ISpming fffif icmomt HARVEY SICKLER, Publisher VOL. VII. Ppning fJmncul. | Dsmocrauc weekly P er devoted to Poll ics News, the Arts 11 HARVEY SICKLER Terms —1 copy 1 year, (in advance) 82,00 ;if aet paid within six months, 82.50 will be charged NO paper will be DISCONTINUED, until all ar rearages™ paid; unless at the option of publisher. RATES OF ADVERTISING. TE* USES COSSTITUTK A BV)L'ABE. One iquare one or three insertions •! ,60 Every subsequent insertion less than 8 00 KMALESTATB, PERSONAL PROPERTY, and GENERAL ADVERTISING, as uiav be agreed upon, PATENT MEDICINES and other advertisements ny the column: One column, 1 year, BUO Half column, 1 year j 4 ® Third column, 1 year, Fourth column, I year, 20 Business (lards of one square or less, per year j with paper, 88 rjf- EDITORIAL or LOCAL ITEM advertising—with out Advertisement—ls cts. per line. Liberal terms ■ude with permanent advertisers . EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS and AUDI TOR'S NOTICES, of the usual length, 82,50 OBITUARIES,- exceeding ten lin.-s, each ; RELI SIOUS and LITERARV NOTICES, not of general wrest, one half tne regular rates. f Advertisements must be handed in by TCES IAT NOON, to insure insertion the same week. JOB WORK oftllkinde neatly executed and at prices to suit the times. All TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS and JOB WORK must be paid for, when ordered Business Notices. RTASW ELfrTLE ATTORNEYS AT LA V Office on Tioga Street Tunkbannock Pa HS. COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. 1., 'ARHISH, ATTORNEY AT LAW. • Otfi-e at the Court House, in Tunkhattook Wyoming Co. PA. IM. M. I*l ATT, ATIOKNEY AT LAW of fice ui Stark's Brick Block Tioga St ~ Tunk nirnock. Pa. rv J (HASP.. ATTORNEY AND COUNSEL 1 LOR AT LAW, Nicholson, Wyoming Co-, Pa L=;ooial attention given to settlement of dece dent s estates N'ichoUou, Pa.. Dec. 5, 13g7—v"ul9yl MJ. WILSON, ATTOiiNFY AT LAW. Col • 1 acting and Heal Estate Agent. ftr sale. Scranton, Pa. 38tf. T W. KUOADPHYSICIAN A SURGEON, J • will attend promptly to all calls in his pro feuion. May be found at his Office at the Drug Store, or at his residence on l'utiuan Sreet, tormerly eccupied by A. K. Peckham Esq. DENTISTRY. DR. L. T. BURNS ha* permanently located in Tunkhannock Borough, and respectfully tenders hit professional services to its citizens Office on second floor, formerly occupied by Dr. Pitman. vtjn3otf. PORTRAIT, LANDSCAPE, ORNAMENTAL PA.T3VTirvGr. Hy ?r. ft CO EH, Artist. Rooms over the WyomiDg National bank,in stark' Brick Block, TUN KHANNOCK, PA. Life-iiie Portraits painted from Amb'otvpes or Photographs —Photographs Painted in OilCilors. — All orders for paintings executed according to or der. or no charge made. t*r nstructions given in Drawing, Sketching, Portrait and Landscape Painting, in Oil or water Colors, and in all branches of the art, Tuok, July 31, 'g7-vgnso-tf. HUITORI) HOUSET TUNKHANNOCK. WYOMING CO., PA. THIS ESTABLISHMENT HAS RECENTLY L been refitted and lumished in the latest style. Every attention will be given to the comfort and Convenience of those who patronize the House. 11, IH'FFORD. Proprietor. Tunkhannock, Pa., June 17, 1663.—v7n44. BOLTON HOUSE. - UAKIUSOUhG, PKNNA. The undersigned haviug lately purchased the "BI'EHLER HOUSE " property, has already com menced such alterations and improvements at will tender this old and popular House equal, if not supe rior, to any Hotel in the City of Hnrrisburg. .(continuance of the public patronage is refpect fully solicited. GEO. J. BOLTON WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE/ TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., IA. THIS establishment ha* recently been refitted an furnished in the latest style Every attention *Bl he given to the comfort and convenience oi those •io patronise the Houe. T. B. WALL, Owner and Proprietor : Tunkhannock, September 11, 1861. MEANS' HOTEL: TOWA.NIDA, PA. IT B. BARTLET, [Latecis„ "IRAIVAKH HUI'SK, KLMIRA, N Y. PROPRIETOR. Tba MEANS HOTEL, i- one of the LARGEST *B4 BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country —lt '"*4 up in the most modern and improved style *°4 no pains are spared to make it a pleasantand *Feabi e stopping piace for all, *3021-ly. . INFORMATION. ■Uatrtnation guaranteed to produce a luxuriant Pbeth of hair upon a bald head or beardless face. v' 4 " " recipe for the removal of Pimples, Blotches, "Uptioni, etc., on the skin, leaving the same soft beautiful, can be obtained without charge THOS. F CHAPMAN, Chemist. 482 Broadway, New York. j TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. -WEDNESDAY, JDLY 22, 1868. gftridi's Column. Spring Trade for '6B Will open on or about the Ist of May, AT TUNKHANNOCK. PENN'A. C. Detricb., (SUCCESSOR TO LCXMBLL X BANS ATT NR.) Proposes to establish himself permanently 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. GINGHAMS, PRINTS, SHAWLS. LADIES' SACQ.UINGB, DRESS TRIMMINGS, BLEACHED AND BROWN MUSLINS, CLOTHS AND CASSIMKRES GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS TOILET ARTICLES. NOTIONS, AC. Groceries. SUGAR, TEA, COFFEE, MOLASSES, RICE, SYRUP, CANDLES, 60AP, STARCH, FLOUR, FEED, SALT, PORK, BUTTER, CHEESE, DRIED BEEF, HAMS, FISH of all kinds, BEANS, AC., AC., Hardware, A FULL ASSORTMENT. Cutlery OF ALL KINDS, MEN'S AND BOYS' Hats and Caps. __:n; Boots $ Shoes, A FULL ASSORTMENT. This brand of business made a speciality. A lot of SEWED ARMY SHOES, A GREAT BARGAIN, SOLE LEATHER. CROCKERY. STONE, WOOD AND TINWARE, in great variety. All kinds of Produce taken iu exchange for Goods The above articles will be kept in full assortment. I mean to make the experiment of goods sold in quantite* cheaper than ever before in this vicinity, i I shall be happy to tee you, and ycu can depend up on finding bargains In every department. Goods re ceived every week. Respectfully yours, c- VXTXICJt. loftrg. WIPING OUT THE RADS. AIR .—The Wearing of the Green: With a little Western swearing and a little Yankee cant, And an unenthusiastie unanimity for Grant, The rabble at Chicago has done its work my lads, And nothing now remains for us but wiping out the Bads. The Empire State will take the lead —she's fifty thousand strong— Ohio and Connecticut will follow in the throng ; And all the West and half the East will join the line my lads, And aid us in our pretty job of wiping out the Rads. From where the golden rivers run, on the far Pa cific slope, To the little Nutmeg State, goes up the chorus of our hope ; Three million sturdy freemen now have sworn an oath; my lads, That they will oast a solid vote for wiping out the Rads The white man's country shall be ruled by honest wbito man yet, And to oblivion we will sweep the nigger-loving set ; Then put your shoulders to the wheel and beave away my lads, And let us save the Ship of State by wiping out the ' Rads. ~~ALLIG ATORS ON THE GANGES. The Bank of tne Ganges opposite Mon gliyr lias not the slightest pretensions to beauty; its low, Hat, swampv shores,inter- j seeted with reedy inlets, are the haunts of multitudes of alligators, which in hot sea- sons may he seen sunning themselve by the side of the huge ant hills erected on j the sand batiks, appearing above the stir face of the water. Some of these animals attain a predigious siz-; they are exceeding ly difficult to kill, in consequence of ada mantine armor in which the greater part of their bodies are cased —Even when the balls penetrate less guarded points,they are so tenacious of life as to cause a great deal of truoble before they can finally be dvspach ed. One which had received eight balls, and j was supposed to be dead, alter having been tied to the bamboo of a budgerow for a whole day, exhibited in the evening, so much strength and fierceness, as to be a dan gerous neighbor. Manv of these monsters are fifteen feet long, and swim fearlessly past the boats, lifting up their teri iffic heads, and rising their dark bodies from the water as they glide along. Though ( not so frequently as in former times, when ; the echoes of the river were less distribu ted by the report of fire-anus, natives are 6till the victims of that species of alligator, which lies in wait for men and animals, venturing too near their haunts. In many that have been kdled the silver ornaments that have been worn by women and chil dren, have been found, a convincing proof of the (earful nature of their prey. An al ligator, it is said, will sometimes plunge amidst a group of bathers at a ghaut, and, singling out one of the party, dart into the middle of the stream, defying pursuit by the rapidity of its movement against the current, through which it will fly with the velocity of an arrow, and having reached deep water, it sinks with its victim into the abyss of the river Sportsmen, the youn ger portion especially, delight in waging war against these giants of the stream, as they lie wallowing in the mud in shallow places, and presenting the defencleaa parts of their bodies to the marksmen. In the Sunderbune, where the creeks and natural canals of the Ganges wind thiotigh the for ests, whose margin almost mingles with the 6tream, alligators are sometimes engag ed in deadly encounters with the tiger. A battle of this kind, witnessed by a mis sionary, is described to have beeu a drawn one, for, although the tiger succeeded in drawing his unwieldy adversary into ajuu gle, after an hour or two the alligator was seen to emerge and regain the water, not very materially injured by the conflict it had sustained. OUT UPON THE HYPOCRITES! The Radicals make a groat ado about the presence of Southern sol .iers in the Dem ocratic Convention. Generals Hancock, Franklin, Slocum,Granger, Ewing M'Clern and, and thousands of the bravest of the brave who periled their lives in defence of the Union, meet these Southern soldiers and take them by the hand to welcome them back to their allegiance to the Gov ernment and to American citizenship, but these parlor patriots, these shodJy braves, these howling war-shriekers when the ene my was afar off, these sneaking skulkers when danger threatened, these superlative ly lojal Radicals cannot find it in their hearts to profit by the example. Yes, when the Ex Rebel Governor Joe. Brown, of Georgia, who remanded into slavery the negro prisoners captured by the rebels, enters the Chicago Convention and takes part in the proceedings, it is all right. But when some educated, intelligent and honorable Southerner like Wade Hampton, attends a D< mocratic Convention, oh! hor rors, bow atrocious! Was ever hypocracy more glaring ? Was ever demagoguism more transparent ? lias not Lingstreet been forgiven and taken to the arms of the Radicals? Was not Warmouth, the pres ent Radical Governor of of Louisiana,a "red handed rebel?" Are not half of the Radical members of the Southern Legislatures un able to take the test oath ? If Radicals re ceive into fellowship, those who once were rebels, is it so very wrong if Democrats do the earne ?—Patriot, " To Speak his Thoughts is Every Freeman's Right. " VALLEY FORGE. A Legend of the Revolution. BT GEORGE LIPrARD. Hidden away there in a deep glen, not many miles from Valley Forge, a quaint old farm house rose darkly over a wide waste of snow. It was a cold dark winter night, and the snow began to fall—while fiom the fire-place of the old farm-house, the cheer ful blaze of massive logs, flashed around a wide and spacious room. Two persons sat there by that fire, a father and child. The father who sits yonder, with a soldier's belt thrown over his farmer's dress, is a man of some fifty years, his eyes blood-shot, his hair, chang ed to a ultimately gray, his face wrinkled and hollowed by care, and by dissipation more than care. And the daughter who sits in the full light of the blaze opposite her father —a slenderly formed girl of some seventeen years, clad in a course linsey shirt and kerchief, which made up the costume of a farmer's daughter in the days of the Revolution. She is not beautiful; ah, no ! Care perhaps that disease consumption, which makes the heart grow cold Io name, has been busy with that young face, sharp ened its outlines, stamped it with a death ly paleness: There is no bloom on that young The brown hair is laid plainly aside from her pale brow. Then tell me, what is it you see when yon gaze in her face? You look at that young girl, and 6ee nothing but the gleam of two large dark eyes, that burn into your soul. Yet, those eyes are unnaturally dark, and large and bright ; perhaps consump tion is feeding their flame. And now then as the father sits there so moody and sullen, or the daughter sits yonder so sad and sileut and pale, tell me 1 pray you, the story of their lives. The farmer, Jacob Manheim, was a peaceful, happy man before the Revolu tion. Since the war, he had become drunken, and idle ; driven his wife brok en-hearted to the grave ; and, worse than all, joined a band of Tory refugees, who scoured the laud at dead of night, burn ing and murdering a& they went. To night at the hour of two, this Tory band will lie in wait iu a neighboring pass to attack and murder the rebel Washing ton, whose starving soldiers are yonder in the huts of Valley Forge. Washington, on his lonely journeys, is went to pass this farm-house ; the cut throats are there in the next chamber, drinking and feasting as they wait for two o'clock at night. And the daughter Mary—for her name was Mary ; they loved that name in the good old times—what is the story of her brief young life ? She had been reared by her mother, now dead and gone home, to reveie this man Washington, who to-night will be atlack ed and murdered ;to revere him next to God. Nay, more, that mother, on her dealb-bed, joined the hands of this daugh ter iu solemn betrothal with the hands of a young partizan leader, Harry Williams, who now shares the crust and the cold at Valley Forge. Well may that maiden's eye flush with unnatural brightness, well may her pale face gather a siDglc flush in the centre of each cheek, For yesterday afternoon, she went four miles orer roads of ice and snow, to tell Captain Wiiliams the plot of the refugees. She did not reach Valley Forge until Washington had left on one of his lonely journeys ;so this night, at twelve, the partizan captain will occupy the rocks above the neighboring pass, to trap the trappers of George Washington. Yes, that pale, slender girl, remember ing tbe words of her dying mother had brokeu through her obedience to her fath er, after a long and bitter struggle. How daik that struggle in a faithful daughter's heart! She had betrayed his plot to his enemies, stipulating first for the life aud safety of her traitor father. And now, as father and child are sitting there, the shouts of the Tory refugees echo from tbe next chamber, as the hand of the old clock is on the hour of eleven Hark ! there is a sound ot horses' hoofs without the farmhouse ; there is a pause; the door opens; a tali stranger, wrapped in a thick cloak, while as snow, enters,ad vances to the fire, and in brief words solic its some refreshments and an hour's re po e. by does the Tory Manheim start aghast at the sight of the stranger's blue and gold uniform ? Then mumbling something to his daughter about getttng some food for the traveller, rush wildly into the next room where his brother Tories are feasting. Tell me, why does that young girl stand trembling before the tall stranger, veiling her eyes from that calm face, with its blue eyes and kindly smile ? Ah, if we may believe the legends of that time, few men, few warriors, who dar ed the terrors of battle with a smile could stand unabashed before the solemn pres ence of Washington. For it was Washington, exhausted with a long journey; his limbs stiffened and his face numbed with cold ; it was the great rebel of Valley Forge, who return ing to his camp sooner than his usual hour, was forced by the storm to take refuge in the farmer's house, and claim a little food and a hour's repose at his hands. In a few moments, behold the soldier with bis cloak thrown off sitting at that oaken table, partaking of the food spread out there by the hands of the girl who now stands trembling at his shoulders. And look ! Her hand is extended as if to grasp him by the arm ; the lips move as if to warn him of his danger, but make no sound. Why all this silent agony for the man who sits so silently there ? One moment ago as the girl, in prepar ing the hasty supper, opened yonder closet adjoining the next room, she heard the low whispers of her father and the Tories! she heard the dice box rattle, as they were casting lots who should stab Geotga Wash ington in bis sleep. And now the words, " Beware, on this night you die!" trembled half formed on her lips, when the father comes hastily from the room and bushes her with a look. " Show the gentleman to his chamber, Marv, " ( how calmly polite a murderer can be, ) " that chamber at the head of the stairs, on the left. On the left, you mind." Mary takes the light, trembling and pale. She leads the soldier up the oaken stairs. They stand on the landing, in this wing of the farm-house, composed of two rooms, divided by thick walls, from the main body of the mansion. On one side, the right, is the door of Mary's chamber, on the other, the left, the chamber of the soldier, to him a chamber of death, For a moment, Mary stands there trem bling and confused. Washington gazes upon that pale girl with a look of surprise. Look ? she is about to warn him of the danger, when, see there ! her father's rough face appears above the head of the stairs. "Maty, show the gentleman into the left. And look ye, girl, it's late; you'd had better go into your own room ami go to sleep." While the Tory watches them from the head ot the stairs, Washington enters the chamber on.the left, Mary the ehamberon the right. An hour passes. Still the storm beats on the roof; still the snow drifts on the hills. Before the fire, in the dim old hall of the farm-house, arc seven half-drunken men, with that tall Tory, Jacob Manheim, sitting in their midst; the murderer's kuife in his hands. For the lot had fallen on him. He is to go up s'airs and stab the sleeping man. Even this half-drunken murderer is pale at the thought; how the knife trembles in his hands —trembles against the pistol barrel. The jeers of his comrades arouse liirn to the work; the light in one hand, and the knife iu the other, he goes up stairs, he listens; first at the door of his daughter on the right, then at the door of the soldier's chamber on the left. All is stiil. Then he places the light on the floor ; he is gone a moment; silence ! there is a faint groan ! He comes forth again, rushes down the stairs, and stands there before the fire, with the bloody knife io his. hands. " Look ! " he shrieks, as he scatters the ! red diops over his comrades faces, over ! the hearth, into the file, " Look, it is his ! blood—the traitor Washington!" His comrades gather round him with yells of joy ; already, in fancy, they count the gold which will be theirs for this deed, when lo ! that stair door opens, and there, with out a wound, stands George Washington, asking calnilv for his horse. 44 What I" shrieked the Tory, Manheim " can neither steel or ballet harm you?— Are you a living man ? Is there no wound ; about your uniform ? " The apparatioo drives him mad. lie starts forward, he places his hand : trembling upon the anus the breast of Washington. Then he looks at the bloody | knife, still clasped iu his right hand, and | stauds there quivering as if with a death spasm. While Washington looks on with silent, wonder, the door is flung open, the bold troopers from Valley Forge thronged the room, with the gallant form and bronzed visage of Captain Williams in their midst. At this moment the clock struck twelve.— Then a horrid thought crashes like a thun der-bolt upon tac brain of the Tory Man hciin. He seizes the light—rushes to the room of his daughter on the right. Some one had just risen from the bed—the chamber was vacant. Then toward the room on the left, with steps of leaden heaviness. Look ! now the light quivers in his hand. lie pauses at the dour; he listens. Not a sound—a stillness like the grave. His blood curdles in his veins.— Gathering courage, he pushes open the door. Towards the bed, through whose curtains he struck so blindly a moment ago. Again he pauses—not a sound stillness more terrible than the grave.— He flings aside the curtain. Tbeie, iu the full ligtit of the lamp, her young form but half covered, bathed in her own blood, there lay his daughter Mary. Aud, do not look npon the face of her fattier, as he starts silently back, frozen to stone ; but in this pause of horror, listen to the mystery of the dead. After the father had gone down stairs an hour ago, Mary silently stole from the chamber on tbe right, her soul shaken bv a thousand fears. She opened tbe door on the left, and tieheld Washington silting by a table on which were spread a chart and a Bible. Then, though her existence was in the act, she asked him, in a tone of calin politeness, to enter the room on the right. Mary entered the chamber which he left. Can you imagine the agony of that girl's soul on the bed. as intended for tbe death couch of Washington, she silently awaited the knife, although that knife might be clenched in a father's hand. And now father, frozen to stone, stood there, holding the light in one hand, the other still clencbiog the red knife. They lay bis child, the blood streaming from that wound in her arm, her eyes covered with a glassy film. " Mary ! " shrieked the guilty father— for robber and Tory as he was he called to her, but that was ail he could say. Suddenly she seemed to wake from that stupor. She sat up in the bed with glassy eyes. The strong hand of death was up on her. As she sat there, erect and ghast ly, the room was thronged with soldires. — Her lover rushed forward and called her by name. No answer. Called again— spoke to her in that familiar tone of olden time. Still 110 answer; she knew him not. Yes it was true—the strong hand of death was upon her. " Has he escaped ? " she asked, in a husky voice. "Yes!" shrieked the father. "Live Mary, only live, and to-morrow I will join the camp at Valley Forge. Then that girl, that hero-woman—dy ing as she was, not so much from the wound iu her arm, as from the agony which had brokeu the last chord of life, spread forth her arms as though she beheld a form floating there above the bed, beckon ing her away. She spread forth her arms as if to inclose that Angel form. " Mother !" she whispered, while there grouped the scldiers—there with apeeeh lisss agony on his brow, stood the lover there, hiding his face with oue hand, while the other grasped the light, crouched the father—the light flashing over the dark bed, with the form in its centre—" Moth er, thank God! For my life 1 have sav ed him " Look, even as starting on that bloody couch there, she speaks the half-formed word, her arms stiffen, her eyes wide open, set in death, glare in her father's face She is dead ! From the room her spirit has gone home. That half-formed word still quivering on the white lips of the hero-woman — that uttered in a husky whisper, choked by the death-rattle —that word was — WASH INGTON ! THE CHAMOIS. This animal, which belongs to the ante lope tribe, chiefly inhabits the Alps and Pyrenees, aud are found in flocks of from four to eighty, aud even a hundred. It is about the size of a goat, of a dusky, yellow brown color, with the cheeks, chin, throat and belly, <>f a yellowish white. The horns are black, slender, upright, hooked backward at their tips, and about eight in ches in height, and at the base of each there is a large orifice in the skin, of which the use is unknown. Like all the antelope race, the Chamois has sparkling and ani mated eyes. It feeds only on the finest herbage, and its flesh is ot a delicate flavor. When alarmed, the Chamois hisses with such force that the rocks and forests re echo, the noto being very sharp at first, and becoming deeper at the close. Hav ing paused a moment, the animal looks round, and perceiving his apprehensions to be well founded, he again hisses with in creased violence, at the same time striking the ground with his fore feet, bounding from rock to rock, and evincing the utmost agitation, till the alarm is spread to a very considerable distance, and the whole flock provided for their safety by a precipitate Alight. The hissing of the male is much louder than the female; it is performed through the nose; and is, strictly speaking, no other than a very strong breath driven violently through a small aperture. Ileat is so extremely disagreeable to these animals that they are never seen in summer, except in the excavations of the rocks, amidst fragments of unmelted ice, or under the shade of hanging precipices, which face the north, and effectually keep off the rays of the sun. They drink but sparingly, and chew the cud in the inter vals of feeding. TVir agility is wondeiful, as they wili throw themselve down, across a rock, which is nearly perpendicular, and twenty or thirty feet in height, without a single'prop to support their feet. Their motion lias, indeed, rather the appearance of flying than of leaping. ' The Chamois hunteia of the Alps are so fond of the occu pation that it has .ilinost became a mania, and they wi 1 brave every danger in pur suit of this animal. I.ONG FACES. What a sad mistake it is to suppose that a man should be gloomy because he is devout, as if misery were acceptable to God on its own account, and happiness an of fence against his dignity. A modern wri ter of much wisdom and pitb says: "There is a secret belief amongst some men that God is displeased with man's hap piness, and so they slink about creation ashamed and afraid to enjoy anything !" These are the people of whom Hood saya only billions!" A good man fs almost always a cheeful one. It is fit that bad men scowl, look blue and melancholy, but he has God's smile of approbation upon him should show his radiance in his countenance. Dr. Johnson said he "never knew a vidian in his life that he was not, on whole, an unhappy dog." And well he may be. Aud an honest man the man with good conscience—let him enjoy his sleep, and his dinner, and the love ot his wife and the prattle of his chil dren, and show a beaming face to bis neigh bor. Surely there is no worse theology than that which teaches that He who has given such fullness of joy to beasts aud birds delights in the misery of men; or, that having filled us with gladness, we ought to give the lie to His goodness by wearing faces beclouded with woe, aud fur rowed with prentended happiness. TERMS, $2.00 Per. ANNUM, in Advance pise aito pfrerfee. THE GEOGRAPHY LESSON. —"CIass in Geog raphy stand up. How many divisions of lb* earth are there ? " " Seven," " What are they ? " "Europe, Asia, Africa, America, Long Division, Short Division, the division in the Radical party." "Right. How many races are there 1" " Eleventeen hundred." " Nonsense. Let's us hear you name them." " White race, Black race Indian race, hoss race, race after the gals, mule race, wheel - barruw race, human race, race after a debt, foot race, mill race " " Hold on ! Guess you are right, but we can't stay here all day. Now then what are the principal elements ? " " Air, water, and the national debt." " Is the national debt one of the elements." " Yes, one of the elements of discord." "'What is our globe divided into ? " " Land, water and benzene." " How much of it is dry Uod ? " " Saloon keepers can tell better then I can." •' What is a mountain? " '• You ain't." " Ainounlain .'—to much." " You rascal you will catch it for this," " I caught it last term of Crow Collins, and hain't got over it yet," Boys got au intermission to scratch. A lover and his sweetheart, while travel ling through the woods in haste, met with a malanchuly accident, which is recorded in ike following felicitous strains : Ami while retreating through the woods, And through the tangled fern, He tore his musn't-meutiuc-'eais, And had to put on hera. STORY OP TWO CALVES —Jim Smith was a noted autioneer. Oue day he was selling farm stock. Among the articles to be sold was a heifer, very at tractive in her appear ance, and consequently Juu dwelt extensive ly on her many excellencies, winding up his eloquent flourish that she was as "gentle as a dovo." Thereupon, a long, slab-sided countryman, whose leg some inches longer than his pants, approaching the heifer and stooping down commenced handling her teats. Boasy, not relishing such familiarity, lifted her hools and laid "greeny" sprawlicg some ten feet off. "There" said "Jim," "that 6hows one of her best traits; she'll never allowj a strange calf come near bear!" "Greeny" meanwhile picked himself up, and giving his dusty pale a harrowing scratch, exclaimed: "No wonder when her own calf has beeu bleating around her all day!" A DiprcuLT IRISHMAN —The Captain of a steamboat, seeing an Irishman smoking away, abaft tbo funnel, stepped ,up to him, and said : "Don't you see the notice stuck np there?" • D'ye mane that bit o' painted tin ?" "To be sure I do.', "Shure I saw it." "Why dou't you follow it 7" "I haven't same it move ; it's nailed fast I'm consideriu'." "I mean, haven't you read that notice ?" "Divil a bit; shure I don't know how to lade." "Well, it says no smoking allowed here." "Be the powers, it doesn't consarn me a mite, then for I never smoked, aloud in my life." HOLD on—Hold on to your tongae when you are about to swear, lie, or speak harShly or use any improper word. Hold on to your hand when you are about ready to strike, pinch, scratch, steal or do any improper act. Hold on to your foot when you are on the point of kicking, running away from study or pursuing the path of error, shame, or crime Hold on to your temper when you are an gry, excited, or imposed upon, or others an gry abuul you. Hold on to your heart when evil associates seek your company, and invite you to join in their games, mirth, and revelry. Hold on to your good name at all times, for It is more valuable to you than gold, high places, or fashionable attire. H dJ on to tha truth, for >t will serve you and do yon good throughout eternity. Hold on to your virtue—it is above all price to jou, in all times and places. Hold on to your character, fur it is, and ever will be, your best weath. NEWSPAPER ERRORS. — A notice of a recent ; steamboat explosion in a We-tern paper j ends as (ollowa : "The Captain swam ashore. ISo did the chamber laaid ; she was insured for §15,000, and loaded with iron." A Western editor in one of hia papers,says "For the effects of intemperance, see our in side" "The Springfield Repub ican tells of a horse which ran away in that city," throwing the driver out and cutting a severe gash in i ore of his hind legs." "The classic London Spectator makes a curious slip when it speaks of Matilda Griggs who "was subbed by a lover to whom aha bad borne a child in thirteen places. NO. 49.