HARVEY SICKLER, Publisher. VOL. VII. Ppmiitg pfinornit. D?mocratic weekly f.jer devotel to Foil „S„,, ,b, Arts tiJ ? •ienoesic. I'uo- \ ■' liiiicl every We does- i iy.. Nt Tunkhannock ||Wf V HARVEY SICKLER TVrmk —1 copy 1 year, (in a lvance ) 52,00 ;if not paid within six months, 5'2.30 will he charged XO paper will be DISCONTINI ED, until all ar rsirigcsre pai 1; unless at the option of pu Oisbcr. j RATES OF ADVERTISING. TKN LINKS CONSTITUTE A niCARE. One square one or three insertions- "'^'n Every subsequ- nt insertion less than e o , ItitAL ESTATI: Pr.wsoNAL PBOPBRTV, and GENERAL j as ui v be agree ! upon. PATENT MEMCINES and other advertisements oy | the column : One column, 1 year, - - 160 H ilf column, I year 35 Third col 1 year, 25 Fourth column, 1 year, 20 Kiioltit'ss Cards of one square or less, per year with paper, i 9 f EDITORIAL or LOCAL ITEM advertising wit h-9,' \ iverti-c i ent—ls cts. per line. Liberal terms E . ;e will permanent advertisers EXKCU fOliS, ADM IX IS'i'H ATUHS and AUDI j t> NOTICES, of the usual length, $2,50 OTIITI'ARIEC- exceeding ten ! in- s, each ; It ELI j jpli'N and LITERARY NOTICES, not of general Bierest, one half toe regular rates. |s*'Alv9rtis9raonts must be handed in by Tcxs tAi Xjo.N, to insure insertion the same week. JOB WORK if iC is neatly executed and at prices to suit t'ta t'mes. All TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS and JOB WoP.lv ii u;-t be paid for, when ordered Bus in ess N oti ees. j> R. A%V BUTTLE ATTORNEYS AT It LAW Olfice on Tioga Street Tunkh mmck Pa HlkCOOm, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. r\ 1,. PAIRHi, ATTORNEY AT LAW. ' I't.i cat tLe Court lluuse, in Tunkbaumk ft tiling Co. l'a. UAi. ,u. PIA it. A'ilOKNEi Al La v • I £-e 1:1 Stark's Brick Bioek Tioga St ~ 'iunk HKk, !'a. rU j. UHNL. ATTORNEY AND COINSEL- I i LOR AT LAW, Nicholson, Wyoming Co-, Pa Esiedal attention given to settlement of dece it-' N'-i l-on. Pa- Dec. 5, l?d"— v"nl9yl | W. RHoADS. PHYSICIAN ASI IH.EO S, J • w.ll attend piomptly to all calls in his pro le--:.n. May he louod at his OGK-O al the Drug • .re. or at hi- 1 residence on Putman Jreet, loriuerly 9 cupltd by A. hi. Pe.-kh.itu E-q. DENTISTRY. rvp. t, x. BURNS ha permanently located in - ' luakhar.noct Borough, and ropc.tf ully tenders toi itTf service* to its cititena. 01 -e on second floor, formerly by Dr. §i sun PORTRAIT, LANDSCAPE, &EIUKSTIL 2PAINTIIVG, 7>y V\ 'JiCGEII, Artist. Htcm* over the Wyoming National L-nk,in Surk's la.'k Block, IIVKIIANNOCK. Life-.'ize Portraits painted from Ainh'otypcs or Photographs t'ho'ogrnphf Painted in Oil (Mors.— A "r li-rs for paintings exicuied according to or der or no charge made. |ff Instru.-tions given in Draw ing. Fketcb'hg, f' -V.it and l. in l-cape Painting, in Oil or water 0 :..r*. and in all branches of the art. I. :k, July 3! "el -vgso-tf. BOLTON HOUSE. ! 11 A K KIS I' l< <■ w PKNNA. The un itrsigned having lately pun based the " 1:1 KiILEU - j aen el such alterations ami improvements as will; re ier this old an 1 popular House equal, if not sup- ■ r.„r, to anv Hotel in the Ctl.v of Ilarrisburg. \ continuance of the public patronage is refpect fa.ly solicited. GEO. J. BOLTON WALL'S HOTEL7 LATE, AMERICAN HOUSE, TV N KII.VN NOCK, W YOMISG CO., I'A THIS establiihmcnt has recently heen refitted an furnished in tne latest style Everv attention mi; he yiveu to the comfort and convenience of those patronize the I!oue. T B- WALL, Owner and Proprietor . Tunkhannock, September 11, IS6I - BRANCH HOTEL, MKnHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY, PA IVm. 11. CORTRIGHT, rrop'r ITAVING resumed the proprietorship of the above II Hotel, the undersigned will spare no efforts ts r ier fhe house an agreeable place oi sojourn to •11 who may favor it with their custom. Win 11 CORTRIGIIT. June, 3rd, 1R53 MEANS' HOTEL. TOWA.NDA. R-A-. P. B. BAKTI.ET, Lateolt- ''BRAisAnn HOIISB, ELUIHA, N. Y PKUPKILTOK. The MEANS HOTEL, i- one of tne LARGEST and BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country —lt "f'tedup in the most modern and improved style Hoi no pains are spared to make it a pleasantand •greeable stopping place for all, v3n'2l-ly. mssoL'niox. THE Copartnership heretofore eiit ing betweea Jacob Bell and Charles E. McYicar, in the L'acksmiihitig business, is ibis day dissolved by niu htal consent. The business will be carried on at the old etani l J Jacob Ball. JACOB BELL CUAS E. Mc VICAR. Mareb 21, 166—84i TUMHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. -WEDNESDAY, APR. 22. 1868. §etrick's Column. Spring Trade for '6B Will open on or about the Ist of May, | AT TUNKHANNOCK, PENN'A. C. Detricli, (SICCESSOR TO BCXXELL A BASSATY.NE,) Proposes to establish himself pennancutly in trade at this place, at the Brick store house in Sam'l Stark's Block, where by fair dealing and fair prices he expects to merit and receive the public patronage. Attention is called to the following in Dry Goods : SILKS, POPLINS, ALPACAS, LUSTRES, DELAINES. GINGHAM!, PRINTS, SHAWLS. LADIES* SACQ.UINGS, DREJIS TRIMMINGS, • BLEACHED AND BROWN MUSLINS, CLOTHS AND CASSIMKRES GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, TOILET ARTICLES. NOTIONS, AC. Groceries. SUGAR, TEA, +- COFFER, MOLASSES, RICE, SYRUP, CANDLES, SOAP, STARCH, FLOUR, FEED, SALT, PORK, BUTTER, CHEESE, DRIED BEEF, HAMS, * FISH of all kindi, BEANS, AC., AC., Hardware, A FULL ASSORTMENT. Cutlery OF ALL KINDS, MEN'S AND BOYS' |a Hats and Caps, i Boots $ Shoes, A FULL ASSORTMENT. Thil branch of boainew mails a apsciality A lot of SEWED ARMY SHOES, A GREAT BARGAIN, SOLE LEATHER. CROCKERY. BTOMB, WOOD AND TINWARE, iu groat variety. All kiuda of Produce taken in exebaogo for Goods. Th. abort article, will bo nspt in ftill aaoortmoot. I moan to make tbo experiment of gooda lold in quantitea cheaper than ever before in thia rteinity. I shall be beppy to see you, end yen can depend np j on finding bargains In every department. Goods re- Iceired every week. Raapeotfnlly yours, a V3Z&ZC& j Inbj. THE THBEE CALLERS BY CHAS. BWAINI. j Morn calletb fonuly to a fair boy straying ' 'Mid golden meadows, rich with elover dew : Sbeealls—but he still thinks ot nought save playing And so she smiles and waves him an adieu 1 m Whilst he, still merry with his flowery store, Deems not that Morn, sweet Mum returns no more. Noon cometh—but the boy to manhood growing, lleeds hot the time. He sees but one sweet form, One young, fair face, from bower of jasmine glowing, And all his loving heart with bliss is warm, i So Noon, unnoticed seeks tha western shore, And man forgets that Noon returns no more. Night tappeth gently at a ensement gleaming With the thin fire-light, flickering faint and low ; By which a gray-haired man is aadly dreaming O'er pleasures gone, as all Life's pleasures go. Night calls him to her—and he leaves his door, Silent and dark— and he returns no more. BEAUTIFUL EXTRACT. Ob, if (here is one law above the rest, Written in Wisdom—if there is a word That I would trace as with v a pen of fire Upon the unsullied temper of a child— If there is anything that keeps the miad Open to angel visits, and repels The ministry of ill — 'tis human loct ! God has made nothing worthy of contempt, The smallest pebble in the well ol truth Has its peculiar meaning and will stand When man's best monuments wear first away. The law of heaven is lore, and though its name Has been usurped by passion and profaned lo its unholy uses though all ihs time, Still, the eternal principle is pure ; AD2 these deep affections that we feel Omnipotent within us, can we see The lavish measure in which life is giv'n And the yearning tenderness of a child, For every bird that sings above its bead And eveiy creature, feeding on the hills, And every tree, flower, and running brook, We see how everything was made to love, And bow they err in a world like this, Find anything to hate but human pride. THE JOSH BILLINGS PAPERS. JAW BONES. Dry goods are worshipped in this world now more than the Lord iz. CuiiLcilling with fear iz the way cowards are made, councilling with hope iz the way heroes are made, councilling with faith iz the way Christians are made. Pleazure iz like a hornet —generally ends in a sting. The most dangerous characters in the world are # thoze who live in the subherbs ov viitew —th-*y are rotten ice. Lazvuess iz a good deal like money— the more a man liaz the more he seems to want. Thare iz no such things az inheriting virtew, money and titles aud fever kan be inherited. The virtews ova convent are like hot house fruits—tender, but tasteless. Life iz like a mountain—after climbing up one side and sliding down the other,put np the sled. When a man proves a literary failure, he generally sets up for a criiick, and like the T'X ill ihe fable, who bad lost biz blush in a trap, kant see a nice long tad without hankering tew bob it. The devil owes most ov biz success tew the fackt that he iz alwuz on hand. Coquetts often beat up the game, while the Prudes bag it. Thare iz only one excuse for impudence and that iz igporanze. Modest men, in irieing tew be impudent alwns git sassy. liepntHshuii iz like money—the princi pal is often lost by putting it out at in terest. Jealousy iz nothing more than vanity, for if we love another uiore than we *do ourselfs, we shunt be jealous. Thare iz lots ov folks in this world who, rather than not find auy fault at all, wo'd'nt hesitate tew say tew an angle worm that hiz tail wuz altogether too long for the restov hiz buddy. Thare iz menny who are kut out for smart men who won't pay for making up. Envy iz an insult tew a man's good sense for envy iz the pain we feel at the excellencies ov others. llow menny people thare iz whose souls lay ia them, like the pith in a goose quill. AMUSING RECEIPTS. To make a lemon drop. Let it fall off the table. To make a stomach cake. Use plenty of unripe fruit To make a(n )ice cream. Stick a pin in the bahy. To make cats sup. Give them milk. To make toad in-the-hole. Make a hole in the ground and drop a toad in it. To make a nice pickle. Hunt in a drawer for something in the dark. To make a bed. Dig into the pillows, rake up the sheets, and hoe the blankets, sew up (he holes in the quilt, and finish by destroying all insects. To beat carpets. Use matting; for coolness it beat 3 carpets. To make a window blind, Fill it up with bricks and mortar. To prevent the creaking of a door. — Nail it up. To obtain sleep. Have nothing but I 44 nodding acquaintances." To keep up yonr spirits. Place the de- I canters on tbt roof of lb® bouse. " To Speak his Thoughts is Every Freeman's Right. " YOUR FIRST SWEETHEART. You can never forget her. She was so very young, and innocent, and pretty. — She had such away of looking at you over her hymn-book in church. She alone, of all the world, did not think you a boy of eighteen, but wondered at yonr size and learning, and your taint foreshadowing of a sunny moustache,, and believed you every incli a man. When at those stupid even ing parties, where boys who should have been in the nursery, and girls who should have eaten supper of bread and milk, and gone to sleep hours before, waltzed and Hirted and made themselves sick over oys ters and champagne, you were favored with a glance of her eye or a whisper from her you ascended to the seventh Leaven immediately. When once, upon a certain memorable eve, she polkaed with the drug gist's clerk, and never looked at you, how miserably you were. It is funny to think of now, but it was not funny then, for you were awfully in earnest, One?, ala pie-nic, she wore a whit* dress, and bad roses twined in her black hair, and she looked so like a biide that you fairly trembled ; sometimes you llio't in just such snowy costume, with just such blossoms in her hair, she might stand be side the altar, and you, most blessed of all mortals, might place a golden ring upon her finger ; and when you are left alone with her for a moment, some of your tho'ts would form themselves into words, and though she blushed and ran away, and would not let you kiss her. she did not seem to be angry. And then you were somehow parted for a little while, and when you met again she was walking with | a gentleman, a large, well whiskered man of twenty-eight or thirty, and had neither word or smile for you. And some well meaning gossip informed you shortly that she was a engaged" to the tall gentleman with black whiskers, and that '• it was a splerdid match." It was terrible news to j you then, and sent you off to some great city, far from your native place, where, j after a good deal of youthful grief, and ma- : ny resolutions to die and haunt tier, you j recovered your equanimity, and began to I make money and to call love stuff and non- ' sense. You have a rich wife of vo ir own now, and giown tip children—aye, even two or j tliro,. i-l.thlron almnt nnr j hearth ; your hair is gray, and you lock j your heart up in the fire proof sale at your j counting house when you go home at night. Anil you thought )ou had forgotten that little episode of your nineteenth year, un til the other day, when you read of her death in the papers. You know she was a stout ladv who wore glasses, and had daughters older than she was in that olden ■ time, but your heart went back anil you j saw her smiling and blushing, with her , golden hair about the face, and yourself a boy again, dreaming ot wedding robes and | rings, and you laid your gray old head up on your office desk and wept for the mem- ; ory of your first sweetheart. Covetous people often seek to shel ter themselves behind the. widow's mile, J and give hut a paltry sum to the benevo- j lent objects under color of her contribu- f lions The following incident has a moral to all such. A gentleman called upon a wealthy friend for a contribution. " Yes, I sunpose I must give my mite," said the rich man. " You mean the widow's mite, I sup pose," replied the other. 44 To be sure I do " The gentleman continued : 44 I will be satisfied with half as much J as she gave. How tnuch are you worth ?' j 41 Seventy thousand dollars." j 44 Give mc a cheek, then, for thirty-five , thousand ; that w ill be half as much as she gave —all she had." This was a new idea lo the wealthy morcant. MECHANICS. — They are the palace build ers of the world; not a slick is hewn, not a stone is shaped in ail the lordly dwell ings of the rich, that does not owe its beau ' ty°Hiid fi.ness-to the skill of the mechanic. The towering spires that raised their giu dy heads among the clouds, depend upon the mechanic's art for their strength and symmetry. Not an edifice for devtion, or business, or comfort, but bears the impress of their hands. How exalted is their vo cation ! how sublime their calling. I heir path is one of true glory, it is their own fault if it docs not lead tliem to the high est post of honor and renowa. THE WIDOWER. —The death of a man's wife is like cutting down an ancient oak that has long shadowed the famdy man sion. Henceforth the glare of the worlJ, with its cares and vicissitudes falls upon the widower's heart, and tln-re is uoihing to break its force, or shield liirn from the full weight of his misfortune. It is as it his right hand were withered —as if one wing were broken anil every movement that he made, brought him to the ground. liis eyes are dim Hnd gla?sy ; and when the film of death falls over him lie misses those accustomed tones which have smootli ed his passage to the grave KEEP IN GOOD HUMOR.— It is not great Calamities that embitter existence; it is the petty vexations, the small jealousies, the minor miseries that make the heart heavy and the temper sour. Don't let them. Anger is a pure waste of vitality ; it is always disgraceful, except in some very rare cases, when it i* kindled by see ing wrong done to another. But even that noble rage seldom mends the mal i ter, j Til* FAT* o VANITT.— The New York | papers are moralizing over the fact that a young lady recently diopped down in the street owing to a congestion of the lungs arising from tight lacing. She was, says one paper, an estimable young woman, well informed, pious and exemplary ; hut nei ther her piety nor her amiability, her in telligence nor her sense of decorum, was equal to her vanity. She was too plump, Jo speak daintily. She was too stout, to 1 use llie diction of society. She was too fat, to employ vulgar phraseology, for her conceited sense of the genteel, if not the ! beautiful. Her self-complacency was | more disgusted with her tendency to obseity than she cared to manifest; and whether ior not she drank vinegar (as many fool , ish ones do ) to counteract the tendency, ' or dieted herself upon the bantling system, j she was ashamed of nature's generosity that she tried to conceal it by tight lacing. , The blood thus driven to the head in in ' ordinate proportions put hei life in danger | every time she indulged in ihe slightest exercise.; but her figure was of more con sequence to her than her life. She would rather be dead, with all her pi'ty and ami ability, than 6tout-waisted. Site prefer red to meet her God, as a suicide, than ! meet her fellow creatures in a state of such plumptitnde, and we see the finale of i Iter vanity ! But how many women, old as well as young are '* killing themselves ' bv inches" after this fashion, in the midst of us ? Is there one amongst us who could not lay his hand upon a number whose vanity is thus digging out for them selves day after day, a burial place in the But drive on as last as you choose, ladies, as Mark Twain says, it is none of our funeral ! UNEARTHING A MISBR'S HOARDINGS. — " Napock " writes from New York to the Chicago Journal : " A friend of your correspondent, living in Brooklyn, was appointed executor for his wife's uncle, who died suddenly a few days ago. The latter was far advanced in years, ar.d had lived almost alone for a verv long period in a small house in Har lem. He Ladled a miser's life, spending little tnore than was necessary to keep body and soul together, and to outward appearance, being vfl-y poor, llis relative, ; however, believed that lie had some money ! about bun and Brnvn-dlnolw the evcQUlor j recently began a search for it. Lp to j this date he has found between five or six thousand dollars in gold and silver The coin was secreted in old shoes, in the beds, ot buried in little heaps uuder the tloor.— Many ot the coins thus far found are as fresh and new as if they had just come j from the mint, though bearing date all ihe wav as far back as thirty years. The I search is still going on, and new coins are dailv being brought to light. The executor j will not be surpiied if fully fifty thousand | dollars are turned out before the search about the house and lot is concluded. — | This is no story of imagination, but a ' truthful account of what has transpired in Harlem. ALASKA.— The present prospect is that our purchase of the Busman American possessions is to be a failure, even after taking possession. The payment of the money was to be made on the 20th, of April. But the Radical Congress, purely for the sake of mortifying Mr, Seward, and thus hitting him a back-handed slap in the face, has put off the consideration j of t! e question of the necessary appro priation until the 20th of May next. — Thus the honor and credit of the nation is to be dishonored simply to subserve partisan malice. If the treaty be wrong, 1 iu the estimation of the House, why is it not manfully and publicly declared ? Why sneak behind a delay until after our na tional credit is dishonored ? lIICKUAN AFTER THE NTGRO WoMEN OF HARRISBURG. — It might have been supposed that Hickman's remarks at Ilar risburg, a few days since, iu which he de clared that " I may probably see the day that I may walk side by side with a color ed woman. 1 have seen many a colored woman that I would lather walk with than a great many men, " —would have ; produced some comment or excitement — i Whatever it may have done elsewhere, !we are free to say that hero, where he is personally known, and where his habits are faiuilliar to the people, it lia9 excited no remark whatever. — IFrsl Chester Jeffer souiun. A BEAUTIFUL SENTIMENT. — Mr. Chal mers beautifully says; " Ihe little that I have seen of the world and know of the history of mankind, tenches me to look upon thi ir errors irv sorrow, not in anger. When 1 take history of one poor heart that has sinned and suffered, and represent to mvsclf the struggles and temptations it passed through —the brief pulsations of joy, tlu tears of regret; the feebleness of purpose ; the scorn of the woHd that has little charity ; the desolation of the soul's sanctuary, and threatening voices within— health gone, happiness gone—l would fain i leave the erring soul of my fellow-men : with Uiiu from whose hands it came. " mm The wife of a mechanic died lately in j Detroit, and <>n the night after the body had been laid out one of the watchers tho't she discovered evidences of life. Restora tives were applied, and the body warmed, and at the end of five days life was re stored, the patient opened her eyes, and is now in a fair way of recovery. The coffin had been prepared, and the body placed iu it, and but for the discovery of the watcher undoubtedly there would have been a oaw of burytng atiy* fyA distinguished ex-Governor of Ohio, famous for story-telling, relates that on one occasiou, while he was addressing a temperance meeting at Georgetown, ! District of Columbia, and depicting the ! miseries caused by too freely indulging in : the flowing bowl, his attention was at tracted by the sobs of a disconsolate and , 6eedy looking individual seated iu the rear part of the room. On going to the | person and interrogating him, the Govern or was told the usual tale of woe ; among | othea sad incidents, that during his career ;of vice he had buried three wives. The ; Governor having buried a few wives of his own, sympathized deeply with the in ebriate, and consoled him as much as was !in his power. Said he : " The Lord has, indeed, deeply afflicted you." The mourn er, sobbing, replied : "Yves, he has;" and, pausiug a minute, and, wiping his nose, he continued, " but I don't tbink the Lord got much ahead of me, for as fast as He look one, 1 took another !" O.v THE TRACK. — The other day, I heard a mother ask a little son to do some thing. "In a minute, " he replied. She spoke again. But it was one, two, three, four, five limes before he minded her. It makes me think of the switch-tender's boy. What if he had waited a minute be fore minding his father? A switch-ten der in Prussia was just going to move the rail, in order to put a coming train of cars on a side track, when lie caught sight of his little son playing on the track. The engine was in sight, and be had not a moment to spi re. He might jump and save his child ; but lie could not do that and turn the switch in time: and if it were not done, the on-coming train would meet another train, and a terrible crash and smash take place. The safety of hundreds of lives depended upon his fidelity. What could he do/ "Lie .down ! lie down!" he called, with a loud, quick voice to the child; and seizing the switch, the train passed safely on its proper track. Did the heavy train run over the boy ? Was he killed ? Was he crushed to pieces ? No, for he did just as his father told him, and did it instantly, lie fell fiat between the rails and the cars went high ever his head ; and when the anxious father sprang to the spot, there be was a live and well : not a liair was touched.— saved his life. He did not stop a minute. Even a moment's hesitation would have been too late. A KC-KLUX GHOST IN A SATE. — The Nashville Dispatch, states that a few nights since, the clerks at the Chattanoo ga Depot perpetrated a fearful joke upon a daikie employed there, who goes by the name of General Butler. One of them, wrapping himself in a washed sheet and donuing a tall hat constructed of blot ting paper, placed himself inside of a big safe, and at a late hour the negro was sstit to the safe with two books, which he had orders to deposit. Asbe slowly swung the door on its hinges, a deep groan that seemed to come from the door itself in complaint at being disturbed, nearly lifted poor Butler from his boots. Almost sim ultaneously, a shriek as from some yawn ing grave, fell upon his ear, and a ghostly figure tushed towards him. With a loud yell of horror and dismay, the darkie sank upon the flooY, where he doubled himself as if of India rubber, and lay till the graceless scamps who bad imposed upon him could biing to bear the proper re storatives, and lay the mischievous ghost who had come 60 near being the death of him. Is CoNSUMPitoN CONTAGIOUS ? Popu lar belief lias generally been on the side of the contagiousness of pulmonary con sumption. In Southern Europe, it is a part of sanitary legislation to destroy the clothes and bedding of those who have died of this disease. Until recently, the opinions of medical men have leaned to the other side. Experiments and obser vations now being made iu Europe seem to show that tubercle introduced by inoc ulation into a body of a healthy animal will give rise to tuberculosis, or the for mation and deposit of the like matter in the tissues and organs. Dr. Gerhard ter miuatcs his paper on the treatment of continued fevers .by some remarks on the transmission of pulmonary consumption from one person to another, when sleep ing in the same bed. He says: " I should set dowu the probability of con sumption occurringto persons thus exposed to contagion as husband • and wife, two sisters, or two brothers, sleeping together iu close rooms, to be at least three-fold greater than ordinary, if they be long ex posed to inhale the exhalations from one patient to another. " joungman having preached for his bishop, was anxious to get a word of j applause for bis labor of love. The bishop however, did not introduce the subject, and his younger brother had to bait the book for him. 44 1 hope sir, Idid not weary your "people by the length of my sermon to-day ?" / No, sir, not at all; nor by the depth either 1" (9* Why do annual flowering plauts resemble whales ? Because they only come up to blow. 49" Why does a dog looking for liis master resemble an orange? Because he looks all round. TERMS, $2.00 Per. ANNUM, in Advance. NO. 37. pise antr fftherfeise. "When shall se have another war with Turkey ? Next Thanksgiving day. When ia a trout like a bird ? Ana When it takes a fly. "Doctor, what will cure the fevor of love?" "The child of wedlock, Mademoiselle." I " A tender-hearted railway engineer says he never runs oTer a man when he can help it, "because it always musses up the track 80." "Sal," said one girl to another, "I am so glad I have no beau now 1" "Why so ?" ask ed the other. "Oh, cause I can eat as many onions as I please." "Father/'said a cubler's lad as ho was pegging away at an old shoe, "they say that trout bite everything now." "Well, well, replied the old gentleman, "stick to your work and they won't bite you." One evening a young lady played a piece of music consisting of twenty four pages.— James Ward, in referring to it the next day, said tfeey were favored with music by the quire. Dry Jen was so bound up in his books that his wife one day exclaimed, "I with I were a book that I might always bo in your so ciety." "I wish you were an almanac, so I could change you every year," ho ungallanU ly replied. ■4* - ■ An urchin in a country school, was reading the verse in the New Testament which reads thus :—And he saw Abraham afar off, with Lazarus in his bosom." The boy gravely spelt it out thus And-he-saw a broom afaroff witb-lether ears-in-Boston, "You have lost your baby, I hear," said one gentleman to another. "Yes, poor little thing ! It was only five months old. We did all we could for It. We had four doctors, blistered its head and feet, put mustard poul ;<.*• ii ;• it nine calomel r°"" , * r9 ' leached its temples, baa u o;eu, and gave it all kuids of medicines; and yet,after a week's illness, it died." A gentleman said to one of his sons who used to lie in-bed late in the morning.— "Your brother gut up thia morning at five o'clock,and fouod on the sidewalk a purse of gold." "Very well," replied the lazy youDg man, "if the poor fellow to whom it belonged had remained in till ten, ho proba- * bly would not have lost it." Tha latest specimen ot juvenile literature is tbia : As Wi-lNi-am Wilk-ios was walk-iog in the gar den one day, he met his dear sister, and thus he did say : "Why is a squash like a lit tie newsboy ?" She gave it up. "Be cause," said the wicked boy, "the old er he grows the more of a yel-ler he will be." His good grandmamma orerheard him, and he went to bed sick with grief. A Yarikee basing.told an Englishman that he shot, on one particular occasion 999 snipe, his interlocutor asked him why he did'nt make it a thousand at once. "No," said be, "not likely I'm go'mg to tell a lie for one snipe." Whereupon the Englishman, determined not to be outdone, began to tell a long story of a man having swam from Liverpool to Bos ton, "Did you see him !" asked the Yankee,sud denly, "did you see him yourself ?" "Why, yes, of course I did ; I wss coming across, and our vessel passed him a mile out of Boston harbor." "Bell, I'm glad ye saw him, stranger, 'cos yer a witness that 1 did it. That was ma !" The following coloqoy took place between a New York census marshal and a native of Germany : " Who lives here ?" "Yaw." " What 'a your name ?" "Sharmany on der Rhine." "What's your lather's name ?" "Nix fer shtay." "When did you arrive in Little Falls 1" , "Mid der cars." "Got any children ?" "Yaw—two barrels, mit kraut." "How long have you been in this housa ?" "Two tDd der basement." "Who own* the building 1" "I pays nothing. Ilans pays der same twice a month." "Where did you live last year ?" "Across der retire as you come up with der market in yer right hand behind der pedstock what belongs to der blacksmith shop." * "Coffee, wat you link de moat useful obdo plannets—de son or de mune ?" " Well, Sambo, I link de muDe ortcr take de fus rank in dat ar' 'ticular." "Why you tink so Coffee ?" "Well, 1 tell you; ka she shines by night when ws went light, and de sua shine* by day whoo era do *o P*