TERMS Ol' THE " AMERICA'." H. D. MA8SER, ? roBLisan 4bd JOSEPH EISKI.Y. $ Pi.oran.Tor.s. Ml. it. MASSEUt Editor 0tce in Centre Alley, in the rear of IL B. Ma ser's Sliire. Til C AMERICAN" is published every 8atur- umj mi i nu uui.iiAita per annum to lie t e . . . . . jibiu nan ye.iriy in advance. lo paper Uisconiin tied till Alt lit.aiii naiil I Wo subscriptions received for lost period than ha nunmsi mi luiuiuuiiiiauuiis ui ii'uvrs un business relating to the ollice, to insure attention, mini ra ru.-vi imiu. From the Knkke-liorkrr, womrs on vixr. An cpi-tlo tn the President of the New Englxnd Hurirtv, who recommended ihe introduction of Women in place of Wine, at Eutcrtainmciil.'. 'Ono of the two. according to y.mr choice. Women or wine you'll have to undergo ; Both maladies nre fulnl to our j.ivs; Hut whirl) to choose 1 rral'y hardly know. T hive tried both ; so (hoe who would a part tnke. May choose between tho head actio and the heart sche.' Brno. OI ! wenk am! foot-hardy reformer, To substitute women for nine ; The c'ow of whiie presence U warmer Than Ihe sunniest juics of the vine. Bi lb ve me, i s- fitnl are julep Than women in witeheiy -killed ; For there ouze more venom from two lipa Than ever from grain was distilled. Who barters fur beauty hia whiskey. The change will he cert.iin to rue ; F r her eyes filed a spirit more fri.-ky Than lurks in the best 'mountain-dew.' Ah ! ihoe eyes at e.irh meeting so merry You'll find to nut-p irkle champagne ; And tingleis more gnldi n than sherry W;ll fuddle as wi II the poor train. Morn t.ipering necks than the bottle's. With mouths more bewildering crowned, Will pour from their raiMi ng throttles, A stream that a sage would confound. If wine makes us brute, love is able To turn ua to fools with like ease : If the one lays ua under the table, T'otlii r brings us at Usui to our knees. After dinner when warmed with good eating, 'Tis women, not wine, we should flee : Peif'ct I.oveV a chaeae exfe mire healing Than ever abused 'eaude tie.' St II nt table some michief she's brewing ; O't feet srrtjir acquaintance bi low ; Ah ! no heel-tnpa so pregnant with ruin As those hi.Uin taps of the toe. And hsnds, between courses at leisure, M ke fiiicds whi n there's no one to mark : Ah ! less poion yield gripes undir pressure, ThBn fingers thus sque zed in the dark. As hit" c reel the toper of beauty. Hnw rnmin bin Hvpc, poor elf! How fi vered he n'cep-! how his duly la left to lake care of ii If ! When thwarted, how palsied his power, Till he rinks in despair at do oh's iljor ; Oh ! if worn m her viri m thua loners, What, I hfk.ran the bottle do more t No spirit so ardent ns woman's fco sure to intoxicate mm : Her L.tirh i delirium ttemens,' That maddens him moie than the can. The glance of her eye is blue ruin,' Hei I In h is the blood of the vine, lit r pout i a punch, in whose brewing Tart, sugar, and spirit cm' inc. So sparkling, so heating, so heady, No hope for her victim npjears : Should her smiles only render hire giddy, He'll be surely made drunk by her liars. Not the grape juice of Eden made Adam 80 stupidly fulfil his ail ; But the lure of hi- volatile, Madam Led him tip-ily on to his fall, Ni-I 'he wires of fair C prus the rover Ho sure as its women liecu le : Uei'rr rest where he is, half-seas over, Than stvei l. r so fatal n is e. O ! (hen shun such a 'empter ns this is, Nor rommeii' e so hiiznnloua court : Who m' arks en tho wuvia of her tresses, Will grieve llidl he vei.tuttd fionrt Tart. Furrcv. Castle bi'H.dino. The habit of w hat in common parlance is called '-buildinp cattes in the oir" lias a most pornicious influence on the health of the mind. There is a lerrit:n)ate exer cise of the imnrrinative faculty which is advan tageous to the understanding', and to this no reusonahle objection can be urped ; but when the fancy is allowed '-to body forth the form of thinps unknown," without bein under proper discipline, much evil will result. Individuals endowed with an unhealthy expansion of tho imspination create a world within themselves, in which the mind revels until all consciousness of the reality which surrounds them is lot. The disposition to reverie is very pernicious to intellectual health. Many habituate themselves to dream with their eyes open, without their senses being literally shut ; they appear to be insensible to the impression of objects external in themselves. This condition of mind borders closely upon the confines of insanity. If the imagination be thus permitted to obtain so pre dominant an influence over the other faculties of the mind, some particular notion will affix itself upon the fancy ; all other intellectual gratifications will be rejected ; the mind, in wea riness or leisure, recurs constantly to tho favour ite conception, and feasts on tho luscious false hood whenever she is offended by the bitterness of truth. By degrees the reign of fancy is con firmed : the grows first imperious, and in time despotic ; the fiction begin to operate as reali ties, false opinions fasten upon the mind, and life passes 111 dreams of rapture or angu'uh. Oh, haaving !" cried a nice old lady, the 0 thcr day, "if the world docs como to an end nct year, what shall I do for snuff!" SUNBUMY AMERICAN. AND SIIAMOKIN JOURNAL. Absolute acquiescence in the decisions of the lf Nasser & Elscly. for the AMrnrcA. THE RIDDLER. Juvenile Department. ENIGMA. I am composed of 13 letters. My 9, 8, 11 and 7, was the favorite of Burns. My 11, 5,9, has ruined thousands. My 0, 11, 15, is the noblest work of the Dcie- ' My 1,12, fl, is the wages of Death. My 4, 5, :i, is a delicious cake. My 1, 2, 1, 9, 15, is n lady's name. My 13, 11, 4, is a vehicle, My 1,5, 3, rules the day. My 13, 11, 7, is to weep. My 4, 10, 14, 11, is an animal. My 11, 1, 1, 10, 15, 13, 10, is what all lovers dread. My 1, and 7, (inclusive,) is a much admired villnpeonthe Rtiscjtiohanna. My and 1 1, (inclusive,) is a name dear to every youth of our happy country, and, My whole is a neat, useful, well conducted, Democratic news paper. A solution is requested. CHARADE. My first, in what Printers hnte, In sand my second is found, My third is an exclamation That has a hollow Found, My fourth is where soldiers dwell, Then mW the final e, My whole is what the ladies We, When they amused would be. Mr. Editor : Please tell me sir, w hat re- lation is that child to its 0111 father, that is not its fathers otrri son A man having a fox, a pnose, and a basket of corn to take apross the Susquehanna, his boat beiiifr too small to lake more than one at a time, how then can he take them across, in order to prevent the fox from entinp the goose, or the goose from eating the corn ! FROM THE SATl'BDAV Mt srrM. An f wets to the Charadei of lubt week. 1. Evnil-LASTINO. 2. Watch-Mas. Answer to Enigma. The animal sent was an autulupe (.4m il "") The fruit returned was a cantelopo (Can't elope.) Answer to Conundrums. 1. It is sin-oit-n -mouse (tynanymous.) 2. Because thry are too long and two loose (Toulon and Tvlouse.) 3. R-ii-t-hy (are yon alii 7) 4. Ileolten runs for a plate or a cup. 5. He's a bit of a buck. G. On the other side. CHARADES. I. My first we oft lend to each other in turn, To borrow it would be excessively droll ; My next, near my first you may often dis cern ; In my first, too, alas ! you'll perhaps find my whole. II. Drink deep of my first : admit me to your second : and let me play upon my whole. CONUNDRUMS. 1. Why is a madman like two men ! 2. What is a man like, that is in the midst of a river and can't swim ! 3. Why is a lady curling her hair like a housebreaker 1 -1. Why is a man in a fevtr like a burning candle ! 5. Why is your hat, when it is on your head, like a pihlet pie ? G. Why is a good story like a school-bcli ! B.riir.t.0Ks in Dasuir. The Boston Mer cantile Journal gives an account ofa new rem edy which damsels ofa particular age have of procuring, if not a lui-b;ind a generous equiva lent in money for that deficiency. It appears that a fair ilainsel lately brought an action a gainst a faithless swain in a neighboring state, to recover in the shapeof dollars and cents, con solution for a breach of promise of marriage. The evidence of promise having been given, was not clearly proved, but thn court very pro perly decided, that if he did not promise, he ought to have done it. And tbe jury agreed with the judge and the unfortunate man was compelled to open his purse strings, and pay for his ungallant omission. Nos'ur upon tinkers; they are found in eve ry honorable profession. Your politician's a tinker in mending the State kettle, when he patches up one hole he makes two ; your poet's a tinker : he hamniered out new works from other men's old wit ; the lawyer's a tinker: he deals in brass, and opens more flaws than he stops ; and what's your physician! Why, a tinker, too; a brazier of old battered constitu lions, and if he cures you of a .ou,i will take care to leave a rheumatism behind for a new job. "Matrimony" may bo anagramatized into "O ! try man '." and 'Huhbond" into "Ah ; anub'd !" Ootid j'es for bachelors, but no fun to inaried men. majority, the vital principle of Republics, from which Sunbury, Norfliuiiibcrlaiitl Co. Health and Animal Heat. It is highly important for every person to understand the necessity of supplying the body with a proper proportion of oxygen and carbon for the preseivation of health and animal heat. Oxygen is indispensable in every breath we draw. An adult man takes into his system, says Lnvoizier, 730 pounds of oxygen annually. All animals, whose ex stence depend on the absorption of oxygen, have a sourco of hrat within them, independent of external objects. That heat is the result of combination of oxy gen and carbon, which produce combustion, and gives just as much heat in the body, as it would if burnt in tho air or in oxygon gas. The temperature of the human body is the same in all climates, and depend on the quanti ty of oxygen taken into the system. Animals which breath frequently, as infants, coilsuiiik more oxygen, and have therefore a higher tem perature of heat than those which respite less frequently. Infants are therefore warmer than adults, and birds warmer than quadrupeds. Man requires more oxygen in cold than worm weather, o supply the diminution of hcatcatned by cold. As food furnishes carbon or fuel in the body, and oxygen is the fire, when the amount of oxygen is increased in win ter, the amount of food containing carbon and hydrogen, must also he increased in proportion. A starving man will soon freeze to death in winter. Hence we know that animals of prey are much more varocious in cold climates than worm. Our clothing is an equivalent for a certain quantity of food. The savages in northern lat itudes, who go naked, can consume without dif ficulty, ten or twelve pounds of flesh, and per h.nps a dozen of tallow candles, or a gallon of fish oil into the bargain, because the quantity of carbon and hydrogen contained in them would be required by the quantity of oxygen consu med to keep up the equilibrium between the temperature of their bodies and the external at mosphere. The northern man who goes into southern climates, from the increased he it. does not in hale as much oxygen as the colder climate required, and therefore does net need as much food or carbon; and findinghis appetite fail, re sorts to stimulants to increase it, and hiis in troduces more carbon into his system than there is oxygen to consume, disease therefore follows. Li eLig's Chemistry. Foil Mriini:R. The following is a copy of a letter to the St. Louis Republican, dated Au burn, Mii-souri, February 15th : "On the evening of the 13th inst., a rencon ter took place in the neighborhood ol New Hope, Lincoln county, Missouri, between Reu ben Jackson and Jotdon M. Gibson, w hich was about as follows : "A difficulty had arisen between them, res pecting a pre-emption claim ; and, on the even ing mentioned, Gibson and wife were return ing home from a neighbor's house ; and met Jackson ; some warm words passed, and Jack sou drew a pistol, upon which Gibson ran to a tree ; Jackson pursued him up to the tree, and after pr ssing round the tree tw ice or three times, suddenly stopped, and met Gibson on ihe other Eide, and immediately fired, the bull pas sing through his heart. Jackson stood looking upon his victim, until Gibson's wifo came up, and turned him over, and found him lifeless. He then broke for the woods and has not yet been taken." Qt axtitv or Bueatii in Man and Woman. The French ore a most experimenting race, and their diocoverics in the arts end scii'iices are proverbially 111 advance of Uhur nations. By experiments made ut the Paris Academy of Sciences, and arrived at by an ingeniuiiH spe cies ot mask being placed over the fuco of the person whose breuth was to bu examined, it was ascertained that man gives out a larger quantity than woman, and this difference is most striking between the ages of siitcen and forty, at which latter period the quantity of car bunic acid given out by the male is double that of the female. In tlio male the quantity goes on increasing from the age of eight years to thir ty, utter which it begins to diminish ; and. as a mun becomes older, the dimnution goes on in un increased degree. In old age, the quantity is not greater than it was at the age of ten. Let all men avoid rash speaking. They that speak without care, often remember their own words afterward with sorrow ; tliut,e that ex pect peace and safety, are to rettrain their tongues with a bridle. It is good in a fever, much better in anger, to have tho tongue kept clean and smooth. Anger may glance into the breast of a w ine man, but it rests only in the bosom of tools. What men want of reason for their opinions they usually supply and make in rage. Py taking revenge, a man is but iven with his enemy; but in pist:ng it ovtr, he is superior. J-t V ..1 .11 - J'-UL ",!.- LIU '- there i no appral but to force, the vit.it prim iplc Ia. Saturday. March II, IS43. The London Plrnrlng-IInnsr. Francis Lloyd, in his "Visit to the Bank of Frince," published in Bentley's Miscellany, says : "I explained to the regents of the bank tho operation of the Iindon Clearing-house ; that system so economic of time and trouble, and without which concentration and rapid settlement, the enormous balances between tho banking-houses in the great emporium ol the commercial world could not be go promptly struck, or the wheels of our complicated iimue tiry system could not revolve so evenly and quickly. I have ahv;;ys thought that the sys tem ol making bills, drawn from whatever quarter of the world, or from whatever town or village in Great Britain, upon all parts of Great Rritnin, payable in one place, i. e., as effected daily by one hour's adjustment of the clearing-house that such muted regulation and acceleration of finance is t the complex m ichinery of blinking what the fly-wheel and governor is to the steam-engine. You may imagine tho regent's surprise when I told him that in the Loudon 'Clearing-house," (a plain room, on part of the site of the old post-office, in Itmbard street,) a clerk from each private bank in Imdon attended twice a day for but half an hour; and commercial obligations wore collectively discharged to the amount of throe millions sterling every day in the year, with not more than a fifteenth of this sum in bank notes. That, as to using coin, (silver and cop per,) I could reBilily picture to myself the con temptuous and derisive expression of the face which the most juvenile ofthese clearing-clerks would assume at the bare suggestion. A thousand millions of pounds sterling, I told him, were paid last year in this room by these clerks, not more than forty in numbor a sum larger than the nutiorml debt ; and that nil the money used for the operation this balancing of a year's commercial enterprise in all quar ters of the globe was affected without a sin gle error, a moment's delay, and wi'h bits of paper only the promissory notes of the Bank of England. "The sjimnnl circulation of money through all the branches of the Bank of France is about eiobt miil'ons. When I hid explained the clearing system in all its bearing to the re gents, and the great facility it conferred on banking operations, they unanimously expres sed their admiration, and one sa;d, " 'Ah ! sir, would to God that we could con centrotc the energies of this country upon ob jects conducive to its wealth and prosperity, as you English ore doing. We have energy enough, and to spare, in France ; but, unhap pily, that energy is, for the most part, misdi rected by those who ought to know better.' "This was the candid avowal of a wealthy and intelligent man, emulous of the true glory of his country ; and the sentiments it contained appeared to coincide with those of tho other regents who did me the honor to receive me to-day." Curious Tale. An old man, following the occupation of bone collector, residing in the vicinity of Southamp ton, passing a marine store shop in that town, saw in the window an old piece of canvsss, part of a picture, having umw it the head ot an ox, which was full of tmall holes and very much obliterated with filth and age ; he inquired the price of it, which was 6s. The old man not having the money, said, "I will pay you a shilling a week until I have p;:id you for it if you w;ll 6avo it for me." This was agreed to, At length the picture was paid for, and the old man hastened to his humble home with his bir?ain. He was pursu'ided by some of his noiirhlmrs to have it varni-hed, and carried it to Mr. De Lainey. ho then resided in South ampton, (and now of No. 32, Princess street, Bristol,) fi ir that purpose. Instead of varnish ing the picture, Mr. De Lainey, being struck w ith its beauty, restored it by a newly disco vered process. After it was done, he offered the old man 20 fur the picture. "No." says he, "if it's worth 20 to you, it is worth 20, to me to look at." Mr. Do lainey then coniiiitini eated with some connoisseurs in London, whd "Mine and examined the painting. One of them commissioned him to purchase it lor him ot any price, but, strange to say, that although he offered various sums, until tho amount of 31)00. was offered for it, tho old man still re fused to part with his treasure, nor is it ex pected that he ever will dispose of it, aUhough he is in actual want. The painting is sup posed to be the finest Copy in existence. Rath Gazette. Awri'L Lkap. In New York, on Saturday, James Gordon, who had been several duy khor ing under scail.itinn.and a slight delirium, jum ped out ofa four story window upon the side walk a few duorssou'li of St, Mark's I'laee, Third Avenue. Dr. Miller, who had been in attendance, was immediately sent for, but n'd discover no marks of any injury except a slight bru'ke en the ruts-ide i.f the riht ler. He sur vived until 10 P. M., and if there was any seri ous injury, it mur.t have btcn interna!. and immediate parent of desp nism. Jrrrsnso-r. Vol. 3Xo. 21 VHiulo Xo. 138. ADVICKTO ntCUKt.OItS. nr mr.. tnwmn ritooit. Wnrin'sT ihou divine the miidcn's lore, Thtt ne'er hss hoen eolifcst, Strive not by questioning to mne The silence of l.er b-eml ; For l.ove h is mnnv untnught ways Tit m-ke j: secret known A side-Ions itlnnre, a word of praise, Be-lovv'd on t'10. id nfl. If -be. thee for aoo'ber mmes, Then sees tbe find niii;ikr; Wl.tb. o'i t her cheek, a lhvissnd slumer lo e n ciiiui bliih s bre.k, 1)0 hurries lo sme idle theme With well-nssunvd conrtrn, Be sum lb t ih"U sri in her d' tnm, A rid seek no more to letrn For pnt ily t! y sense she'll chest. To hid the truth fr rn ihee ; WH'p, btrk'cs-" yon'h ! there's no retreat From the sweet witchery, Bewild'rii.it Ihee in fend imili1, A rapiite to ihe Sjiell Th t dwells in the enchanting gnto, !ill X'-reis'd too well. If --hp could s'srt then check surprise Or Isiurh. vet licking mirth- Then dnrt tho lith'ning of her eyrs Prune to the senseless rsrth Whenever thou sppronrhest nigh, Be FUre ihst thou rt drar And in her boim lurks a sigh Me.nt not for thre to he.ir. Compel her nut, then, to disclose What sVsme would hide within, 'Pi rudely ravishing the rose A rentier hand should win. TI e fairest fl tw'r lhat ever grew Soon lo"s i's perfume When csther'd while expires each hue Fond sunbeams kia'd to bloom ; So nve, an ei tic m st rire. Thrives in the vi-gin's brertst In native beamy leave it there, Its genial plnce of rest. L't the soft veil of myt'ry still Enveloi ihe coy thought. The fi.st 1 lire spa'k'e from tbe rill Of p ion's fonn'nin enngbt. Where Ho:e'- hrigM iris tints appenr, Ti' fleeted in thp ray Of If 's vounj mro, sromly clcs', Swifilv to pass aw v Then be content to let h"r eves Her h t'l'i swee' ere' tell. Tor h ! they nee' can discui' Wh t'- known thfe bu' too w-tll ! N' r force her lips re uc'ant'y Tit syllsMc the s und That in the 1 1 irees of her ev More tiiithful maybe found. Evirtxrn or Pistufss. At the delivery of fice (f the Provident Society, the appl;cants yesterday for work, making shirts nt 12 J cents, were about eight hundred. The applicant were women w ith suitable testimonials. This is a most melancholy evidence of the amount of positive distress, of pressing want among a very considerable portion of our population, a portion entitled to our keenest sympathy and most active charity. I'hila. Korth American. The Toad and the Monkey. Tn Madrid, a newspaper is published under the title of "The Toad and the Monkey," and self-described to be "A Journal offensive, revolutionary, and disgusting, edited by a brutal society, and addressed to brutes." The Crescent City says a woman's tongue has been found capable, on actual experiment, lately, to move 1,020 times in a minute. Think of that and weep. The N. Y. Aurora thinks that coal merchants would make excellent soldiers they are so fond of obeying "orders." The word fire, too, always gives them pleasant sensations. "Mayo man marry hiswife's sister Via a question which cun only be properly answered by the sister herself, when the widower pops the question. Some men have all the abilities necessary to form great characters, but never distinguish themselves for want of determination they arc like a good clock never wound up. Is it not a truth that people who reside in houses w ith but few windows seldom live long? A house short of lights, should certainly he short oflivcTt. There aro three things which tshould never bo done in a hurry : threading a needle, shoot ing wild fowl, and getting married. Tho fiill that is most likely to injure a per son's brain is, to fall in love with a pretty girl. Love is the k.'iuJow of the morning which decreases as the day advances. Friendship is the shadow of the evening, which strengthens w ith tho setting sun of lilo. The greatest repose which man can enjoy, is that which he fuels in desiring nothing. One seldom funk that for which he seeks, when he searches for it with impatience. It is said, there are only threo ways to get out of 1 quirrel : right out, w ri'e out, or back out; but the safer mode is to kep out. "I como to etel," aa tho rat observed to the trap. "And I spiing to embraco you," as tbe etcwl Imp replied to the rut. TO rniCES or aivi:ktisixc. 1 square 1 insertion, . fq AO 1 da 3 do . . , 0TI I do 3 dj . . 1 00 Evry subsequent iertirn, 0 Yearly Advertisements: ont column, 155 half column, $18, three squares, f 13 1 two squares, f 0 1 ona squire, Ililf.yearly t one column. $18 t half column, $13 t three squares, $8 ; two squares, $5 j one square, $3 AO. Advertisements left without directions a to the length of time they are Id be published, will he continued until orjered out, and charged accord inffly. C"3Sutccn lines mako a square. A Ftensiint Witness. Patrick Scott, Step Father of Eugene Sulll. van, (one of tho apprentices of the Somer,) was examined as a witness on an application ferthe discharge oftheboy. Tho following wJ part of his cross-examination. What was the name of your wife before you married 1 A. I can't tell. Was she a widow A. She pnii' so. Q. What was tho name of her first husband 1 A. I believe it was Eugene Sullivan, bcciuse my wife passed by the nama of Catharine S illivan before I married her. Q. How many children had your wife, before sh a was married 1 A. How can I tell. Q. How many did yon know of 1 A. There were two boys before I married her. Q. Were they her children 1 A. That's more than 1 can tell. Q. Was Eugene Sullivan ono tftheml A. Ye, Q. Do you recollect that he left your houe anl went to sea 1 A. No. Q. Then yon must re collect his leaving it ! A.I did not say that 1 did not recnllet his leavinj the house, but I don't recollect his going to eea, for I recollect nothing about it. I can't tell where he went to, for 1 did not see him going to sea. Q. Is it possible that if one of the intimates of your house, your son or wife, for example, left, your house and went to sea, that you would not know it ? A. How could I tell that my wife went to sea, unless she told mo so when she came back, and she never told me any such thing. Q. But you would miss her out of the house? A. Ofcourse I would but I could not tell by missing her out of the house that she was at sea ? Q. Did she ever tell you Eugene Sullivan was at sea ! A. No. Q. Where it your w ife now 1 A. How can I tell. Q. When did ynn see her laFt 1 A. This morning. Q. Where t A. In tny own house. Q. And yet 5'ou sty you could not tell where she tea ? A. No, I said no such thing I said I could not tr II where she is, for alihourjh she was in my housa this morning, she may not be there now. Pi.lmoilr vs. I.nbor. Snooks had occasion to call on the reverend Domine Thomas Scratchard, while he was at Glasgow. 'Is the DominP in ! he inquired of a portly dump, who opened the door. He's nt hame, but he's no in,' replied the h dy, Mle'sin the yaird, sonperindendiii' Sauners, the carpent er. 'Ye can fee him the noo, gif your business is vera piecue.' Snooks assented, and walked through the door pointed to him into the yard, where ha beheld a carpenter brikly planing a joist to the air of'Maggie louder,' and the worthy Domine standing by. Unwilling to intrude on their con versation, Snooks stepped, unseen, behind a wa ter cask and head 'Sauners 1' No answer from the carpenter. 'Sauners, I 6ay 1 Can ye no hear me V 'Yes, minister, I hear ye ! Whal'a your Wull !' Can ye no whistle some mair solemn and jjod ly tune while ye're at your wark V Avvecl, minister, if it be your wull, I'll e'en dee it.' Upon which he changed the air to the deal march in Saul, greatly to the hindrance of what was now really painful planing. The Domine looked on some minutes in silence, and then began : 'Sauners, I had anither word to say till ye. Did the gude wife hire ye by the day's darg, or by the job V 'The day's darg was cur 'greetng, maister.' Then, on the whole, Sauners, I think ye maun just as weel gie bach to w histling bonnie Lauder. Nimrod and the Moos. Nimrod looking at the moon the other morning remarked, that it must be nearly out of change. "Why so ?" asked we. Because I see it has got to its last quarter," replied the urchin. We treated to a glass of root beer. A gentleman, the other day, on asking a mar ketman thn price ofrggs, was answered, "Eggs arc eggs now." "I am glad to hear it, with alt my heart ; for tho last 1 bought of you were hn'S chickens." An editor, lately married, inquires of the Pi cayune the price of tuition charged by the Sheet Iron Band. He thinks it meat that his lady should learn the music ol the frying pan f A gentleman, w ho was importuned by a stur dy beggar, answered liiin "My good man, I ain nearly as poor as yourself, with only the dif ference that what I have I work for." Anlrit-hman thus describes a wheelbarrow "It is a little carriage w.th one wheel and the horte is a man, w ho goes behind." A fellow in Arkansas is so short that he has been often mistaken for pie cru6t. Tobacco. T hseeci is an In.lun wee J, The J v I wa s J the m-sI; Il robs your jnckeis, sjxiils yuui fl ''has, AnJ nukos t cbimosy of your no."