MY , BLAIR, . , A kAAlll l T,3slrol o .l4,l l pl.4o#l*E)Clieq, , l*44#ltE ? : LOCAL AND GETIMPLA.L . ' NE'W'S. VOLUM 25. Ailed poen!. A LETTER TO SASTA CLAUS, BY BIIILY HUNTINGDON )TILLER. Blessed old Santa Claus! king of delights, Wile are youOqingtheselong winternighte Filling your rinig,t‘with trinkets and toys, IVepilerfnl gifts,for : the girls and,boye • Wale yon:are planning for everyttiing,niee, Ilray,.let me give you a:hlt, of advice. Don't•take it, bard, if I say in youx..ear, you were partia Loading the richlolks with everything gay: Snubbing theimor ones who came in your Now, of all timeßin the yearTl aid sur This is the time t.p.remember the poor Plenty. of . children there are in, our city Who. have no fathers or mothers to -play. ; Plenty of people whose working and heeding Scarcely can•k:eep all their, dear i ones from " needing • Now,•if I came,every yearin December, They are the ones I would surely remember. Little red•hands . , that are aching and cold, You , should,h4ve mittens your fingers to • hold ; Poor little feet..with'your frost-bitten toes, —You should be clothed in warmest of hose; On the dart h - e - tirth 7 would.ig t, Till the sad faces were happy andobright. Don't von think, Santa, if, all your -life • through, Some one had always been caring for you, Watching to guard you T by-night - and - brilay; Giving, you gifts you could never repay, Sometimes, at least, you wrml4l cioh to ca_ HoNv,many children have nothing at all? Safe-in your quiet chamber at night, Cosy and warm-in your blankets so white, Wouldn't you think of the shivering form, Out in the cold, and ihn wind, and the storm? Wouldn't you think of the-babies who cry. Pining-in hunger and cold, till they die ? • Once on a•beautiful Christmas, you know, Jesus, our Saviour, -was born here below ; Patiently F tooping to hunger and pain, So He might save us, His lost ones, from shame ; Now, it we love Him, He bids us to feed All,His poor brothers and sisters who need Blessed old Nick! I was sure if you knew it, You would remember and cirtainly do it ; This year at least, when you empty your . . • pack, Pray give a portion to all who rimy lack, Then, if you chance to have anything over, Bring a small gift to your friend, Till TIDB DF DEATH, The tide rolls on, the tide of death. The never ceasing tide That sweeps the pleasures from our hearts And loved ones from our side. That brings' afflictions to onr lot, And anguish and despair; And hears from youth's unruffled brow The charms that lingered there. The tide rolls on, wave after wave, It's Swelling waters flow ; Before it all is bright and fair. Behind it all:is .woe. The infant from•its mother's breast, The gay and blooming bride, Are swept away and borne along By that resistless tide. The tide rolls on, the soldier's eye Grows dim beneath the swell. The scholar shuns the mystic lore, That he bath loved so well ; The monaach puts the crown aside, And labor's weary slave Beloices that his limbs will know The quiet of the,grave. The tide rolls on ; like Summer's brooks It &Meth to the sad; 'But like dark Winter's angry tide, It rusheth to the glad. From kingly hall, to lowly cot, From battle field and hearth, It sweeps into oblivious sea The dwellers of the earth. Roll on thou dark and turbidWavc, . Thou can'st not bear away The record of the good and brave, That knoweth not decay. Tho' fierce may rush the billow's strife, Though dee p thy current be. Still faith shall lift thy beacon high, And guide us through thy sea. Stistetlaucour) Patting. Outwitting a Bachelor. BY MRS. FLORA A: RALLY. We were up to our ears house-cleaning, amidst the noise and din ,we felt almost as if it were necessary to hold on to our heads, lest we lose them, as we seemed to be losing everything else. There were masons and carpenters down stairs, and up stairs were paper hangers and painters, while Bridget and her as sistants were present here and there, and everywhere. I remember I had on a faded calico and a huge gingham apron, and, with a cloth in ri►y hand, was engaged in the,lau: &Me pultuit of rubbing a window clean, when I saw' John coming up the street with my brother. Nothing very serious in that, I hear c 0 112 one say, Well perhaps ; not, to you; • but my .brother was the most fastidious of mortals, and abhorred . house-cleaning above all things else. He kept his suite of rooms is a,certain hotel in a city East, and, when it became an absolute necessity that they .should be cleaned, he packed his valise .and took a little pleasure-trip; coming back' in' time 'to find everything the per fection of good orderand,neatness. Ent he was a handsome, broad-should ered fellow, cheerful and good natured and was proud of him--as I well could be—,and mourned very much because he mas,.,so wedded to his bachelor's life. yc l u see, John and I 'were very. happy together, and my pet drgam had been that,brother Will would see me, and envy us enough to,go and do likewise ;„ bUt - he had • 't • uite _otten overlis idea that wives an ouse-c eaning invariably go together, and : this visit—in the muss that we were now—would effectually put an end to all -drenming r and-strengthen Ails_prejuclice_ enad. last year, Nevertheless, I tried to see on y • e best side of the matter, and gave him a true .sisterley, hugging, that he returned with interest, and for a minute or so,,in our delight at seeing each other,. I doubt if he noticed. he carpetless floor, the cheer less walls, or the board that held mortar, and the shayings 'and tools that always accompany a carpenter. Not five minutes after however. wbile I Was reading a letter John had brought me from one of my school girls friends -I hadn't been married long enough'to have forgotten them—l heard Will say,'in that positive manner of his :- -- "It is all very—well, John,for you-to talk, now that you are married and can't help yourself;' but, as for Pe, I would be strung up. head downwards, an fed on bread and water, before I 'would marry the best woman that ever wore petticoats." "It would-make-a-difference-ithe-wore pants, I suppose ?" • "Your let my lady, or you would not find time to interrupt us," he returned loftily. "As I was saying, John, if I really could make up my mind to marry any one, it would certainly. be the inevitable Bridget, .who could ,do her own work, attend to her house-cleaning without any of my assist ance, and never question my doings or my goingslct them be what•or where they would. or or "We can't forget, brother Will, that ,you do not speak from experience. Look out that we 4n't cry `sour gra' es,' with some reason," said John, with a laugh. "Sour grapes, indeed! Well, say as you please, my shoulders are broad enough to bear it ; but truth, you as well as I know that there is not onc, household out of a •hundred but what have their skeleton hid away—in the forin of trouble—that the world wots not of." "Possibly,. but Lizzie and I haven't found our skeleton yet." "Only two years married ! Wait un til you can talk of ten or fifteen, and then see if 'you can't find a skeleton to disturb , the'quiet of your conjugal felicity." "You are a skeptic, brother, - don't de-' serve a wife, anyway. I prophesy for you a long walk through the • swamp, and a crooked stick alter all." He laughed merrily, as I started to see if at least one room could not be made comfortable for his lordship. After tea, which was served in tolera ble good order, considering the general state of things, and John and Will - had gone.down street, as men.always will of an evening, I fell to' cogitating ogta very perplexing subject. My letter that afternoon announced the coming of my intimate friend, Jennie Janison ; and anxious as I had always been to have her visit me, and especially to Meet my ln other, I Was iu disniaY at the thought of her coming now ; but a moment later I concluded - that it Would Knry CLOVER be wiser to accept the inevitable with as much grace as possible. There was a sigh or two smothered, for like all young housekeepers, I A'as desir ous of having my home the perfection of good order and neatness, with no jarring in the domestic machinery ; but sturdy common sense told me that everybody had to endure house-cleaning at one time or another, and if my friends chose to come at such a time, they must accept the situ ation as best suited to theni. I had scarcely settled the matter in my own 'mind when a cab drove up to the door, and Jenny—fresh and blooming as when we parted two years ago—came run ning up the steps. I was quite as glad to see her as though ohe had been,. a sister, and told her so-o ver and over again, while she pinched my cheeks and assured me I was as rosy as a girl, though I was an old married woman: But all this school-girl gushing could not Wake me long forget my carpetless sad' dismantled home, and sitting down We-a-tete. that was carenilly covered with a sheet, to protect it from the dust and dirt, I told her all about it, a little dole fully it natty be. "You silly goose, yon, as if I would care. Why, Lizzie, we'll have some fun out of this, albeit they say 'fun' is a low word. That brother of yours deserves to he taken down a peg in his skeptical no tions, and lira:mine that we know how to do it. You see, I be maid-of-all-work, and your right hand -woman in general, and we will make order come out . of this: confusion in little less than no time. "You!" and I looked at the elegant gray poplin; that was ruffled and .be-pan iered _enough to drive'a modiste mad,. then at the nicely-fitting -gray - walking-boots. the beautiful auburn hair with its curls and its frizzes, the sweet piquant face, and the'red, ripe lips, and laughed immoder-• , ately. "Laugh, if yon will, Lizzie Biermerton ; you ought to rem ember school days enough to know that what I begin I can accom- W.ViNEISItORO:; 4'.; 4 ' :ClitriSTTY . ,:lq:, THURSDAY, DEvontß, 26,1.872: !WM tere-tinol Set your (gra 'tot,Oittle .woman. Will Heldberg shall never guess that lam your beloved' friend. Dresti is a metamorphoser, remember, and. when, a woman will, she will." • • The merry girl dancA Out, of the room slnging, and what could I do with such a witch, only to wait and 'bide the' conse quences ?' , If I had intimated•that my greatest de sire was to see her and Will married, she would have found it convenient . to take herself home again immediately, and Will woul*et have stayed in the house a min ute. As to this plan ' I was very doubtful, but I was forced to accept it. ' . "An' it plase you, ma'am, will I be of-. they suiting the likes of ye 1" Jezmy stood .before me metamorphosed, indeed. Hei cdrls and frizzes were combed straight hack and twisted in a littlt! knot behind, and she. had purloined one of my, cast-off-calicoes-and-an apron, two-thiTds -as_large_as laerself; her sleeves were rolled • ' above ,her elbows, and a pair of Bridget's eat er s Des r" -- leteo leather shoes comp) ; - (1 - 47picture. "Sure an' will ye give me an answer, ma'am, or I'll :be afther 'gain'," Ole said a little sharply, as I 'Persisted in 'laughing at hei;droll appearance. ."Y•;:, I think you may stay?! "Sure then; ma'am, what ahall,l s do for yer She had scarcely said it; when I heard John and Will coming; and with• a quick —"Remember, I am the newigirl, Jane' Cleary,: and don't spoil. this fun for any; politeness to Jenny Janiionr—she was out in the kitchen entertaining Bridget. before John and Will had fairly into -the-house. The next morning the:new, girl, Jane, in clean white apron waited on the table,. and I saw, with secret delight, ehat my brother's eye kept following her as she went to and from the kitcheir. "Tha is . a deuced Jae-looking girl of yours, Lizzie ! Look out or she will rival: -eQes—l—have—been trying all th - morning to find out which is the prettiest, mistress or maid;" he said, at length. dur ing one. f her absenceirom the room. . John of course, had 'been let into the secret, but he kept his face admirably grave, and I tried to• pucker up a frown, and assured him that I thought be had better things to do than co come here and admire my servant girls. As the week wore away, I began to flee Jenny's bright eyes were not used without effect, and, in her new character, she was quite' determined to win my brother in spite of himself. I was. doubtful still, for, despite his many. words to the contrary, I knew him to be full of .family pride ; but when tho masons. and carpenters had left the 'Mime, and the paper-hangers were quite throti,gh, he - surprised me by volunteering to stay home and help Jenny and I put doWn car pets, as John could not leave the store. Jenny gave me a triumphant look, which I dared not ,return, for Will was looking straight into my 'face; but • every part of my face was aching to laugh at the sight of her comically oil face. I tried to look severe, and kept scowl ! ing at Will but all to no purpose. Jenny had been quiet, and inclined to be reserv ed before, but had lain it all aside now, and returned Will's sallies With interest. • In truth- —though I knew her to be full of life and mischief—l had never ken het so bright , and wity before, and could not wonder that 'Wi l .l admired her straight hair, faded calico and all. We boasted of a little library in this new home of ours, and Jenny took it up on herself to put this rcom to rights ; but it being very high, we were forced to im provise some steps in order to reach the top shelf; and we did so by putting an ohl-fashioned stand on top of a table, and climbing to it by the aid of a 'chair and another stand. . I had use for the other stand, and took it away, promising to bring it back in good time ; but, being busy, I forgot about it, and Will found her puzzling over the mode of descent. "I will help you down, if you will prom ise to listen to a story I have to tell you." "Thank, ye, I'll not make promises.— Mrs. Biemerton herself will come for me, after a bit." "But Jenny, Jenny Cleary, don't you know that I love you" (he had known her only three weeks then,) "and want you to be my wife !" "Shure an' I don't think Mr. Heidburg wants an Irish did for his wife ; he's jok ing." "I am not joking 'I do not care wheth- er you are Irish, Dutch, orPanish, I love you for yourself', and I want you.to be my wife." I- was just bringing the stand, and heard so much, and I didn't think it quite right to listen for her answer; but an hour af tcrwards, when I went to call. them for tea, .I. heard a sound something like a kiss —only I wouldn't dare to say it was one, but his lips were suspiciously near •her own, and I was told that Jennie Janison would be,my sister by-and-by, Bridget, or not, as the case might be. So I knew the, secret was out, and Jen ny, with blushing cheeks, came down to tea, her own dress, to receive my con gratulations; and about Christmas time I bad a mauve silk; and John got white kids—you can guess for what. That was five years ago: Will annen ny keep house, and have two babies now, and when we laugh at him for being out witted; .he-turns around and says •Jenny was caught_at her own game. But one thing is certain he can tend babies splen didly, and bears house cleaning like a martyr; but he insists that his wife knows how to clean house better than any one else, for she made him love her while she was doing the very thing . he hated ; but I notice that - some days ni lie eats without grumbling in almost any conveni ent llac; • '"TOUB • , If you cannot on the ocean flail among the swiftest fleet, Rocking on the highest billows Laughing* the storms you meet ; You can atilnd'among the sailors, Anchor4lyerwithin the. bay, You can:fend•a hand to.help them, As they Munch their!boat away... If'You are too weulitcijoUniey Up the mountain steep and high : -You•can`stand Within the valley, . While the multitudes go by; N'ou,can chant in happy measures, Asithey slowly pass along, , . Tho' they may forget the singer, They will forget the song. If you have not gold and silver y • command ; If you cannot t'wards the needy. -- Reach - an - ever open-handl-- You_can_xisit_the_sf . O'er the erring you can weep, You can be a true disciple, - Sitting at the Savior's feet. If you cannot in the conflict • • Prove yourself a soldier true, It where fire and 'smoke is thickest, There's no work for youto do, - Wien the battle field iR silent; You can go with careful tread, You can bear sway the"Wonnded, You ban cover up the dead. otTthenstimildly - waitisig — For some greater work to do ; Fortune is a lazy goddess, She will never come to you. Go and toil in any vineyard, ' Do not fear to do and dare,- f you want a field of labor, You can find it any where Advice "to the, Girls. We have charity for fast girls. We have often found them generous and warm hearted, and are full ready to believe that their disregard of conventionalities is of ten the boldness of innocence. Ftir ex ample, in some families the chamber of the sister is the resort of the brother in the first place ; then of the cousin, who is al most a biother, 'and then of the brother's most intimate friend, who is treated as one of the family. When this free style of living is transtbrred from the shadow of the, family to the apartsments, of a crowded h.otel or boarding house, it gives Occasion for much free speaking and free thinking—fora style of judgment that of ten does the girls great injustice. We have said that our Americans had their faults. The want of conventional limits of propriety between the sexes is one of them. The young French girl is kept secluded, and never suffered to see a gentleman unwatelied. In America,• from early childhood, little girls and boys grow up" together—and on the whole it is best they should: But in order thatithis liberty should produce good effects•, , pa rents and guardians should incessantly teach certain limits of propriety. There are certain places, times and modes of in tercourse that are proper. There are cee tain other places, times and modes that are improper, and it ought to be a part, of the early training of , every girl to teach her this. Every approach on the part of a young girl to any personal familiarity with a young man, such as she mint most innocently take with another girl, exposes her to misconstruction which it was the duty of her mother to prevent by timely warning. , ,A. favorite author has said that such personal adVances, on the - part of women, were "immoralities of manners," even if the intention was inuocent.' So girls, take care—respect:yourselves—respect your sex, and do not give the enemy cause to speak reproachfully. Listen, all of you, to what a man says. It is out of some old-fash ioned Father's Legacy, or some such an tiquated book. He says : "A fine woman has a power over us which she very little dreams, but a little too near acquaintance often dissolves the illusion and converts the angel into, an ordinary girl." Let a mother tell you, girls, that mothers, when they send their boys into the great world and its temptations, hope much from the influence of gOod women. Did you ever think of this when you tell young men that you dote on !inkling —when you urge wine upon them at par ties ? Some mother, some sister, may wish that you would lead her son or brother to nobler, purer conceptions of life. Ought not some higher motive to govern your in tercourse with the young men of your ac quaintance than merely ,the desire to fas ten their admiration on yourself—to please them at'any and every Lazard ? Be sure that a young man who is pleased through his lower nature, because, you encourage his indolent and self-indulgent habits, and take part with his least elevated impulses, will think of you, by and by only as a part of Something unworthy, which his bet ter self Will seek to outgroW.—Mrs. if, B. Stowe.- -.. Writing of Henry Wilson, Vice Pres ident elect, - Colonel Boynton says : "He is an exceedingly plain man—without wife or daughters to do the honors of his home, and being also a poor man, never having learned "the ways that are dark and tricks that tiie'vain," by which money flows in- to the coffers of poor congressmen, he has steadily maintained a style of living in consonance with bis pecuniary condition. Whether he will materially change this when assuming his new role remains to be seen." It is very difficult to . keep your own peace of mind, if people thrust pieces of thei- upon you. - Woman. The Christian Union says,: "It strikes us.that society is ,so arranged that, the, American. young, lady his a pretty easy time of iecompared With her brother" . - That is just what is the matter. Oar society ia so arranged that .the young la dies, are considered more asornamental pieces of furniture, to be dressed and trim med, and tucked and frilled, and paraded for show,' thin as intelligent human be ings, with minds and bodies to be eultiia ted and improved. , . - When young men arrive at their prop er age, they seek some useful and remu nerative occupation and strike out into the world, boldly and independently, to make a living for themselves, When a young lady. arrives at sixteen she becomes a walking advertisement for. the milliner and dressmaker, and spendi her own time' in tucking and frillir e' , and trimming unmentionable garments that _woubleostlesd, look neater, wear longer, and ,wash and iron easier if made plain. - ITU onlythis, but - tt►ey neglect - the - edii 7 m cation and improvement of their minds, to totinie,and money,tcHortnumentrth• - •. bodies. We can name more than one. young lady, who appear upon the .street, and ,an society, decked out in all the glory and style of the day, who cannot tell,lor their lives; whit the clothing on their backs' cost, if they have given them the number of yards and, cost per yard, and cost for making. • Ought not such girls better be studying arithmetic, than learn ing to dress? What our American women lack more -than anything else is, independence-i, dress, ft matters not how ridiculous,may be a certain fashion, nor how poor a man -may be, hie wife and daughters must dress in the same style and wear as good mate , . rial as their wealthier neighbors. What -if-it-doesmakeltwomanappearridictilous and silly and, vain, "other people" dress soanctsoaini I i , p.• ‘. '•c• differently. What if the 'dry-goods mer chant, the milliner, and the dressmaker, have not been paid ; "you would not have a lady go out dressed differently from any other ladies, would you '1" Well, yes, we . most decidedly would, and most other men. would too. Men have mighty little res , ;, pect for an overdressed woman, and espe-, eiaily if they know her husband cannot afford to pay her bills. They would res.. pect and admire her independence , if she dressed ever so plainly; provided she dreSs- ed neatly, and their admiration would be, increased if they knew she ,never dressed beyond her husband's or father's ability to pay. These girls whose whole time is occu pied in dressing, cannot, of course, learn much of household duties; and when they marry- and they generally find plenty of men who are fools enough to many them —then their troubles have just commenc ed. The first article on the list of house• hold necessaries• is a "hired girl"—there are no "servants" in the country,' and we write from a country and not from a city stand-point—if she undertakes to find this necessary appendage to housekeeping, will soon ascertain that "hired girls" are diffi cult to obtain. Most girls are like her self—know nothing about. work—and if she finally finds one who has the necessa ry knowledge, she is informed that girls, "don't' hire out to do housework." Not genteel! why not'? A brother works out; on a fait: ; .another is employed' s& a sec tionland on the railroad ; another .is a smart, blacksmith or carpenter, but the sister cannot work because it is not ."gen teel." Offer her a situation in a store or milliner shop, and she will jump at the chance, because that is "genteel.' It is perfectly right and honorable for her brothers to hire out 'at anything they can find to do ; but she can't do it. Her bead is filled with false notions, and no amount of coaxing or argument will change her mind. Girls, here is where you make another mistake. It isjust as genteel and honor able to cook a dinner as to trim a hat; to wash dirty clothes as to measure tape be hind a counter; to scrub a flooras to cut a dress. Any honest work is honorable, it mat-. ters not what it is. The man who wheels dirt or saws wood for a living is as much entitled to resPect as the• man who prac tices law or sells dry-goods for a living; and the woman who does house work or washes for a living•is more entitled to re spect that:. the 'lady", who employs her time in studying the fashions, dressing and gossiping, and thereby deforming her body and belittleing her soul and mind.— Bradford Chronicli. Spotrr COURTSIIIPS.-A geologist once traveling in a stage coach in England, happened to sit-opposite to a lady ; glen cps were exchanged, and mutual admira tion seemed to be the result. Eye lan. gauage was soon exchanged for verbal conversation ; after a few interchanges and petrifactiona; they began to talk about living subjects—from generalities to spec ialities—from the third person plural to the first person Singular. Bald the gen tleman : 'I am still unmarried.' 'So am I,' quoth the lady. 'I have sometimes thought of marrying,' said the former. 'So have I. the latter responded. . Then a pause ensued. 'Suppose said the gentleman, 'we were to marry one 'another--I would love and cherish! said the fair one, 'would honor and obey: . . . . in two days they were married. Few will admire such a precipitous courtship ; is is altogether too short. " . Sir Thomas Brown says: ."Sleep, is d'eath's 'younger bittlel", • MO that I nevii'dare trdSt: him without say ing my prayers," ' • ' Profanity. The man whose tongue is ever ready to give a round oath, is by no means tit to be chOsen for a companion or friend.— Yet'the vice of profanity is one of the, time. Many individuals who rank as re spectable members of society, think little •of garnishing their conversation with pro fane expressions and • strut about as if proud of their vile habit. Nov it is &rule of rhetoric that vigorous expressions should be:sparingly used, as a continual effort to :be 'forcible gives sameness to the style,' and 'weakens it: As a matter of artistic taste, therefore, we should infer that a very small amount 'of profanity is necessary to invigorate a man's conversation. .As a matter ofgood morals,: we ; are, of course, forbidden to swear at all. An oath thrown into the speech of a man 'Whose *usual tone is one of • Moderation, strikes us with startling effect, while the talk of one wh'o'garnishes his conversation with an embroider of curses passes un eed . -- There - is - a - perpetual-fusillade- of—mere blank cartrige.s in the sha se of rofanit :wearing so on y.wea . - ens the effect of a man's conversation, con-. sidered objectively, destroys the individu- al's power of expression in the course of time. -- A profane man; instead-of-stop,.. ping,to,analyze an opinion, and state his regons for holding it, asserts bis conviction with an oath whose earnestness is suppos ed to supply' the place of argument. Instead of selecting an appropriate ad jective in praise of an object, or a .power ful epithet in its denunciation, he uses an execration - to expresshis feeling in the matter. This course saves trouble in ran sacking his vocabulary, and the, wortli, grow rusty in the, memory of speech and their uses are soon forgotten. A mind, that is accustomelto profanity grows too lazy for iiiTtor thinking. Oaths thus become syanbols for a num ber-or(1-s;-itTI-for'promses-of-th-oughtii- and in the end abridge a man's - capacity of utterance if he depends Upon Mem. In most cases, swearing is simply a habit; but if a man would seriously reflect after givinm b vent to some blasphemous expres sion, he would assuredly feel his selfres pect shocked, and endeavor to check his course,ere he becomes deadened,to shame, and utterly regardls of the estimatiOn in which he is' held by others. . Ages of Distinguished Men. Although most of us have been accus tomed to speak of Mr. Greeley as an old man, yet, says the New York Times, if we estimate his life by the standard which often prevails among distinguished men, we are justified in saying that Mr. Gree ley's life came to a premature close. If medical men are right in the opinion that smoking is injurious, and that even mod erate indulgence in stimulants tends to shorten life, surely the absence of these habits in Mr. Greeley should have tended to prolong his days. It m,ust he remem bered that Mr. Greeley was much young er. thin many men whose names are asso ciated with his own in American political history, or who have.been on the stage of public life during the whole or a portion of his cancer. Mr. Seward lived to the age of seventy-one, and Mr. Thurtow Weed still dives at the age of seventy-five. Mr. Webster was seventy when he died and Henry Clay, to whom Mr. Greeley was devotedly attached, was seventy-five. Old Ben. Wade enjoys very fair healthat the age of seventy-two. Mr. Chase is sixty-two, and Mr. Sumner is only Mr. Greeley's age. The, late James Gordon Bennett was seventy-one ,•when - he died, and Martin Van Buren was eighty. The newly-elected Governor of New York is older than Mr. Greeley by thirteen years. If we look to other countries, and turn to the men who have , led very active and hard:walking lives, we find the compari son equally striking. M. Thiers is sev enty-five. ' Lord Brougham lived to the age of ninctyrthree—no doubt an excep tional instance; . brit the present Premier of Eng.land, Mr. Gladstone, is sixty-three, and his great opponent. Mr. Disraeli, is sixtyseven—six years Mr: Greeley's sen ior. Palmerston lived to the age of eigh ty-orie,, and , the present Chancellor of the Exchequer ; Robert Lowe, is only Mr. Greeley's, and is expected to do a great deal of hard night work, to say nothing of his inc es sant attention to office duties during the day. Mr. Greeley, then, can not properley be described Lis an' old man. A few days ago the inhabitants of a country town in England . were filled with conjecture at the following sign, painted in' large capitals on the front of' a house recently fitted up and repaired : "Mrs. Brown, dealer in all sorts of ladies.". All was consternation. Inquiry was instant ly set on foot as to who this Mrs. Brown might be, but no one could tell. She was a stranger in the town. Thes econd week . after the mystery , was unraveled. The house,painter returned to finish his work,' and Concluded by adding, "and gentle men's wearing apparel." A certain genial bald headed gentleman while _ Pgris, went one. day to the Zoo logical Gardens. The weather was op pressive and he lay down upon a bench.— Presently he went to sleep, and was soon awakened by a warmth ahout the head. An infatuated 'Ostrich had come along,• and, mistaking his head for an egg, had sentled dOwn with a determination t o hatch it out. In the Supreme Court Judge Blank was speaking of the death of a mutual friend, and remarked "He has . gone to heaven." Judge Goldshorough unmea lately replied :;"Then .you will never meet him again?' "Well, well," Judge Blank quietly answered; "yOtx will Pever be there to decide on that - • • MOO PER YEAR i t and al it ntal. Why is abu , Because he carries Why is the• patpt for ladies' faces like a fiddler's rosin ? ,They v.fs,both used is drawing.a beau. What animal could have dispensed_with the ark? Why the dog to be sure, might have set up a bark. . ‘! i r. )5., is your customer B. a man to be trusted ?" "I know of no one snore so, I He is to be trusted forever." The Cieeinnati ~E4quirer has reduced itemizing to a 'science. Here is a late ex ample: Henry Layman, shoemaker, Terre Haute, bed cord---.-jealousy. A sChool girl was recently 'asked at ati examination, by the clergyman, what Ad am lost by his fall, and when pressed re plied, "Isupposeit was his-hat." It is said of a fashionable•lady, Who. went to a party not long since that shl arrived there about the first of the eve• fling, but the last of her drs did not ar rive-until 12-o'clock. "Correct likeness of youtself sent and ,your fortune told." .. Young,Green seer to the above advertisement, receives a looking glass and is informed that he can tell his own fortune by counting his Money. r""Sir" said one of the Barbury shore tars to•a rusty old captain, "did you ever know coffee to hurt any one?" "Yes, you fool you," was , • the response :"I knew a-bag-full-to-fall-on-a-mares-head-once 7 and kill him.", College boys are so full 'of the mischief that they ought to be spoken to. It has just come to our knowledge that thelearn ed and distinguished President Of one of our colleges has been made the victim of a practical joke which we are induced to record with the expression of our regret that the boys willdo such things. It seems 'that the worthy President went down . to Virginia, where he was, personally a stran ger, to attend an elcesinstical meeting at which manreminent ministers , v. ere to be piesent.., o,n arriving, he was surprised to find that, after, .making himself known, no attention whatever 'was shown 'Limn, and from certain ominous whispers', helm ferred that fie was an object. of suspicion. His position was embarrassing, and the conduct of his brethern inexplicable. In , vain he sought to make himself agreeable or useful, and when at last he was con strained to make a formal demand, he was informed that a few dayti before'his arriv al a letter had been received from' the' President of the College which ho profess, - ed to represent, stating that, he should be ; , unable to attend, and that a man who was, unfortunately out of his mind wasiravel:' inft'around the country pretendingtcrbe• the President-of the college,.and would" very likely present himself, at the meet inn. The truth flashed on'the reverend Doe tor's mind in a moment. He had been "sold" by his students for a crazy man ; some of the rogues having got up the let ter and despatched it in advance of his vis it. After much difficulty, with aid of other letter in his possession, he succeeded in dispossessing the minds of the breth ren of their first implaksions, and he took his seat as a member. Rut they kept a . bright look out on hini all the while, lest.. the crazy should get the better of him. Be Happy Now. How old are yen.?. Twenty-five,? Thir tv ? Are you happy to-day! Were you happy yesterday? Are you happy, gen : erally,l If so, you have reason tq, judge that you,will be happy by and bv. Are yeti so busy that you have no 'time 'to be happy? and are you going to be happy • when yeti are old, and you have not so , much to do? , No, you will not. You now have a specimen of what you will be When you are old. Look in the face of to-ddy. That is about the`aVerage. -That you what you , are.o.niug to be. 'What you are carrying withyounow ig what you will have by and by.. If you are so con- , ducting yourself* that you have peace with God, and with your fellow men, and with your faculties ; if every day you insist that duty shall make you happy, and you take as much 'time as is needful !for the culture of your social faculties, you will. not be exhausting life, and it will be con tinually replenished. But if you are sav ing everything. up .till_youxet . to, be pn. old mani habit .will stand like a tyrant and say, , "You Would not enjoy yourself before and you shall - not nor. How nin ny men there are who have.grouud ground•to make , money, that they might be happy by and by, but who, when they got to be fifty or sixty' years old, had Vq ed tip all the enjoyable nerve that was in them: During' their early life they car ried toil and economy and frugality to the excess .of stinginess, and NORA the time , came that they, expected joy, there was no joy for therii.—Beecher. If a man wishes to know the strength of evil let h im try to abandon. it. A great man is always willing: to be little.-;—Entersoa. LOye keeps no-books. It has no ac cOunbi.- • . . • Itis always florid tide in the eternl pean. Omnipotence romizflies k;*pgth, n=ER.29 cart ljke his boots .- calves there. ✓