m IM S ran ill ilcimurat. .V J\VI3T* SICKIiEH Proprietor.) NEW SERIES, . ■■ H~.UIII I II I ■ IIMJI.J—■ A'Vl le-ucfiiic ... _ 11 >. I * %4 r. t • ; , #1 nl rduku;.n<>, ' L ' >T- f T.minj: County,Bu f. LtL|ia fj "■fit HMVcY SICKLER Tttn—-1 i;opjr 1 y.-;< . (.n advance) <-2 00 Vt paid aithin Hl .* mwitl." S"2.'o will he cbarjtcd SO i*per will Br DSCOXTIM FD, until nil ar rearages are pai I; urtlrts at the option of puMisher. Jk.T*iei3STCA. It lime.* or- I 'ass, <•&>. three Jos." '■ '•o three) six ■ one ewe sqmMre'.trr*n!t -. < ihu'lh mo'lh,mo'Uuyear <* 2,25 2,97! 3,0 c; 5,H1 ?Jo I -'5 350> 4St 6,00 7 ito. i JrO", " ' '' 5,50} 7,V(- 9,00 i C-U-oii t 4,t)ot - ■" G 8,60} M),OCi 15,00 1 Jo. I P.OOE ;• >• iy w j?.on 17,01. 25,00 i ,j 0 ) d 7,w i 1 doi llbiOntWi-00l 22. Uft 29)00/ 40,<'0 AD'M'iN A'fuitS and AUDI TOR'S NOTICES, f the u>ut leu/th, 52,50 • BITUARIEL- t I..:; •••n;in 4 each ; KELI fITOUS .ml Lil'EK \'i\ not of genera interest, one hnlf tue regular i vies. flttieineM Cerdt f square, wltkjjsjer, S5 job wonia: af all kinJi realty executed, and i jri:ec to suit he times, . AIl-TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENT* apd JGB- M'ORK ii uat be paid for, when oivlereßl.- * flusiiifss R.B. liITTI.E, ATTORNEY AT LAW Ol.c on Tioga etrect, Tunkhanno.kt'a HS. COOPER. PHYSICIAN * SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luienio County Fa /"ff K . TUTTON, A TTO NEY aT LAW 4j Tenkhoaoock, Vs. OSce- n Mark's Brtc ak, Ttoga stint. WM, M. PIATT. ATTORNEY AT LAW, 0 i-e in Stark's Brick Block Tioga St., Tunk aaaeck. Pa Biifjiler jßoirsf, HAHHISHRHG, I'KNNA. The undersigned hiving lately pur. Based the ■" BUBHLEII HOUSE" property, lias already com menced su<-k a Potation* and iinproi eoieots as will render tbis old n I Rnpular H .use equal* if no' supe rior, to any llou-l in the City of llarriaburg. A eentinuanco of the public patronage is refpect felly solicited. GEO. J. BOLTON WALLS HOTEL, LATX eiMExiICsAH HOUSE, TUlk ii\\ MK W, V* VONING CO.. PA rilL? cjt.ihli.uaici'l b.H r*r -titly been refitted ..i, furui.-'jei ill -He U'.v-M style Every, attei ;i .r. ♦-ill b jt : - v.-n t>> the comfort and convenience of ','.•>•* *i. patronise Ike il.c.e--' T. 1!. WALL, i;.vi.tr and Propriet Tankhannyk, September 11. 1->1. HOSYH SPiAHfiH HOTEL, MK; HOPPUN, WYOMINO COUNTY. 1A W ri, Jl CtlKTHltillT, I'rcp'r * j] \* , ••li. iet'J :Liu of the ah" > 1 , , - n ,tu Vtll Spare ail effort : • e • a igmibh pli.e el eojeniu t', • e, - :rr curtain Wm li t.O'Ulßtlii twa. i t jT V, fc?rKKiTT .%. -; ;tv a. sußf.ri v. lVu. respc. t. r 4,1; ft:. . .. . ■> ti.e Wy e*g tj ,r a.* hss ioc.'tco at > v'.khannock where - >7>in.t! y < -m I : " Ms in the line of ,<• . I?,iii)ii. r V Vijl *> *eu3l *' • on Saturdays of a*h' eek §ltan.s I)otfl, TOWAWBA, BA. TL F...B.UiTi.ET, f Late "t i ' BitstaAHi-ii*v.a. ELVIRA, N. Y. prtiritinTiiß. The MEANS HOTEL, i ..nc ..f ttie LARGEST aad MKST ARRANGED il in th* ui isi mo • and improved style, ead R" pains ire h;. id ?• ke it a [deasant and an'a > T''- Htdpnitic-' • '• • t... v 3 '.21 CLAAKE,AII* EY.^TO., atxcnctrKi.KH A>l> HOLVS\LB DLALEKS IS LANES', MISSES' & GENTS' ADD JOBBVM IW ■ATS. CAPS. Fruss. STRAW GOODS, PARAMOUR AND UMBKKI.I.AM, EUIFALO AND FANCY ROBES, •A9 BROADWAY, COit.aKß OK LfeONARD STIIKET, asw '&&&'&., •. . CLARK, a a. • uiirr, > a. Ltaaiir. j M. GILArAX, M OILMAN, has permanently located in Tunk • bannock Berougb, arni respectfully tendered a rfeaeienal aarvices to the citisens of thi place h n •■•ding reentry. * ' yt^ oßK WARRANTED, TO GIVE SATIS- A TION. •ytr Tuttea'a Law ORce, near to e Po Vall.lM/ 4" f / r. . 1 . J . TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEB. 7, 1866. J A rt's dm'iifr. PURITAN PHILANTHROPY, Tht.-e w:is a tnan in our town Whose hobby was canary l.irds ; For songsters he'd as high renown As some teen for their dairy herds He kept hi little dickies all In most eomfoi table cages, And furuished food for great and suiall, In accordance with their ages. He loved his pets and they Vere gay, And caroled songs of joy and peace, To hear their youn? attempt the lay, And see their little broods increase. One day some philanthropic gents— At loast so they themselves announced— Impelled by Puritan iutcnts, Upon the dicky-bird-man pounced. Their speaker Tet'del! Willipssaid : "Friend, this committee's from the East, Where bran-new moral plans are laid— The home of him .?urnauied 'The Beast "We're sent by that great Commonwealth, Which claims the right to interfere In other people's moral health- An ancient right she bol is most dear. tuifs+on's brief, liii-f let it be : 'tis ttiorsl }f iHsa.-liu-etts' wivh That you at once tuesa birds set free ; To cage them's vile and heathenish." '■Why !" quoth the ui >r, with staring *y3s, "1 break no laws—the birds are mine ; Your w.>r .* have fitted ice with surprise ; 1 shall ii >t D irt with iheui, in fine In vain the delegation plead The r.gttt ol all bir is to ke free ; 11 "Their homes are fields and trees," they said ; But this the bird man could not sec. "What! fields and trees !" cried he amazed - "These birds ictre all in cage< bred ; Your M • ssaehusctts lie crazed ; l reeJoiu would cause their dea h," he said. Sorm angry works advanced to blow. , The delegation prove! too strong ; Eaoh eage by force they did unclose— Accomplishing great right—or wrong. When all the diekey-birds were out, These philanthropic wise men fired Every cage i'ir found about ; : ich Vet all I'uri'Hiis admired. Yhrn as the bird-man waxed Irate, Ar punishment because he railed, Ires seized his "pictur-s. g-m- an I plate, And for the modern A'hem sailed. Meanwhile the di- key-birds, poor things, Hopped helplessly about in need : And knowing not the use ot wings, They did not fly in search of feed, Sotne died in corners starved to death Muuy b* little beys were killed— P. ,; tr suiiched them doeens at a breath Wi;h scores of them cats' maws were filled. Bv th ee who illy knew their dee Is, Son* werecangk' enle 'get once more, Alas ! flxy j.rhed on htoken reeds; Their m-th and singing Jays tyre o'er. Poor birds ! their race is nearly run- Squelched by mors! thimble-riggers ; Now. re-'d r, answer this laourn — Why are dickey-bird- like nisrgers ! A l>oy ttttfi red u fttincry store the other day and asked the proprietor what kind of pens he sold. "All kinds, - " was the reply '-VYwIl then I'il take three cents* worth of pig-pens.* - £W The best description of weakness we have ever heard is the wag's query to liifi wife when she jjave him some broth, if •he would not coax that chicken to wa'de through the soup once more. V\ hy are the Southern negroes now like I'nited States bonds ' Ueeause they are non-taxable property ; ;md because tliey are a burden upon the poor white men. , - {■ t • CP* The Albany Arcus says ; '"There is a geiiervl inquiry what shall he done to ar rest this epiiiem eof erim -?' This ques lion put to a of our Courts., elicited this reply ; "Carry a revolver. :nd when attacked siioot—hut he sure to shoot ac curately." TAKEX DOWN a PEG —The Bellfonte Watchman says a hachel r fiend of ouis who is well known a ahont Belief mte, atten ded a wedding party a few miles out q f town, not long since. Accidentally he had a pair of infant shoes, nicelv wrapped in a piece ol paper. Here he thought was a chance for some fun ; so. going up to the newly-made bride, he gave her the package with the remark that it contained some thing that would be useful to her after awhile. The Jady op< tied the package critically examined its contents, then turn ing to our friend, remarked : '"I am much obliged to you for the present, but if I bad married ypa I wouldn't have neoded them. "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RIGHT. "—Thomas Jefferson. § fleet jfc-, . UNCLKVB tiV'S VISIT, It wood have required no very power ful stretch of imagination for Mrs. Amb -r's gu s's to fiftVe fWnci 1 themselves ami d the light and fragrance <>f some tropic isle on that festal night The stately balustrades were wreathed with deeply-tinted blossoms the air was freighted with the perfume of heliotrc pe and tuberose, and the chande liers that bung from the frescoed ci iling, like coro.iate of quivering fire,threw a noon day brilliance over the crowd -At the further end of the superb draw r>ora stood Mrs. Amber herself —a state y matron in saphire velvet, illuminated hy the pale glimmer of pearls. No one wo'd ever have imagined from the smiling seif- of her manner that this night was the crisis of her l.fc. Through "all the hum and murmur of the aristoerati# assemblage —through all the crash of and the stormy inelodv of the hand beyond, Mrs. Amber's quick ear caught one low, hesitating step on the threshold. It washer husband's.— She beckoned to him with her jewelled fan and uj icarcelv an audible voice. "WellfS "Just sin I expected. We are ruined, can't keep above water awe k. Norris has tailed an I wcsltall follow suit ! ' "A week,' murmured Mrs, Amber tho't f'ullv, ":t week !" One can accomplish a go al deal iu a Week, "Have you noticed how nttootive Young Gold is to Cecilia?' sin ad edm isinglv. • lie won't he after—" 'Hush i" Mrs. Ambv'f exclaimed wth a qtrck glance around, as if apprehensive that the very \¥alis would hear their whis per-d colloquy. "If she **iusa rich hus band hefggu toe -II to Iter company that stoo I bete re her, lc< Ii >iiest features beaming with delight. Ii was a ruildy-faced old man, in a suit of hut ternut-colored cloth, carrying in one band a neat I v tied handkerchief, containing bis wardrobe, ami in the other a crooked walking s irk, lull of knots and gnarl*— such a stick as grows only in dense swatnp-i where the young saplings have to twist their little arms in every direction to get a I,it of sunshine, and grow up ia the most unhe rd of shapes. "I declare." pursued Uncle Ooed, "yon'r fine as aflld e, "Tildy —and where's them little gals yon sent up summer before last, to get red cheeks at their uncle's.? Gro'n up to he young ladies—well, if I ain't beat en." And Unci Obed extended a bony hand to Miss Cecilia, who drew back and put uj a gold-mounted eye glass with an air of well-bred astonishment. "I never heard that anything ailed Ce cilly's eyesight, Til iy,*' said Uncle Obed in extreme perplexitv. "And that young filler in th yHlar waistcoat is her bean, I suppose? Well,youngfdkn will be young folks, and we did one's had'nt ought to in tefere. That's what I always said when you and Jim Amber used to walk in the old side-hill orchard, after you'd done the milking." Th s unlucky allusion brimmed the al ready overflowing veins of Mr. Amber's wrath—she drew her gloved hand from the old man's cordial grasp, with an energy which puzzled him, and spoke with com pressed lips: "I am r<>; Uy sorry, sir, that we were not previously made aware that you proposed honoring u* with visit. In that case we conld have prepared ourselves for the ple;t stirc ; now, I regret to say, it will he incon venient to receive you." "Whit!" eja 'tilated the astonished old mac, who was uncertain whether or not hi' had heard ari rht the words of his only niece —the g : rl whom he had brought up and cared for wli n others rejected the cha'ge of the p tmiless orphan. Mrs Amber repeamd the frigid sentence with that empha-is which only a heartless w< mm of the world can give. "Thi< U. a big ho-tse,'Tildy," said the ol! tnan in sli rlitlv tremulous accents, "and I should ha* thought there was a corner in it big enough for Uncle Obed,l wasn't c Jcti •lt;ng t<> stav long— not over a week at the furthest; but I'll go home to-morrow the first train that leaves, if I'm in the. wav." Mrs. Amber made no answer,hut tapped lightly on her mosaic bracelet with one slen ler fing -r. and uncle Obed turned awav with ra -istilrc in his eves that made curious rings of m st around the glaring jets of flame in lite chand -lier. . Uncle Obed was wishing himself well out of the heartless scene, when suddenly a pair of plump little arms were t! rown around Iris neck, and a cheek fresh and pinker than a damask rose was pre.-s --ed to his brown face. It was Mrs. Amber's youngest daughter—his own niece—the incorrigible romp, who had climbed cherry trees and stolen bird's nests innumerable in the meadows of the old homestead, two or three years ago. And there she was — a young lady in pink silk and cameo brace lets ! "Dear Uncle Obed, I have only just heard of your arrival. I am ghtd to sec you if no oue else is !" •And another shower of kisses succeeded, greatly to the discomfiture and envy of the young man who had escorted Miss Amber to the spot, arid stood surveying the pretty tableau. "Go about your business, Harry !" she exclaimed gaily, "I've got ever so much to say to Uncle Obed !" And Harry Latimer obeyed, hut rjither ungraciously "Just the same little Fanny as ever!" exclaimed the old man, patting the curls with delighted fon Iness, "You haven' changed, though Tildy lias!" "No); and 1 will never change for von. Uncle Obed " said the girl. "I haven't for gotten Itow kind you were to ine, up at the old homestead, how you shielced my trans gressions, concealed my faults, and always had a smile for naughty little Fanny." And she chatted on, entirely unheeding lie'r mother's frown of displeasure Fanny had always been the least manageable of Mrs. Amber's daughters, and the worthy matron seen telv resolved to lecture the young lady at her leisure. Uncle Obed was by no means deficient in observat on, and while lie related the changes which three year- had wrought in tlie vicinity of tin* old houiestt ad, he per ceived the rosy blood mount t>- his nice's cheek every time Mr. Latimer passed. "Now little girl, ' said lie, "who's that young fellow there by the window ?" Fanny looked up and then down, played with the middle button of Uncle Obed'- co:it and answered very softly : "Mr. Latimer." "Iluiapb ! I suppose that isn't all you em tell me about liiui ?" Thete was a minute's hesitation ami then Fanny hid her cheek on the old man's sh übler and told Uncle Obed all. "Then why on earth don't you ti.arry him!" ejaculated the old gentleman, at the clone of the little romance. "He's only a poor lawyer," sighed Fan ny, "and pajin will never consent. But one thing lam resolved on," she added itli spa.kling eyes, "I will not marry any one else, least of all that odioit* Col. Wood all, not if he were worth twenty times twen ty thousand dollors. I'll marry the one I ean love not for money." The stamp of her fair foot gave empha sis to the determine-! words as she spoke. F >nny was wry much in earnest, ami if ' 'olonel Woodall had happened to be pres ent, he would haw concluded that his ehati res were to say the !ea-t of it rather small •Twenty thousand dollars, eh ?" slowly re peated Uncle Obed. "Well, Fanny, it is a hard world we live in—a hard griping, grinding wot Id. I never thought so afore, I-tit sonielnrw to-night has borne it upon me. When Uncle Obed went away next day h ; was comparatively cheerful. The kind words and loving smiles of little Fanny uad fallen like drops of balm upon the sore spot in his heart. There it was nestling in the hillside the grav old farm house, with giant sycamores tossing their silvery branches above it ami the lilac hushes nodding before the narrow windows. Uncle Ohel thought it never looked so pleasant as nOw, in the level gold en sunset with the purple woods rising ag'nst the bright far— off horizon. But he did not stop in the cozy room where the eight-day clock, ticked away as peacefully as if its master had not been ab sent two whole days—a thing which had not occurred before in half a century ; lie went straight up stairs, to a tiny nook un der the eaves, where he kept an old sort of trunk, curiously scented wiih camphor, and bound together with strong clasps ami tivets of brass. From this receptacle In* took a hit of paper, and held it so the light fell on its contents. "Twqpty thousand,''he muttered. "Well lam an old man, and that gal is just tin light o' my eyes. It shall buy her happi ness,'the blue-eyed bird, instead of lying useless in the garret! She deserved it all!" Uncle Obed pocketed the document, locked his precious trunk, and went down stairs wiping the glasses cf his spectacles. The financial crash cme, and the Itou-e of Amber & Co., was among the fi st on the list. It was true that Mrs. Atnber had been expecting the failure, but the blow fell none the less heavy for the an ticipation. Somehow her plans all proved futile. Young Gold had in some unac countable manner discovered ihc state of the Amber exchequer, and wisely conclu ded that it was not b.-st to waste his per sonal charms and eleg;int stock of small talk on s>* ineligible a fair one as Miss Ce cillia. Coloiml YVoodal had also ahown unequivocal signs of withdrawing his suit, not at all to Mis Fanny's displeasure In short, everything seenu-d t>. be going wrong and the only satisfied member* of the confederation were liarrey Latimer and Mi>s Fanny. It was a gloomy morning of rain and tempest, and Mrs. Amber sat in a sort of slovenly dishabille, in a narrow room in one of our third-rate hotels. His own I stately house had fallen a prey to greedy TBRMS, 82,00 PER ANNTJIt "reditors some time since. Mr. Amber at n opposite table was slowly opening and glancing over his letters. "Hallo!" he suddenly exclaimed, drop ping oue and catching it up again. ' How von do agitate one's nerves groaned Mrs. Arnber. Hang your nerves, here's something to set them "in a flutter—a letter from a New England lawyer, announcing* that your Uncle Obed Jenkins has made Miss Fan ny Amber a present of twenty thousand dollars, to become her property on the day she marries Harry Latimer." "Twenty thousand- dollars," shrieked Mrs. Amber and Cecillia in chorus, "and nothing for us!'' "Twenty thousand dollars !" murmur ed Fanny, with a crimson spot on her cheek; "Oh, how happy we shall he ? Dear, kind Uncle Obed f" "You're a nice manager," snarled Mr. Amber, turning sdiarply to his wife. It was for this, was it, Mr. Jen kins so rudely on the night of your last party ?'* "I didn't know—l didn't suppose"— sobbed Mrs. Amber. "lie never told me he had any property " "Of course not!" ejaculated Mr Am ber, "it's enough to make a man rave to have such an idiot as you for a wife. - Twenty thousand dollars would have been everytiiing to ine, just now, when there is -uicli a scarcity of ready money in the mar ket. And what's wor.-e, tlie sum is so tied up that r:o one hut Fanuv can touch a cent ol it." Mr. Amber strode out of the room, giv ing the do >r a very energetic slam, and Mrs. Amber went gracefully into hysterics, wlnle Fanny sat looking at the letter which hail been a messenger of so much happi ness to her, with scarlet lips half apart and lite light of deep gratitude in her eves. "What will Harry say?" she pondered. 'W ill he not think it a blessed dream?— No more weary waiting—no more procras tination. O, Imw can I ever thank Uncle < >b d sufficiently ? Iut Uncle Obed was already thanked When upon Fanny's wedding day, the d*- d which constituted her a >mall heiiess w s delivered into her hand, it wa9 in closed in it narrow strip of course blue pa per, which the old man commonly used in Lis correspondence. Upon this was written one single line, and tears suffused the fair young bride s eves as she read the words, "In memory of Uncle Obed's visit.' THE PURITANS; A writer in the Christian Witnesn, re viewing tiie different religious societies of the world, gives the following fearful pic ture of the religious creed and practice of the sect of I'uritans. The Puritans, who left Kngbind, settled at Plymouth and founded New England, professed to have fled from persecution, and sought a place to worship God ae cor-ting to the dictates and rights of con science, and to Christianize the Indians.— They were not settled before they robbed the Indians, enslaved their women and children, sold tbem into foreign bondage, ami visited the most inhuman and sel f'-de— grading cruelties upon classes with whom tiiey camw in contact. They plundered the towns of the natives. They employed and paid assassins. Bribes were paid for the assassination of chiefs. They burned hundreds of the natives alive. They roast ed at the stake women and children, and burned them in heaps. Their ablest and favorite divines declared that the burning of four hundred Indians at once, mostly women and children, seemed a sweet sa vor to God, while they admitted it wa< awful to see their blood running and quenching the violence of the burning wood, and smell the stench. Mather him self boasted that they had that day sent four hundred In.man souls to hell. They turned upon the Quakers. They imported heavy fines for hearing them speak. They passed laws against all other sects. They flogged women and children., Tiiey put them in prison and whipped them daily. They cut off their ears.— Tltey bored their tongues with red hot irons. They hung men. women and chil- j .It-en as witches, and continued this for tif- i tv years. The colonies of New England ! were thteatened with absolute extermina-, tion by their fanaticism They exiled Baptist* and Catholics. Th<-v drove wo j men and helpless children, nndet the se-| verest penalties, to seek protection among; the savages where they were all murdered, because they differed with tliein on meta physical divinity. Mather, the cletgy. Governors and Legislatures, all combined and vied with each otln-r in radical filer and h:Ue, As late as they enacted the most barbarous laws Against sectarian ism, and enforced the Say brook platform. And this was all done after the genius es above named had written Chancer had three centuries before written the Canter bury Tales. Spencer had given the world the Fairy Queen and drawn the character of Arthur. A man whose calling to please the wot Id in an age ot almost universal cor ruption, had made Fortio to plead like an angel, had drawn the character of Duncan, Miranda and Antonia. Massinger had written,an>l Millon had sung the sul>lime*t epic in the world. Bacon had written Novum Organum. Magna Charta had bee', a law over four hundred t ears The Petition of Bights had been obtained fifty years before, and Loohe had written on the toleration in exile, CF flubKriba for th DtMocrtt, VOL. 5 NO. 26 HOW RICH MESf WORK. The hardest working men and the liaidest working institutions in New York are those wldch ' are the most snccessfui. To the outsiders it seems an easy thing to make money to keep it. Banking was easv work a few years ago and is now in the old fashioned institutions which have country and no foreign exchange.— But n<>" factory or machine shop keeps men on the jump as does a like bank in this wide awake city. I was in one of these institutions yesterday which is not ten years old Its army of clerks have to be on hand early in the morning, and they cannot 1 ave until fheir day's work is done, which is often not till long after the gas is lighted. Its capital is two millions, its daily receipts seven million dollars. It* receives daily from two hundred and fifty to four hundred letters, all of which have • to he registered and answered before the business of the day ends No bank clerk on the salaivofa thousand dollars a year goes to his bank as regularly, or works as many hours as William B. Astor, who counts up his forty millions. His little one-story < ffice, a step or two from Bioad way on I'rince street, with its iron bars, making it lesemble a police prison, is the den where he performs his daily toil, and out of his labor gets only "his victuals and clothes."' lie attends personally to all his business, knows every dohar of rent or in come that is to become due, pays out e.vry dollar* makes his entries in li s own hand, and obliges his subordinates to come to him for information, while he does not go to them. He generally comes down in the omnihus at an early hour of the day, and remains closely absorbed in business until near five o'clock* lie rare ly takes exetcisc and finds his pleasure in die closest attention to business. A fiiend of nttue rode to Washington with him in the same car front New York. He nei ther spoke nor got out of hi* seat, and hardly moved from Jersey City to Wash ington. lie usually leaves Lii& oflico at 5 o'clock, and slowly walks up Iroad way to Lafayette place. He is over six feet high, heavily built, with a decided German* look snta 1 haZc eyes, a- if he was halt asleep, head round as a pumpkin and about as des titute of hair lie is exceedingly hospita ble. and in the "season" gives a dinner to bis fiiends weekly, at which the richest viands, on services of gold and s lver, are presented by liveried servants to his guests. Commodore \ auderbilt in-ver worked har der in his lite —never worked more hours than now. He lias a confidential clerk who works like a pack-horse, who has been in his employ for thirty years. Be sides this Vanderbilt does his own busi ness, makes and executes his own contracts and this, with the business he does on twenty millions, is no small toil. The Commodore goes down to his business regularly every day, and can be found vi* certain hours. His only recreation, euchre and fhst horses. Moses Taylor, whose dividend from his coal stock alone this year reached the pretty little sum of a million of dollars, began business in New York when he was sixteen year* of age, kept books with his own hands, and has done so ever since. His library in his house on I* itth Avenue is a regular work shop. Every night he brings up his busi ness with his own hand. His Vast busi ness, personal t> himself, and his business as trustee, are kept by himself. He makes all the original entries of sort and kind and goes to his office for no informa tion, and he knows just how things must be there to be right. And should every record kept by his book-keepers and clcik3 be destroyed, it would make no difference with him. foi he has the originals in his own hands. Many merchants spend the afternoon in riding, or in the excitumeut in the evening stock hoard, but Mr Tay lor finds his recreation in a bath, a good dinner, a comfortable siesta, and an even ing devoted to work. Such a man would make money and keep it.—*V. Y. Cor. Boston Journal. western correspondent says : In a district in tlie far \Y est we had a gen tleman teacher who thought it advisable to give some lessons in politeness. Among other things he told thelovs in addressing a gentleman they should always say. Sir, and gave them examples, and made quito a le->on of it. One boy was particulailv delighted, and took occasion to speak to his teacher often, to show lie profited by his teachings. When he went home to dinner his father said : "Tom, have some meat?" "Yes, Sir. I thank you " The next thing the child knew his fa ther's hand came whack n his ear, and hi< father's voice thundered forth, "I'll teach you to sass vour'dad !*' Tom gave up being polite. tW A young lady from a boarding school, living asked at a table if she wo'd take more, replied: "By no means raidam gastronoinical satiety admonishes nic that I have arriv-d at the ultimate (f degluti tion consistent with the code of JSsculapi ns."' - A man sentenced to be hung wa* visited by his wife, who said : "My dear, w< uld you like the children to tee you exe cuted ?" "N"," In* replied. "That's just tike you; you never wanted the children to have any enjoyment !" —■ * &T An old bachelor says the most dif ficult surgical operation is to tako the jaw out of a woman.