TERMS OF PUBLICATION Tho MRLI3I,B ITrinaim is published weekly on alerge shoot containing twenty four column and furnished to subscribers at $1,50 if paid strictly in advance, $1,75 I( paid within the year; or $2 in al Litases when pay. wont is delayed until after the explritlon of tha year. subserTtitlons fileelved fora MRS period than six =torahs and none discontinued until all the arrearages are paid, unless at thn option of the publisher. Papers sent to subscribers living out of Cumberland county Mast he paid for In advance. or ihe payment assumed by son.; responsible porson liv.ng le Outlaws land county. These term.: will be rigidly adhered to In nil cases, A I) V ;:it'l'LSi kr. :ICI'S : 4 , ; 1, • Ir_ .1 100 pot' .4,0 ms. 1111 25 materor each u1. , 0 , 10. , ut. 11,,,trm. All alverlAsemenls of 106. than tW ig IVO ii nos etuu•lklertul as a square. c ;;t , lrctt,tl AFTER =if Now she lies hero dead before you. Still and cold as any stone: Now the dro offal grief broods o'er you Desolate and all alone; Now that all of passion's past, It is well we meet at last. Daytime—hut von would not know It— And the surntner sun in bright An the visions of a pout— An.' she only diva last night ! Alt, it Iv a sorry jest, All these things :no for the best. Say you loved her, bored her truly, With the purest tidth of man, Saoilieing all thinus duly, 19=11 Yet she made yea—yes, T see— Just the 'hint, you ought to hi• ~••I nth and homer I !. 1= NM 0 h ••• ,its I N10 . t1.1 , ),.1/ 1212= MIME Tl.ugh p-rohanc•• 'For she hattlan.arch :ON kor Uuc wiloso.4lomo is doii n iu li.•ll Oh, but sho Zig NVOl,lll , lls r 311: Lrs"ii 11,1 ,hi• is .... ‘l,:. See, T pity I=l I:=1111 =I I= Hope, 1 qty. ; yoo meet her With 1!” Edeo Nein, MEE 111:h :•, ifilill Ple :tl;,rtut..l with pain Lilo is restless with elldeaVOr : t , ad with last., and sweet with pin But there is nu settled hliFs In this world for ouly this. For around us are the eurqes, And the tumult and the riot We are jostled In UM" heaines As we 'always Wero heft re. Only those surpnss the strife Who attain the higher life. Look up bravely. Say I chee'rett you, St audit% here beside this ems(' ; Say It was your love endeared you; Toll her of tuy wild remorse. Tell het, I•owsoe'er you will, Ruined; lost, I hve her still! Not for me is any morrow, CroWI, of lt.Ve nr crown of fame =9 =I I will glove] in the earth, Wasting toward a lower birth There is nothing makes me tromblo, Nothing that I fear to do. But so gently I dissemble, You would never think It true. "Pis no matter best be gay, Playing out a foolish play. Mork you? Is your heart on broken Was it nothin . ; t I,le•t Kith that Th I,Neti y.. 11 111, the re.t ? Nothl,4, that tiii her ”Iv No, I do 11 , 1 . . Mod, p, low in a world of commonplaces, Yhupty hoArts and shallow braille, Flaunting fools with painted faces, black desires and crimson status— 'Well enough as such things go. That sweet grief should tempt you so !Hope, I my, till you receive her; Hope, for see are only men; Tut her In the grave, and leave her Jimt your heart to keep till then. Sn—my bleming—for I knew Just how good rho seas to you! o,ir4cl.llnuoazo. THE BROTHERS One fine spring day in 1831, I was walk ing accompanied by a physician, in the gar dens belonging to the celebrated Lunatic Asy lum near Paris, conducted by Dr. 8.-. At the turn of an alley I suddenly found myself oloso to an old man, on whose arm loaned a youth, apparently about twenty years of ago. The countenance of the first wore an ex pression of profound sadness, while the young man's. eye gleamed with the wild strange fire of madness. The aged man saluted me with silent cour• tesy, but the younger ran to me, seized my hand, and exclaimed, " A glorious day, mon sieur; the scaffold is ready on the Plaza Bemposta I Do you see the crowds assem sombled I And look I chained on yonder cart, that woman with the pale and savage face ;- that is Queen Carlotta, the wife of Juan VI., the mother of Don Miguel. 'Tie now thy turn to die, tigress! thy turn to hovi beneath the ax, anti redden the scaffold with thy blood! But adieu," he added, address ing me, "they aro waiting for me—they call me! lam the queen's ,execulioner l" I turned toward the old man, but ho only shook his head and sighed ; then I questioned the physician who acoompanied me. "That young man," he said, is one of the mostinteresting oases wo have; his history is a strange ono." My curiosity♦-cos now excited, and I begged of my companion to sati s fy " Roy 1, wit hout indisorei ion, lislen niso?" asked a tall man, wtt!tll and unit gloomy coqnteuttitt, wig nttw tti•pronched Its., and who, as I learned tatt•rwarl, was hntlur oaro fur a serious iitfo.limt bl the head. " You may, certainly," replied roy.friend, bowing, and then began: "' , ln the year 1823, one of the first families in Portugal inhabited an old castle not far from Coimbra. Tho Marquis do San payo, tho head of this houso had plated au important part in. the rovolu. --;;-- i - • it v p 11 • . . v Ti4A,) I‘ . .. • .. ~.. • lion which, for a short time, removed from the throne Juan VI., and his imperious queen Carlotta. The attempt, however, having been finally frustrated, the loon who had made it, fell victims to their temerity, and the mar quis, disgraced rind distrusted by the reigning powers, was forced to live in his castle, 'via were an exile. Ills wife and his two sons ac companied him thither; the el,k-t. of these, named. Malmo', woo fifteen years of age, and of an ardent, excitable temperament t hi, brother, daeinto, two years younger, was at a tender, melonell‘dy, dreamy disposition.— The minds of both were folly nurtured in the political views winch had ruined their fath er's lie 6io CON Vt•l'S:lliktft and the in , truettens imparted to 11,0 at, the col lege ni'CoinilTa. Thal oily 1.1 heroine the centre (,r Clllloq . re.VohlHrin t ry ,py ra tior i ,, and the Univeraity had not escaped the coma gions exciter.lent of the woes The students organized the plan of a new insurrection, and at their It-a I wa. Matlock the coolest, how ever, proved an unequal 0!1.0.—A Charge Or cavalry; n tew volleys of shot and shell, two bundled corps's on the 11,;d, awl all was. over. Manool Ny I , 1,10•11, 3111 1100 111 , 1 , 6 4 - ~1 1 Th.jl , l I'llo • t. 11'1.1 L,t Wol.` i,.•~ , ! :• 1.! y and in. )J! , W 1)11 /) , ICt .11 . 111 , , lo , 1111 , •1' 11111 , 111,, fiat in 11V , ' •111 111:1.:It'10.1• !- . 111 . 2'.!1 1W ,11 . 11:4 II; CU( IgLvo eno.l t., h wiffi nrt 'tom iint d,,st i li,tl )Vain! 11111 (111' sun of the Alar,ris do Son Payo, anal I come 10 ask panhollor my broth- "The Dulse , l'Arfnas Inol;ed a p, nll , l cs chatl2:,l with Ilse ' fli4l he, the heqt elerneney in pohiieal nt tait....4 ,hown by the swum or the execution or:" Manoel is hut sixteen yctrs old!' cried JaCin to, in a voice of agony. "'So much the better,' replied Carlotta; he will go the more surely and speedily to hear en ." "Next morning the condemned cart left the prison of Oporto; it cowl - Lined the two brothers, for Donna. Corloillt, Wit It an incred ible refinement of cruelty, ha I ordered that Should be pre•ent at the execution.-- sictil 11.4 t try to dc-i , o fl -t -coop of i• 11,0, ill IJ. t lip : h• e, - strttek oh 1111 coneeoled among; the crowd, the marquis had witnessed till, but no external emotion .betrayed his inward ag ony ; hie tearless eyes were fixed on the ax which had hewn down the noblest branch of his house. As to the marchioness, her woo was also silent: eight days afterward, she was found dead, with her eyes fixed on Man ners pm trait. 'the marquis, after. IL time, went to England with .(',:Pats, where he wa s duritt : !, it p• It WI I •I melee we heal teem mem, 1 ,t •I. ! • tt • t.tvae.l, ';.•, . •,!, :,.• II C 4 , 1 , 1 . 1 .11 v• ,'" leog:li re sQlved to 1 , 1 icr his son under the care of Dr. IS-; he is now in a fair way to recover." Are you sure of that ?" asked the stran ger eagerly. "I have every reason to believe it." We walked toward the house, and again saw .facinto; he was seated on . a grass pint, leaning forward. with his fare hurled in his hands. Ins father was near him, grave, si lent., and MIX iOuslooking no before. The stronger followed us, and. as he came near, the eyes of Jacinto were raised, and fixed on him with a wild bright look. Stu' lenly the youth started tip, and shriked, "the, Duke d'Areuns!" Then he fell senseless on the ground. At the unwonted sound the old man thought That Intellect and memory Ipul returned to his chill, and, tot getting that his enemy, the murderer of his eldest. sun.oo , hbvfore hint, he exclaimed, " .`-thank flod is saved !" " lle is Ill,'' said the doctor, sadly. A fpw moment , : of awful silence followed ; all eyes were fixed on ,iseinto, wlmso mouth was open, whose eyes were fixed on va cancy. The sudden shock had rendered him a hopeless idiot. The Duke d'Arenas looked at the marquis with an earnest supplicating expression ; and then, falling en his knees before him, ex claimed, " Pardon me, I have suffered!" "1 curse thee! Duke d'Arenas." " Behold me at thy feel, Marquis do an Pay o Begone!" cried the old man,eernly; " there are between us the corpses of my wife end of my eldest eon, besides this other ruin, whose destruction you have just achived; I am now childless?" .The Duke d'Arenas fixed on the marquis a look so filled with sorrow and despair, that it might have sufficed to satisfy his vengeance• " And I," he said, bending his hand, " oan never again hnoW repose, except in the grave!" Lunionous.—Tho following curious &ring or puns is taken from a rare work published in the reign of James I. A divine, more will ing to play with words than to be serious in expounding his text, spoke thus in his ser, mon: " This dial shows that wo must (HO all ; yet, notwithstanding, all houses are turned inl t 11 . 112111111 .1 014 11111 . (111.1'114 are turned into eat ,21.1 lII' I 11',‘!11 4 13 illlll 11 11)111' (1 ' Wee ; mat rimony minor o ; Way. 111:A111111 , It 111 ;%1101. tiny %ions; it tit) the days vi LOUISVILLE JOURNALISMS, - - In the Charles ton Convention Gen. B. P. Butler voted for Jeff. Davis thirty odd times for the Presiden cy. Au t now Gen. B. is to he hung if Jeff can, catch him. We are not. sure that he docsu't deserve. it. OL. (13 A. K. RHEENI, Editor & Proprietor • ti wa, al 1 . tho r 1,1 1.1111 iii II il' 1 . ~, iL `\111•'11 Mr CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY; lANUARI: 30, BE SYSTEMATIC It will add more to your convenience and comfort through life than von can imagine. It saves money. Fora while it may be a-little troublesome, but you will soon find it easier to do right than wrong—that it is easier to act by rule than without one By systematic in everything; let it extend In the very minutest trifles; it is sot beneath you. 15111111,1 d, could not go to sleep at. night, if, after ret he remembered dint his gloves and riding whip were not in their usual place, where where he could lay his hand on them in the tlark in any emergency ; anti such are the men who leave their twirl, I ,r good on the world's hislory. It woo by has S.stetbßtki battik I'l'olll youth is tip` that. Noah Webster iv.ts able to learn the world hi: , great diction ary. "Method was the presiding spirit of his life, ' Writes the biographer. Syst calm ie num are the only reliable men ; (hey aro the Ilion who comply with their en gagements. They are minute men. The man of system is soon known to do all that he en gages, to do it well, and to do it at the line ; cowequently he has his hands full. Wlteu 1 Wtlllt fley ' llleelllllllCal job done I go to the mot tiltmn I way.: find busy, and Ido h :111t1 I t , 111)• 1,1 tre , Irucl, y ,, nr children to be sys tenpon•. Ilogiu with your , laughters al live y—tr , ; give ihrut a dr.iwt.•r or two for tke it a 1.01111 to go to that dcawcr an • 1,1 ttrl 'tele 11-01,crly nrranw; I, ~ Z IVC` 11114 ra'.o.m.l 11 , 111.'16i inn; if arrangel 11',:11, pi% e tion3lQ pr.tiSo /1111 CliColll'- `111e11:. r 1.1,kt Chil , llC7l :I , IVO I 113 ;z.• tip titort• to rclUin a !Lune ih in to rrLlso As nrn W-111 :tcli• a Nsl&li th tt iii,:roa-e I'4 • oiL,I I heetmw.iit paient, :11),1 %OM ME IBIEMMII MIMI ,lutior, nwl I-1 Vl•proach to the mother wlio h,11'1:1101' l'Iltill:,11(IN AM, L'ItACTICI.: —Two hinds oP Witllo , -CS :Ire °Hen talcountere•l iu courts ut Ju-lice; the unwilling - witness, and the too 'witness. Here is one who doesn't. seem to come under either category; Tile prosecuting attorney thus addressed hint : ,• Mr Parks, stale, if you please, whether the defendant, to your knowledge, has ever followed any profession." •• Ile has been a professor ever since I have known him." " Ah ! a professor of what ."' "A professor of religion." "You don't un.lerstand rue, Mr• Parks.— ] !.1 ' • • 11 ell general!) , what he plesses I 'lto jury, \hr l'ark•+, what the defeil- • t ; tdtc...-11 of clip . ittry, th e Ittittn•latit ; 1.o• t o wli n tlicy go to drink." Mr. rat kind of prev.trteation will not do here: Now, state, sir, how the defentd dant supports himself." '• 1 saw him last night supporting himself against a lamp post." •' May it please your Honor this witness shows an evident disposition to Iliac with this honornhle court." "The court ---"Mr. Parks, state, if you lt , tow , Irty Ihinv aliont it, wirtt thedefendant's I The I‘l/1:1'1, 10.1 tlr• 5:11y, has no : 1:11:111 ,1,.1 y it " 1 , , crt.,l the jo , lge, les, echoed tho counsel, What is his Cc rust inn ? " If I am not mistaken, lie occupies a gar ret somewhere in town." " That's all, Mr, Parlo. - I understand you to say that the defendant is a professor of re ligion?" lle "Does his practice correspond with profes sion? " I never heard of any corrospoodence, or lei ler: , of any kind " " lon said something about his propensity for drinking. Does ho&lrink hard?" "No sir! I think ho drinks as easy as any I over saw." •• One more question, Mr. Parks—you have known t , lefendant a long Limo. Whet are his habits—loose or otherwise?" "The one he has got on - now, I think, is rather tight under the arms—it is certainly too short—wakierl for the fashion." You enn take your seat, Mr. Parks." Grammatical Advice. When man and wife nt odds fall out, Let Syntax be you tutor "lrnixt masculine and feminine, NVltat should one be but neuter I Dr.eincriLy Coot. —An Arkansas volunteer in the Mexican war, riding on horseback, came across an Illinoisian told him where ho was wounded, and asked to be taken up and conveyed out of danger. Arkansas placed him"tiOlita his saddle, and fastened him to himself with a leather strap. While they were hastening from danger, a grape shot took Illinois' head off but Arkansas thought he had only fainted from fatigue and pain. When a safe place was arrived at., the horseman re• leased his charge, and seeing his head was gone, exclaimed, `• Well, these Illinoisians are the greatest liars. Ilere's a rascal with his head cut off, when ho told me ho was only shot in the leg. You can't believe a word those fellows say!" CAELRYINO A JOKE TOO FAR.-A follow etolo a saw, and on Li ial told the ,judgo that he only took it in a joke • •• How far did you carry it?' asked the \v, mile ‘,"ai la; wore2l 11.0 pai,hstwy. iii;; jol,o to., fit,'' re in nl.cal 11,v ain,l file prLiulier 1363 , ....Gen. Him!Mau, who, under the false assumption of authority from a superior offi cer, compelled an Arkansas bank to give him a million of dollars, forbids' his troops to plunder on penalty of -death. Tho seouudrol wants to do all the pluuderiug.himelf. rael ie3l,le, let :,-our 11 . 111 c it. I) !I, 'llOl bent 111:11. .21,011 111 11. 11 = =MEI LITTLE JANE "Can you love mn , Hale Jane?" Straight her blue oyes opened wide, Wondering I should ha so vain— " Oh, Sir, no, sir!" she replied. " Shall I leare you, then 2" t -Raid— " Shall I go unto the Will 2" Low silo bowed her modeFt head— •• Oh, sir, no, sir ! not Fo far." "Simi) I marry Mary Priv° Bhe with hair and oyes so bright ! Fair, affectionato, 4714 nice•" "Oh, sir, no, Mr! not th.rt fright r' " there's Eleanor Men row— . Large of iter,on --la 1.4 e td I,nrn— Do yun think that she will do !" oh, sir, 1111, wir I worse and woriai "Then rhoo,e for me—end the strilb Say what lady you prefer I strut take to be my wire " Oh, sir, no, six never, sir!" “ Stint I go, my littlo 1 3110 2 .0 ,. . 161100 3/,1 t.ty 1111. 11:1y IN'o‘or no” to von. , ?" sit, n“, you may stay. A Word about Dross Ono of the gravest. mi , takes in our dress is the very thin covering of our /Irlll9 and logs. No rhy,;(iologist can ilouht that, the extremi ties require as much covering as the liody. A fruitful source it disease: of congestion in the head, chest, ,ttiti alAloien, is ft und in the nakedness if the arms and leg., which pre. vent a lair dis:iiluition of the A yuung 1111.1 whnt she Call 110 for her All` is o,lotine,iuf thew. I le:; Lsi them thrun g h Lhe thin I.aca govvvilg, ott 1 foun.l them !1.:L.7.111g CCill. I L Ite I I t aI, ht ,he ourp,o4vdl woul , l woke uutecies gi ow. ei , ,, - rortainly, Lat vxorci-o 1:10111 grow only giving them np, I e leoritho rvorcho• .11.1 t•l\',•- • t,.• I, co! I o- ,• . r-o!1:t 1:: I E II it Cur .vrsant, gr; constant Rll.l VigorollA :to , purc large fine arm+, in spite of their thikelltlH. Awl if young ladies will labor as hard from morn ing till night, as do these tiqtni clas:•es. they may have as fine but even then it is ,I,mhttuti if they would get rid of their conges lions in the head lungs, and stomach, IN iLIIOUL =I more dress upon the arms and legs. Perfect, health depends upou perfect circu lation. Every living thing that has the latter, has the former. Put your hand under your dress .r.pos . your body. Now dolt your hand upon your arm. If you find the body is warm er than the arm, you have lost the equilibrium of circulation. The head has too touch blood, producing headache or sense or fullness; or he chest has 100 much blood producing cough, raziAtrrtt ug,_p :tin in !lie .',l,lo,_outalountion of Iho 11: , too ❑otTi pr—lo ih,H••• : )o‘ pith' I 'MVO , • 1 i•o/14111 , I1,11 Ul . di,,rrit,‘ a An, , Iwse difficult ies are tempin ardy t e,,, , ve,1 by 1111111er 811)ll Ut the feet, ur hands in but ',yawl., mid they are permanently relieved by such dress and exercise of the extremities as will make the derivation permanent. Again I say the extermities require as much clothing as the body. Women should dress their arms and legs with une or two thick nesses of knit woolen garmem.-.,\llieh 61 them. Thealemrdiiy lomm t 1 us- , Itt ide , I,re 1.1 b 1 . lb, yeti rt , t, rule l b • • bee,me• m•mi--Mme I m •,.-•tt • Ime (he Mee I answer, likel Iws prov.blt•l the lace wall an immense circulation, becau,e it must be ex posed. A distinguished physician of Paris declared, just before his death. "I believe, that during the twenty-six years I have practised my pro fession in this city, twenty' thousand children have been borne to the cemeteries, sacrifices to the absurd custom of naked arms." When in Harvard many years ago, I heard the dis tinguisho Dr. J. C. Warren say, " Boston sacrifices five hundred babies every year, by not clothing their arms." Those little arms should have thick. knit, woolen,.warm sleeves extending from the shoulder to the hand.— Diu Lewis, M. D. I=l THU RULING PASSION.—On One of the north ern railroads, there is a conductor •maned S —, a very clever, sociable, gentlemanly man, a great favorite with the company be is connected with, and the travelling public in general—fond of a joke, quick at repartee, and faithful in the discharge of his.duties.— During the past year, as his train, well tilled with passengers, waa crossing a bridge over a wide stream some seven or eight feet deep, the bridge broke down, precipitating the two patisenger carriages into the stream. As the passengers emerged from the wreck, they were,liorne away by the force of the current. Our eriend S— bad succeeded in catching hold of some bushes that grow near the stream, to which ho hold for dear life. A passenger, less fortunate, came rushing by. 8— ex tended one hand, saying; r " Your ticket, sir; give me your ticket." You can imagine the effect of such a dry joke, in the midst of the water. Ttae AND CURE.—A good•looking fellow was charged with having stolen a watch. It was his first offence, and ho was ready to plead guity. The magistrate asked him what had induced hint to commit the theft. The The young man replied that, "having been ill for somo limo, the doctor advised him to take something. which he accordingly did." Tho-mngistrato was rather pleased with the humor of the thing. and asked what had led him to select a watch. " Why," said the prisoner, " 1 thought if I only had the time, that, Nature would work a cure." L...7.? - Tlio U.:. mall or war li:toe:Letts is to nt Porl:,ntozith, N: - Iwpo tiw :..;:atey Cuss will have a proia..r otui eau eor. . . • 1•1 1 .: „The leh rp'S Virginia !int J• mite Treasury. Probably ho will try his hand at bleeding an Egyptian mummy. • Snr.v lquinnu.—lf a luau is murdered by Lis hired ratan, shoal,' the enruuer. relyler a verdict , er killed by hi own' hauqu ?" 1 tt TERMS :--$1,50 in Advance, or $2 within the y cal Ike Partington is well advanced in his class. Ile is in some things, butted the teacher's art, and could, in fact, give that functionary some lessons in arts wherein he is perfect. Ikedislikes "composition," where a theme is given out to be written upon by scholars, and his credits are not very great for his efforts in that direction generally, but the other day he astendthed the master and every one in school by an elaborate article on the horse. Ile was called upon to rend it aloud to the schol•tns, and upon getting upon the ph at forts, Ire made a bow arid began:— " Tire horse is a quadruped, with four legs, two behind and two before.-- lie has a tail that groWs to the hind part of his body, that nature has furnished him with to drive the flies away. Ills head issitutated on the other end, opposite his tail, and is used principally to fasten a bridle to him by, and to put into a basket to eat oats with.— Horses are very useful animals, and people couldn't get along very well without, them, especially truckmen and omnibus drivers, who don't some to he halt grateful enottf!i be cau=t• they've got I hem. They are very convenient anim ds in the country, in vaca f itgrrt is ,•, ari d g o very fast over the country roads, when the !toys stick pins in them—a speri.t- of conelty that I would not encourage. Horses are generally covered with red hair, though some, are white, others are gray and black. Nobody over saw a blue horse; which is considered very strange by emillent natmr ali,os. The horse is a quiet and intelligent animal ; an 1 can sleep standing np, which. is a very convenient, gift, especially where there is it crowd, and it is dillieult to get a chance to lay. There is a great variety of horses—fast horses and slow horses, clothes horses, horse mackerel, saw horses, horse tiles, horse chest nut, and horse radio-h. The clothes horse. is a very quiet animal to have around the house, and is never known to kick, though very apt to make a row when it gets capsized. The same m id Le wit l or a liirlr 11! '''t`l.l ! ` P .V i• MEI it Ltu oonntrip , , principally in livery -rabic,, who: they fluty he hire.' by the utile, atbl are con t,ilere I a great Inviry, esreially in t.,tleigh ing tteq:tou. In ~oath America they vow, wild, aria the hilt:lna catch them with nootto that they throw over the horses' heads, which must be thought by the horses a great uoo• senste.--,--Th,vtort fret A NEW KIND or Poor.—A. citizen walking up the street the other day, trod upon the flowing skirt of a lady's dress. The skirts were distended by the most lavish circumference of crinoline, and trailed upon the sidewalks at least fltur inithes. The drapery was s 9 volumin on4 :it ari:` - ran'. th:tt - 11 - 17; -- wrarm—lm f. t tli,t, t ;t her Ilu,Latt(l 1V:19111 I , \V The iti zru tit 1111 , 01 . the I:irt, bringing her to a stand still. The citizen apolo gized in the most humble manner, and the lady granted it. To his surprise, as the lady passed on, the husband turning short about, said to the citizen. "You're a feel "I," said the indignant and ast,mislied citizen, AVith all eye dial I'•_ i'lnn! , a rpsc:lL to the in,ult. n()11,1 :..rc -0:01;117:111. \\ . lo-1 I I moan you'ro loo! for .!:•. , iozi:o to a woman who Nrettr:i trail you accidentally tread upon (limn. That lady, sir, is my wife, I have to get my boots blackened four times a day to walk with her, for fear of soiling her flounces. The next time you tread upon them pray don't apologize for it. If you,liad torn the whole trail oil' the dregs, 1 should have been pleased rather than otherwise. FOUND MS CROWD.- - 7A young; man, clad in homespun, was standing in Third street a few days since, devouring a doughnut, when he was accosted by one of a half-dozen genteely-dressed with— " Just come down ?" " Yes, guess I have ; great place this, ain't it, you ?'' said the countryman. "Tis so; hcw's your warm ?",asked the city buck, bent on sport witli the grecny. Well, she's pretty well. •She sent me down hear on business." "She did! What kind of business arc you on?" "Why, she wanted me to come down. to town and look around, and find half-a dozen of the biggest foles to edicato 'cm, and I rather guess I've got my eye on 'em now," said the stranger, taking in the whole crowd at a glance. The next moment ho had the curbstone to, himself, where he quietly finished his -doughnut. RHAPSODY.—A poet in a recent poem speaks of au embrace as— One kiss—whose stolen svreetnens all language out. strips ; 'Twits the wild world of love In ono contact of lips ; 'Twas a whole wadded life, with its joy and Its roof, In one clasp of the arms, In one pant of the breast; Twits ocean, the mighty, with wide leagues of foam on't, In a cup: 'twee eternity crushed to a moment Wij,„Some years ago, ono' of the guards : of a Liverpool coach, seeing a steam engine clove somewhat. slowly along the railroad, ,• 1 110 .111 the :;16!;or. " I say. Jew. Irliftt.'H Ihp ;14, , .0 . your t•immoritift. :It that. 'cru jor - Oil 1,11 ilrr llp 1,0 I= V:_ ;:j": 4 11' I Wilt 111;I).; you feet flit) areuvilLul: rosentment. Alt, llisv, NC• Ly should fear your nrrows whoa you Dever had it bow (beau.) , , • ' \lrani' do sailors do with tho hoota that 11+0 41,akc.4 : 4A a day. 110. 'I THE HORSE =I The Highwaymen Worsted. I've been rifled In Mexico, robbed by banditti." "Poor Caleb I your case I meat heartily pity." " YON; they stale all my coats, and my manuscript leaves." "Thee, Caleb, I pity not yoe but the thieves!" Ho MECONVEIISATTON.—ChiIdren hun ger perpetually after new ideas, and the most pleasant way of reception is by the nu , ? oar. •u , l not the cyc and the ,I#o IIIW 11114.1 e is natural, } „, i. , .) would not rather li• uncrequcnt ix J t j:. n-port of' . . ut ort%an 1 Own 0 and pay our money to heAr tic. ,inc vords uttered. An audience will listen closely from the beginnining to the end of an address, .which not one in twenty of those present would read with the same attention.— This is emphatically true of children. They will learn with pleasure from the lips of parents what they deem as drudg ery to study in the book ; and even if they have the misfortune to he deprived of the educational lulvantages which they have the desire, they cannot fail to grow intelligent, if they enjoy in childhood and youth the privilege of listening daily to the conversation of intelligent people. Let parents, then, talk mull and talk well at home. A father who is habitually silent in his own house, may be, in many respeets, a wise man, but he is not wise i n hi s silence. \\'e sometimes see parents, who are the lifb of every company which they enter, dull, silent, uninteresting at ho m e a n umg their children.; I they have no mental activity and mental stores sullt6ient, 'for both, let them provide for their own household. It is better to instruct children and make them happy at home, than it is to charm strangers or amuse friends. A silent house is a dull plane fir young people—a place from which they will escape if they can. They will talk or think of being 'shut up' there; and the.youth who does not love home is in danger. Make home, then, a cheerful and pleasant spot. Light it up with cheer , ful, instructive conversation. Father, mother, talk your best at Ironic. " ALL Wit° !"—A Jew, in a tavern itt the town of Endingen, saw a merchant whom lie seemeil to recognize. " Are .01 one of the goo,l non with whom I 14oa-ire to tr.tc l from Basal to - inim merchant • ' • 11 , 7, ntt rellOW • " .I•tich trade?" k 1.1'..p,,e to het with dent, t.11';1 1 , , I I)Ct that you cannot repeat th reit word , : after me as I_ say them." The merchant thinking that a few pence more or, less, would make no differ ence to him replied ; "Say on." The Jew said : " Cutler," the merchant replied : " Cutler." Next " Bagpipe;" the bag pipe. was responded to. .The Jew smiled, and said, "Wrong," The merchant, puzzled, bethought him self where the mistake could be; but the Jew, taking a piece of chalk out of his pocket, made a stroke, and said : " One, sixpence for me." Again the Jew com menced and said; " Olive Oil. " The Jew "" Tanner:" - Thii Jew, dissem bling, smiled :main, and said: "Wrong." And so um to the sixth time, when the merchant sail; 4:Nui‘ I will pay you if you can show inc how I. was wrung." The Jew . said: 44 N . uu never repeated the third word "wrung" and accordingly I won the bet." The merchant paid, and the Jew made money as he went along. Tin; PEA tTi FUL.—Beautiful things minor and a li;gher • • I , 1 ;iii, l l fi, c and 10y will 114 , 1 to maintain you.; anti :.ecuro for you con,ideratiun ddiracy of LuLa vior. yi?lit tt Wire Citti.nuF.:l have seen persons gather for their parlors the choicest flowers, just as they begin to open into full bloom and fragrance, lest some passer-by should tear them friini the bush and destroy them. Hoes not God sometimes gather young and innocent children into heaven for the same reason —lest some rude hand should despoil them of their beauty. no_The man who makes a joke without intending it frequently amuses us more than the most ingenious of professional jokers—as when the milkman in a play is charged with cutting calves brains in his milk; he answered:—Brains! I never had such a thing in my head !" It vias the same sort of a case when the juryman having asked the judge to excuse him from serving on account of deafness, the latter said; "Couldn't you hear my charge to the grand jury?" Yes, I beard it, but I couldn't make any sense of it." Da. THE FEW CONTRABANDS in Washington, not enfeebled by disease, "watched" the Old Year out, and when it had departed, an ex pounder of the faith, known among them as k , ti. John, the Baptist, preached a sermon from . a text in the " twentieth ohaptbr of Rvulations.'' BLACK EYE .=The Spaniards do not pay hyperbolical compliments ; but one of thoir admired writers, speaking of a lady's black eyes, says, " they were in mourning for the murders they had committed." tkS„Wbenever you find a groat deal of gratitude in a poor man, you may takolt for; granted there would be as much generosity if he wore a rich niati. linniptiroy Martihall wero presorvod in a liwz,nlieNd of ,wifi:diciy, and so follow wiiro to hip the hag:Ate:l,d and take a drink ho woubl prolniblx lAEA file liquor had in it. jario.4 The sun is nit very well" 'said au Irishman, " but it is my opinion that the moon is worth two of it, for Um moon affords us light in the n%ht time, we really waut asked: :.; Ow fair? - \ • of