llpming lemoctftt. HARVEY SICKLER, Publisher. VOL. VII. pptniug flfmocrai A Democratic weekly _ paper, devoted to Poli •ad Sciences Ac. Pub- " day, at Tunkhannock "" H ppWl' IY HARVEY SICKIER '**' Terms—l copy 1 year, (in advance) #2,00; if ■at paid within six months, #2.50 will be charged NO paper will be DISCONTINUED, until all ar rearagesre paid; unless at the option of publisher. RATES OF ADVERTISING. TKN LIKES CONSTITUTE A SQUARE. One square one or three insertions #1,50 Every subsequent insertion less than 8 50 REAL ESTATE, PERSONAL PROPERTY, and GENERAL ADVERTISING, as may be agreed upon, PATENT MEDICINES and other advertisements oy the column: One column, 1 year, #6O Half column, 1 year 35 Third column, 1 year, 25 Foarth column, 1 year, 20 Business Cards of one square or less, per year with paper, #B. nr EDITORIAL or LOCAL ITEM advertising—with out Advertisement —15 cts. per line. Liberal terms made with permanent advertisers. EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS and AUDI TOR'S NOTICES, of the usual length, $2,50 OBITUARIES,- exceeding ten lines, each ; RELI GIOUS and LITERARY NOTICES, not of general ntereet, one half the regular rates. vw Advertisements must be banded in by TCKS- X)&T Noo.v, to insure insertion the same week. JOB .WORK ef all kinds neatly executed, and at prices to suit the times. All TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS and WORK must be paid for, when ordered Business Notices, RR.&WE. LITTLE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW Office on Tioga Stroet Tunkhannock Pa H S.COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. L, PA RII IS H, ATTORNEY AT LAW • Office at the Court House, in Tunkhannock Wyoming Co, l'. iriW. M . PIATT, ATTORNEY AT LAW Of \\ fice n Stark's Brick Block Tioga St., Tunk aannock, Pa. JW . RHOADS, PHYSICIAN A SCR GEO N • will attend promptly to all calls in his pro fession, May be found at his Office at the Drug 1 Su.re, or at his residence on I'utihan Sreet, formerly occupied by A. K. Peckham Esq. DENT,STRY DR. L T. BURNS has permanently located in Tunkhannock Borough, and respectfully tenders his professional services to its citizens. Office on second floor, formerly occupied by Dr. Wilman. 6n3otf. PORTRAIT,"LANDSCAPE, AID OEIUME2HIL l3E*.A.T*ffX TVTO, liy W. 'JtUGE'/t, Artist. Rooms over the Wyoming National bank,in Stark's Brick Block, TUNKHANNOCK, PA. Life-size Portraits painted from Ainbrntypes or Photographs—Photographs Painted in Oil Colors, — All orders for paintings executed according to or der, or Docharge made. JEW Instructions given in Drawing, Sketching, Portrait and Landscape Painting, in Oil or water Colors, and in all branches of the art, Tunk , July 3!, '67 -vguoO-tf. NEW TAILORING SHOP The Subscriber having had a sixteen years prac tical experience in cutting and making clothing now offers his services in this line to the citizens of ■ icHouaoH and vicinity. Those wishing to get Fits will find his shop the place to get them. JOEL, R, SMITH -nSO-6mos BOLTON HOUSE. HARRISBURO, PENNA. The undersigned having lately purchased the " BUEHLER HOUSE " property, has already com menced such alterations and improvements as will render this old and popular House equal, if not supe rior, to any Hotel in the City of Harrisburg. A continuance of the pnblic patronage is refpect fully solicited. GEO. J. BOLTON WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE/ TU N KIIAN Si OCR, WYOMING CO., PA. TTIIS establishment has recently been refitted an A furnished in the latest style. Every attention wiil be given to the comfort and convenience of those who patronize the House T. B. WALL, Owner and Proprietor-; Tunkhannock, September 11. 1861. NORTH GRANCH HOTEL, MESHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY, PA Wm. H. CORTRIGHT, PropT H A ™ r#,ume d the proprietorship of the above Hotel, the undersigned will spare no efforts lender the boose an agreeable place of sojourn to all who may favor it with their custom. . * WM U - CORTRIGHT. Jane, 3rd, 1663 MEANS' HOTEL7 OWA3VTDA, PA. P. B- BARTLET, {Late of c a BBRAINAHD HOUSE, ELMIBA, N. Y. PROPRIETOR. The MEANS HOTEL, is one of the LARGEST *nd BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country—lt ' nued up in the moet modern and improved style, •al n<> pains are spared to make it a pleasant and •greeabi,, stopping-place for ell, ry "k, Ty y>. THE peculiar taint or infection which we call SCBOFULA lurka In the constitutions of 5N multitudes of men. lb either produces or ia feeblcd, vitiated state 1 blood, wherein *r/rai t ' ,at becomes in "Jpyb| H$ M9r sl com f p t cnt to sustain rfe3r v 'tal forces in tlieir vigorous action, and the system to fall into disorder and decay. Tlie scrofulous contamination is va riously caused by mercurial disease, low living, disordered digestion front unhealthy food, impure air, filth and filthy habits, the depressing vices, and, above all, by the venereal infection. Whatever be its origin, it is hereditary in the constitution, descending " from parents to children unto the third and fourth generation;" indeed, it seems to be the rod of Hint who says, " I will visit the iniquities of the fathers upon their children." The diseases it originates take various names, according to the organs it attacks. In the lungs, Scrofula produces tubercles, and finally Consumption; in the glands, swellings wliich suppurate and be come ulcerous sores; in the stomach and bowels, derangements which produce indi gestion, dyspepsia, and liver complaints; on the skin, eruptive and cutaneous affections. These, all having the same origin, require the same remedy, viz., purification and invigora tion of the blood. Purify the blood, and these dangerous distempers leave you. With feeble, foul, or corrupted blood, you cannot have health; with that "life of the flesh" healthy, you cannot have scrofulous disease. Ayer'a Sarsaparilla is compounded from the most effectual anti dotes that medical science has discovered for this afflicting distemper, and for the cure of the disorders it entails. That it is far supe rior to any other remedy yet devised, is known by all who have given it a trial. That it does combine virtues truly extraordinary in their effect upon this class of complaints, is indisputably proven by the great multitude of publicly known and remarkable cures it has made of the following diseases: King's Evil, or Glandular Swellings, Tumors, Eruptions, Pimples, Blotches and Sores, Erysipelas, Rose or St Anthony's Fire, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Coughs from tuberculous deposits in the lung 3, White Swellings, Debility, Dropsy, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Syphilis and Syphilitic Infections, Mercurial Diseases, Female Weaknesses, and, indeed, the whole series of complaints that arise from impurity of the blood. Minute reports of individual cases may be found in AVKR'H AMERICAN ALMANAC, which is furnished to the druggists for gratuitous distribution, wherein may bo learned the directions for its use, and some of the remarkable cures which it has made when all other remedies had failed to afford relief. Those cases are purposely taken from all sections of the country, in order that every reader may have access to some one who can speak to him of its benefits from personal experience. Scrofula depresses the vital energies, and thus leaves its victims far more subject to disease and its fatal results than are healthy constitutions. Hence it tends to shorten, and does greatly shorten, the average duration of human life. The vast importance of these considerations has led us to spend years in perfecting a remedy which is adequate to its cure. This wo now offer to the public under the name of ATLR'S SABSAPABILLA, although it is composed of ingredients, some of which exceed the best of Sarsaparilla in alterative power. By its aid you may protect yourself from the suffer ing and danger of these disorders, lhirge out the foul corruptions that rot and fester in the Mood, purge out the causes of disease, and vigorous health will follow. By its pecu liar virtues this remedy stimulates the vital functions, and thus expels the distempers which lurk within the system or hurst out on any part of it. We know the public have been deceived by many compounds of Sarsaparilla, that promised much and did nothing; but they will neither lie deceived nor disappointed in this. Its virtues have been proven by abun dant trial, and there remains no question of its surpassing excellence for the cure of the afflicting diseases it is intended to reach. Although under the same name, it is a very different medicine from any other which has been before the people, and is far more ef fectual than any other which has ever been available to them. AYER'B CHERRY PECTORAL, The World's Great Remedy for Coughs, Colds, Incipient Con sumption, and for the relief of Consumptive patients in advanced stages of the disease. This has been so long used and so uni versally known, that we need do no more than assure the public that its quality is kept up to the best it ever has been, and that it may be relied on to do all it has ever done. Prepared by DA. J. C. ATEB & Co., Practical and Analytical Chemist*, Lowell. Maes. Sold by all druggists every where. For sale b.vßunnell A Bannatyne, and Lyman A While, Tunkhanoock. Sterling A Son, Meshoppen, Stevens A Ackley, Laceyville, Frear, I)san A Co , Factoryville, and all Druggjsts and Deuliu in med icines, everywhere. Teeth Positively Extracted WITHOUT PAIN! NEW PROCESS. NEITHER CLOROFORM, ETHER, NOR GAS, WHICH ARE SO INJURIOUS TO TO HE A L TH AN LIFE. This Substance is applied directly to the gum* producing a numbness (local Anaesthesia) of only the parts around the tooth, whereby it can be extracted without any pain whatever, and without unpleasant ness to the Patient: CALL AT MY OFFICE AND BE CONVINCED. J-. J~. SETMOUE, Surgeon Den/is/, Laeeyville, P.--v7no-3m: FOR NON-RETENTION on INCONTINENCE of Urine, irritation, inflamation or ulceration of the bladder, of kidneys, diseases of the prostrate glands, stone in the bladder, calaulaa, gravel or brick dust deposits, and all diseasea ot the bladder, kidneys, and dropsical awelllings. LAI HNLMNETU'I FLCID EXMUCT BrtiV. ENFEEBLED AND DELICATE CONSTITU TION3,of bolh sexes, use Ilelmbold's Extract, Bu chu. Itwil eerisk andgive energetic feelings an •owWef m te rienp veil. TDNKHAINOCK, WYOI WHY CAN'T I HAVE A BEAU. 0 dear ! 0 dear ! there's just one thing I'd truly love to know — Why can't I have, like other g'rls, A yonng and handsome beau ! There's Sallie Jones, and Nattie Smith, And freckled Susie Crow, A trio like the Gorgon Maids, Yet each one has a beau ! But here's poor me as fair as a flower As ever chanced to blow— My winning voice and sweet beguile* All fail to catch a beau ! 1 dress as neat,'and smile as sweet Aa any girl I know. Yet, as I live, I do believe I'll never get a beau ! I'm always found in best attire, Wherever gents may go, Yet not ODe chap in all the lot Asks me to be my beau ! Confound such men, such silly dolts- How very dull and low, To stand and look, to grin and squint- Afraid to be a oeau ! Just listen to me, ye gawky clowns, Now don't you fully know, That you should be, each one of you, Some lair young lady's beau ! ( Then brush your teeth, and oil you! hair, And let your 'stachios grow, And turn to be a civil man— A gay and gallant beau ! UP SALT RIVER. Come, boys, come the boat is leaving, All is lost ; 'tis no use grieving ; Jump on board, each seize an oar. Up Salt River we go once more. CHORUS— We're going to row all night, We're going to row all day ; We bet our money on tbe wooly horse, And white men wou the day. The breeze is up ; then wait no longer, Every hour the tido grows stronger ; The Sharswood waves rua mountain high, And hark, on every side the cry. CHORUS— We're going to row all night, ±c, We thought our horse must win this fall, But find be has no wind at all ; Oh, had we left the niggci out that bill Wo might be gaily singing still. CHORUS— We're goiDg to row all night, Ac. Then hoist the sails, and bid farewell To office that we love so well ; Should aught grow scarce amongst our crew The Freedman's Bureau will beef us through. CHORUS— We're going to row all night. Ac. Quick start, it drives us to despair, To hear those shoutings rend tbe air ; Cut the cable, hoist the sails, off she goes, When we'll get back the d—l only knows. CHORUS— We're going to row all night, Ac. Ufacrtlaium RECEIPT FOR FlTS. —Though no doctor, I have by me some excellent prescriptions, and shall charge you nothing for them ; you cannot grnmble at the price. We are most of us subject to fits ; I am visited with them myself, and I dare say you are also. Now, then for prescriptions ; For a fit of passion, walk in the open air, you may speak to the wiod without hurt ing any one, or proclaiming yourself to he a simpleton. For a fit of idleness, count the tickings of a clock. Do this for one hour, and you will be glad to pull off your coat the next time and work like a horse. For a fit of extravagance or folly, go to the workhouse, or speak with the ragged and wretched inmates of a jail, and you will be convinced— •' Who maketh his bead of briar and thorn, Must be content to lie forlorn," For a fit of ambition, go into a church yard and read the gravestones. They will tell you the end of ambition. The grave will soon be your chamber-bed, the earth your pillow, corruption your father, and the worm your mother and sister. For a fit of repining, look about for the halt and the blind, and visit the bed-ridden and afflicted and deranged, and they will make yon ashamed of complaining of your lighter afflictions. CONCEIT. —HardIy anything is more contemptible than that conceit which rests merely upon social position, the conceit of those who imagine that hey are thus di vorced from the clay of common men, of those who shrink with horror from the idea of work, as something that degrades by its very contact, and yet, who, very likely,owe their preseot position to some 'emote an cestor who, recognizing his call to work, lived more honestly in tire world than they do now, and was not ashamed of soiled thumbs. It is one of the meanest things for people to be ashamed of the work from which they draw their income, and which glorified their ancestors more with their soiled aprons and black gowns than them selves with their fine ribbons and flashing jewelry. It might be a fine thing to be like tbe lillies,more gloriously arrayed than Soloman, and doing nothing, if we were : only lillies. Advantageous position is on-1 ly a more emphatic call to work ; and while j those who hold the advantage may not be compelled to manual drudgery, they should \ recognize the fact that manual drndgery may be performed in the same spirit as that which characterizes their OWB work, and i therefore that it is equally honorable. J " To Speak his Thoughts is Every Freeman's Right. " IING CO., PA.-WEDNESDAY. NOV. 13, 1807. A CHAPTER OF HUMOR. ABOUT NOTHING IN PARTICULAR BT JOHJT QCILL. Having nothing in particular to write about this week, I concluded to do it. The earth was made from nothing, and man was made from the earth, consequently wo all sprang from nothing, and it is surpris ing how many human beings are true to their origin, in knowing nothing, doing nothing, and being good for nothing all their lives. Authorities differ, however, in regard to the origin of man. Some think he is but the higher grade of * What is it ?" and others that he is only a fully developed claim. I incline to the latter opinion in the case of certain men who fritter away their lives in folly and dissipation. But the whole subject is a difficult one, and pe culiarly so to the unmetaphysical mind.— This is illustrated in the ease of young Wilkins, who sought the author of his be ing with the following inquiry: " Pap, wern't all men made by Heaven/" ,l es, my child," benignly replied the paternal Wilkins, "but why do you ask ?" " Oh, nothing, only I see in the papers long 'accounts of ' self-made men,' and 1 thought may he some of those fellows had been gettin' of their own selves up." This is the brother of that other Wilkins, baptized Uolfernes Montgomery, who came home and complained that he didn't like the arithmetic they had at school, be cause he couldn't guess the conundrums in it. " Conundrums?" exclaimed pater nal guardian, " whv, Holfernes Montgom ery W ilkins, what do you mean ? ' " Why, you know that old arithmetic of ours is full of conundrums,and them things, and when Mr. Swi&htail asked me ' if 120 bushels of corn will serve 14 horses 56 days, how many days will 94 bushels serve 6 horses?' 1 said* I give it up,' and be got mad about it, and said I was stupid as an owl. Then he wanted to know why forty rods made one rood ? I couldn't guess it, I can't guess his darned old jokes, you know, and then he licked me." " He was only trying to demonstrate,my child, that while forty rods make one rood, one rod sometimes makes one polite. Lou isa remove this child to bed." This was the same boy who afterwards got his teacher foul on the question : " If it takes four nails to make a quarter, how many carpet tacks will it take to got up a ten dollar bill /" A cousin of his only nine years old, be gan crying piteously, as if his heart would break, when his father stated that he was a Republican. His fond mother took him in her arms, and upon ioquity ascertained that he was impressed witli the conviction that he liad'seen Rc-publicans aud sinners classed together in his Sunday-school les son, and he was anxious for the old man's moral welfare. Wilkins has taste for these things. It was during his connection with the Utterly Hopeless Mutual Insurance Company, that he went over to Boston for a few days,and upon his return was asked by Smythe, you know liim—son of old Smythe—coal oil man—was asked by Smythe, " Say, Wil kins, where have you been for a week back ?" " I haven't been anywhere for it. I haven't got a week back," and he shot around the corner. But his great point is in educating the minds of his boys; and one day when he had a quarrel with his aimt, and Bucepha lus Alexander, his oldest child, wanted to know what was the matter, he said it was simply a grammatical error. The relative didn't agree with his antecedent. lie was stroDg on grammar; and when Marv Jane asked him what Syu-tax was,he said, the tax on Whisky, for Wilkins will have his top whether or no, and he thiuks it aint right to put high duties on it. Wilkins would sacrifice anything to a joke. When his father died, a venerable friend called to console him upon the loss of his parental protector. Wilkins sighed and said: "Yes the old man was good nt that, but now I'm the head of the family, and I suppose I'll have to pay-rental in his place." llis friend dropped a sympathet ic tear, and drove to the funeral in a hack. The elder Wilkins died of consumption, and his son remarked as he saw the re mains placed HI the undertaker's carriage, that it was singular that the old man should first be carried oil by a hackin' coogh, and afterwards by a coffin back, The under taker didn't perceive that this was a joke until he got to the cemetery, and it made him so mad that he kicked a dog that lay in his way, and the dog bit a chop out of his leg. " Is it a bull dog, said Mrs. Wilkins ?" "No, my love,'' replied her husband "it's a ceme-terrier." But Wilkins had a brother-in-law nam ed Gouge, who ran forjudge up in Schuyl kill connty, and the very first case he tried was that of a man who owned a coal mine, but had been a major in the army. His tailor sued him for a uniform, but Gouge decided against the tailor, that he couldn't have made tho6o clothes for him, because a miner couldn't be a major. Gouge wa an infidel. lie was so skep tical that his own mother wouldn't believe ! him, and he gave up the law and turned spiritualist. He was the medium who re ceived a message from the spirit of Daniel Webster, stating that there were a great many error# in his dictionary which he would like to have corrected. It was before Judge Gouge that Fergu son the soap-fat man, was sued by a woman for a breach of politeness—she thought that was what it was; and Gouge charged the jury to give her a verdict of thirty thousand dollars, which they did, while Ferguson was led out of court headed bv a brass band, playing ' the girl 1 left behind me.' Ferguson raid be was like Leandcr, it was swimmin' that reduced him to such great straits. To which sbe said that if he hadn't mortgaged herself to him, he had at least lien'd'er." Judge Gouge sent them both to prison for contempt of court, for joking ia his presence. j Gouge was a bosom friend of a man nam ed Mahoney,who lived out in the jungles of Germantown, and Mahoney was in the na- I vy, and attached to a mortar boat on the , Mississippi. Mahoney used to tell how j very large a shell was that they used. It l was several yards in diameter and had to ibe brought on board in sections. The first | time they fired her off, the boat was shot . foui miles away from the hall, which was so heavy that it never budged an inch, ex j cept to drop plumb into the water. Mahoney was fond of stories, and it used , to delight him to tell hjw lie went to Ven ice, and got leave to go on shore, but there was no shore there and he spent the day sitting an a front doorstep, afraid to move for fear he should get drowned. Speaking of the army and navy, and go ing aboard, reminds me to state that St. George, the patron saint of England, has been proved to have been nothing but an army contractor, who supplied the forces with had pork, and had to lly the country. His fight with the Dragon is all humbug. Our army contractors were more success ful. They not only furnished had materi al, hut they did not leave the country, and they succeeded in draggin' a large amount of cash out of the popular pocket. I often go around to see VVilktns when his wife is out of town. He can smoke then, and he don't care how late he sets up. Wilkins is fond of music, and he has a band organ in his back parlor. " Wilkins, my boy," said I, " play us a tune, won't you?" '• Oh, I can't, excuse me, I am out of practice." "Do you play by note or ear ?" I in quired. Just then Mahoney came in, and related how, when he was out on the Mississippi, the boats were so ex-t-r-emely slight, that the officers wouldn't let the men shift a quid of tobacco from one side of their mouths to the other for fear of upsetting her. When they ran out of quids they had to reverse the engines every time they wanted to back'er. Mahoney is dead now. He mistook a lobster for a soft shell crab, and it stuck in his throat and killed him. The doctors said it was strangulation, but it is more likely he died of grief because he couldn't lie again. A Beautiful Passage. The following is from the reveries of a bachelor, l>y Ike Marvel: " A poor man without some sort of re ligion is at best a poor reprobate, the foot bail of destiny, with no tie linking him to the infinity and the wondrous eternity that is even worse—a flame without heat, a rainbow without a color, a flower without perfume. A man may in some sort tie his hope and his honor to this shifting ground tackle, to his business or the world, hut a woman without that anchor called faith, is a drift and a wreck ! A man may clurusi ly continue a sort of moral responsibility out of relation to mankind ; but a woman in her comparatively isolated sphere, where affection and not purpose is the controlling motive, can find no basis in any other sys tem or right action but that of faith. A man may craze his thoughts to trustful ness, in such poor harborage as fame and reputation may stretch before him, but a woman—where can she put her hopes in storms if not heaven ? And that sweet truthfulness—that abiding love—that en during hope, mellowing every page and scene in life—lighting them with radiance, when the world's storms break like an ar my with cannon, Who can bestow its all but holy soul, tied to what is stronger than an army with cannon! Who has enjoyed the love of a christian mother but will echo the thought with energy, and hallow it with tears ? % A HISTORICAL PARALLEL. In a late speech made in New York, bv Richard O'Gorman, Esq., we find the fol lowing reference made to Ireland and the South. The parallel is complete, and is a historical lessou that should not bo for gotten: " Ireland, at one time, was swept from end to end, by a great soldier and a great statesman, who formed his idea that the only way to hold Ireland in peace was to annihilate its people. It is two hundred years ago since his track blasted that fair island, and yet there are many men among yon, whose faces I look upon to night, wbo know that in Ireland there is no more bit ter malediction in the Irish tongue tliau this : " The curse of Cromwell on you 1" Ireland never forgot Cromwell; it never cau forget the iron hand of that grim chief tain which gripped it too firmly and too sorely—for forgetfulness and forgiveness can never come from that people. It re members forever, because there are some wrongs that burn into the heart so deep that they live from generation to genera tion and cannot be effaced while It exists, while that race is living Do you wish, fellow-citizens, to deal with the Southern States as Cromwell dealt with Ireland? (Cries of" no, no.") Talk to an English statesman —to any man who lives above the petty level of faction —and he will say: "Would to God that, two hundred years ago, Cromwell had never stf his foot npon that ruined land—would to God England had dealt more kindly by the sister island. Would to God that after the Irish people had been defeated in war, we had trusted them in peace, and taken them to our heaits and made friends of 'hem, as wc could have done.' Rat to all this puritauism there cornea the answer : " Too late—too late. The indelible mark is upon us; we can never forget, and we uever can forgive." ' Citizens of the North, do you want that cry to come out of the heart of the South ? 1 hat fatal cry, " too late." Do you wish to hear them say " you defeated ns, you tram pled us under foot, hut wc expected, when we acknowledged your triumph, you would not have refused to receive us again as fel low-citizens ? But you would not—you said to ns of the South—because you were onr enemies once you must fotever be our enemies, never approach us with the hand of friendship. The favorable hour for rec onciliation is gone. Too late,too late; we never can forget; " we never can forgive." Is that the state of mind you want to force upon the Southern people ? Citizens, as I told you when I commenced, I am giving yoti my thoughts in undress. lam talk ing to you candidly. In one moment I shall be done. The duty is now upon you of exercising the right of suffrage. Do it cautiously and wisely, but fearlessly, vot ing only for representatives into the Con gress of the United States—vote for them and vote for no one else. Do not bd con fused about any side issues. That is the great question. Look at it—Union or Dis union. Refuse to admit the representa tives of the Southern States—that is Dis union; admit them and that is Union.— Keep these two facts before you, and then you will have no difficulty in depositing your votes as (hey ought to he deposited. And now farewell. I may say to you as I used to say in the kindly old times, "God speed you all. May He protect you from the errors of those who are honest, and the machinations of those who are not. May He guide and guard yon, so that you may leave to your children, unstained and un impaired, the great heritage you received frotn your fathers—this great republic, this proudest nation of the earth, free, united, prosperous and happy." llow VICTORIA REPROVED A Ft IRTINO DAI GUTEP. —An R.ne:dote illustrating Vic tor's admirable good sense and strict do mestic discipline, is related by one who wit nessed the occurrence. One day,when the Queen was present in her carriage at the military review, the princess royal, then rather a wilful girl of about thirteen, sitting on the front seat, seemed disposed to be rather familiar and coquetish with some young officers of the escort. Her majesty gave several reproving looks without avail "winked at her,but she wouldn't stay wink ed " At length, in flitting her handker chief over the carriage, she dropped it too, evidently not accidently. Instantly two or three young heroes sprung from tbier sad dles to return it to her fair hand, but the awful voice of royalty stayed them, "Stop gentleman," exclaimed the Queen, "leave it just where it is. Now, my daughter down from the carriage and pick up your kandkerchief." There was no help for it. The royal footman let down the step for the littie royal lady, who proceeded to lift from the dust the pretty piece of cambric and lace. She blushed a good deal,though she tossed her head saucily, but the morti fying lesson may have nipped in the bud her first impulse toward coquetry. It was hard, but it was wholesome. How many American mothers would be equal to such a piece of Spartan discipline ? BOTS. —A son of Scranton, the founder of Scranton, Pa.,joined the hanJs in hs father's foundries, that he might learn the practical part of the iron business. The son of a well-known and wealthy New York publisher used to leave his elegant home every morning, with his tin pail and in the garb of a laborer, and betake him self to a machine shop to labor as hard as the hardest, that he might learn the busi ness. We also know the son of an emi nent college professor who does nearly the same thing.—N. Y. Gazette. The "son of a wealthy New York pub lisher" alluded to above, is Gilbert Jones, son of George Jones, of the New York Times. He graduated from the New York Novelty Works, after a regular and severe apprenticeship, with all the honors ; and is now in a manufacturing business in the city of Brooklyn, on bis own account—a busi ness for which his mechanical knowledge and experience admirably qualify him. And young Jones is not only a first-class machinist, but quite as much of a "gentle man" as if he had graduated at college and had regularly rounded off seasons at Saratoga and Newport.—Troy Times, The son of the "eminent college Profes sor" is Wm. IK. Tyler, son of Professor Tyler, of Amherst College. Yonng Tyler graduated at Amherst in 1864, taking the second highest honor in his class, and im mediately after commenced serving a reg ular apprenticeship in the Ames Com pany's Works at Chicopee, where he line remained ever since,not only studdying the business theoretically, but learning to do with bis own hands all kinds of work. The great need of the country and the age is for liberally educated men in the mechani cal and industrial departments,and if more young men would graduate from a college to a machine shop,instead of already crowd ed professions of law,medicine and divinity they would do a good thing for themselves and the world.--Springfield(Mass.)Repub licau. TERMS, $2.00 Per. ANNUM, in Advance. Pse ant Why is a letter T like an island 1 Becausd it is in the middle of wa-t-er. An exchange queries whether a young lady of eighteen springs ought not to bare a fine waterfall. Some malicious person sayS that hindaonie women never trouble themselves upon tbe ; subject of woman's rights. A western man says he always respects old age except when some one him with a pair of tough chickens. HUSBANDRY. —The pleasant husbandry . known to a man is said to be tbe destroying 'of weeds—a widow's weeds—by marrying the widow. A ftistn named Crapo, who has lost a leg and is crippled in both arms, was robbed by some desperately mean wretch, on the train between Troy and Dayton on Saturday. The loss was made up to tbe unfortunate cripple by the passengers. CUTTING.—A young lady possessing moke vanity than personal charms, remarked, in a jesting tune, but with an earnest glance, "she traveled on her good looks." A rejected lov er being present, remarked, be "could now account for the young lady's never bating been found far from home." A countryman going to market with a load of pork was met by a young girl, who very genteelly made him a low courtesy, itbefl he exclaimed : "What ! do you make a courtesy to dead hogs ?" '•No, sir," answered the girt, "too a live one !" There was once a little illiterate gentleman —one Peter Patterson—appointed as a Jus tice 11 the Peace. The first day his clerk handed him a duplicate writ: "Well, wot shell Ido with it ?" was tha query. "Nothing but sign your initials," was the reply. "My nishuls—what are they ?" "Why two P's," replied the clerk impa tiently. Cold p^spiration T stood upon the forehead of the unhappy magistrate as he seized a pen and with desperation on his face, wrote "two peze ?" Josh Billings says of owls ; Burds is God's choristers. Tew the Tien he gave majesty ; tew the e'ephant, strength ; tew the fox, canning and tew the tiger, deceit. But tew the burds his pets, he gave buty and song. And none is so blest as the owl. The owl is a game bord ; he can whip any thing that wears feathers—after dark. Ho is a wise bard, and hoots at most things. He is a solium burd, a cross between a justice of the peace and a coanty supervisor. He is a stiff burd, and aits ap as stiff as an exclamation point, lie is a luxurious burd and, feeds on spring chickens. He is a long lived burd, and never was known to take death hatrally. lie is a hardy burd, and groza tough by bileing. He is an honest burd, and altVui shows an opeD countenance. He is a prompt bnrd, and satisfize £at onst his outstanding bills. He is a comfortable bard, and alwuz sleeps in feathers. lie is an attentive burd, and dutin' the day can alwuz be found in. He is a festive burd, and don't come home till mornin'. Thus the owl, a mistaken emblem of soli tude and sadness, if we dig intu his natnre closely, is emphatically one of the b'hoys, and belongs to the club. RCLPIT ECCENTRICITY —Rev. Samncl Clawson, a Methodist preacher.ofi'eCcenttic manners, sometimes called the "wild man," was very popular in Western Virginia some twenty years ago. Ile.was cross eyed and wiry made,and very dark skinned for a white man. At times he was sarprisingly eloquectj always excitable, and once in a while extrav agant. He once accompanied a brother •bl ister, Rev. Mr. R , a prominent pastor, in a visit to a colored chuich. Mr. R. gave the colored preacher the hint, and of course Clawson was invited tofpreach. Ho did so, and during the sermon set the impulsive Af ricans to shouting all over the house. This in turn set Clawson to extravagant words and actions, and he leaped out of the pulpit like a deer, and began to take the hands of the colored brethren and mix in quite happi ly. He wept for joy. Then pressing through the crowd, ho found brother R., and setting down beside hint, he threw his arms around his neck, and with tears streaming down bis cheeks, he said : "Brother R, I almost wish I had been bm a nigger. These folks have more religion than we have." "Well, well," said brother R., "you come so near it jou need'nt cry about it," NO. 15.