RAI ES,O F---A DI/11171Si N Ono Square. ono Insertion, ' Bor,iaoh additional insertion, ' ' For a A dcantilo AdvoalHinttnts, - -- Lagql - Nottcosi • Pr.feenlonal ca.tdx without paper, Obltuory Notice, nud Otnimunio - . tions ,elatlng to matte's or pa ' 'Vito( aturoAs alonolo contx pqr. • JOB PRINTING.—Oui•Job ,Prlotlng Office le the neatest and most e °ambito ustabilehment In the noun. y. Four good Preases;and is general variety If .usterlaleultedreiplalu andPaney workolevery kind, aunties as to do Jub.erlutlng at the shortest ann.:o k and ou the most reasonable terms. Persons lii—Joankii, or anything litthelobbipit oa.t. IViit Lind It to their interest to give us a call. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. jOS'A Pll RITN Jr.; Attorney at Law and Surveyor, kleebatiesburg, Pa. (Racoon tall Rood Street, two dooreftfotth'Of tho Bank. aLlL.Puelnese promptly attended to. • . July 1, 1901. • • Jt. R. MILLER Attorney at Law. Office In Efininon'° bending haimodintely oI osito the Gond 29tiov 67-Iy. , • iet-0 . HERMAN, Attorney at Law,• earThlo, Po., No. 9 Bloom's Nall. TOIIN C,ORNMAN,, Attorney at 11 Law 0111ce bulldlug--attached. House, opposite the Court House. lbmtty 6847. V E. BELTZHOOV ER, Attorney • ftt. lato , O ffi ce ill South tlanovor strdet, oitu:.. : • Bonts's dry good otoro Carlisle, Pa. Soptomber 0, 1804. T.A BS. A. DUNBAR, Attorney at Law, Carlisle, Pa. 041 co In No. 7, Itheam'e llall July 1, 1864-13, WJ. SHEARER, Attorney at • LIANY, (Moo, North East Corner of the Court Home. 12feb 69-Iy. J. M. WICA.B.I.T WE/ILKLEY & SADLER. A TTORNEYS AT LAW, .offioe LA_ No. 16 Booth llonover 6troo t. Carlisle Pa. n0v16.67. •. r. nunirtum HUNERICH & PARKER. A TTORNEYS A'r LAW. Office on Ll_ Main 9t., In Itlatlon Hall, Carlisle, Pa. NTT ILLT A NI K NNNEDY, Attorney Y nt• I rtn No ,7 Enotk Market Elquare, Car- Prlinn. Arrll 19. lon7 I'l R. J B EINI D looln otl,fr 611,telau 016, In the erly 0,111)1,1 by Col. John Lae 16.1rtn 69-Iy.' CIMORG 1 - 41 S. SEA ,L./111011T, Dentist, from the Sal timore Collage of Dental Surgery. trity.i)fdie nt tlie residence of htit mother; Phmt L'''OnAtt'ciistresi, three doors below Bedford. iuly 1.1804. fl 'NO. W. ?MINCH', D. D. S.— 31 - Lato Demonstya tor of OpArettro Den tint ryof the 4'..,ciwr r 13falt!tuor , College al 117 ilifir.,, '' l' i:or 2 ' :: ,". a5 .). ; , •41- •61,0,,1t0l Muntm Hall, - Was: Xa: /1 Nt,r,lit,Ctl- demo linlo, I• =TEO FL. SU ItYO E'!K„IIT*FIC 01 a . Tni, IT ACI: , No. 3,11;1120 . 4 7 mt) ly. 10 11 N 1)U 11 N-I'llt AIF,FICEIA:NT TAILOR In KrAmor's ItulldinK. ntar Ithoom'e Pa., ha , just returodl from the ltastery, fillies 0011 ho largest and moot UOMPLTSTE issoRTNIEisIT OF FALL . /SD -IVINTER-GOODS, •nd•ttn( •f °lotto, Cato:lsaro§, Pestings, • Gents' Purnis►lne Goods, so., bvtr Maght b t7hrlide. ail alpine nonsprize ONG ;XIS, 97.2111iiin, tied AYRtICItr Rail( litlikintl lilt of Yf etn•Ol tortnr• eat of all minden P ' , leer bolo/ kl =milt • practical outPor of lang •nporlootio le praparerl warra•l parfeot ate, ant prompt limn, of ordnin.. Pine 090‘11 ay thogard, •r out to ofilor. . Don't forgot Qt. , pine.. llOt-tf. FRESH. ARRIVA.L Of &Wilt( 9111 Nprinifflyies'of ' HATS' AND CAPS. Sulsseribor has Junt openrl, at Ne. 15 North fiario••r St., a few doors North of the Carllslo Deponft Bank, ciao of the laraest sad best stock •1 lIATS A CAPS "Sr of In Carlisle. Silk • Hate, Cantu:was of *II styles and ocalltlen, Stir Brion different colors. and ovary description of Soft Plats now made. The Dankard and old fashioned on hand and rondo to order. -ranted tciOie instisfactlo•. - 1 filltAnnoyrmirtrt i. RATS. Men's bey'a and chlldre• i li fancy. ided to ray ntOck, Notion!! of different • of Ladles and Gent's Stockings eves, Ti read, Soviing Silks, Sup Prlrao Sews and TObsceo, , e- , 1112 Housekeepem . OftleOß,-&0.- . 4Ab VAUNT WTI , j ustible Window Scree'n, WILL PIT ANY WINI/019, 0146 Tentihition 11d light, 'Berm from view sad exelnee , Flies; , ifesquities; and other • Inerete THE ADJIMTIBLII WINDOW BORDEN COMPANY I == Sss !larked Streit, Philadelphia. ler wade' Dealer' h House Tairnlohlui said, Mune ths • • B GENTSIPANTED FOR PROF.. ' PARSON% Livre of DOlam: With fall, Di- L toot owl angli Tom* for all Itroarladloas In ivory *Ado by To ll oMbill ?anon% L. L. D. Protein! 'of Nor_vara ,A Na l, Coot 111,1 C Exlitv otory'llad of nitrite, Anil ;") an • ehitgitlan... owl go lino to dhow mill *DI 1-, Ade these. - Talbairkest sod losit'aatiorlty In oh. ,• laj; AM Armor WOoratlerso; airofor ger 14A7eeeki.. pmts sera. PA a co., pRt .Pa. • in boiaby ". ivotteo divan • - •44Xt Wink .0 11 tr,lto I .4 . "1" ' T ro,l..Erirri of 4 rF. ::./ rluY xll4 Uri nr. , . uE tlll.l ;;;;.6.4,sot,thr (1 1 P,0 3.4 44 • • • ME " C s ' ) 26.00 1 00 7 00 YOL69 ' GROWING , OLD. One by one they are passing away— Tito old of.our town—to (hair final rest! With reroroine Otebion the pillow of clay, And pilo up tbo owth oa thoiolot brood. . That pillow iv aft. to 66' time worn head, Thai load is light to the eged dead. They have borne thoir bUrdan of joy and maim, - - Thoy have hod tbotr portion ofhopeo and fears; They have wrought out their work, they have gained their gainer, They have - smiled their• smiles, they hove wept - their tears— • It Is over nowt — The record close, And leave them there to thole long ropoao, !NM! • They more childrowdf earth, as They strove with temptation, they yielded and foil, And anon they conquered as Nye still do; Their history.in klint oats ohill be— • ppank of than, think of them, tenderly. But few remain; and whoa they are gone We shall 1111. the place 4 which they now hold; Our heads sill be frosted; our bosoms be lone - Even our hea, is will - grow tam and cold ; • And the faltering stnp,,and falling brealh Will remind us, too; of arpt osehing,desth Rivalry, coldness, worldliness, pride— Why liould wo yield to their baleful thrall? Let ue clasp halide closer as downward waglide Into the shadow: that wain for u 4 all; For Anon we Altail ho among tho . old, • de the daps of yea,e will:000n be told =TM= PRESIDENT, LINOOLN,n IVM, E. PAILISPIII During the summer of the most-dis astrous and doubtful year of the late A.mericau war, the 301onel of a New Hampshire regiment lay for some weeks t xitretnely ill of camp fever, par Hampton _Howls, in Virginia. Hearing of his critical condition, his wife let' her Nert beim hirer, and. after, much , tiiitienhy mule her way to his ! bedside:• LLcr cheerful presence and careful nursing so car — restored him that he was in a shot time ready to be transferred to Washington In the Potomac river the•steatner in, which tho invalid officer, Colonel 6c tt, and - liiA . 'wifo had takHr passage • Was 13ftok, in 0 collision with a larger vessel in the Jlighl . ThcOrs‘V and near ly all ou hoard were rtsetb-1 or saved themselves ; - but amil the • horrible contuAm of th k ! seem: Colonel Scot r becalm , separated from hit wit', a m! ibe ti tisl t. Tim G.lonet tr;i's pi;:ked up m the waler by the crew .if lar;_toc. !ilea 11l Itr, and mud. r die lion every (Aria was made to Ms wife, oi—ratner her inletall hope of finding her alive iv 1• ,z,ptti atimuluned. 'flit , sad seareli finitles's ; it was resumed in the itlmm ing, the pcfople along the shore, tfit- Mane Confederates, lending their aid. But the gray,'Bullen river refused to - give up its - dead, and the young officer, half frantic with - grief, was compelled to :go on to Washington'. Within a week however, he received word from below that the body of the lady had been writhed on shore ; that those.good country people, generous foes, had se cured it, and were keeping it for him. It happened that just at that time imperative orders were issued from the War Department.prehibiting all inter course with the peuicaffia— 'necessary precaution against the' premature dis -olosure of important military plans. So it was with some misgivings that Col onel Scott applietto Secretary Stan ton for leave to return to Virginia, on h m clone:holy:arty • .. _).l.4pessible, Colonel," replied Mr. Stanton, firmly ; "no one can have leave to go clown the river at this time on any private mission what ever. Our present exigencies demand the most string Lent regulations; and 1 hope I need not say to you thqt no *merely personal considerations should be allowed to interfere with great na tional interests Your case is a sad one • but this is a critical, perilous, cruel time. "The dead must bury the dead." The Üblonel would have .entreated, but , the busy Secretary cut him short with another "impossible," from which there was absolutely no 'appeal. He went forth from his presence, and re turned to his hotel quite overwhelmed. Fortunately. he was visited by a friend, to whoa) he told the story of his . unsuceessi al application and sad "piir• pitixily, and who itnnac,diately ex claim:A "Why not apply to the Pres ident!" , 01 either, an T foal 00 tar you money. TC.ELtAIt, Art. th LlnnoYer St. 'RING} Er= hlte p Iq,n. ( It, . The Colonel bad but little hope, bu acknowledging that the plan was worth trying, drove-with his frN•nd to the White liouso: They were too late. It was Saturday evening, and Xl.r. Lincoln had gone to Spend Sun. day at the ,Soldiers' RCM, his summer retreat. This was only a„ few miles coin - town, and the Colonel's indomita-, ale 'friend proposed that they should followitim out, awl they went. There. was then a popular belief that all tidi wronged, the troubled, and suf fering could find a refuge iu .•If`atlier Abraliain's”.capacious bosom ; a belief that was not fiar out of the way Yet there were times u en overhurdc ned, wearied, tortured, lie patrilreh longed to clear that aryl tu of its-1011.)in in- . Juatea,to bolt and bar and double-luck -a againfiCithit=wer e rl .; wneic file became too hail and perplexing lot his genial, hone t nature : too serious and tritgic an rascally a thing by half. It, happened, unluckily, that the poor'Colonel and.his friend found, the President in one of his most despond ent and diegnsted moods. .He -wail in his- little 'private parlor,. alone . in the gloaMing.. He was lounging loosely in a largo rocking chair, japing over it in all directions. His elippered feet were eT.alted, his.'„rougli head was• 4hrown 'back, his "long throat Vare—ho' was in 'his shirt, sleeves: Yes, dear, fastidi ous English reader, it was genuine - Yiitikee . ivbandoii=make the most of it. He turned upon hip visitoie a look -of althea pavage inquiry:- There was, indeed; in his usual \pleasant 'oyes, a. wild, angry' gleam—a Something like the glare of a worried animal at hay. Colonel Scott proceaded7vety mod estly to tell ,his story ; but'tlhe Prasi dant intorrrupted him,- to say brusque-. ly, "Go to Stanton ; this is his busi, nese "I have been to him, illr. President, and,he will do nothing foi me." You have been to him, and got your answer, and still presinne to Coni to me I Am I to have no rest ? 'no pri va.l7 Must '1 be',.cloggfal to my' last fastness, and worried to - death:by inch ps 4 Mr.ltanton haa d 904 He: 'knows what' he is .about. 'Your demands are unreasonable, eh." ' But Mr:-Litteolti, I thought you Penh' feel , for Me." • . • " Feat for you I Good Goill I hate .tolcul for o.,llindreiiitlioupcind more • dry fhle and, Athena. .staatly en 4 . Paundry. I at an vices .b ar■e. A dee. Amain. attaided to In lECICO carliele,: Pa TEEING, ` unfortunate than you..No ar.o at war TAV ...ikon% yon,tyow wd ore at liar? Sorrow la . t•too ).ot , of 0 1 ; Gear Y° lll ' share liko a Inaii.an4 a ' 111 147 to i ltr.rviidout;but it DOOMS , . ~.••.. _._ . • - , . . .. , . . 4 . • ' - ' ' . • , . , • , . . --- ------- - . .. . , • . . . . , . •'. • • . ~,_ , . _ ... , . ''._ _ / _ :_______,_____,_ ._ __ „: - 2 - ;"'" •. ._ _ _ .__7;_._ . _:.___..... ' ~-._.-g_..._,.= ...., _ • ....... '-.;. . _.. ' . .. „ _ - ___,_,._._ '_ * _%• (...: (_•':',. l.l4 ‘•:::;•_'___,______ . ....1. _ - __Z:_' . ._ . ___' L____ _ __L__________,. ___': ____ - . -__-,-_-. ' . C .--- 7 77- ;: ------ ii - r --- i - 7 ------- '" ------.--- ' l---- ° A- - ---------.- -.- . g 4, '-].--. -- 1 ,-- . \--- , - ~-'-`---. 1, ---.' -.\ . ?A q c if '•.'') ''' . . . fw Pi • . i(.- , ' ••• Z . 01 1 ' -L•\ . • \ ,- (N 6) tilt " I,?_: . ` 1 .1 ~,. - ~. 1 .. , • • - I 1:" Porp . . 4 1... . j__ .. _ __. ._______L_L_ ___l_ ,_ .: A l - "''' . . ‘L " 1_ ' k___ ___.' .1 ,__ '..._ _. i ... -.. I, •_ .. 1 . . . . . , . i• - • . . . _ .. . . '. .1•-." . . . . . . . . .. . . .. _ .:, ~ _ • .:...._ . -- . ; -- .. -- iyi - F:frf • _ g .14 . :-.4 :,, . ~.„. ~:,,. - 1 - ,)',. ,) ~. .• remember them wall— i . +• brave and pltickygoing everyw..-... at the call of duty, facing. every dan ger! [ Cell . YOu, if it were not for the women, we should all go to the and should deserie to. They are the salvation of the nation. Now come, Colonel ; my carriage is at the door. I'll drive you to thd War Department and we'll see Stanton about this-mat- the Secretary at his post. The Presi-, dent pleaded the case of Colonel Scott,_ and not only requested that leayo of al;) sence should be given him, but-that a steamer should be sent ,down the rivet expressly to bring up the body of his wife. Humanity, Air. Stanton," aicithe good President, his homely face tranSfigured With the — glow earnest, tender feeling, " humanity should overrule considerationi of poli cy, and even military necessity, in matters like this." The Secretary was 'touched, and he,. said something of his rdgret at not having felt himself at liberty to grant Colonel Scott's request in' the first place. • "-No, no, Mr. Stanton," said the President; "you did right in adher ing to your own rules; you.:ure the r ght wan for this place. If we had such a• softhearted did fool as I here, there would be no rules or regulations that the army or the country could de pend upon. But this is a peculiar case. Only think of that poor wo man !" EEEEI Even at that early hour, they found Of course, the impossible was ao complished. To the surprise of the Colonel, the President insisted on driving him to the Navy lard,. to Ace that the Secre tary's order was carried out immediate ly ; seeming . to have, a nervous fear that some obstacle might be thinly') in the way of the pious expediition. He waited at the landing till all witS -ready, then charged the officers of the steamer to give every assistance and attention to his friend, Colonel Scott' WitliThim he shook hands Warmly at parting, saying . "God bless you, my dear fellow. noile you will have no more' trouble in this sad affair—and Colonel tryoto forget last night." Away up in a Now Hampshire church there is a certain grave care fully watched and tended by faithful love:. But every April time the vio lets on that mound speak not idone of the womanly sweetness and devotion of her, vim sleeps below—they are .en(lOr mid tearful with the memory of lie murdered Piesident:-L.From Dick- en's All the' year round NEAT THINct,IN JAIL BREAKING.-- , -; We halo) read in an Ohio paper orthe wonderful, exploits of a convict, who took a false set of teeth out of his mouth and contriied to saw a hole in the floor of his-chamber, throngh,which he then dropped and escaped froni the jail. Being captured and carried back, he secreted a pin, and vtith that in strtiment contrived to picit the luck of his dm' and escaped into the IfeW wherei) was captured. But he haA secreted a small brass" ring, and that, during the night, cut through a window sash and shutters. , Why,'all this is nothing to an es capist we have in our New Jersey State Pris.n. By means of a piece of twine,. he made a hole in a wrought iron boiler plate door, and scaled the-wall of the prison by the aid of a common - horn butte .He was retaken, pretended to Il ick, and when the vigilance of his custodians had Somewhat relaxed, he made use of a blister, which, the hul mane phYsician of the establishment bed ordered for his chest, to draw the 'rivets of his manacles, and opened a passage in a wall of solid.masonry by a single blue pill. Perhaps" theollie pa per may try again.—Newark Journal. ,‘1 The corpse's mousing will now come forward," wan tho order of. the master or ceremonies at -a country nem]. Molly • nap taps. an absurd drolult, hor toistrems ecolaimfd . " , Y(ui muet biro been,aeleep whys you dreamed ouch stuff its that l" • indeed, roplietl., tartly, jOIX 4rIF. jUBt, Cat' wido *wake aD I om *IL minute?' CARLISLE; PENN'A, riATIWY-,--SEPTEMI3ER-24,-1569 The Territorial :pintoes of Utah . is Miss. Eliza Snow,,who is kept in board and, clothes by Brigham, as a reward for ber literary outporinge. She has written'a book of Mormon hymns: Prospects for a heavy sugar crop, at. St.. Mary's, parish, " the sugar bowl," of Lonisanna; are not so good as they were. in the early part of the spring. Very good yields will be had, how ever. The Lexington, Ind., Enterp , ise, says": " Married pn Wednesday last, after a vast amount of trials and tribe -Isitions, by Squire-Dirffield;Gok-Robt.- M. Foster and Airs. Sarah Hughes, all of this place. Mr, I;talrymplei the--Minnesota far mer, has completed his harvest 'of 2,000 acres of wheat. He hnti'reaped probably 50,000 bushels of wheat, using fifteen reapers, and employing 125 men, who performed the work in nine days. A party of 18 velocipedists, lately made the distance from tne obelisk of Luxor, in Paris, to Versailles, eighteen miles, in one hour and 25 minutes; And yet the ignorant say the veloci pede spirit is over. • HOw pleasant it is•to have to answer your door - bell a namber of. times during the day, and always find_ .that it Is rung by a pedler. Friend hip:is a vase; which, it once - flawed, may as well be lirolten ; it can never be trusted after. 'Fbey 'are trying to repeal a Dela ware lew w hie!) requires a man. be fore marrying to give bonds'of $2OO, for good behavior. ' Brigham Young himself adjusted the foot liglus;at George Francis Train's )eeture to suit the eyes of the distin guished orator. A Man in Illinois has a drove of about 300 mustang ponies and Texan horses. He- LoughL. them.in.Texas and Arkansas. 'Evidence to trace and arrest a for ger wa• fond , ' among the 'effects of a yttnng wan drowned ,tt Cape May. Nearly' a thowand applie ions have leJen wade by persoiN anxi o us to fill f.ur.-vacancias-on- tho-Ohleago-police,— It is said that a dog taken In Mein fancy and held three quarters of an hoar under water, will never have the hydrophobia, even if bitten by a mad dog. It is said- that-w-hen 41 -R118811111_111L9: band neglects to beat his wife- fon a month or two she begins toget alarmed at his 4ndiffvence. A. 7.; Stewart says his business never was better than 'this year, and that he. never advertised so 'much be fore. He gives his advertis .ments credit for lopping : HS business good ih dull times. " Parson: I. had much rather •hear yen preach," said, a baffled swindling horee jockey, " than see you interfere in bargains between man and man-" W replied the parson, " if you had bean where .you ought to have deco last Sunday you would have heard meyreach." Where was that ?" asked -the jockey. In the State Prison, returned the clergyman." An impudent fellow_eve : "Show me all the dresses a woman has worn in the course of her life, and I will write her biography from them.": Go to the devil, do !" cried the enraged Lord Thurlow to his servant ; " Give me a character, my lord," re plied the fell.ty, drily " people like, you knonr, to have characters from their acquaintances." "Johnny," said a mother to -a Son, nine years old, •" go,,and . wash your face. I am.ashamed -, to see you come to dinner with so dirty a month." " 1 (lid wash it, mamma !" and feel• ing his upper lip, lie added .gravely. " I think it must be a mQu•tache corning !" Eieses and applee are very similar they eliould iiever 'be .taated without pairing; Experimental philbsophy.—Aaking a man to lend you money. Moral philosophy—Refusing to do it. " I came near selling my liOote the other Said Scuttle to a friend. " Flow so 7",, " Well, I had them half soled." ~• There is mid to be a great similarity between a vain young lady and a con .firmed drunkard, in that neither of them can get enough of the glace A sailor, in attempting 'to kiss a pretty girl, got a 'violent 'bo‘k - On"the . ear. " There," he exclaimed, "just my luck ; always wrecked on the cor: . al reefs." IE2EI ".My son," maid a man of doubtful morale, puttice, his hand on thO head oflp. young urchin. " I,believe Satan. had' got.hold of you." " I believe too," the urchin replied. . • Mrs. Partington has been reading the holdth officers' weekly reports, and thinks " totar'must be an awful ma lignant disease, since as many die of it ae of all the rest, put together: Public opinion has . found some where the following original joke :_ " The earliest mention 'of a banking transaction—when Pharaoh received a check on the Bank of the -Iced Sea, which was crossed by Moses and Aaron." Was itita Pharaoh bank ? If so,-'why should there'be A-run upon it I y l The latest st 10, f advertisement for hislp : Wanted, a general servant, ,in a small family, w mro 'a man. is kept. The housework and ' cooking all done by the members of the family. The gentleman of the house rissa•eai:ly, but ,prepares breakfast himself. All the 'wishing isput out, and the kitchins provided with. every comfort and lux ury. 'Cold meats and,hast studiously. avoided.' Wages no, object to a Com-. potent party..: Refereacei and photo . r graphs exchanged'. : . „ TOY; Tllll fainter once hired a Vermonter to attain in drawing logs. • The Yankee; when -there, Was . a log to liit.,,generally contrived to necuie;. the smallestead,,for which' the farmer, chastised hini;etd ,told hint, always tO_ take'the,butt end: .Dinnov csuie,, nod With it sugar - loaf Indian pudding. Jonathan slicod off a gentirous portiott of the largest 'Dart, giving the.faitner a wink, and exclaimed:- ” Alwayatukik the buttr,tudl'i. • A DAY AT NIAGARA Tirir MARK TWAIN Niagaia :Falls is one of the finest structures in the' known world. I have'beeii ;visiting this favorite water ing plaCe- recently, for the first time, and was well pleased. gentle!Man who was with me said it was customary to be disappointed in the Falls, but that subsequent visits were sure to set that all right. He said it was so . with him. He said that the first time he went the hack fares were so much higher than the Falls that the Falls appearcdlia — slg,nificant: — ltictraTik — All" regulated now. The' hack men have been tamed, And numbered, and black guarded and brought into subjection to the law, and dosed with Moral Princi , ple till they are as meek as mission aries. They are divided into two clans now, the Regulars and the Pri vateers, and they employ' their idle time in warning the public against each other.' The regulars are under the hotel banners, and do the legitimate at two dollars an ,hour, and thb `priva teers prowl, darkly on neutral ground and pick ~Off stragglers at halfprice. But there are no-more 'outrages. and extortions. That sort of thing oured itself. It made the Falls unpopular by --getting-into , -the'--newspapers, and whenever a public evil Achieves that, sort-of-a success t'or itself, its days are numbered. It hecaine apparent that, either the Fallhad to be discontinued or the hachmeti had , A) subside. They could .not darn the'. Falls, so they damned the haekmen. One can be comfortable and happy there now. SIGNS AND SN'AIIIOLS I drank up most of the American' Ealls hciore I learned that the waters were not considered medicinal: Why are people left in ignorance in this way ? I might have gone on and ru ined a fine property merely fok the want of t-o litiic trttling hiformalion. And yet the sources of information at _IN Mg Ira Falls are not meagre ! You are sometimes left in doubt lhere about Nvhat, you ought to do, but you are :;e1(1,n11 dultht about, what you n ,, t do. No— t he sign s It, up you poet ed. If an-in fant' can tea), th.o, in- butt is measuruhly eafe at Niagara Falls. In your ii 0015 at the hotel yriu will find your course marked out for you in the most convenient way by means of placards on-the - wall, like these : " Pull the bell rope gently, but 4ou'tjerk." „ door." " " go t your "Don't nerape matches on the Wall." " Turn offy o dr gas when you retire." " Tie up your dog." If you place - your boots Outside the door they will be blacked—but the horse, will not be responsible for their return:"- [This' is a confusing,,,tangle some proposition—because it moven -you to delitiCiaie 16fig:aud painfully as to whether it will really be any object ,to you to have your boots blacked less•they_ ore returned.] " Give yotir key to the omnibus driver if you forget and carry ft off with you." Outside the hotel, Wherever you -wander, you are intelligeutly assiated by the signs. , You cannot come to grief as long as you are in your right mind. But the difficulty in to slay in your right wind with so much hist rue .tion to keep track of. For instance : " Keep off. the_gralea._ " Doif!t climb the trees." '; ; lauds off the vegetable's." " Do not hitch your horse to the shrubbery." • " Visit the Cave of the Winds." " Have your portrait taken in your carriage." "'Forty per cent in gold levied on all peanuts or othif.r,lndian curiosities purchased in Canada." "Photographs of the Falls taken here." ' "Visitors will please notify the Su perintendent of any neglect on the part, of the ° employees to charge fir comirmillititis or services. [No inatten tion of this kind observed.] • i• Don't. throw stones down—they may hit people below " '• The proprietors will not be respell- Bible for parties who jump over the Falls." [More shirking of responsi-, bility—it, appears to be the prevailing thing here.] I always •had a high ward 'for the signers of the Declaration. of Independ ence, but now thciy do not really scum to amount to much alongside the siga ers of Niagara Falls, To tell the pLin truth, the multitude of signs .nnoy me. It was because I noticed at last they alwaya happened yo prohibit, exactly the very thing I was just wanted to do I clesired to roll on the grass ; the sign prdbibitedit. I wished to climb a tree; - the sign prohibited it I longed to smoke ; a sign forbade it. And I was going to throW a stone over to astonish and pulverize Buell parties as might be picnieing below; ,- when a sign I have just mentioned, forbade that.' Even that poor satisfaction was denied me, (and J. a -friendless orphan) There was' no resource now, but to seek con solation in thp flowing bowl: I drew my flask Nom my' pocket, but it was all in vain. A • sign confronted me which said : "No thinking allowed- on these premises." On that BO Imight have perished of thirst', but or tho Saving: words of an honored Maxim that flitted through my memory at the critical moment. " All signs fail in a: - .Arr-time.'_' ' mon law takes precedence of the 'statutes. I was saved. - • ° , THE NOBLE RED MEN . The noble ;red . mtui has alwaya been a darling)of mind. 1 love to rehil alont, him in tales , und legends aud - rommicns. love 'to read of his itnipired sagacity, and his love of the Wild, free life of mountain mid forest; and hitS grand truthfulness, his,hatred of treathory, and his generhl , nobility of character; and, his stately metaphorical manner of speedi..; add. his ssinvalrowf love .for the dusky Maiden ; .aid .picturesque phrop of dress and accoutrement,— ' When the shbris at Niagara Fella full of dainty Indian Weak, and stunning inuccaeins, and ~equally stunning . toy figures; representing humuit beirsga;,who' carried their weep= Maniii‘ boles bored - through their_ arms and hodieti:and had . feet shapenike pie;" tilled 3041 otutitien. *tiny!, that now at laic; I' was "going to . 61110 ftice 'to. TaCp theNobhi fled. Men. • A. Joy . cleik. *shop Oil Me; indeed,..that - all her grand arraysf 'euriositista wbris . made by the liith..ns; saud• that they wero frteudly and it would not be dangerous to speak to them. And sure enough, as I ap proached the _bridge leading over to Luna island, I came upon a noble Son of the Forest sitting under a tree, dili gently at work on a bead reticule. He wore a slouch hat and brogans, and had a short black pipa . in his mouth. Thus does ,the baleful contact with our effemi ate civilization dilute the *tun esque pomp which is so natural to the, Indian who far removed from us in bis 'native haulits. I addressed the relic as follows : Is the Waho Wang Wang of the W_ack_a__W_ack_lappy l Does 'the great Speckled Thunder sigh for the war path, or is his heart contented with dreaming of his husky maiden the Maid of rke Forest 1 Does the mighty sache A 4 yearn• to drink the blood_of hid , enemies, or Pi ho satisfied to make bead 'reticules for the papooses of the pale face 1 Speak, euclitue relic of bygone „grandour—yenerable ruin, speak I" The relic said • " An' is it mesilf, Dennis Hooligan, that ye'd 'bo„takin' for a bloody NM, ye drawlin', lantern jawed, 'spider legged devil By the piper that played before Moses ; I'll ate ye 1 went away from r pere.' By and by, in the neighborhood of the Terrapin, I came upon a gentle daughter of the aborigines; in fringed and bladed buCkeikin mod asins and leggings, seated on a bench with her pretty wares about her. title had just crfrved out a wooden chief that had a strong taintly resemblance •to a mothes pin, and was now boring a hole through his abdomen to put his bow _thrtlugh. I hesitated a moment, and then ad dressed her: " Is the heart of the forest midden heavy'? Is - that- Lpughing Tadpole lonely 7 Wee she mourn over the ez tinguishe I council fires of her race and the vanished glory of her ancestors 1 Or does her sad' spirit wander afar to ward the hunting grounds whither her brave Gobbler of the Lightning is gone? Why is my dangliteri4ilent '1 Has she auglit'against. tic pale face stranger 1" The Maiden said : " Faix, an' is it Biddy Malone ye dare to be eallia' 11:13111 . 9 '1 Lave this or 111 shy your, Jean carcass over the eatharacti-yesnlvling blagyard!" 1 adjourned from there also. " Con• ,found these Indians," I said, " they told mel they were tame—but, if ap pearances_ should go for anything, I should say they were all on the war path." ),_made one more attempt to frater nize with them, and only tine. I came upon a.catnp of thein gathered in the shade of,agreat tree, making wampum -end moccasins, and addressed them - . in the language of friendship. n Noble Red Men, Braves, Grand Sachems, War Chiefs, 4ga:we, and uck-a-Mucks,the pale face from the land of the_sEtting Sun greets. you! Yoi,'Beneficent Pohcat—yon, Devourer of,Mountaims—you, Roaring Thundergust,—you, Bullyboy with a glass Lye—the pale fine from beyond the' great waters greets you all ! War and pestilence have thinned your ranks ,and destroyed your once proud nation. Poker, and seven up, and a vain' mbd era expense for soap unknown to-your glorious ancestors, have depleted your purser. Appropriating in your sim plicity the property of others, has . gotten you into trouble, Misrepresent ing lacts , in your sinless innocence, has damaged your. reputatiou with the soulless usurper. Ti admg for forty rod whisky to enable you to get drunk and be happy and tomahawk your families lice played the everlasting mis chief with - the picturesque pomp of your dress, and here you are, in the broad light of the nineteenth century, gotten up like the rag tag and bobtail of dm tuitions , of New York ! , For shame ! Remember your, ancestors ! Recall their mighty deeds ! Remem ber Linens !—and • Red Jacket !—and Hole in the, Day I.—and Horace G/ oe- Icy ! Emulate their achievements! U Ito I yam selves under lily Moter, made savage,, illustrious guttersnipes—." " n vu u 16,1 him I" " .•:ectop the blagyard 1" " Hang him " Burn' him!" • " Dhrown him)" It was the quickest operation that ever was. I simply sawn sudden flash in the air of clubs; brickbats, fists, bread baskets, and moccasins—a sin gle dash, andAhey all" appeared to bit me at once, and no two of-them in the same ; place. In the next instant the whole tribe was upon me. -They tore all the clothes off me, and broke my arms Ind legs; they gave me a thump that dented. the - top of my, head till it would hold coffee like a saucer; and to crown their disgraceful proitedings and add insult 'to injury, they threw me over the Horseshoe Fall, and 1 got wet About 90 or a 100 feet from the top, the remains of my vest caught out . a projecting rook, and. I Vas almost drowned PeforoT•could get loose. finally fell and brought up, in a world of white foam at the foot .of the . fall, WllOB6 celled and bubbly, masses tow ered' up several inches above my head, Of course, • 1 got, into the eddy. I - rbitrid' r Mind it '44 chasing a-chip and gaining upbn each round trip a half a mile—reach ing for the same bush on' the bank 44 times; and just exactly missing it by a flair's breadth every time. At last gi Man walked down and sat down closb to:that lASI,- add pit a pipe in his mouth, and lit a match, and followed me with one eye, and kept the other on the match* while he sheltered it in li:mdfrom the wind. Presently a puff of wind blew it out,. The next tinie I swept Mound, he said Got a match?" • • " my other vest. Help me out, please." • ‘! Not for Joe." 'When I came round again, I said - ~ , , Excuse. t he seemingly impertinent curiosity of, a drowning man, but will you explain this Angular conduct of yoUrs ?" i! With pleasure. I am' the coroner. Don't hurry on mraccount: I• can wait for •you, 13 . 4 I wish I had,a Match." I said ; Take my place and I'll go and get you . oue.."„ He declined. Thii lack stf con& deuce 'on his part 'created a coolness lretweeit ns, and from that time forward, 1 avoided It liras . 'my : idea, in aim anything happened to ta6, sci . to time the ocourronceas to throw my custom into the, hands of .thiopposi-: tiun coroner over on the . Anthican side, At last a policeman ,came- along lind arrested me for diethrbing the.peace by yelling at people on shore for help. The judge fined me, but I had the ad iap tage of him. My money was with my - pantaloons; - and mY pantaloons were with the Indians. Thus I escaped. am now lying in a very critical condition. At least lam lying, anyway—critical or no - critical. ' I am hureall over, but I cannot tell the full extent yet, becadse,the doctor is not done taking the inventory.. He will make out my manifest .to-night- However, thus far he thinks only six of my wounds are fatal. I don't mihd the others. tipori regaining my rig — tit mind said : It is an awful savage tribe of Indians that do the bead work and moccasins for Niagara Falls; doctor. Where are they from T" " Limerick, my son." I shall not be able to finish my re marks about Niagara. Falls until I get better. A Romantic Love Story The Count de St. Croix, belonging to one of the noblest families in France, became engaged,-after a long courtifdp. to a ,lady, firs 'equal' in position and fortune, and famous for her beauty= shortly after tha happy day was ap pointed which was to render tdo loving hearts one, the-Count was ordered ini medhltely to the serge of Sevastopol ; BO he girded on his saber, and at the head of his regiment marched to the battle field. During the Vqint'.g ab sence, it happened that hifi.l•9.trrilled affianced had the small .poi , :',?After. hovering between life mid de:IL - Ahe , iicovered, but found her 'beauty beim lessly lost The disease had assumed in he'r case the most virulent character, and left her not only disfigured, but seemed and scarred to such an extent that she became hideous to herself, and resolved to pass the remainder of her days in the strictest seclusion.A year passed away, when one'day the Count, immediately upon his le turn to France, accompanied by his valet, presented himself at the resi dence of_his betrothed, and solicited an interview. This was refused. He, however, with the persistinceof alover, pressed his_SuiLand finally the fluty made her appearance; closely muffled in a , veil At the sound of her voice, the Count rushed forward to embrace her, but stepping aside she tremblingly told him the story of her sorrow,. and burst into tears. A heavenly smile broke over the Count's handsome fea tures, as hand above, he ex claimed : "It is Uod's work I lam blind 1" It was even sp. When leading. his regiment to attack, a cab-. non ball passed so closely to his eyes, that, while it left" their 6xpression changed,. and his countenance un m arked,c i t for eii•er* Of citht. Tt is'almost unnecessary to add, that their marriage was shortly after sob. ernnized. • It is said that, at this day. may often be seen at the Emperor's receptions an officer leaning upon the arm of a lady closely veiled, and they seem to be at tracted to the spot by their loye o music. • Han Hinglishman's hobservation) "Ilin'the awning, you know, I went to the barber, 'e clips my 'air, and then yoU see, bin the hevening I went to the top hof my-'ouse and-saw-the moon heclipso the sun." " I cannot imagine," said an -alder man, " . why my whiskers should turn gray so much sooner than the hair of my head." " Because," observed a wag '• you have worked so much harder with your jaws than your brains A well known minister declares bat his choir ha given him so much rouble on earth that the ideti of music n the world to come 'is wholly repug nant to his ideas of eternal peace and darn, (looking at, the bonnets, etc :;) " Dou't you think they are very hand, some V Amy (whose thoughts are on the other side of the street.) " Very, " especially the ono with the ‘ l2lack. moustache." borne tasteful individual very cor rectly remarks that the beet lip salvo in creation is a kiss. The remedy should be used with grata care, how evsr, as it is apt to bring on an affec tion of the heart. "If you can't keep awake," said a preacher to one of his hearers,- " when_ you feel drowsy why don't you take a pinch of snuff ?" The shrewd reply Was, " the snuff should be pue - nito the , ADMIRING WWK, 7 - 4 .0 my—do you see that love •of a bonnet opposite'?" Short-sighted 'husband —u Lovely, no doubt, my dear—but I can't see it" Husbankdon't want to, and squeezes his puree tighter than ever. Upon the shutter of a little shop in Philadelphia is a plaCard reading thus: Gootweel and-figstyers fur sail." The premises have just- been vacated by a German cordwainar, who desires to ,dpose of---his--" good-will and -fix,- three." . _ . 1.0.. is so very - cloam" it was 'ob. beF,ved, "he will squabble about a sin gle farthing." " Well," remarked W. "I have' always thought that the, lees one squabbles about the better." An Alabama editor, in puffing a grocery kept by is woman; says, " Her tomatoes are as red 'as her own cheeks, her indigo as blue as her oivn eyes, and her pepper as hot as herpsin temper." A so . naibie cotemporary says;: The women ought to make' a pledge riot to kiss a man who uses tobacco, and it, would soon break up the practice. A friend of ours says, " thoy ought also to pledge themselves to kiss every man that' don't use it—and we go for, that too."' • • ' A Gentleman in Quincy fOund an expreee package addreeeed to "Adam Sell, Ohicugo.". He opened Wand it •. Mark 'Twain, at the Packer House, rang for a 'copy of the lath! of Massa-. chusetts, to see ii there wait anything to prevent him, fronidrinking is water. „ . The .mtirder of tbo oecentrie Ynd heroic African travelec,Vian Tinno, has Iwo* officially apeotmeed. to Dr, l'oterrneo, of Gotha, from Tripoli: ?hie sietie Ben Prilicisette tithed Mr whin lux, is coal chi, , mtd then tried m light lux, pipe. friend put vut - vrith 4,, ookriwt, • EMI NO. • p. Trials_ of a Country Clergyman: A,young parson thus feelingly de scriber; his bachelor experience in the firstiyillage in which he ponied after entaking. the ministry Old' ladies gave , zaetracts and tor: mented me in every possible way. One gave' me - cough-lozenges because a fly got downiny throat in church; another - sent me her late husband'S. goloshes to wear when out on wet evenings. (The late, husband's feet were about five "iodise - 'Ong.) A:third-gent-a wonder ful kind of India rubber bag, which she said could be applied wherever a chill -was felt. got till my aister came to Stay with me did I know tbat Tot water was to be put into the creature before using it; I had thought it a sort of mat to lay over my feet, and very' useless of its kind. A Miss Thomp eon was the most disagreeable of the old maids; she actually one day ran ht r fingers underneath my collar, to see if I wore flannel. During the year I was at Littleback I had 13 pairs of slippers, 25 sermon cases, and three smoking caps worked for me. One young lady embroidered my initials on a handkerchief in a shiny looking black thread. My sister says it was done in hair ; and perhaps that accounts for bliss Ridge tieing so offended when. I said ,thought Lector's red marking cotton as gond as any other. Threw, young ladies declared that trifled with their affections ; two, on the con trary, affirmed that they had rejected me ; while the village school mistress assurdd the rector that I had tried to • Pre.% her hand. I certainly never had such hard work as while at Littleback I played at least three hundred games of croquet, and at any spaie moment I was liable to be sent for by Miss Anna Phelps to practice an Italian duet. I bore my trials with christian - fortitutle,. until one morning the Bishop sent for me, and'said that my conduct disgraced my profession. I took the hint„and at the end of on e year and three months my career at Littleback was over. The young ladies dried when I went ; they said 1 was " such a darling 1" Now I itsk my impartial reader whether it was not hard that I should be blamed for the ladies of Littleback My life is blighted, and all that is left to me is 13 pairs of slippete r 25 sermon cases, three — smoking - caps, oneliandkerchief marked " T. G.," and a bad character :rom my late - employers. • A Beautiful Pioiure. The man Who stands upon his own soil, who feels that by the law of the TFnd whiCh he lives—by the laws of civilized nations—heis the rightful and exclusive owner of the land he tills, is, by the constitution of nature, under, a wholesome influence not easily imbibed from ahy,other pource. He feels, other things being equal, more strongly than another the, character of a man as the lord of an animate world. Of this great and wonderful sphere, which, fashioned by the hand of God, and up held by -His power, is rolling through the heavens, a part is his—his from the centre to the sky. It is the space on which the generation before moved its round of duties, and he feels him self connected by a link with those who follow,,and , to whom ho is to trfius rnit a home. Perhaps his farm has come down to him from his fathers. They have gone to their long home : but he can trace their footsteps over the scenes if his daily-labors,---The-roof-whicintirerr ters him was reared by those to whom he owes his being. 'Some interesting domestic tradition is connected with every enclosure. The favorite fruit •was planted by his father's hand. He." sported in boyhood beside the brook which still wind's through the meadow There lies the path l ro the village of earlier days. , He still hears from the -window the yoke of the Sabbath bell which called hikfathers to the house of God; and .near at band is the spot where 'his parents laid down to rest, and where, when his time has come, be shall be laid by his children. Theme are the feelings of the owner of the soil. Words cannot paint them ; they flow out of the deepest fountains of the heart; ,they are • the life spring of a fresh, healthy, and generous national character. , GOOD BYB.—It is a hard. word - to speak. Some may laugh that it should be, but let them. Icy hearts are never kind. It is a word that has choked many an utterance, and started many a tear. The Inind is clasped, the word spoken ;_ we part, and are out upon the ...ocean of time—we go to meet again, where, God only knows. It may be soon.;, it may be never. Take care that"-your'"'good bye" be not a cold one—it may be the last that you can give. Ere you can meet your 'friends agaia, death's cold band i'may bare closed bin eyes and chained his lips lorever., Ah I he_may._bavo...ldied_ thinking you loved him not. . Again, it may be a long septiratip.' Friends. crowd onward and'give you their hand. lloir pm detect in each " good bye" the love that lingers there ; and bow you bear away with you the memory of these parting words many, many. dpys. No must often separate. Tear not yourself away .witlra careless bold-- ness that defies all love, but make your last words linger—,give the heart its full utterance—and if- teaks fall,.what . of it t Tears are not unmanly. • A man in the dress of A workman was lately, seen walking in the streets of Berlin with a Packet in hie band, sealed and inscribed with. an address, and a note that , it 'c'ontained • 100 thalers in Treasury bills. As. the bearerappeared to ho at a loss, he was accosted - Jay a passehget .who staked him what he was looking "for.' The simple cpuntrymai placed the packet in the inquirer's hand,.and requested that he would read the'addrees. The reply was made with an agreeable. Bur: prise. " Why, this letter is for me! I have been expecting" it for -long -while!'!"The messenger upon this de manded ten thalers 'for the carri4e of the . packet, which. was readily 'paid, with liberal .nddition to, the porter. The new possessor elf the packet haat ened to An obscure corner to examine his .prise but on breaking the acal, found Nothing but at: few oboes of papa, on one, of which was 'written, "Done." ' • A ptkohet lo Bats etinntyi,, 6T:contains 12911..9"w:1101'in tho NO/ deli ; paid : An tiniro, h. anbi all sight ' loblcin 7, al, : the ;1./atilt of wallet" ) , ttud itAlislu!t faTt him it cent" The: Essay . on Man-4 woman's attempt to marry him., t like a tea you re temp it: The onlp tolerated murderera — ere the lady killers ___Pyroteelmical_remedy Tor - crying in fauta—rodkeL —when door - n criminal-resemble_n old hook 7 When he is bound over. A self-denying woMan—one who, sends word " not of home," -when she , What sort of a sickle d. 6 harvesters long for in midsummer? I-sickles I Smith found , a•dollar the other day _ In an alloy. He calls it alimony... Freedom of the press—Snatching a kiss from a pretty'girl in a crowd. " I don't think, indeed, that you are . very sunlit." "No, indeed,4ife ; teat • everybody knows that am awfully sltrewed." . • To ascertain the numbeecift children in etrect—beat - a drum. To aner tail' the number of loafers—Start a dog fight. - - _ _ . , " Where shall I put this pAp_er so as to be sure of seeing it to-morrow 7 in quired Mary Jane of her brother Charles. " Oh, on the looking-glass, to be,sure," was the reply. A magistrate, Censuring some, boys for loitering in the streets, asked : Ifieverybody was to stand in the streets, how could anybody get along?" THE TALENTED YOUNG , MAN..,—In rs peon, the talented young man is tall and generally thin, with fair and rather lank hair, brashed behind his ears, and no beard, unless he be an English wk. Wed young man, when one on ap proaching becomes dimly conscious of a faint glory of side whiskers Talent ed young men from the Continent of . Europe, on the other hand, era usually bearded like 'the paid, and cihi.to tie averse to a change of raiment. But all alike wear glasse:t—which are so be coming, their lady toque int soros toll them in pretty rapthres—aad are all interestingly pallid, with deep set, dreamy eyes,, and fair, high: brows, gently spread o'er with the cast of thought... They -all smoke a great deal, and drink as pencil as they can, being easily fuddled, whereby they gait: the reputation among thThir female admirers of being very wild filters iudebd, and are sometimes, in moments of sweet 'confitlence, gently reproved for their excesses, when they will smile • sadly, and shake a deprectci•tg. he,rd, as much a's to say, it is the f.tte of genius I The tnlenfi yoretg m -11 is not often a dandy ; he ra her '111,0.4 a certain laborimos disorder ia his ap parel, which shall single him tart, from the common herd ; and so gain hint the, proud distinetiOtr which is. one chief aim Of - liiH tantitiow-=to - he- in(' uired--- after and pointed -out as the talented Mr. Snooks. , A young. married lady; -says the Fort. Wayne Democrat, parting from her husband at the Fort Wayne depot: one morning, was overheard to utter the folkiiiing, terminating the sentence -- with an affectionate kiss: " Goddbye, Will, write to mejsvery day wout you? I'll expect a letter three times a week anyhow. Take good care of my tidy work. •I'll want it when I come back, If Miss S. calls, don't give - viol o Wan • fifty, cents., for we have to Aupport our own church, you knew. Don't (orget to bring my silk dress and shoes. Come cs "soon 'ail you can. Goodbye. Don't forget your cane, and let your mus tache grow. Now there's a good fel low." TuE - LAw.—ln the chief court of law in Grenada there used to be a picture of a naked man with a large bundle of papers under bis arm, and certain words proceeding out of his mouth,of which these are a translation : I who won my suit am now stripped to the skin ; what then must be the fate of him that lost it 2" Spanish litigation would seem to be as expensive a luau.; ry as OUT 01911. The Young Postmaster &braham ,Lincoln was onto Nat master in the mall village of New Salem, Out West." Ile then went to Springfield to study law, awl fat; years had hard work to earn his bread and butter. Fighting with poverty is a hard fight: One day a 'post office agent came round to collect a balmce due' the Washington office frian .the New Salem office, The bill vain 517.60. Dr. Henry, a friend of ".poor happened to fall in with . thii Was as . , we as could be that "he had nothing his pockets to pay it He went, therefore, to the office, in order to lend him the money, or offer to lend it.. . - When the agent pr9enipcl the draft, Lincoln asked the to 'Sit clown, and sat down. himself, with. at very puzzled look upon hi 3 face, He then stepped out, went over to hiS IMarding house, and came thick 'with, all old stocking under his arm. This lie un tied, and poured out upon the table a quantity of small silver coin and ".red cents," These. they counted, erftlY sl7.6o,—just the amount called-for and, moreover, it 'was the very money called for,,for on leaving the ollice,.the young postmaster tied up the money, and . had kept it by him, awaiting the legal call to give it up. paying,it_nype, ‘‘. T parer itsp t " said he, "even for a time, any money that is not mine. This money, 1 knew, lielongelto the government, and l had no•right to exchange or use it for . any, purpose of my own." • That is the right and-true ground to . take. If the money is entrusted to yOur care, never touch it, hover use it. am not now talking,-about cheating.or stealing, bat taking and using . money with the intention of returning it.. ;t'o ney in trust•shciula -alwayp be kept apart from all your owajinainess,,llind held snored. By neglecting 'this, and not making good, the dellciencywhen pay, day came, many .a man has lost. _the, confidence .sif _hi fellow, men,, and damaged, his . integrity beyond repair. There 'seems, indeed, no harm in just using it. It, is easier, perhaps, to use 'than ta. keep it ;. easy enough, too; one may .think, to make it good when called for.Alrihifoilibm Low naturally any one can slide into loose liabifel . ' If an body:,.had' a good—excuse, for using 0.7.60 • of . government. Money, Mr.' Lincoln had who'll he wan a poor law student. Oh; it would: have come ih so " pat " many and many p time. But nu !, That is.ct Place to stand by. X*, boys. No, no I ,tlin strictest, integrity, and not a jot less. °annumid 'ArantaLS..--Tho penalty for 11/antbnaly or cruelly ill treating ovor• loading, ore otherviise abusing any ,horso or other domestic anima I; under the est passed by the Legislature,-.is gee of n,P lees then ten and no more' than, tw9mY toilers „ for the grit offenie, loft thin twenty and ao mot"' ' , Aso fitly for Ate ed.oed 'Rad oeirseetoe' , --„Ortq &Of tee nee It.)ei teas( '" eller 'wife+ the cc ;Ile imelaire L. tn . ' • '• " d cog% . " • , . rtniohirk uhtil dii Jaw. , A of /- When