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From Artliur's Home Gazette. ABSENCE AD RETURN ; A TALE OF TENNESSEE. i BY O. M. WHAKTON. The gentle old roan, whom we called "Wallace," after reading the "Scottish Chiefs," aloud together during the long even ings of the past winter, was fastened to the , deer-horn rack in front of the extended porch of our homely but comfortable mansion. He was in fine order for the journey, of many days, that I was about to go upon. Charles, the hostler, carried out my saddle-bags, and loitered by the steed to bid me adieu. I stood on the porch, the tears in my eyes, while my little sisters Elizabeth, Jane and j Susan, wrung my hands, clung around my , neck, and kissed me a hundred times. Milber-1 ry my orphan cousin ; " Berry" we called . her was very pale, and tearless, retiring , from me, but gazing mournfully and fixedly upon me. ' " Farewell, brother Will," said aft my sobbing sisters, embracing me by turn. "We are so sorry to part from you ! And to think what a sad, lonely, weary, journey you have , before you, from Tennessee to Virginia! You ( must write often, for it takes a whole month for a letter to reach us. Oh,, you must re member us all the time, as we will you." My resolution trembled ; but with a great effort I still concealed from them the depth of my emotion. j " Here is a pair of riding gloves," said the elder, my own, whole sister; "I knitted them myself for you ; don't forget Bettie," cried the poor girl, weeping profusely and kissing' me again. 1 The other two were half-sisters; this J was told; I never knew any difference, in my af fection for them. 44 Jenny gives you this handkerdhief, hem med by herself, with your initaJs and hers stitched in one corner ; look at it and recall her when you're far, faraway." Dear Jane! how convulsively 'she clasped me to her breast ! 44 And here's ajsilk purse.'hrpther, tlie'had diwork of Sue; it's my keepsake." The dews of love moistened her face ! Cousin Berrv-steDned forward, butmv fkth- w 1 j - - - j i er and step-mother joining us at the instant, ' she shrunk back. j "Be a man William," said my father. , 44 We are loth to part with you, but it. is for your good, my boy. You arc to go to j school, and.wjieh.you learn enough, yourun-; cle Dahney will send you to Philadelpln"a to make a doctor of you and then you shall come home and physic us all; Bo careful with your horse ; see that he is Well attended , to, yourselfj.be polite to every body you meet, familiar -with none. Husband your money, as you hav'nt more than enough 'to' bear your expenses. Treat your uncle as i"f he was your father; study hard, and become a doctor; but above all, be a man! And now no whim pering ! good-bye, my lad !" j My father shook ray hand heartily. I see ! him now ; his spectacles raised over his fore head, the morning air playing with his few , thin gray locks, his favorite book (Claren-. don's history of England) under one arm.-hisji silver-headed cane under the other. I'llayeJ never known a greater readeV, p beltVr Jiis-j toriau, or a, kinder, gentleman." TSfyatherf was nearly deaf, and in proportion-as .that misfortune grew on him, his love, of books in creased, silence, ia the .course .of .his fort v- ive years,-ka waaenaHedto accumulate .vast, if miscellaneous, &QIQ8 0f knowledge. He! was an unsurpassed tracer of genealogies ; not a distinguished family in England, but whose pedigree-he could carry up to the Nor man conquest. This propensity led liim to acquaint' h'imself With' all the fatnily histories; of any consequence, in Virginia, his- native state ; arid when' he removed to Tennessee, then a new country the city of Nashville, near which he resided; being 'a mere hamlet, and married again, and children gathered a round his hearth, he was wont torinstxuct and entertain them from these large treasuries of anecdotes: There were no schools in the neighborhood, and my further endeared him self to us by the' simple and tender matirjer in which he discharged towards us the duties sof a teacher. He now, however,, considered himself bound as a parent to afford me, who was old enough (thirteen years) to profit by them, better advantages than the primitive settlement offered ; and thus, as I have' rela ted,) assigned me to the care of a relative liv ing in the older state of Virginia. . My step-mother, in her conduct towards me and. my sister Elizabeth showed no dif ference in favor of her own chilren. She had, been chosen by my own mother, when dying,, as that friend, to whom it woaldisoothe her last hours could she believe her boy and : girl would be entrusted; and my father prom- j ised her, if he ever married again, it should be the friend she had selected. My step mother's loving attentions to us-proved how discerning a judgment she had. Willie, ray dear son," said my step-mother, pressing me to her'bosem, while the, tears fell from her eyes on my-young-brow; 44 God bless you dear Wilie !" I reeled to the spot where 44 Wallace" wai ted me. Charles, the hostler, assisted me in to the saddle ; he grasped my hand in fare well, and I gave the rains to the horse. It had always been a custom of mine and my sister Elizabeth, to visit, every pleasant Sabbath, my mother's tomb, some half mile from home. It was a sweet, secluded grove of cyprus trees and arbor vita;, mingled with wild and planted flowers. ' Thither an irresis tible impulse directed me ; I wished to bid the grave adieu. I dismounted on. the border of the grove, I repaired to the tomb, and there met Berry. !' I knew you would come "here," said she. 44 1 will not disturb you ; I did not tell you farewell Farewell !" 44 Dear Berry," cried I. I could restrain my tears no more. I leaned my head againEt the marble, and wept. 44 Hush, Cousin Will," sajd Bery, ap proached m e, raising my head with her mor sel of harfds. li We shall meet again if not here, then where my good aunt is, inHcaven; You have been so. kind to me, but I do not weep, though if I did I should feel relieved." 44 Berry," exelaimed I. . I kissed her, I had never done so before ; this shy, sensitive, though affectionate ichild, shrinking from such endearments from me, though I was ever' her favorite cousin. lfhad once told her that .1 love.d her more than even my sisters, and one day would ask her to be my wife. She was a precocious being mentally, albiet her phys ical frame was more delicate than suited hef year?, two less than mine the same as E lizabeth's. She had beem an. inmate of our home sixteen months; and every one was at tached warmly to her. Berry was pale all the morning'; eIic, turn ed very red now. . , . 44 Havn't you a keepsake for me, too.!" I said. it'.. She pulled a twig of arbor yit from the grave and handed it to me. x v 41 It will remind you of both," she replied "the living and the dead. May be I shall be sleeping here also, when ybuTctufnj" hilt I can never forget yourkindrWiil."4 So saying, she rose up, anoV walked slpvly away. Two'ancrels'feeEdmea to walk slowlv away, she, and Mny mother's epir.it .(tins back to gloves, the small hantlkerchiefjf'the toy purse Heaven) that had hovered "aboye,,iis. The and the twigs of arbor yjta. I packed them grave, for the. first, time, was a hollow, tent up tpo, to shovy ,the fairjdonqrs hpw I treasur antless cell to me. Henceforth the spirit, ed their; mementos. Would watch over and Often yisit m'e.'f I put the green twig in my pocket carefully hand, 'rrr much comforted and strengthened, pegan my journey. A journey on horseback,' for a month ! . Many days I was,alone, the housp's being rare. ' mi i. t ii . i i .xne peopie seiuom passeu wongersa to sqe so youthful a traveler thus prematurely trus ted to himself. The women at the houses on the road where I slept, as if moved at my apparent desertion spoke tenderly to ., me. Sometimes I jencountered hunters armed in the woods and blind paths ; but the "Scottish ! Chiefs" nerved me with courage, and I was not afraid. .Indeed, my mind was two busy, recalling home or painting the future, to al low me much thought for fear. When I reached, the more inhabited couptiesof Vir ginia, I was no longer wondered M, the peo ple taking me for a neighbor's son, going pn a distant errand. ' At last, I reached my uncle's. .Agajn the tears gushed forth,,: when ,1 .contrasted this strange, thoaghVbeautifuh'place,, with that ll had left. It was not io?ic.' : ' My uncle encountered me at the gate. " You must be my nephew William," said he, in such assuring'tone as ait once consoled me. " ' " My'; airht received me cordially I soori be carhc.fbconcilnd tolmyi;exile. They had no offspring of their own, I was in the stead, of such to them. I rccolfect the" painful feeling Tcxperienced on going to school a few weeks after my ar rival. I was a stranger amid strangers. I fancied there could never be any interest in common bfctween' the' master and me ; and and as for the oilier boys they were fpreign urchins to me But the' master came to me, shook my hand, arid toTd me he knevy my father. Immediately he was transformed in to an old acquaintance ! At play-time, I wandered aloof from the school-boys, till one, a mild, fair-haired little fellow, came up to me, took hold' of the skirt of my coat and said, " Come don't be shy play with us." I yiel ded and joined in their sport. I got excited I excelled my rivals in the game they were "no more foreigners to me ! So"passed away several years, I studied assiduously, I improved in knowledge. At eighteen, I entered my uncle's office to study medicine. There, I read for six months, and then repaired to Philadelphia, where I was to remain two years, until I graduated in the profession. Finally, I obtained my diploma. I had an ticipated it with joy, I accepted it with sad ness: Suddenly' the responsibilites of a phys ician realized themselves in my mind. I re turned pensively to my uncle's. Meanwhile, during these eight year, (how slowly they sped away !) did I never recur to home? Oh, yes ; constantly. It was ideali zed by absence. It was changed into an Ar cadia, a Happy Valley, Fairyland. Letters came to me at remote intervals, such were the poor mail facilities. What God sends they were to me ! I laid them up, like fairy money. Those from my sisters, with occa sionally a postscript. from; Berry, sometimes "Itound Margarets;" when they all wrote in copartnership, so full of love, and girlish prat tle L I could follow their improvement in their letters. How a Echool had been opened in the neighborhood, then a dancing school, then a music teacher, with an. assortment of guitars, finally a drawing-master, who taught themtorpaint everything. They drew a pic ture of the old family mansion, and Berry one of the graveyard, inclosing another twig .of arbor vitic. Then I could discover that Bet tie began to have beaux, and that she thought a great deal of "Mr., White," a fellow hunter of rabbits of mine! Flach one said the other was growing quite handsome, hut that Bettie was most like mc, with her dark hair and blue eyes. However, all declared in one epistle that Berry was the prettiest, if she was'nt so. strong and Healthy ; she. had a cough, which they knew I could cure. My father was full of advice arid manly, projects !in his commu nications. My step-mother was less dignified than he, but rripre so than ' my sisters, and talked much' of piety: TheReV. Mr. Black burn,, she said, was' doing much good in that part .of the i Lord'sraofal, vineyard, and she fi oped I might soon hear him preach. Berry had professed religion, thpughjn a quiet way, not "having a, sore, conscience to trouble, her as many, others. She was feeble and delicate, my step-mother, continued, but such faith, such beautiful trust in her heavenly Parent! I bade my uncle and aunt farewell. I shall never be ungrateful'to them for their thought ful regard for me and my interests. My dbnt is no more, but, my uncle still lives a ven erable old man,belpved,by all .that knew him. Thepld roan, " WallaceVhadound a cine cure, jn irjy uncle's crib, and, in isj hardy green age was fully competent ;to go back again the same long journey he jhad once borne upon. I packed my saddle-bags, as before, with a diploma in additiop. t1 hTfld preserved my tiny ifrhe journey fwas less monotonous than, formerly, more settlers haying como out into Tennessee. But ltwas nothing like what it is'at; preSerih ; It is riefwd greatj prosperous, dens'clv populoui and glorious state. It waB tfifeft'a hew country, thbrigh' Hoi so ney as when I was a child. It was aspnnySaJijbaBth1niorn ,ip May that I arrjyed injhfvicjnjty of my home, ,1 Te cpghisedn.umerops.alteratjpns.Jn, the scene-, ry, ?nade by the jndu.gtry of tie fawn.ers. But niqsof jtbfi changes ydre owing. to the grand one in size, proportion 'and distance, -which wo experience'when we revisit the associa tions ttnd haunts' of ehildhbotl after attaining to the age of maturity, streaihg wjiich the hoy contemplated as riyejrs, diminish to rivu letgj houses jiy'hich appeared a.spajacesdwjn- . ybjie, I,,notpd tljese general cjianges.l approached tjje grajeyar,dt I checked .my courserV pa'ceaudilismouritedi andoacpinore stood ibesidcniymbtlier's' grave. It-vvas nev er a melancholy spot to moj l did not' witness' her death, and I scarcely rcmc'mbek,dllia'ving seen her. The body that was there wasting, away, was younger than I, for my mother died before she was nineteen. I recalled the image of Berry, when we parted there. Ji searched for the bush of arbor vitay from whence she had pulled the small branch ; it was grown to the height of a man's head. l reached up, to gather another from its boughs, when I beheld a newly dug grave. The fresh red earth was piled up on either side, there were short pieces of plank hard by. The grave awaited its victim. There was a funeral about to take place. Who could be dead 1 It was the general burial-ground for the neighborhood, so that conjecture had a wide scope to choose from. A senEe of sad-, rress came over me, which I could not dispel. I had resolved to surprise all at home by a sudden arrival, and not revealing myself, see if any, and who first, would know me. As I drew near the house, I perceived hor ses and carriages in front of it. I readily divined the reason. There was a religious assemblege there. There were few church es then erected in our vicinity, and the weal thiest and most hospitable farmers were used to open their doors, on Sundays, for the neigh bors to come and attend church at their homes. My father's was a famous meeting place of this kind. Charles, the hostler, much . older-looking than when I saw him last, came out to as sume the charge of ray'horse. He did not !guess.who I was. I gave him the saddle- bags to cary into the house and not daring to clamation. though the coiif relation was as-' 1 1 -i " j 6 , Tint ,uamauoii, uKra0u mi con0rtgauon nu bb a phenemenon truly striking and extra converse with him lest I Bhould betray my- touished. . 1 o T.. , betray my self and mar the little plot I had conceived, I walked slowly into the porch. The porch and the parlor were filled with people of both sexes, who had grown out of my remembrance. I seated myself on one the vacant benches which had been provided for their accomodation, and gazed eagerly a round for the forms and -faces of those I most loved. The Rev. Mr. Blackburn was the minister who officiated. He was a tall, solemn man. with long white locks hanging over his shoul- ders. His voice was deeply sonorous, and imparted wonderful force to the startliiig im agery he was wont to employ in his extem poraneous sermons. He rarely gesticulated. His eyes glowed like a fire, and he seemed earnest to the verge of insanity. He Was standing in the doorway and obstructed my view into the parlor. But having often heard of this singular orator and divine, he became even in my extraordinary situation, an absorb ing object of interest. Some of my readers may have heard of a curious effect of this man's oratory which, passing from the sphere of his immediate in- fluence, perpetuated itself in the form of a! ...... . j . I relnrious enidemic or mania, under the on- religious epidemic or mania, under the op probious name bestowed by scoffers of "Cum berIand Jerks." Thousands of persons, excited by his eloquence, have been seized with various kinds of physical convulsion, as twitching of the muscles, galvanic motions; ele'ctr;c ith ceain minute vessels point upon which he had been question ofthe limbs, rigidities. Some would fly at united by nerves and moistened by mu- e.d: He gave a deepen in direct oppo their utmostspeed, as from an invisible enemy j'cus, which exist in nearly all kinds of Uon to his former declaration. hen others would-shout. and rave: as ifthev were' animals, and nro. found most developed in- ask.e.d to.c.sP!l,n .blS terlveratiou he .... ... exquisitely happy, or overborne by the recol - lection or nideous crimes; some would laugh hysterically ; some would weep inconsolably ;' I . t I ,M Ko, ,f.;n,nn a k 1.: , for days. Irreligious spectators, carried a- way by an inscrutable sympathy, would be - come equally affected, in spite of their strug- a cat to the cold until his fur lies close through one of the streets m Boston a gles and in opposition to their will. Attacks' to the skin and appears greasy ; expose , few days since, rubbing hh hands togeth ofthis unparalleled monomania would fre-j your hands to make them equally cold er, and appearing as if weighed down by quently endure for a week without interims-' then take the animal on your knee, apply ' soul destroying sorrow. Stepping into a sion: Those who considered these reinarka- ble phenomena as the result of divine inter - position, entitled them spiritalization." . .t . On this occasion Mr. Blackburn was speak- ing of the frailty of life, the evanescence of things earthly, and the durability of heaven ly joys, "with a solemn pathos peculiar to him self. He took the career of a nure-hearted i,-;... r.i- -j .i' wi.ii a jruuiijj JUlliaiu iaiiu jjaiuicu uiiiiu the untownrfl events nf ffiis WnrW nn, f hn approaches of death, till her faith ended T , 4 r : , . . . I almost fonrot mv search, moved bv his ' - . earnest words awoke, was not of that woarFe- j ed and mysterious character, which I havJ ..... .1 , commendable; He sat down after Teading a familiar hymn, which the audience united in chanting. It was then I saw, and by instinct recognised, my parents and sisters. My heart yearned towards them : I was impatient for the "con - elusion of the services to rush into their arms Time had yet further thinned my fathers locks, and more wrinkles furrowed his fore hoAl. Uy step-roptbefs brown hair Was' ungcu witn gray, ana uur irumu was fmuroi spare, iiiuzaboih was a woman growi person, air' and dress, and nu -odd fe'cli pogfosscu me it i Limiiamuu nei luiiy-iiKis .i i j i i j.-. i: feeling eloquence. All present were touch-gho wa3 tie(1 to an iron ring . the ground . the Biddeford Herald : ed. I observed tears pouring down the ( was frozeri ; one han'd was placed on the The Rev. Mr. E., who lived not a cheeks of young and aged ; they could not breast apd the other down the back, when thousand inile3. from Portland, was prc haye manifested more sympathy had he por-1 such nn electric shock occurred that Mr. paring his discourse for the? next Sab trayed an actual existence that had just cjos-.l B. was thrown to the ground. The cow , bath. Stopping occasionally to review A AnA thn omntfnn Ma simnle.- thmiirh ' appeared very much irritated, but it was what he had written, and to erase that dignity with my remembrance of the girl. Jane was nearly as mature, and when "Mr. J In the midst of exaggeration and inven White" should appropriate Bettie, as I was ion, there is one undoubted circumstance, inclined, to believe he would from divers hints which formerly excited the worst appre that had been trasmitted me, Jenny would flensins the fact that bodies were of-' no doubt bo ready to supply hor place: Su- ten found turned fn thcir coffin and the o ,o rr,..,.i, . v e grave-clothes disarranged. But what san was much grown too, being over four- 63 ., r ' c.t l . was ascribed, with seerainc; reason, to teen. I was vain of the beauty of my sisters, i 4l c -t i-t i . oiofccio, thethroesrof vitality, is now knowu to their goodness and intelligence as delineated De ,iue to tbe agency 0f corruption. A in their pleasing expressions. White, too ! gas is developed in the decayed body wild Dick that was-evho was seated behind which mimics, by it3 mechanical force, Bettie, was a finely proportioned, magnificent c i.u- r o' fellow, of a military aspect, who looked guilt-' manJ f f . the movements of life So less of any knowledge of rabbits and opos- Powerful is this gas m corpses that have sums, his quondam quarry. More than once been long in tne water, that Mr. Dcvcr I fancied that I perceived their regards fall g, the physician to the Morgue at upon me, and winced for fear they should Paris, and the author of a text-book on detect me too soon; but my fears were vain, ' legal medieiue, says, that, unless secured mere fancies ;' for of all there assembled, my to the table, they are often heaved up, sisters, my parents, and even Dick White and thrown to the ground. Prcquently, seemed most affected by the sermon of Mr. strangersseeing the motion of the limbs, Blackburn. I marveled greatly at this. I . ' , ,r intimvCpir ..r,. mv ftVnr;t,nl,n.,rai1 to tlle keeper of the Morgue, and porrir i t o..n.,t for her continually, but with out success: , allve. Ail bodies, sooner or later, gen And here the meeting did come to a close, erate gas in the grave ; and it constantly Several moved forward, and then I was ena- twists about the corpse, blows out the bled to command an entire view of the par-: skin till it rends with distension, and or- sometimes bursts the coffin itself. When 'Near the window, the sunshine resting on tbe gas explodes with a noise, imagiua- ll'mJ u" ! i e i a'i . v k tion has converted it into an outcry or They who moved forward, did so to adjust .. , . J , thelidf Mr. Blackburn had been preaching goan ; the grave has bccn re-opened; a funeral he described no ideal, but a real the position or the body confirmed the life, terminating here and that new-dug suspicion, and the laceration taken for grave Oh, God ! 'evidence that the wretch had gnawed his As I sprang forward, my parents and sis- flesh .in the freuiy of despair. ters wore bending in tears over the calm, beautiful face of the dead, not yet excluded Sigulur Phenomenon. irom the iiht. l'hey did not hear my ex - If she could have only seen brother Will," said Bettie; "It was he4troubling desire, and his name was her last word." I joined the mourning ffroup I looked upon the wan, wan face, with its marble of,sm,Je i innocence and holy Jove. .Pressing 1 my lips to the waxen cheek, I sobbed 4 Berry, Berry alas, dear Berry I An old joker, who was never known to yield the palm to any antagonist in . rfr itkt n. irnnft-v mm trn.; mir. tn ma trumps, at hearing'a traveller state, that he once saw a brick house placed upon runners, and drawn up a hill to a more favorable location some half a mile dist- ant. What do you think of that, Uncle Ithiel?' said the bystanders. 1 Oh, fudge !' said the old man, I once saw a two-story stone house down east, drawn bv oxen, three miles.' A dead silence ensued the old man evidently mi i I had the worst end of it, and he saw it. Gathering all his energies, he bit off a huge piece of pigtail, by way of gaining time for thought : ' They drawed the j stone-house,' said the old man, (ejecting a 'qunntity of tobacco juice towards the n7e P 'out tnat warn t tne worsi-01 the job ; arter they'd dun that. they . ' . J , . ' went back and draiced the cdkr.1 The stranger caved in. Prof. Beckeinstoiner, of Lyons, was: Ftl.l IIITK I I V. XII Hli;il III W I J I 1. I TZ IjUIU VA. . , 1 j r-it. t 11 u 1 man at the period of the greatest strength, ' Itnl- MAllMnnJ nii 1t lift irt f fl ftCl wunupscu uuu ui;u iu. He began a series of experiments, and imei mrue years iueauKonSuuua..T nTrni 99vn WAnva lTinncrifruriirii ii'iu i m i i u Xl. J .V.AnllnOnn lillD 1 O f al Tf f, , . j I n a oTttt ioor omn ULl LC 111 Uul ULUlU A.J II vw AmTAr'ifiirft is helow do decrrees. the lingers ol your leit nana on us Dreasi, ' ad pass your right hand down its back, pressing moderately ; at tne nun or sixu , pass you will receive a slight snocK. ivt xfirst Jh(J appears pleased, but as soon a3 ;t fceig the jt jump3 away, and :nnc.j Mr,f:f;nnnffiiooTnriinpnt during the same day. After the experi - ment the animal looks tired: some days ' nffn u ;t. nnnntit. seeks solitude. , fx ' 1 drinks water at rare intervals and dies mj!n a fortnight. The same experiment; t has succeeded with rabbits ; they die the o - . . ... 1 same day. It is un3ucccssfi . i i t j It is unsuccessful with dogs I unce only it nas uuuu uiau e on a impossible to know if she suffered from it, since she was killed by a butcher ' turee aays uiierwiuua. nitwrwn nv a T.mnnn Vr.vnm. Thn devices to evade the operation of the Maine Liquor Law are very numerous and ingenious, A Dov?n East paper states one of the latest "dodges" to be of ', the following character : A tamous liquor aeaicr nas put up in quart bottles a vast quantity of pure Holland gin. These bottles are labeled with the name of some wonderful uiedi - nino wl.irOi ? nfl vnrf fsol in nil flm news- a cure f()r aj diseases. Tho jCI10WinO' ones have nilyto be a little in j unwell, and procure a b'ottle of thisfamo.ua ' tho astonishing gnd , speedy cures wrought ecliiig cure-iill, in order to' obtain what liqudr by it. We mention the mattorUiat oti-ly-UkoMhoy wish. ' jCrs may " go and do nk?-siar" 1 nicy wish. j- A!li'ri 3-iryt:is Alive. announce with horror that a person 13 , AK,,f io rwu rt .q,,t,,0v ;i.t iot J- " luc.w'' cumstance of the falling of a copious ! of rain; for the sPace f from seven to ten minutes, from a perfectly cloudless, haziless, and starlit sky. So plentiful -3 the shower that the streets run with water, which had tbe singular effect upon the mind of appearing to come without a cause. During the shower, two streaks of fleecy cloud displayed themselves in the north and South, but far distant from finch nt hpr. ami TiPitiinr nr nn nltinirlft above the h.orizon exceeding 20 degrees, The position of the?e clouds forbid the idea that the rain could have fallen from either of them. We make no effdrt to I explain this strange phenomenon, sati- fying ourselves with a bare but faithful statement of it. Vashvvjtoii Ifitcliigcn- cer. i G-ov. Wood, of Ohio, is an airoifc ' political trimmer, and rivals the heifer, "we read of, that walked on both sides the creek at the same time. Here is an instance of his facility in making a doa- ble track : Some years ago, when the Bank question agitated Ohio, Mr. Reuben ouw, . Bench. Questions were propounded to .,. . i?i . him, as they were to all the candidates, touching the Bank question ; to which he returned a most catholic and satisfac a"a" tory answer. He was elected. iNot a case arose involving tuo 1 .1 . ....... coolly said, 4,U, the opinion 1 ave when J t, lin:on ot- jeugn sft-QOfi . but in the latter Qf . case it a ' ' 1 i r nr iiir. in rill if. i'.iiiimi mi in i vi-iiJUfviin' a r i , i hen-oecked husband was seen strolling harness maker's shop, he inquired in 7 1 ' feeble and pitiful tones have you bridles of all 1 Of all kinds, sir,' replied the smiling shopkeeper, pulliug down a variety of blinds, bridles and cheek-reins. 1 1 1 wish to obtaingasped the stranger, wiping the perspiration from his brow, 1 wish to obtain an article to to oriaic -, y ' , mywije s tongue. The shopkeeper fainted, and the Strang- J'J er w. We take the following good one from ; which he was disposed to improve i Was accosted by his iittlo son, of th he three years. "Father, doe3 God toll you what to preach?" "Certainly, my child." , "Then, what makes yaxscrach it out 1" Scarlet Fever Reinedy. Wo published a year or two ago a' simple remedy for scarlet fever, being no other than the rubbing the patient thoroughly withy& bacon, We have since at different times 'received assurances from parties, whom tho notice led to make a trial of it. of the ! entire success of the experiment. Other ; are just now sending us testimonials. or r i ...'il 3 mm