.. . i ii 1 1 1 1 i ii - II i ii . i ill l ' 'J 111 ft if T iff T iffff n if1llllf! 1' 1 ' i THU BLK3SLNe3S OF 'JOVKHXSlJiNT, HKB THK DEWS OS" HKATKif, SHOULD DISTRIBUTED AL1K.B CPOM THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THK RICH AND THH POOR. VOL. 1 SO. 32 urn SERIES. EBEXSBLRG, TUESDAY, APRIL 27, 1851. 1 . TERBIB: The DEMOCRAT & SENTINEL is published every Thursday morning, in Ebensburg, Cambria Co. Pa., at ? I 50 per annum, if paid in advance, if not $2 will bo charged. ADVERTISEMENTS will be conspicuously inset ted at the following rates, viz : 1 square 3 insertions $1 00 Every subsequent insertion 25 1 Square 3 months ' 3 05 6 " 5 00 i year 8 00 column 1 year 18 00 " tt n 50 00 Business Cards with 1 copy of the Democrat J Sentinel per year 6 00 lg Letters must be post paid to secure attention The Graves of the Emigrants. They sleep not where their fathers sleep, In the village churchyard's bound ; They rest not 'neath the ivied wall, That shades that holy ground. Nor where the solemn organ's peal Pours music on the breeze, Through tho dim aisle at every door, And swells amid the trees. Not where the turf is ever green. And spring flowers blossom fair, Upon the graves of the ancient men, Whoso children sleop not there. Where do they rest ihose hardy men, "Who left their native shore, To earn their bread in distant lauds, Beyond the Atlantic's roar ? They sleep on many a lonely spot, Where the mighty forest grew Where the giant oak and stately pino A dark, Iono shadow threw. The wild fowl pours her early song, Above their grassy graves ; And far away, through the stilly night. Is heard the voice of waves. And the breezo is sofily sighing The fores boughs among, With mournful cadence ringing, r ' Like harps by angels strung. And liliei, nursed by weeping dew, Shed here their blossoms pale ; And spotless snow-flowers lightly bend Low to the passing gale. The fire-Cy lights her spfuklinjr lair.p In that deep forc-fct glcoin. Like hope's blessed light that Licfcki iLc i And darkness of the tomb. The mossy elone or simple cross Its silent record keeps, Where, mantling in the forest shade, The lonely exile bleeps. Yet deem him not by all forgot : Kind heart have breathed a rrayer, And tears of faithful love been shed By those who laid him there. lliscdlanfcus. " ThsKDOW Kattings " The New Orleans Delta gi ves an account of the new secret society; which appears to have origi nated in New York, bat which has since extend ed all over the country. The Delta saj's: The objects of the " Know Nothings" arc two fold part religious, part political : and the ends aimed at, the disfranchisement of adopted citi zens, and their exclusion Iroui office, and per petual war upon the Catholic religion. With these cardinal principles, the qualifications for membership and brotherhood, arc easily deter mined. 1st. The applicant for an admission to a "whr wain," must be a native bom citizen, of native born parents, and not of the Catholic religion. 2d. To renounce all previously entertained political leaning, and co-operato exclusively with the new order. - Sd. To holdncither political, civil, nor religious intercourse with any person who is a Catholic ; but, on the contrary, to use all available means to abolish tho political and religious privileges he may at present enjoy. 4th. That he will not vote for any roan for efucc wh U not a native citizen of the United States, or who may be disposed, if elected, to place any foreigner or Catholic in any office of emolument or trust the latter not Being in me opinitra of4 Know Nothings," a creditable wit ness" in any case eave where the oath is admin istered by his priest. The "pass words" and "signs" for admis sion into the wigwam of the Know Nothings, axe as follows : The applicant raps at the outer door an indefinite number of times, asking at the close, in a low whispering voice, "What meets hereto-day? (or night as the case" may be.) The interrogated immediately replies, " I don't know." To which the applicant for admission responds, "lam one," and forthwith is admit ted to a second door, at which he gives four dis tinct raps, when the door being opened, he whis pers to his attendant " Thirteen," and then ad vances into the body of the lodge. If disposed to leave before, the adjournment of the lodge, member leaving salutes the President, then tho Vice President, by first placing his right hand on Lis heart, than letting it fall on his side, whispering to the Guardian as he retires, thir teen." If a member requires assistance of a brother hen mixing promiscuously with the public, he places th right forefinger upon the left eyebrow, aa if iu tie act of -rt-hinjr, lookitar directly at the person whose attentioti he desires to attract, when, if the person be a member, he is bound to respond immediately by a similar sign. If it be desired to know of a stranger whether he is of of the initiated, shaking hands with him the middle finger is placed upon the lowest joint of his finger, near the wrist, with a gentle pressure ; when, if he is a member he will ask, "Where did you get that!" to which he will rejoin, "I don't know," and the queriest will end by re plying, "I don't know either. Nothing concerning the association is to le committed to writing or published, and the most profound silence and secrecy are to be observed by every " Know Nothing" outside ; but every thing inside the Wigwam is imparted indiscrimi nately to members. Every member on admission, swears by hold ing up his right hand, and pledges himself to do all in his power to put down foreign influence, and particularly the Catholic religion, and in no case to vbte for anj' person for any office who is not a " native American citizen," and no one, with somo exceptions, is eligible to membership, unless he or both of his parents are native born. As no records are kept, or publications made by the association, the plan of notifying mem bers of any emergency requiring their speedy assembling, is by scattering small square pieces of paper over the banquets and public thorough fares, and by nailing them to posts, doors, or other places accessible to the public. Cruelty ia the Ohio Penitentiary. The Ohio Stato Journal of the 25th contaius some facts relating to the cruelty exercised by the Deputy Warden, whose name is Watson, upon the body of a negro named. Coker, confined in the Ohio Penitentiary, The case has been brought to the notice of the Legislature, and a committee have made a report on Ui6 subject, which is paid to have produced a sensation in in the House. The testimony is in substance as follows - " In March last, Coker was suspect ed hy the AVardcn of having stolen $380 belonging to hitu. He therefore, had him thrown into a dark cell, having no floor but the earth, without bed or bedding, 70 feet from any stove. He was kept there three days, and then taken out and given ten lashes with the cat, which were laid on so vigoiously that his back was cut aad the blood flowed from tho gashes. He was then placed in h ce.il, u- before, and kept three d;iys more, taken out agnin and whipped as severely as 1 ure, with his shiit saturated with his blood, he was again placed in the cell, without bod or clothing, and en tho earthy floor of the dungeon, ho w.sjhft tor thru- days iuor. IL? ".va.-; iiui: tiikcn out and flogged a third time with the. cat by W'atiOU. The fourth tin.e he was taken out and strip- pfcd, and was told if he did uot remfess he would be whipped every day until his time of confine ment expired. All the time the negro protested that he was innocent, and knew nothing of the money. He was flogged again, and for sixteen days in cold weather, he was kept in the cell in this miserable condition, and fed on corn bread and water. This outrage was committed upon an innocent man, the victim of suspicion. The negro told his own story, and his testimony was corroborated by the other witnesses who was examined. Mr. Dimmock, the Chief Warden, was absci.t or Mck during the time, lie return ed Ufore the close of the examination, and wns placed upe-n the stand by Watson, but when the Committee told Watson that if Mr. Dimmock was sworn he must be exam sued ge nerally in relation to the affair, he declined to have him sworn and he was not examined. The Commit tee had two physicians, members of the House, called to examine the back of the prisoner, and they report that it was badly cut up ; that twen ty prominent gashes through the skin were ap parent that his injuries, together with his ex posures, wculd have been sufficient to have pro duced the death of a person cf only ordinary en durance. Spicy. The Editors of the Olive Branch, published at Boston, having received a communication from Nashville, Tenn., enquiring " whether 60me fc mal frinter could be obtained there to go to Nahvil!e," replies as follow : " Every girl in Boston, who is old enough to work in a printing office, or in any other office, has a lover whom she would be just as likely to trade off for a Tennessee article, as 6ho would be to sw&n hirn off for a crizzlv bear. The idea of a Boston girl, who goos to operas, patronizes Julien's concerts, waltzes once a week, eats ice cream, rides ia the omnibus, wears satin slip ners. and sometimes kisses the editor, going to Tennessee, except she goes there as tho wife of one of your first class citizens, (editors excepted; i t ml v ridiculous. Would not a girl in a nice silk dress, lace-edged pantaletts, and shiny gaiter boots, look well trudging through tho mud and mire of Nashville, in the old roost of a printing office, the walls of which are covered with posters, offering rewards for runaway nig gers, while in one corner of the room two old darkies are jerking away at a Ramage press, and in the other the editor is squirting tobacco juice all over the floor ? Wouldn't she be ia a nice fix when the editor and some great brute of a follow, whom he had offended, got playing at the game of shooting their revolvers across the office, at each other's hands. Who would make the firo when the devil had run off, and the editor was drunk? Who'd go home with her dark niiihts ? who'd take her out to ride on Saturday afternoons and go to church with her on Sun days? No sir a Boston girl wouM't go to Tennessee for love nor money. She can get caough of botb w.-Am Lome. Trouble. . - Read what the CInton CauraiU man saypn. this subject: Babys got the measles, send boy is drooping ; thirl owe down on trundle jd, with dreadful cough ii whooping. Mercury elrn to zero, wood-pile sonrwhat below it ; man ies to be a hero, but feels he cannot " go it." fife is busy washing, ahostof dirty " duds :" vile ever and anon a tear fa'Is silent in the sn j Husband rocks the cradle, " second" on hisip, soothes the " third" with a kiss, and hitsihe fourth a slap.- So from mtlancheJy moans,hd startling, troubled dreaming, the tuve is chared to groans, stifled sobs and sr-rraming Paiice U exhausted, he roughly speeds the vn.'pg, and jolts the little sufferers, with a rudenK is shocking. . Confusion worse confound . A neighbor opens the door, and with voice aj faje astounded, says, "Have you heard the Uxof flour ?" " No 1" husband loudly halloas ; 'fiat's the latest news V " Flour's thirteen dars ! twelve has been refused." A scream ! tisksy's voice ; something comes athwart her. she comes, all covered o'er with blood andiirty water. " Old brindle's gored the hciferrokc the vearlinsr's thieh. knocked Sissy dow and ml - t i cut her, and scared a passer-by. Wife si her down, dispairing, weary of her life; hcx'.nd nothing caring, for the quadrupedal strife-Wonders whether Job, the man of many sores! hen his wife made him give up, led such a li in doors . Meanwhile the wealthy mother, sits her easy chair, on its rich embroidered coveiViid comfort everywhere, and wonders whaf.hey mean these people that are poor prat of their troubles, which they think they ef-ire If they only had kcr trials knew what 4 uu- derwent, they.d think that all the vials of were on them spent ; which sets us thi ralh ing reader, that if rightly estimated,, one-half p all our sorrows, are sadly overlooked. Aud ti iio- al of our rhyme, though proseily it rans, isJicv tr borrow trouble- but take it as it comes. About the Letter J. Many people in writing the capital J mano distinction iu form from that cf 1, or if the lo it is SO slight that most people would be ii t loss to distinguish the two unless the letter iyc Ceuupauitd by the whole word. Such tndisti:ft- ne-ss often occasions mistakes ; mistakes tat mij.ht at times result in something seii"U3, al wiysm that which is unpleasant. Every 1-.er should hre a chaiactemtic form that uul f;s tinuLih, it from oiheis at a glance. An J yuy J has to come tu ue written so much like 1 is Lard to be told. TIic fault must lie iu the:e.L er, or him who leads the haud to the use- f Vae pen. J should always, when designed as a api'.al be made with its lower half below, while Ishould only come to the lino ; there can be no miiakc and if the renowned "Joliu Doe" should taL the notion to write his first name with only its ini tial. the printer would never transform hiu to 1. Doe. Everyone who instructs penmanskip, sould bear in mind, and teach the pupil the dilfeTertco in constructing these two letters ; and thosewho have acuuired the habit, should at once brcat it and so write their J's that thev may be "known of all men." (H7" Doctor Kaync, the American voyager, re latcs the following coucerning the caves of the Ar tic regions. Some of the berges were worn ekep vault-like chasms, to which a way wa; pracioa ble to broader caverns within. In the cr'stal solitude the echoes were startling. "A whstlc your own whistle you could harelly recojnize for the length and clearness of the ring ; the clang of a ramrod was heard running down the whole length of an army review ; and when you spoke, your words were rcpated through the mo tionless atmosphere almost as long as jour breath could hold out to make them. I tritd a hexameter we used to quo'e at home, and it came back to me in slow and distinct utterance. There is a certain cousin of mine, whom I remember annoying in our school days, for the dispatch with which he could say bis prayers of a frosty night before jumping into bed. My cousin's entire ration of winter prayer, I thought would have been repeated to him by a single effort of these echoes. A Mtstekt on- TnE Sba. Capt. Haskell, of the ship Independance, at Valparaiso, from San Francisco, reports that on the 21st of November, lat. 15deg. 40min. W., he saw a raft with two .!.. .-,.,rJ lvi;.a rn it. Tho raft Was mada of spars from a vessel, and there were yards and beams and eight water casks. It was well secu red in eyery way, having a mast, but no sail ; a small piece of white cloth was tied up for a sig nal on the mast, then there was a brass binacle and compass, a tin pump, half barrel dried fish, and some empty barrels. What a tale of hard ship and Buffering is probably associated with that raft ! a tale which will only be known when the sea giTes up its dead. A Cossciextiocs Gentleman. An Irishman being recently on trial for some offence, pleaded " not guilty ;" and, the jury being in the box, the State's Solicitor proceeded to call Mr. Fur kisson as a witness. With the utmost innocence, Patrick turned his face to the court, and said: " Do I understand yer honor that Mr. Furkis son is to be a witness forenenst mc agin ?" The Judge said drily, it seemed so. " Well; thin, yer honor, I plade guilty, sure, an' yer honor plase, not because I am guilty, for I'm as inno cent as yer honor's sucking babe at the brist, put jist oa the account of saving Misthcr Furkis son's sotie." Wadded comforters voided wives- are poor substitutes for From the Carbon democrat. Machine Poetry. Ma. F.PITOU : When in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one poet to enter nto poetical warfare wiih another ; and when poetry manufactured by machiencry becomes the order of the day in this place and vicinity, 1 would inform the public that I have a machine that can turn out as good poetry as can be fur nished by any machine in the county. If you wish to hear some of it: listen : Not a boat-horn was heard on the Lebigh Ca nal' On a cold dreary morning in March, When an A t was seen to emerge from his cell, -rriiti iua Lead all fenced in with starch. A lar"e roll of nonsense he held in his hand ; To the Democrat office ho hurried ; And when he reached there his spectacle band Gave way, and O ! how he flurried. Slowly and sadly he turned to retire, He had struggled, and we knew ho was hu man ; He shed not a tear, and spake not his woe, And we left him alone with his unsearchable and infinite approximation ail irtfynatim to a "boundless beneath," subservient and almost irreparable Here a screw was discovered to be loose, which accounts for the length of the last line. Howev er, it is all right now, so hero goes again : There once was a man and II s was his name, And he wrote poetry accordin And w hen he saw that "Novice" had answered the same, He started for the other side cf Jordan. Citokis. Pull elf your ccat and roll up your sleeves, For his poetry is hard to unravel. Hut when he finds the poets all awske he be lieves, It is about time for him to travel. But as a poet we confess he did excel!, For he dived into "Webster" accorehu , Nor left unexplored the heights of "Donkey Hill" On his way to the other side of Jordan. CiuiKis Pull ott your coat, &c Here we stopped the machine for the purpose- of nuttinsr on some oil, and re-pairing uio aama- ces occasioned by the screw slipping out, anu were just about starting the machine ajrniu when the bright hopes and expectations of our nsirg to eminence with the other bards of Mauch Chunk, were blasted by the bursting of the boil er, and blowing the machine into tho "rocky de pths.', where we hope it may repose unmoles ted, and may the services it has rendered long be re membered by the people of this vicinity. MUSES. "While a number of lawyers and gentlemen were dining at Wiseasstt, a few years since, a jolly son of the Emerald Isle appeared aud called for dinner. Tho landlord told him he should diuo when the gentlemen were done. 'Let him among us,' whispered a limb of the law, 'and we will have somo fun with him.' The Irishman took a scat at the table. You were not born in this country my friend?' said one. 'No sir, I was born in Ireland.' Is your father living V 'No sir, he is dead.' What is your occupation V A horse jockey, sir. What was your father's occupation ?' Trading horses.' 'Did jour father ever cheat any one while here V 'I suppose he did cheat many, sir.' Wliere do you suppose he went to V 'To heaven sir.' Has he cheated any one there ?' 'He has cheated one, I believe, sir.' Why did they not prosecute him V 'Because they searched the whole kingdom of Heaven, and couldn't find a Lawyer. y- Aicxender Deliome has been arrested in New York, for marrying a girl under 1-1 years of Lasrc. It renders lum name to ine oeaie pnsuu, poor fellow! How much foolish legislation there is in the world. What possible good can it do to make a felon of the hustaud of a young girl who marries her with her fiee consent: If you want anything cheap substantial and beautiful, tro to those h advertise. The rea son why their goods are superior to others is very simple : they have articles which they consider worthy of notice, and consequently ad vertise them ! An Item fohFakmsrs wuo desiujs to uirKOVE. The following little fact may induce farmers to raise honey as thus they gain a double prof it. It is stated that bees greatly improve the fruc tification of fruit trees. Orchards in which sev eral hives are kept always produce more fruit than others in which there are none. In the provinces on the Rhine the fruits are more abun elant and finer than in any other parts of Ger many, an tnere it is the custom 10 .eep large nuntitics of bees. Plants, too, which bees visit, thrive better in the neighborhood of hives. Paste as is Paste. Dissolve an ounce of alum inaouartcf warm water; when cold add much flour as will make it the consistence cream, then stew mto it as much powdered rosm as will 6tand on a shilling, and two or three cloves; boil it to a consistence, stirring all tho time. It will keep for twelve months, and waeu j ouiiviivvi j . Everv vie flatts azaiast x-uturt. - - Stems. Much talk, little sense. The man who stuck to a point has got loose. There are about 17,000 Jews in the United Stales. Counterfeit Shangahis are nw being sold in New York. What makes more noise than a pig under a gate ? Two Pigs? A man was accidentally precipitated from tho height of Mly" yesterday. Why is a person asking questions thestran- p.eri of ell iitiitlatl ? Because he's the que rist. When has a man a right to scold his wife a- loat l.is collie t When he has abundant srrou nds. Uv The first step to great nefs 13 to be hon est. j jeiu auu uduuivi iim lunger O 1 J..Vl. 1 . the ruled but the rulers. There is nothing more uncertain, than a 'certain age. T7 In a woman, an ounce of heart is worth a pound of brains. Contentment gives a crown when fortune hath denied it. O" What would the te'egraph line be good for on a fishing excursion ? The first law of gravity ; Never lanh at your own jokes y We should like to know how many spokes there r re in the wheel of fortune t (v If you doubt whether yon should kiss a girl, give her the benefit of the doubt, and 'go in. 5vMcn's frame is like their hair, which grows afte r th y are dead, and with just as little use to the in. 277 Thr- modern way of asking for a marriage license is to say : Clerk give me an order for a woman ! Ty The fellow who kissl the face of nature, Fays it didn't f.ro half as well as the busses of some of his laiy friends. If you don't wish to get angry, never argue- wih a blockhead. Remember the duller the razor, the more you cut yourself and swear. 2v" Why may a mau, whose landlady tor ments Lim, be said to live without expense ? Because he gets 'ltord'-'d for nothing. sZf Who ever lost money or character by at tending to his own husines, and letting other people's alone. 37 They have get a very benevolent old gen tleman in Troy. On Christmas he boiled dish cloth and gave the broth to the poor. Qlr There is a gentleman in ihe Legislature who can be trusted with any secret ; for nothing he can say will be believed. Uhio Vvji r. No man can do anything against his will, said a metaphysician, "raitn, said rai, "l had a brother who went to Botany Bay, against his will, fliith an' he did." A Lawyer, r-n his death-lK-d, willed his whole property to the lunatic asylum, saying that he desired it should lio to the same class of persons he teie-k it from. 0""lt was a Portland lady that said she would make a noor tailor, and to which a nautical friend replied, but you would make an excellent mate though. An adopted citizen wrote home that he was employed by the State. On coming over they found it just as ho had stated he was up at Sing-Sing serving out a sentence for life. fJCT Some people make some strange mistakes as to the nature of angels. They talk of woman as "acgels." There's not a word in tho whola Bible about female angels. They arc always of the other sex. 7"The greatest pleasure conectcd with wealth consists in acauirinir it. Two months after a I uiall comes into a fortune, he feels just as prosy I an(j fretful as when he worked for "four and six" a lie who publishes the faults of others to con ceal his own, ia like him who attempts to hide the wind by throwing dust into the air. When day "breaks" what becomes of the fragments f There aic now 15 Roman Catholic journals in circulation in this country, whose united cir culation is estimated at about sixty thousand weekly. She that marries a man because he is a "gxd match," mutt not le surprised if he turns out "lucifvr." It is remarkable, says the correspondent of the Boston Atlas, that the only governments of the world which have an excess of their receipts over - their expenses, are republics, the United States - J and Switzerland. Chinese widow, bcin found fauuic? the grave of her husband, was ask! why she per formed so singular an operation. She said sue had promised not to marry again wnile the grave as remained damp, and that as it uned very slowly of she saw no harm in assisting in tho process, j Aa t.mjlltut artist American of courses laU,, y painted a snow storm so naturally, tht he j caugV.t a bad cold by setting too near it with hi coat 0jf ITP Aw , is von (.u J a Me-!i-r-oc.et. uw I ' J ' man wio says "the world ovts ILa living Seed Potatoes. One of our friends, a very close and intelligent observe r as well as a good practical fartnor, h3 lcn in the habit for many yean of sek-cting tho largest and finest potatoes fur seed. Those who have purchased of him have long rtm&rked one peculiarity about them not found elf cwbrc, that they are nearly all of a. uniform size, with no small ones among them. Uis neighbors haTe ob served this without knowing the reason, which our friend attributes entirely to selecting tho seed as above for a course of years, and thus es tablishing the size as permanently characteristic. Like produces like is the foundation of all im provement in both vegetable and animal life. The advantages rcsptctivJy of large or small po tatoes for seed, have been before the public, and the question has generally been decided after the trial of a single season, when ihe effect would bo so perceptidle. Here, on the other hand, are the results from continued care for a course of years. and we consider them highly interesting and im portant. Pa. Farm Journal. "Jiiu," said one fast man to another, "It is reported that you left the East on account of your belief an itinerant martyr." "How," replied Jim flattered by the remark, "how's that t" "Why, a police officer told mo that you belie ved everything you saw belonged to you, and as the public didn't you left." Doobs and Reputations. A Mr. B. Payne, was arraigned in the Mayor's Court of Peters burg, on Saturday last, to answer sundry char ges of naughty conduct towardsa Miss Williams Thejyoung lady testified that Sir. 1'., "liact- guarded her, stole her keys, villihci ucr reputa tion , and ruined her character and the trou ooor of her residence. A very 1'aync-full aliiiir ! The Sons and daughters of Vermont ia Lowell held a great family festival; on Wednesday even ing. The company, including delegations ff na tive bom Verraontcrs, frcin Boston and other places, numbering about a thousand persons. At the supper table various spiritedaddrcsseu were made by duTertnt gentlemen, many letters were read by distinguished Ytrmonters, who were unable "to be present. Saxe, the poet, sent the following toast : Vermont Famous for tho production of four great staples, Lamely: vu.11, auinen, nwpls $uur aiul horses. The first arc strong the .last are fleet; The second and third arctxcediugly sweet; And all arc uncomonly "hard to beat." ' A Inlaut ball closed the festivities of the oc casion. Tom and Joe were talking over their travels, when Tom akod him : AVas you ever in Greece V No, but I fell into a thundeiin' big tub of tump once.' At an infant Sabbath-school, to the card of which I was promoted a lew years since, I gavtf a Bible story of the proeligid son. When I cam to the place whero the tioor, ragged son reached his former home, and his father saw him a great way o!T, I inquired what his father probably did One of the smallest boys with Ids little first clenched, said : 'I douo, but I des he set tie dod on him. Tr2 Inflailuatoet RnEfMATisv. A'gentl man wishes us to publish the following for the relief of humanity. He says he has known a number of cures made by it, and all of them ia a short time. Half an ounce of pulverized salt petre, put in half a pint of sweet oil; batba the parts affected, then a sound euro will b spHdily elTected- Lyiuhlvrg Express. Scnvat Mails. The ladies say they are op posed to stopping the tnales 011 the Eabbath, es pecially iu the evening, unless tuty can be stop ped at their houses. Governor Bigler, of California, KtU a taoet commendable example of reform in the matter of government expenditure. He proposes re trenchment to the extent eX 5371,700, chiefly from salaried, among which he reduces his own from $10,000 to 0,000 ! Wc think we sc the Legislature adopting the propositioa ! How Men "East Up." Meu with unassuming wives never bust. Ilia the husbands of such women as Mrs. Dash and Lady Brilliant, who find themselves face to face with the Sheriif, and certain mysterious docu ments adorned with red tapes and wafers, big enough for tarcct exercises. The desire of a New York feminine is to out shine her neighbors no in mental acquirements, but in gmgeabread ornaments and gold-edged coalse-utJes. If Mrs. Dash gives a game supper wood-cocks stalled with gild dust Lady Brilliant takes the wind out of her by getting up another, in which the prevailing dish will be birds of ranidicc, swimming in gravy made of melted peails. It is this rivalry, not "dabbling in railroad stocks," that brings ruination to the fast men ia AY all street. Tho "ill-fortune" 0 which they complain is no more nor less than a brainless wife. If they would cou.e btck to hap piness, therefore they should tarn their attention not to the fluctuations of the stock, market, but to the ruinous absurdities of their own fire-side. Thousand dollar repasts dou't pay, whila the merchant who purchases huudred dollar handker chiefs Tor a "duck of a wife,' shoud not wonder if tho time event ually comes lien a "goose of Kilobaud" laeked shilts. ni was but ill supplied, with brtecb.es. 1 -. ti ! 'r V, J I tr