OF rinuickTios. ' r 4RE ' •s• s - REPOSITORY IS published every Wednesday 'morning by "THE "REPOSITORY ASSOCIATION," at $2 30 per annum, DI ADVANCE, Or $3 ff not paid within the year. 411 subscription as Sipa be visaed annually. 2•Zo paper will be nerd out of tuti - State unless pall for in advance, and all ouch subscriptions will iniariabiy be discontinued at:the Ml ration of the time far which they are paid. ADVESTLSEMEMB are inserted at arrnnv CST 3 per line for Etat insertion, and TEN Myra per line for rub' sequent insertions. A liberal discount is made to persona advertising by the quarter, half-year or year. Special no tices c rged one•half more than regular advertisements. AU re f i lutions of Associations; communications of limited or vidual interest, and notices of Marriages add Deaths exceeding flee lines, are charged ftfteen cents per line. ' AU Legal Notices of every kind, and all Orphans' (burr and other Judicial Sake, are required by lam to be advertised in - the REPOsrlt rav-11 haring the LAMENT CHI- C ULATION of any paperpubl Wad in the county of Fra nkl in. JOB PRINTING of every kind in Plain and Fancy col ors, done with neatness and dispatch. Hand-bills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, d:.c., °revery vuioty and style, printed at:, the shortest notice. The REPOSITORY OFFICE has just been re-littecl with Steam Power and three Presses, and every• thing In the Printing lino can be execated in the moat artistic manner and at the lowest rates. TERMS IN VARIABLY CASH. liar Mr. Tolir, K. Shryock is onr authorized Agent to reeelve Subscriptions and Adverti.sements, and Coo& pt for ,the same. All letters should be addres.stsi to Id'CLIrRE & STONER, Publishers. Coal, Lumber, CARPENTERS AND II I' IL DE RS! ATTE .V ,T ONI The undersigned have now oa hand, at that PLANING AND FLOORING MILL, a large supply of Sash, Shatters, Wong aid Blina, for .4alo, or made to order. Manldlags,of all defterirtioto, from half inch to P iuchem, on hand., „ , Plain and Ortomental Scroll Sawing neatly axecuted. Also—Wood Turning in all its branches. \e}.-el Posts, Banisters, Bed Posts. Se„ on band. A huge supply of Dressed Flooriag for sste. Also—Window and DoorFromer ea band or • mada nt abort mike. HAZELET, VERNON - EVE Harrison Arenue. ClumNrsburg. i's. N OTICE TO FARMERS 100:TONS OF TIMOTHY HAY Wanted by GEO. A. DEM 2 WALNUT LOGS Wanted by GEO. A. DErri. WO ASH LOGS Wanted by GEO. A. GE= 100 LARGE CHERRY LOGS Wanted by GEO. A:Diaz. WHEAT, EVE, CORE, OATS, Haden kinds of Produce bought by GEO. A. DEM, at his Warettianie above the Riiifrond Depot. STOVE AND LIME COAL . for sale ebeap, by dhe toa or half ton. OAK AND HICKORY WOOD by the earl or ball cont. OAS. AND HICKORY WOOD, sawed and split for stove mer by the cord or half coni. WINDOW AID DOOR SILLS, of Oak, Walnut and Pine, always on hand. WINDOW AND DOOR-FRAME STUFF, and all kinds of LUEBER, such an Oak and Pine Plank ; Oak, Walnut, Pine and Hemlock Boards ; Flooring Boards, Jcdets, Scantling,Stlingles, Paling, Laths, &e. BEST OF ROOFEiGiBLATE always on hand, and roofs put on by the best Slaters. who have drawn medals for their superior workmanship. CALL AT DEITZ'S WAREHOUSE above the Railroad Depot, and buy cheap. LEONARD EBERT & SON, COAL AND LUMBER MERCHANTS. We have on hand all kinds of Coal and Lumber, and are prepared to famish Bill Lumber to order at short no tice, all at the most reasonable terms. Onr stock of Lum ber consist' s of White Pine 2 inch Plank, " " " select Plank. " " 11 " Plank. " " I select and Calling - Boards, f " Boards, " " f " Siding (6 inch,) " Best River Shingles, _ " " Worked Floring, • " " " Siding, " Joist and Scanting, all sizes, Hemlock Joist and Scantling, - Boards ) Veil:4El4mi Boards,_joist and Scanting. Plastering - and Plasteng Lana We have also always on hand a good supply of all kinds of Curt for !awes and lime-burning. Also a supe• dor article of Broadtop Coal for blacksmiths. The pub- Hare invited to give us a call, as we will endeavor to give satisfaction to all that call. , Coal and Lumber furnished on the cars to= any station on the Franklin Railroad. larOffice on Second St, in the rear of the Jail Yard, Chambersbmg, Pa. LEO. EBERT S. SON. • july27-tt STEAM SAW MILL.—The undersign ed have erected anti in operation a Steam Saw Mill at the South Mountain, near Gmffenburg Springs, and are premi to saw to tinier Bills. of, WHITE OAK, il CB. or any kind of timber desired, at the short. ek, notice and at low rates. One of the firm will he at the Hotel of Smog Greenawalt, lb Chambershurg, on Satur day the 24th inst. and on each alternate Saturday thereaf ter for the purpose of contracting for the delivery df lum ber. LUMBER DELIVERED at any point at the Low. EST Italia. All letters should be addressed to them at Graffeaburg P. 0, Adams Co„ Pa. decl4-IY . MILTENBERGER & BRADY. - Small lots of - Lumber, Shingles. &c., from our minima be procured at any time at W. P. EYSTER & BRO'S, Market Street, Chambersburtr. SMALL, BENDER & CO., York and Goldsbarough, Pa., LUMBER DEALERS ANIrIIANI:FACTUICERS OF SASH, DOORS, SHUTTERS, BLINDS, DOOR AND WINDOW FRAMES, 4c., . - Keep eonstattly on hand a" well selected stock of seas onableLaraber, viz :—Joist and Scantling, Weatherboatd, tug, &rinsed Flaming, Biding, Laths, Shingles, Palings and Fencing. r ir White Pine and Oak Bills, sawed to order at the sheeted notice. • All communications sheuld be addressed to TORE, PA. raepCB.l3- RIILL D IN G LUMBER.—The under signed is prepared to taw all kinds of Building Lem. Ler at the lowest market price. E. A. RENFREW, GBEE..iIWOOI3 ?dims, Fayetteville P. O. decl L:MA B E R.- -All kinds of Lumber for sale at reascruable rates at A. 8. moms's Mill, near Quincy, Pa julyl9•tf Matttro anl(.2elnelrp. WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, &c. Having just opened a well selected assortment of goods in my lint, directly Opposite the Post Office, on Second Street, where my old and I hope many new customers will find me daring brudness hours. My old stock having beetTh re duced very suddenly on the 30th of July last, I wasZom pelted to buy an Entire New Stock - of Goods, which are of the latest styles and patterns, consisting of Gold and Silver (Imported andnt's American) Ge and Ladies' Watches, Jewelry of fine and medium qualities, Silver Thimbles, Napkin Rings, Fruit and Butter Knives, Gold Perm of fine quality, Pocket Cutlery, Razors, Strops and Brushes, Silver Plated Spoons, Forks and Butter Knives, Jerk Goods, . Pocket Books, Ladies' Purses. Nail and Tooth Brushes, Redding and Pocket Combs, Lead Pencils, Morocco Satchels, Large and Saudi Willow Baskets, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTt; Violins Pint . Banjos, Tamborines, Accordeons, Plutinas, Ac. The armament of CLOCKS Is large and of every va• !l ey. • I have on band the HEN - R "I REPEATING RIFLE, which can be fired fifteen times in that many seconds. Everybody should have one for self defence. The pablio are Invited to call and examine them. FIBTOLS on hand and orders filled for any kind that may be wanted. Cartridges of all sizes kept on hand. Froze long experience I can adapt Spectacles to the sight of the old as well as middle aged. SPECTACLES AND EYE GLASSES in Gold, Silver and Steel Frames al. wajnol , tand. f the agency or the sale of the celebrated BUR. 43/713ND I'ME-PROOk SAFE, manufactured by Farrell, Flatting . _ & Co., I fill orders at the manatee. tnretrprice.- All information in regard to them given. The'pnbllo are invited to call and examine the stock. Wean., Clocks and Jewelry !opened at law rates to suit the times. decl4 EDWARD AUGIIINBATJGH. VLI HOLDEN. INVITES THE AT _ILO tertian cd every reader of this paper, which Includes many thousand of his old patrons and acrinaintances, to Ids uraileallElYge ane heal:alba] variety of AMERICAN &Isaported WATCHES, CLOCES, and elegant designs atIEWNARt Y, SILVER WALE, &e. ELI HOLDER, 1!0.02&:17 703 Market Street, Philadelphia. CIIMB'ERVAND VALLEY - • -' INSTITTITE, FOR YOUNG GENTLEMEN , • MECUANICEIMEG, REV: 0. VIE & SON. • RutteeßesUltiearAbraber e. cbaxgriv .1.12.50 per. swaths afgdon, in advance. rind for o #113+26-13e. • ht \ . t •_ s - . BY ECLITRE & STOM. Qranbitratro' earlio. COUNTY TREASURER.—MAJ. Joan HASSLER, offers himself as a candidate for the office of County Treasurer, subJent to the decision of the Union Nominating Convention. St. THOMAS. Starch 22 1861 (I . OUNT.Y TREASURER.—At the solie- NJ itationoranumber of my friends, I asmounce my self a candidate for the Ofticeof County Treasurer, sub ject to the decision of the Union Nominating County Convention [Quixcr, March 'AI WM. FLAGLE. A M. CRISWELL will be a candidate fur the office of County Treasurer, subject to the decision of the Union Nominating County Convention., GREEN TOWNSHIP. May MREASURER.—SainneI F. Greenawalt A. offers himself as n Candidate for the office of County Treasurer, subject to the decision of the Union Nomina• ting Convention. Clumnmsntina, March 15. W.M. H. BROTHERTON WILL BE A 1 candidate or COUNTY TREASURER, subject to the deebtion of the Union Nominating Convention. WaYNrsinnto, June 7, HERIFFALTY.—At the solicitation j of n number of my friends. I offer myself as a Can didate for the °thee of Sheriff of Franklin County, eubjeet to the decision of the Union Nominating Convention. 6..tinsoup Tusvhsuir, klarrh 29." F. W. DOSH. H ERIE' A LTY.—Eucouragell by a ►J number of me friends, I offer myself as a candidate for the odiee of &certif. subject to the decisionof the Union Nominating County .Convention. DAVID EBY. II \ 111LTON TOWN , IIII' March c.',IHERIFFALTY.—I 'offer myself as a IJ Candidate for the °dice ,of Sheriff of Franklin county, ..übjeet t the decision of the Union Nominating Convert hen. THOMAS M'AFEE. MEr.t:Ensnritc, Pa., Slaroh4, Q HERIFFALTY.—Encourag,ed by a numberof my friends, I offer myself as a candidate for the - office of Sherdf, subject to the decision of the Union Nominating 'County Convention. D. 3L LEISHER. CELUIZEPSBUR.G, March 15. SHERIQIIERrFFM,TY.—Ca'pt. JNO. DCERLER, FF_ of Chambersburg. willbe a candidate for the office of Sheriff, subject to the decision of the Union Sonlinating County Convention, giarchls. DISTRICT ATTORNEY.—The name of W3L S. EVERETT, Esq., will be ptesented to the Union County Convention for the nomination for Dis trict Attorney.- i.1. 3 3' 19 ] UNION. DISTRICT ATTORNEY.--SNIVELY STRICKLER will be a candidate for DISTRICT AT- TuIiSEV, subject to the decision of the next Union County Convention. Greencastle June 7th, ISfifb. T 1 WATSON ROWE WILL BE • candidate for the office of DISTRICT ATTOR NEY, subject to the decision of the next Union County Convention. rany3l. oltlo. EASTERN INN.—The undersigned ha ving lately purchased the large and counnodione Brick Building of Rev. S. B Fisher, in connection with his present pinee of business, on the corner of Main street and Ludwig 's Anon is prepared to accommeshise BOARD ERS by the tiny, week or 'month. He is amply provided with STABLING to accommadate the traveling . public. Having a. large LIVERY STABLE connected with the Hotel. guests and the public generally can be furnished with Homes and Carriages at any moment Personssisit ing Chambersburg with their families will find this the most comfortable lintel in the county, as it has been re fitted with entire new Furniture. and the rooms are large and Well ventilatetL The TABLE is amply supplied with all the luxuries of the season. and the BAR, which is de tached from the Brick Building, will always be furnished with choice and pure liquors. Every attention paid to the comfort of guests. [oetl2[ S. F. GREENAWALT. EMI BROWN'S HOTEL.—This Hotel, situ ated on the corner of Queen and Second Streets, op posite the Bank, Court Room, and County Offices, and in the immediate neighborhood of Stores, Shops, and other places of business, is conveniently situated for country people having business in Charnbersburg.. The Building has been greatly enlarged and refitted for the accommoda .tion of Guests. THE TABLE will always be furnished with the best thefitarket can produce. EMINIZI=M THE STABLE is large and attended with a good and careful Ostler. Every attention will be rendered to make Guests emu fortable while sojourning at this Hotel. febl JACOB S. BROWN. PrKwietor. UNION - a 'MB od and well established Hotel is now open for thu acoommodatitnl of Guests The Proprietorhavingleased the three-story bro.& of buil dings on Queen,Street, in. the tear of bin former stand. is prepared to fartiish GOOD ROOMS for the traveling and transient enstoni. HIS TABLE willkustain its farmer reputation of being supplied with the best the market can produce. HIS BAR, detached from the main building, will al• ways have choke and prrfa Liquors. Good warm STABLDIG for fifty horsc4, with careful otoor. Fs err attention will be made to reader guests comfort able while sojourning at this hotel. jasiS JNO: FISHER, Proprietor. lATIONAL HOTEL.—The subscriber would respectfully announce that he has so far cow. pleted his Rotel building as to be enabled to open it for the accommodation of the public. The building is en tirely new and built on the most approved plan for com fort and converieuce. ESMIMEIMEI He has also erected in connection with the Hotel a large and convenient STABLE. and is now prepared to furnish Stabling and Pros ender for any number or Homes. Attached to the Stable (under cover) are a pairof HAY AND STOCK SCALES, to which the especial attention of Farmers, Drovers and Butchers is invited. july26 DANIEL TROSTLE. DAVID H.. HUTCHISON all become the Proprietor of the UNITED STATES HOTEL, near the Railroad Depot at HARRISBURG, PA. This popular and commodious Hotel has been newly . refitted and furnished thhinghout its parlors and chambers, and is now ready for the reception of guests. The traveling public will find the United States Hotel the most convenient, in all particulars, of any Hotel in the State Capital, on account of its access to the railroad, being immediately between the two great depots in this city. [Harrisburg, Jane 17, 63.tf. STATES UNION HOTEL, OPPOSITE the Lebanon 1;alley and Pennsylvania Railroad De pots, Harrisburg Oty, Pa. This convenient and pleasant . Hotel is now kept by the undersigned, late of the Indian Queen in Chambenburg, and he invites the patronage of his old friends and the public generally. Terms moderate. octi.tf - JOHN W. TAYLOR. elatbing. NTEW QUARTERS AND NEW STOCK THE OLD CLOTHING EMPORIUM, • TILE MiItEET 1101.75 E, Chambcrsburg, Pa. The undersigned, after a temporary absence necessitated by the destruction of Chambersburg, has again returned and opened out in full blast in the Market House between Wallace's Dry Good store and Huber & Lemaster's Gro cery• store, a large assortment of FALL AND WINTER GOODS, of every description and quality. This stock consists of Ready Mode Clothing such as Over Coats. Dress Coats, Pants, Vests, Under Skirts, Drawers, &c., also GENTLEBENS' FURNISHING GOODS, such as Cravats, Suspenders, Gloves, Shawls, Handkerchiefs, Col lars, Umbrellas, &c., &c. His stock of Cloths for customer work minsists of French, English and Domestic manufacture. Black Doe Skin and Fancy Cassirners, Black Satin, Figured Silks, Plain and Fancy Cassimer Vestings which will be made up to order In styles to snit the taste of customers, on short notice, and reasonable terms. Haring engaged a pracfical Cutter from the East, lam prepared to furnish clothing in the most fashionable styles, and as none but esierienced workmen are engaged per sons may rely upon getting their work well done at my Store. Thankful for the patronage heretofore bestowed, I re spectrally solicit a continuance of the name. octl9 J. T. fIOSKINSON. THE ,NEW PHILADELHHIA CLOTHING STORE! JOHN DIETER Would respectfully inform the citizens of Chambersbnrg, and the public generally, that be has opened A NEW CLOTH/NG STORE, - On Main St., in !sewn llnteon's new blinding, VPosiin Huber i Tolbrn'F. • His stock embraces a complete assortment of new and desirable Goods, which he offers to the public at very low rates. He also bas a full line of GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING. GOODS. Call and examine for yourselves. PARTIEVLAIL ATTENTION PAID TO CUSTOM WORK, -and satisfentlon grirmitetxl, LinJy26-3m ,finattrial. BOUNTY TAX By order of the School Board of Hamilton township, the committee will teem at the Tavern of JUlfti GORDON, On Saturday, the 20th of Joty, and on the two encceeding Saturdays, Augu.st sth and 12a, to collect the Bounty Tax due from the tax- Bald township. trwc All Bounty tax remaining unpaid after the 14th of August Will lave ten per cent added, and placed in the hands of proper officers for collection. july2B-3t MONEY W A NTE D.-BRAND & FLACK respeettally request all persms knoadag themselves indebted to th6 - ti by notes or took accounts - to mil and make himedhhe 'settlement. The neeeseity of this notice is apparent to every/ one, and we hope those In• &teed will - report at one.. onit24-tt granklin r.,iirkvinfoitrag. PVT YOUR SHOULDER TO THE WHEEL There is a voice that speaks us, If Ire own no craven heart, As we pass along life'rpathway Taking our appointed part ; And it bids no beams burden, Heavy though it seem and feel, And with strung and hopeful vigor Put your shoulder to the wheel. What though clouds are darkening o'er 119, They but hide a tranquil sky ; Or should storm drops fall around us, Soon the sunshine bids them dry. S'ever doubt, fatal Rita and falter, Heart be stout and true as steel ; Fortune smiles on brave endeaCer— Put year shoulder to The wheel. Folded hands will never aid us To uplift the load of care ; "lip and stirring" be your motto, Meek to suffer,, strong to bear. 'Tis net chance that guides our footsteps,- Or our destiny can seal ; wall a will then, strcmgand steady, • Put your shoulder to the wheel. Men of worth have conned the lesson, Men of might have tried Its truth And lips have Meatball its maxim , In the tist'ning ear of youth; And be sure throughout life's journey, Many wounded hearts would heal, If wo all as friends and brothers Put our shoulder to the wlreeL-__; From: Hours at Home. LIEETENANT GENERAL GRANT " Who is that chnp in blue, whole always hang ing around Grant'etanneg 7" asked a new-corner at Galena, of an eld resident. "The short fellow with a cigar in his mouth, do you mean 7" "Yes; he is constantly smoking, and walks up and down without speaking to anybody." " Oh ! that is Grant's brother; don't you know him ?" • Such was the standing and de fame of Ulysses S. Grant before the breaking out of the rebellion. He was the brother of Grant the tanner; and but for the summons of Port Sumter requiring him to take up anew his cast-off vocation of soldiering, his grand mititary genius, his indomitable energAy, and his heroic patriotism would have lain'hidden under his slouched hat, in the smoke of his own tobacco, or would have been expended uppn the strategy of improving the sidewalks of Galena- He was not without consideration, indeed from those who knew that he had been educated at West Point, and served with distinction in the Mexican war; and among familiars he was still addressed as Captain." But he had resigned his commission years before, and military services and titles were at a discount_ in comparison with farming and mining, the great staples of prosper ity in the West. - Grant had tned farming in north-western Missouri, but with indifferent suc cess, and now had fallen back for alivelihood upon the family trade of tanning—iu which, how ever, his progress toward financial independence was hardly more promising. Rumor has attached to his name at this period, a habit of self-indulgence which is inimical to in dustry and thrift, and fatal to character. It is difficult to ascertain the precise truth with regard to the private personal habits 'of men who have become distinguished in public affairs. The tongue of slander is busy against them, and on the other hand, a zealous -partizanship is forward to mag nify their virtues, and to cover or deny their faults. No charge is mere common against our generals and our prominent civilians than that of intem perance ; and it is far easier to start such an tic cusatien' and to gain credence for it in the public mind, thateto disprove it by competent and avail rn 411....anc1y stages of - ta , the ready solution of a defeat to the J.Tizion arms was the intoxication of the commanding general; and whoa' the battle of.Pittsburg Landing waver ed between defeat and victory, the rumor spread over the land, that the peril ot the second day was owing to the General's free indulgence in whisky. Influences were used at Washington to! have Grunt displaced - from his command -; but the witty reply of President Lincoln after the victory at Corinth —" I wish that all the generals would drink Grant's whisky"—showed how little credit he gave to the story. And Gen. Sherman said, in hisbumorons way, " Grant stood by me in my insanity,' and I stand by Grant/in his drunkenness:" by which ho intended to convey the impression that he no more believed that Grant w.asLa drunkard than he be lieved himself to be insane, A careful sifting of evidence upon this point leaves it probable that like too many army officers, Capt. _Grant was a convivial drinker, and was sometimes betrayed into inebriety. Whether from this cause, or from the natural inaptitude of civil pursuits, of one trained in the school of arms, he seems to have led a somewhat aimless and shiftless life, in the in terval between the closing up of his first military record and the - opening of the war of the rebel lion. It is said that when he received his com mission as Colonel of the Twenty-first Regiment of Illinois Infantry, he had not means of providing himself with a horse and accoutrements, and that the note that he gave for their purchase was suf fered to go to protest because the paymaster did not come round in time for him to meet his debt !. The qualifles that he has exhibited as a general argue that he could never have been an habitual drunkard ;.nor could he have broken either his physical constitution or his force of will by indul gence in drink./ But whatever may have been his antecedents in this respect, it is certain that du ring the war he has been a model of self-control, and that his personal example and influence have been decidedly upon the side of temperance. Grant was brought up in the school of manly toil and honesty; and in the combined occupations of the farm and the tannery, he formed habits of industry and of perseverance, and acquired pow ers of endurance, which have served him well in the vast anti complicated labors of his military campaigns. How marvelous and how instructive the providences that had prepared for the service of the nation in the most arduous and critical pe riod of its history, that trio whose names shall hereafter be grouped for the incitement of Amer ican youth, and for the honor of deniocratic in stitutions—the pioneer-boy, the tailuriboy, and the tanner-boy! As a school-boy, Ulysses exhibited l Pdogged - perseverance that served him instead of the quick ness of tho genius; and when, through the favor of Hon. T. L. Hamer, he was nominated to a Ca detship at West Point, this quality of mind ena bled him to master the mathematical discipline of the Academy. Having passed the examination successfully, he wrote to his father: "I don't ex pect to make very fast prOgress; but I shall try to hold on to what I shall get." That faculty of holding on to what he got never deserted him; and proved indeed the main stay of the country in the last year of the war. His thoroughness of application secured for young Grant au honorable standing in his class in the Academy. Immedi ately upon graduating, in 1893, when he was barely twenty-one years of age, he wascommis sioned, by brevet, second lieutenant of infantry, and was dispatched to Missouri, whose frontiers were completely disturbed by roving bands of In dians. Soon atter, the whr with Mexigo, origi nating in Texas, opened to him the field of mili tary adventure. He fought under Gen. Taylor at Palo Alto, at Rearca do In Palma, and at Mon terey; and marched with the victorious Scott from Vera Cruz to the city of Mexico. In every bat tle, Lieutenant Grant won such distinction for usefulness and bravery as was within the reach of a junior officer; and at the close of the Mex ican war, he was made captain, by brevet, in the regular army. Young as he was, he exhibited a remarkable combination of coolness, skill and courage. Hie bravery was the more noticeable because he coveted extreme exposure when he might-have shielded himself- with honor. His practical sense, his-method and energy, had caus ed him to be selected as regimental quartermas ter, Upon the march from Vera Cruz to the inte- rior—a valuable training in the way of logistics, of which he has proved himself master upon so grand a scale. But ho would not suffer the du ties of this department to detain him from the field. Me wrote to his parents: "I do not mean you shall ever hear of my shirking my dtity iu battle. My new post of quartermaster is consid ered to afford. an officer an opportunity to be re lieved from fighting; but I.& not, and cannot see it in that light. You have always-taught 11/6 that the post of , datiger is the petit of duty." Then, quoting wanta's memorable replrto•Putnaixt, who bad prtipooett.sewlinglim to a Olime of ;life. CHAMBERSBURG, PA., :WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1865 ty—"Send me where the fightmay be the hottest, for there I can do the most good to my country;" the young hero added ; "So I feel in my position as quartermaster. Ido not intend it shall keep me from fighting for our deiir old flag, when the hour of battle comes." After the Mexican war, Captain Grant was sent'to the Pacifiic coast, where he remained for several years in garrison duty; but growing wea ry of this dull routine, he resignedhis commission in 1854, and returning to Missouri, he settled down as a plain farmer, in St. Louis county. He gradually dropped hie associations with military life, and the opening of the war, as we have seen, found him in Galena at his old trade, bat known familiarly as the tanner's brother. The sound of war, however, and especially of war in defense of the nation's life, broke his almost sluggish Tue. tude, and roused within him more than the fire of his Mexican campaign, in the (aiming zeal of patriotism. He felt that he owed his country the military skill and training she had given him, and he was prompt to lay these at her feet. Commis sioned by Governor Yates to recruit volunteers for the quota of the State of Illinois, he received a colonelcy as the reward of his success, and with his well-drilled regiment he was goon in active service in Missouri. Once in the field, Colonel Graiat well knew how to make his way ; yet the rapidity of - his, promotion must have surprised himself no less than the development of his mili tary genius amazed and thmied the public. It would be quite superfluous to follow in detail the battles of General Grant from the brilliantvicl tones of Forts Henry and Donelson, which em blazoned his name beside that. of Admiral Foote, to the magnificent sweep of his campaign through the" Wilderness," from the - Potomac to the James, which ended at last in the capture of Richmond, and of the principal army of the rebellion. Every body knows the story of the news-boy who was selling the " Life of General Grant" in a car, where Grant himself was sitting. Being pointed to the General, by a waggish officer as a probable customer, the boy was surprised at Grant's ask ing him, "Whom is allthisstory.about " Well," said he, turning away in contempt , "you must be a greeny, if you don't know who General Grant is." - - If any reader of Hors at Home does not know who ii the hero of Fort Henry and Don elson ; of Pittsburg Landing: Corinth, and Inka of Vicksburg and Chattanooga, with the adjacent heights of Missionary Ridge and Lookout Moun tain ; and Richmond—we must leave him to ap ply the story. Our purpose is not to fight over upon paper the campaigns of General Grant, but briefly to indicate the salient qualities of the Gen eral himself. The thoroughness with which he mastered the situation, and the sagacity and boldness with which he took advantage of the :critical opportu nity, were first conspicuous at — Fort Donelson. By a series of skillful maneuvers he had complete ly mvested.the fort, and had gained command of the enemy's principal positiobs. Just as he was preparing his combinations for a grand assault, word was brought from the front that the enemy was about - to assume the offensive, and a prisoner was sent to the General's headquarters to confirm the report. Instead of interrogating the man, Grant examined his haversack, and finding it well stocked with rations, decided that Buckner was preparing to evacuate the fort. He at once or dered the assault, and before night held the fort so secnrly in his grip that the rebel General sent a flag of truce proposing an armistice for terms of capitulation. Grant's quick reply was, "No terms other than an immediate and unconditional surrender can be accepted. I propose to move immediately on your works;" and in a little time the flag of the Union was waving over the entire fort. His confidence in his chosen position and re sources, and the superiority of his will to any emergency or disaster, were strikingly exhibited at Shiloh, where, in disregard of tactical prece dent, he placed himself between, the enemy and the banks of the Tennessee. When aksed how ho could have retreated, if beaten, he replied: "I didn't mean to be beaten; and besides, there were transports ready to carry us across the river." When reminded that the transports could only have carried one fifth of his army, : "_There was transporta tion enough for all that would ante been Lett ur us." In the judgment of some, the fothinabi turn of the day barely saved him from severe military censure, for his hazardous disposition of his command. But was not the fact that he had staked all deliberately upon one blow, the key to his success ? - The difference between Grant and myself," said General Sherman, "is this : I fear no danger that' I can see; dud Grant fears none that he can't see." His courage was al ways self contained. As he himself once said, af ter the gxplosion of a shell near his tent had scatteredi his staff, who returned to find him quietly smoking: " A military man should never get fevited." To these qualities of thoroughness, boldness, and confidence, must be added that tenacity of purpose which first impressed itself upon the :country in the siege of Vicksburgh, and whose success against the citadel of the Mississippi in spired the country with hope and patience during the protracted siege of Petersburg and Richmond. It was there that he illustrated his good school boy maxim to " hold on to what he got." At_Chattanooga he redeemed' our army from the demoralization of despair; and there also he displayed the vastness of his grasp in strategy— the power of combining upon abroad scale, move ments converging toward one end with the cer tainty of success through the careful adjustment of parts, and by boldness at the moment of oppor tunity. He was months in maturing hisplan for dislodging the enemy from the mountain fastness es around Chattanooga and in getting, up his own supplies; but when the day for action arrived, his plan was at once so comprehensive and so minute that the result was almost a certainty of mathematical calculation. His strategy, as he himself defined it, consisted in'"getting as near as possible to the enemy with the least necessary loss,- and then going at him!" This strategy, so strikingly inaugurated at Chattanooga, was car ried to perfection in General Grant's last cam paign for w hat had proved the insoluble _problem of the war—the capture of Richmond. His ob ject was not Richmond, but Lee's army; and his rapid and terrible blows upon that army, in the "Wilderness," with the determination to "fight it out upon that line," and to fight his battles "through," drove Lee into an attitude ofsheeide. fence, from which he was never able to recover himself. Having thus crippled Lee, Grant's one aim was to hold him until ne could make sure of his entire army. He did nottherefore move upon Richmond, as he might have done successfully, from the north, but striking at the key of Lee's supplies, he eat down calmly to await the result of Sherman's grand campaign in Georgia and the Carolinas, which was a part of his programme fir the capture of Lee. And when at lasts almost at the appointed day General Sherman had ful filled his task of cutting off at once Lee's supplies and his retreat, when Sheridan had swept -the Shenandoah, sod Thomas held the mountain pass es of Tennessee, then Grant struck the final blow, and in five days accomplished what he had been as many months in maturing. 'We know not whether most to admire, the terrible energy of the battles of the Wilderness, or the calm tenac ity of the eeige of Petersburg, or the comprehen sive sweep of the Georgia flanking, or the rapid onslaught and pursuit at the.last ; but in the com bination of qualities here presented, we have be yond dispute the greatest general of the age. General Grant has been favored in his subordi nates: Sherman, Thomas, Sheridan, are names that will stand before his own in history. But it is a part of his greatness that he knows how to choose his generals, and -that he awards them all their just weed of praise. A severt 'Singleness of aim has marked the course of the Lieutenant General. Not a. lino has he written, not a word has he spoken, that could be tortured to a political use. Indeed, he has not written nor spoken at all except upon to pics connected with his official work, and then always in the fewest and simplest words. Neither the devices of New York politicians, the tempta tions of New York dinners, nor the uproarious cries of New York mobs, during his recent visit to this metropolis, could extort from him anything beyond the expression of thanks. . His modesty is one of his chiefest virtue, re lieving and adorning all the rest. We chanced to see General Grant upon the floor of the United States Senate, where he seemed asmuch abashed in presence of civilians as a school=girl before an examining committee. When he bad left, &Sen ator called attention to the fact that the Lieuten ant-General wore tewer airs than a second Lieu tenant. But the people will not suffer his worth to lie hid. General Grant is only in the prime of life.' A kind Providence has thus thr upheld him in his position from folly and from fall. May he be kept secure in his wisdom, his patience, and his prowess, until the nation Shall again demand his leadership, in decamp or in the Onto! ,Frere the Hanistrayg Telegraph. THE CIOEDEEN OF THE STATE. The Orphans of Pennsylvania Soldiers Adopted as the Children of the State—Liberal Provisions for their Education—The Plan Demised and its Operation the Work of Andrew G. Curti n—lts Support Based upon the Munificence of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. As our own noble State was the first, and we believe is yet the only one; to make liberal and per manent provision for thc maintenance and educa tion of the destitute orphans of her gallant sons who laid down their lives for the Union, we have watched the progress of the enterprise with more than ordinary pride and interest. Feeling also that our readers will be gratified to hear of the present condition of this work, we have been at some pains to procure a brief outline of what has been done and is in progress. Fortunately, or rather providentially, for the efficiency and success of the undertaking, there was scarcely anything of detail .as to a plan of operation in the acts, (one of May 6, 1864, and the other of May 23, 1865,) on' the subject; the -whole manner of proceeding being left to the dis cretion of Gov. Curtin. And here it may be re marked, that more of this noble project belongs to the present Executive than is generally known. It is supposed that it entirely originated with the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, but this is not by any means the fact. Itis true that that liberal corporation did present to the Governor, for the use of the State, towards the demands of the war fbr the Union, the sum of $50,000; but we be lieve that the gift at first was general and not for the specific purpose to which it has since been_ dedicated, or for any other specific purpose ex cept as above stated. ' And it was sometime after the Oft took place, that the suggestion was made to appropriate the fund to the support and educa tion of the destitute orphans of our soldiers. As we.understand the matter, this suggestion origin ated with Gov. Curtin, but was at once acceded to by the company. It thus oppears, that while the 'honor of designating this particular work of benevolence is due to the Governor, that of afford ing the first means of putting the idea into opera tion is entirely the -work of our great railroad company. We are much mistaken, indeed, if this plan for the support of our military orphans, does not furnish one of the brightest pages in the his tory of the State, and, therefore, the above state ment has been made, in order that the facts may be put correctly on the record. The plan for giving activity to this humane and patriotic thought seems to have . been well con sidered. At one time very different methods were proposed. Some desired the money to' be dig; tribated amongst the destitute widows of our sol diers, in proportion' to the number of their chil dren, to be by them expended in their mainte nance and education. But the uncertainty of the effective application of the fund by this means, to its specific objects (the maintenance and educa tion of the orphans) rendered it, it not an unsafe., at least a very unreliable mode. Others contend ed for the expenditure of the fund by the various School Boards, who were to find out the children and have the general oversight of them while in a state of apprenticeship. But here; again, want of certainty and reliability were felt to be in the way, while the - plan itself differed nothing from that of treating these soldiers' orphans as paupers, ex cept that they were to be bound out by School Directors instead of Directors of the Poor. A broader minded policy was fortunately adopt, ed and is now slowly vindicating its own merits and taking firm ground in the public mind. Its main features aro these: The destitute orphans of our deceased soldiers and sailori are admitted into the care of the State, between the ages of four and sixteen, and of both sexes. The lowest age—four—has been adopted as the limit, for the reason that as ,"education" as well us maintenance is to be afforded, no child could be fairly accepted as'the proper, subject of school education—the kind supposed to have been intended—till at least of that age, though as a general rule, not many are fitted for such exer cises even then. But to meet the wants of as many as possible, it was thought best to , fix the age of admissibility as low as the most liberal as uuld ...teed for. Dclow suer children are to be regarded more as nurselings than m3'4011601 pu pils: On the other hand, it was suppomi that at sixteen young persons might be so well grounded in the essentials of a general English education and established in moral and business habits as to 'elmit of being safely sent abroad into the world to win their own "maintenance " Hence the li mits upward as well as downward; it being al• ways understood that orphans of this class, now under four years, shall come intolhb school as soon as they arrive at that age. - Of course proof of the facts that the children are the offspring of our soldiers, and of their des titution, is in all bases required. This, while not so strict as in case of application for a pension, is sufficiently so to guard against imposition. The mother or guardian is required to state all the necessary facts, under oath. This statement is then laid before the Board of School Directors of the district in which the applicant reiiides,and if found to be correct, is officially approved by that body; and finally, it is scrutinized by a county committee of superintendence, appointed for that and other purposes; and not till all these formal ities and approvals have been complied with and obtained is any case laid before the State Super intender.t, who has a final power of admission or rejection, according to the facts of each applica tion, regularly and officially considered. The pupils when accepted are divided into two classes. Those between the ages of four and se ven, eight or, nine years, according to physical development bud intellectual advancement; and those from seven, eight or nine, as just stated, to sixteen. I'he first class, or the more juvenile orphans, are placed in the Orphan Asylums already in ex istence for general or denominational purposes, in most of the cities and some of the larger towns, Here departments for themselves are in some ca ses provided; and they receive that careful degree of physical and moral care and that moderate por tion of intellectual culture which their tender years demand; and hence, when duly prepared, they are to be transferred to the other or.higher grade of schools. To these schools, for the more juvenile, the State pays a moderate annual hum for their keeping, the price-at present being $lOO for each pnpil, including the expense of boarding, clothing, tuition, &c. The other class—from seven, eight to sixteen —are being placed in schools in the country., where they are not only to be instructed in all the branches of a sound English education, as soon and as thoroughly as their previous culture and various gifts will admit, but in those useful and piachcal employments whiCh also, constitute a portiportion of education in the true sense of the term. on this end, no school for this class of pupils will hereafter be accepted with less than twenty acres of arable land attached to it, and all now in the employment of the State will be required to have that quantity in readiness for cultivation next spring. Each school is to contain about an equal number of boys and girls, and all the household and domestic employments, as well as the culti -cation of the ground belonging to the school, with several of the simpler mechanical employments, are to be habitually attended to, and pursued by the pupils, according to sex and physical ability, in addition to the usual number of hours of school study common to other boarding schools. No other pupils are to be mixed with these or phans in their more advanced institutions; and the course and method of, study are to be such as shall be designated by the State officers. There are to be nut less than 100, nor materi ally over 120 pupils, in each of these more advan ced schools. To secure thO sound moral and the proper re• ligious training of these orphans, they are to be assigned, as far as practicable, to the care and instruction ofteachers of the same religious per suasion as that of their deceased fathers; and the clergymen of the - vicinity of each school are ex pected to have thorn in their proper Sabbath behoolii, and otherwise regard them as of their flocks. The compensation now paid for keeping and instructing the snore advanced pupils in these boarding schools, is $l5O per annum for each, for everything except clothing, which is provided by the State. The attempt to execute this task began ln June, 1864; but till May, 1865, no encouraging pro gress was made. This was owing to two obsta cles: let. To want oftonfidenco on the part of Mothers and of proprietors of proper schools, its the permanency of the enterprise. The mothers were unwilling to separate themselves from their children—rendered doubly deal'. to them by the loss of the other parent—under the strong. prob ability of having them sent back when the first approprintionmf $50,000 should be expended; and school proprietorq felt the same unwillingness to embark in an enterprise _of .such very doubtful duration. 2d. Thli exorbitant war. prices of all VOL. 72....W110LE NO. 3,71 i the necessaries of life caused the few offe : to ac cept thege orphans that were made to run • high, that the State officer would close with v ry few of them, and these only because they we com paratively moderate and emanated from •ersons who were willing to risk a good deal in this noble undertaking. • There are now seventeen of these institutions, of both classes, in operation, viz: eleven for the more juvenile, and six for the more advanced. Those of the 'former are Northern Home, in the city of Philadelphia; Home of the Shepard of the Lambs, Bridesburg; Lutheran Orphans' Home, Germantown; St. John's Orphans' Asyhrm Philadelphia; St. Vincent's Orphans' Asylum, Tacony ; Children's Home, Lancaster; Children's Home, York; Loysville School,, Perry county; Pittabnrg and Allegheny Orphans' Asylum, Alle gheny City; Pittsburg and Allegheny Children's Home, Allegheny City, and Soldiers' Children's Home, Pittsburg. Those for the latter are at Quakertown, Bucks county , : Paradise and Strasburg,.Lancaster coun ty ; 31cAlli:terville, Juniata county; Orangeville, Columbia county; and North Sewickley, Beaver county.' Into ell these schools, as we learn by the Penn- , syleania &hoot Journal, in which- the fall pro ceedings of this trust are published monthly, there had been ordered for admission to the schools, to the Ist of July, 857 orphans, viz, 33'2 of the more juvenile, and 525 of the more advanced clas ses. About 50 have since been admitted. There are about 200 perfected applications now on hand, for which no schools have yet been procured, and applications are coming in at the rate of from 100 to 150 per month. While speaking of expenses, it may noOseilia proper to say we are informed that theomoney now at the command of the State Superintendent, for the expense of these schools for 1865, will probably be sufficient to meet all demands to the end of the year. We learn from the School Jounial that schools for the more advanced pupils are yet needed in the extreme northeastern, southeastern, north western and southwestern portions of the State ; alio, in or near Elk, Cambria, Lycoming and Franklin counties ; and that communications on the subject, from those quarters, will be gladly recevied by the Hon. Thomas H. Burrowes, Su perintendent, at .Lancaster. The schools are regularly visited by the State officer—some of them as often as six times within the current year. They are all found to be improving—some more than others; but all doing as well as the newness of the enterprise and the difficulties in the way of putting it into operation, fairly con- a sidered, could be expected to admit. At first many of the children were rude and un mixed ler, some of them filthy in 'condition, and all liable to the temporary diseases and un'pleas antnesses incident to the collection into close companionship of so many, from such cations and often wretched homes. But now that they are becoming cleansed and brightened, and are begin ing to feel the comforts and advantages of their position, their official visitors and teachers speak of them in most encouraging terms. And why should they not justify this opinion? They are of the same flesh and blood—even the poorest and most neglected of them—as the offspring of their there favored fellow-citizens. Placed, there= fore, under humanizing, christianizing and eleva ting inffuences, they begin not only to manifest their claim to equality, as human beings, with the rest of society, but to prove that the same good blood courses in their veins, and the same, high spirit informs their childish actions which distinguished those whose Fames they bear, and whose records are so honorable to their native Pennsylvania. Great diversity of appreciation of the value and benefits of those schools has been manifested, even by the mothers of their pupils. Not a few, being habitually impatient and captious, have given trouble by their unreasonable complaints and their impossible expectations. Bat the very large majority, appreciating not only the great value of the undertaking to themselves and their unprotected children, but the difficulty of at once perfecting go complicated an enterprise, have been reasonable, patient and grateful. In fact, with out the moral support thus aftbrded, aud the hope • ot mitinlato.oaccesa tliusencourageti, the.attempt to organize them: , achobls would have been one of unmixed labor and care. As it is, even this early dawn of their history begins to brighten with facts, and feelings, and results, which justify any amount of effort and expenditure for their completion. .It is amongst the most wise and .benevolent features of the plan under which these orphans are now trained, that they are to be allowed the same vacation accorded to other boarding-school pupils, to visit widowed mothers and other rela tives, and keep up the parental and home rela tions. The first of these vacations will commence on Friday, July 28th, find will eontiniretill Mon day, September 4th. About those days, there fore, they will be seen. in the public conveyances of most parts of the State, going from call return ing to their respective schools, clad in their neat but plain, uniform dresses ; the boys svith blue cap and roundabout and gray pants, modestly cor ded with black; and the girls in tan-colored or white and black muslin de laine dresses, weer dingto age, and dark straw bats with brown rib bons. Each will be furnished with a pasS from his or her school, setting forth the purpose and duration of the term of absence, and the direction of the •journey, thus certifying their character to all who may take an interest in these CHILDREN 9F THE STATE. We mast close this long article by commending these young and interesting travelers to the con sideration of all who may be favored With the op portunity of showing gratitude to the dead by ex tending kindness to the living; and especially we would suggest; if it needs any suggestion, to rail road and other authorities in matters of travel, that their official passes shall serve as free tickets to their holders. Let it not be forgotten that these visits will carry gladness to hundreds of . sad and lonely homes, and that this graceful aid will be an additional evidence of kind feeling to the soldier's widow and orphan. And let us not forget, here again to acknowledge that to Andrew G. Curtin, Governor of Pennsylvania, the widows of the brave men who fell in defence of Liberty and Union, are indebted for the care and educa tion thus sectired.for their children. ' WORKDAY RELIGION Gail Hamilton, inter direct and forcible, but not always elegant style, sometimes advances sen timents which we cannot approve; but the fol. lowing practical view of religion commends itself to every one who desires to live•a truly Christian life: -_ "We want a religion that softens the steps, and tunes the voice -to melody, and fills the eye with sunshine, and checks the impatient exclama- tion and harsh rebuke ; a religion that in polite,. deterentiaLto suieriors, corteous toinferiki, and.. considerate to fnends ; a religion that goes into a family, and keeps the husband from being spiteful i when the dinner s late—keeps the wife from fret ting when the husband tracks the newly washed floor with his muddy boots, and makes the hus band mindful of the scraper and door mat— keeps the mother patient when the baby is cross; avuses the children as well as instructs them; prokuptly looks after the apprentice in the shop, and - the clerk behind the counter, and the student in the office,-with a fatherly care and motherly love, setting the solitary iri families, and introdu cing them to pleasant and wholesome society, that their lonely feet may not be led into temptation. We want a religion that shall interpose continu ally between the ruts and gullies and rocks of the highway Of lif6, and the sensitive souls that are traveling over them. "Wd want a religion that bears heavily, not only on the exceeding rascality of lying and stealing— a religion that banishes short measures 'from the counter, small baskets from the stalls, pebbles from the cotton bags, clay from the sugar, chicco ry from the Coffee, otter from butter, beet juice from vinegar, alum from bread, strychnine 'from wine, water from the milk cans, and buttons from the contribution box. The religion that is to save the world will not make one-half a pair of shoes of good leather and the other of poor.leath er, so that the first shall redound to the maker's credit, and the second to his cash ; nor if the "shoes be promised on Thursday morning, will it let Thursday morning spin out till Saturdatnight It does not send the little boy, who has come for the daily quart of milk, to the barnyard to see the calf, and seize the opportunity to skim off the cream; nor does it surround stale butter with fresh, and sell the whole for good; nor sell off the Black baked bread upon the stable-boy; nor dea con' the apples. "The religion that is to sanctify the world pays its debts. ' It does not ,borrow money with little or no purpose of repayment, by concealing or gloating over the fact. It looks upon a matt who vrf• , has fns tritderans eathinta to Eye in loin s t ; , as a thief. It looks upciii him who promises to Pay MI dollars on &pond, with interest, and who neglects. to ,pay fifty dolhmtron demand, with or without iate.re a t;aa a Dar." - IMEI HOW DFACON alUtif Courtitrk 31:/z WIDOW. — The DeaCC4fB wagon stopped one, igormn . g be fore Widow Jones' door, and he gavel Vai usual eoulltrY me 4 11 MA he wanted somebody in the house by dropping he wanted and sitting double with his elbows on his Iteees. Out tripped the widow, lively as a cricket, with a tremendous black rib bon on her snow-white cap. "Good morning" was said on both sides, and the widow waited for what was farther to be said. " Well, Ma'am Jones, perhaps you don't want to sell one of your cows, now, for nothing, any way, do you?" " Weil, there,Mister Smith. you couldn't have spoken to my ind better. - A pour lane woman like me does not know what to do with so many cretare, and should be glad to trade if we can fix it." So they adjourned to the meadow. Deacon Smith looked at Roan—thou• at the widow—at Brindle—then at the widow—at the Downing cow -then at the widow , again—entr 80 through the whole forty. The same call was'nfade fora week, but the Deacon could not decide what cow he wanted. At length, on Saturday, when the Widow Jones was inn hurry to get through her baking for Sunday—and had " ever so much to do in the house,". as all farmers' wives and widows have on Saturday—she was a littlo impatient. Deacon Smith was as irresolute as ever. "That 'ere Downing cow is a• pretty fair cre tnr," he said, " bur—he stopped to glance at the widow's face, and then walked around her, not the widow—bat the cow. " The Downing cow I knew before the late Mr. Jones bought her." Here he sighed at the il lusion to the late Mr. Jones: iihe sighed and both looked at each ether. It was a highly interesting moment. " Old Roan is a faithful old milch, and so is Brindle—but I have known better "—a long stare succeeded his speech—the pause was getting awk ward—and at last Mrs. Jones broke out: "Lord ! Mr. Smith, if Pm the cow yoh want_ do say so!" The intentions of the Deacon and,theiridow were published the next day. c 4 REMARKABLE Co ND U CT OF A DOG.—The Cleveland Herald says: We have anew dog sto ry-to relate : A little Euclid Avenue friend of ours possesses, among other pets; a fine' pointer dog, and. a couple of -little chickens, that have been deserted by their mother--a very unprinci pled and unnatural hen, by the way. The other day he fell asleep while playing with the chickens. As he' lay upon the floor, with his long golden curls streaming out upon the carpet, the chickens nestled beneathp.them, as they would have nestled beneath their runaway mother. The pointer dog was near, and, for some time, had watched the proceedings with evident interest. Finally he approached the sleeper, poked the littlr 'chickens Mf om beneath the curls, took them gently in his outh and carried. them to his kennel. Their twende owner was much alarmed upon awaken ning and finding that they "were not." Alarm was changed, first to surprise and then,to • pleas- Lire, upon discovering their whereabouts, and the gentle manner in which they were being cared tor. The dogseemed perfectly carried away with fond affection for his charge. He would gently caress them and look upon them with eyes beam ing with tenderness. For three or four days,the little chicks thus resided with their canine friend. At night.they would repose beneath the hair of his paws. and during the day he was their con stant companion—attencliug to their every want with a human care and solicitude. Finally this unnatural mode of existence seemed to disagree with them, and the chickens were taken from their strange protector—much to the latter's sor row. . The dog's conduct could hardly be ascribed to instinset ; he ratherseemed to be impelled •by a - human impulse and affection, Swum KISSING—The author of " Sketches in Paraguay" gives us this fragrant morsel:— Everbody smokes in Paraguay, and nearly every female above thirteen years of age chews. lam wrong. They do not chew, but put the tobpeco in their mouths, keep it their constantly, except when eating, and instead of chewing' roll it about with their tongues and suck it. Only imagine your self about to salute the red lips of a magnificent little Hebe, arrayed in satin and flashing diamonds: she puts you back with one delicate hand while with the fair taper fingers of the other, she draws forth from her month a brownish black roll of to. bacco, quite two, inches long, looking like a mon strous grub, and depositing the savory morsel on the rim of your sombrero. puts up her face and is ready for your salute. have sometimes had an over delicate foreig ner turn with a shudder of loathing under such circumstances, and get the epithet of d saraco (the'savage) applied to him by the offended beau; ty for this sensitive squeamishness. However, one soon gets used to this. in Paraguay, Where you are perforce of cnstSm obliged to kiss every lady you nre introduced to ; and one half you meet, are really tempting enough to render you reckless of consequences ; you would sip the dew of the proffered lips in the face of a tobacco battery— even the double distilled "honey dew" of old Virginia. "AIN'T DoN NOTIIING."-' ter, John ?'t " I ain't done nothing, father. - " Well, what are you crying for, )ott lubber I" "I was afraid you would ship me." - "What , whip you when you hasn't done noth . .. • ing." "Yes, sir." - " Go into the house, you booby." John telt quite relieved, and went into the house,' and his father went down to the farm. Very soon his father came back in a rage, and laying a cowhide over the urchin's back said : "Did I not tell you =hen I went away to hoe the corn ?" `.` Yes sir—butyou told me just now you wouldn't whip-me if I hadn't done nothing." Fortunately John's wit didn't save him the whipping. ORIGIN or Tin; PRINTER'S DEVIL—When Ilanitius the elder set up in business, at Venice, he came in possession of a little negro boy. The boy was known over the city as the "little black devil," who helped the mysterious bibliofactor along, and some of the ignorant persons believed tinn to be none other than the embodiment of Sa tan, who helped Aldus in the prosecution of his profession. One day, Aldus, to dispel this strange hallucination by publicity, displayed tho young imp to the poorer classes. Upon the occludes he made a very characteristic speech—" Let it be knowh'in Venice, that 1, Aldus Ma:nitius, printer to the Holy Church Doge. have this day =del public exposure at thopriater's devil. All those who think he is not flesh and blood may come and pinch him." A NEW NAME.—A young lady recently entered a shop of a fashionable tiullinelr, for the iturpose of making some trifling purchase: "How is your mother, miss?" inquired the la- " She is not very Well," replied Aff ect i m i l t e . " what is the matter with her 7" •.. • She fell down stairs, and hurt her c Minn./ten : der T ery,much." "Her what?" Her courtsepbender." " Courtsey.bender! what is that'" inquired the puzzled milliner. ...Why her knce," said the blushing damsel. • A tort LETTER.--Och, Pady, mate Paddy, if I was your daddy, I'd kill 3c with kisses en• ; tirely ; if I was your bruther, and likewise your mother, I'd see that you went to bed airly. taste of your breath, I'd starve me to death, and lay off me hoops altogether. To joost have a taste of your:inns on me waste, I'd larf at the meanest of weather. Pear Paddy, be mine, me own swate valentine; ye'll find me both gintle and civil, our life we'll spind to an illegant ind, and care may go dance with the divil. : How TO REFUSE A Lo_ N.7-A young city clerk vgho felt inclined for a trip to the sea-aide. called Ppon a friend.. "Hal, my dear boy," said be, I'm off for a holiday, and I find I'm a trifle , "short--Llend me a ten, will you ?" Hal, after a pause. which apparently included a mental exam ination of his 'financial arrangements replied— "Well—Phil—td tell you the truth—l do ligt tel —disposed—at present—to make any—perma nent investments." " YES, Mrs. tiiitn," said a visitor to her ho& toss, "dear little Emma has your features; bdt I think she has got her father's hair." " Oh; nor I see," said dear little Emma, " it is, because I have papa's hair that he wears 'a ' A SOMEWAIIT juvenile dandy said. to _a fair partner at a ball: "Don ' t you think, iciec,,u 3 Y moustache becoming 7" To wbieb ahe " Well, sir, it may be coming, but it :has,notiyet arrived," , ,SArmio hurl: been_ Whifsged,for'stealing. *nuts- , ter'll. onions - - On