#:.,. - 1,*041 . t4t114 - 0; - )L . : tir My - 'nein . 'Evs,' -writes; Fanny,' Fem,' in reply in 'inother'ladY,ctintribu= tor of l ' the,_Bostov Ol ive Brap - th - i ble S youiloll,-Lial4orea oonias ! I \ hadas 4 , lief take's doie-of physic f 4 - t Fa s , TeVer inlet:skitl shourdt . is a - waste * Of io* der•-.life is too I t for Sucha 'folfyl , Thhre's-no use,. ` incing:Matters, my dear; (Inever-co tell .a lie, and,rve . sried`morq than a hundred tinier :women 'never rnahe e `ileeentfriends to theirown sex ; thfi,Egfiiiiiqs telling , each '.ot...*&:'- Se crets and 'pulling each, other'i capt-end -characters to: piece's, -and tht-owing dust -innich inlient-..eYev or; scratcking, 'em out. I wouldn't trtilit ja: woman. With my middle tiame,Aldidn't want the Sand-: • winix - lalittilers - tii hear it befora 'sunset: They rttl(qiiiiions friends to the :other ' csex, (ati I'll- ; shim'. you, if you'll—intro, duce me to..Adami) I'll like you, if you say SO, but as toloilittiyou; that's alittle luxnry I reservii(triercy on ns ; :what- ant.' I - talking aliout,?!). --. , - : - : to 12001;i8iti:inii;ei,:tells of Emtha Thayer, a young Indy of fifteen,, liiing'at Rawley.!s BaY; near the toVto of : Two Rivers, who; whileWalking' 410!, beach in company :*witle another young lids, saw a wolf a short distance ihichinn• a deer that he bad' driven 'nit; the lake. With a courage Mrely ed she drove- Ole. wolf away, and wading into the lake brought, the deer on shore by the ear ; - but after petting-him a short time, ti:: ungallant - fellow. made.-seiFraL attethpts to get aWay, - _and finally carried`, matters so ,far.is to knock kei - dayvn, and tear_her dresi; when becoining justly in caused by such behavior, she took a stone add dashed outids'bmins, - thO . Wolf all the' time standing a short distance , off a si -lent spectator of the fight, - in Which he took no further part Shan by slowing a lorthidable_rdw pf teeth, to ShOW his.dis 14probition of her •-interference. it is safe enough to peedtct that. if this girl , lives a few years longer she:will be able to whip her weight in mild. cats, 'our screatn the catamount,. give the:-young _"badger" the -heartache, and, whit - is bettor,,proside With dignity.: Oyer. some : " Wild - WisConsin home." I • MRS. PARTINGTON ON DISEASEB.—"Dis - eases is, very, various," said Mrs.Tarting 7 ton, as'she. returned from a street ; dour conversation with Dr. Bolus. "The due; tor teils me that poor old Mrs. - Haze has got-tWO buckles on her , lungs t dread . - fu'l to think of, I dectare. Thedisease,is \ 1 so , variousi Cone ivay we hear of peoPle dyilig of hermitage of the lungs; another - 'we.y =of the brown creatures; -here they. tell.us of the elementary canal being out , of. order, and'there about tensors of the throat; here whear of nearology in the bead, there of :an embargo- one side' of us we hearof men beinticilied by , getting a pound of tough :beef sin the, sarcefagus, and there another kills himself by discov ering his jocular vein. Things change sio that I declare I don'e kno* how to snb scribe for any disease new-a-days. New names and new nostrils takes the place of the old, and r might as 4ell • throw my. ,old herb bar , - . • it strikes a Stringer. rts• what I have seen or New England s a,s there are two things, the vidence of" whic.h-Strikes the observer at e h -step— prosperity andintelfirrence. I have seen ' thousand assembled,following the noble impulses of a on heart ; almost the . • enure population of every town, of every villa-me where I pasSed, gathered around ine, 'throwing the flowers .of .consoli'tion , ,in my thorny path. I can say - , -I have.. seen the people here,.and :1 have looked it' it with A keen eye - , sharpened-in the' school of la toilsome Ere; well, I have seen not 4 single man,hearing mart of that poverty upon himself which in old Eu - rope lstrikes the eye sadly at every -step:l,lsave:seen po ragged,..poor—l. have not seen a single house bearing the 'l . sp-' . pearance Of a - desolated. poverty. - The theerfulnesi4if a comfortable condition, the result of industry, spreads over the land. •Pne .. sees at a glance.that the pecy ple I work assiduptisly, not with the de, pre4sin..ir thought Just V) get from day to daykbillaid toil, thrOugh the Car i es of .a rmse.rable life, but they work with if cheer-. ful, consciousness of substantial happiness. And the second thing which I could . not fail to remark, is the stamp of intelligeuca impressed on the very eyes and outward: .. appearance of the people at large'. rand * my companions' hei , e seen that people in. the fac,tortes, in the'Swerk:shops, an their houses and in the streets, and 'could not fail a thousand times,to think : ".how . in, telligent that- people . leaks." - Alt is to such a people that the orators :of .Faneuil Ifallhad to speak, and thereinis the.rays-. \.:tory 'of success. They -were: not. wiser '.than:the public,spirit of their audience,' 1 " but they were the elopient interpreters 1 of. the people's ,enlightened- instinci..—; Koskuth's Addrees at - Pau - cull Hall. _ ' - A SHARP 'RRPLY.-"" How do -you feel with such a shocking looking -old coat on 7"--,#0,4 a " clerk, of sotne , pretensions, Ono miincting to Jild Roger:: ,1 'feel," said old Roger; , looking at hinrsteadily with ...44 01 - one .eye f . osed, as if taking -aim at the ;r ~ Ifeel,•young man, as :if.4 had a tc as been paid or—a laxury:*:feeling which I think you ,111,11 tietiOr tiperietice! - " 'A. sudden gust, of wind took a par skiol fa - 4n the hand of the _owner, mid -.a liVely Irishman, droppinghish9d of bricii, . 'caught "ehe parachute. - AA Tattb.-ma'am," said Vie , .!,,if you were as strong as yon. -, are. Book fir even , ' A : . iUtias' - are Its;idsotne, it -would' not have got :. '', 7„, . ---,, - , -, ~ 1 caiciircsa'You-"- " Which shall I-thaPk 'MEN, 7 :IWANTEP ~ TO TR* ii, As 'you foi'' - fi .rst„the,senice or the cotnPii- - 4- ---.- - A AGENTS . 1 L f:. ment i" "aike.44.ltp:Wypiiiiingiy. 4 Troth, . ;,, "Themlberihin iii new is;b4.lkhi ! Th e arn ,7! said 144.;_, igain toucl i in # the -,,, TN, We sad lirefeilei, a I:494x4iFy place where originally stood the brim of _of the Celcbiatiit4niencas, - ,lreei whom !.',,, ,Ameri c a . what was 'o nce a s b eaver , , _.o th a t 1.„,,,,,,t-, : o f :.-,'t:ti a vec i t 6 ita gi re. ....Malt/stet' with • nii-Ast4lAirra, Latit,S.'o+W-'. Your beautifu l eye t,1441 4 - "Ci f YA . ' -b°t4 ''' Aliaor 0f.:4, "dlory and Shame of E4gisio;"`ete .-- - - -, -. -7 4 5°k- -- - --,' ,-- ~5 - ",--..2.4, • A s- RairwtiTeliptEint,okomic it ell4 e- Tll6 4oehester Timit !atrvit cPala ,rneu offered jibeml inducement leeircula never . - ip l dnstand the ' feaaim- yOrj .. 'tlie,, - ati'o g 17- beekiptio 3 .; - ,thi•ibove rifult, l 4 4 ,l l lail j', 3 ". Illiii e man-who-sells a iard of - sdienioe#:filic .# ,,,,, t_. ing.. wiate`Peletlejli*u*„ ~: ''/. I ~ 1 . Ten ' ' b. " n i ppl e & t' - - .• - ineVer WM - telt on apg-, aing- ;to the lor em axe, or a . patr , , • , . , .• -. . •''• • ' NEW GOODS &IVSPRING '4f SUMMER' GOO I.lin "---- -• ~ Omit variety apil style, itisd atetrral -trod :•iiieot. 'Ed ' • -,••• . STAPLE 4 Farrar