JOBBING DEPARTMENT. The I ,ropriotora have stocked theostablislan e all on% `'arid assortment of iCrE, AND CARD TYPE IND PAST PRESSES, cud fat lorepaccii to execute ¢eullyunrl promptly v osTERS, DAND - 1311.1,5, CIRCULARS, BlLL 'it EADS, CARDS, PA4PHLETS,...t.c., Sc. Deed.. Mortgages, Leases, and a full assortment „t Conoables' and Justices' Blanks on hand. people living at a iliBtanee can &Tendon hav ic,: their setirk dune promptly and bent back in rctlirti MASONIC. „t; IMO P., No. 317, A, 1.11., moots at their Hall Ur. Roy's drug storo, on Tuesday exening, on or lon Moon, at 7 WeJoch ,04. 011.11'1TR, No. 194, It. A. M,, meats at the . .9. on Thursday evening, on or before tlO Fun, o , u , a t 7 o'clock I'. N. citi.WlL, N 0.31, H. Lt 5. MASTERS,raccta at 11 111, on the third Fi iday et NM) calendar t.,oth. at 7 o'clock I'. ,1. . • k j AGIITON COMMANDERY, No. 2S, of KN I IMITh TOIPL.tit, and the appendant orders, meets pt the the first Friday of each calendar month, at ch,cl; n, BUSINESS DIRECTORY, WILLIAM. ALI. SMITH', TORYEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW usurance, Bounty and Pension Agency, Main vest Wellsbora, Pa., Jan. 1,1888. s, ----- Wm, GARRETSON, ToRNE y AND - COUZISELOR IAT LAW, Sotary Pulilie and Insurance Agent, MOBS :a., , Pa. over Caldwell 's Store. *GEO. NY. MERRICK;. TIORNEY AND COIiNSELLOR AT LAW. 0 , 1 1„ with W. Esq., ...Main Street, c eposito Union Block, Wellsboro, Pa. July 15, 1863. O:TERBELL at. CO., fIOLESAIIE DRUGGISTS, and dealers, in dill Paper, Kerosene Lamps, Window Glass, Perfumery, Paints and Oils, &e., SC. rning, N. Y., Jan. 1, IS6S.-Iy. F. WILSON WILSON & WILLS, oRNEYs, A COUNSELORS .AT LAW, .:rst door from Bigonoy's, on the Avenue)— 'ill attend o basin s entruAted to their care the olunttee of 'CI gaanti Potter. - Wellsboro, Jan.]] 1568. ' • JOHN I. ITcHELL HORSEY AND 'OUNSELOR AT LAW, Welltboro, Tioga ,Co., Pa. uw Agent, Notary Public; and Insurance s. 110 Hill attend promptly to collection of Back Pay and Bounty. As Notary be, takes ac.knoWledgeniciits of deeds, ad- -:era orths, and will act as Commissioner to :te,timony. )1711 — Office over lloy's Drug S:t.ore, .rdng Agitator Office.—Oct. 30. 1367- John W. GuernseV, ,oRNI:Y . AND COLSELOR AT LAW. fcturtleillo this Sounty with a view of -,ln; 111:4 perpanent residency, poiielts a ,1N of public patronage. All business en. n4c , l to his cure wit) be attended to with ,upzne.zs acid fidelity. Office 2d door south Fares hotel. Tioga, Tioga Co., Pa. apt. 26.'1;8. t 1. „WWI B. SIIAKSPEA RE, ;PER AND TAIOR. Shop over John R. tun'' Store. Cutting, Fitting, and ,wing done prowl y and in boat Ay le. Pa.. Jan. 1, NtiB—ly CICORGE WAGNER, ti.olL shop first door north 4,r1,. A . Sears'a Sli p,'.y-Culling,hitting,and Repair romilitly-and Jai). 1, 1S1;8.-Iy. JOHN J ETIVER, 11. 1 1 t( AND CUTTER, has opened a shop iatiton street, rear lil Ficar., A:, Derby's shoe ;,,p, whereto is prepared to manufacture gar a• to order in the most substantial wanner, -,I with ,li-patch. Particular attention paid .!ritting ;Ind Fitting. March 26, DoiS-ty Dr. C. K. Thompson. LIVEI.I : SPORoIiGit PA.) atletol to Profossiona I culls in the. eill,ty e, &boro and elbew Imre. L , : and ltez:nlenee on State St. 2d door on going Ett,t. Pima. 2.1, 1 SetS. 11.1C.tN . 31. D., 1 tte of the 2d Pa. Cavalry, :titer , liter Lat.t of army service, tuth a large to•ld and holtttal practice,banoputted as *1 th.. piaetito of medicine and surgets, in all Ppr....tn, from it tliqtanco can tI I good tt 1101t.1 Mien de-iti,ll. , putt of tho Slate ib consultation, or to ,Terationn. No 4, Union Monk, tip 11,11.buto. Wm. B. Smith, .XVILLE, Pa, Pen ion, Bounty, and In- Agcnt. Couituunicationa :cut to the C;ohlre,s will reecivo prompt attention. rl,;.= moderato. [jan 8,1868-131 Thos. 13.13rydon. DRAFTSMAN.—Orders left a • -m, Town:Tod Hotel, WellEboro, wil •tt with prompt attention. 11, E. 01.,NEY, in . CLOCKS A-, JEWELRY, SILVER 'SLATED WARE, Sp ,ctaeles, String;, tc,Mw>tield,Pa. IVatehe9 and Jew- Ludy repaired. Engraving done in plain lad Gentian. I i.epti;7.ly. ilairdres,ing & Shaving. !..,r Willcox 4; parker's Store, l'Articular attention paid to Ladies' sbunpooingi Dyeing, etc. Braids, and swiebes on band atybinade to or- k U,,1::,}l J. G. PUTNAM, i. Wittlt UT—Agent for all the best MANE WATER WHEELS. Also 7571', u „ .,,,llating Movement for Gling and t'a . Aug. 7, ISnS, ly. C. L. - WILCOX, DRY GOODS i,l all kinds, Ilardwnrc cAeo, Notions. Our as,oronent is large "es low. Store in Union Block. Call .Cc nati.—tuay 20 lEtfiS—ly. PETROLEUM HOUSE, :1E1.1), (IEORO E CLOSE, Ihupri \ new Hotel conducted oh the principle t 0.1 let live, fur the aci;oinmodatioil ul - , hc.—Now 11, 186d.—ly. itzLEvirs noTELf '.k, TIOO C.OVI N , A ••.ihling, attached, and an at tent a ht . attendance I , .1 It IS, RILL'S HOTEL, IEU) l'ior a ugh, Tioga CO. Pa., E. rr..ptiemr„ A now and commodious i.n4 %%Ilk all Ili° modorn ituproveitiv-nt. t:Azy .I:l%es ,t the bast hunting and Ikti :,,Rind• m Northern Penn'a. Conveya rem t rms. moderate. kik ‘I'..II4TOIN aines, Tioga County, rn. 1:1:1111.11:A, l'itut , ' K. 'Ott, izd mithi n carry acce!. : l the •I„ b Hating grlol/ in North.. p.tito+ spared .)1 ple;11 , 11re Sriti.l 'o,ty ;ifil _Pension Av;i_qte, "' .l 1 "111 1 114'11,11118 11,11,1, I 4•;.1 .; .1 . 4 4 I ..111i)' 01 , 14 rd to) Ow at I IpiPt..X.'.l 11111 ir/Lt 011 -)1111ki .01 .14 ' ,L,.1 t.,..p01ed h, 111 all pl It• " "•Int,, 1010) )lay 1, 1.114.4441 44. My 111.4 lt .1 .IIMI t )r, , au C. ol,ll Willaato ltioi tII ir ,!.rmi444114144.1tri01, 411 140:11 11, I I I'l II r l'•fiC, 11115 If tt.KN EsB RILEY, I AND SHOE MAKERS, 4- riot 1,;“ ry'o .6.•• el,. by ”j. cl.ll. Ic AND gIIORS of all kind: male h. k i, the heq mann or. kindg dono prilniptly - and `' 1,. (.13‘ a call, Jottx HARk.NESS, WM. RILEY. - 40r01Jatt.2,1868-17. VOL. XVI. CITY BOOK BINDERY AND BLANK . : BOOK MANUFACTORY, - • S Baldwin Street, SINGS OF TILE BEG BOOK, 2D FI.0011,) OTSR MOTTO: GOOD ASTIII.I isEbT, ()ASAP AS TIIC WILAPEST. Of every description, in all styles of Binding, and as low, for quality of Stock, as any Bindery in the State. Volumes of every description Bound in the best manner and in tiny style lq deted. ALL KINDS OF GILT WORK Executed in tho best manner. Old Books re bound and made good as now. at:AC . 42= UMZIMS I am prepared to furnish back numbers of all Reviews or Magazines published in the United States or ti reat Britain, at a low price. BLANK BOOK & OTHER P , PER, Of all sizes and qualities, on hand, rul d or plain. ' DILL lIEAD PAPER Of any quality)or size, on band and ct t up ready for printing. Also, BILL PAVER, aid CARD BOARD of all colors and quality, in boards or cut to any size. STATIONtRy, • Cap, Letter, Note Paper, Envelopes, Pens, PeneilN 6z.e. I am sole agont for Prof. SHEPARD'S NON-CORROSIVE STEEL J. B. NILES Which I will warrant equal to Gold 'Pens best in use and no mistake. The above stock I will sell at the Lowest Bates at all times, at a small advance on New York prices, and in quantities to suit purchasers, All work and stock warranted as represented. I respectfully solicit a share at [while patron age. Orders by mail promptly attended to.— Address, LOUIS NI ES, Advertiser Budding, Elmira, N.Y. Sept. 28, 1867.-13 UNION HOTEL. 1111 N tilt, wATRINs, I,LtorRiF.ToR. FIAr „,, IL new hotel !mailing on t e of fife Union Hotel. lately d e , l loy t Lc tilt% Mil 110 \V th it - tall - c and cttttvt it t gut -dr:, Tht , Unlink Ilntul t t 'Wendt,' Int a Toppelaind. ou"•, and the Prow . l6tot• belio‘en jt can 1 , J., 811:11.11111ed WIEIIOIII Grog. Ati atteiiiirc Ii ,) ti in attend:thee. ' • Welinhoro,.11111121:1i. GROCERY AND RESTAURANT, \V E L L 811 0 It l> , N N ' RESPECTFULLY itinittintees Iv th, Ending public that lie litiq a th-tr.ittle "Li.; ro. Berle entnitriFing, Tetnt, Colter-, tSplee,, t 4 ii,tart4, :11olast•es,,Syrups, anal all tiiht eon:A . 11111es .1 tir,t class rttteh. Oys.ters in every Aylo et All sonnille hours, 11,boro, Jan. 2, 1' , 117 -11 Ore,at Jolitiqati bt ce's Itouot , , ai.,l :01111 , H II 1111111.liAlit .1.•• w,,111,1i , ,,,3 , t ic tltc I,,iple ill IA x b:Il he i. , 1 11 :11:111aCtIll'illg It PMl•lit Rant s lurh 1.• r,, 114.' 4 0`4 tlm following.advatitage over 1/11 F 4, there is no erimpii3g; 2.1, 'lo,s-1ml:bog, die ) break II•t'l ; ad , Ito I lit , I.to I. 11., ju-t Lho lig lor vverythoy. S.l•iiill,•H MI Ilallit , 111.) orders solleitod. t of 1V0..1 field non,' 01,:n 8 P 1,9 ) , )id Na( of hain "' r4l r‘lt° llo,lll lNSl Coltli• 1:1:t• „uuc tilt \VC 1110 bull 1. , 1 I r p. t. ‘ rhup 00e.1.00r soul 11 .11 Sander% I:ole , rove. %Vogl 11e1.1 11...0, rel., 1,3 Is4 e s. .1.11. . ; WALREII & WITT-111OP: • 1,.1 IN tIARDWARE, IRON, STE1:1„ N A 11,5 . , 87'0 V ES, 7'l - fl •I BELTING SIIVN _CUT! FRY, wATER, At:RICE LTUI; AL IMPLEMENTS 4 '4 , Carriage.. and Itarness Trimmings, lIARNESSE:z, SADDL I'. Corning, N. Y., Ja.l:2, IStl7-Iy. H EAR YE ! HEAR YE ! HEAR YE Kept f:onslantly on hand, ;1,1 (oroiz.ll,,ii to or or, by at his now store. 2,1 41,ii,r !IL.•\ t. WelltAborci. faun lu, be,Q.) THE BillTato Platform :'calos, :11l ortlitpry sizo4, tor lie.tvy, and tttuntel u , u, tnaSr be lound at the Hardware St..te Wu,. Roberts, verellsbere. These Sealett mettle Fairbanks-pat ent an d have no superior att tv here. 'they are medal n the hest style and ',Ave taLten the premi ere at all the gie3t exhil,itt n, I have the , 010 ageney lot tbst:e Menlo: in this region. tV 11.1,1 A NI 1; 01.1F.ItTS. Well-31,0r0, Feb. t 2, J. JOHNSON PACIFIC ETOT - 14a, 170, 172, 17-1: cl• I7(1 GPE,/,'N UCH ,Veto /o)/. , • THE (IN DEtISI(I \` El) lakes pleas ure in annunnvlbi: and patritris that froln date, the etiarge of the Pirelli - I'c will he per 11 y Proprit h.! I hi , there core free ( N or, the 't. o i i/l ; au itiorditutte rent, he idle to meet - the ilownerrd tendetley iiriee- Lining „fl iif service. It ,tti 1101,1” I .1"1:, nn•l';roini-hr•l the tivtanl.te the it Li , for ui;iny t r•;,r 110 tikr: rilde every , I• 1;. .3 , IL, Ttl.` itts.lll.l, Propl Tht: e,rilet,iunt tor 111. 1 1 " " 1 d„„, ~f land :ztr..,•l, 114 1 .1 , 11 "i•,i lit It riiathi 8011 of r,,Jy ,••••• - tti go 1 , 1 ..11,1 tilCaw hull Li ni• , . 111 . 1 . 2, I IF la, evv - Tol)aeco Store ! rum P t I, :"•I'Ool?lung • I•I the I I siori ;111 , ,tali .!•• t 1 1. , I'll; is''l4 (%,ittino.) s f)KINi; II: I'i of PI, re; PHI: I'l : 1. I, 1. ic•-• I - 14,,, , 11 . , er:rtify 1. • • .-•I .1t I': 1.1. I PII I II Choi! rt nn. 1,24 1 , e11.•'11,‘I. It ti. 1 .0 alai• I•• ; nister I.!, •i •..••, l It ofrno I Li It .1 I:vl3:icier I, 'r t• lAf, ilhert .1 ,, 111) t' J'iller lli :V .1, 1 I :, \V II W.11r..u. 1, I, ,1 Smith \1 V.,.,t0 .1 ft ,:t I' I: (I,,lllttr .1 .1 ti.,%1 , ,1 h Zimuwrlnan C L Rin N. B.—Pl.iste,r always on,hand at tho Price $5 per too. Nov. 4, 1868. l i ..:'.' .. . . . , l•-•-_, • •'" ' - I _ • , , • I. . .. , 1 • , . . . . . -.. . . , . • , . .. . . - , , • .. _ . --1•••••-4 . . . . . .. . f f . . . .- . 1 ...•\ , • ~.... . ...--7 - 7—.,„ , •• i qt gigga Courdo agait t ,--.......::_; - --........ + . __N : 1- ' , ,- . I 1 . , ~,•,If a: • I ' , . ~......„s N .:. . N, Is published every Wednes(l,7 lloornin: *lf , . '::, .1,-, ~.... .. ....\ ••...,„ %., 1 ::N '- ' ';': . ... .. per year, invariably in ativaneo F ..,' !.: .- ,-,'.?. :. ~ ' , :4 .,.... , lett . 4 { - • • "-• . .. . . ) , . l ' C ''i' COBB & .VAN GELDER. •z - . . „.. .. •• ... '''''. *?l•F'. 1 , 1 .....007473..] I Er. 0 . 1 7,5410 ii. Dr. . •. . : „: •i• , - ~., f. , ~. e"""`• . t - --- 1 + . ...°- .. ...e.,...7= , v .R.,'X' 1S X IsT Ct. Ft.6"l - F. . ".,.• , - i. . . . . , , TEm LIVES or Mirnou, On 1..M . £1, AUBE ONE 8 or,a I EL:MIRA, N. Y. BLANK BOOKS COMPLETE YOUR SETS! PENS, OF VARIOUS SIZES, FOG LADIGN A:41.) GENTLEMEN, E. R. KIAII3A.I4L, Otte door ahoy° 1110' Moat Mal I, et , 13. cx C' kit fa. leo SI la . BAREIILS, FIRKINS, 011URX'S, PAMPER TUBS , RE W. T. MATT S ! M=M=IIIII I 1.. elli (lt , • 11,1: 1;. , 1 • 7 l'111:1:1 =II I\l ::;.'- NEW SPRING GRUBS J. A. Parsons &.Co., y our attention to our New Stock as we think you will tind it very attractivo and chtlnp: W e do not, as roost in the trade, claim great ad vanoes, Sc., but intend to giro more goods for a dollar, taking the average of our stock, than at any time for sovoral years. Our Linen Stock is very large and cheap. Brown 'table Linens ds, his, fie, Bs, per yard. Meachea " Cs. Ss, las, 12s, Table Cloths in extra Sizes and Qualitiea Napkins from - $1,50 to $5,00 dna Towels from - - ;:i1,75 to $6,50 " Towoflings - ls, 16e, 18, 200, 250, 26, 3s Full linos of Drapery Muslins, Marseilles Quilt•, Tabto Spreads, cheek and striped Vain soaks, &c„ at• very reasonable prices. In Domestic Cottons our' Stock is very desirable. With as many Leading Goods at Low Rates as ever. We have Brown Sbeetings yd. wide 12 ets. Bleached muslins Is per yd. Handsome Prints Is yd. Common Prints l cents, mind ail other goods such as Cheeks, Denials, Tiehings, stripes, dc., equally cheap. The Cassinieres, Kentucky Jeans, d Cotton• odes. A larger stock than utsual, and at still lower priee.s)l Dress Goods and Shawls. We have a fine Stacie of early Spring Goods, We ate lotepintr Luger Anal' of tht \ ,to many last Atol are Dew :clang them at n6lllll/ per la,f fall. 11'n ,11411 Iteep all the nuittheis having them at_ :1,,4•11e .5., (ig., 5..,311 , 1 x% know that no nne t•alt 'beat It, either as le !awes, tin.ilittes, t o n. to to the BOOTS & SHOES.; I tee Ira de la3t. year Wa-• larger in till? EtnelC In .1 .0. , r0, //11(1 ele•ire to increase it .0.4 to do ro, ititetld ttr lit`tr a atilt 1 , 011,, , 1, I: in lit,n %1$.1l; and Cliit \i".• i..t1l I:43101111W 1,, 111 , our largo tt.F•lorttithitt oi 1 1 Al'l , l lc in Alcn's and Rov't; Shoeß, Women's & eiril dren't,, Call; Kip and Moroe-' co Slioes. Al file same oleo: , as last yea'r. ' troik i 1L wo,t ttlidile id . :illy ,01.1, and our 'largo iradr, enahles o , to sett it at a y moult profit. In Ladies' Serge Congress Gai ters. Scr 9 t: RUI OYU'S, and AIUSA BOaS, • Also, Arid and Pcldde'Woat 10»le We I.cep a lunch larger iitack than es•cr bciure, 'inil rrll it le-c than regular pricer. Wu .ire , 111 " the balance of unr ;kteek "f Winter NI awls, Sacqueinks, Dress Good, Furs, &e. At a rcduc4n of full 25 per cent. from our regular vriveN,lany o no do.irens of buying very chap not': J. A. PARSONS & CO e,”rning, 11 a rtol . 10, 1 V. 9. THE Atlantic, and Great Western C LEVEL A ND, TOLEDO, CHICAGO, M [WAUKEE, ST. PAUL, OMAHA, A.nil to all Points in tho IVEsT and Noirru-VinsT Dayton, Cincinnati, Louis- VILLE, ST. LOUIS, KANSAS CITY, MEMPIIIS, NEW ORLEANS, Awf nil L. iota in tLo South A: Southwest, with No Change of Coaches TO CLEVELAND OR CINCINNATI, From ;Lily point on the Erie Railway. An ad ept.' ge anti e.mvonienee not ollered by any other route. Turtorith LD3FITNING 1 1 ',x1'1:ESS MAINS DAILY. Baggage Checked Through, and No CHANG! from ono car to ;mother, preventing loss or darn ago. Tickets via this popular route can he peoeure( al all offices on the line of the Eric Railway, ant When purehaBilig, 'IA' the Agent for Ticket} in. rho TLA NT' I_l t; 1: E.% T 1PI:S . 1'101N I; A Thw A l'A [TEN CONITMIS OS GOOD A V.1.1!n 1191)4 and t!ro enn , fantly nweivin t the ir ev,ry nrlicle needed in this region of country in the HARDWA RE LINE. SHELE HARDWARE, IRON, STEM . `.\ I LS, MIDDLETOWN ANJI IRA MAW'S, ROPE, 'T 1 - A Ti N.., .1 1 1 1.0 to Wa of om.lok,L.o.ner, ATTORNEY Jo COUNSELOR AT LAW, Law renoevilin, Tiogn County, P. Office over George McLean ' s Boot 16 Shoo Store. Business attended to with promptnoaa. apr. 7th, 'Bo—]y, " ti con. ca' "V. 12. <rim gixt Its tis.o 780 irnilxi, car 101:7-1.•st very ellen p BLACK • ALPACAS WINTER GOODS. -AND ERIE HALILWAY ! ..S. , TUE GIzEAT 11110 AD GUAUE ROUTE MD BEERS & ABBOTT. ovrosir DI:POT ELNIIIIA IV. 11. SHATTUC, tlen. Tiohet and Cl.weland, 1) 1). ItI.ICKEII, 14n Gen. Rupr., Meadville, Pa HARDWARE AND STOVES fHlardware Store W. 7 7 11 Cooking latti rs and Coal :stov e . iff mate C oniapanion, rul the etkhra tri IMERICAN COOK CONVERS k OSGOOD oPsborn, Jan. C, John C. Dorton, WELLSBORO, PA., MAY 26, 1869. X'orto' tgorstrr. BOIL IT DOWN. Whatever you have to say my friend, Whether witty, or grave, or gay, cendense ns niuch as ever you can, And say in the readiest way; And whether you write of rural affairs, Or particular things in town, Just take a word of friendly advice— Boil it down For if you go spluttering over a page \Vhcn a couple of lines will do, , Your butter Jo spread so much, you see, That the bread looks plainly through. ,So when you he:ire a story to tell, And would-like a littlo renown, To make quite sure of your wish, my friend, Boil it down. When writing an article for the press, Whether prose or verse, just try To utter your thoughts in the fewest words, And let them be crisp and. dry. And when it, is finished, and you suppose It is done exactly brown, Just look it over again, and then Boil it down. For editors do nut iiito to print An article lazily long, And the general render does not care Vor a couple of yards of song. So gather your wits in the smallest space If you'd Win the author's crown, And every time you write, my friend, Boil it down. `<itior,ellaneriito gradino. Wikß HE GUILTY' " Sheriff, remove this prisoner !" com manded the Judge. " Five years, liVe long years in the pe»Rentiary!Ood (Jodi 1 am not guilty ! I ant not guilty !" cried Regin ald Forester, as 4e was led away. He had been sentenced to live years' hardiabor for the!crime of breaking the dam of John Cluny's flouring mill. Two brothers / lames . and Charles Crocker were the! principal witnesses. They swore that late one night about six months before, as they were walk ing haute, they saw ,Forester walking rapidly along the •pAli leading across the dam. Thinking that something had happened to the sluice-gates, they were about to follow in order to assist when he saw that ho began to cut away the Props that upheld the tint= hers. Horror-struck they% stopped. It Nvas too late. dam g ave away. nur,lling down the road twards• the mill tilt.); shouted : '"('he flood, the flood!" The miller heard the shouts, and had just time to save himself and his ; shortly afterward the flood reached the mill and swept it away. A. merchant of the viliteou close by swore that _For ester bougla an axe, a shovel and a nick On the eveni qf previous to the break ing of the dam. The axe was found hidden aniong some hushes close to the path, and was identified by the mer chant to 1,0 tho VIIIIII,I Whl4lll Reginald bought or him. The miller swore that Voresier had several times been seen lurking around' the mill. The miller further stated that at the tune he dis charged him, he (Forester) swore lie would he even with him. "Ail he destroyed my property be cause I •discharged hiin for during, against my wishes, to make love to my daughter, Amy," concluded he. Only one person believed Forester to he innocent—Amy Cluny, the miller's daughter. It was twelve at noon, just four years after the conviction of Forester, when the door of the State's prison opened to him. A pale, bowed-down man, whose eyes were constantly seeking tire ground, walked down the road towards the ferry boat. T,ho crowd that stood on the wharf quickly moved aside as the' man tottered towards a bench: " A pardoned convict !" ran iron iouth to inouth. Yes, Forester, for it was he, had been pardoned by the Governor. Four long years he lia , l toiled in the brick-yard of the prison. Thoughts of self-destruc tion often flitted across his weary mind. Often as he stood near the fur nace of the brick kiln he thought that only one hold leap into the roaring flames, and his misery would be at au end. Re had received only two letter 3 du ring his iuhlu•isonment. One tills from Amy. The other letter came from - New York. It was from a lawyer, andread: "This is to inform you that Allen Forester, Esq., your uncle, has departed this life. He died intestate, and you aro the sole heir to—." The letter Ivas received two days before he was pardoned. ,`Fortune avails me nothing, the world thinks one guilty," cried lie. " Forester has come back. I wonder why in the world ho wants to conic to this place again ; he's rich, and has threatened to shoot Jim Crocker if he calls him a convict again." Such - were the reports that spread over the village like wildfire. • At last the news came to the cars of the miller. With a muttered curse upon his enemy, as he called Forester, he ascended the stairs leading to the second story of the new mill that he had erected in place of the one swept away. His steps were noiseless as he approached Amy's bedroom door. • He looked through the keyhole. A minute afterwards he wrenched open the door and rushed into the room—he had seen Amy signaling to somebody. As lie rushed to the window he caught a glimpse of the figure of a man as lie dis appeared behind -a projecting elifr—it was the form of Forester. He caught hold of Amy's arm. " Who was that man ? Quick, tell me," came from between his clenched teeth. ;gymy uttered n. shriek of pain, 1 te propped her arm and rushed from the room, but soon returned with a loaded gun in his hands, and dragged her to the open window. Tim head of a man could plainly be seen rising slowly from bellied the cliff'. Amy sank upon her kuecs. The miller re leased her arm and slowly raised his gun. Ile had recognized the features of Forester. , " Signal :" shouted her father, "so that call be sure of him. I want to cltoot hint through his black. heart;" .& m e rcy 1" shrieked Amy, raising her hands. Forester, who only saw Amy, now crept slowly towards a projecting shelf of the clill: He did Hot know what Amy meant day raising her hands. Soon he stoodt the eXtretne edge of the cliff', not m ire than fifteen or six teen feet in a If o orizontal lino front her window. Thifty feet below Will the water of the t!anon roared over huge boulders, and behind was a solid wall of k g,ranite s twelve feet high. The shelf was only two feet wide. "Die convict!" shouted John Cluny. Forester heard the word "convict," saw the old man, saw the bright barrel of the gun as it was pointed' tolvards him, heard. the report—thettialh was When his eoneiousness returned, be found himself lying on the top of the elitt; It was night. A form was bend ing over him. By the dim starlight he could not distinguish the features, but a cold shudder passed through his body RS he felt a ham! upon his fate, and heard thq Well-known tones of the mil ler : " He'6 dead; and I ain't .ft bit sorry for it either. But what am I going to do with the body? I can't throw it over the chile. Well, I guess its best to stick to my first plan." The miller took a rope from his pock et, passed it beneath ' the arm-pits of Forester and dragged the body to a cave only known to himself. This cave was situated clOse to where one end of the min dam was fastened by means of heavy timbers to-the cliffs; the open ing was concealed by a clump of bush es. "No one will ever find him there," i l muttered t i e miller. When h entered the bedroom of his daughter hfound her lying upon the floor inseivible. IV When Forester awoke from his death like swoon, darkness was around him. Painfully he lifted himself upon. his el bow. Bending aside, the boughs he saw the glimmer of a lantern which stood upon the dam close to the sluice gates. When Forester's eyes became IL more "accustomed to the da kness, he perceived the forms of two men who were bending over the brestwork of the gates. goon the sound of. voices came to his cars—he heard his name mentioned. Ile was abou, through the opening of t, when the men began to wal About four feet from was lying they stopped. " What time is it, Jim ?" t tem. " Time enough for our littl plied therother with a coarse "This time he'll he cool life—you bet," said Jim. " Or else he'll swing for it,! ed the other. " He'll swing for it," echoe " Look there, dim." filter! other. " What the devil's up you " t thought I saw a face me from the manzanita." Forester bad protruded his saw by the light of the burn the bloated faces of ;James a Crocker. " Stuirand nonsense! (_;( Have you fixed the plank can Hhove it acrosg the gu window " Yes," growled the hrothc NV:is devilisx hard worli, - ." "Theo we are sure of the for the thtm," C away. Like a ilw,h or lightning t w villains was revealed to 1 They lirst intended to cut they would rescue the le miller by nwans of the eourse this latter act would it the gratitude of the miller ing of the dant would aguiu upon Forester, who, as one of ers remarked, "would 14e ser f.''' "fe l e BWitlg for it." A. look tosvard the dam showed that the water was nearly level with the path. He heard the creaking of the titubers and planks as the two men were prying With at, iron bar Sit ono of the beams. A rumbling sound came to his ears—it was the petit up water as it began to overflow the dam. • He rose to his feet; and draWing aside the bushes be stepped upon shelf-like path which rang alongside of the clifr. " Villains !" he shouted. The two brothers looked up, but saw no one, for the lightof the lantern was illuminating the sluice gates. They resumed their work. Again Forester shouted ; and again they lifted their heads, when there came a terrible crash mingled with the roar of the water. Forester heard a cry of despair, and saw James Crocker fall headlong over the dam in- to the seething water below. With a prayer upon his lips for the safety of her he loved, he ran along the narrow path until he came opposite the mill. " The flood ! the flood For God's sake, save your lives! 'rho, water is coming! They have cut the darn !" be cried. The window of Amy's beds thrown open and the miller w ed candle in hand was standi! it. Too late. The rushing, N already encircled the mill, w now swaying to and fro. " Help! help!" shouted Jo, raising the light above his cry of terror escaped his li light shone upon the pale fa man'-whom he thought he lit The candle dropped from his ho sank upon the floor. 1V Forester was searching for tl At last he 'Omni it. He tried it across the gull', but his strer him. " Oh God ! is there no help sist me? Help ! help!" lire el tugging at the plank. " Come on, boys," shouted i Soon a dozen men with hint rushing towards Fore -or. 'rite convict," cred the for i ft he held the lanteu to the fa , prostrate man. " He has cut the (bun again miner ; "I'm sure rill." " Impossible; see, he has be( ed !" cried the first speaker. pointed to the plank and the the mill. . me men understOod his Soon one 011(1 of the plank fou ing place upon tho-window-si, man with lantern In hand will the swaying brh ge and di; through the WilltiOW. And another followed. A few mint two men crawled back across t bearing between thent the i form of the miller, another carrying ,the brother of Am where was the miller's -(laugh last man came across empty She could not be found. "Airy, dearest . Amy!" shoe ester'. His shrill voice sound' the awful roar of waters. A white form wits seen at the It lifted its hands as if to w one away. The light of hal; lanterns illuminated her glut' which was partially coneettlis long black tresses. Forester saw her. With SUE strength tic rose to his feet gered tiiward the plank. Amy stepped upon the win She had heard the voice of hi she loved. Slowly she walk, the plank until she was witl feet of the men. She stopper her love pronounced her na recognized his voice. A cry o front her lips as she gave which [n•ought her within Lb the outstretched hand's of the Another cry answered front below ; it was a ery for help. ately after the mill sat►k with crash upon one side, thus dam across the canon. But rising water overcame that struetion and curried the - mill channel. Toward morally , when the somewhat subsigd, a par found the mangled body of Ja er, which had lodged bet boulders. Close by they found his brother \vitt/ both leg broken. He was yet alive. A cry of intense pain came from his swollen lips as the men lifted him upon a rude stretcher. ' , Let ►ne die here! Let me Me here !" cried he. "I feel that I'm hurt inside. Put me down. I have only a short time to live, and I want to confess. Reginald Forester is innocent ofelite crime for which ho suffered. It was I. and my brother who cut—" These were Charles Crocker's last words. A stream of blood welled from his mouth. Once more he tried to raise himself, then he breathed his last. An entire week passed away before the village doctor pronounced Reginald out el• danger. The ball fired from the rifle of the !Willer had glanced from his temple. • Iliad made an ugly but not a mortal wound. His overexertion on that terrible night had greatly increas ed his illness, but he gradually regained his-former health and strength. Three months after the breaking of the dam, Amy, her brother, father and Forester, left California forever. The andatt has a just claim to the title of animal, fur its affinities with the f,ortuninifera are clear; and ndone would deny that these creatures, with their exquisitely beautiful shells, are animals. Nor is this position shaken by the fact that the life history of the anneha can at present hardly be s - idd to be fully made out. Vet the ammba has no stomach—possesses, indeed; no or gans at all, unless we comidet its Iso called nucleus as one; and tl ere are closely allied forms, in.which e 'en this is absent. Conceive of a minute drop of transparent jelly, so small as to be invisible without the help of a micro scope, a drop of jelly sprinkled and studded with a dust of opaque ganles, sometimes hiding in its Midst a I lore solid rounded body or kernel called the nucleus, and perhaps with the t? ter rind a little (hill :rent from the into •nal ti j mass. Conceive further of this annelat as of no constant shape, but like the Ent pusa, shifting as we look upon it front one,form into another. At one moment it is like a star, with strag gling, unequal limbs ; at another, club shaped; now it is a rounded square; soon it will I, . the image of an hour glass. None of these changes can be referred , to currents in the water in which it ,live, 0r to any other forces acting directly upon it from without. It, -coals to have within it soma inner , prim;, an in Idol'll power of flowing, whereby this part of ii or that moves itt this or that direction. And not only do its parts thus shift and change in form, but- through theirs changes the whole body moves front place to place. As we begin to watch it, for instance, at the mothent when it is in what tu..ty he called its rounded phase, a little pro tulteranee may fie s,ccn starting out on one side. ;speedily the little knob :;,tells, leogt(hens, flows into a long prOCI •;,:4. Thd itroce,-;1 thlelienS, Mill t strealrii3 01 gran ides indicating in which way the currents of the ttleseell mole cules are Hutting. The substance of the hody surges into the process ; and as the latter widens and grows thick the former shrinks and grows small. At last the whole body has flowed into the process ; where the (wily was there is now nothing, and, where the process reached to, the whole body now is. The creature; has moved, has flowed from one spot; to another. Here, then, we have movement without muscles, lo comotion without any special organs of locomot ion. We have also feeling, with: out nerves or organs of sense, for if a pate( ss such as We liftVe described, while flowing out, meet with any ob noxious body, it will shrink back and stop its work. .And the whole body, terrified by some potent shock, will of ten gather itself up into a ball. As it moves without muscles, so also does it . , eat without a stomach. Meetint , in its sluggish travels with some d'elicious morsel (and diatoms are its frequent food,) it pours itself over its meal, and coalescing at all points around it, thus swallows its feud by fluxion. Tq. use a homely illustration it is much as if a piece of living, dough were to creep round au apple and to knead ftsell to gether into a continuous envelope in order to form an apple-dumpling.— "Watching the food thus enveloped j)y the gelatinous substance of the amoeba we see it growrfain ter as its 'nutritious constituents become dissolved by the corrosive action of thp samtli transpar ent but chemically :Addy° iiply ; and when all the goodness'has Wen got - out of the meal, the body of the eater flows away from the indigestiblO remains just in the same way that lit flowed round the original morsel. We have in this creature, then, eat ing Without a stomach, moving with out muscles and without limbs, feeling without nerves, and we may add, "treadl ing without lungs, and nutrition with out blood. The animba is a-being of no constant outline, of no fixed shape, which changes its form according to its moods and its needs, and turns its out side into its inside whenever it pleases, which is without organs, without tis sues, without unlike parts, a mere speck of living matter, all alike all over.— And yet .in the midst of all tl4 sim plicity it enjoys all the fundamental powers and fulfills all the essential duties of an animal body, and is more over, hound by chains of close-jointed links with those complieated forms of animal Hi, which are provided with special mechanisms for the most trifling of their wants.—London Quailerly. to creep ie bushes 'c towards - where he id ono of job," re aug,li A - ed up for ' remark- Jim, I ti p test the 'out?" leepiug at lead. He tg match d Charles to ) that We Ch '4O her ; "but it zit. Now 1110 V 1 lig le plot of orester. the dam; family of dank. Of 'l:Aire them r lie break charged the broth tenced 1.0 Ise would .00111 was , WI light ug before 'Liter bad bleb was n Cluny, !lend. A s as the o of the 1 killed. hand as eanwhile le plank, to shove *tit failed ero to as eti, still VoICO rus were 4host, as fi of the cried a !u wound- Forester i toward gestures. Ida rest , and a ed across appeared her and tes after, le plank, lsensible followed 337. But ter The -handed. The inexhaustible r4ervoir of• apho risms, the Talmud, snpplies the follow ing, which have be6n (ally reee)tltly translated For man who has 'been ruineit by woman, there is no law no judge. When the axe already touches thy neck Still hope in God's saving grace. Hang the sweetest grass round a Pig's neck, it will still go and wallow in the ed F or. d above When the jackal has day, make him Law: lie who rents one garden 1, birds ; he who rents many, II will eat him. Eat below your mearm ; dwel lug to-your means., tint spend vile and children above your ,11 FirA understand, then argue. :Ulm was cr i catcd on - the la even the ,gnat has a more, ancie window. FR BMW; a, dozen •tly face, 1 by ber l erhutnan kild stag- ow sill. whom Across 'A a few lig,e ;;(;r4PiCIOU6 M A itilottu, just over, wentll to IL ant, and was asked Div the waite h would have. " Why, sosnethil3' to ate, av was the reply. A plate of was placed Agni 11 10. She oy cattle bou rettell of MEI the gulf Im medi ; a fearful ;nuking a soon the Llight oh idown the Fot's that' " ' demanded. he " That's wittles," was the answei lle eyed the compound suspiciously for sonic time, and finally exclaimed ; ne jahers, the man that chewed that can fist ate it !" voter had Loi;(1 Brougham's executor has refus ed to pay for that nobleman's teeth, and the dentist ,has gone to law t 9 get the price of thou). of .men es Crock- Teen two The Arnceba LANDING A TROUT \V sat for several minutes in silence, Nvateliiiig. At last, Ronn e fifteen rods away, a magnificent fish shot up out of the water after a butterfly which chanced to he winging its way across, the lake, and miss.ing it by only a few inches, fell back with a splash into the very ripple he made in rising. " Now !" shouted John, as he sent the light boat skimming over the water, give him the feathers, and if he takes, sink the hook to the very shank into his jaws." pitched the coil into the air, and by the time it had fairly straightened it self out the boat was in reach of ; the wake; and, obedient to the quick turn of the wrist, the huge fly leaped ahead. It had not reached the surface by ayard, when the water parted and out came the trout, hie mouth wide open, quiver ing from head to tail with the energy of the leap; missed, as he had before, and fell inteii flat upon his side. " Quick, quick ! cast away'!" shouted John,-as with a stroke of the paddle he sent the boat sheering ofr to give me room - for the cast. Feeling that !here was not an instant to lose, by a sudden jerk I caused the fly to mount straight up into the air, trustiog to the motion of the boat to straiAhten the slack, as it fAI. John understood the motion ; the boat flew round a-I on a pivot, awl glided back ward under the reversed stroke. At was well done, as only John could do it; nor was it a second MO soon ; for a ? the tuft of gay plumes alighted amid the ripples, the huge head of the trout came out of water, hiy mouth opened, and, as the feathers• disappeared be tween hi; teeth, I struck with all my might. Not one rod in twenty would have stood that • blow. The fish was too heavy even to be turned an The line sung, and - water flew out 61 the compressed braids, as though I had sunk the hook into an oak beam. j Reader, did you ever laud a trout?— "' do not ask if you ever jerked sonic p oor littl e fellow out of a . brook three feet, across,with a pole six inches around at the butt, and so heavy tis to require Isith hands and feet well braced to hold it out. .::(), that's not hindinga trout. But did you ever sit in a boat with nine minces of lance-wood for a rod, and two hundred feet df braided silk in your- double-actin;; (reel, and hook a trout whose strain brought tip and Mutt together as you checked him lit some wild, flight, and tested your' quivering line fixtm butt to reel-knot :` No one knows what game there is in a tr'att, unless lie has fought it out, matehing such a roil against 4 three pound fish, with 'forty feet of water un derneath, and a clear, unimpeded swoop arotind him ! Ali, then it is that due diS44oVel' what Wiit Mid energy lie w4h in lie mottled skin of a trout, and what a miracle of velocity he is when roused. I loye the rifle, and I have looked along the sights and held the leaping blood baCk by an efitirt, of will, steadying my- Noll' f,:r du , r.hol, when my veins fairly tingled with the exhilarating excite ment of the nannent ; but it' one should ask me what is my conception of pure physical happiness, I should assure him that the highest bodily'heatitude 1 ever expect to reach ,tl3, on some fu ture day, when the clear sun is occas ionally veiled by clouds, to sit in a boat once more upon that little hike, with 1 John at the paddle, A ti ni mastera again Coni•ty end against a hreerpound trout. Thai's what feall ha Thiess ! Well, as 1 s.:aid,l itl•tick ; and, as we afterwards discovered, the huge salmon hook WziS h . tilicd lii OW Shank amid the nerves which lie at the root of a trout's tongue. Then came :t light fir the flult,iery 6th:ji us nevcq• before had I lVat-T.Ol With anything that switne.— Worck :Thouhl have hie in them to de pict the scene. Quick as flash, before I had fairly recovered my balance, partially lost by the eueigy with which f struck, the trout started, and before I could get a pi e,stire upon the line, not twenty yards wih'e Ica on the reel. A quick stroke from John, and the boat shot one side; and bearing stoutly OD him, tasking the rod to the last ounet of resistance, 1 slowly swayed him about and recovered a little slack. After a few short sweeps he doubled on the hue and shot straight for the boa as au arrow from a bow. " Double, and be hanged to you!" shouted John, as he shied tho light shell to one side tv d swung it round so as to keep me facing the lish. "If you get under tlik boat it will be because this paddle break- . . Failing in his attempt to 11.111. Willer us, he dove to the bottom. " Let him rest a inomenj," said John; "recover your line; you'll need it all when he rii-es.r lle's big and ugly, and his next rush will be like liglAnnig." After I had stowed away some forty yards of line on the reel, winding it on hard and evenly, so that it would ren der well, 1 began to feel the . fish. The first Tres:giro elicted only a shake. At the next lie described a circle, - still keep ing to the bottom, then camq again to a stand-still. Ile acted ugly. II Wit that, when\ the rush came, it would try nerve and tackle alike. Enjoining John to watch the lish and laver me all he could, and by no means to let, him pass tinder, the boat, I gave a.qttick, sharp jerk." My arm WilB ~ , t ill in the air and the tid unstraightened, when 1 caught a gleam far down below The, and be fore I hail time lo wink the huge fel low parted the water almost within reaeli of my arm, and \Own high up in mid-air he shook lihnseir, the crys tal dr...qis were dung into my very face. Perhapl.l shall live long enough to for get thopielmc, as that trout for an in sta h nt ung in the air, his blue back and i a:aire Si les spotted with gold and agate, Ii is tins edged with snowy white, his eyes protrutii»g ' gills distended, the leader hanging* from his jaw 8 1 :While a shower of pearly drops were shak e n front lik quivering sides. Ile-fell; hilt while, still in air the boat glided baelF ward, and when lie touched title water I wail thirty feet away and ready fur his rush. It came:. And as he passed us, some forty feet, oil; he clove Lilo-wa ter as a halt Born a cross-bow might cleave the air. Possibly fur live min utes the frt'iwy lasted. Not a word was uttered. The wiii., of the line through the water, the whir of the flying reel, and au eecasiCnial. gitlla 110111 John as the flt,h dOtlidea OH the boat, were the only -moil; to be heard. When, sud denly, in . o ne of his wildest 'lights, the tixritily taxed roil straightened itself out with a splint:. the pi essure ceased, the line sliteken i tal, anal the fedi again i;ly on the bothrin. Wiping . the sweat Irwin nIY 1 , r0w,1l turtit.l to John and said, " What it,yoi i think 44 titht •."' Mr. Alllllll ,".I;:plivd .11 . *», laying the paddle ilt w ii and drawing the skive of h lis voolcii shirt actoss his forehead, beatted with persphation,--- " Mr. M uru a, that 1111 is ugly • if lie should get tin; line over his hack, he'd smash the rod Ike a pine-stem 1" " lie won't get it over his Liaek,;) r e : plied I. " Beady with yoilr paddle ; he's getting too much breath." . " But I say" said John, looking af fectionatelyat the 'rod as. he took up the pu'ddie ; "if I wit-3 in your place, avail lie dichget the line over his should er, I would part any tackle before I smashed that rod." " I won't do either, John ;" and a•d t I answered I gave a jerk, and the trout started again, But wily repeat? w4y, ,nay eat le birds accord pn ouk cans. LL day ; 11 AS' fr t.1.5t11.11- 1' Whitt our.e," before lio.ofklq're. 1 in. - 3lns. Has 1 'Square, $l,OO $3,00 $2,60 $6,00 2 Squares 2,00 3, 0 0 4 ,0 0 8 ,0 0 10,00 i 16,40, 17,041 22,00 ono 16,00' 28.001 30,001 40,00 NO. 21; Special,Noticep 1& cents per line; Edi Local 20 tents per line. tell of flights and rushes which fa , cq .?' Twice did he break the stir I hundred feet away, flinging hit. self out like a black bass. Once did ha par tially get the leader over his bac. and dashed away like lightning; piffle John, anxious to save so true aro. from ruin, shouted to the, " Part the :ut!" But who evdr kneW a ilsherma,n, vhen his blood is,s,np, refuse a risk to sa e the game? I saearned to John to shoot the boat one sidb ; and when the las foot-2 of silk was given I advanced th butt. (1 1 . r The heavy 'fish and ' pliant ro were pitted one against the other. hree days later, in another struggle, he old rod parted ;' but this time it triu i, phed. For a moment the quivering tip attled upon the hars .of the reel. Thy fish struggled and shook himself, bt t the tenacious fibres would not pars. He .ceased to battle, came parttin< , P • the surface, - and rolled over upon hi: side. The boat shot toward him, and as it glided by, John passed the landi g-ne beneath him, and the bravo fight•r lay upon the bottom board . i His tat serosA 4 its base, measured five inches; -.ld hilt length from tip to tip; was sevO , eon inches and three-quartrs.—Aclvet t,res in the Wildernes. i -, A SINGULAR COUPL • .—The 01 II \ - stance which, more th 11 anything els-, obtained the dingy old town of He .sham a lasting place in my memory, wa: our taking lodging with an extraordi ary pair—an old man and woman, hus 'and and wife— who lived by themse yes, without child or servant, subsistin: on the letting of their parlor and tw hed rooms. They were tall, thin, and erect, though each seventy years oi age. When we knocked at the door fir ad mittance they answered togethe • ; if we rang the bell, thehnsband and wife invariably appeared; side by sid a ; all our requests and demands were rec-ived by both, and exs.Ttitthl With thou most exactness. The first night, arriving late b ! coach from e v.r Ea st le, and merell quiring a fire and tJa, wd were pu to understand the reason of-this (1.1 attendance ; and I remember my b er rather irreverently won4red wh., sve " were always to be wd - ited ups' these Siamese twins." On thigh) bell to retire for the night both app=, as usual time wife carrying the j room candlestick, the husband st' ing at the door. I gave her so rections about breakfast the folio morning, when her husband iron' door quickly answered for het. " Depend upon it, she is; du whispered my brother. But ) this not the ease though she rarely Wad; of the speech. • They. both attended lie into my room when the old lady seeing me with some surprise toward her hus said : " There's no offense meant, in by Myhusband *fling wi.th ini the chamber; he's stone 'Wind." Poor man!" I esclaimgd, " hut then does be not sit _still ? Why he accompany yod tAiery where It's no use, ma'am, your spelt to my old woman,'' said the bust' she can't hear you ; she's quite d 1 was astonished. Hero was a peusatiun Could a couple he VI matched? Man and wife were one flesh ; • for he saw with her and she heard with his ears! It beautiful to me, ever after, to mite old man and woman in their ins ableness. Their sympathy with other was as swift as electricity made their deprivation au nought. I have.often thought of that old and woman, and eau but hope t 1 in life they were inseparable and i pensable to each other, so in death I might not be divided; but that ei might be spared the terrible (alias of tieing- alone in the world.--(111 bed's Journal. As we never see a woman but mentally bless Adam for going to - and losing a rib, and hence are al on the look-out to please them, we lisp the following recipe forkeepin skin clear and beautiful. We mean to Insinuate that there are girls about hero who haven't the liest, peachiest laces in the word ; at all: But they, or some of the! quaintances, may happen to go to nic on Fourth of July this summer get a little tanned, and then the r will come so handy. Cut it out paste it s on your looking•glass : " may be removed from the face by ing magnesia in suit water to the listency of paste. which should e spread on the ince and allowed t main a minute or two. Then was with Castile soapsuds, and rinse soft water." , A FOOL'S ANsiwi.:ll.—ln years 4, by there was' a Baptist clergyman, eit Elder stone. one dny the sawed off a block of wood to ma beetle, and 6mmeneed to bore a through it to put in the handle; owing to the shortness of the bloc would not lie still, but would turn the augur. A half-witted felloW, monly called Albriglit's fool' Albright by name—came along in a lisping manner: `Elder :-:tone, 1 can tell you hoN . bore your beetle; put it in a hog tr and then you eau Vire The old parson turned round, lo at Bill, and said : there fis something to be lea, from almost and `Yes,' replied Bill, 'I thought so' der stone, or there would not ! many people to go Ito hear you pre In oneif the courts, afew days s a very grotty young lady appeare_, witness.flier testimony was like! result unfa v orably for. tbe client pert young lawyer, who addressed very supercitioustywith the inqui • You are mat'ried, 1 believe 'No sir.' Oh ! only about to be married?' Only _wish to ?' `Really • I don't know. Would advisu•such a step?' Oh, certainly ain annulled myself.' 'ls it - possible? I never should thought it. Is your wife blind or de' It is scarcely necessary to add, the disconnited attorney did not vo safe a reply• A „young mini NV lid was 'eleeted'l our Penitentiary for a few ye a rs, released on Wedne.,:lay, his term ing expired. (tn going to the ('iet•i llis gate money Air. telnarkei tint : flicitd, youbeld the Pt dent a little; time expires the before Andy 'b.' y e s,' replied the ex-euoviet ; bet you Live dollars I tttifil n b chance of getting back hero than does of ever getting 1.6 the W House.' Mr. smith refused to bet. A young lady_ the other day, in course of a lecture, said mar young man, and be tjuicli about it, Don't wait for the nuilleuiuw ho' that the girls will turn to angds be you would trust one of them. Apr thing you would be ztloug-side o angel, wouldu't you, you - brut= ?' ir t $2 Mffl 3 Mos. a Noa $12,00 18,00 40,00 90,00 $7," 12 il BOP CD,II rial or low ace a 1111 b" was use bed- I look and, 'am, into vby, does nan t as dis hey tiler ity :can- ac ' pie ' and I eipe land TA n ux loon- hen L t . re -1 o 1 olthff • to ugh MO MU El () so ch. i nee, as a , tO f a her yoft ONO t ?" hat ich- tO a%'_ I for I to lesi -1 tIY ntl ter he ito
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers