V i. .: I JEFFERiOMAN REPUBLIC!. . THE WHOLE ART OF GOVERNMENT CONSISTS IN THE ART OF BEING HONEST. -JEFFERSON VOL. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5S 1S52. No is, : Published by Theodore Sclioch. TERMS Two dollars per annnum in advance Two dollars and a.aun'rter, half yearly andjf not paid oe lore the endof theyear.Twodollarfiandahalf. Those whd' receive their papers by a carrier or stage drivers mpfoyed by the proprietor, nill be charged 3. 1-2 eents.per year, extra. ., No papers Uitcontinued.'Jiitil all arrearages are paid, except at the option of the Editor. ICT Advertisements not exceeding one square (six teenilincs) will beinserted three weeks foroncdollar. and twenty-five cents for every subsequent insertion. for one and three insertions thc same. A liberal discount made to yearly advertisers. All letters addressed to the Editor mustfic post paid. JOB PRINTING. Having a general assortment oflarge, elegant, plain and ornamental Type, vc are prepared to execuje every descriptlonof Cards, CircuUfs.TWl Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts. Justices, Legal and other Blanks. Phamphlets, &c, printed with rieatiicss and despatch. oa reasonable tsrus, AT THE OFFICE OF THE Jeffersonia.u Republican. Jnrr L.i?t, February Term 1852. GRAND JUROTS M. Smithfield, Simeon Schoonover. Sniithfield, Samuel Deitrich, Henry Dei trich. Hamilton, Daniel Heller, George Larew. Chesnuthill, James Smith, Charles H Hea ny, Peter S Altemose Paradise, Andrew L Storm Stroud, Aaron Crosdale, William Smiley, Peter Keller, Jacob Loder, Philip Shaffer Polk, Andrew Serfossj George Gorshimer Pocono, Robert Mount, Thomas McElha ncy Ross, Peter Jones Price, Jacob Miller, William Price Jackson John Winters, Michael Miesncr Coolbaugh, John Vliet PETIT JURORS. Stroud, George Drake, jr.. Wm Clemens, John S Vanvliet, William Carey, John Mai- j Tin, Olis B Gordon, Edward Brown Cheshuthill.George Everett,uharles bhupp, Patrick Daily Smithfield, John Frutchey, Luke Staples, Josepn rentier t Hamilton, Tetcr Snyder, Josepn HinKie, Adam Jvester. George KSlutter, John Dreher, Alexander Brown M. Smithfield, Jacob Angle, Henry Over field, Charles Shoemaker Polk, Peter S Hawk Ross, David Smith, Joseph Altemose, Da vid Gower, Reuben Stevers, Wm. Smith Price, Charles Price, (Eleazer's son) Coolbaugh, George "Keiple, Hiram Warner Paradise, George Smith, Henry Bush, Charles Transue Tobyhanna, Philip Abbot Pocono, Matthias Miller TRIAL LIST FEBRUARY TERM. Diebler v Price township Mcrwine & Walp v Grcesweig Trainer v Teel Felker Woodling TayJcr to the use of Mosteller v Hoffman Gctz et al v Getz Crook to the use of Huston a Burling Long v Kintz & Dietrich Jonas Greensweig v Joseph Greensweig et al Omirlpv ti Alhnrt Menvine & VVslp v Greensweig Clark v Kemmerer et al Young v School Directors of Hamilton tHp. Kresge & Correll v Charles Hawk Merwine v Keller Keifer v Heaney et al ARGUMENT LIST. Account of Michael Brown Account of Simeon Schoonover Schoonover v Schoonover King v Teel Hull etal n Miller etal Inquisition on Timothy Vanwhy's estate Sox v Buskirk Yetter v Quiley et al y,uiey ei ai Stroudsburg and Stroud township Road in REGISTER'S NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby given to all legatees and other persons interested in the A X f lU .Ar.nnttA 3 A ft A J ATI f G 1 Tl f3 TT1 1 - nors, that the administration accounts of the following estates have been filed in fhn. nro. nf tlie Rerrister of Monroe coun- tv. and will be presented for confirmation and allowance to the Orphans' Court to Account ot jonn Huston ana xsaac Marsh, acting Executors of the last will of Abraham Marsh, senior, late of Hamil ton township, deceased. First and final account of Daniel Hel ler administrator de bonis non of the es- tate of Abraham Shafer, late of Chesnut- hill township, deceased.' ; ?irst account of F.E. Grattan, adminis- trator of the estate of Matthew Gr. Grat- tan, late of Middle Sniithfield township deceased. SAMUEL REES, jr., Kegistor. Register's Office Stroudsburg, ) Jannary 29, 1852. S QVuiitor's Notice, In the matter of the account of Michael Meisner, administrator of the Estate of Ezra Bates, deceased. December 27th, l85J.,lhe Court appoint Mr. Barry, Auditor to resettle the account .and make distribution if neces sary and .report the facts to lhe next , Court. Uie undesigned vyjll attend to the duties ' of the above appointment, at the Hotel of i Abraham & bimon Barry, in Stroudsburg, J on jLuesday me ith ol February, 1852, at 10 o'clock A. M., when and where all those interested can attend jf they see proper. . A BRA HAM BA RRY, Auditor. January 22, I852i ... ... Wl S-.ui.li t!j cAtsuuwn ai ims UIJICC. De neia at atrouasDurg, in anu ior tuuit- 0f the ground; the city of Salt Lakeaperfect " &e n rec.ora inere someumes f uma uhuci me wuwuig tuu ut aii, uuuuie foresaid county, on Monday, the 23d day Sodom and Gomorrah, which some day if not wandcrs a vagc shadowy fear, which will at their heart those firstlings of fruit, which of February next, at 1 o'clock, P. M. , ysl-tej by4he wrath of the Almighty, I shall come that your name may soon be there. the heat of summer shall ripen. Has site any Tin. Oh ! do not paint her charms to me, " I know that she is fair ! I know her lips might tempt the . bee, Her eyes with stars compare : Such transient gifts I ne'er could prize, My heart they Could not win : I do not scorn my Mary's eyes, But has she any tin V " " The fairest cheek, alas ! may fade, .Beneath the touch of years ! ' The eyes where light and gladness.played, May .soon grow dim with tears ! I would love's fires should to the last Still burn, as they begin ; But beauty's reign so soon is past; - So ; has she any 'tin V " We have received from two or three sour ces batches of curious and authentic epitaphs. These are the best. " Here lies the body of poor John Mound, Who "was lost at sea, and never found !' " Lie long on him, good mother Earth for he Lied long enough, God knows, on thee !" Here lies John Bean, who from a house Into a cistern fell ker-souse ; He struggled hard with many a bound, But couldn't get out and 60 was drowned." The Albany Dutchman expresses its sur prise that young men can consent to loaf a bout the corners as they .do, when a good dose of arsenic can be purchased for six pence. ITIoi ciboat the Hlorinous. An old citizen of St Josephs, Missouri , TT-ir r v . r " .i e n ! Mr Wilhnm It Vntoe tvritoo frrim tho Nfilr i and any statement he may . - uu. y , i c i r t , i . i . r ii ' " I reached Salt Lake city too late last fall . 1 to come on, and was compelled to winter. ., ... - . - .i there with many other emigants in the same , r m, . - ,r infernal scoundrels, is almost too bad to be believed. They shot men down in their tracks for nothing, and confined others with a ball and chain, and made them work in all wea ther and upon all days, (for they have no j Sabbathsl. and fed them onlv on bad bread ' and water: man v roor fellows suffered and died. And what wao all this fori I will tell , you-for simply asking for the payment of. whnt wns due vou : thev would sav. after the i ' , work was done, that they did not owe you ! catches now and andthen a flicker of the fire any thing; that the people of the States trea- ieht' and makes il Plav as if in wanton, up ted them like dogs when they were there, on the ceiling, lies that biglook, reverenced ! and now it was their time. If the man said , anything in defense, and happened to say they were dishonest, and acted rascally to get, neavv Sllvcr CIasPs tl,at vou nave often pres their labor of a man for months andthen re-j sed Pen for a look atit3 luaint old pictures, fuse to pay, they would haul him up before a ; or for a etudv of those .prettily bordered pa kind of court, and condemned him to from one ! Ses which lie between the Testaments and to ten vears' imorisonment with a ball and . chain. I have seen a man shot down at the door of their temple as he was quietly coming . . out of the church. The cause assigned was a 10" "Ine aE ana even your own date oi, miner; iove mem aeany wnue you cam that one of the Eealed wives of the murderer hirth appears an almost incredible distance 1 Make your good-nights linger; and make had taken a fancy to the emigrant, probably , Dack- Then, there are the marriages ; only ! your adieus long, and sweet, and oftenTepea not from any fault of his, for he was a mar-; onc as vet5 and yur mother's maiden name ' ted. Love with your whole soul father, ritid man from tho Eastern SLitPs. Tt m n positive fact that a man cari hove as many ' r nnd m ronmin sealed wives as he can support, and a woman can at any time be unsealed and sealed to 'another; in that way she may have five . ' ' ' CIV .hllfl ran with Hittarant TY or six children with different fathers. When she is sealed to another, she does not take her children, but leaves them to their father. ! You will, therefore, see that in the course of! fifteen or twenty years, there will be hun- dreds of young men and girls that will not know their relationship towards each other, and intermarriaee with brother and sister wni be the result to an alarminrr extent. I look upon them M the' jowe3t peoplc on top u.nn,ipp" $Mrs. Partington on being told that Richie had aold the Union, exclaimed 'A-, ,CU1CU "u uu nu J"n hoard that. Congreas had deject- 1 rZZl J I tc t in . emuiate t0 the south" where thev know ij0W t0 treat the poor critter!' And Mrs. ! Partington sighed deeply and said no more. jp- 'IIere;"young man, .1 wish ,to speak to you.' ' ; fi?he fellow stopped, and boniface pro ceeded : I Iad such 611 me how to black, i That ' said the awkward fellow, ,1 can ' - . ..'....! 0 ' caSy enough nr rfnrr -just rub 'em 'gainst , A countryman popping his head ii;to a lottery office, and seeing only one man sitting at the desk, vasked bim what he had for sale; To wliicli'the-wouJ(l-be wit ; ni,rt'ci Urc fli) v7iibu, JVJUi UCclUD. . jJ. 1341 tj countryman, "yopr trade .is amiost to. an, lend, for I see vou have but one loft." j mire the appearance of your boots, " , , t , a beautiful jet black! I wish you'd j yPWuffn f - - DREAM -LIFE. BY IK MARVEL. One more extract from this charming vol ume. Mothers, read it to your older children. It will do them good. K A Home Scene. And now I shall not leevethis realm of boy hood, or 6ufier my hero to.slipaway from this gala time of life, without a fair look at. that Home where his present pleasures lie, and where all his dreams begin and end. Little does the boy know, as the tide of years drifts by, floating him out insensibly from the haibor of his home, upon the great sea of life what joys, what opportunities, are slipping from him into the shades of that inexorable Past, where no man can go, save on the wings of his dreams. Little does he think and God be praised, that the thought does not sink deep lines in his young forehead! as he leans upon the lap of his mother; with his eye turned to her, in some earnest plead ing for a fancied pleasure of the hour, or in some important story of his griefs, that such sharing of his sorrows, and such sympathy with his wishes he will find no where again. liittlc does he immagine, that the fond Nelly, ever thoughtful of his pleasure, ever smiling away his griefs will soon be beyond the reach of either ; and that the waves of the years which come rocking so gently under him, will soon toss her far away, upon the great swell of life. But now, you are there. The fire-light glimmers upon the walls of your cherished home, like the Vestal fire of old upon the fig ures of adoring virgins, or like the flame of Hebrew sacrifice, whose incejise bore hearts to Heaven. The big chair of your father is drawn to its wanted corner by the chimney J J f; hlS head' touched with gray lies back upon its oaken top. Little Nelly leans upon his knee, looking up for some reply to r ' . b . . nor rriTiicn nnoctmnn rrr llnnnnitn cite? ttop y , . .. , , , , - , mother ; her figure is thin, her look cheerful, , , , , , yet subdued; her arm perhaps resting on your shoulder, as she talks to you in tones of ten der admonition, of the days that are to come. The cat is purring on the hearth; the clock that ticked so plainly when Charlie died, is ticking on the tnantel still. The great ta- ble in the middle of thc room' with his 1001:5 and work, waits only for the lighting of the i . . eGn,nff -"P. e ui ions mores of embroidery, and of story. Pon a llttIe stand under the mlrror which 01 vour 1New "gJana parents the 1'amily Bible- It is a ponderous square volume, with wnicn noia e jamny necora. There are the Births your father's, and vour mother's ; it seems as if they were born ! i : i . . l00kB oddly to you ; it is hard to think of her . as any one e6e than your doting parent. Yu wonder if your name will evercome un- der that PaSinS5 and wonder, though you ; scarce whisper the wonder to yourself, how, anotner name would look, just below yours ' 6Uch a name for instance, as Fanny or Miss ' Mararet Boyne! La6t of all comcf the Deaths only one, Poor Charlie! How it looks 1 11 Died 12 September 18-, Charles Henry aged four ycars- You know Just how 11 looks- You haye turned 10 5t oftcn 5 there you seem to be io!ncd t0 him thou&h nly by turning of a leaf. And over your thoughts, as you look, You try to drop the notion, as if it were not fairly your own ; effect to slight it, as you . slight a , boy who presumed .on your acquin-; tance, but whom you have no desire to know. lt & a common tnmg, you win unci, wun our . vorl(lt t0 dccline famuiarity wit'h those ideas that fright us. Yet jour mother how strange it is !-has no fears of such dark fancies. Even now, as , yu stand oesidtJ he0 and as the twilight, deepens in the room, her low, silvery voice is stealing upon your ear, telling you that she j on your soui, as me dreams or youwi anu man cannpj. be long with you rthat the time ia : hood will do. coming, when you must be guided by your own judgment, and struggle with the world, j UI1U1UCU UJf tllU 11 iCUUD Ul J VIU WUjrillVU JL ItVi V 1 iiMMtdntl Kit f Visnl rP ir rsii y ri rrA 'Pliori cate hngGrS so tender of your happiness play t.L -1 11 I i c. . . . . wun uie iocks upon your urow. 'lo struggle with the world that is n proud tkjng; to struggle aloue there lies the'doubU' Then, crowds in swift, upon the calm of boy hood, the first anxious thought of youth; th,en, chases over the sky of Spring, the first heat edjand wrathful .cloud of Summer! iXltCt iUA lfmna nrw rirtitr lif in1 frif'tif tln4nnr- .-:r ;T "ryvr. lor, and they shed a eon hnze io the larmeFt liasuy inioine nome uiazu, wiiuc mose ueu- corner of the room; while the fire light streams over the floor where puss lies purring. Litle Madge is there ; she has dropped in softly with with her mother, and Nelly has wel comed her with a bound, and with a kiss. Jenny has not so rosy a. check as Madge. But Jenny with her love notes, and her lan guishing dark eye, you think of, as a lady ; the thought of her constant drain upon your sentiment. As for Madge that girl Madge, whom you know so well you think of her as a sister ; .and yet it is very odd you look at her far oftener than you do at Nelly. Frank too has come in to have a game with Lyou at draughts; and he is in capital spirits, all brisk and glowing with his evening's walk. He bless his honest heart ! never observes that you arrange the board very adroitly, so' that you mar keep half an eye upon Madge, as she sits yonder begide Nelly. Nor does he once notice your blush, as you catch her eyes, when she raises her head to fling back the ringlet ; and then, with a sly look at you, bends a most earnest gaze upon the board, as if she were especially interested in the disposition of the men. You catch a little of the spirit of coquetry yourself (what a native growth it is!) and if she lift her eyes, when you are gazing at her, you very suddenly divert your look to the cat at her feet; and remark to your friend Frank' in an easy, off-hand way how the cat is lying. And Frank turns thinking propably, if he thinks at all about it, that cats are very apt to lie still, when they sleep. As for Nelly, half neglected by your thought, as well as by your eye, while mischievous looking Madge is sitting by her, you little know as yet what kindness, what gentleness you are careless of. Few loves in life, and you will learn it before life is done, can bal- ance the lost love of a sister. ' As for your parents, in the intervals of the game, you listen dreamily to their talk with the mother of Madge good Mrs. Boyne. It floats over your mind, as you rest your chin upon your clenched hand, like a strain of old familiar music, a household strain,that seems to belong to the habit of your ear, a strain that will linger about it melodiously for many years to come, a strain that will be recalled long time hence, when life is earnest and its . ?t . r i cares neavy, wun tears oi regrei anu wun sighs of bitterness. B.v and by yur amo 18 done and other games, in which join Nelly (the tears come when you write her name, now !) and Madge (the smiles come when you look on her then,) stretch out that sweet eventide of Home, un til the lap flickers, and you speak your friends adieu. To Madge, it is said boldly a boldness put on to conceal a little lurking tremor ; but there is no tremor in the home good-night. Aye, my boy, kiss your mother kiss her again ; fondle your sweet Nelly ; pass your little hand through the gray locks of your r. i .i i i . t i mother and sister for these loves shall die. Not indeed in thought : God be thanked ! Nor yet in tears for He is merciful ! But they shall die as the leaves die die as Spring dies into the heat and ripeness of Summer, and as boyhood dies into the elasticity and ambition of youth. Death, distance, and time, shall each one of them dig graves for your affections ; but this you do not know, nor can know, until the story of your life is ! ended. The dreams of riches, of love, of voyage, of learning, that light up the boy-age with splendor, will pass on and over into the hot ter dreams of youth. Spring buds and bios You little know and for this you?may well thank Heaven that you are leaving the Spring of life, and that you are floating fast from the shady sources of your years, into "u(.,.uuBueanu storm, xourreamsare now faint,flickeringshado.ws,that play like fire-flies in the coppices of leafy June. Theyhaveno rule, but the rule of infantile desifc. They have no joys that belong to your passing life; they have no terrors as the darkness of a Spring night makes They do not take hold xour highest hope is shadowed in a cheer ful, boyish home. You wish no friends but the friends of boyhood no sister but your fond Nelly none to love better than the play ful Madge. Xou forget, Qjarence, that the Spring with you, is Jhe Spring with them ; and that the storms of Sumpier may chace wide shadows over your path, and over tlieir's. Anil you forget, that Summer is even now, lowering with its mist, nnd with its searching rays, up on the hem of your flowry May ! The 'hands-of the old clqck upon the man tel,, that ticked off the hours when Char lie digd, draw pn toward midnight. The shadows that the fire-flames makes, grow dimmer anil dimmer. Ahd thus ,itis,-.that Honje,;bpy?hpme, passes away fpreverrUke, the swaying of a pendulijm-r-rlike ihe-faduig pf a shadow on the floor ! From tJie N. Y. Spirit of thc Times. A Jdcar Uititicr. Dear P. At the last "Hen Conven tion" in our city, some six weeks since, a mutual friend of ours, residing in the suburbs of our metropolis, came to the city in the morning to attend the " hen fair," where he purchased a very large and beautiful pair of Shanghai fowls, to breed from; and as he was to remain in town until evening, he sent t;he birds by a boy, with a note to a friend of hi3, liv ing at the Albion, requesting that he would take charge of the chickens until the afternoon, as he had some Shatters t)f business that would detain him ; he al so told the boy to say he would dine with him at 4 o'clock. The boy delivered the fowls, but forgot the note, and simply remarked, "Here's a pair of rousing big chickens Mr. M ssent you, and says he will dine with you at 4 o'clock." The gentleman supposing his friend (who, by the way, knows a hawk from a handsaw, and a canvassback from a broil ed owl)) had sent him something extra, ordered them to be civen to the cook, with directions that they be killed and dressed at once, as he had a friend to dine with him at 4 that P. M. The or der was accordingly obeyed, and at the appointed time the dinner served. After imbibing sundry " wine bitters," as a sharpener to their appetites, they sat down, and the Shanghai owner was re quested to carve; and as he was dissecting these enormous " cute members of the Hen Convention," he remarked to his friend, " You have an extraordinary fine pair of chickens here ?" " Yes," answered the other, "they are an indifferently good sized pair of birds; they were sent to me by a mutual friend of ours. " " Indeed, were they ? a devilish clever fellow he must be, Jim ; a very pretty present this, and I declare they are the most delicious flavor I ever tasted, and as juicy, too, as a canvass-back !" And so he continued praising the rich flavor of the chickens until! they had taken care of a couple of bottles of Schriedef ; and while chattering over their bottle of sherry, and enjoying their regalias, the owner of the Shanghais said, ." By-the-bye, Jim, what do you think of my hen purchase this morning!" " Why, Bill, I think they were most delicious, and wish you would dine with me evary day in the week, if you will send me such chickens." " Such chickens !" screeched Bill, as the thought flashed across bis mind that he might possibly have been eating his own Shanghais. " What the devil do you mean if" " Mean," replied Jim, " why, I mean to say that you have dined off of those chickens you sent me this morning I" Bill instantly jumped up from the ta ble, and rammed his hands up to his el bows in his breeches pockets, and after striding across the room some half dozen times, without uttering a word, but his eyes all the while with " fine frenzy rol ling," stopped short, and turning to his friend, exclaimed, with no little gesticu-lation-r- "Good God, Jim! Ipaid Hiirtxj-five dollars for tliatpairof fowls this morning! Didn't that cussed boy give you a note this morning when he left the chickens!" " No," said Jim, " he gave me no note, he simply handed me the Shanghais, and said you would dine with me at four ! Therefore, I had them roasted !" Bill instantly rushed for his horse and wagon, and has not been seen in the city but once since, and then he was closely muffled up, and both ears stopped with cotton, for fear he would hear some one say Shangliai ! A few days since, while passing his re sidence, I dropped in upon him for an hour, and after a while ventured to touch, upon the different breeds of poultry, but at once discovered a witness about Bill's eyes, therefore discontinued the topic. When he said, imploringly, " Old fellow ! don't "hit me now, I'm down that cliickeu dinner lias never yet digested !" Tru'y yours, ACORN. Boston, Januarys, 1852. To Preserve Milk. Put a spoonful of horse-radish into a pan of milk, and it will remain sweet for several days, either in the open airvor in a cellar, while other milk will sour. Cure for Tootli Aclic. Two parts of brown sugar, two parts of tar, and one part of finely ground black pepper; mix them oold and apply a por tion to the affected part. Repeat this oc casional for a day or two, and a perfect care wilL be effected. I have tried it twice with entire success on my own teeth. My neighbors have found itequally effica cious. "No one would take you for what you are," said an old fashioned gentleman, a day ortwo. ago,to.a dandy, who had:moro hair than. brains. "Why!" .Siim.medi atoly asked. "Because they cannot aoa your cars." Boundlessness of the Creation. About the time of the invention of the telescope, another instrumentwas formed, which laid open a scene no less wonder ful, and rewarded the inquisitive spirit of man. This was the microscope. The one led me to see a system in every star, the other leads me to see a world in every atom. The one taught me that this mighty globe, with the whole burden of its countries, is but a grain of sand on the high field of immensity; the other teaches me that every grain of sand may harbor within it the tribes and families of a busy population. The one told me of the insignificancy of the world I frcad upon. The other redeems it from all in significancy ; for it tells me that in the leaves of every forest, and in the flowers of every garden, and in the waters of ev ery rivulet, there are worM steemmg with life, and numberless aB the glories of the firmament. The one has suggested to me, that beyond and above all that is visible to man, there may be fields of creation which sweep immeasurably along, and carry the impress of tha Almighty s hand to the remotest scenes of tho un iverse ! the other suggests to me, tLat within and beyond all that , roiuuten-s , which the unaided eye of man baa bcc able to explore, there may be a lion of invisibles ; and that could we draw a side the mysterious curtain which shrouds it from our senses, we might see a th atre of as many wonders as astronomers have unfolded, a universe within the compass of a point so small as chides all the powers of the microscope, but where the wonder working God finds room for ail his at tributes, where he can raise another mechanism of world aud fill and animate the evidence of his glory. Chalmers. Cure for Deaf nest M. S. W. Jewett, writing to the Boston Cultivator says : At about three years of age, a daught er of the Hon. Daniel Baldwin, of Mont peliar, became very deaf in both ears. In conversation it was quite difficult to make her hear and she continued in this wretched state until about eighteen years of age, when an Indian doctor chanced to see her, who told the mother, Mrs. B.r that the oil of onion and tobacco would cure Iier if prepared as follows : Divide an onion, and from the centre take out a piece the size of a common walnut ; fill I this cavity with a fresh quid af tobacco, ' and bind the onion together in its usual shape ; roast it, theu trim off the outer part until you come to that portion slightly colored or penetrated by the tobacco ; mash up the balance of the to bacco ; put it into a phial. Three drops of this oil Mrs. B. informed me, she drop ped into the ear after her daughter had re j tired to bed, which immediately gave her ' considerable pain which lasted for some time. Before morning however, her I hearing was so extremely delicate and ' sensitive, that she suffered by the sound ' and noise in common conversation ! This she soon overcame, and for more than : three years past her hearing has been entirely restored, to the great joy of her parents and friends ! Having been ac quainted with the family for many years, the case is so miraculous and gratifying, ( that I cannot, in justice to the afflicted, refrain from making this simple and ef fectual remedy for deafness known. To make Court Planter. Dissolve isinglass, suspend your silk on a wooden frame by tacks, apply the glue with a brush and let it dry, repeat it, and when dry cover it with a strong tincture of Balsam of Peru. This is the real English court plaster. It is pliable and never breaks. The mere common is cov ered over with thc white of egg and dried. To Irv'iil Ixxh from Frcziiijj. Instead of water use brandy with tho same ingredients that you use for any ink and it will never freeze. To toaki? SVUow Uulterln Just before the tcrminaton of chttrnin cr : nut in the yolk of C22S. Tt has been kept a secret, but its value requires pub licity. To Prerent Shoe From Tak ing Water. One pint of drying oil, (boiled linseed,) two ounces of turpeutine, and half an ounce of Burgundy pitch melted careful ly over a slow fire. Rub new boots with this mixture either in the sunshine or at some other distance from the fire, repeat the operation as they get dry until the leather is saturated. Lqt them remain for some days until they get perfectly dry and elastic, and they become imperv ious to- wet: they will wear much longer and acquire a softness and plyability that prevents the leather from ever shrivling. " Com.e here, my little man," said a gentleman to a youngster of four years old, while sitting in a parlor where a large company were assembled, " do you know rao!" "Yes, sir, I think I do."- r' " Who am I, then ; let meshoar.,.r " You are the man whatKisse,d eis.tar i. Jano last night in tha- prlor." Jano fainted. T i f