1 ' 'mm1 -1 1 1 ' " J I I ' ' II ' ' ini "i'i mill iiiini ii iiii . ; j.-" iimiii.-L y m n n , " . ' "lift I iif-ffl- . ' WHOLE ART OF GOVERNMENT CONSISTS f THE ART OF REING HONEST. JeflerSOIL f ' ; r-: : - i: - , i 1 10. Pitblislicd by "tfheodore Sehoch. TERMS Two dollars Dcr annum in advance Tn o dollars and-a'qufirter, half yearly and "if riot paid before Hie end of me ypar, i wo uoiiars ana a nan. Those who receive meir papers by a earner or -stage drivers employed by the propne tor,' will be charged 37- l-2 cents. nnr vear. extra. Njo papers discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except ai urc. opium oi me isuuor. lEPAdvcrjisemerits not exceeding une square (sixteen lines) will-bo-inserted' three weeks for one dollar, and twenty-five wviul every suosequeni lnsuruuii. uuajyu ior oneana iiirec iuscrnons me same, a uocnuui&uuuui maaeioyearly advertisers. IO-AU letter addressed to the Editor must be post-paid. Ilaving a general assortment of large, elegant, plain andorna- menial Tvpe, we are prepared to execute every " description of Cards; Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes, :T Blank Receipts, " JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER BLANKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch,on reasonable terms AT THE OFFICE OF THE ,ef fersouian Republican. a. . " From the Tribune. Ancestors. I scorn the man who boasts his birth, lAnd counts his titles and his lands; vAVho takes his name and heritage . From out a dying father's hands. -The sword his proud forefathers drew He cannot lift from out its sheath, ' But walks, a shadow on the earth, - Of mold and ashes down beneath. I scorn him, and his countless gold ' His equipage, ard lands, and slaves; I scorn him us a robber of - - The glory of ancestral graves. AFooli with his parchment and his seals, To think him, as he walks the sod, .better than the poorest man - L Who claims a father in his God. CD. Stuart. -li.-j Hints to tlie Bald-Headed -According to the following extract from an ed itorial in the Boston Medical and Surgical Jour nal, the easy and sure way to prevent baldness is to go bare-headed or to wear a well-ventilated hat : ..'-'A refined civilization has brought with it a train of physical evils, which it is in the province , of science to control or subdue. Our tight hats, our warm rooms, closely "fitting caps, silk night caps, fiom which the perspirable matter cannot escape, by their combined agency, in connection with other influences not always easy to define, bring off the hair prematurely, and turn it gray, sooner than personal vanity is willing to exhibit such e vidences of decay. And this is not all ; the skin is actually in a low state of disease, the ef fects of which are recognized in the accumulation of dandruff desquamation of the epidermis. The bulbs of the hairs are inflamed also from the same cause, arid from year to year, the hair degen erates and becomes thinner, and not un frequently ending in baldness. On all that part of the head not covered, viz: from the back side, between the ears arid on the temples, the hair generally re mains to extreme old age, however much the ver tex may be denuded. If females wore equally tight coverings, their hair would probably suffer very much in the same manner; but' their light airy bobinets admit of ventilation, and hence a bald-headed woman would be a phenomenon. Who ever saw a bald-headed Indian 1 We have .had an opportunity of seeing various tribes, in all tKe'freedom of an unrestrained savage life but a -sparse head of hair we have, never noticed. At mospheric exposure conduces to the luxuriousness of the hair and a healthful condition of the scalp. There is another cause of the falling off, or rather the breaking off of the hair in combing and brush ing, not the effect of disease at the root, but the destructive burrowing of a microscopic insect a living invisible moth eating its way from one ,stalk to another, like the Hessian fly in a field of 'wheat." Wlsite Irik for Wr(iuff on Black Paper. Having carefully washed some egg-shells, re rh'ove the internal skin, and grind them on a piece of porphyry. Then put the powder into a small vessel of pure water, and when it has seUled at therbottorja, draw off the water, and dry the pow derjn the sun. This powder must be preserved .in a bottle: when you want to use it, put a small quantity of gum ammoniac into distilled vinegar, and leave it to dissolve during the night. Iext morning the solution will appear exceedingly white; and if you then strain it through a piece of linen cloth, and add to it the powder of egg-shells, in Sufficient quantity, you will obtain a very white ink. J ;To Construct Paper Balloons. - Take several sheef s of silk paper ; cut them in 'the .shape of a spindle, or, to speak more familiar ly, like the coverings of the sections of an orange; sjoin these pieces together, into one spherical or globular body, and border the aperture with a rib 'boh, leaving the ends, that you may suspend them from the following lamp. 'Construct a small basket of very fine wire, if the .balloon is small, and suspend it from the apurture, tao that the smoke from the flame of a few leaves pf paper, wrapped together, and dipped-jn oil, may 'hcat the inside of it. Before you light this paper, suspend the balloon in such a manner, that it may, in a great measure, be exhausted of air, and as soon as it has been dilated, let it go, together with the wire basket, which will serve as ballast. vv. STROUDSBURG, MONRO? COUNTY, jA-, THURSDAY, Chemistry for Girls. something that everv woman should read. This is properly styled a utilitarian age, for the inquiry, "What profit !" meets us every where. It has entered the temples of learning, and attempt ed to thrust out important studies, because their im mediate connection with hard money profits cannot be demonstrated. There is one spot, however, into which it has not so generally intrdued itself the female academy the last refuge of the fine arts and fine follies Thither young ladies are too fre quently sent merely to learn how to dress tastefully and walk gracefully, play, write French, and make waxen plumes and silken spiders all pretty, but why not inquire "what profit?" I take my pen,, not to ultera dissertation on fe male education, but tor insist that young ladies be taught chemistry. They .will thereby be better! quaiitied to superintend domestic affairs, guard againsi many accidents to which households are subject, and perhaps be instrumental in saving life. e illustrate the last remark by reference merely to toxicology. The strong acids, such as nitric, muriatic, and sulphuric, are virulent poisons; yet frequently used in medicine and the mechanic arts. Suppose a child, in his rambles among the neighbors, should enter a cabinet shop, and find a saucer o(aqua-for-tis (nitric acid) upon a bench, and in his sport, seize and drink a portion, of it. He is conveyed lome in great agony- The physician is sent for; but before he arrives, the child is a corpse. Now as the mother presses the cold clay to her breast and lips for the last time, how will her anguish be aggravated to know that in her medicine chest, or drawer, was some calcined magnesia, which if timely administered, would have saved her lovely, perchance her first and only boy. Oh, what are all the bouquets and fine dresses in the world to her, compared with such knowledge 1 Take another case. A husband returning home, on a summer afternoon, desires some acidulous drink. Oueninsr a cupboard, he sees a samll box. labelled "salts of lemon," and making a solution of this, he drinks it freely. Presently, he feels dis- frPOJPfl cnnrl fnr liiewifn ,nrl noor.ntnc: ,W has drank a solution of oxalic acid, which she has j. , , . r m, , procured to take sins from men. The physician is sent for; but the unavoidable delay attending his arrival is lam:, n nen ne arrives, pernaps ne sees u on the vei table on whjcIj lhe weepinff wicjovv bows her head a piece of chalk which if j time would have certainly prevented any mischief from the poison. Corrosive sublimate is the article generally used to destroy the vermin which sometimes infest our couches. A solution of iris laid upon the floor in a tea-cup, when the domestics go down to dine, leaving the children up stairs to play; the infant crawls to the tea-cup, and drinks. Now what j lOW Wllllt I j.uw wuaif think you would be the mother's joy, if having; studied chemistry, she instantly called to recollec- tion the well-ascertained fact, that there's in the u t . . . ... , c, , j hen s nest an antidote toJhts poison ! She sends for some eggs, and breaking them administers the whites Her child recovers; and she weeps for joy. Talk to her of novels-one little book of na-! tural science has been worth to her more than all the novels in the world. . , . Physicians in the country rarely carry scales with them to weigh their prescription, They ad- minister medicines by guess, from a tea-spoon or the point of a knife. Suppose a common case.- A physician in a hurry leaves an over dose of tar taremetic, (generally the first prescription in cases of billious fever,) and pursues his way to another patient, ten miles distant. The medicine is duly administered, and the man is poisoned. When the case becomes alarming, one messenger is dispatch ed for the doctor, and another to call in the neigh- bors to see the sufferer die. Now there is. in r,. nister in lb. cupboard, and on . tree tlmt grows by the door, a remedy for the distress and alarm-a c .1 , r , sure means of saving the sick man from threatened rPath: A stronor rfprnrtinn nf vonnfT livefn 1nn oak bark, or any other astringent vegetable, will change tartar emetic into a harmless compound. Vessels of copper often give rise to poisoning. Though this metal undergoes but little change in a dry atmosphere, it is rusted if moisture be pres- ent, and us sunace Becomes covered witn agreen j perfec,iy ravenous, and in a very fair condition substancecarbonate or protoxide of copper, a;lokill. I saw, also, in one comer of tho en- J Tl, t 1 aCqUire a rich green color, which they do by lo by ab-! sorbins noison wl ' , , . ! Families have often been thrown into disease: by eating such dainties, and many have died, in j some instances without suspecting the cause. That lady has certainly some reason to congratu late herself upon her education, if under such cir cumstances, she knows that pickles rendered green , by verdigris are poisonous, that the white of an egg is an antidote. Illustration might be multiplied but our space forbids. Enough has been shown, we hone, to convince the utilitarian that knowl- edge of chemistry is an important element in the nrWtion of the female sex; without it they are!. imoerfectlv qualified for the duties devolving upon them in the domestic relation, and poorly prepared : . t to meet its emergencies. E. Thompson, m. p. No Beaux. Some one says, "Blessed arc j the girls who have no beaux to plague tnem, i for ihey shall not be kepi awane on ounuay nighls." Where is the girl in this neighborhood who will respond 10 such a sentiment ? poisonous cuuipuu.iu. itumuumes udppeneu, ; closure, wnat appeareu to ne me remains 01 de; Tho one is expensive, and often impos that a mother has, for want of knowledge, poisoned j some raw flesh but I will go no funher. This sib,B wijeje cjlojce lreeg are piammi . and the her family. Sourkrout, when permitted to stand , making pork out of old dead horses, caps the 0,ier js barbarous and unsightly, causing ex for some time in a copper vessel, has produced j climax. Surely, we innocent citizens know , haja,0 0f gm an( consequent canker. In death in a few hours. Cooks sometimes permit, 1101 wnal vo cal . , iany case, a few applications of soap to the sur- pickles to remain in copper vessels, that they may ! ln passing from this establishment I passed i fice ()f ,ho hide-bound will remove the - t; w a w 3 m done with the carcassei. carcassei. 1 therefore cent a BOOd " look OUt." ami saw it nntr.rnn n.nplntnrn where there was a number of old wooden build- ings and aheds, alsoajarge brick chimney termed " a stack." I approached the entrance, over which was a sign, Depot for Dead Animals." "In a few moments a man came out, and I asked him what he did with the horses. He said, " We sskin 'em and biio "em up. Come in," if yo wish to see how it is done." As soon asl en tered the gateway, 1 saw1 large piles of bones, comprising skulls, leg-bolics, ribs, eic, wMch j were very white and clian, and were piled with great regularity, theiskulls and other large j bones forming the outsille, and the smaller . .u J ri. :i. oones hlicu in the centre X IIU piles were ; about ten feet in heishti There was alio good collection of dogs chained up in the en closure, intended, probabjy, to watch the prom ises. 1 turned towards the buildings, and the first thing that met my S eye was a poor old horse just in the agonies of death. He was to eat--A Ilorble Picture. A New York corresp-ndeni of the Skaneat Ies Columbian, gives tie following horrifying picture of an establishing in that city, at the corner of 40th street ail 10ih avenue. We imagine that few city esidents were aware that such an enormous nnaance existed even in their suburbs : ; A few days since, hile strolling in the sub urbs of the city, in the vicinity of the track of the Harlem River raWtd, intersecting 40th street, my attention wjs drawn toward an odd ly shaped cart, on whidlj was a dead horse. 1 had heard that there was a. class of people who make a business ol drawing off dead ani mals, and I felt a curiosity to know what was bleeding from a frightful jash in the neck. 1 j but had given them merely as matters of corn stood by, thinking what '.he might hare been ; mors civility. As ha concluded his speech, once and of his sad fate, when the proprietor Mhe squaw gavo a loud scream and fainted in remarked, " that was a har$ case." 1 asked i the arms of her mother. The old chiefs pro how. He said, " look at hit hoofs and joints." i ceeded to judgment, and, whether guided by Sure enough, his hoofs and joints were one mass ol disease anu putrefaction, i turneu j fl0m ,ni3 51"ghl only to see araoro horrid one iere were to Irish boys. " cutting and slash- ing al llOFSOMO gCl llis skill off. A feW ! disIa"1 W"ec alher Se, Lculti"g UP an0.,h' i er mass of putrified hortje flesh, and throwing j lh jecei mo a , ca,dron undef whic, j w a fierce fife anher Qff wcrfl ma?sca of flesh in lho B,a of disease and putrefaction. 1 inquired of ihe owner Jiow many animals they manufactured in a dayV-Ho replied, R B , iu. -,,u a..u u: arfi hllfiV all ilnv parlinn flio ammnla Irmn all , r u J' " parts ol the city ; and it was as much as his r ii t J , o men could do to cut 'em up as fast as thev !-ca'ne- . 1 mquirea, liow do you ascertain I here he hJ are !-do you keep an office T , . i down town?" " Yes," he replied, "we have . ' 1 !e an office in the street inspector's 0;ffiue, at ST. TT II It-it , l Q.IV jJa I anfl ,'n-t is th nn Inr.o whprn nenn wh'0 have 'aick or dead an'Ima,s makc lh'ojr 're. , port ." I asked, Do you get paid for remov-: !ng carcasses V Oh, no--we generally ! r , lr t i i : pay for the privilege If the animal is in good ; order and has j not been sick very long, wo, gve a dollar for him; but if, on the contrary j 10 poor and thin, we give fifty cents. 1 1 , "a"l " .,l,,a Ya". , 3 ' . ! 7u ,7 i -u,i,muuu-- When my father commenced he was almost ! . r. . . . j w'" ti Tor I ll anirn Z rMV in V, fllk..,l In fn m. . I M j-v m m nMnA,ll no lhcro 8 80 much coropeli(lon thal we pay for lhe privilege." I inquired how many fac - many ,,,,., . . , ,dry weather, it will become so hard as to re- vctt. I asked him about how many shoes he, man sercra shower anJ thus have 80t't P'.fuu tbUl a,hundred i1e;!time to perform its office. Trees with smooth week. " w hat do vou do will) the hoofs, and t i u .i i . ,r ,i, ..uar-r;ao . . , , , , ' . i bark, such .as-the plum, many of tho cherries, how much are the bones worth, &c.l Wet - ,,,. . r. . , -,t fvo. rnnah wnnlfin .!. I. r . .1 1 .l . I "e"rJ edU" K "r "7"' l"u bK,n ,s "or", $1,'2,' ,3nd !ho. fa,1 10 ,h.e 0aP tmc"' l ooKeu nto tne oo ng cau uron, ana saw i ,he roce8s. Th flt or 0 ria'ea ,0 lll0 I tm(W, and is drawn off by means of a faucc, ! . , '.. r ,, ' , . , ., , ., ' , the side of a vat. The flesh is boiled until. . lhf hnnc urn lnncnnu1 nnrl llintr rsrn i'llrvrt out and the residue is fed to the hogs, of which there arc large numbers around al! these faclo ries. I saw an enclosure containing nearly a hundred hogs, which were being fed by one of the hands. He brought two pails full of the j hot soup each time he came, and the hogs were 1 I , , ,ii - r i t I - .1 l,w ' u"y "... , . , - ; consumed in the horse factories in a year. He , repijedf m j?f0m 5o,000 upwards." is' large number, but I give it to. you as I received j it. , I forgot lo mention that the horse establfsh-S ments also " manufacture'' all the dogs that are killftd or din about the cilv durintr lhe warm , r1"' " ' LT'n r , " " T ilmiv r, m mil lr n'llh Ihn UUI ZUD. J I - w-- - ' . . quite decent-looking steaks hanging up some against ihewa . VV leiher it was Dee! or horse, nr tvliritner Ii WdS iu uu t: n. i, i uui u uui iiuyr. , or wiieiiici t , jo T -ii-o trnn ihn fnrfinnina mat as tho nronrie-i , t, T n.lA ,., ;,,! nu ai,d a.. I saw mv-olf-no.hioL' , x gi'v j 1 inore: and anyone may satisfy himijlf of it; j i ruili by going io ihe factories, corner of -40th 1 , street and 1 Oth avenue. Burton says of sickness that it is the moiller louftr ne 11 nuts ll$ 111 fill 11(1. l)f OUT IIU) r- jj &nd wj-aj0 we jrjve on heedloly in the fu career ol worldly pomp and joimy, Kinuiyi pulls us hj the ear, and bungs us 0 a senM of jour du,'J NOVEMBER 29, L849. i um, i' ,iomja-Lgc ITudJaci Breach of Promise Action by young ladies for breach of pro mise, weyfthad thought to'be one of the perfec tions o'pBritish civilization. But what jspot in the world is not how qivilized ? In half a dozen years more, the manners of mankind, from Chilli- to Constantinople, jvill be as smooth as a bowling-green. I In Illinois, lately, a joung Indian fair, or brown one of some distinction in the woods, made her complaint to anold chief, of the faith lessness of her betrothed. The squaw assert ed that she had no sooier made up her mind to the marriage, than the.yojuig chief chose, to turn on his heel and rnaYryCaoinebody else. The case was brought before the heads of the tribe. The matter was regarded as touching ihe public honor, aud ihe old warriors held a grand council on the subject. As, among. the Indians, there are yet no pro fesae lawyers, justice was not quite so tardy as Li more accomplished countries, and the cae was pleaded by the squaw herself. It consisted of statements of frequent visits of the young chief to the wigmam ; of his smoking a considerable quantity of her father's tobacco, and eating their venison when he could get it; those attentions to hims-elf being connected with frequent atientions io the lady, the state- ment being corroborated by several bunches of feathers, yards of Welsh flannel, the fox tails and a scalp. The lover was then called on. He denied ihe charge of affection altogether. w;ti. .... ii...t . i. i,i u.. - " tiiai v.uiwu uui ut: uauucucu uy man of fashion, he said, that though he had visi'ed' her father's wigmam, he had done it onlv when he had nothing else to do, when the beavers were not to be found, or the buffaloes were gone. As to ihe " feathers and flan nels," he acknowledged that he had given them, j 'ho justice of the case, or touched by the suffer- ; wigs ut mu squaw, urcjugui iu a yeruiui ui damage?, sentencing the offender to give the broken hearted fair one, a yellow feather, a brooch that was then dangling from ihis nose, ; nnd a doZBn boavcr ss' Jh sen,eI,ce''as; no sooner pronounced than the squaw recovered j fro,n her sw00m, sprang on her feet, clapped I lands whh jl)y and crie( out Now x am ready ! tofcourl again !" ! , j Glcasisiug' the Sark oi Wvnit Trees. Thjs operation should be performed in the ..." early spring, as well as in midsummer. The , , r u i i u i rough, looae partsiof the bark should be scraped i ... i. . i .L mu i on. us wuis ds muss anu uuier uaiasims. x ue ; bat,. shou,d hen CQVered (he r0,Iovving : &s h- . iffo (or can reach whh an ordinary long-lnndled white-wash brush : Five pounds soap,1 one pound fine salt, one - IJlUliUO 3UO I. Uilll UUIIU DOP. i , ' . 1 . ?ouna sand, uvopm.ds potash, two pounds o. "l,rle ' 80 3' d,lJe(1 r mlXP;d, ZLXZ l. h8, c0slstc f "earn, and thoroughly rubbed upon the bark. Many kinds of insects tho b asoution of wha!e. oi SM' , nd M ar(J resjdenl Jn , lctcQ9 of he bark are de5troyed bv sa,, The fine Sar,d is intended, during the j and thus assisj the dihor ingredients for more ' r , fp. , . , r11(L penect action. J ho potash and nitrate ol soda ! ""I d-npo,e or s.ften the dead parts of the C 3 I 1 ""Ton' f L I ! hr VII,ofi S.!he "9" "f ins bark. If the abovo mixture be applied in : imk.uv-v. cloth, in a few hours after applying the mixture; .his rubbing will cause the sand to clean the I -surface so perfec.lv as .o give the bark an im- , t , ,., " rennn Tn an P' 4 'X h" ?lea,-"e? 8 ? n.01, " 1,, r, ?. 'Ziel insects as those left with their natural surluce?, lhliv no UuflU, ,n hppnmp hark ,lound. ' . . ? Indeed we have never known a tree to exhibit the disease called bark-bound, the surface of the trunk of which, had been softened by a soap wash in- early spring. The cherry, apricot, peach, and nectarine are subject, when left to their natural state, to this disease, and it has usually Ik: en attributed to too rich or too moist , , ! : i ir. .: .tl I. J , V ? .,' f L,u er-urarnni" anu Mining wie uaii I Vi n rtfa Tl llm iisiinl rpiTlfi- I C II Ii II W I U TUU ICII"lillYPU '""" "K- ",u" - , (,rjjCUjiyj anii ihe mixture heiore recommenueu may be applied, sligniiy watmeu, wnen lequireu () s()fen lhe bafk ()f a hidebound tree . The farmer and Mechanic. From Miss Leslie's Indian Meal Book. Wisicr Saccalash. This is made of dried shelled beans, and hard Take equal quantities of shelled beans and i corn : put then, over night into senate pans, and 1 1 pour boiling water over them. Let them soak til morning, miwi mm im mat itnern again. rirsi Doti ine ueaua uj u.o..a...i. ... 7 - , i i . ,l lt iUmi . vVhen they arc soft, add the corn, and let them.it . J ' ........ Imil tnnrithpr.lill llift rnrn 13 OUlte SOU. WhlCll Will boil l0Sdlher llU l,lfi corn 13 qu"e , require -at least an hour. I ake them up,,drain them in a sieve ;-then put them into a deep dish, and mix in'a large'piece of fresh butter,-and a lit lie pepper and salt This is an excellent accompaniment to ptcKied-wnicn uuuiu iidvo ucbh ujijiujjiiia.au uy ., pork, baconor corned beef. The .meat mus't hyo, a small well formed egg. We have often ' boiled by itself in a separator pot. America i ' 3 F'tCe' American gold dollars sell in San Francisco at Doings in our School House. Under this head, we find in the N.Y. Spi'r ii' some humorous reminiscenes by Nix, of Gowanus,' from which we extract the follow ing spicy paragraphs : " 1 First class of vagabones, rise !' thundered our schoolmaster. Well, the vagabo nes rose. 'Now answer every question correctly, or I'll break every, botre in, your bodies,' wah the next pronunciatnento of the old autocrat of our red school house. ' John Brown, what do you understand by acoustics V 4 Why, a stick to drive cows with I spose. ' Get out, you young vagabone ! did I not just see you reading about the science of sound?' Guess not that was about Sylvester Sound) the Somnambulist. ' It was, eh ? Sarah, you are John's young er sister ' J 'Yoihthir. 4 What is acoustics?' ,.rr ; lS. I know thir it ith, it ith the aft ofmaking. a noith, and hearing anoith.' You are right explain it.1 Yelh thir. If you stick your finger into your mouth, and then pull it out thuddenly, tho cold air rutheth into the vakkum and prudutheih a thound thai striketh on the tympan of the ear which makeih the thound audible, and ith called tho, thience of a couthtixth.' ' You are quite right, Sarah. John, can,yptl now tell me what is meant by acoustics ! Be careful, sir; or you'll feel niy stick.' Yes, sir. A cow sticks your finger in her month kicks over the tin pan, which sounds awful, and is called the science of a cow's kick.' Well John you do credit to you teacher; You may take your books and run home. Wil ly Chase, what is ihe currency of the Uniiod States V 1 Cash and money.' 1 What are its denominations.' ' Coppers, bogus, and Bungtown cents, pen nies, fips, pics, four-pence, ha'penys, levy.Sj ninepences, Spanish quarters, pistareens and shinplasters.' That will do. Jones, what is the standard weight of ihe TJ. S.' ' Scale weight, and wait a Utile longer.' " Samuel, how many kingdoms are there in ihd material world V Four.' ' Three, only three.' Four, I think air.1 ' Well, name them what are they ?5 ' Mineral kingdom, animal kingdom, vegeta ble kingdom, and kingdom come.' ' Now, how many kinds of motion are there!' ' Four.' ' No, only two.; voluntary and involuntary.'. Simon says there's four.' 1 What does Simon say they are !' Point, point up, point down, and wigwag.1 You rascal ! I've a mind to wigwag your jacket ! Had'ni you bettor describe tho motion of my stick V 4 1 can sir.' 4 And its effect V 4 Yes, sir. Up stroke, and down stroke the up stroke, regular and easy; the down 8troke spasmodically electrifying, and its effects .stri kingly indescribable.' 4 You understand that, I see.' 4 George Smith, do you recolleet the story of David and Goliah V , ,.j . 4 Yes, sir David was a laverh keeper, and Goliah was anjntemperate man.' Who told you that V 4 Nobody. I read ii, and it safd,jhat David fixed a sling for Goliah, and Goliah got slewed with it.' 4 Wa's'nt Goliah a giant, a strong man V 1 4 Yes, he was a giant, but he had a weak head.' V'' 1 How ao V r ' ' Why to get so easily slowed.' ' Yes, George; that was undoubtedly. Owing to the strength of the sling. Was'nt David a musician V 1 Yes, sir he played psalms on the harp ; a favorite instrument with the Jews, and at the present day it is called a Jewsharp. 1 have one in my pocket here it is. Place it in yoqr mouth, thus breathe on the tongue gently then strike with your finger, this way and the psalms, in harmonious corncob, fructify on tho ear as natural as thunder.' 'Thai's sufficieiu-ybli. can pocket. your harp.' ' ' Jane, what is time?' Something that flies, any howt 4 How do you make thai out V V ' Why, tempus fugit.' Whal's thai V Latin ; it means that time flies and-hov can time if it flies, be anything else than some-; ' thing that flies ?' :j ' Excellent. What is the meaning of resqni eBcat in pace ?' . Kest quiet cats in peace.' Well, Jane ; at Latin you are perfectly au j tail wnicn translated means penecuy awtui i lit i9 a great phrase, from tho classics, and ap plicable to this class, particularly. Now lake off your jackets, and 1 will give 'reward, of merit.' Those who gel more than they merit, can keep the overplus as a token "of my special affection for them ; and those who get less, can have ihe mistake rectified by mentioning . t0 me. An Ess within an Effff. A few day? smcet whie a lady in towrTwas partaking of an egg for breakfast, she felt some thing hard resist the point of the pnon, and,.on examination, he found inside in ihe posllThrt 1ICUIU J vJJJ3 ttiiii inn jruina, iimi an " i 1 1 - out a vulk. and tn nlace thereof ah egff ivhh- in an egg, is what we have nevef seen before. 'PL. I. K-...V. i in; egg ia an u&iiawiuuidij uuu