modestly down at her mosaic bracelet. "Well, you know, Eli, my dear Eli! that I have been out with you a good deal." "Yes." I replied, beginning to feel embarasscd. You know, my dear," she said taking both of my hands, "that it costing me a good deal for dresses and gloves, and "And costing me a good deal lor carriages, bouquets, aud Ueimouico lunches," I interrupted with increased embarrassment. "And while T bnvo enioved mvself all winter going with you, 'In expensive carriages to the Acad emy and Delmonicos, 1 suggested "les, and while 1 have been happy to go there with you I leel 1 leel O, my dear Eli, 1 don't know how to Bay what I want to !" and then the beautiful child hid her lace on my bosom. "Do not fear my answer, beau'.iful one, 1 said, soothingly. " nai is it that weighs so upon your sorrowful heart? O, Eli, it is love," she said, sobbing wildly, and twisting her jewelled fin gers in my auburn hair. "Heaven bo praised, 1 sighed, as I felt the beating of her heart against my vest. "For whom is this love, dar ling?" I asked, "for you know I am deeply interested in you." "You will not be mad with me, Eli ?" "No, sweet one. I shall be only too happy," I said, wiping my tears from my eyes. "Well, my dear my long-cherished friend, I love " "Who, dear bailie who do you love?" 'Well, Eli, I love Charley Brown, to whom I am engaged ;" and then the scalding tears fell thick and fust on my shirt bosom. "Well, Sallie, what havo you got to say to me?" I asked hesitatingly, as I loosed her hands lrom my neck. "Why, my dear Eli, Charley and fa ther thought that I had better see you and propose "O, darling one, I am thine !" I said, with great emotion. "Take me! Never mind father. Take me as I am Take" "But. Eli. let nie explain. They wanted me to see you, a:id thank vou for your kindnesses, and propose tii you aon t come here any more ! The London Times predicts that Great Britain will lose her industrial superiority within a decade, if the pro tectionists policy ot tho American government continues. A Utica girl at tho proper hour pulls a string which reverses a picture on the back of which appear in hurgo characters the words: "Ten o'clock is my bed-time," and her admirers take the gentle hint and depart. "Bov," said a teacher the other day, "what if tbe meaning of all this noise in school Y "It s Bill Smith, sir, who is imitating a locomotive." "Come up here, William," said the teaeher. "If vou are, turned into a locomotive, it Is high time you were switched off." In an advertisement of a railroad company of unclaimed goods a letter dropped from the word lawful, nnd so the advertisement appropriately reads : "People to whom these packages aro directed are notified to come forward and pay the awful charges of the same." A gentleman desirous of purchasing an estate in Switzerland, which he has not sufficient money to buy, adver tises in the Swiss Times for a partner possessing enough money to make up the required sum. Tho partner is to bo a lady, and one of the conditions is that she shall marry the advertiser. Mrs. Emily Pitt Stevens claims that it was a doughnut, and not a revolver which she drew on Mr. Meeker in San Francisco. Those who have traveled in the west say that her deadly intent is all tho more certain, Bnce a dough nut is far more fatal than a pistol, which sometimes misses fire. Mrs. Necley, of Covcntryville, in Schuylkill county, a day or two ago, whilo sweeping the house, found a box of powder.and thinking it useless threw into the lire. It was blasting pow der aud it blasted. Mr.Neelcy thinks he will put a French roof on his new house, ns Mrs. iNceley Jo. & may like it better. . An Irishman, at Philadelphia, was watching the conscription wheel, when suddenly, losing all control of him self, he burst out, 'Whirl it round I whirl it round! rouse it, will ye? What's the matter with you? said tho TVnvnut. Marshal. 'Oh, lie jul.ers ? turn Men generally put a greater value unon the favors they bestow thau upon those they receive. Dr. Johnson used to sny, "He who waits to do a great deal of good at ouee, will never do any. Mrs. Partington will not allow Ike to play the guitar. She Bays he had it ouee when a child, and it nearly killed bun. "Husband," said a wife, "if an hon est man is Uod s noblest work, wnai is an honest woman? Vllis rarest, was the uncivil reply. Sensative New London people are an noyed by urchins going in swimming around the w harves w hose entire batli- iug suits is a rag around a stubbed toe. An Alabama cemetery bears this inscription over its entrance, "Posi tively no admittance here." Quite gratifying to the living, but very an noying to tho dead. . A man iu Danbury discovered that powder fried with lard was good for boils. The stove cover is iu tho second story uow, though most of tho rest of tho stove has been recovered. He was deceived iu his lurd. A band, which serenaded a young married couple, iu ono of our subuib an towns tho other evening, selected a peculiarly happy and flattering piece known as "The Monkey married the Baboon's Sister." A burglar was onco frightened out his scheme of robbery by the sweet simplicity of a solitary spinster,' who, putting her night-capped head out of tho window, exclaimed : "Go away ! ain't you ashamed ?" A complicated case was rather nice ly met by uu American preacher who owned half of a negro slave; and who used iu his prayeis to biipplicate tho blessings of heaven ou his house, his family and bis share of I'ompey, it round a dozen tunes, lor the man ou drawed last is my next door neigh on A boy who had just come iu posses sion of his first shot-gun, amused him self by banging away at his father, who was greasing his harness on the wood pile. The old gentleman let him prac tice a few minutes, and then fanned him with ono of the tugs until he con cluded to go out of tho schutzenfest business, borne parents can never let a boy have any fun. Says the Richmond Dispatch : "Tho first man who took the benefit of tho bankrupt law in Virginia after tho passago of the act in 18G7, went West shortly afterward. Recently he re turned to tho city, and before night had paid all his former creditors in full for tho claims which they held against him when ho went into bank ruptcy. We suppose there are few such cases on record, and it speaks well for our people." In ono of tho Western States there resided a family consisting of aa old man by tho namo of Beaver, and his three sons, all of whom were very wicked. They bad often laughed to scorn the ndvico and entreaties of a pious, though very eccentric minister, who resided in the same town. It so happened that ono of tho boys was bitten by a rattlesnake, and was ex pected to die, when tho minister was for sent in great haste. Ou his arrival, ho found the young man very penitent , and anxious to be prayed with. The minister kneeled down and prayed in this wise: "O Lord, we thank thee for rattlesnakes; we thank lheo becanso a rattlesnake has bitten "hTiii" Wo pray thee send a rattlesnake to bito John, scud ono to bito Bill ; and, O Lord, send the biggest kitid of a rat tlesnake to bite the old man, for noth ing hut rattlesnakes will ever bring tho Beaver family to repentance.' We learn from a Harrisburg paper that there is a girl in that city "who always spells backward." No expla nation is given of this, and we cannot understand it. "Backward" is not a hard word to spell. We should 1'iiuk that almost any ordinary girl who would practice upon that word assid uously for a few days would learn to spell it w ith a very considerableamount of facility. If this HarrUburg girl, therefore, spends her lime always spell ing "backward," merely because the cousiders it an exceedingly remarka ble thing that any one should wrestlo with the difficulties of that word aud triumph, she is iu error the has been misinformed. And if she devotes her life to such an exercise merely to amuse herself, we should think the would find it monotonous. There is n sort of a sameness about that kind of entertainment which is calculated to depress the miud. We would rather read tho dictionary or a puteut-uflice report through a couple of tiires a week. It M is t u fci I i 1, s J 0 i-i iwit T 4 r "J