..... ._ . • , ~,., . , • • . , . .1 •;• - :'.. . • - P , . 4 'l,, ',. '.•' , i ' ) 1 0 ; • 11 / 1$ : .0 , .. ti ,Ls .., P I ~, „ r• 1 1 ..' ... .• ....: 4 . .„ . t ~. ,.. .. .....„„ ~..., A • ~. ~ . ~ • • • . . BY W. BLAIR. VOLUME 24. c sexert ottrg. CREEDS OF THE BELLS. BY GEO. W. BUNGAY. How sweet the chimes of the Sabbath bells; Each one its creed ',a music tells, In tones that float upon the air, As soft as song, as pure as prayer; And I will put in Simple rhyme The language of the gentle chime. My happy heart with rapture swells Responsive to the bells—sweetest bells. "Ia deeds oQove excel, excel;'' Clamed out Trom ivied tower a bell. . "This is the church not built on sands, — .Emblem of its forms and sacred rites revere— Come worship here, come worship-here; In ritual and faith excel, excel," ,Chimed out the Episcopalian bell. . "Oh, heed the ancient landmarks well !" In wilemn tones ex.chtilled-a-bel . "No-progress - nitrde by' ortal-man - - Can change the just, eternal plan— With God there can be nothing new— Ignore the false, embrace the true. While all is well, is well, is well," Pealed out the good old utc 1 c urc i e , "To all the truth we tell, we tell," Shouted in ecstasies a bell; "Come_alLye_wear-y-wanderingsisee, Our Lord has made salvation free; Repent; believe, have faith, and then Be saved and praise the Lord, Amen! Salvation's free, we tell, we tell," Shouted the Methodist Bell. "Ye purifying waters swell," In mellow tones rang out a bell ; "Though faith alone in Christ can sati•e 11Ian must be plunged beneath the wave, To show the world unfaltering faith In what the sacred Scriptures saith. Oh swell! ye rising waters, swell !" Pealed out the clear toned Baptist Bell "Farewell, farewell, base world, farewell," In warning notes, exclaimed a bell ; "Life is a boon to mortals given, To fit the soul fbr bliss in heayen. Do not invoke the avenging rod ; Come here and learn the will of God. Say to the world farewell, farewell," Pealed out the Presbyterian bell. In after life there is no hell !" In raptures rang a cheerful bell. "Look up to heaven this holy day. Where angels wait to cheer the way ; There are no fires, no fiends to blight The future life; be just and right. No hell! no hell! no hell! no hell !" "Rang out the Universalist bell. "No Pope, no Pope to down to Well The Prote:tant !" rang out a bell ; "Great Luther left his fiery zeal, Within,, he hearts that truly feel That loyalty to God will be The fealty that makes men free. :No images where incense fell !" Rung, out old Martin Luther's bell "All hail, ye saints in heaven that dwell Close by the cross!" exclaimed a bell, "Lean o'er the battlements of bliss, And deign to bless a world like this: Let mortals kneel before this shrine— Adore the water and the w*.ne. All hail, ye saints, the chores swell!" Chhned in the Roman Catholic bell. "Ye workers who have toiled so well Wo save the race," said a sweet boll, "417ith pleJge and badge and banner come, uravc•heart,Leating like a drum. 14.1toyal men of noble deeds ; Ifo'r luve is holier than creeds; Prink from the well, the well, the well," In rapture rang the Temperance bell. atlifictlineaus Iltading. A CASE OF CONSCIENCE. It was the hardest of hard times. Old, .well established houses were fidling all a round, no wonder the smaller concerns were fairly swallowed -up in the crashes goin g on in the business world. .No won -der 'that Harry Tyndall, a young city nierelfant, sat in his office gazing with a pale face and despairing eyes at the spec tre, ruin, which staired at him from no great distance. He had weathered ,the 'storms of three brief years—he had hop ed to soon weather this, but the loan of a thousand ?ounds, held by a friend, de prived him of the means of making a pay- Meat due in three days, and he felt that all indeed was lost, for his efthrts to ne gotiate a loan in the present state of the Money market had been worse than use less. . . - The prospect. before him was not a cheering one. It is rather hard to begin life over again at thirty, especially when one has reached that age after years of poverty, toil and self-exertion. In his younger days, Harry Tyndall had known want in its cruelest, most savage form— he had battled its grim legions, and risen to independence ; and now, at the thresh old of a higher lith, he was hurled back with just a glimpse of the enchanted grounds within. As he sat confronting the heap of pa pers upon his desk, the office door open ed, and a. lady entered. Mechanically Harry rose and placed a chair; but as the lady threw back her yell, he =claimed in surprise, "Miss Berwick !" "Pardon my• intrusion, Mr. Tindall," said the most musical of voices. "I have been on the upper floor looking for the office of Graves & Waldron, and was told they were on -this floor. I wish to give Mr. Waldron this package. May I ask you to deliver it ? I will rernain Of all the things, I do dislike to lose my self in these dark passages hunting offi ces." Harry took the package with alacrity, and was gone but a moment, and on his return found Miss Berwick standing by the window idly looking down the street. She turned at his entrance, thanked him with a smile and a bow, and then took her bright presence out of the room, and - Harry was left to his meditations. "I may just as well give it up. I have not a fri(nd who could help me in this strait," he muttered, after half an hour's deep thought. "I will make an assign ment or go into bankruptcy, and then de part for America, where toil is better re quited. --And-as-he-spoke r he-rose-to-his-feet, his eyes falling on the floor. lie was vague ly conscious of some dark object at his feet, stooped carelesly tolift it, and saw it was a pocket book—leather, and rath er the worse for the wear, but•was very plethoric. 'He sat down again - ano I -ed-it—There-were-various-compartraerits;- hat all of them were empty save one.— That one contained ten" one hundred lb. notes. Just the sum that would save him from ruin. If it were his he could pay that note falling due, sell off his stock, and soak a situation until the panic was past. Ile looked the pocket book over again. There was no clue to the owner; yet he t-con vinced-tha tit-must r of_course„ber, long to Clara Berwick. 6he was the on ly person who had been iu his office that morning. It was a terrible temptation to Harry, Had his visitor been any other than Clara Berwick, it is hard to say whether consciousness or inclination would have prevailed; as it was, conscience won the day, and he started out after Miss Berwick. • She was not to be found, however ; and he concluded she had gone home. So thither he bent his steps. Clara was an heiress, and something of a belle, too.— She was not classically beautiful ; but she was young, and a good figure, clear com plexion, frank grey eyes, and very abun dant hair; all of which good points she made the most of, as every, Aaughter of Eve is bound to do. She came down in response to Harry's double knock, and looked quite surprised, though she endeav ored to conceal it. Wheu harry showed her the 'pocket book, she looked at it attentively, and laughed a merry peal of laughter. "AV hy, Mr. Tyndall," she cried, "You must think I have poor taste to own such a purse as that. See, this is my pocket book," and she drew out a dainty purple velvet purse, to which Was appended a gold chain. "But no one has been to my office to day save you," "‘lndeed ! the pocket book. certainly is not mine," she responded earnestly. "What shall I do with it ?' asked Har ry in perplexity. "Why, keep it, of course," responded Miss Berwick; with a charming smile ; and she seated herself on the sofa, and be gan to discourse of something else. She and Harry had often met in socie ty, but he had never called on her before, and when lie •rose from his chair to go, she said, "Really, Mr. Tyndall, I ought to be greateful to the owner of that pock c;.-book, since it gained me the pleasure of a call. May I hope that you will repeat it sometime when you have not stray ar ticles to dispose of." Harry blushed, mur mured something about the pleasure be ing on his side, and hurried away. "0, dear," he said to himself. "she ac tually believes I trumped up that story of the pocket-book for an excuse to call on her. Wealth privileges her to be imper tinent. But, oh, if I only dared to use it! andijust the amount, too ! But I must ad tise Harry Tyndall did—not advertise the lost pocket-book, and• when, three days later, his bill fell due, he paidit and was a free man. It is not necessary to recount the suc cessive steps in temptation which finally led to the first act of a hitherto spotless life. How the pocket-book came there he could not even guess. But it was there; it just supplied his needs, he appropriated it, and was henceforth branded as a thief in his own eyes. . - Those months of financial embarras ment that followed were safely tidcd over, and then he devoted himself to his busi ness with a Melancholy desperation born of conscious guilt, He went little into so ciety, and especially did he avoid Clara Berwick, who, with a perversity of mock ing mischief, tortured him with allusions to the lost pocket-book whenever she chan ced to meet him. She was thoroughly good-natured, about it, so utterly careless and trifling that he could lit accuse her .of malice ; yet his own con fence was his sharpest accuser, he imagined knowledge of his guilt, when in reality, there was none. He did not comical, from himself that the desire to remain in Miss Berwick's sphere was the principal cause of his rash act, yet, now that he was still where he could meet her, he shrunk from • making an avowal of his feelings, he dared not ap proach her with his love. So he argued to himseif, thinking he was, strong e nough to withstand the temptation, al though ho knew he had yielded to a less er one. But, disguise the fact as we may, we are all creatures of circumstances. We say, "I will not do so," and lo! in a month or year we have done those very things ; and. F6liclicw , 4•0 p•il ,- ).;IN;0.3 , 0 ;IMI ALAI *A 'Jo o_2_ A.O ti' ;Is'! I t!lei: ll 4k l o ,l ic)*P .;Na` I. l ',l l3 i'''S ANC WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, MAR it has become a matter of course that we should have done so. Even as, in. spite of himself, Harry Tyndall had appropriated what was not his, so also in spite of his will he was thrown into just such circum stances as forced from his lips a declara tion of love to Clara, though he doubted as he made it. Clara arched her brows a moment in pretended surprise,as if she had not known his struggle all along, then her old mer ry, mocking smile flashed over her face, and some bantering words rose to her lips; but they were unspoken ; for there was an earnestneFs enough, and enough of passion and pain in his face to subdue .even her. He scarcely knew what she said, but he wenFliWay, feeling as if hig - head would strike the ,stars, because Clara loved and would marry him ; but as he walked a long, he thought of the pocket-book, and his ecstacy died away. Why should he, a common thief,rejoice because under false colors, he had won a good woman's heart? But he must play the accepted lover, and he did so, forgetting, when with her, his -own_un worthiness_ Sometimes he thought to tell her all a gain, but he shrank from her scorn and the oss of her respect. But one day, when they were together, after a short silence between them, - Clara said suddenly, "Har 7did you.e-vei find out whose purbe - t -was-that—youlound in your office?" He turned pale as death. Was his sin about to find him out at last? "No," he said, hastily. "Was there no clue--nothing to indi cate who was the Auer ?" "None at all." "Have you it yet, Harry ? "Well, I should like to see it. Will you go and get it ?" "I have it here," he said. Like man criminals, he had never .ar- ted with the witness of his crime Clara. took it in her hands. "Now, Harry," said she, "I have a con fession to make. I don't mind telling yeu that I fell in love with you at first sight ; and that when I learned from my lawyer that you were on the verge of ruin, and that so small a sum would save you, I was grieved at your suffering., but was rejoic ed to think I might help you." Here she opened the purse, slipped the penknife between the two compartments, and drew out a folded paper, which she handed to Harry, who read it : "Use this money to take up that out standing debt." A FRIEND. He looked on her smiling face, and a light broke in upon him. "So it was your purse, aftei "No; it was not ruy purse. I found the old thing in the garret ; but it was • my money. Tell me, did it save you ?" "Yes, or, yes. And all these years I have borne about a. needless burden, and morning,*noon and night called myself a thief and dared not tell you of my love be cause of it : Ah ! what have I not suffer ed ?" "And I am the cause of it all," cried Clara, throwing her arms around his neck with a burst of tears. "Can you forgive me ?" "Forgive you," said Harry, fondly, "I would go through twice as much to save you a single pang. "And at last I can hold up my head among men with a clear con science." "Of course you can. Can't you remem ber that I told you at that time to use it? You might have kncwn it was all right." "Yes, I might, but I did not. It would have saved me much sorrow if I had.— However, I do not regret it now." Abraham Lincoln was once a post-mas ter in the village of New Salem, "out West." He then went to Springfield to study law, and for four years had hard work to earn his bread and butter. Fight ing • with poverty is a hard fight. One day a post office agent Came around, to collect a balance due to the Washington office from the New Salem office. The bill was $17,60. Dr. Henry, a friend of "poor Abe, happened to fall in with the agent, and was as sure as could be that he had nothing to pay it with. He went, therefore, to the office, in order to lend him the money, or offer to lend it. When the agent presented the draft, Lincoln asked the man to sit down, and sat down himself with a puzzeled look up. on• his face. He then stepped out, went over to his boarding-house, and came back with an old stocking under his arm. This he untied, and poured out on the table a quantity of small silver coins and "red cents. These they counted, exactly $17,- 60 just the amount called for; and more over it was just the very 'no -lay called for; for on leaving the office the young post master tied up the money and had kept it by him, awaiting the legal call to give it up. On paying it over, "I never use, he said "even for a time, any money that is not mine. This money I know belonged to the Government, and I had no right to exchange. or use it tor any purpose of my own." . That is right and true ground to take. If money is intrusted td your care, never touch it never use it. lam not now talk ing about cheating and stealing, but 'tak ing and using money with the intention of returning it. Money in trust should always be kept a- part from all your bus iness, and held sacred. By neglecting this, and not making good the deficency when pay-day came, many a man has lost the confidence of his fellow-men, and damaged his integrity beyond repair. A school ma'am has adopted a new and novel mode of punishment. If the boys disobey her rules, she stands them on their heads, and pours water in their trowser legs. Complaints that old maids would like to be troubled kith,—chaps on their lips. iionesty. Lot and his Wife. rFrom Lippincot for March.) A correspondent in Virginia sends the following : As I approached a pond a few days ago where some negyoes were cutting some ice, I. chanced to hear the conclusion of a con versation between two of the hands on the subject of religion, "What you know 'bout 'ligion? You don't know nothin"tali 'bout ligion." "I know heap 'bout 'ligion; ain't I bin done read de Bible ?" "What you read in de Bible? You can't tell me nuthin' what you read in de "But I kin, dough,. for I read 'bout 'Morrow." "What sort o"Morrow—to-morrow?" "No, Go. Morrow." "Well, whar he go, and what he go fur?" "Shoh, man! he didn' go nowhar, 'coz he was a town." "Dar! didn' I tell you didn' know nuth in"bout nutlhin'? You read do Bible ! Hoccura (how come) de town name 'Mor row, and how de town gwine go anywhar? Town ain't got no legs." "Man, you's a born fool, chor. De town named Go-Morrow, but dey call it 'Morrow• coz dey didn' hey no time to stay dar talkin' long talk. Deli ey s y gar o day, why can't dey stay dar to-morrow ? 'Splain_me_dat." "But dey all gone, an' de town too.— All done bu'n . up." "Ef dere ain't no peopul, an' dere ain't no town, how de town name 'Morrow ? Glong, nigger ! Didn't I know you didn' know nuthin"tall 'bout 'ligion? But (sar castically) tole me some mo' what you read in de Bible." "Well, 'Morrow was a big town—'bout mightynigh's—big-as—Washington-eity_, and de pepul wat live dar was de means' pepul in de whole wolf. Dey was dat mean dat de Lord he couldn't abear 'em, and he make up his min' dat he gwine bu'n de town clean up. But dar was one good man dar—member uv de church, i p'sidin elder—name Lot." "Yaas, I know'd him." "Whar you know,d him ?" "Oil de cannel. He owned a batto, an' dror' it hisself." Heist, man! I talkin' sense, now. Den do Lord he come to Lot, an' he say, 'Lot, I gw•ine to bu'n dis town. You and you wife git up and gether you little all, and put out 'fore de crack o' day, coz I cer'n ly.gwine to burn dis town and de pepul, to-marrow. Den Lot he and his wife riz, and snatched op der little ails and travel soon in. de mornin'. And the Lord he tuck two light'ud knots and some shavins, and he sot fire to dat ar town uv 'Mor row, and lie bu'n it sprang up,clear down to de groun', like he did Chicago." "What come o' Lot?" "lie and his wife, dey went, and dey went, and dey went, twell pres'n'ly he wife say, Tor! of I ain't gone and lee de meal-sifter and de rollin' pin, I wish I may die!' and she turn roun' to go fetch 'em, and she turn r‘mn'. and—and—she dar 'HOW!" "What she doin' dar?" "Nuthin'." "Must be mons'us lazy 'ooman." "No, she ain't. De Lord he tu'n her into pillow uv salt, 'kase she too much af ter sellin' pins and sich tings." "Dar! ev'rybody know 'bout sack o' salt; who ever hear 'bout pillow o' salt?— But what 'come o' Lot?" "Lot; he weren't keerin' tall 'bout no rollin',pin and no meal sifter, so he kep' straight 'long, nn turnin' uv he head nei der to de right, neider to de lef." "And lef de ole 'ooman dar?" wyth as. ,, "In de middle of do road?" "Yaps " "Must skeer'd mighty little fur her— want to git married to seck'n wife, I spec'. But de fus' man come 'long and want to git some salt to bake asheake, he gwine bust a piece out'n Lot's wife, and 'stroy her; and what you tink o' dat? Call dat 'ligion? And de ole man lef' her? and you read dat—" Hero a peremptory order from the fore man to "go to work" broke short the con versation. . No Ti.istE.—A man of business was so engrossed with his cares, that he would not rest even on the Sabbath. Half of that day he spent with his clerk over his accounts. The other half in a ride into the country. Monday morning found him unrefreshed, but still driving on after the world as fast as ever. "Have yOu heard of the death of Mr. D--?" asked - one of him at breakfast. "Ab, no; is he dead? Well it is very dif ferent with me; I am so eiigaged in busi ness that I could not find thuelo die."— Soon after, having passed into another room, he fell dead on the floor. He must take time at last. There wai no return ing to his farm or his merchandise. His business he left behind him in the twink ling of an eye. But the great work of life was undone. "I have not time," is the common ex cuse of men in busy lit', when urged to think of eternity. But they must . take time when sickness comes, when death knocks, then when it is too late. . A Cleveland man knows how to enjoy all the comforts of a home. When he sees a book peddler or a sewing machine man in front of his house he touches up his face with a box of water-colors, in im itation ofsmall-pox pustules, goes to the front door, and then laughs to Ewe the call ers.try to break their necks in getting o ver the gate and fence. If you like practical joking, just intro duce tWo strangers, previously inform ing each that the other is deaf; but. I wouldn't stand around, WE ALL MIGHT DO GOOD. We might all do good Where we often do ill; There is alWays a way, If there be but a will. Though it be but a word, Kindly breathed or suppres.cd, It may ward off some pain— Give peace to some breast. We all might do good • In a thousand Small ways, In rorbearing to fatter, Yet giving due praise. In spurning ill rumor, Reproving wrong done ; And treating but kindly The heart we have won. We all might do good, . Whether lowly or great ; For the deed is not baught By purse or estate. Life's Changes. Life is not all sunshine, as we find the farther we advance upon its path. At its commencement we start out with sails un furled to the breeze; no fears to mar our demure; Soon the change comes! Soon are we called to battle with life's stormy tides. Then it is we find the world a bit ter-riality;= Its scenes are - diversified.-On one side the gay and brilliant bridal par ty; on the other, the gloomy hears. and its fearful followers. On the other side of the Atlantic may be the smoke and din of a battle field, the flash of musketry,the moans of the dying and all the accompa niments of an awful battle, while here, perchance, is a peaceful, united country Changing, changing, bright hopes and happy realizations, altare-gone:-Oh-,-how much. meaning is conveyed in that little word, gone! Do we not realize it as we follow some near relative to the silent city of the. dead ? Did we not realize too deep ly when our fathers, husbands, and bro thels were buried in soldiers' graveS in the Sunny South ? Childhood, with its simple laugh, youth with its ambition, all that is good, pure and beautiful, all that makes this life oth er than the dullest existence, are chang ing, going. Life is made up of changes, and as the wheel of ever-present time is going round, it brings them about. To some it has brought the last of their school days. School-day-s, happy by-genes I will ye ever be forgot ? On memory's fairest tablet ye are recorded with no blot. Is there one, who reads this, who would, if he could, blot out from remembrance the early school-days? Little incidents are cherished fondly in our hearts, because connected with those welove best on earth, some of whom have met with the kit change, and gone. And so we go, as the years roll round. Soon our life tasks will be completed; soon will we go hence. Go back with me in fancy, to the old farm-house near the large cotton-wood trees. How we long for the years that have passed, years in which we traveled up from the paths of childhood. How we long even for one brief hour of the good old times to come again ; then let us im prove the minutes as they fly, so that when that life change comes, we shall be ready. A River With no Mouth. The Leavenworth, Ind., Democrat re cords the following: Daring this age of discoveries and superstition, it becomes our duty to report a fact, which to those unacquainted with the singular develop ments of the day, may be somewhat dis posed to doubt. But we give it as a posi• tive truth, as related to us by one of the best, citizens in this county, who went and examined it. , It is as follows : Two men, named John E. Stanley and Freder ick h 4 'ennio•er, were employed in, digging a well on the farm of Mr. Benj. Ellis, who resides in Washington county, near the line of Harrison and Washington counties. They] commenced digging in a place where, as they thought, it would be pro bable not to encounter any obstruction in -their search for water. They had pro ceeded hitt a short distance, however, when they encountered a bed of loose "nigger-head" rocks which, upon being broken open, where found to contain water and other substances, supposed to be ore of some kind. When they reached the depth of sixty feet from the surface, they came to a large cave, which they follow ed a distance ten or twelve ft, when there before their gaze, was a beautiful rivet' of clear water, which, upon examination was found to contain an innumerable number of small white fish. Upon a - closer examination it was found to be sixteen feet wide and five in depth, and•as clear and,cold as spring water.— As an experiment a lighted candle was placed upon a piece of plank and set a float. It started of into the darkness with the current and was soon lost to sight. Several persons have visited this great curriosity, and many where the con jectures as to where the water came from and whither it went, but nothing satisfac tory could be arrived at. When Eve brought woe to all mankind, Old Adam called her wo-man, And when she woo'ed with love so kind He then pronounced her woo'rnan. But now with folly, dress and pride, Their husbands' pocket trimming, The ladies are so full of whims The People call them whim-men l "The penalty for walking on a railroad track in England is ten pounds," said one while discussing the numerous fatal acci dents on a railroad. "Pooh !" replied Uncle Jerry, "is that all ? The penalty iu this country is death." WHEN Do MEN DlE ?—Medical expe rience proves that, in chronic disease, the greater number of deaths occur just be fore dawn. This is eminently true of brain disease and of all those related eases where death results from an exhaustion of the vital power through overwork, excessive excitement or mervous prostration. It is at the hour of five o'clock in the morning that the life force is at its lowest ebb, and succumbs most readily to the assult of ep ilepsy, or paralysis, or of the fatal lethar gy that comes in those beautiful picture dreams, for which medical science has as yet found no name, and of which.it has taken no sufficieni, cognizance. Nine-tenths of those who die iu this way, expire in their sleep. In many such cases,if a friend were at hand to waken'the sleeper when the attack comes on, or if he were to awa ken by some accidental noise,he might,by the use of a feW simple precautions, pro long his life for many years ; for the shock which proveS - fatartlithe - nran - wrapped-in deep sleep,. when the system is passive and relaxed, would be victoriously repelled were it armed with all its waking energies. Men who do brain work, and who are on the shady side of forty, should be on their guard against this insidious enemy. They should be ware of five o'clock A. M. for it is a. perilous hour. Do you find yourself unable to sleep, when you retire for the night, exhausted with iyeur days work ? Do.you, in vain turn from one side.to the other? - Does your brain persist in work ing when you would fain have it rest? Do old saws, and scraps of rhyme,repeat them selves in your memory with wearisome it eration, defying your utmost efforts to si lence them ? Then, I say to you, beware ! You will be sure to sleep at last. It is only a question of time; for soon or late, nature will assert her rights. A - GOOD - ENDOBSEE.—When General Jackson was President, a heartless clerk in the treasury department ran up an end less indebtedness with a poor landlady to $6O, and then turned her off, as he did every other creditor. She finally went to the President with her complaint,and ask ed if he could not compel the clerk to pay the bill. "lie offers his note," she said, "but his notes are good for nothing." Said the President : "Get his note and bring it to me." The clerk gave her the note with the jeering request "she would let him know when she got the money on it Taking it to the President, he wrote "An drew Jackson" on the back of it, and told her that she would get the money at the bank. When it became due, the.clerk re fused to pay the note, but when he learn ed who was the endorser, he made haste to raise the "wind." The next morning he found a note on his desk saying that his services were not longer required by the government; and it served him right. Pitts is a sharp business man, and when Pitts goes into a store, to trade he always gets the lowest cash price, and then says: "Well I'll look about, and if I don't find anything that suits me better I'll call and take this." Now quite lately, Pitts said to himself', "I'm getting , rather 'long in years, and guess I'll get married." His business qualities wouldn't let him wait, so off he travels, and calling upon a lady friend, opened the .conversation by re marking that he would like to know what she thought about his getting married.— "Oh, Mr. Pitts," she replied, "that is an affair in which I am not so grately.inter esting, and I prefer to leave it with your self." "But," says Pitts, "you are inter ested, and, my dear girl, will you marry nie ?" - The young lady blushed Very red, hesitated, and finally, as Pitta was very well to do in the world, and morally and financially of good standing in society,she accepted him ; whereupon the matter-of filet Pitts responded, "Well, well, I'll look about, and it' I don't find anybody that suits me better than you,'l'll come hack." THE CARPENTER'S DREAM. - A poor man was a carpenter, and he often said to himself and to others "If I was only rich I would show people how to give." In his dream, he saw a pyramid of silver dollars new, bright and beautiful. Just then voices reached him saying : "Now is your time ! You are rich at last ; let us see your generosity !" So he rose from his seat and went to the 1 He to take. some money for charitable purposes. But the pyramid was so perfect that he could not bear to break it. He walked all around it, but found no place where he could take a dollar without spoiling the heaj. So he decided that the pyramid should' not be broken ! * * * * and then awoke. He awoke to know himself, to see that he tvoule be generous only while com paratively poor. "Sich is nib. I" A Scotchman and Irishman, 'previous to their first battle, agreed that if one was wounded the other was to help, his fellow. It so happened that a bullet wounded the poor Scotchman in .the thigh, so he call ed out to his Irish friend for help. Pad dy lifted him on to his shoßlders and was carrying him to an ambulance, when a cannon ball came and carried awa:itAe poor Scotchmares head, unknown to poOt Paddy, who feeling the "whiz" of theprn; jectile, remarked!' That etas a clostrdnii too." A surgeon, noticed the Irishman carry-. ing his headless burden, asked bon where he was going with it. "Why, share, where should I be going but to the doctor, to have him doctored? replied Paddy. "But my friend do you not see' that he has had his head knocked off by a shot ?" "Oh be gad, so he has !" cried Paddy, when ho had lowered the corpse of-his friend ; "why what a liar thefellow tuft be I He told me it was only a bullet -Ut his leg !" Fools and obstinate people make law yers rich. $2,00 PER YEAR till li3Di ME Wit and atumor, What State is high in the middle and round at both.encis. 0-hi-o. ac Pr e the only ae in the world where a young lady is of "missed" is at home. There it is alw *s plain Susan or Bet. A. lady was lately hugged to death in Minnesota—another illustration .of the. "power of the press." ' The wife is the sun of the social system. Unless she attracts there is nothing to ke,..p heavy bodies, like husbands from .flying into space. 1 1 r unt . Susan says: Suppose all Ethe men were in one coup and all the women in another, with a riv etween them, Good gracious! what 1 of girls would be drowned;" A man swapped his horse fur a wife.— An old bachelor acquaintance said he'd bet there was something wrong with the horse, or its owner never would have fool ed it away in that manner. "How wonderful," exclaims some un known philosopher, "are the laws govern ing human existence ! Were it not for tight lacing-all civilized-countries_ would be overrun with women." Two gentlemen, one named Woodcock, the other Fuller, walking together hap pened to see an owl. Said Faller, "That bird is very much like a Woodcock."— "You are very far wrong,"said Woodcock, "for - it's - Fuller - in the head, Fuller in the eyes, and Fuller all over. A little girl remarked to her mamma on going to bed, "I am not afraid of the dark." "No, of course you are not," replied her mamma, "for it can't hurt you." "But mamma, I was a little afraid once when I went to the pantry in the dark to get a start." "What, were you afraid of?" asked her mamma. `I was afraid I could not find the tarts.' An Irish priest, standing upon a scaf fold, bestowed the following consolation upon a murderer about to be hanged : "May ye niver forget the milencholy tachings of the lisson before ye, an' may the miniery of this interesting occasion last ye long as ye inhabit this world." A physician was going his rounds a mong some small pox patients in a hos pital, and stopping by the bedside of an Irishman, he inquired : "Well, Pat, how are you to-day ?" "Faith sir, I'm better ; but I'm so wake that I should not be surprised at all if some one was to come along and tell,me I was dead." The old man calmly surveyed the scene and with a severely reproachful look he said— "Johannes, your fadder, your. grand , fadder, and great grandfadder all went to de mill with the stone in one end of do pag, and de grist in de (Aden` Lind now you a mere poy, sets 'yourself up to know more as dey do. You put de stone in do pag, and never more let me see such smartness like dat." Extract from a Colored Folks' Hymn Book, used in South Carolina : ; "We's be nearer to de Lord Dan de white folks, and dey know it, See the glory-gate unbarred— Walk in darkeys, past de guard ! Bet yer dollar He wqril close it ! "Walk in darkeys, troo, de gate, Hark, de eullered angles holler: Go away, white folks, you're too late We's de winnin kuller ! Wait Till de trumpet blow to folleor. "Halleleojah ! tanks to praise ! Long 'nuff we've borne our crosses; :Now we'se do superior me, And, with Gorramighty's grace, We's gwine to hebben afore de bosses." A Nrw . one of the New London Northern Railroad Ticket Offices, the other day, a citizen, who had evident ly been fanning the flame of conviviality with the wing of friendship, rapped on the slide of the ticket office, and laying down ten cents, said : "A dhrap of beer, sir, if ye plaze !" "We keep no beer here," sternly repli ed -the agent. "Well, thin, a. dhrap of whisky." "We ke:p no whisky here; we sell on ly bits of pasteboard," was the repl: - . " . .Div if. a bit do I care what it is," said the internationalist. "Give us .a rink of pasteboard, thin.!" They concluded he was drunk. .A..NersTRAL Wrsnom.--In Pennsylva nia, not many years ago, there dwelt the decendants of Peter' Van Schrenbendyke who had cleared his own farin, guarded. .carefully from the attacks of the, Indians, and willed it to his son Jacob. The farm Abfas transmitted in regular order fronl 'l4.lier to son, and at last became the prof , ook of Heindrich Van Schrenbentlyke a;gt* natured, stolid Teuton whose son, •jritif ' , es, a bright, lively youth of six teek os told to saddle the horse and ride to MI, kgrisc and hurry back. The grist:O. .ich occasions placed in one end 1.,:ef.0,•,';'. 4 :nd a large stoma in the other end 40.1rttance it. Johann, having thrown .thilack across. the horse's back and gOi.thegrist evenly divided, had no need'otttle,VAe to balance it,. - Re there fore ran and cried, "Oh fatlieW . : and see; . we. don't need: the stosterviiy_erate,'-1'