19 rUni.IfllIKU EVEUY WUDSIOSDAY, UY vr, 11. DUNN. DfTTco In Knox's Dulldlryg, EIn Street. TEItMS, J2.00 A YKAU. No HulscrtptioiiH,rivnlvod for a shorter period than three months. Correspondent solicited from nil parts of thn country,1:' No notico will 1)0 taken of annoityinou communications. Jtarrlagos and Dentil notice inserted gratis. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. KKWTON PKTTIS. MILES W. TATB. PETTIS & TATE, ATTORNEYS AT LAV, .A tin Sired, TIOXICSTA , PA . Isaac Ash, 'A TTOKNEY AT T,AW, Oil City, Pa. xV Will practice in the various Courts of Korest County. All business entrusted to Bis earn will reeoivo prompt attention. 10 ly ' W. W. Mamn, Georgo A. Jenka, Tloaeilft, P. , llrwkville, P,. MaSon, & Jcn.H.3, ATTOTtNKYS AT T,AV. Ollleo on Kim Street, above. Wnlnut, Tioucsta, I'a. C. W. Giinilan, ATTOKNKY AT LAW, Franklin, Vo nanKO Co., I'a. tf. t. II. HARMS, D. P. FASSKTT, It A KRIS C FASSETT, Attorneys at Law, Tituoville Penn'a. -" I ACTICK In all the Courts of Warren, , ,'rawford, Forost and Vonanjio Coun ties.' 4!l-tf W. P. Morcllliott, ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR AT LAW Tionosta, Pa. Ollleo on Klin Street. The professional services of tlio Hon. H. P. Johnson can be secured through mo if desirod in any business entrusted to mo in Forest Co. Collections promptly attended to. AIho Keal Estate Agent. Tlonesta House. MITTKL. Proprietor, Klin St., Tlo- nestii. I'a.. at the inoutliof therrcpk. Mr. Illlo lias thoroughly renovated tho 1 ionestn 1 loiio, and re-furnished it eoin plclcly. All who patroni.o him will lie well entertained at reasonable rates, ill) ly FOREST HOUSE, T PLACK PltOPHIKTOU. Opposite court: House, tioneslsi, 1M. Just npcuid. Kvcrvlhlntr new and clean and fresh. Tho best of liipiors kept constantly on hand. A portion of the public patroii no Is rospeetfully solicited. 4-17-1 v Holme3 House, JL V. 1). Manic, Proprietor. (Jood Nta- bllng connected with the house. tf. Syracuso House, HPIDIOUTK. Pa.. J. A. 1) Maokk. Proi.io J. tors. Tho house has been thoroughly rpl'ittcd and is now In tho lirst-cliiss order, with tho host of accommodations. Anv nformation concern imx Oil Territory lit tuts I'uiiii. niu uu cueunuiiv iiiruisncti. -ly J. ill. MAllEE, . ' ' Exchange Hotel, T OWER TIWOUTE, Ta., P. 8. IUms-J-i bkki. A Son Prop's. This house having been rclitod is now the most desirable stop- iinjr placo in Tidioute. A good llillinrd loom attuclied. 4-ly National Hotel, TRVINETON. PA. W. A. Ilallenlmelc. Proprietor. This hotel is Nkw. and is iw open as a first "class house, situiito at HO junctioii-of theOil Creek A Allegheny tivcrani i-iiiactelpliiu ,fc l-rio Kailroads, iposito tho Depot. Parties having to lay ver trains will tind this tho most ennven- ent hotel in town, with first-class accoin- sxmHWUons and reasonable charges, tr. Dr. J. L. Acomb. PHYSICIAN AND 8UKOEON, who has . ' I had fifteen years' experience in a hirj.-o and aueeossl'uf practice, will attend all VtTtf.Mtuljltinl I'llllu Olll,.ati. 1 k-.... .....1 tlroeery Store, loeatcd in Tidioute, near Tidioute llouso. IN HIS STOKE WILL BE FOUND A hill assortineut of Medicines, Liquors Tobacco, Cigars, Stationery, lilass, Paints, Oils, Cutlery, and lino Groceries, all of tho lest quality, and will bo Hold at reasonable Voltes. II. H. BTJROESS, an experienced Drus p 1st from New York, has chargo of tlo Store. All pi-ocriitious put up accurately. JNO. A. Dil.K Prait. 1. T. DALK, Cuhlur. TIOITESTA SAVINGS BANK, Tionpstu, Forest Co., Pa. Thin Bank traus,v:0i a Goneral Banking, t-'ollocting and Kxchauo Business. .Drafts on tho Principal Cities of the United States and Europe bouhtand sold. Hold and Silver Coin and Government Securities bought and sold. 7-!i0 Bonds converted on tho most favorable terms. I nterest allowed on time deposits. Mar. 4, tf. Lloyd & Son, WATER STREET, TIONLSTA, I'A. ' IT AVE JUST OPENED an oxtanslvo XX Ktocl Stock of KiOUR AND FEED, GROCERIES AND PHOVISIONS, Which they offer to tho public at rates as low as can be offered by any other estab lishment in town. Uivo u a call before purchasing elsewhere, sU-3. LLOYD A SON. SLOAN & VAN GIESEN. fc AND WAGON-MAKERS. . w Corner of Church and Elm Streets, TIONESTA lV. This firm is prepared to do all work in 1U lino, and will warrant everything done at their shops to j;ive sulislactiiui. Par ticular uttoulion given to iioitsi:.snoi:ix(;, Give them atrial, and you will not re gret it. lit-ly. SUBSCRIBE fur the Forest Republican ll will pay. 1 JL J. UlD " Lot us havo Faith VOL. V. NO. 18. D. W. CLARK, (commissioner's CI.KIIK, KonUST CO., PA.) It EA L EST A TE A G EXT. HOUSES mid lints for Sale and PENp Wild Ijmds for Sale. 1 . I have superior facilities for Rscertnlnlnor tho condition of tuxosand tax deeds, Ac, and am therefore qualified to act intelli gently awairent of those living at a dis- tniK'e. ownlntr laruls In the C ninty. Olllco in (Joiumissionars Booin, Court Honso, Tionosta, Pa. 4-41-ly. D. W. CLARK. THE SUPERIOR LUMBER CO., MANUFACTURERS OF Pine Lumber, Lath, Shingles &c. Mills on Tioncstn Creek, Fortst Co., Pn. Ynrtls k Office eor. 22d k Rnil Road Ms., riTTSnUUGII, PA. Jos. Y. Saul, PRACTICAL Harness Malter and Sad i (Her. Tlirco doors north of Holmes House, Tionosta, Pa. All work is war ranted, tf. KDWAHU DITIIRinilK. t. D. DITIIIIIDUX FORT PITT GLASS WORKS. Established A. D. 1SL7. MASUFAOTt'llKltS OF Dithridgo's xx Flint Glass PATENT OVAL LAMP CHIMNEYS. AND Silvered Glass Reflectors. Thoso chimneys do not break by heat. Ask for PiTirmnons. Tako no other. DIT1IRIDGE it SON, Pittsburgh, Pa. 25-ly. 'Hvw ISoardlii"; House. MRS. S. S. HUI.INtiS has built a larco addition to her house, and is now pre pared to accommodate a number of perma nent lsiBrders, ami all transient ones who inay favor her witii their patronage. A Kood slalilo has rocently Ikm'H built to ac commodato tho horses of quests. Charges reasonable. Residence on Elm St., oppo site S. Haslet's store. 23-ly JOP1ES HOUSE, CLARION, rEXN'A.' S. S. JONES Proprietor. GROCERY AKO PROVISION STORE IN TION ES T A . GEO. W.B0VARD&G0. II AVEust brought on a completo and caroiuuy sciecteu stocK 01 FLOUR, GROCERIES. PROVISIONS, and everything necessary to tho completo stock ofa tlrst-classi.rocerv House, which they have opened out at their establish ment 011 Elm St., Hrst door north of M. E. Church, TE S COFFEES, " ' SUGARS, BVRUPS, FRUITS, SPICES, HAMS, LARD, A KD PltO IV.SOA'.S OF A LL KIXD. at the lowest cash prices. Goods warrant ed to bo of tiio best quality. Call anil ex amine, and we believe we can suit you. GEO. W. 1IO YARD A CO. Jan. , '7i A M I It A I. 13 I Mr. Samuel Hell, of W. E. Schmertz & Co., Wholosalo Hoot and Shoo Manufactur ers, 31 Fifth avenuo, Pittsburgh, I'a., has been altlictcd with chronic rheumatish for tlii.ty years, from his right hip to his fisit, having to use a crutch and a cujie, at times so painful as to utterly incapacitate him from attending to his "business. Having tried every remedy known, without effect, except Gilliland s Pain Killer, ho was finally induced to try it. A second applica tion enabled him to' lay aside his crutch, and a third eltcctod a permanent euro. Mr. Hell Is a popular and well-known citizen, is a living monument of tho efl'acacy of that great medical discovery, Gillihuid's Pain Killer. The atllii tod shc'uild ask their gris'or or druggist lor it, and trv its won derful power. Mr. (iilliland, 'we under Htand, v ants a respectable agent in every town and eduut.v for it. The principal oi llco is at 7 Third Avenue, Pittsburgh Pa. 31-4t AGENTS WANTED Bound canvass ing book SENT FREE! of postage on receipt of 75 cents, and ex eulsive territory granted on tho PICTORIL HOME BIBLE. Contains ovor:(oo illustrations. Isa com plete Library of liihlu-al K nowled-re. Ex cellsall others. In English and German. Win. Flint &. Co., Phila., I'a. ii7-4t THE BOOT AND SHOE STOKE. IK YOU WANT a perfect lit and a good articlo of Hoots and Shoes, of tho Lnest workmanship, go to II. I.. Mt'CASCK'N, S'J CENTRE STREET, OIL CITY, PA. J'tr Satiif.c tinn sjuaiantcrd. 'J-Zi u'. Or that Right makoa Might ; and TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1872. THE HIGH PRESSURE NOVEL A TAKE OFF. Once upon a time there was a fair young mnidcn, whose name wnHMary, although they called her Moll, for short. She wasn't a tall, dark-eyed maiden, with clear, transparent skin, and lipg like cherries, and cheeks suffused with blushes. She didn't have glossy black hair, sweeping back in wavy tresses from her queenly brow, and her form wasu't a bit like Hebe's. No, there was none of thoso things on the contrary, she was short and thin, and had red hair and freckles, and she also sported snuggle teeth and wore pads, but still she was a right nice girl, and there was a young mail who fell in love with her, and his name was Bill, although his friends called him William wheu they wanted to hurt his feelings, lor he dtdu t like it much. He wasn't fine looking, and had neith er curly brown hair nor a moustache. Not much Bill laid himself out on soap locks, and wore a goatee that he had dyed twice a week. Now this Bill was in love with Mary, but did he go and make a deliberate ass of himself? Did he, I say, go into a grove with her, and in the soft moon light, by tho streamlet that murmured sweetly by, and with the tender ze phyr sighing through tho foliuge fall down ou his knees, seizo her jeweled hand and breathe his deep affection in the tender accents of fund attachment, and swear "by yon bright orb above us, always to be tin tie r Did he, I say ? You can just bet ho didu't. You can lay out your whole revenge safely on that. William knew too much about tho price of pants to go flopping around on the wet grass with his good clothes on : besides he never cared any thing about streamlets or any kind of cold water, except to mix with his gin. No, sir, but this William met. her at tho alley gate, and says; "Say, Moll, old ual, b posen we net latched But how did Mary behave? Did she go dropping to sleep over ou the bricks in a dead faint, or did she hide her gentle head on his shirt bosom to con ceul her blushes? No, she didu't and bho didn't say, "I'm ever thine, tny swn love, dear William 1" Oh, my, no. She looked right in his yellow eyes, and says : "1 in in, Billy ; 1 m the gal lor these sort ot things. Go in 1 Now, tho old man wasu't wealthy, lor lie sold soap-iat lor a living, and so ho didn't think Bill was nosing around fitter his stamps , so when Bill asked him, he neither ordcreJ him fiercely away uor did the dewev mois turo gather in his eagle eye as he passed his hemslitchcJ hankerchicf up theie and said: "liless von, my chil dien, bles3 you !" Oh no nothing of the sort. He just blew his old red nose in his baudauna and told Bill to tako her, along, for he was glad to get rid ot her, he was, and William would be tho sauie mighty soon, tor' she was awful rough on victuals, and always broke plates when she got mad. So, you see, th;re really was none cessity for William to coiuo at mid night's solemn hour, iu a cab, and throw a rope-ladder up to her window, and whistle three tunes on his lingers, and then go up, hand over huifd, aud bring her down iu one hand and her trunk in tho other, and a band-box aud an umbrella under each arm, and a whole lot of bundles ; and then get into the cab and fly to some distant shoro. That's the way it would have been in a novel ; but Bill said he wasu't on that lay, and so he just went out iu the yard, aud out of pure joy he skinned the cat three or four times on the grapo-vine arbor, and then went and got in his butcher curt aud drove Mary right down to the magistrate to get the job done for a quarter for he said he was some on low prices, ho was. But the very queerest thing of all was, that Bill had no tall, dark, ruffian ly rival, with a scrowliug visttge and black whiskers, who flew at him with a drawn dagger and a horse-pistol in each hand, aud a muttered curse upon his lips, and cried wildly for 'Revenue.' Ha 1 ha ! and said "Death !" aud "Vil lain, thou ditst!" Not any. There was another fellow in love with Mollie, to be sure, but ho was a weak-eyed young man, who had sandy hair and wore spectacles aud u choker collur, and always looked scared wheu you hollared at him. So, when ho saw that Bill had the best of the girl's affections, he looked all serene and said : "Go in, Billy, if you hanker for her ;" and as Bill was a trillo on the hanker, he sailed in. So William, you see had no trouble at all and you couldn't get up an agouiziug novel about him if you tried. Ho didn't have any urgent business that called him to a foreign land, and so had to bid hera fond good-bye, and swear always to bo true, aud then go away and forget her, and full in love with a dark eyed Italian girl, picking grapes in a vineyard, with a square towel folded ou her head, while his forgotten and forsaken Maiy gradual ly tinied aud pined away, aud buflled the physiciuu s skill, aud grew paler, and at lu.st, when the June roses were in bloom, lying gently down to die, while through the open w indow float ed iu the balmy odor of jessamine and houcy suckle. An J William didn't- Republican in that Faith let us to the end, come homo at last, and filled with deathless remorse, go daily to the sweet cemetery and strew flowers on her grave, and teach his children to lisp her name. Not at all. That is the way Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth would have dono it, but she wasn't round. Bill was a butcher who wore a white shirt aud a shiny hat, aud he stayed at home and killed beef and sold it at ft big price, and stuck to Mary, and she kept healthy and wosn't much on tho pine, or the fade, while if any fellows got to lurking around, William went right out and batted them in the eyo, he did. And then, at last, when all was over, Mary didn't sit iu the room while they dressed her in white, and mixed orange blossoms in her watcrfull, and then go gently down glairs with six bridesmaids at her heels, and stand up with her William, and weep gently while she was being married by tho minister, and then get lost of presents, r.nd then go to her new house and live through all the happy years with Billy and never know sorrow or trouble any more. Why of course, she didu't for it wasn't her Btyle, you see. She just rushed up stairs and put on her pink muslin and her bud bonnet, and had nary bridesmaid, and weut to the magistrate's and never wept a particle, and got no presents but fif teen cents from the old man to pay her car fare home, and wheu she got to the magistrate's she just rose off the bench and told Bill she didn't see much use in splicing, and that sho didn't liko him ; any how ; and so she went home, and Bill he weut with her, and told her he wasn't sorry, as he didu't want her and he guessed she was hard on her clothes, any how, and so they never got married, and the whole thing turned out wrong ; but I couldn't help it, for I ain't going to put facts on record that ain't so. But it ain't a bit like any novel that I ever read, bo thero must have been something strange about this fellow and Mollie that I never could Cud out, so I'll have to let slide ns it is. IY.ofessou Tuatt's method of tam ing horses is not so popular at Spring Mill as it was. Mr. Fisher of that place took lessons from the professor ; and having perceived how, with a piece of rope, he subdued tho wildest animals, and even opened umbrellas suddenly in their faces without scaring them, Mr. Fisher felt certain that he could tame the most fiery fstccd in Montgomery Co. There was a caual boat man i Spring Mill who owned an implacable mule, and Fisher felt that it was his destiny to conquer that mulo or perish. They led the mule out upon the towpatn one morning, and Fisher followed with a bit of clothesline and an umbrella. He tied the mule's leg with the rope, as Pro fessor Pratt had done, aud threw it down three or four times until ho thought it was lime. Then tying tho rope urouud his own waist, while the other cud of the cord held tho leg of the mule, lie asked the crowd to watch how that Bubmissivo animal would not flinch when the umbrella was opened suddenly in its face. Fisher then flung the umbrella open. Only a moment or two later a certain subdued mule might have been observed to plunge wildly from tho towpath into the river and to swim down stream at tho rato of nino knots ar. hour, while a misau- thropic and liumilitated victim of rrof. Pratt s method with animals towed behind, and made a fresh dive under the water every timo tho mule jerked its hind leg forward. When ho was rescued and resuscitated he said it must have been the wroug kind of an umbrella; but he has discontinu ed animal-taming ns a business now, and whenever he hears of the approach of anybody named Pratt he scowls, and gloomily says he wishes ho had brought his shot-gun with him. During the New York draft riot of 180.5, a howitzer, trebly shotted, was planted on the Tribune stairway, and men stationed beside it, ready to fire it off upon the first attempt of tho mob to storm the building. What a for tunate thing that the attempt was not made I It is fearful to contemplate what a large number of Greeley votes might havo gone down before that howilier ! "How do you like the looks of the varmint?" asked an Arkansas fellow ofa down-easter, who was gazing with distended eyes at an alligator, which was lying with open jaws on the banks of the Mississippi. "Wa'al," respond ed the Yankee, recovering his mental equipoise, "he a'u't what we'd call a hau'somo critter, but he has a deul of opeuncsss when he smiles." An excellent old deacon, who' hav ing won an old turkey at a charity raillo, did not like to tell his severe orthodox wile how he came by it, quietly remarked as he hauded her I ho fowl, that the Shakers gave it to him. Tho difference in nature ivnu u-..11 illustrated at the depot this inoi'iing. Two sisters met. "(), my dear sister," said one, exhaueted, us they embraced. ii V I . .. ... . iou ve ueeu eating onions," said the other, calmly and f..:nlc.-lj, daro do our duty as wo understand ifLINCOLN A Poor Boy's Victory. An appointment to tho United States Naval Academy having been flace within the gift of Colonel Wm. 5. Roberts, member of Congress from New York city, he determined to award it to the applicant who should, in a competitive examination, prove him self to be best qualified therefor. This examination recently took place in the hall of the Board of Education in New York city. Twenty -six boys wero present, thirteen from the public and thirteen from the private schools of the Fifth Congressional district. Sixteen of tho uumber wero rejected by Dr. Skiff, tho medical examiner. Tho examination was conducted by .-superintendent Kiddio and Ids assis tant, Mr. Harrison. Matter John O'Keefe, aged fifteen years, of 107 Washington street, stood first in the order of merit and is to be the nomi nee. His parents are in very bumble cireumstauces, his father, Timothy O'Keefe, being an ordinary dock la borer. The announcement of the de cision of the committeo was received with applause, as tho appearance of the lad denoted his condition iu Die. He was heartily cougratulated by all pre3eut, but by noue with so much pride and emotion as his principal teacher, Mr. Duffy. Master O'Keefe, it was remarked by all present, bore a striking resemblance to cx-President Lincoln. A subscription is to be im mediately started in the First Ward for the purpose of securing his neces sary outfit. o The following is said to be an au thentic anecdote of a well-known ar tist. This son of genius, one of the greatest portrait-painters of his day, was at times such a votary of the bot tle that his friends begau to fear that he would be utterly ruined iu body aud mind. After one of his periodical "sprcas," several of his friends deter mined, if possible, to arrest him in his downward course, aud so went over to his studio, carrying in a pocket a big rat, lor purposes which will bo seen E. sat painting lazily, returning to his woik alter he had greeted his v.sitors, They took him to task roundly for his dissipation, declaring that Ins health was utterlv ruined, and that vervunnn he would be driven into "snakes," oth erwise called delirium tremens. They pressed the topic, when finally he rose in a passion, and as he did so tho rat was slipped loose, and went flying among the halt-fiuished gave chase with a cuue, calling loudly for assistance, knowing that if the an imal was not caught it would work mischief with his canvass. NoUhcar ing the others move he looked round with astonishment, and shuddered visi bly as he saw them looking at him with faces full of saduess and pity. They tried to get him to sit down, say ing that he'd "get over it pretty soon;" but he shook them off, and weutsilent ly back to his painting. After a few touches he stopped aud turned rouud, with an attempt to laugh that was in expressibly painful, aud broke out: "That was a good joke I had on you fellows. did not see a rat." The last remaining hrilliancvnf the empire has been eclipsed by the sale of the Emnress Eugenie's iliHinniulu nt London. There Were no less than one hundred aud lourteeu lots of these geiua, including almost every variety of beautiful handiwork imaginable. The jewels were, of course, of the most eiegaut ana expensive inscription. There wero diamonds without end in the wonderful combination with other precious stones. One group was made to represent a roscbutl and leaves mid another a bunch of forget-me-tiots', iormeii or pearls encrusted minutely with diamouds. Tho enraptured spec tators found themselves dazzled suc cessively by brooches in the foim of a double piuk, sprays of flowers and leuves, peudanu of brilliants, pearl drops as lurgo as a sparrow's egg, mag nificeut emerald, oval shaped gems, formerly belonging to the Empress Josephine.groU'sqiio oiuauieutss haped like a guitar or a tortoise, diamond snuff boxes, and, above all, the ex quisite neckluce of forty-one choice pearls, matched in sizo aud splendor, which has employed tho most hercu lean endeavors of admiring scribes ou many a Statu occasion under il... .I, l regime. Lace parusols and fans of miraculous oeauiy complete this glow ing aud yet sad record of the glories of departed power. A novelty iu the way of "hops" has been introduced in Boston. A hall at tho South Eud is now open every Fri day evening for"bh'u t aud pants'danc ing parties," and the attendance is confined to those of the middle class who uro disposed to behuve themselves. There is nothiug allowed that would be considered improper in any hall in the city, and the proprietor takes sen sible ground that if ludic consider themselves dressed iu "shirt waists" there is'no reason why "gents" should not appear in tho samo cool apparel. A young lady in Platlsburgaskcd her mamma, "How long does tho honey moon last?" to which tho practical mother replied, "Until you ask your husband for money. $2 PER ANNUM. A rVliddle-Sized Boys Composition on Girls. Girls are the most unaccountable things in tho world except women. Like the wicked flea, when you have them they aiu't thero. I can cipher clear over to improper fractions, and the teacher says I do it firstrate ; but I can't cipher out a girl, proper or improper, and you can't either. The only rule iu arithmetic that hits their caso is the double rule of two. They are as full of Old Nick as their skins can hold, and they would die if they couldn't torment somebody. When they try to bo mean they are as mean as pusslcy, though they ain't as mean as they let on, except sometimes, and then they aro & good deal meaner. The uuly way to get along with a girl when she comes at you with her non sense is to give her tit for tat, and that will flu in mux her, and when you get her flummoxed she is as nice as a pin. A girl can bow more wild oats in a day than a boy can in a vear. but cirls get their wild oats sowed after a while, which boys never do, and then they settle down as calm nnd placid as a mud puddle. But I like cirls first rate, and I guess the bovs all do. I don't care how many tricks they play on mo and they don't care either. The hoity-toities girls in the world can't always boil over like a glass of soda, liy and by they will get into the traces with somebody they like, aud pull as steady as an old stage horse. So let them wave, I say ; they will pay for it some day, sewing on buttons and trying to make a decent man of the fellow they have spliced on to, and leu chances to one it they don t get the worst'of it. One cf tho Candidates. A gentlcmau traveling through In diana in the early days of that 'cow powerful and vigorously growing State, stopped at a log cabin and asked and obtained entertainment for a man aud horse. During the conversation after supper tho stranger said : "I am traveling through your coun try to obtain information about its re sources and products." "Well, stranger," observed the host, "you have stopped at the right pluce. I am a candidate for the Legislature, and I reckon I know as much as the next man." "Ah, indeed? Well, I am unfortu nate. What is tlio population of your county?" ' "Corn, elicat, outs, raid such like truck." , "iou ini.sunuerslund m. I want to know the population of the county." "Oh, to be sure, I did niis.iuderst.iiid. Well, there's oak, dogwood and some elms mostly with villi's running nji hat spectacle more pleasing does the earth ali'ord than a happy woman contented in her sphere, n utly at all times to benefit her little world by her exertions, and transforming the briars and thorns of life into loses of Para dise by tho magic of her touch? There arc those who are thus happy because they cannot help il; no misfortunes dampen tin ir sweet smiles, uiid thev diffuse u cheerful ghnv urouud them, as they pursue tho even tenor of their way. J hey have the secret of content ment, whose valua is ubovo tho philos opher' sbine; for without seeking tho baser exihaiigo of gold which buys Koine sort, oi pleasure, nicy convert everything they touch into joy. What their condition is makes no difference. 'I hey may bo rich or poor, high, or low, admired or forsaken by the fioklo world ; but the spiuklini; fountain bubbles up in their hearts aud makes them radiantly beautiful. Thouirh they live iu a log cabin, they make it siiino Mini a nistro that kings and queens may covet, and they make wealth a fountain of blessings to the children of poverty. A clergyman of Saratoga sprjngs has constructed u system of national time, for the convenience of railways, as wen as ot the traveling public, simple in its elementary principle, yet evincive of much sludy and research in its details. He proposes to make Washington time the national time standard, and then to divide the coun try longitudinally into four sections, the extremes of which, being fifteen degrc-is apart, tii'i'cr iVnm each other jul one lioiiriu time. Those hour sec tions of liftccu degrees aro subdivided by the various railway btulions which they contain j uml by" u sytem of in dexes at each station, the traveler, having the local timo of each station, can readily dttermiiie its relation to the national time standard at any point between the Atlantic ami tho Pacific. The New England Railway Association, having submitted the sys tem to a cummitlto for .eoiisidi ration, has uuiiiiiiuoii.- y adopted the report of tho committee approving it and rec ommending it to ull the railroad com panies in the Uuitcd Slates. A youthful lover who siiiil' and play ed before his young lady's house fur j two mortal hours, Friday night, was electrified after a short pause bv a coidiul "thank you" gracefully mo- nouueed by the "other fuller," whoup- p' nrcd at the w indow. r.atca of Advertising. OneSpmiorl inch,) otio Inertlons - tl M (neS-pnirn ' one month - - .1 no OneS pmro " tlireo months . n in) One Sipiarn " ruin year - - In i" Two Squares, orm year f, M ifiinrnTi o. :. K) Half " " .v, ,Mi Ono " . . . . iix) no Iliisiiip-M I'snl i, not ex coed ins one Inch In length, fit) cr j ear. Irf-al notices at cMshllshod rates. Thon riles are low. and no deviation A-ill i.o hi:, I,-, (r diserini'iiation amonir i-mrniis. 't in, rates ntlcr, d are unci,. will make It to the ml van: sueof itiimi dot. g Imsini-ss in the limit ni l.lm circulation of tlio jn;.cr to advertise lils-rall v. A "feller onJ his gal" from tho country, concluded to try n little sod:i water, and accordingly ordered a couple of glasses. "What syrup?" linked the handsotnn clerk. "Syrup syrup," repeated the bucolic fop, with a stare ; and then leaning forward, lie impressively aided: "stranger, money is uo object to me to-day you can put sugar iu them." A young man went into florist's store the other day to buy a rosebud lor his athanced. ftovcnty-Gvo cents was the price asked : " ill it keep? Inquired the young man. "Oh, ye, a Ion;' while." "Then you may kieep it." Exit young man. A very close-fisted old fellow, In treating a friend to somo liquor, pour ed out a verv mall drink. I'ho latter, taking the glus and holding it abov his head, remarked very skeptically, "You say this is forty years old?" "Yes", replied iho host. "Then," re plied our friend, "all I have to say is, it is very small jbr its age !" A humming bird flew into a court room in Georgia, during tho session of the court one day recently, at 10 a. m., ami continued to fly with in a few inches of the ceiling until 0 p. m., when it fell slowly and alighted ou a mentel-piece, where it was cap tured. It was on tho wing seven and a half hours without rest. A prudent Kentucky father, with a marriageable daughter, found it im possible to keen the bcaus from tho house, so he furnished her with a mu sic box which plays "Home, Sweet Home," at 10 o'clock p. in., precisely. The beiiis are all gone, and the hoiiia closed up in five iuituitcs after. A Paris journalist recently encoun tered a poor blinl man playing a clari onet in the street, whom ho had f r merly seen doing tho earns thing in St. Cloud. He asked him how he had happened to change places. "Ah sir." answered tho blind man, "it mado mo sad to look at tho ruins of the war." A Chicago female graduato has written and recited a long essay urging the futiliy of using the pen or tongue, and the infinito superiorly of confin ing oneself to thought and deed. Very well, but if such be her conviction why did she indite aud speak her es say? The rising generation "ago" rapidly in Detroit. A mature specimen, eight years old, was hunting ubout the po nce station tho other night for a stray father. "You Bee," he remarked, wild filial exultation, "the guv'ner's a littlo wild yet, but he'll grow out of it." An old writer has quaintly said: "God looks not ut tho oratory of our prayers, how eloquent they are; nor at their arithmetic, how many Ihcy ore ; nor at their logic, how methodical they arc ; but He looks at their sin cerity, how spiritual they are." "We have a pan of horses," said an economist the other day, "on our farm that support themselves without any cost." "Why, how is that?" exclaim ed a listener. "Why, you see," re marked the questioned, "one is a saw horse, aud the oilier a clothes Jiorso." "I hope you havo no objection to my getting weighed?" said a husband to his wife. "Certainly not, my dear; but why do you ask tho question?" "Only to sec, my leve, if you would allow mo to havo my weigh for once." A Detroit man, who bad no ear for music, confessed as much when ho frankly owned that "If I were the pro prietor ofa hand-organ, set expressly to play 'Old Hundred," I couldn't get over seventy-fivo out of it." Two Irishmen once saw a red-hcad-ed woodpecker pecking awuy at an old stump. "Murthrr, Jemmy 1" ex claimed one of them to his compatriot, "just look at you bur-red; he's ham mered his head till it's all a blaydiii!" John Randolph met an cuemy in tho street, one day, who refused to eivo mm nan me sioewniH, saying mat no never turned out for a rascal. "I do," said Randolph, stepping aside ami politely lifting his hat, "Pass ou, sir." They havo a flower in Alameda, Cal., called "Aaron's cup," which ineusures two feet eight inches from the buse of the flower to the tip of the cup. Tho Yo-Semite Valley is said to bo full of rattlesnakes, and the little Snake Indians aro said to use them for rattles to cut their teeth on them. The Colorado desert, by a late rail road survey has been found to be in places 200 feet below the level of tho 1.:.., I...U- .i. ..: i il. .i . i sea. Scientists aro iu a quandary. An Irieh lecturer of note solemmv said one evening. "Parents, you may have childreu ; or it you have not, your daughters may have." Col. Tom Scott, tho Boston Post thinks, has become greater than a rail road king, niui it therefore describes him as a railrcad tlephaut. A California jury, in a suicide ca.-e lately, ictuiiie.i tho following verdict: "We, Iho jury, find ;hut the deceased was a f,-ul."