tA • ." ) t,.4 A ..0 „ * '5 5 ckw it : ;.? ,p ; r "•-• 1 1 .4 • dt. . 014 foli *, IJ • • a. • • VOLUME 25. .*eltzt Vottrg. - 11Y-KAL. LIFE. 'They shy life is an empty dream, A vain and fleeting show ; Its lights will soon forget to gleam, Its streams of bliss to flow. They write it as a guideless•bark Upon life's boundless sea ; A meteor ray—a single mark . ...Of what doth quickly flee: They say life is a darksome way, With scarce a star to guide ; The•lizhts but flicker, fade Away, Upon the shoreless tide. 'Tis likened to a bliale - of grassy -- - 1 shadow, and a flower; That witherethwhen the whirlwinds pass, Apd lingers but an hour. - And this Alley flay is life—this dream ! But ali rifeannot tie ; _Else why did reason _ on us beam, If thus its bearas..lnust,flie : E' While measurements as mastancl2deep, _ As earth and air,:sre given; (LA ife is-not-a-dreamy—sleep,__ But half of earth and heaved. I deem not aught that God hath made, A vain or useless thing; Even though its dowers quickly fade, Each (loth a new hope bring.. ___Tkon_let, us pray for strength to Our-feeble- And look w•l EM=ISOMi Beyond this earthly night COOD•BY. , W. EMERSON. Cood-by, proud world! I'm going home; Thou art not my mind, and I'm not shine. Long through thy weary crowds I roam ; A river-ark on the ocean brine. Long I've been tossed like the driven foam; But now, proud world! I'm going home. Good-by to flattery's fawning face ; To grandeur with his wise grimace; To upstart wealth's averted eye; To supple office, low and high ; To crowded hails, to court and street; To frozen hearts and basting feet; To those who goand those who come— Good-by, proud world, I'm going home. lain going to my own hearth-stone, Bosomed in yon green hills alone— ecret nook in a pleasant lam', Whose groves the frolic faries planed; "Whose arches green, the livelong day, Echo the blackbird's roundelay. And vulgar feet have never trod— A spot that is sacred to thought and God. Oh, when I am safe in my sylvan home, I tread on the pride of Greece and Rome! And when I'm stretched beneath the pines, Where the evening star se holy shines, I laugh at the lore and pride of man, At the sophist schools, and the learned clan: For what are they all, in their high conceit, When man in the bush with God may meet? Bis . ttilatteous 'gtading. I''l • 3(13 r s) ;A Szfl BY ABIIY SAGE niculunsox All families have their own private and personal traditions. Ours—proba bly because so many generations of us have been born and died by the . sca.—are always of shipwreck. In all the stories told in my childhood, in the twilight, or by the winter lire, I scarcely remember one that has not for its central porat of interest the figure of a lost, dismantled ship, with many freighting souls, within her, going down in black, angry waters. The first shipwreck I remember to have heard about, for many years tinged my childish dreams with some of the hues of its own melancholy. It was that of my own granfather, who sailed away from Salem harbor, Massachusetts, one bright summer morning, many, many years be fore I was born. He was a vigorous, handsome man, they said, and walked his ship's deck like an emperor. From the long wharf; running into the harbor —then so full of life and bustle, now so dead to all the stirrings of commerce—my grandmother, holding her little son by the hand, looked her last upon the re treating sails, after the form of her hus band had blended with his ship. And from the moment that her eyes thus bade him firrewell, it is not known that any mortal eyes ever beheld the doomed ves sel again. In the language of the story, as I heard it—listening with a vague, childish awe, "neither ship, nor captain, nor any of the men were ever seen or heard of afterward." There were many conjectures about , their fate. One I remember. was that ' some revengeful British man-of-war had found the lonely merchantman on the high seas, and had burned her to the wa ier's edge. For it was just after the peace of the war of 1812 that my grand 'father sailed on this ill fitted voyage, and au my of his good friends thought then ;Mat pirates and Britisher were words of Ilk same coin. There was a report also which somewhat aided this conjecture ; how a Boston captain coming from a long cruise, had passed, one night, far out at sea, the hull of a burning vessel, and sailing cautiously around to find, if he could see, any living man about her sides a sudden burst of flame had lighted up Ler _ fi,,uredhead_ and showed him the name of the missing ship. No living creature was seen or heard near her, and the story, as it was told, sounded so dim and unreal, that it seemed like little more than a fancy of his who told it.— • • l ested the ho le that some of the ship's crew, had got a way in boats, and that they might some time be heard from. The hope" haddied out many years before I heard the story, but it revived in my childish brain, and fir many years I had a secret fancy that the old man, whose hair and beard had turned silver gray in the long sad years, was waiting on some solitary isle, like Alexander Selkirk, for a friendly ship .ke to ta.. nim home. Many a time ail-Ilk-bli the story over, my heart has beat raptur ously at the thought of the welcome I ' would give the tired shipwreck wanderer, - and - my-immagination has throbbed with_ visions of the strange stories his exile I would be rich in. — Thou - was another-shipwreck, which fascinated nre strongly, although it had none of the mystery in its tragic ending _which gave- the last such a hold on my imagination. The hero - Of this - ale - was -the-husbaud_of_a_great Mint of mine, who in _ spite,of her venerable title wears an immortal halo of youth and beauty in my fancy. She.was a bride—a bride of hard six=months'— duration-when_lier hus- and sailed out of one of the ,n-the—llfassachusetts coast _ leavinc , her in a village that nestles down there ify tT black sea. Up to this day tradition has .notlorgetten what a blythe, sweet voice she had, and what bonny brown hair. A month or two_after_the_ve4qPi went qwny —she was only - a - c - oast - trading-schooner —a sudden sea storm came up; and while the anxiousdlvdlers - ort - shore-- were wait ing to see the fleet of startled fish boats outside the harbor come in for safe an chorage, _they all at once descried this schooner beating in upon some sharp rocks, only a mile or two from shore. It was so fhr but all eyes on land could see every motion of the stricken vessel. j For hours they watched her, till the cruel rocks had gored her through and through, and the last plank, with its help less, struggling freight, had gone under the boiling surge. With the other watch ers on shore stood the happy bride of six months, her beautiful hair streaming in the salt wind, and her sweet voice hoarse with anguish as she cried to earth and heaven for help for that sinking boat. "And although up to that time her hair had never showed a single thread of gray," so ran the story in my girlish car, "and though she was barely twenty-four years old when she saw her husband's vessel go down so cruelly under her poor eyes, iu less than a week from the day she saw him drown her hair had turned as whitens drifted snow." She never married again, although her voice grew blithe once more, and made cheerful music in the homes of her many kinsfolk, till her face grew old to match the bleached hair. Another of my shipwrecks has a flavor of India's coral strand. It is of another kinswoman who went on a long voyage with her husband, He was an East In dia merchant, bound to China.and the ports of Calcutta and Bombay. .J-Ie had a little boudoir fitted up on board his ship for her, to whose furnishing all foreign . lands had been made tributary, and there she abode many months iu the voyage through tropical waters, as choicely taken care and waited upon as the queen of ma ny at large realm. Somewhere off the Malay peninsula a typhoon struck the vessel, and whirled it upon some sharp locks, where she lay im paled and helpless. Fortunately they were not far from land, and in the ship's boat they reached a flat, low-lying shore, with a thick, green jungle only a few rods back from the sea. Here the captain landed his wife, her pet dog, and a few animals from the ship's live stock, which he had not the heart to leave on board to perish. Then, leaving her one of the ship's boys for protection, he took his boats and crew, and went back to the wreck, which still held first to the rocks, to see if he could save the most valuable part of his mer chandise. In the.full glare of the burning sun, beating down on that white.strip of sea beach, the captain's wife waited, not dar ing to seek the delicious shads of the jun gle,lest there might be wild beasts or dead ly malaria lurking in its green fitstiness. As dark drew near, and the boats did not return, the• two or three goats and jigs who had been saved from the ship, wan dered from the beach, and were seized up on by two huge tigers, who rushing upon them from their covert in the jungle ; clutched and bore their prey away with them. Imagine the horor of the lady and the ship's boy, who were near enough to the .monsters to see the yellow glare of their fierce eyes. The little dog, as if he had a human sense of danger,-would not approach the jungle, but ran up and down the beach for hours, in a little circuit close about his mistress, uttering all the time a sharp, quick bark, which she always be lieved helped to frighten the wild animals away. Perhaps the feline part of them was awed by the bark of even so small a canine ; perhaps they did not care to at tack human beings. At any rate,although, the tigers appeared twice or thrice to take away the pigs and goats, they made • no motion to approach the lady and fright ened boy. When the boats returned with the best part of the ship's cargo safe, they made huge fires on the hot sand to keep away the beasts, and slept soundly in their boats, drawn up on the shore. The next - U • ;."'" Il V.M. I I 4 1 4 1 _1"7 4 k 1 / 4 0 ;.; k WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1872. day they sought-oura—native-towni—and shortly after found an American ship, which took them back to Boston harbor again. I think it was of an uncle of hers that my grandmother used to tell a story of shipwreck,which always made us cry. All the preliminary circumstances have fad ed from our memory up to the fact that a crowded boat load of men were afloat up on the ocean without water, and without food. They had'gnawed to rags the lea ther of their shoes' soles, and the leather of their belts. A friendly rain, whose Td - _ AessCmoss - their handkerchiefs and clothing, had kept them from going mad with thirst while they lay thus for days on a becalm ed and dreadful ocean. Now hunger had begun to get the better of the braves of them, and at first with hints, and finally with spoken words it had been made known that one.must die to furnish food for the others.* ' They cast lots for him, and it ihil--onAhe-elder-of two-h others, who was a married man and had a wife and five' small children at home. The then youn ger brother, who had no tie to hold him to life, except the brave love of it, be sought his eider brother to let him die in his stead, and reminded him so movingly °tithe wife and babies who were his cause to live, .eliti•eating' all - his - other - comrades . to accept him as the substitute for a life better worth preserving than his own,that even - the-hunger-maddened-men e r e_ moved to tears, and the dew of a blessed iiityMT)istafed - the - fever - of - theirparched brains. And while they paused, a sail ap peared on the horizon, neared them with the help of a fresh upspringing breeze, rtial - before - tWiNWWV.sGtTd;:they=were_ - safe and succored on board a vessel which Yo - re them swiftly - home.—This-sounds like an incident from an old black letter book of voyages, yet my grandmother had it from the lips of him who was one of the moes_ofAhe_stor_ There_are_so.man ing the past with visions of shipwreck, that they make the crawling hungry ocean seem like a great charnel house with aisles of graves hidden ender its arching billows. No beauty in it at best, but the :cruelest thing in all nature, even - when it lies most peaceful and serene under the smiling sky. A thousand ghosts from the old winter's tales rise up, hardly to be laid, whenever I think of it, but I conjecture them down, and end with a little incident of shipwreck, which happened only a few years ago, while the civil war was raging among us. The story was told me by a friend whose sister sailed on a steamer bound for the Pacific coast. They were wrecked just off Florida, on Roncanda.r Reef. On a part of this reef, only a little above,,sea-level, and so nearly submerged that a violent storm might lash the waves over the wretched foothold they found there, three hundred people clung to a bare hope of safety. They had somethtno• to eat, a meager allowance, and they had constant hope of being seen by vessels, which were sure to pass that way. Thus they drag ged through the dreadful week till succor reached them in the form of a United States steamer of Farragoes fleet, which came to take them off. During this time a ba by had been born,there on this bald reek, and named from it, Roncadora, in com pliment to the poor succor whichlthe reef had given the mother in her bitter travail. When the steamer found them out, and the officers and men from the fleet came to bear the ship-wrecked sufferers on board, they were so weakened by missery and want of food that the strongest men were like babies, and had to be carried away, in the strong arms of the sailors. The shipwreck interested me greatly, and I cherished it too as one in which no one I had known had suffered any part. A year later I was telling it to a little company, among whom wavily stalwart cousin, who sailed in Admiral Farragues fleet, the youngest officer among them all; As I spoke he started up crying—" That wad .111 Y steamer. We helped those poor creatures off the reef: I carried in my arms to the ship's boat, men who were too weak to walk even in the excitement of being saved." And with many graphic words he told anew the story of the res— cue ; how shipwrecked men and women shed tears of joy on the breast of their pre servers; and bow tenderly the sailors nur sed them, till they could bring them safe to land. Com Dow, FATIIER.--Some one has paraphrased the song "Dear Father Come Home," as follows : Oh, Father dear fa ther, come down with the stamps, my dressmaker's bill is unpaid—she said she would send it right home from the shop, as soon as the flounces were made. My new dress from---is down in thif ball, the boy will not leave without pay—l've nothing to sport with-can't go to the ball, so please send the shop boy away ! Come down ! come down ! Please father, dear fa ther, come down ! Oh, hear the sweet voice of thy child, who cries in her room alone; oh, who could resist her most beautiful tears ? So, father, with stamps you'll come down: Oh,. father, dear father come down with the stamps, my curls are not fit to be seen—the hair-dresser said be could not do them up unleSs I could pay him fifteen —he only asks twenty to give a new set, and take the old hair in exchange— besid es, Pa. my waterfall's awfully rough, and so my back hair will look strange. Come down ! come down? Please father, for Bri tain come down ! If God should put suddenly into mon ey, or its representative, the power to re turn to its rightful owner ; there is not a bank or a safety deposite that would not have its sides blown out; and parchments would rip, and gold would shoot, and mortgages would rend, and beggars would get horses, and stock gamblers would go to the almshouse.—Rev. T. D. Talmage. y of these stories crowd- = = 43es-to-let-Married . A Yankee old bachelor was once banter ed on the subject of matrimony by a young girl, who told him she didn't believe he ever found.a woman who'd have him. "Yes, I did," replied he, " I had three chances to get married, and they all "bus ted," so I never tried a fourth." "Pray how was that ?" inquired the young lady. "Why, you see, I courted Deacon Haw kin's darter , Deborah—Deb, they used to call her—and so one night we made it up between us to get married. Well, while e-were-going-to-the-parson's, I accident ly slouched my foot into a mud 'puddle And spattered mud• all over Deb's new gown; it was made out'n one of her grand mother's chintz petticoats, and she was so proud at' the rig that she got mad as hops. Wa'al, when we got to the parson's the ceremony began, and he asked Deb if she would take me for her lawful wedded hus band. "No !" • says she ; "I've• taken a mislikin' to him since I left home 1" "The parson laughed, and so did his wife and darter, who had come in to see the ceremony, and I felt streaked as thun— der, while Deb went off in a miff: "Wa'al, it was all up, of course, for the time being: but I was determined to have somesatisfaction for such mean treatment, to - shine - up - toher -- again-;--I r - again -; - gin her a new string of beads, a few kis ses and some other notions until finally _we _made it all up,and_welffent to_the son's a second time. We was stood out -in the middle of the room and he ax'd me if I would take the Deborah for my law ful wedded wife? "No!" said I, "I've ta ken a mislikin' to her since I was here imt_r "This was a stunner for poor Deb, who turned white as-a-sheet,and-the-parson's wife ran for her smellin' salts. I began to relent a; little when I saw how she took it ; but it proved only to be nanutes more she was skittiu away for home, live- ly as a cricket. "It was some weeks before I could bring round the gal agin to let me spark her, and it proved rather an expensive job,too, for I had to buy her a span new caliker gown which cost hard on four dollars:— That fbehed her and made a sure thing of it. So we went a third time to the par son's expecting to be tied so fast that all natur' couldn't separate us. We ax'd him to begin the ceremony, , as everything was all right now. 'I shunt do any such. thing!' said he,"for I've taken a mislikin' to both of you since you were here last. • "Thereupon Deb burst out a crying, and the parson's wife she burst out a laugh ing, and - the parson burst out a scolding; and I burst out the front door and put for home. Next day, hearing that Deb had licked the parson and pulled out nearly all his wife's hair, I concluded that my chances with such a filly - buster would be rather squally, so I let hsr slide." Romantic Marriage. At noon yesterday an event of unusual interest took place at the Home for the Friendless—the marriage of Judson P. Es may, a conductor on the Northwestern Road, to Martha Arlingdale, one of the pupils in the Industrial School. - As nearly as can be ascertained, the history of Miss Arlingdale is as follows : Her father was an officer in the rebel ar my, and was killed in 1864, and her mo ther died - shortly afterward, at Helena,— She was brought to Plainfield 111., by Capt. James Baker, of the Union army, and for six months had a home in his fam ily, when she was sent to the Home for the Friendless in this city. Having been taught to read and to sew, she was adop ted into a family at Clinton, lowa, but the death of her benefactor caused her to be returned to the Home. On her way thither she attracted the attention of her future husband, who :placed her in the hands of Mrs. Grunt and Miss Bowman, and requested permission to visit her.— For two and a half years he has watched over his protege, only to claim her yester day as his bride. Mrs. Esmay is sixteen years of age, pe tite in figure, and a brunette with flashing black eyes. She has been fairly educated, is amiable in temperament, and was a general favorite with the lady managers of the Home. Mr. Esmay is twenty-nine years old, bears a high character, and has two broth ers in this city who are greatly esteemed. A wedding based .upon such romantic circumstances necessarily created a great sensation. For some time the lady Direc tors of the Home have been preparing for the event, and . the fair bride was forced to accept an outfit at the hands of those whose hearts she had reached. The ar rangements for the dress were made by Mrs. Perry H. Smith, Mrs. Edward Ely, and Mrs. H. M. Buell,and material there of was contributed by several parties.— Mrs. William C. Dow decorated the re ception-rooms with flowers, and Mrs. Mar tin Andrews sent the bridal bouquet. The ceremony took place at noon in the reading-room, Elder Boring officiat ing, in the presence of a large number of ladies. The bridesmaids were eighteen girls from the Industrial School. The bride wore a drab traveling dress, gloves, and veil, and a white hat trimmed with drab, and relieved by rose-colored ribbons. In her left hand was an elegant bouquet. The groom was attended by his two broth ers. On the conclusion of the ceremony, Elder Boring presented a Bible, When the party repaired to the residence of the el der brother, and last evening repaired to Oak Park, to spend the' honeymoon vithlk a relative.—Chicago Tribune, May 3. It is said that one green tarleton dress contains arsenic enough to kill a man; and vet men don't seem to be afraid to go nearl green tarleton dresses. . The world strethces, widely before you, A field for your music and brain ; And though clouds may often float o'er you, And often come tempests and rain; Be fearless of storms that overtake you— Push forward through all like a man— Good fortune will never forsake you If you do as near right as you can. ReMember, the will to do rightly, Huse& will the evil confound ; Live daily by conscience, that nightly Your sleep may be peaceful and-sound. In contests of right never waver— Let honesty shape every plan, And life will of Paradise savor, If you will do as near right as you can. Though foes darkest scandal may speed And strive with their shrewdest of tact To injure your fame, never heed, But justly and honestly act: And ask of the Ruler of Hem en To save your fair name as a man, And all that you ask will be given, If you do as near right as you can. Stupid People. A number of the The Saturday Jour iiattsiys : — "I - think-stupid-persons take of Nature." This is a very savage indictment of Nature, which generally knows-what it is doing, as well as agy body. When there are so many stupid people, most of whom enjoy themselves to the utmost, it is not kind to speak illy of them. Let us consider a few of them. Take the, profane map. He imagines that profanity is an evidence of smart bass and superiority ; that using the name of - his-Maker-vainly-elevates—him_in_the_ estimation of others. How grossly stu pid ! • Remark him who makes lone tiresome prayers in public places, wears sanctimo nious airs and sniffles daily. He suppos- es that such con' uct cowmen s im o his neighbors as an extra good man. He cannot realize that common sense reads his character as clearly as one reads • a street sign. The gambler, who usually dressing in purple and fine linen, supposes that the advice once given by a dying man to his sons, is good morality. "Finally, my sons, get money. Get it honestly if you can, but get money." He lives by ly ing, trickery and cheating, never think ing he will die "as the fool dieth." Stu pid ! Stupid ! But is he any more stupid than the money-grasping man who puts on .the "livery of the court of heaven," if not to serve the devil in, at least to cover his bad deeds from the sight of man, and to hoodwink his Maker—very likely at last leaving his dishonest gains to religious and charitable institutions ! His stupid ity is so great that he does not know that his character is an open book to be read of men as well as by God ! Then there is the man who vociferates his views on all possible occasions, and lifts up his voice like a braying ass, es pecially when he ought not to be so, un der the impression that he has a large in fluence. Well, perhaps he has ; but it is directly opposite to what he supposes. The hard-drinker, the idler, the spend thrift, the common slanderer, the two penny rascals must all think they are promoting their own happiness. Th,ir stupidity is' unfathomable ! But we need not extend the list. We will only add that if stupid persons are a mistake of Nature,_ it would not be safe to rectify the mistake all at once. The shock to the human family would destroy half the institutions and objects of the world, and brim , moral chaos in every community.—Geneva Courier. Amusing Scene on a Street Car. The Washington Star says: The passen gers on one of the Riker's street cars laughed some yesterday morning at a scene between the conductor and a well dressed young man from Georgetown. As the car was passing down the avenue, the young man at the time standingron the platform taking it easy, with one foot on a trunk, he was approached by the conductor and his fare demanded. He quietly passed o ver his five cents. Conductor: I demand twenty-five cents for that trunk. Young man (hesitatingly): twenty-five cents ? Well, I think I will not pay it. Conductor: Then I shall put the trunk off. Young man : You had bet ter not, or you may be sorry for it. Conductor pulls strap, stops ear, dumps trunk on the avenue, starts car, and after going some twc squares, approaches the young man, who was as still and calm as a Summer morning, and in an angry mood says: "Now I have put your trunk oil; Wliat are you going to do about it ?" Young man (coolly,)—Well I don't p ro pose to do anything about it; it's no con cern of mine; it wasn't my trunk. Con ductor (fiercely,)—Then why didn't you tell me so? Y. M.—Because you did not ask me, and I told you you'd be sory for it. C. (furious.)—Then o inside the car. Y. M.—Oh no ! you're good enough com pany for me out here. At this juncture a portly German e merges from the car, and angrily says, "Mine Cott ! you feller, where is mine drunk ?" Y. M.—My friend, I think that is your trunk down on the avenue there. German.—Who puts'him off? I have the monish to pay for him.. I see about dot. The ear was stopped, and shortly after wurds the conductor was seen to come sweating up with the trunk on his back— a part of the performance he did not ea. joy half as well as did the passengers. Hourace Greeley's father was a poor' fanner. So is Horace, 'OII CAN. A rich, old gentleman bad only one daughter, possessed of the highest attrac tions. moral, personal and pecuniary. She was engaged and devotedly attached to a young man in every respect worthy of her choice. All the marriage preliminaries were arranged, and the wedding was fixed to take place on a certain Thursday. On the Monday preceding the wedding-day the bride and groom elect (who was to have received $50,000 down on his wed ding-day, and a further sum of 400,000 on his father-in-law's death, an event -which-would-proon_occur) had a_ little jealous squabble with his intended at the evening party. The "tiff" arose in consequence of his paying more attention than she thought justifiable to a lady with sparkling eyes and inimitable ringlets. The gentleman retorted, and spoke tauntingly of a certain cousin whose waist coat was the admiration of the company, that it had been embroidered by the fair heiress herself. He added that it would be soon enough for him to be schooled af ter they were married; and that she adopt ed the "breeches". a little too soon. After the supper they became reconciled appar ently, and the bridegroom elect, in taking leave, was kind ,au affectionate. On the next morning the swain regretted the an gry feeling he-had-exhibited; andrthe cut-, ring sarcasm with which he he had given it vent ; and, of a part of the amendo hon orable, packed up a magnificent satin dress which he had previously bespoke for his beloved' (which had been sent home in the interval), and - sent it to the lady with the following note: "Dearest Jane: I have been unable to close my eyes all night, in thinking of our misunderstanding last evening. Pray -pardon-me_;_and,in_token.of your forgive ness, deign to. accept the accompanying dress, and wear it for the sake of your _mostaffeetionatedient " Having written the note, he gave it to his servant to deliver with the parcel. But, as a pair o pan a oons — h - api • e • • repairing, he availed himself of the oppor tunity (the servant having to pass the tailor's shop) to send them in another package to"the tailor. The man made the fatal blunder ! left the satin dress with Snip, and took the note and the damaged trowsers to the lady. So exasperated was she that she determined it a deliber ate affront, and when her admirer called she ordered the door to be closed in his face, refused to listen to any explanation, and resolutely broke off the match. WoNnEats.—Lewinbecic tells us of an inFect seen with a microscope, of which twenty-seven millions would only equal a mite. Insectn•of various kinds may be seen in the cavities of a grain of sand. Mold is a, forest of beautiful trees, with branches, leaves and fruit Butterflies are fully feathered. Hairs are hollow tubes. The surface of our bodies is covered with scales, like a fish ; a single grain of sand would cover one hundred and•flfty of these scales, and yet a scale covers five hundred pores. Through these nar row openings the perspiration forces it self, like water through a sieve. The mites take five hundred steps a second. Each drop of stagnant water contains a world of animated beings, swimming with as much liberty as whales in the sea. Each leaf has a colony of insects graz ing on it like cows in a meadow. ?Moral.—Have some care as to the air you breathe, the food you eat, and the water you drink.—Home am/ Health. FAIR PLAY.—Hearth and Home talks thus to boys : "Fair play in play is the foundation for fair play in life. To play unfairly is to steal. By the rules of the game, you have cek tain rights and your opponent has rights. These rights like all rights, are Of the nature of property. If you take the slightest advantage to which you are not entitled, you are to that extent—well, thief is a hard word to use. But I will let you or any other conscientious boy say what one is who takes that which does not belong to him, and thus infringes on the rights of another. "The boy who plays fairly is sure to make an honorable man. I . should not like to say that the boy who plays unfair ly will grow to be a rogue. But I will say that the boy who takes unfair advan tages in a game shows a weak moral na ture and cannot be depended on in a pinch." PUNISHMENT OF ENVY.—An eastern potter, it is said, became envious of the property of a washerman, and to ruin him, induced the king to order him to wash one of his black elephants white, that he might be "lord of the white ele phant," which in the East is quite a dis tinction. The washerman replied that, by the rule of bis art, he must have a vessel large enough to wash him in. The king ordered the potter to make him such a vessel. When made it was crushed by the first step of the elephant.in it. Many times was this repeated; and the potter was ruined by the very sceme he, had iutendea should crush his enemy. When a woman falls from virtue to dirt, or even "suspicions," the tongue of every woman will run with lightninc , speed to assist in rushing her down the hill. When these same women meet a man who is a.,"dobauelice" in every sense of the word, whose - reputation as a dis honorable scoundrel is well established, they will smile and do "the pretty" to the best of their ability. Who can tell why such is the ease? It is indeed a ra rity to find charity in woman tin wo man. A Laughable Love Stoiy $2,00 PER YEAR Mfil Why is a man never knocked down a gainst his will ? Because it is impossible to fall unless inclined'. Massa, Christopher Columbus was a queer man," said a negio orator. "A notion crossed him one day, and den he crossed an ocean. The youth who stole, a watch and re turned it to the owner , who promised "no questions asked," is in jail. The owner was as good as his woht - he arrested—the— youth without asking any questions. "How far shall this excruciating un certainty go, Adelaid, my beloved?' said a gallant youug Romeo to his pretty sin liet, the other evening. "Go to—father," was the prompt and satisfactory reply. An Indiana land owner lately leased one of his farms, stipulating that tobacco should not be raised on it, saying he wa "dead set against tobacker, and nun o the pizen stuff should be raised on hi sile." "Can you change a two dollar bill ?" said an impecunious drinker to a bar•ten der. • —"Yes."-----"lVellrwhen-l-get=a-twa dollar bill I'll bring it in." A man named Wells, having stepped upon a quicksand in the river near Browns ville, instantly sank out of sight, where upon one of the companions remarked, "That's a new way of sinking wells." Two young men, hunting on the St. Se bastian river, near St. Augustine, Fla., the_other_dav,_ pro • osed to set down upon - a certainlog to rest, but changed their= minds when they fonnd it to be a lively viligator. Engagement bracelets are the last no velty. Thy • . •• I ~ i .• - arms as soon as papa has given his con sent, and then locked on by a small gold key. Thompson is not going to have any thing more to do with conundrums. He he recently asked his wife the difference between his head and a hogshead, and she said there was none. He says that is not the right answer. Josh Billings says : Skunks are called pole kats bekause it iz not convenient tew kill them with a klub, but with a pole, and the longer the pole the more convenient. Writers on natural history, disagree about the length ov the pole tew be us ed, but i would suggest that the pole be 365 feet, especially if the wind iz in fa vor *ow the pole kat. "La me !" sighed Mrs. I.Parting,ton, "here I have been suffering the bigamies of death for three mortal weeks. First I was seized with a bleeding phrenology in the left hampshire of the brain, which was exceeded by a stoppage of the left ventilator of the heart. This gave mo an inflamation in the borax, and now I'm sick with chloroform morbus. There is no blessiu' like that of.health, particular ly when you're ill." WASN'T FOND OF SWEET THINGS.- During the late rebellion, a nutn out West, in a small gathering of friends, was urging upon their minds the importance of enlisting : "Go, my brave friends," said he ; "fight for your country—die for it, if it is ne cessary ; 'for it is sweet to die for our na tive land." "But," said one, "if it is sweet to die for one's country, why don't you go:" This was a poser, and for a moment disconcerted him, but rallying, he repli ed that he, as an individual, "was not fond of sweet things." A Newport correspondent tells of a loving couple in a railroad car : "The presumption is, they had "tunneled" be fore but it had been in the daytime, when the darkness of the tunnel was advanta geous. On this occasion :it was after nightfall, and the candles were burning. The male lover for miles had been talk ing tunnel, us if deeply interested in that underground passage, and his love evi dently understood the allusions. At last the train thundered into the tunnel, and the lovers indulged in one of those hear ty salutations that are made to be felt, but nut to be seen by indifferent • specta tors. Of course dui car-loud exploded, while the impulsive swain tipologitied 'to his Dulcinca with the unsatisfactory ex clamation, uconfouud the lumps, I didn't think of them." Sonic fellow mortal with a just appre ciation of the great sin of cheating the printer s and a 'audible desire to reform. the world, get off the lidlowiug : The Ulan who elleatS the printer - Out of a :single cent, Will never redch that heavenly land. • 11here old Eli.l;.lk went.. lie will not gain adinTance Mete; By devils he'll lie driven, ,f - And made to loaf his thee away Outside the walls of lwaven. Wit Wait a man to greet him, Without a pleasant grin, The luipp.n.vss that he will reap Will be almighty ttii.u. He'll have to eat the thistle• Of sorry anAl regret, have to buck around right smart With cussedness, "Yon het!" NUMBER 2 M a r.