Vltiozolnirg /PtMarrai. POW 1• 4 112 D P.VR.RP WE INSIDAT Or lll. o oSPint`R(l, PA., DT WILLI (NUM U. JACODY. TismA —II nn la addaate. If not paid wishin SIX "'Milli.. lit ivatii additional will ao thattath Cam' tior.,p, , al.enntlnued antil all atritaragal 11,1 paid merit IR tie op' ion of taw editor. ILATTA al ADVERTISINO. ^ In Lellilis rfillirriTtYri a 0b17.41111. One givers min nt thine In•prilans SI 30 Vary Sithequont itomnina late than 13 ao uPaCS. . IL Q. 3x. Cx, IT. titan imamC 100 303 I 40l twit ea, 1 , :&0n 3.0 n 1,4 10 Etirmi i• 0,00 7.00 I I Y. 50 our aqu•reo. am I 0 )i.ill I 10,.0 all•nlicii !la ho I 1.2 on II 0!! Dee cola,. , liIS 00 ~ DO 'S! 10 ' A ni•trenr. 3Ol u 4 Nliillw.. 4.60 Ogler oulte rth row nt. I ftotrtut: unit ..t. • •' emtire• tit 4Po t. , J , 01:1.fq, sweaty. tart. per lIM rblym , ,q 10.alige all Chefs diae afire tkp li•pg fruited la *UN* -,• tif Yil APiK ',XVIII*. Thy 113rother Has Fallen. TILT brother has fallen Oh, go to hint now, With love iu thy bosom, And smiles on thy brow. Speak words of true kindness, And bid him arise From error to virtue, And press to the skies. Thy brother has fallen! Assist him to stand ; Throw around him thy mantle; Extend him tby hand; Be gentle,, be tender, Persuagive and kind ; And to his heart's centre A way thou wilt find. Though sunk and degraded By error and vice, Till early affections Are cold ar the ice. Compassion and kindness Once felt in the heart, Will melt to contrition By the warmth they impart. Thy brother btu fallen! Oh ! hasten to give The help that is needed, And bid him to live. Wait n• t for the tunrrow; Today is the time; Before he is hardened In error and crime. Ask not for the reason That brought him so low; That he is disgraced is Sufficient to know, Wben virtue has triumphed, Joy beams in his eye, •With tears he will bless thee, With hands to the sky. To save a lot brother What honor en great? Yet thou-ands neglected Are left to their fate. When a word a look eren, Would virtue restore; And keep the lo.•t brother From wandering more. TUE LOST MAN. A PRAIRIE SICSTVH. Ast unfortunate trader once strayed from his companions, and was lost four or fiat. days, suffering the toenetst pangs of starva tion. It as+ years ago, yet the story only been told in oral repetition anwpg th, old traders, and has never before, to our knowledge, fallen in the way oft. -.ribs. The man wander2d away upon a sultry mid-envoi:ler aftereon, oppressed to despot ration with th:, .t, in -eureh of water, while the caravan, v.a., dragging slowly along the dreary and tie.ted prairie. Making his way to a cluster of titutter that appeared at it very mat distance, ho wait fortunate enough to find a small cool spring gushing and rip pling at the bottom of a deep rocky hollow. The Avila water, the cool shade of the steep rock and trees above, together with the knowledge that the wagons were still mov ing along in eight, induced the poor fellow to yield to his weatiness and suffer hi, eye. to close. Wnen he awilte, the grey of the evening was deeputaing around the pi aai, and rushing up tom the •hof.div, his ey, wan d ere d t og n i! in vain 'sots:6 ui his et ! iii• paniuns. lie we, a raw adventurer, upon his first travel, lnoocing r.otiriag of how to advance his step, in toe wilderness, 'add trusting entirely to the guidance and experi ence of than with whom he traveled. ties ty, impulsive, and rash us ho was careless. and without possessing a single quality of character to assist him in such an emergen cy, confused terror at once took possession of him, and started as he thought in the direotion whore he had last seen the wagons, be MO with headlong speed, shouting wildly hopes of being hoard and companions. wan, bereft of all thought by ire of his predicament, could iber to fire the rifle he held. :caring his lungs with wild !ries fur assi.,tance. While forward in this manner, the , ning around him, the man 'Wield fall and was stunned into 'lrsoule hours. Wean giving tee of the poor fellow's own e back to consciousness some night, in the midst of a wolves, and found himsell Ade of a buffalo's skeleton, not 'ripped by the prowling dogs 11, A situation more appalling nerve, may not be imagined.— bted not but that he was =il ly fr itn bid state of torpor by eatures assaulting his own thee were mauled and torn f a claw was on his leg, seems had not touubed .4d upon the skeleton, ' on a limn or some 13 other part, La he diaeoveri.d a large lump upon his head, which alp.° ed distressingly when he num to his;sen.c ; The poor fellow in the bout of his terror, made out to scare away the twelves from himself, and escape from the spot, leaving t'te famished ati'm fls to return again to the buffalo's bones, and give them u oloaser polishing. Just escaping from ono fright f fil danger, perhaps took smnething from the keen horrors of his desolate and wrett hod condition, but the unhappy man's Fellstlion+ were harrowing end fearful in the extreme. Ile still pressed onward, his strength failing at every step, calling in harsh and broken shrieks to his friends, and changing his course again and again in utter and misera ble uncertainty of which way to turn. Daylight came, the sue arose, noon ap proached and passed, and the lost man was alone in the desert, famished and faint, and without a solitary hope of regaining his companions or finding the track they were pursuing. That night the unhappy wretch sank ex hausted upon the grass and slept, to awaken in a state of fear and danger more appaling even than the night before. A compact and intrumerable hand of buffaloes came moving slowly across the region of the prairie on which he lay, and he started from sleep in in immanent peril of being trodden to death by the huge monarets of the plain. As these dense masses of buffaloes move, they emit sounds that rise in the air like sea surge and as the black herd came towards him in deep midnight, the poor trader declared that rolling ocean seemed about to over whelm him. Utterly parented with his danger, the unfortunate man could but start to his feet, and stand confounded, fearing either to fire or use other means to alarm the buffaloes, lest by exciting their terror, be should but increase his own peril. From this critical position, however, he likewise escaped unhurt, for the animals separated, as their custom, when a strange scent is de tected, and passed on in two divisions, keep ing, keeping some two hundred yards clear of the mysterious intruder in the middle. Daylight was again appeering, as the last of the innutuerablo herd of creatures passed him, and the man was starving. He took aim at a retreating buffalo, and missed fire, for his percussion cap was damp with the night dew. Still he was famishing and his only hope seemed in the slaughter ing of a buffalo. fie followed, crawling, on his hands and knees, and, after hours of weary watching and labor, wounded a cow at last with a suoccssful shot, and the whole , band disappeared, while the poor trader fell prostrate, too exhausted and faint to make another effort in the pursuit. This unhappy wretch lay gmanine aloud. ' alone in the midst of an interininabh. wa. t.. abandoned to desperation and de pair, when the thin bark of a small prairie dog of meted his attention. Once more ho charged hi, Hie, for the little creature was in night. with its nose lifted just al ove the mound sur rounding its bole. The starving Man lay prostrate upon the earth, took slow and cautious aim at the dog, and was fortunate enough to knock it out, of its hole with a uroken back ; but before he could reach the spot, the dying creature had wriggled hack into its hiding place and di-appearcd.— With his ten fingers, the de -iterate man raked up the earth, and sueeetsiod in drag ging the dying dog out upon the grass, where without waiting to finish his agony, he tote •ts warm flesh with his teeth, like a wolf while the expiring creature was -till Ifititio at his fingers. This unnatural su.tenatic estored the drooping man, and he was en• 'bled to resuuae. his wanderings, which he continued for three more days and nights. *lone desolate and miserable, until he en sountered a hunting party of Catuanchea. whom, so far from avoiding, he rushed to •mbrace, as though they were kindred near Ind dear, and the beat friends, MI could meet on earth. They were friends as it t if ned out, for they set him upon the track ot regain his comrades, with instructions to ;inert hint, and buffalo meat to support him. Hying themselves by stripping him of his • die and everything else of the slightest value hat had about him. 6 on 1 o,on i . to Ilcon I 4 1141 I 30.00 HI I* 11.00 OM.I / 411 ,00 'OOO .50,110 After fi,ur days travel the poor trader reached his friends again, and was welcom ed as one from the grave. Upon the eve ring of his loss, search was made in all di rections and signal guns fired which hi would have heard, had ho not have been la)- ing insensible by the buffalo's skeleton.— Search was also continued upon the sne• seeding days, as the caravan moved alone. but Ms wandering had been to irregular. tending in a far and opposite direction, the it was impossible to truce him, The flys lays suffering of this unfortunate man may 1,0 but faintly imagined. A YANK EZ IN PAIS'S.— A story is told it, private circles about a wealthy but ill-it formed American who went to Pari4 and up plied for lodgings at one of the aristocratic 'old family" mansions of the city, when ho read the words "Hotel de Crillion" ovo: the door. Haughtily dismissed there, hi neat applies at another of too Fame sort, tht 'Hotel de Boling," unaware that the cus tom of placing the name over the door it one of the old observances of the French aristocracy. At this juncture some one in fanned him of his blunder, and great was his chagrin. Subsequently he met a friend who recommended him to go to the "Hotel de Louvre," which is really a house of public entertainment. But ignorance had suc cumbed to wisdom. "No, hang it," was the erudite reply, "I'm up to that, you know, you don't get me to apply for board at Leas Napoleon's palace." Letter to Mr. A. T. Stewart of Slew York. Geneorrowm, D. C., Feb. 5. 1858. My Dear Afr. A le.enntler T Stewart,'• Chair. man Grant Committee, Cooper Institute N. Y." Your very handsome printed letter of Jan. uary the Ist did not reach me until today, and I hasten to assure you that its tenor is !ouch more congenial to my feelings than any of the printed papers you have ever had the kindnes.. to seno tne, printed: Dams: PROMPT CASH, mix, per cent. off, C. 0. D. To be frank with you, I always thought of croton oil when I saw those papers. They suggested haste, and made the nervous. But this State paper is heavy, and makes me fool inclined to sleep and think. I never know any of your partners before ; but it a ppears,sinceyou added a' new Onsn t depart ment to your trade, you have put the part ners' names an the "bill heads." Is Mr. Astor a son of the old gentleman that was in the fur and skinning business? And does he propose to renew the trade on the "political varmints" that can't be "melted out?" Mr. Peter Cooper, that was in the paint, glue, and isinglass trade. is he a special or general partner to furnish all the paint and putty and glue that will be required to cover up and hold up the Grant plottform? If so, it is a big thing. Isin glass and all other transparent substances will be useless. The people see their way through it now. Mr. Chittenden is a lovely character, and I suppose he is to be the head of the "religious department." Ah! I learned to know and appreciate him during the war in dealing in tracts, blankets, con tracts, and all other kinds of tracts towards loyalty and the Treasury. The combination grows on me as I read the name of Mr. Vanderbuilt ; it denotes pluck, speed, and bottom. The very thought of him and Grant hitched double on the great national track makes a fellow feel horseish, and be willing to het that they would make the faste-t time over poo peo ple's children. and their written and other constitutions, that we ever had in this coun try ; they would shower down the oats, and no patriot would dare utter neigh as long as we had a "stable government." With Mr. Bonner's influence. the thing would present a completeness doubtless even never contem plated by Washington hitnself. The very sight of Mr. Harper's name was refreshing to my eyes, as my memory was even full of the sound law, morals, and pictures of their publications—the "Magazine," "Weekly," and "Bazar-and often regretted that Con gress had not made an appropriation for their introduction into the colored universi ties. The absence of the name ot Mr. Be nnett, of the fienthl, is to be regretted. as its hare use would have added an element of public regard not always attainable. Would it not have been well to have added the names of the proprietors of "Zozodont," ••Night Blooming Ceres," "Balm of a Thousand Flowers," Barnum, and the sew ing machine men? I merely mike the sug gestion. It seemi unkind to touch the ar tistic pile that you have all created with a labor of love and faith. derived either from the Bible or the Treasury Department, a kind of millenium faith, where all nations. kindreds, and tongued dwell together and gather in harmony. When one scans the list of lean Democrats, tat loyalists, and stock fossils, his mind can but revert to the Prairie scenes, where none but Providence. he Indians, and nature rules, and he thinks th e P ra i r i e dogs and their holes, and all •he varmints and reptiles that therein dwell in a peace as profound as lovely, a scene truly edifying to one of large Christian faith. You will, I trust, pardon the liberty take here, and now, in expressing a personal regret that the name of that august vegeta narian squash philosopher, Mr. Greeley, does not appear on the list. iVe shall need blood out of turnips and other green things in the canvass. By the way, Speaking ol blood, brings to mind our old fricud, the re doubtable Rynders. You have neglected him, a game, good fellow, who never struck .'out of time," or "below the belt." 1 quote the personal port of your appeal, and regard it as addressed to myself: "Your position in the community wll. , re you reside will enable sou to sh.tne, if' nit lead, public opinion."— Yet farth-r, "Y will ut once issue a col; tilt' a pulite., Inc- , init.' . So, after an early oealch-4 I ao a! once to -ec my brother, Is rael Funk, the tobacemii,t, and, to my sur prise, find him in a great rage, reading you' printed letter, a duplicate of mine addressed lc him. He won't budge a peg—swears that he is badly bitten now with the "Grant grand" in tobacco and segars. All of that iirand have plenty of grit ;Ind smoke, but no flavor. Greenhorns and boys buy once and hen drop that brand. Ile was down on it— real savage. What could a man do, then. when his own brother was against him, in :totting up a public meeting, but go and 4eo 31r. Washburne, and lay my plans before him? He listened with both eyes until I named about the public meeting. with th. "Grand Grant Head Centre" to talk ahem, in publk; says "it won't do at all for aim public man to talk all his wind out before lung race, but he must keep it in him to make time coming down the 'quarter stretch . in the last heat on the four mile day; say• "Grant acts, don't talk; Johnson talks. don't sot, and has got down from a thor ough-bred to running quarter noes, with Mr. Seward for his rider and Pokey, and takes the spurs like a Conestoga wagon horse." I do not see what I can do but await Your instructions You know I ate disposed to .hlige you. You are so very kind, atfoe• donate, and liberal to all your friends. em ployees, and servants, that your will is their law and they would never dream of diso beying at the prevent high price of board "Trusts: PROMPT CASH, gaper cent• off. C. 0. D." I neglected to men.ion a very small, trivi al eircunmanve that !illy be in the way of our new "Grant th.t u! fluent" in the dry goods trade, We did not kill all the Demo. crat4 and rehelA, and they say a tuillinen•, vegetarian, shoe, and Grant department, or anything of that kind, added to the trade, may do; but when it comes to selecting their offieerF, the descendents of the old stock intend to select and name their man, not yours. Mrs. Funk desires you to Rend her some cal keel' or other prints for drapery nt the public meeting, (if ordered,) representing the scene at the War office when Gen. Grant Rurren dered to Mr. Stanton. Ple,ce don't mark the bill for the calieoem "Twos : PROMPT CASH, RIX p,r cent. of, C. O. D•" As I said before, k makes me feel Patriotically—well, yes, Pana FUNK. P. S. mr. F. directs me to present her compliments, and says that she always thought you were the handsomest man of your age in New York, and she regrets to learn that you are getting round-shouldered, and desires to know whether it arises from having the weight of the nation to bear, or is it occasioned from a habit of putting your hands down deep into your breeches-pockets to pull up money for the poor ; or will it not make a man stoop—just a little—in trying' to pass from the tail of the Radical party to the bead of the Conseratives and Demo oats? She further directs, that it is proper that an answer to a printed letter should be printed. P. F. A Tower. e - is. SlWl.lB.—Lamertine in his "Pilgrimage to the holy Land," writes as follows : —'•W hen I was about* league from Niel. the last Turkish villaer. almost on the •entier of Servia. I sate a large towerrisinr I. '1 the inid-t of the plain. 1 VI white as Par, • marble. I hat down under the shade ' the tower to enjoy a few moment's repose. So sooner was 1 seated than rais ing my eyes to the monument, I discovered the walls which I supposed to be built of marble, or of regular rows of white atone, were composed of regular rows of human skulls. Bleached by rain and sun, and ce mented by a little sand and lime, formed entirely the triumphal arch which now slid toyed me from the rays of the burning sun; there might be from fifteen to twenty thou sand. In some places, pordons of hair were still hanging, and waved like lichen or moss, with every breath of wind. The mountain breeze was then blowing fresh, penetretiug the innumerable eavalties of the skull, and sounded like a mournful and plaintive sigh. These were skulls of fifteen thousand Servi ens who had been put to death by the Pa ella, in the late insurreution in Sunda. How ever, Servis. is now free, and this tunnitmont will teach their children the value of hide dependence, by showing them the price at which their forefathers purchased it. FIDDLINO TO A :Caw Tune.—The New York Tribune in a late article upon the fi nances said : "Legal tenders are a forced loan—a sort or legal robbery. They have no self regulating. expansive. and cowl:, t,ve power. adapted to the hminess want- (.1' he eonmiunity.-- I.ny papereurreney to deserve the nan!r tnu-t be: First security. Second, redeem able. Greenbacks arc neither. They are a standing advertisement that the United States are insolvent. They are depreciated Government lies." This is very different talk from what we heard during the war. Then greenbacks were declared to be as good as gold, and th best currency that had ever been discovered. Had any one used such language as we guilty from the Tribune then, he would have had a short trip to Fort Lafayette. It is Axton ishing what a difference there is in greenbacks when it is !imposed that ti bondholders as well as the people hall talc' them. Then, instead of being the hest. 'hey become the must miserable currency iti the world. WILD CATS AT WORK.—Never in the lii,tory of this region were the forays of wild cats so numerous or serious as during the present winter. We learn that some twenty sheep were destroyed by them last week on some farms in the vicinity of Green ville. Grown persons have been chased by them, and it is considered absolutely dan• gerous for children to be any distance from the farm houses. If the bounty had not been taken off their scalps, large numbers of them would have been killed. We hope our member will attend to having restored. If not. for a large amount, at least suffieien• to induce people to engage in their destrue tion.—Cktrim► Banner. The lawrcnee (Kama.) Rept', limp 'Parisi that the late-sowed wheat is more rrronii-ing than that which was put in (rain. rr. The dry weather of the full was injuri• sue to early-sowed wheat, and it same up it regularly. That which was rowed later chrt better. Some fanners kept on sowing in wheat during the warm weather of Deem. her and early in January. A farmer writing from Miami county to the Farmers' Club of the American Institute, under date of Jan uary 5, said that he could see from his window twelve teams engaged in plowing. - A Lively Hear Story. The Chippewa Ilines boot's good story of a party of hunters in !Ouch of wildcat!, who found instead three lit* bears- The party had Just separated to scour the locali• ty, when Sheriff Bond was suddenly eon• fronted by an enormous black bear, coming right out of the ground, and not six feet distant.. The per.l was imminent, and only Ill• , !• • (I,)—"fight it out on that line," and o,lolcoly. Ho shouted to warn hi• pai , y, awl fled, striking the bear in the center of the head. Doubling up like a knot he appeared in the ground as suddenly as he came out. The firing brought tha ratio of the party, and it we- resolved to go into the hole. Mr. Buzzell prepared for thi. job, and was lowered into the ground about eight feet before he came ta the bear, which was lying quartering hind part toward him lie undertook to tie a rope around one bind leg when a tension of the muscle, a move body, and at the canto time a •;,dogane ray of light revealed two other bears and his own awful situation I Busse% eight feet in the ground, head foremost, without a single weapon, with three wild bears, and the only means of getting out to be hauled out by ropes attached to his feet, was very unuoinfortable. How he escaped from the situation is a wonder to all who know anything about it; but he got off with a blow on the head and a scratch extending front the jaw to the temple. But the old bear got the worst of it, for he fol lowed his man out. and on showing his head received a ball under the jaws coining out at the top of the head. So to get hint out was the next consideration, and Bashfield was slowly and cautiously lowered into the den, revolver in hand. A survey showed that the old bear was dead, and but one other in sight, and that not all pugnacious. He attached a rope to the old bear's leg, whanged'his 'evolver at the remaining one, save signal anti was jerked out. When h e 01,1 bear was draw u out, the ot!ters seem ca bound to come too, and as fast as the showed thetwelves, they were fired at. Forty one shots were filed, and their heads were riddled with the holes before he suc cumbed. The old bear dressed 400 pounds, the others about 150 each. AN ASTOUNDtNO AND CONIPOUNDINO lIISCOVERY IN ALASKA.--We have an en. chanted world in Alaska. Here is what a Russian guide told a Californian who asked about a range of mountains near Sitka : "They are mighty in size and cause much cold. Wonderful things are told of them. It is said that in some places there are deep pools and lakes in which dwell monsters— serpents as long as a 6r tree, which, were they in the open sea, would commit niiebty damage. One thing the Indiana tell us fir certain—that yonder, far away to the Nortb in the heart of those hills there is a won derful valley, so narrow th atl only at midda y is the face of the sun to be seen. That val. lay, lay undiscovered and unknown fir: thousands of years.; no person dreamed of its existence ; but at last, a long time aim two Indian hunters entered it by chanty. soul then what do yin think they found They found a small tribe of unknown pci' pie, speaking an unknown tonge, who had lived there since the creation of the world. and without knowing that other beings ez• isted." THE ONIALASICA CANOL—There ie it, the audience room of' the Department of State, Washington. an interesting specimen the tntnne ..I by the Onialaska Indian • to Ito. , is Atet•ric:i The canoe appears -kilts of some anima?, sewed with tondiunt and totretehti cm.; woodcut frame. It is &Ant eightitim in length. pointed' at the end , nod it,' enough to hold, in a •itling , ortt. the ;in ale occupant fear which it is inter; fed Hi• toe i• in the middle, and a web, apparent k made of fi.h skin, is intended to be tretched over the hole where he sits to keep out the water • there. The double paddle by which the canoe lb :,r ,1.0;1141 i. itlytut eight feet in length held in the middle by both hands.— Vmoiret to the region inhabited by the In. •linns referred to say that the skill whb which they manage these canoes, and their .touruge in iiithing enterprbes in them, fa, from land on a stormy sea, are wonderful. flue mime is understood to bare been sera to Washington by Capt. W. A. Howard, of the revenue service. Mormay.—There was once to be a meet ing of the flowers, and the judge was tr award the prize to the ono pronounced the moat beautiful. "Who shall have the prize?" said the rose, stalking forth in all the eon sciousnese of beauty. "Who shall have the prize?" said the other flowers advan sing, each with conscious pride, and each imagining it would be herself. "I will take a peep at those beauties," thought the vio let, not presuming to attend the meeting ; "I will see them as they pus." But am slit rai•ed her lowly head to peep out of het rititug plate. she was observed by thojwitn .vbn hnnie.liatelv pronounced her the most neautiful, because the nose modest. A California correspondent writes that the mixture of rams in that State is be• fond ell precedent in the history of man. kind. He reports rnarriages between Yin• keel and Digger Indians, Irish and Clittieis, Mexican and Msylry, Portages. and Sand wich Islanders, English Canadian and Ne gro, French and Apache, to my nothing of the more common intergars to be own in all parts at Anifill A Marsachuseils !Standar* Mr. Anson Burlingame, of NIP 4aohuipeeti l / 2 our minister to Chinsythe gentleman wbo, in UM, declared in a public :.spots h. that this country required an. antislavery Con stitution, en antislavery Bible and an and. slavery God, has decided to desert his post as American minister, and become a Chinese ambassador to the western powers of Europe, to represent there the interests of hip. Celestial majesty, the "brother of the sun," etc., for forty thousand do/fare a par / Whether Mr. B. has been "natural istsr a, a video' of China, or, if be has, what sort of a course of sprouts he was put through, is not stated; ,but they do say that he has accepted the Emperors appoint ment. and ie now on his way to Europe, via San Francisco awl New_York, accompanied by a suit of thirty Celestine of rank, who are to be attaches of the embassy, and who are decorated with the insigne, of their rcs pective positions at home. • It is not known whether Air. Burlingame was required to adopt the Chinese costume and cultivate a tail before receiving the honor conferred up on him by his new employer and, sovereign. and there will be much curiosity to sec him when he lands in this country, to determine this point. A Massachusetts man will do a great deal for money, and if Anson could not otherwise secure the forty thousand dol lars per annum, his friends may expect to see him pass through this country in the garb and gear of a genuine mandurian. A man who would desert his post of duty to his own country to take service under a semi- barbarian for money would, if necessary to complete the sale, don the clothes of a clown or "hung a ealf-skin (with a tail to it) on his recreant limbs !"—Paily I'Veter. PROFESSOR FARADAY.— Profeasor Fara day sought to reach the mind of every hear er through more senves than one. He new er told his listeners of an experiment ; he always showed it to them, however simple ~ n d well known it might be. "If," said Farady, once to a young lecturer, "I said to my audience, "Ibis stone will fall to the ground if I open my hand,' I should not be eontent with saying the words , I should pen my hand and let it fail. Take noth ing for granted as know. Inform the eye at the saute time you address the car. was the great secret of Faraday's success.— Every one left the theatre of the institution in Albemarle street satisfied that he had re ally acquired some useful knowledge, and iwt lie 6,1 gained it pleasantly, and with out toil or labor. DOMINO HORSX SOLD By TIM POUND. —The eel. brated trotting staliion Dasbaw. jr., who ha, a record throughout the Wes; us a - rooter and stayer," was pnrchaaed by Mr. A. F. Faweett, the former owner u; Dexter, in Chicago a few days Aire. It 'hated by a Chicago paper that Mr. Fawcett requested Mr. David Kelly, the owner of he horse, to name his price, when the lat er wpied jocularly that he would sell hin. ~ i r liiurteen dollars and My cents per pound ,fier the manner of selling cattle. Mr. Few ,ett immediately accepted the proposition. rhe horse was aceordinely eir upon the males, and weighed one thousand and titrt, ! mends, making the amount to I teen thousand and eighty dollar-. QUEEN Vic-matA has ordered !.;,. Governor of Jamaica , o fill all the resp,a, ible offices hereafter only with white men !ion' England. The negro has effcctuall p!ayed him-elf out with the Ittitish Govern nt by his fantastic, tricks of murderous and mar-aeres. That Government .1i the leiri in the attempt to emancipate 0 1 .. :evil! , IP! bliwit nee. It is now the chat the negro is unfit fin ut of to live harmoniously on ,u Go %oil) white people upon the same I. This vountry, following in England'• puke. will pass through the same experi ence. A enterprising and ingenious Illinoisian of the romantic name of Wiggins. had seven young women under promise of marriage to him in the village at the tame time, two of them being sisters, and in each case had an ticipated his marital privileges. He depar ted between two days, and at present there are seven young Japhet Wigginses in search of a fugitive father. Ur is stated that two of the Benoit. huff robbers have been put under arrest at Memphis Tennessee, by a Cleveland detec tive, who followed them there ; that $150,- 000 of the stolen property has been secured in a Metnphis hank, and that the detective has Immured Bennighoffs promise of a re ward of $65,009 for his eervioes. A man in Boston has got nearly one ihousand photographs of ladies who re spondel to an advertisement, "Wife wanted by a man of weans"—whieh in this ease rig nified a very mean man. In this case the man wanted no wife—only a lot of pictures of simpletons—and he got bushels of them. Quint A FAMILY. —The Downingtown ./oitranisays the wife of Jacob Spotts, of ipringfield, Chester County, Pa., on Sunday night limit gave birth to four children, each weighig eight pounds. The mother and children are all doing well. A new Masonic Hat is to be erected on Broad street, corner of Filbert, Phila• delphia, which will take live years to build and will Goat when finished nearly a million of dollar,. "Watah withe lilonVet hew they tan mad a latter theat itiM without tearing on 'ton all to bite." 'in, me they don't seed the paper, bae shut need the wri slag 1e e ihdol stiMmea Odds sod Sad& Ws are alt Adams's children bet silk mskM the diffuses.. Nlsto? odor, produces moniaire? Fa.cination. Row sweet to recline in Ile tepee doges —say about eighteen. A warm of raw material—two young Is. dies kissing each other. Wart was Noah in America? When ha was on the Ark-and-saw. RT are young ladies gives to blushing? Because it is a becoming rod. "You are quite woleome," as the runpky pocket said to tbo greenback. WRY, is your nose in the middle of your face ? Because it is the seentre. Ate exchange calla Anna Dickinson Mimi Jaw, and Grant, General Lockjaw. GENERALLY observed— Tilting skirts, we. ter.fallii, and other people's bulimia. Way cannot a cook eat her own apron? Because it goes against her stomach. Alto. Partington says, one is obliged to walk very circumscrumptionaly these slip. per) , times. WHAT'S the difference between 6 boot black and a Freedman's Bureau Agent Ono blacks the boots, the other boots the blacks. AN Irish absentee is said to have sent this comforting message to his steward : Tell the tenants that no threats to shoot you will terrify me." Tuz wan who wrote 'Badly round the Flag,' has gone into the flag atone business. In stead of rallying around the flag he flags around, the alley. AN Irishman being asked in court for his cenificate of marriage, showed a big scar on his head about the shape 42f a shovel, which was satisfactory. WHAT nose is wore brilliant than a tope?. nose? W hy, vole-no's, to be aura. Pat remarks that the chief glow of each comes from the crater. AN apothecary asserted in a large cow pany "that all bitter thincs were hot." "No," replied a physician, "a bitter cold day is an exception." Wuxi. is the difference between editors in.l matrimonial experience? In the former the devil cries for "copy." In the latter the "copy cries like the devil." Tux passing years drink a portion of tb light from our eyes, and leave their traces on our cheeks, as birds, that drink at lakes, leave their tliotprints on the margin." THE most effedin: imtance of the power ,t music, is that presented by the trouble lour tuaitioned in the song. He sang so 'weedy that he actually "touched his gni. A YOUNO man by the name of Johnson has been arrested in Pittsburgh for perpe trating a new "dodge." He fastened kit ties on the tail of a rat and sold him for A RURAL philosopher avers that subfeets me all children to the same system of instruct. ion is like boiling large and small potatoes in one pot for a like number of minutes. Some of them get done and some don't. IN ancient days the precept was "Know by self." In utodsrn times it has been upplanted by the far more fashionable maxim, "Know thy neighbor, and every. thing about him." TENDER HeAnTED.—Mrs. Jones a farm. itr's wife in Connecticut says "I believe I've.got the tenderest hearted boys in tho world. I can't tell one of them to fetch a pail of water but he'll burst out a cryin'." romUTIC DlLl,lA.—Mather in the oellar •plitting wood—Daughter in the parlor sing. inu to Clarence Fits Noodle the plaintiff air •'Who will care for wother now." To obtain a fat dce—become a 111:41p boiler. Ax awkward man attempting to cure a goose, dropped it on the floor. "There now I" ezeleimed his wife "we've lost our dinner." "0 no, my door!" answered ho, "it's safe; No got my foot upon it !" Ad Irishman a short time in this country, was eating boiled green corn. After eating off all the oorn, he passed the cob back to the lady who sat at the heod of the table saying: "would you please be so kind as to put some more beans on the *thick." A LADY having accidentally broken a smelling bottle, her husband, who was very petulant, said to her: deolair, my dear, every thing that belongs to you are more or km, broken." "True," replied the the limb's "for even you are a little cracked." "My sort," said an affectionate moth*, to her son—who resided at a short distance and expected to be married very soon —"you are getting very thin." "Yee, mother," he replied, "when I come again you will be able to see my rib." "Doze pa kisayou because he loves you?" inquired a snobby nosed urchin of his ma• ternal ancestor, the other day. "To be sure, sonny, why?" "Well, I think he loves the cook too, for be kissed her more than forty times last Sunday, wheat you was gone to meeting," A 'roux° lady ftom the Seminary at M--, being asked at the table if she would have some more cabbage, replied : "By no means, gantromical satiety atinsone' idles me that I have arrived at the shim* culinary *Wade° consistent with the Cdr . of Emulations." She meant, "ea, but Wen as much se be' stoussit mia„ rot 111