If WW . It I ! I I ' t "to I: BY JOHN G. GIVEN. TAKE THE iron LI) AS IT IS. Ta the world as it is I lliere are good and bad in it, And good and bad will b from now to t'ue end: Aad they who expect lo r.iako cahits lu n min. ute, Are in danger of marring mora hearts than thev'lt mend. If je ish to bo happy, ne'er seek far the faults. Or you're .are to find tumcihing or other I ' . . arcisi; 'Mid modi that debase?, and much that eialts The world's nut a bad one if loft a it i 1 Tke the wor'.d aa it is I if tUo surface be s!ii niog, Ne'er stir up the sediment hidden below ! There'i wisdom in ih'tt-, bat there's none in repining O'er things that can rarely be mended we know ! There' beauty around ua, which let us enjoy; And chide not, unless it may bo with a kiss; Though Earth's not the Heaven we thoug!it when a boy. There's somethingto live for, if tucn at it is. Tnka the world as it i ! with its smiles and its sorrow. Hit love and ita friendship its falsehood and truth !la isheines, iLat- depend on the bteaih of morrow ! Uthtpcs, which pas by lihe the dreams U yOUtU. Yet oht whiUt the light of auction y -p. , . ,,. , r . nf i.. ! iie heart in ,..eii hatha, ounu.n un s. in the worst there aomo sya.k oi .1 iiALiit , ; r , -, : iV inn Anu i.;e wucai anu oci isai; t.iu vuin as it IS. n tj j " 1 : KXSOBLLAWB THE WOLF-CHASE. BY C. WHITEHEAD. During the winter of 18 14, being en j gaged - in the northern part of Maine, I had much leisure to devote to the wild sports of a new country. To none of these was I more passionately addicted than to skating. The deep and sequestered lakes of this State, frozen by the intense cold of a i northern winter, present a wide field to the lovers of this pastime. Often wouhl 1 bind on my skates, and glide away up the glittering river, and wind each mazy treamlct that flowed beneath its fetters on towards the parent ocean, forgetting all She while time and distance in the luxuri ous sense of the gliding motion thinking of nothing in the easy flight, but rather dreaming, as I looked through the trans parent ice at the long weeds and cresses that nodded in the current beneath, and eemed wrestling with the waves lo let j '.hem lem go; or I would follow on the track j f some fox or otter, and run my skate j long the mark he had left with his drag- j of alon ging tan until me trail entered the woods, -v ...w... .,j ... . 'r' ii--.ici-iiy it-do largely icpresented there; i-ranee moonlight, and it was on one of these ; at home on the ice. Many were the days : has heard the shout of welcome, and pours occasions that I had a rencounter, which j that I hud spent on my good skates, never : in her thousands; England, Germany, lta even now, with kind "aces around me, I j thinking that at. one time they would be ' ly, Hungary, Poland,and the far off islands cannot recall without a nervous looking-j my only means of 3afety. Every half ' of the sea yes, even thoso distant lands over my snouiuer leeimg. I had left my friend's house one evening just before dusk, with the intention ol I ' n t i . I- ..a. I . T l iv-uiig ;i snori uisianco up uic iiou.e i ".vuyy, tTiiiv.ii gmitu unctiiy uciuit luu j 2oor. The night was beautifully clear. 1 A peerless moon rolled through an occa-i ionai tieecy cloud, and stars twinkled from the sky and from every frost covered tee in millions. Your mind would wonder t the light that came glittering from ice, and snow-wreath, and incrusted branches. s the eye followed for miles the broad Jleani of the Kenebec, that like a jewelled lone swept between the mighty forests on oaniis. And yet all was still. 1 he I cold seemed to have frozen tree and air. nd erery living thing that moved. Even the ringing of my skates on the ice echoed, back from the Moccasin Hill with a start ling clearness, and the crackle of the ice as 1 passed it in my course seemed to follow the tide of the river with lightning peed. 6 I had gone up the river nearly two miles, when coming to a little stream which empties into the larger, 1 turned in o explore its course. Fir and hemlock of a century's "growth met overhead, and formed an archway radiant with frost-work. All wa3 dark within, but I was young nd fearless, and as I peered into an un broken forest that reared itself on the oorders of the stream, I laughed with very Jyou3uess ; my wild hurra rang through the silent woods, and I stood listening to the echo that reverberated again and again, until all was hushed. I thought how often the Indian hunter had concealed himself ofihmd these very trees how often his row had pierced the deer by this very Ten, and his wild halloo had here rjng t lW for his victory. And then, turning from fancy lo reality, I watched a couple of white owls, that sat in their hooded state, with ruffled pantalets and long ear-tabs, debating in silent conclave the afi'airs of their frozen realm, and wondering if they. " for all their feathers were a-cold," when suddenly a cry arose it seemed to me to ; come from beneath ihe ice it sounded low and tremulous at first, until it ended ; in one wild yell. I was appalled. Never ! before had such a noise met my ears. I thought it more item mortal so fierce, and amid such an unbroken solitude, it ! seemed as if fiend had blown a blast from : a:i internal trumpet. Presently 1 heard ; the twigs on shore snap, as if from the . - ireau oi sonic: anunai, ami uie oioou rusueu ; oacii to my lorcneau witn a oouiiu t.'iat i made inv skin burn, and I felt relieved : that J h id to contend with things earthly, ; and not of spiritual nature my energies returned, and 1 looked around for some means ul escape. 1 he moon saonc thro them, and then I would have protectors ( Oregon, Northerner, Sarah Sands, Caro ihu opening at the mouth of the creek hv that would be peers to the fiercest cenizen ' Una, Columbus. Isthmus, and Antelono. w hich I had entered the forest, and con- sidcring this the best means of escape, I darted toward it like an arrow. 'Twas it iikc an arrow. i was tueu- mau carreer, ana aner a moment s i,aw s line) traverse tne waters ol the ! luminary ol the world, thus ushered, began ed yards distant, and the consideration, turned and lied. I watched ! Pacific, arriving and departing 'with the ! to rise majestically from behind a distant scarcely excel my desperate ! thain until their dusky forms disappeared regularity of a train of cars on the Erie ! range of the Sierra Madrc. I have wit l lurued my head to the over a neighboring hill. Then, taking off Railroad. Ik-sides thess belonging to the I nessed the same spectacle on the broad Hard iv a nuuureu swallow could s lliirht : vet as ! shore, I could see two dark objects dashing throui underbush at a pace nearly frnni lliP i!ps fri ! it inn pivp'i nf ltmrn I bul little pleasure in inaking ihcir acquaint. ! , . ' Uic u:mreiag strength which seems part ; j l)ieir nattltc renders them objects of nrr I Heir nnt:inin:i i p tiprcpniK -irii : ureau to every oenigiiiea traveller. ; It- I ' I . I . tl ; " W'i;h tiieir i g i!-p, which nn ti.-e j Tiu d..cr hou-id'a lutu, the hunter's fire." l'iey Plir5Ue their prey- never straying : from t!e track of their victim and as the j weaned hunter t.iuitis lie has at list out- ; , stripped Ih-rn, he hud that they but watted lor the evening to seize their prey, ; and falls a prize to the tireless animals. 1 h j bushes th.it skirted the shore llcw past with the velocity of lightning as 1 ' dashed on in my flight to pass the narrow opening. The outlet was nearly gained; one second more I would be comparative- dashed madly forward. The ie wolves ; :r speed, ' ;nded prey ;, j jmc. The ; sprang, but ' miscalculating m sprang behind, while their intend glided out upon the river Mature turned me towards iiomc. 1 lie ; - ww- I I uaivua ui snow spun iroui me iron of my skates, and I was some distance j from my pursuers, when their fierce howl told me I was still their fugitive. I did not look back ; I did not not look back ; 1 did not leel alraid, or ; sorry, or glad; one thought df home, of: the bright laces awaiting my return, of ; their tears jf they should never see me, ! and then every energy ot body and mind , minute an alternate yetp irom my heree attendants maue me out too certain that , they were in close pursuit. Nearer and I . . . I 1 I i- . . , nearer wiey came; j. uearu ineir leet pal- luting u ins nii niui n. i oim, unlit i uouiu , leel tiieir breath and hear their snufiling scent. Every nerve and muscle in my lo. ! y!l-ai P1"- ai,u ,ilc s;u)ri e'iS which nicy ; nui even yet, i never see a ;road stieet . trade, and also ttic Uoltl Hunter and tiio tha highest peak of our own stupendous " occasionally g ive, I knew at once that of ice in the moonshine, without thinking ' Sea Gull, which have recently been upon ; Alleghcnies and in each case deemed that t I. 1.11 .1 i TJ . . 1 f . n . , -.' -a ' ' -- , mi- uui3 uctwceu oan i uiitisto una vie- , us gianueur eouia not ce surpasseu. uut ; I had never met with these animals, but things followed me so closely down the ' con. - This number of steamer, running ! ihesa wnrt u-rptchpd pxhihiti.-ms whpn ly sate, wnen my pursuers appeared on : we rem irked a lew days ago, are in them- tty with which those that wer employed, ' bathed every other object. c were de- ! about three leet above aim; tue squirre;! the bank directly above mc, which here selves the monuments that establish the were called into requisition, being more or nied the pleasure of beholding the uplifting ; started the lightning had to follow the rose to the height of ten feet. There was progress and prosperity of California, j less imperfect, insufficient, and temporary. I of the curtain that concealed their recesses j grain, and the squirrel went straight down; no time to be lost, so 1 bent my head and Conducted widi great ability, abounding : What Iriumohs mnv not be looked for ! from our view; the striking of tenu in the .! So confounded crooked was the tree, air. "... " witn a sound truly nornoie, when an in- voluntary motion on my part turned me out of my course. The wolves close be- h:ud, unaoie lo stop, and as unable to turn on the smooth, ice, slipped and fell, still going on far ahead; their tongues were lolling out, their white tusks-glaring from their bloody mouths, their dark, shaggy breasts were fleeced with foam, and as they passed me, their eyes, glared, and they howled with fury. The thought flashed on my mind, that by this means I could avoid them, viz : by turning aside whenever they came too near; for they, by the loimation of their feet, are unable to run on ice, except on a straight line. I immediately acted upon this plan. The wolves having regained their feet, sprang directly toward me. The race was renewed lor twenty yards up the stream ; they were already close on my back, w hen I glided round and dashed directly past my pursuers. A tierce yell greuted my evolution, and the wolves, slipping on their haunches, sailed on, presenting a perfect picture of helplessness and bullied rage. Thus 1 gained nearly a hundred yards at each turning. This was repeated two or three times, every moment the ani- nr. orals getting more excited and baffled. trame was stretched to the utmost tenison. channel, converse nearly in the same lan The trees along the shore seemed to 1 guage, and submit to the same institutions, dance in the uncertain light, and my brain ; The Future may have greater blessing turned with my own breathless speed, yet j than this in store for the world- but fifty still they seemed to hiss forth their breath j years hence, men will recur to'his event R GO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAY J WHEN THEY CKASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO E BENS BURG, THURSDAY, At one time, by delaying my turning 1 too long, my fierce antagonists came so near me, that they threw the white foam over rue as they sprang to seize me, and their teeth clashed together like the spring of a fox-trap. Had my skates failed for one instant, had I tripped on a stick, or caught my foot in a fissure in the ice, the story I am now telling would never have been told. 1 thought all the chances over; I knew where they would first take hold of mc if I fell; 1 thought how long it would be belore 1 died, and when there would be a search for the body that would already have its tomb; for oh ! how fast i a man s mind traces out all the dread col- ors of death's picture, only those who j - - i miu uccii near wiu gum ongmai can itn. ; mu soon i came opposite trie Mouse, j and my hounds I knew their deep voices j roused by the noise, bayed furiously ; from their kennels. I heard their chains , rattle ; how I wished they would break of t!io forest. The wolves, taking the ; hint conveyed by the dogs, stopped in ' their mid carreer, and after a moment's my skates, I wended my way to the house, wi'di feelings which may be bettere ima- fri7ii K P-nii-'iP:' " 1 H .im! - nf f., i; f -.? " J"a- u Luniji -.a i. j Tho marvels of .Monte Cur.isro are K,.;,i:r rrui?..,!, ihn c!,rHJ f P;. I tw I. I fic. it is not alone tha splendid fortunes 1 which there reward adventure and enter- I prise, but the development of athletic civ- ilization and exemplary order, that stirtle the civilized world. Men see the statue i breaking lro:u toe inanimate marble in an j hour; they see the symmetry and the har- i inony of political equality and universal content made actively manifest almost in ! a day. We have before ih at this writing, the Caliiorni i newspapers by the last ' steamer; and we pure over them with irre- sisiilde and constantly recurring surprise and pleasure. These journal" alone, as ' in information ol the rarest chaiacier, 1 hether v( commerce, of politics, or of i general intelligence, they already bear ' more of the metropolitan character than ! most of the boasted dailies of Li verpool i . most at the boasted dailies of Liverpool ana icv ioik. indeed they are necess arily vastly different from the newspapers of any other quarter of the world thns of London prabably excepted. California ! is not only the nreat seat of Ampricm i Commerce, on the Pacific borders, but it is also the point to which the nations of ! the whole world are sending their contri-' butions of capital and men. China is al- : were civilization has not vet diwmd ill nrc tending to the goal where men may become rich either in possession of wold. or great in the possession of equality. All - nations iiuve as to a c,)(nm:in j California; and, in a space of ! ibly short, all move alon"- centre in time, incred- I ' VV as one of the greatest and one of the most j beneficial to mankind, that has occurred j since the Creation. A few of the wor- i ders ot California as we "lean them from the papers before us will serve to show how mjich she has advanced in the last twelve months. The gold shipped at the port of San Francisco, in one year from January 1, 1850, to December 30, 1830, amounted to the incredible sum of twenty-nine mill ions, four hundred and forty-one thousand, and five hundred and eighty-one dollars! For more wonders, let us call the read er's attention to the following article con densed from the Pacific News by the New York Express: The total value 0f merchandize received from Nov. Ulst, 1S19, to Sept. 30, 2850, in domestic vessels, was S737,275,10; ton nage of vessels, fe-,9 jo tons. Total amount of merchandize received in foreign vessels during the same period," $3,351,902 G5; tonnage of vessels, 151,001 tons. During the year 1850, as we Icarn from the same paper, there have entered the port of San Francisco, from ail foreign ports, 1,713 vessels; in the sitne period the number of vcsbc-U which cleared was l.Jfil. The i vessels arriving lave hnded upon the Pa- FEBRUARY 20, 1851 cific shores, 35,333 males, and 1,248 fe males. -The number which have left by sail vessels and steamers during the same time was 26,593 males, and 8 females. The growth of San Francisce, wonder ful as it before seemed, now appears much more surprising. That city, with" a popu lation of 33,000, supports seven daily pa pers; while New York, with half a'mill ion of inhabitants, can only keep double that number alive. Hut a few months ago there was nothing of San Francisco but "cotton houses:" now there are one hun dred and seven miles of streets laid out. one quarter of which is built upon and oc- cupted, and over seven miles ol it substari - tially planked. Sixty brick houses have ueen oum, ana one marine insurance com- j pany has just been started with a capital of half a million of dollars. There are forty-seven steamers employed in the river trade, while eleven ocean steamers the California, Panama, Tennessee, Unicorn, (the first eight belong to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, and the last three to Law's line) traverse the waters of the i regular lines, arc the steamers New Or- leans Ecuador, and Constitution, j which have been engnged in the Panama j between San Francisco and Panama, is ; I greater than the number employed in the i . l u . rv! v-,. i. r : i .uii'j ucnuTii new iuijv ana xiv e puui , and New York and Havre combined. i Trnlv. sftflr rPiHiiiff Ihrsfi fiMs. wprminnt 1 but say, with ihe Pacific News, "The j .' germ of a mighty people on the shores of j l-he Pacific has been planted; it has grown stitely, proud position already, and, ' although ta'e past has witnessed much that appear- like a dream, the future is uevelo- ; Petl by time an. I energy, will give birth to : yet many fold more astonishing results ' within the Golden Gate of San Fran-j cisco." One great fact hardly yet considered in connection with this almost magical result : is the comparatively imperfect means of ! transportation to California, and the rapid- j when the railway "over the Isthmus of I Panama is completed when Mazatlan is j connected by a good road through Mexico j to Vera Cruz, uniting the two oceans at another noint when the Nicaraugua ship another point when the Nicaraugua ship canal is completed, bringing them together at another, thus tapping other regions, i swarming with people and when, final- ly. from our Atlantic seaboard, we reach tli Po;t;,. Iiv mm unbroken chain of rail- roads thai by one track pour in upon Cal- ! ifornia the products of thirty stales, and by j the other receive tiic coveiJd wealth of the i New Tyres, and Veniccs.and Liverpool, that will sprin-r Minerva like unto vigor ous maturity, from the trade of those dis tant lands heretofore locked against us by apparently insurmountable barriers, but opened upon us with the hidden treasures of unnumbcrcdages! When these arc com- nletp. thpre willbe other glories to arouse the admiration and excite the cupidity of the world. California, under this new order of things, will be the scene of still more extraordinary transformations. Ilcr paliner, but more substantial sister, Ore gon, will tower into a more mighty man hood. The whole Pacific Coast will be stirred by the energy and the successes of these herculean rivals. Asia w ill move from her lethargy and lassitude, and whether she groans under llntish, or Turkish, or Chinese oppression, the voice of Young Freedom will reach her ears, and fi fill her with aspirations heretofore un- vn. Mexico vvill hear it, and find an known escape from her weak tyrants, in the road that leads to her political and commercial independence. From the Isthmus of Da rien on the one extreme, to Dehrmg s Strait on the other, the. victory will be alike overwhelming and complete; alike irresistible and enduring. These the con sequences; and for what a cause? Who that takes up the map and runs his eye along the vast range of territory already conquered to civilication, and observes how conterminous countries must at last be affected by the neighborhood of sub stantial freedom and resistless commerce who that does this, can fail to be recall ed bv the sudden rise and rapid progress of the whole marvel, to the great . nation which pointed and prepared the way for this Exodus of the masses of the world, to a new retreat in the new possessions of the United States. Two years ago the experiment was made. Its success is al ready assured, and we now only ask when will "its wonders cease to a?t.iiis' mm-khr-1 ? Pen n sylvan ian . FOLLOW." Suarhe among the Monnlains. Next morning, at an early hour, we climbed ihe high hill which overlooks the valley of Encerro, to witness the rising of the sun, which had been described as a magnificent sight when viewed from that elevated position. The summit was at tained just as a few faintly defined roseate streaks, apparently tipping and resting upon the luitiest mountain tops, announced the speedy occurrence of the spectacle we had come to behold. As yet, the basin beneath our feet was shrouded in impene trable darkness; but above and around us the glories of the new-horn day were be- gmning slowly to unfold. Gradualh- the messengers that heralded the approach of J aurora, assumed a stronger color and an I increased expanse until the whole eastern horizon was siitiused with the blush of morn. Soon this mantle of the sky was penetrated by thin threads of golden night which dispersed themselves in shapes of fantastic embroidery, that rapidly combined and widened, and finally banished the crimson clouds to the confines of tiieir bright circumference. And then the great luminary of the world, thus ushered bean ocean, where the waters, converted into a sea of amber, seemed the great eye of the universe; and I have gazed upon it from compared with the scene on which mv vision now rested. The heavens weie a n f . i i c i i wan oi nre, ine reiiecuon irom w nicn sei- tied upon and wrapped the snow-capped summit nf OriTihi. nn,l iKo nh-.rro.) or.,1 blackened head of the Coffre de Perolc in a flood of radiance, while the base of ei- ther was yet enveloped in niht. Strur- gling, tiie rays of the sun clambered down the mountain sides and entered the valley beneath, their course bein" marked through the surrounding irlooni by trackways of! effulgence which looked like seams of silver upon a velvet mantle. Hut even when the basin was flooded from the day- j spring, and animated nature re-summoned to the labor and the pleasures of life, the l gorges of the hiiis still rested in a shadow j that contrasted well with the light which I camp below warned us that the division was about to resume its march, and we quitted the spot where so much rational enjoyment had been realized, with feelings closely allied to regret. Reminiscences of a Campaign. Leather Tanaiuz New Process. A new chemical process for tanning leather has been patented by Harman Hibbard, of Rochester, New York, and for which a silver medal was awarded at the last Ohio State Fair. Ansel Frost, we believ e, is the proprietor of the patent for many of the Western States. www v e have seen cait skins and sneen skins tanned by this new process, and j . j there is no doubt of the fact that the leath- j er is greatly superior io mat lanneu oy tne usual process. The calf skins we saw, ! were superior to the imported French j brands and the sheep skins were as strong as the common call skins sold in our mar kets: and for boots and shoes are better in many respects than the calf skins sold in our most fashionable shops. This new process, is used also for tan ning all kinds of leather harness and sole leather, and heavy cow hides for uppers and this leather will not crack or break when exposed to the imluenco of the weather. Messrs. Ilovvlett & Kellogg, of Colum- bus have purchased the right for Franklin county and are now producing the finest specimens of all kinds ot leather tanned by this process In additiou to the superior quality of the leather turned by this process, it takes only one-sixth of the time required by the old process. Sheep, calf, goat, and all kfnds of light stock, are thoroughly tanned in three or four days; cowhides in ten or fif teen days; harness from fifteen or twenty days; and sole in from thirty to forty days aud there is a saving in the cost of tan ning materials of from 15'to 20 per cent. The process of tanning skins with the hair on is perfect the leather being thor oughly tanned, aud the hair left as smooth and fine as before tanning. We saw boots and gloves, of sheep skin "wool side in" - that particularly struck our fancy" This proeess.of tanning ha been thor oughly tested, and is rapidly getting into use. A common "wash tub" by this pro cess, will do as much tanning as all the vat3 of an ordinary "Tannery" and there can be no doubt thai it is destined to crc ate a perfect revolution hi the business manufacturing alt kinds of Icathcr..'vKvi VOL. 7. NO. 19. A Woman's Will. It has been stated, with some truth, that the genius of woman lies in writing letters. Here is a queenly specimen in evidence. It seems that the Bishop of Ely had promised Queen Eli zabeth to exchange some part of the land belonging to his See for an equivalent, but hesitating about It, she wrote him this letter: Pkocd It elate: I understand you are backward in complying with your agree ment, but I would have you to know that that I. who made you what you are, can unmake; and if you do not forthwith fulfil your engagement, by God! I will immedU aidi' nnfrnrt vnii ' Yours, as' you demean' voursc-i Elizabeth Heading. Make it a rule to read a lit tle every day, even if it be but a sicgln sentence- A short paragraph, will afford you a profitable source of reflection for a whole day. For this purposo keep some valuable book or paper always within your reach, so that you may lay your hand upon it any moment when you arc about the house. We know a large family that had made itself intimately acquainted with history, probably more than any other family in the United States, by the prac tice of having one of the children, each one taking turns, read every morniii-. while the rest were at breakfast. About 3fod;sy. Modesty, says Alli son, is not only an ornament, but a guard of virtue; it is a kind of quiet or quick feelin? in the foul; which makes her shrink j.from every thing that has danger in it. It is such an exquisite sensibility as warns her to shun the appearance of everything that is hurtful. In fchott, if you wish to banish modesty from the world, she car- rios away with her one half of the virtue there is in it for modesty has great influ ence over our actions, and in many c3e is an almost sure defence to virtue. Touh Slory. "You are rat ' crooked character, Mr. Jones." i "Rather, sir; but not quite so crooked as a tree I once knew. It was the tillest butternut I ever saw. Standing close to it one day in a thunder storm I saw a squirrell on one of the topmost branches, The lightning struck the same branch ' that the squirrel, by the watch, get to the j bottom precisely three minutes before the f ! lightning. . . . I That's a lie," exclaimed the landlord. j "A lie! true, sir, as any story ever was. ' alterwards cut the tree down, and made it into rans lor a nog pasmrc. l ce nogs would crawl through twenty times in a day, and so thundering crooked were them rails that every time the hogs got out they found themselves in the pasture againl". Well! that's enough, Mr. Jones," cried the landlord, "I never heard that before!" A True-blue Yankee. A Quebec cor respondent ol the Oangor ranger, tells the following story of a Yankee, who had been . II HI .1 . 1 "all around that place Fhe Yankee appi cached a group of English gentlemen in front of tho hotei, and flourishing a red bandana, observed "Wall, I've been all around, and I've concluded we don't waut ye." An Englishman addressed him with j" What do you think of the Citadel!" Scoti wouldn't make anything of taking that; he'd land fifteen miles down the river and starve them out." "Hut it is stocked with three year pro visions," replied the other. "Well he'd stay live, then." mt (io it, Anglo Saxon, thought wr. 'Sonny, can you cypher in two sylla bles!" "Yes sir and spell in the rule of three all day long." "Smart Hoy. Now see if you can tell what a pint of cold slaw will come to at a cent a vard." Didn't like the Juz. -A wealthy, pop ular and gay young gentleman once boas ted that he could walk home with any one of the members of a certain'division of the. Daughters of Temperance, from church, accordingly he, after services "were over the next Sabbath, sprned up lo a fair damsel and with a polite bow tendered his arm. The young lady, as by instinct, drew back as from a serpant and exclaim ed: "Aa sir.', ril never put my arm through another jug handle an hug as I live!" 3?A young, man at Niagara having been crossed in love, walked out to tin pjecipice, took olf his clothes, gave, one glittering look at the gulf beneath him, and then went home. His body was found .thf-'ncxl morning in bd, ! ? i . if-- n j rn r