Jeffersonian Republican. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1840-1853, November 20, 1851, Image 1

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    J11FF15
'HIE, WHOLE ART OF GOVERNMENT CONSISTS IN THE ART' OF BEING HONEST. -JEFFERSON.
VOL. 12.
STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 185
No 8.
nbltshed Sy Theodore Scliocli.
TERMS Two dollars per annnum in advance Two
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No papers ditcontinncduntilall arrearagesarc paid,
. - . ' 1 - . . f .1 I'.ll n
rr?
teen lines) will be inserted three weeks for one dollar.
Advertisements not cxceeuing uug muiiiu (si- ,
and twenty-five cents tor every suosequeni. mwuiuu.
The Charge for one and three insertions the same.
A liberal discount made to yearly advertisers.
1ET All letters addressed to the Editor must be post
paid JOB FBI IV T I IV G
Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain
and ornamental Type, we are prepared
to execute every desciiption of
Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts,
jjstiecs, Legal and other Blanks, Phamphlets, &c,
printed with neatness arid despatch, oa reasonable
tt'nns,
AT THE OFFICE OF THE
.Feffersoniaii Republican.
You us Grimes.
Old Grimes is dead, that good old man,
We ne'er shall see him more;
Hut he has left, a son, who bears
The name tliat old Grimes bore.
He wears a coat of latest cut,
His hat is new, and gay ;
1 le cannot hear to view distress, ;
So turns from it away.
His pants are gaiters, fitting snug,
O'er patent leather shoes ;
I lis hair is by a barbar curled ;
He smokes cigars and chews.
A chain of massive gold is borne
Above his flashy vest ;
His clothes are4belter,; everyday,
Than were old Grimes' best.
Tie wears a gold watch in his fob,
From it hang golden Eeals,
lie daily drives around the town
Behind a horse's heels.
In fashion's court he -constant walk's
Where he delights doth shed ;
His hands are white and very soft,
But softer is his head.
He's six feet tall, no post more straight,
His teeth are, pearly white ;
In habits he is sometimes loose . . . ,;
And sometimes very. tight. l
His manners are of sweetest grace
His voice of softest tone ;
His diamond pin 's the very one
That old Grimes used to own.
His jetty hair conceals his mouth,
His whiskers hides his cheek ;
He has an aunt of Chrisiain mould,
Of temper mild and meek.
A dickey Loll adorns his face,
His neck a scarf of blue ;
He sometimes goes to church, for change,
And sleeps in Grimes' pew.
He dissipates the cash more free ;
Is lavish as the air;
I grieve to hear, from those who know, -
That sometimes he vjill swear.
lie has drunk wines of every kind,
And liquors cold and hot ;
Young Grimes is just the sort of man
Old Mr. Grimes was xct.
Xow let us pray old Grimes may stay
His quiet grave within, i
'Twould grieve him much I think to see
The young 'un Epread his " tin."
Impromptu.
The best impromptu in English is said to
be the following, "perpetrated" by the author
if" Night Thoughts," when twoladies, with
V.
horn he was walking in a garden, (one of
tiiem his "intended,") compelled him to leave RespectfuI ove inspjrcs noble acti0nS.
'iiem, to answer a summons from the Duke Yoi'c
ol liarton, Jus " patron :
"Thus Adam looked, when from the garden
driven,
And thus disputed orders sent from heaven,
Like him I go, but yet am loth ;
Like him I go, for angels drove us both.
Hard was 'his fate, but mine still, more un
kind :
His Eve went with 'him mine remains behind."
A late traveller, in speaking of Egypt, and other obstructions from the road is char
says her products consist of wheat, flics, tyi your gwng water to the thirsty is char
and sore-eyed children. So much for itv- A ,nan's true wealt, hereafter is the
her crops. In remarking on her com- gd lie docs in thi3 worI(1 10 llis fellow men.
merce, he observes that her imports are . When he dies, people will say, "What prop
made up of underdone Englishmen in pur- erty has he left behind him 7" But the an-
cnJl .f iL. . 1 - . l 'i , x I . , -i. .ii ,
"it ui wiu pyjruuuufc wmie ner exports
consist of the same Englishmen " done
urown," and fleeing from beggars andbed
tugs. Nice country that.
Fica?:s of Genius. " Kittv. wborn's
tlic frying pan?" "Joh'nnv's got it cart-1
ln mud and clam shells up thc alley ! "moral handkerchiefs" for the use of tho be
Jpth the cat for a horse," "The dear 'nighted citizens of Timbuctoo. They live by
Wle fellow, what a genius he will make; I cheating their fellow-citizens while they die
M g and Set Wer e goin to have j
company, and we must fry some fish for
ladyjon being, separated . fr.om lier
Ermine, as ihetoidlhis :
Pany in this world and the next.
A Leaf from our Scrap Book.
A man's virtue should not be measured by
his occasional exertichis, but his ordinary do
ings. A man's own good breeding is'the best se-
Uqu....u. jicujjiu a ui manucia.
Every one complains of his memory, but
nobody of his judgment.
Virtue, writes somebody, springs from in
dustry rather than religion. We care not
how pious a man is, let him loaf for a week,
and he will feel the devil in him bigger than
a woodchuck.
The Boston Post thinks that some folks
hearts would make good lap-stones!
A man who gives his children a habit of
industry, provides for them better than by
giving them a "stock of money.
A friend of ours says he would have re
mained single, but he couldn't afford it.
; What it cost him for " gals and ice-cream,"
is more than he now pays to bring up a wife
and eight children. Bachelors should? think
of this.
To improve a man is to liberalize and en
large him in thought, feeling, and purpose.
Hasty words often rankle the wound which
injury gives; but soft words assuage it, for-:
I giving cures it, and forgetting takes away
! the scar.
I
' Smart Sayings. To kiss ladies' hands as
some do, is like little boys, who, alter eating
j the apple, fall to the paring out of love they
j have to the apple.
Old sciences are unravelled like old stock
' ings by beginning at the foot
i Education begins the gentleman but rea
j ding, good company, and reflection, must fin
; ish him.
I Old friends are best. King James used to
i
call for his old shoes ; they were easiest for
his feet.
Never build after you are five and forty;
have five years' income before you lay a brick;
j and always calculate the expense at double
1 the estimate.
Some men are only great, because their
associates are little.
The balls of sight arc so formed, that one
man's eyes are spectacles to another to read
his heart with.
He who marries a wife and he who goes to
war must necessarily submit to everything
that may happen.
Love. A sweet contagion, which attacks
people with great severity between eighteen
and twenty-two. Its premonitory symptoms
' are sighs, ruffled shirts, ringlets, bear's grease,
and whiskers. It feeds on moonlight and
flutes, and looks with horror on "biled pork"
or baked beans.
j Friendship often ends in love; but love, in
j friendship never. Lacon.
Maxims for Lovers. Love, takes deepest
root in the steadiest mind.
It is a degree of impurity in woman, to love
a sensual man.
True love is ever accompanied with fear
and reverence.
Platonic love is platonic nonsense.
The proof of true love is respect, not free
dom. But few first-impressions ought to be trust
ed or encouraged in love.
A lady can have but small hopes of a lover,
over whom his own worthy relations can have
no influence.
The more ardent a man is while a lover,
the more indifferent he will, probably, be
when a husband.
Pride -and vanitv are often the source
I
0 I
Girls who "aint" handsome, hate those who
are while those who are handsome, hate one"
another. Which class has the best time of
itl
Charity, Every g5od act, says Mahomet,
is charity. Your smiling in your brother's
face is charity; an exhortation of your fellow
men to virtuous deeds js equal to alms giving;
your putting a wanderer In the right road is
charity ; your removing stones, and thorns,
gels wlio examine mm in uie grave win asK,
" What good deeds hast thou sent before
thee!"
Philanthropists Gentlemen who think.
they atone for a long life of extortion, by
leaving a hundred thousand dollars to buy
in the hope that they can cheat God.
:n thn ,,nno t thov
Too much fancy is not necessary in our
conversation or writings : it begets vain and
peurile ideas, which tend neither to make us
wise nocbetter.- Our thoughts should be pro
duced, by .gopd.sense and right reason, and
ought always. to bo the. .efTeqt of good judgment.
"There is nothing," said Sir Samuel Rom
illy, "by which I have through life more prof
ited than by the just observations, the good
opinion, and the sincere and gentle encour
agement of an amiable and sensible woman."
He who is an ass and takes himself to be
a stag, when he comes to leap the ditch will
find out his mistake.
If the ladies had votes, how long would it
be before a bill would be. enacted, compelling
men to go home to their wives every night
before ten o'clock.
"Wary manhood hesitates to commit
himself by any sudden yielding to his
natural sympathies, while eager youth
grasps at a friend as childhood at a plea
sure, and erects fairy palaces of hope out
of dreams beautiful and "fleeting as the
Morgana of the Sicilian Sea.
Let us never forget that every station
in life is necessary ; that each deserves
our respect ; that not the station itself,
but the worthy fulfilment of its duties,
does honor to a man.
True practical philosophy makes the
most of little pleasures, and the most of
everything.
We should give as we would receive,
chccrfully,.quickly, and without hesita
tion ; for there is. no grace in a benefit
that sticks to the fingers. Senaca.
Speaking of the goods of life, Sir Wil
liam Temple says : " the greatest plea
sure of life is love ; the greatest treasure
is contentment: the greatest ease is sleep,
and the greatest medicine is a true friend.
Affection, like spring flowers, breaks
through the most frozen ground at last ;
and the heart which seeks but for anoth
er heart to make it happy will never seek
in vain.
Tlft First Uaby.
In a new novel, " The Glenns," recently
published, occurs the following striking pic
ture of domestic felicity, which will be read
with great interest.
" If the baby was asleep, no one was allow
ed to speak except in a wisper, on pain of in
stant banishment, the piano was closed, the
guitai was taboed, boots were interdicted and '
the bell was muffled. If Mr. Vincent wishes
to enjoy a quiet cigar, he must go out of the ,
house, lest the smoke might hurt 'the baby;' j
and, lest the street door might disturb its slum- j
bers, he must make his exit by the back way,
and reach the street by the garden gate. J
The doctor was scarcely ever out of the house; '
not because the baby was ill-for indeed iV
was most alarmingly healthy but because ,
she was 'afraid it might be taken with some
dreadful disease, and no doctor near.' If coal
was to be placed in the grate, either Mr. Vin-
cent must put in lump by lump with his fin-
- . TTfc 1 1 a - . 1 1
gers, or uaner must come m on upioe, -eav-
ing nisDoois Deiow,iesi me noise snoumuisiurD
' the baby.' Mr. Vincent might lie in
one '
posture until he was full of aches from tlm
crown or nis nead to tne sole oi nis loot, lie
must riot move nor turn over for fear of
over ior icar or a-
wakening 'the baby.'
And yet he must not
take a bed in the another part of the house,
thr. hnhv mirri.t hrntt ntr 1 1 nti, ti
oecau-e uie oaoy mi0iii De aiiacheu uun ti e (
croup, or migui cry io nave some one wane
up and down the floor with it in his arms, and the care of the poiice. The wortliy gentleman
then he would not be within call. In short ' repudiated the charge with horror and indig
when the baby' slept the whole house was j nation; nevertheless, a purse of 18 sovereigns
under a spell, whose enchantment consisted in' was fo'und in his p0ckct, which he avowed
profound silence and unbroken stillness, and , did not belong to him. The protestations
all who came within the magic circle were' nd assuranccs 0f the high sheriff, who gave
at once under its influence. I his addresS) SGt the local authorities upon the
On the other hand when 'the baby' was a- ( aertj and after a sharp scrutiny of the visi
wakc, the household was equally subject to tors, thc detectives recognized a noted mem
the tyranny which seemed to be a condition ' ber of the swell mob, who, it appears, a few
of its existence. If Mr. Vincent s watch chain
attracted its attention, the watch must come
from the pocket and be delivered over,
at the imminent risk and to the frequent
smashing of crystal and face. If 'the baby?
cried for the porcelain vace on the mantle,
u .B ..u. owuu
they were immedtmeiy on the iloor or in the ( lowed quite satisfactory, and he innocent iver 0il used ,but thc disorganization
crib beside it, and were soon afterward m gentleman was restored to tbe society of his 0f tjie stomach was increased by it. The
many pieces. If it wanted 'papa's papers, sjster and her daughter, whom he accompan-1 phosphate of lime was then applied eight
either they must be forthwith given up, or j ied from Trciand to sec tho wonders of tho ' grains, three times a day. Its good cf
both baby and mother would concur in raising Exhibition. I fects were soon apparent. It and thc oil
a domestic storm. If an important paper was Here is a third illustration, showing the were therefore administered together,
missed, when the inquiry was for it, the chan-' principle of " fraternity" among thc swell and the patient soon was restored to
ces were twenty to one that it had been moD : J health.
given to the baby,'-and on all such ocasionsj t A French gentleman walking in the Cry, The second case is that of a young a
,r ,r. , f . tal Palace with an English friend, when the dv ao-edSd. Her disease was one of "un-
Mr. mcent s chagrin or vexation was treat- conversation turned upon the pick-pockets of nJs(5 pati,isi.s which might have been
ed with merited indifference. If, as it often London; the former boasting that he did not cxpectC(j to terminate in the course of a
happencd,afterobtainingeverything that could fear them, but defied them. His companion V monthj" fatally The upper part of
bo broken, 'the baby- m cried immoderate,y J t3rc" both of her lungs re filled with tuber-
and annoyingly, it was quite as mUchas Vin- from his pocket At the 6amc moment the cles, and in some places were beginning
cent's life was worth to express the least vex- 'joker felt himself touched on the shoulder by to soften. The case was evidently a bad
ation or impatience. He might be roused a very elegant gentleman, who took him aside, ' one. The treatment of cod-liver was first
from a sound sleep, and forced to get up in . and said, with a gracious smile-- j uscd, put without marked improvement.
,. ,l4 . -Ifr A- "Sir, I see that you are one of us. Permit' 'X'he phosphate of lime was then adinin-
the cold ten times in the n.ght for something" mo tQ ypu &rA duties of ll0spitaityi . Jth tL(J oU and tIiC rcsult as in
for 'the baby' and yet a murmur or natural by returning to you your snuff box, which I tho caS(J of he WRS g00n apparenfc.
wish expressed to know the necessity of all this moment made a smure of fa . idl .
this was high treason to the sehold sever-1 he 1. The third ca-cas i?t of achildscv-
eignity. The lawful master of the premises bo to , the hondkerchief to his friend, , on years of age, m which the phosphate
naa sunit, iiKe.a ueposcu monarcn, to uuur
insignificance, and become the lowest servant
of the young usurper. Thc mother was the
Grand Vizipr of the little Sultana, and in her
name ruled every one herself included, with
an iron rod. There was no law but the will,
. , i e , . , 1 1
and the pleasure of the despot, and no appeal!
from her terminations. And this was, the
woman whom. Abraham GJenn had loved !". - j
What arc Kisses ?
The Knickerbocker publishes the following,
with the remark that the lines arc for the pe
rusal of young lovers in particular, and not
for "general circulation ;"
!' What are kisses 1
Short lived blisses
As the dew-drops in the sun ;
Yet in giving
And receiving
' ' Them, are hearts oft lost and won.
Foolish lipping,
Nectar sipping
Sweeter than the honeyed flowers ;
Such employment I
Whaf enjoyment
It imparts to twilight.hours !
Bright eyes shining,
Brown locks twining,
Cheeks as ruddy as the rose ;
i ' - - Smooth chin rounded,
1 Straight neck bounded
" K; By a heaving bosom's snows !
All these charm me,
j . But not harm me
Half so much us ruby lips
Sweetly smiling,
Soul-beguiling,
As sweet poison thence it sips.
Words they've spoken,
Trembling, broken,
Low, but all my frame they thrill;
" Thine for ever !
I will never
Cease to love thee, come what will!"
With a blessing,
Fondly pressing
Many a time those lips to mine,
. .Thus I murmur,
" Lovely charmer
I too am for ever thine !"
London Thieves.
Some of the tricks of the swell mob at the
Crystal Palace have been curious. One thief,
dressed and lookinrr like a crentleman, pre-
i tended to find a burr on a ladv's dress, berr-
glng her t0 alow him to kilf a noisome insect.
and she saw hfm take 5t off- she thanked
him warrniyj anil olT hr, went. Fortunately
she irarne(iiately perceived that she had lost
a valuabe bracelet. She suspected her friend,
went to a poiiceman and toid what had pass.
cd IIe said are you sure you woul( know
thc man ? shn said sha -nS p?rt.nin shn
would. Then go and stand by the door till I
come to you. She did so, and the policeman
soon joined her. He had by telegraph, had
door shut but the one t, t
"
the had not waite( , whon the aJv sdd
that's the
man. Thc person ivas taken into
custody, searched, and on him was found a
EmaI1 box -fuI1 of wSj and the lady,s bracf
et
Ar.fi, ,.(-.. i .u i.i cucmicai researcn ana resuius irum iub mure iuuv are, iuc uiciuust- iuvcs, om
Anotner "artful dodge is thus related: -, , , TT. , i -n v , .. t if
mi l- i i r , , J use of the remedy. His researches show ! says, in Pans, lou cannot utter halt a
The high sheriff of a citv in the south off r Vn i-ui j ! ....-x' v..i. u i.i.
Ireland kile on a visit to the Crvstal Pal-'
' I
arre was accused, to his great amazement, of,
nickinrr Dockets, and nnon f hi trnnsformd tn
minutes before had relieved a visitor of the
1 identical purse, which was instantaneously
1 missed, and thc scoundrel, fearin"- exposure
conveyed the purse with singular dcxterityto
' tie pocket of the Irish hi
igh sheriff, who was1
in his vicinity, and as quickly disappeared m
. L , 3 , 1 ' .
the crowd, explanations and apologies tol -
and continued his route witli nis nanus in nis
pocket.
There is a grocer up-town, who is said
to be so mean that he was seen to catch
I ,V 1 1U I.! . '1,4.
a nca on ms counter , nuiu u ... up uy
i.Jj hind lctrs. and look into the cracks
m-s. 1 ,
of Ins feet, to see if ho hadn t becn.stcal,
iug some of his sugar.
Play of Words.
Somebody (Captain Donowho,.if we ?mtst
give the names,) mentions an old saw-miller, place :
in Maine, whose profane ob-slructure of the ; " An English 'paper complains that " for
steam which "carried" his mill was itself some time past, it has been thc open practice
carried away by a sudden freshet. The mill of the French authorities to clear their coun
was old ; the machinery in its decadence; the try of idle, profligate, or criminal foreigners,
whole establishment " tottering io its full." by sending them to England. Not fewer than
The owner was regarding the " floodwood of eight hundred doubtful characters have been,
his fortunes with a sad and wistful eye when ' within a limited period, sent to this country."
a friendly by-standcr-consolingly said to him: That's the way it goes the French send
" Build another : it won't take you three their rogues to England ; the English add
weeks to do it." j enough of their own to the lot to double tho
"Ah," said thc ci-devant miller, looking at number, and then ship thc whole squad to the
the old naked edifice, which had no more j United States! Having done this, the knaves
"back-water" for a back-grpund, " it ain't who remain at home, sit down and deplore,
worth a dam!" and philosophize about "thc low state of A-
Mentioning this the other evening to a 'merican morals." ModcBt isn't it 1
friend, he said it reminded him of a d m ;
which stonoed the waters of a river between
the mountains in one of our northern States
and which, by a sudden " fresh," was swept
away during the night. The owner
of tho
works thereon was a well known gentleman
of hnnor nnrl intpllprf. hut. irritnhlo. notwith.
llect, but irritable, notwith -
at times to give vent to his
. The neighbors, fls usual,
standing, and apt
aroused emotions.
rrnthorPf nrminrl. nu-nitinn- tho nrrirnl of tl.fi
owner, and speculating as" to the manner and m"sl,be sofaix' 1 ncvcr kne''v m' face was
language he would adopt, under the strong ', a lookln&-ss before!"
provocation to his " pheelinks." He soon af- j
ter arrived and probably suspecting from move- J The Sbop Girle oS Paris,
ments and signs about him, that the assembly l The fonorin ia an c,tractfrom "Fresh
was waiting for an out-break, very coolly sur- . ,
yeyed the rushing river, and the sluice-way ( Weamngs" by Ik iiarvel, jffld is a fair
it had opened, and turning to the people with specimen of thc sprightly style which
a bland smile, he said : pervade8 the wUole work .
" I think, neighbors, you will agree with 1
me that this river ought to be dam d !" -But if it be good philosophy to bear
i meekly with the characteristics of the
Accuracy. j shopmen it is doubtless so with the shop
'Betty,' said a learned lady to her dingy ; jrg
Abigail, 'go for some spirits for thc lamps and lc 'Thc wh.lieelcd shoe3 thc u U
tell Mr. Mixum that the last he sent was so ' , ' . b
, . ... head-gear, that turned the soul of poor
very weak that it only served to make the fo ' 1
darkness visible.' Lawrence Sterne, have indeed gone by,
Yes'm replied Betty, and away she went J but the grisetta presides over gloves
with the message, which she delivered as fol- ( and silks yet. an(i whatever she may do
lows: 'Missus says the last sperrits you sent . , , . . , ...
warn't good for nothin' and it only served to ; the Iieart-strings she mases tnepurse
make the darkies miserable it was so weak, strings yield. You TrT-Il nd her in every
11 was'' j shop of Paris (ezcepi th&t of the ex-
New Cure for Co;w:;:ii:i:i. j change brokers, where are fat middle
AVe find the following statements in ' aged ladies, who would ado? n the circles
the Iobile Herald and Tribune, and if of Wall Street,) there she stands, with
substantiated, thc discovery will be in- her hair laid smooth ovt kit check, over
valuable. The quantity of the medicine her forehead, in the prettiest. blue muslin
to be given at a dose is not stated : t dress you can possibly isr-gine a bit
In the first number of the New Orleans of narrow white lace running round the
Monthly Medical Register which we no-! neck, and each little hrjad set off with
ticed a few days ago, we find an article 1 the same and a very rcitcst at tho bar
by Professor Stone on the virtues of gain. He who makes the shop girl of
" Phosphate of Lime in Scrofula and oth- j Paris bate one jot of price, must needs
er depraved states ot the system," winch
is of some moment. It was suggested by
an essay in the London Lancet on phys
ioloffv and nafcholoo-v of the axalate and
and phosphate of lime, and their relation,
to the formation of cells."
The conclusions of the author (says
Professor Stone) are based upon careful '
OJ r
f BYe"1ab l" SP "
inferior animals, phosphate of lime as
wen as albumen and fat is absolutely es-
itely
sential for thc formation of cells, and he
considers that many of the pathological
states of the system depended upon a de
ficiency of this salt. The affections in
which it is advised are ulcerations depen
dent upon a general dyscrasia, and not a
mere local affection ; infantile atrophy ;
in those suffering from rickets and consc -
quent diarrheooa and tuberculous diseas -
es, particularly of the lungs in the early
stages."
Struck by this. article, Professor Stone
tested, and he thus describes three cases
in which its effects were obvious. The
first was that of a slave, who was admit-
tc" to the Professors infirmary in July,
Wltu ? ais.pa3e 01 inc nobC u.,u wuw JJ-
' , i J3 j- .nr.n nan
1 decay. The usual remedies were unsuc-
1 .nlied llutil AuffnSf when cod
oi nme was useu wuu complete suueusa
We can only refer briefly to those ca
ses for the purposes of directing attention
to the subject. Before the dreadful dip
eases which they describe scientific men
have stood abashed. That there is some
remedy for them we can, hardly doubt:
.and this may, if a new thing, be thc de
sideratum which seiciu'f is in 3cardi of.
How They do It.
The Boslon Post drives a nail in thc ruiht
! Quick
Curran was a rare wit, but even ha Eomc
; times met his match. He was once examin-
inS a cross-grained, ugly-faced Witness from
! W1,uu' "u " vam 50USnt lo ODUUn n aireci an"
I A 4. 1 .1. t- . T T ..T.
1 t. : ; 1 . ... t .
, "
tTymS t fft the truth out of you, for I see
. the villain in yur face!" '.,Do J0". sir!" re"
tnrfprl trie mnn uIth n rrrm 'uj1iv tlirn it
. a"er' 1Bn5ul "e ClCiaimca, It 3 no USC
. tWtcd the maI1 with a &ri'' tKcn il
j have I'rcnch at his tongue s end.
There may be two al a time, there may
be six, she is unabashed, she has the same
pleasing smile the seme -gentle courtesy
i a o . .
tor each; and her eyes gtancchko thoughts
from one to the other. You may chat
she will chat back ; you may scold, she
will scold back. She guesses your want;
buuwuia:, out, uuuaui u. u n
you cannot pronounce so badly but what
she has your meaning in a moment.
She takes down package upon package ;
she measures your hand, her light fingers
over yours Quelle joiie petite main !
She assists in putting a fancy pair on
and how many pair does Monsieur wish?
But one ! ah, Monsieur is surely jo
king. Sec what pretty colors and she
1 gathers a cluster in her fingers ; and so
j nice a fit and she takes hold of tho
gloves upon your hand,
Only two", ah, it is indeed too few, and
i so cheap. Only fifteen francs for six pair
, which is too little for Monsieur;
ana
j she rolls them up in paper, looking you
j all the time fixedly in the eye. And
there is no refusal 3'ou slip the throe
pieces of money on the counter, and sho
drpps them into a little drawer, and thanks
you in a way that makes you think as
3ou go out, that you have been paying
for the smiles and nothing for the gloves."
A Jewish Divorce.
A Jewish divorce was granted in ihte
city a few days ago. It is the rst caso
that has occurred here during 'thirteen
years. The applicant was the husband.
The mode of untying the knot is "very
simple. The aggrieved party lays hi
case before thc Chief ltabbi, who selects
two other llabbis, and the three hear tho
statement, call witnesses, and, if satisfied
there are grounds for a divorce, give to
the suitor a writing of twelve lines no
more nor less on parchment. This is
signed by witnesses, who also see that
this party delivers it to the party crim-,
inatcd. When this has been done, tho
separation is complete, though the par
tics oan be re-inarried if they wish ; but
ifibo wife, for instance, should marry
another man, and ho should die, the for
mer husband cannot again marry her.
The woman in this case is not a Jewess
by birth ot education. She was connec
ted with r. church. Shortly after the
marriage, she appealed most earnestly to
the liabbis here to be admitted to tho
Jewish faith. After considerable oppo
sition, her wish was grautcd' This is ve
ry rare, and only one other instance, has
occurred, so far as wc cau learn'. Qkvc
hnU Okin)lUrimkakr.
!
51