IHe 3lorlh franch Ucmmral, SIOKXJSR/ Proprietor. NEWiSERIES, AwooklyDmocratic m . paper, devoted to Poli News, the Arts "i ' pay, at Tunkhannock * IY HARVEY SICKLERa ' , Term* —1 copy 1 y® ar i (* n feat paid within six months, V 2.50 will be charged >• paper will be DISCONTINUED, until all ar bitrage* are paid; unless at the option of publisher. ADVERTISING. (• lines or . { | j . | Use, make three', four \ trco [three \ six one entsquare weeks j *; roo'Mj mo'th mo'th, year | C au are Tool L 2s ' 2,25! 2,87 3,00< 5,00 ■da 200 60 1 do' 3'ooi ,b 4 ' 7 i 5,50' 7,00 9,00 I Column 4 00J 6.50f 8,00 10,00 15,00 { C do 600 fi ,2 ' oo ,7 ' UU 25 '°° I 3°' I'oo 6 14,00 18,00 25,00 35,00 1 dl. ' 10',00:12,00 17,00) 22,00. 28,00 40,00 'EXECUfOBSi ADMIN ISTBMORS and AUDI TOR'S NOTICES, of the usual length, 82, ?0 •BITUARIES,- exceeding ten lines, each ; RELI ©IOCS and LITERARY NOTICES, not of genera interest, one half tne regular rotes. Susiuess Cards of one square, with paper, 85. JOB WOB.lt •fall kinds neatly executed, and at prices to suit fee times. •All TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS and JOB - WORK must be paid for, when ordered ftoskrss IJirtirs. R' B. & W E LITTLE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW Office on Tioga street, Tunktaannocfcra. S. COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. OEO S.TUTTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW Tunkhonnock, Pa. Office- n Stark s Brick •ek, Ttega street. WM. M. PIATT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, 0 Ice in Stark's Brick Block Tioga St., Tunk ■ anneck, Pa. _____ Sjfr HAIiHISKUKG, HENNA. The undersigned having lately purchased the •• BUEHLER HOUSE " property, has already com meneed such alterations and improvements as will reader this old and popular House equal, if not supc rier to any Hotel in the City of Harrisburg. Aeentinuance of the public patronage is refpect ftdly seliclted. UOLTON WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE, TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. THIS establishment has recently been refitted an furnished in tbe latest style Every attention WtU he given to the comfort and convenience of tho.e was natronlze the House. . P jj. WALL, Owner and Proprietor . Brnkhaaneck, September 11, 1661. NORTH branch HOTEL, MESHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY, PA Wm. H. CORTRIGHT, Prop'r HAVING resumed the proprietorship of the above lintel the audersigned will spare no effort to NHUXYU aa agreeable place ot sojourn for 'WM "H^OKTRWHT. ♦ Tne, 3rd, 1863 1> K. .T. C. BKC l< Eb - PHY'SICI AN SURGEON, Weald respectfully announce to the citizensof Wy- BIM that he has located at Tunkhannock "hero he will promptly attend to all calls in the line of o be found at home en Saturdays of oo*hw*k ______ fetalis Intel, towanda, rA. D- B- BART LET, (Nat* eftv. BBRAISARD House, ELMIUA, N- Y. PROPRIETOR. Th* MBANS HOTEL, i- one of the LARGEST •*d BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country—lt l*ltt*d up in the most modern and unproved style, a*d ao pains are spared to make it a pleasant and agreeable stopping-place for all, v. v 3, *2l, ly CLARKE,KEEN £f,& I)., MANUFACTURE RS ASD WHOLESALE DEALERS 1R LADIES', MISSES' & GENTS' Jlilk antn£assinurf fjats AND JOBBERS IN HATS, CAPS, FURS, STRAW GOODS, PARASOLS AND UMBRELLAS, BUFFALO AND FANCY ROBES, S4O BROA3DWAV, CORNER OF LEONARD STREET, nww was. CLARK, 1 A. * KRERET, V . LCERRET. S M. GILMXN, DENTIST. MAILMAN, has permanently located in Tunk • hannoek Borough, and respMtfully teaderhi Wfe*eioßal services to the citizens of this placeand mm Muling country. ALL WORK WARRANTED, TO GIVE SATIT nfi; ever ffttea's Law Office near the Pos fried ftoty. "NOT IN oun SBT." BY KLLEN ASHTON. It was between the first and second acts of a celebrated ooera. The audience had just ceased applauding Patti, who had been called before the curtain twice ; and now everybody was looking around to sec who was in the opera. A gentleman who appeared comparative ly a stranger leaned over to speak to a lady before him. 44 1 have been so long abroad," he said, that 1 hardly know anybody. Yet 1 never in anv opera house saw so many beautiful faces. Who is that beautiful girl opposite ? I mean the one in pink, on the second seat of the balcony, playing her fan with the grace of a Spanish woman ?" 44 Oh ! that girl !" was the contemptuous reply. ,l That's A/arian Vaughn,the daugh ter of a retired pork merchant, or tailor, or something of that sort. She is not in our set, however, and I know little about her," •II was going, coz to you to intro duce me," said Hairy Berkley, who had been the first speaker, 44 but I see that won't do." 4 - Dear me !"" cried the lady; "the girl isn't in society, at all I tell you." 44 The truth is, Harry," interposed Char ley Thome, the last speaker's brother, "the girls are all jealous of Miss Vaughn She is beautiful, as you see; and witty and ac complished also. Then, too, she's lull of character. Quite independent, 1 assure you, doing exactly what she likes, though she never does anything unlady like. Iler father is enormously rich, and so she is able to gratify all her tastes. All "our set," eh! Amelia? vow she is extravagant, ami try to frighten usjpoor fellows irom marry ing her. I'm very glad," he added, satir ically, "that some of our "first families' have the reputations of our grandfathers and great grandfathers to lire upon; for 'pon my soul, they've neither money nor brains in general." Miss Thome turned her white shoulder contemptuously on her brother, eyed Miss Vaughn askance, and commenced picking her to pieces, in which delightful occupa tion she was most assiduously assisted by af< male friend "in our set" who had ac companied her to the opt ra. Harry Berkley was the match of the season. Inheriting a vast estate, while yet in his minority, he had gone abroad as soon a> he had completed his studies, and had remained there, piincipally. until his twenty-fifth year. His return to America, unmarried, had put all the marriageable vunng ladies in the city into a flutter. His claims to be 44 in society," nobody could deny, for his great grandfather had been a colonial governor, his grandfather a general in the revolution and hi father a senator of the United States; while his mother and grandmother had each been fa vorite toasts in their day, and fashionable leaders in the most select circle of their na tive town. Hence, no young bachelor was more courted Bnt Amelia Thorne, his second cousin, had secretly appropiiated him to herself. One so gently born, she thought, should marry nohodv less genteel; and who was there, she added proudly to herself, with an equal quantity of tbe " blue blood ot America as herself. The next opera night, however, Harry did not invite her as she expected, and she wasforced to press her father into her service as a cavalier. Imagine her cha grin, on taking her seat, to observe her cousin talking to Miss A aughn, the latter, looking more beautiful than ever. 44 Good heavens ! pa," she cried, 44 do you see ifarrv ? lie is actually talking to that Vaughn girl ,v 44 ATH I hear," replied her father,uncon scious of bis daughter's plans. 44 that she is very fascinating. X shouldn t wonder if he married her." Miss Thorne colored with anger, and bit the end of her tan. The opera that night gave her but little, pleasure, for she was watching Miss Vaughn, and was mad with jea'ousy. The next morning her truant cousin pre sented himself. She welcomed him with a sneer 44 My dear cou.-in," said Harry, graceful ly taking a seat beside her, 44 vou don't know how yon girls—the girls of 4 our set' I mean —astonish me. I have just come from Europe, where 1 have been preaching republican institutions, and yet, the. very first thing I hear, at home, is that merit is nothing, and being 'in society' everything." 44 To be sure. A real ladv owes it to her self not to associate with evervbodv." "By which you mean that vou, and a dozen more, protend to be bettor than those who are as cultivated as yourselves. Let me tell vou, coz, that von lose more than you are aware of. for M'ss Vaughn and others like, who rest their social claims on their accomplishments, arc, as Charley says, far more agreeable acquaintances t> an 'our set' generally. You are only laughed at, and, this, not merely by those you think yon put down, but by all sensible people." Miss Amelia was purple with rage. She had never been ta'ked *o so plainly before and she was not disposed to submit to it, even for the best match of the season, and much less from her cousin. "Laughed at, am I?"she cried, rising •' Sir, you forget who are von speaking to Bat when people consort with tailor's "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RIGHT. "—Thomas Jefferson. TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1866. daughters, their manners leave them." " As I shall leave you, fair coz," answer ed llarry, determined not to quarrel, " for I see you are not looking quite as lovely, at this moment, as usual, and I try never to see a lady except in her best looks, so that I can remember her pleasantly." Half an hour afterward, Miss Amelia could have bitten her tongue off, in anger at herself, for having said what she did.— She had virtually driven him away, she reflected, and so lost every chance of se curing him for herself. What if she had also driven him to Miss Vaughn? The suspicion, alas ! proved correct.—- Harry's engagement had jusv been announc ed. And those who used to sneer at Miss Vaughn,not in our set," are already mak. ing interest for cards for the wedding, which is to be the "affair of the spason," and is to come off early in the summer. "Take my advice, Charley," said Harry, the other morning, "and marry a wife who rests ber claims upon personal amiability, intelligence and accomplishments; for she will make you a thousand times happier than any of the haughty maids, too proud to learn anything, and too selfish to care for anybodv but themselves, who chiefly make up what they call 'our set.' " - A FRAGMENT, Years ago, when my good old grand mother filled the place of honor in our popular borne, she related to me an anec dote of one of her neighbors, one who slept beneath the sod long betore ray in fant eyes opened on life's changing scenes. It ran something iu this way : the neigh bor before mentioned wa3 an honest, thrifty, well-to-do man, and, among other possessions prized highly a hog, which he had succeeded in making the envy of the farmers round about. As each week came round, he resolved to kill him; but unwilling to disturb the fattening process, he delayed the unpleasant job. At length one Sum la; after w devoutiy attending church all day, on his return from the aft ernoon service, he exclaimed, "Wife, heat the water early for me 10-morrow morn ing ; I have resolved not to carry that hog to church with me another Sabbath." Since this story fell from the lips of my honored grandparent many years have rolled away, ami dui ing that time, many have been the occasions when the moral of this has obtruded itself upon my thoughts. How many of us carry use less burdens into our pleasures, duties and devotions—burdens that have no more business there than the above mentioned q adruped in the service of the sanctuary. We chafe and fret under them, but do not cast them off; so the wheels of life roll heavily on, making deep furrows that j spoil the retreating landscapes. Man of business, carry not the fret and • anxiety of that last doubtful s peculation over tiic threshold of God's house ! Man of genius, leave with its belongings the canvas, the unhewn marble, or the half written manuscript, and shut out its mem ory on entering the sacred portals that fain would hem thee in from worldly cares and sorrows. Busy toilers in life's many vine yards, learn to drop the memory of wear ing caies and" disappointments when, bv Sabbath bells or other voices as sweet and tender, God calls you to worship aud prayer! A SINGLE WORM KILLED THAT TREE. —During my sojourn in a place of resort for invalids I was one day walking through the romantic grounds and patk with some friends when the proprietor of the estab lishment drew our attention to a large syc amore taee decayed to the core. "That fine tree," said he "was killed by a single worm." In answer to our inquiries, we found that about two years previously the tree was as healthy as any in the park, when a woodworm about three inches long was observed to be forcing its way under the bark of the trunk. It caught the eye of a naturalist who was staying at the establish ment, and he remarked : "Let that worm alone, doctor, and it will kill the tree." This seemed very improbable, but it was i.greed that the black headed worm should ! not bo disturbed. After a time it was found that the worm j had tunnelled its way a considerable dis tance nndet the hark, The next Summer the leaves of the tree dropped verp errly, and in the suc ceeding vear it was a dead, rotton thing, and the'hole made by the worm might be seen in the very heart of the once noble trunk. NURSING TROUBLES. —Some people are as careful of their troubles as mothers are ] of their babies; they cuddle them, and rock them, and hng them, and cry over , them, and flv into a passion with you if yon try to take them away from them ; they want you to fret with them, and to help them to believe that they have been worse treated than anybody else. If they could, they would have a picture of their grief in a gold frame, hung over the man- j tie-shelf for everybody to look at. And ' their grief makes them ordinal ily selfish ; | they think more of their dear little grief in the basket or in the cradle '♦ban they j do of all the world beside ; and they say you are hard-hearted if you say don't fret "Ah! vou don't understand me—you don't know me —you can't enter into wy trial#." , . HOW TO HONOR A MOTHER. In the north of Europe is a mountainous country callen Sweden. Its winters are long, snowy and cold. Its Summers are short, but very lovely and sweet-aired, es pecially' in the valleys between the high mountains. The inhabitants of that country are no ted for their industry, virtue and content ment. One morning a long time ago, a certain king of Sweden, called Gustavus the Third, was riding through a village in one of the beautiful valleys, not far from Stockholm, the capital city. As he pass ed along, he saw a young girl fillings pitcher with water that gushed from the cool rocks which overshadowed the road side. He stopped at the fountain and asked the girl for a drink. She knew not the stranger, but gracefully stepped fur ward and lilted the pitcher to his lips as he sat upon his horse. She was evidently very poor, bnt lur kiudness, so tenderly expressed upon her countenance, together with'her artless, unembarrassed politeness, at once attracted the king's attention, and touched his heart. Judging by her ap pearance that she was a child of poverty, he told her, that if she would go to the city, lie would find her a pleasant home. "Ah ! good sir," answered the girl, "Providence placed me here, and I am not anxious to change mv position in life. I am content, and it I were not content, it would be impossible for me to accept your kind offer." "Indeed! Why not ?" said the king in some surprise. "Because my mother is poor and sick ly," she replied. "And you remain at home to take care of her.'' "I am her only help and companion," said the girl, looking upon th ground with a genuine modesty that won the sympathies of her royal auditor. "I am happy in my lot, and am thankful that I can take care of and comfort the one so dear to me. No offer however tempting, could induce nie to leave my mother." 44 Where is your mother#" inquired the king, becoming more and more interested in the noble girl. "In yon little luit, by the side of the road," said she, pointing toward the hum ble dwelling. It was a low, thatched building, covered with moss and vines, very neat and clean, but so old and weath erworn that it offered but a poor shelter in time of cold ami storms. Gustavus alighted frorp his horse, and followed the girl into the hut, to see her mother. He found her sick and suffering, laving upon a bed of straw —a pale, thin woman—sinking under her infirmities, and looking forward to the grave only as a bed of rest The king was almost overcome at the pitible sight, and said, while tears came into his eyes—ah, yes, and those tears were more beautifully radiant and glorious than the brightest dazzles that ever glanced from his crown of dia monds— "l feel sorry, mother, to find you so destitute and afflicted." "Yes, yes. my dear sir," said the lady, in a feeble voice ; "but 1 am so glad that God has given me an affectionate daugh ter She is always trying to relieve me, and is my constant comforter. May God in His love remember and bless her—my dear child! and her voice was choked back by sobs, aud her face was covered with tears. The good king wept with the poor wid ow. What a sight! How. the angels of heaven hovered over that lonely hut, breathing joy unspeakable into three hearts—the suffering woman's the sympa thizing king's, and the filial daughter's.— The monarch never received such a bless ing on his throne in the palace, as there in the lone hut by the wayside ! He handed the daughter a purse of gold, and directed her to a better house, where she and he-r mother might be comfortable, saying as he depaited : "Go on, my young friend, in your way of dutiful love and care, and you shall lack for nothing while I have means to help you. lam your king. Farewell!' Gnstavu? ever remembered the poor family, and made provisions to have a sum of money regularly sent to the woman for her support; and at the mother's death, he presented the daughter with a ha.ul some fortune. ' Young readers, for your parent's sake, ar.d Christ's sake, but also for your own sake, remember the command, "Honor thy father and thy mother." DEFINITIONS NOT IN WKBSTER.--Q. What is a waterfall ? A. A lot curls made out of the tails of Chinamen, and worn by 'ladies on the back of their heads. Q. What is complexion? A. Red and white stuff, which is sold in small pots at a dollar a pot. Q. What is best? A. Having a jolly tuck in of soda aud a custard pie, a five cent c gar, and a glass of lager, and going to a concert in the evening. Q. What is amusement? A. Setting a dog at a Chinaman ; tying two cats togeth er by the tails ; cutting a girl's doll open and letting the saw dust out, or anything else that makes you feel good. Q. What is a patriot! A; A fellow who loves his country and wants to make as much out of it as possible. ■ - The path of glory leads but to the and the road of tho whiskey swiller endeth in bed in the gutter. CUT THIS OUT.— New Rules to guard ( against Cholera. —Drink all the poor whis key you cant Eat something as often as possible during the day, and take a heavy supper late at night just before going to bed. Follow this with a large instalment of Sweitzer and Limberger. On Saturday nights sleep in the opeu air by all means. ~ Keep well supplied with *green apples and other unripe fruit to eat between meals.* Take a drink occasionally. Don't be afraid of ur.ripe vegetables harness them often. Eat plentifully of young veal. Above all, drink frequently. Avoid bathing altogether Don't miss an opportunity to get nsad,it gives a healthy tone to the brain. Get up cross in the morning, and keep it up. In order to do so, drink a good deal through the night. Don't neglect to take a drink in the morning before breaktast. Pay no attention to your back yards aud alleys. They will get along. Drink as. often as anybody asks yon. Treat as long as you have any money. Eat plenty of onions lor the benefit o! " Wets*" people. Two or three dozen glasses 01 soda dur ing the dav, and a quart or two ot ice cream on a hot afternoon will be found highly advantageous. Drink. Take another. Swill downKissingen and Saratoga wa ter in the morning after breakfast "to give tone to your stomach." We have submitted these rules to the medical profession, and can assure the class yf persons to whom they are applicable that no fears need be entertained in regard to the ceitain results attending their taith ful observance. TNE WIFE'S COMMANDMENTS, 1. Thou shalt have no other woman but me, for I am thy true and lawful wife,whom thou didst promise to love and cherish. 2. Thou shalt not have a picture or any likeness of any other woman but me, for I only am thy wife, and a jealous wife. 2. Remember the market day, and re plenish the larder ; thy wife's command ments, and keep them sacred. 4. Love and cherish thy wife, that we may live happily together in the house thou gavest unto her. 5. Thou shalt not find fault when thy wife goes out to spend money, buying fash ionable shawls and dresses ; for I atn thy wife and thou must abide by it. Thou shalt not scold but shall keep ber decently clad and in gco ! repair. Thou shalt fur nish buttons and thread, that thine and thy children's shirts may be kept in order; i herein, fail not at thy p£ril. G. Thou shalt not play at billiards ; neith er at any game of chance. Thou shalt not gad about after sunset, nor in any way neglect thy wife ; neither the children she gave thee. 7. Thou shalt not dress thyself in fashion unless the wife of thy bosom is dressed fashionably also. 8. Tl:ou shalt not goto any slight-of hand or spiritual meeting, neither to speak thyself, nor to hear others speak : Thus saith thy wife. 9. Thou shalt not find fault if thy wife should fail in getting the meals in due time for it is written, Knowest thou,o man bet ter late than ever. 10. Thou shalt not drink lager or any other beer, no spirituous liquors of any kind ; neither shalt thou chew or smoke tobacco, nor use snuff, for I thy wife abhor eth it. Knowest thou also that it consum ed) money, which I thy wife can better dis pose of, even to the last farthing of thine earnings ; verily I say unto the, I am mistress of the house thou gavest unto me — Do IT WELL. —Whatever you do, do it well, A job slighted, because it is appar ently unimportant, loads to habitual neg lect, so that men degenerate, insensible,lnto bad workmen. "That is a good rough job," said a fore man in our hearing, recently,and he meant that it was a piece of of work, not elegant in itself, but strongly made and well put to gether. Training the hard and eye to do work well, loads individuals to form correct hab its in other respects, and a good workman is, in most caes, a good citizen. No one need hope to rise above Ins present situa tion who suffers small things to pass by un improved, or who* eglects, metaphorically speaking, to pick up a cent because it ia not a dollar. Some of the wisest law makers, the best statesmen, the most gifted artists, the most merciful judges,the most ingenious mechan ics, rose from the great mass. A rival of a certain lawyer sought to hu - miliate him publicly by saying : "You black ed my father's boots on6e." "Yes," re plied the lawyer, unabashed, "and I did it well." And because of his habit of doing even mean things well, he rose to greater. Take heart, all who toil! All youths in humble situations,all in adverse circumstan ces, and those who labor unappreciated If itbe but to drive the. plow, strive to do it well; if it be but to wax thread, wax it well; if Only to cut bolts, make good ones; or to blow the bellows, keep the iron hot,— It ia attention to business that litis the feet higher upon the ladder. Says the good book— Seest thou a inan diligent in his business, he shall stand be fore kings; he shall not stand before mean men." •••• ■■■ • T f *' *' { 1 ' TBUMS, MOO FERAIIJN UM BUSINESS. —Business is business' This is the peremptory maxim of many who would be puzzled to define the word, and yet feel that it stands for something quite distinfct from other occupations which they pursue either for pleasure or of necessity.— A man may be pressed with cares, or ab sorbed in entertaining studies, which hare nothing to do with his business. He may meet the first bravely, and follow the other methodically ; and yet both may be wholly separated from the work of his life, thai special work which is involved in his voca tion or calling, and is expected of him by the other bees in the hive. To that he most give his best days, and the best hours of his day Whatever other duties he has to per* form must, as a rule,make way for business. They must be attended to before or after hours, however important. Unless (as in case of accident, fire, and the like) they are of so sudden and pressing a nature as to justify obviousley the neglect of the regu lar day's work, they must wait till the work must feed your master's pigs before you set down to eat your own supper. FRESH Alß —Everv house should be thoroughly ventillated the first thing every morning, so as to allow the atmosphere of the previous night to escape. This can be done by first airing one part aod then an other. By doing this a house can" be more easily warmed. When there are many persons collected in a- room, care should be observed to keep a few inches of the window open from the top, every one avoiding sitting close to or under it, as, after a time, when many are collected, the atmosphere of the room becomes im pregnated with their exhalations, and the air is thus rendered impure. By perfect ventillation there is a uniform amount of oxygen maintained, which is the vital part ot the atmosphere, and which is necessary to our very existence. Who has not noticed a disagreeable feeling on going from the fresh air into m room with in which the ventillation is imperfect 1 At night, also fresh air should be admitted into the room, tor it is, if anything, more necessary that there should be a plentiful supply of oxy gen. We have often been asked the ridic ulous question if enough air did not coma through the key hole. Certainly not. That is not fresh air. Make it a rule al ways to sleep with part of your window open from the top, avoiding its blowing OQ you. Fresh air never hurts any one, for by it we live. It is a want of it that in jures. Persons seem to forget that they spend one third of their lives in their bed rooms. We frequently see a man building a house bestowing all his attention on the plan of the parlors, while the bed-rooms are, to a great extent, and in some instances entirely neglected. It had better be vie# versa. A genius out West, conceiving that a lit powder thrown upon some green wood would facilitate its burning,directed a small stream from a keg upon the smoking pile ; not pos sessing a hand sufficiently quick to cut this otl'at a desirable moment, was blown into a million pieces. The coroner reasoned out this verdict: "It can't be called 6uicide. because lie didn't mean to kill himself; it wasn't "visitation of God," because he wasn't struck by lightning ; he did't die for want of breath, for he hadn't anything left to breathe with. It's plain be didn't know what lie was about; so I shall bring in 11 died for the want of common sense !" BmrriFUL EXTRACT. —The loved ones whose loss 1 lament are still in existence ; they are living with me at this very time ; they are like myself dwelling in the great parental mansion of God ; they still belong to tne as Ido to them. As they are ever in my thoughts, so, perhaps I am in theirs. As I mourn for their loss, perhaps they re joice in anticipation of our reunion.— What to me is still dark, they see clearly. Whydo Igi ieve because I can no longer enjoy their pleasant society ? During their lifetime I wjes not discontented be cause I could not always have them around me. }f a journey took them from me, I was not therefore unhappy. And why is it dillerent now ? They have gone on v journey. Whether they are living on A earth in a far distant citv. or in some higher world in the infinite universe of God, w hat difference is there ? Are we not. still in the same house of our Father, like loving brothers who inhabit separate rooms'? Have we therefore ceased to be brothers ?— Pyican. fW A Republican in Maine, who had served out his time of thirty days in the Au gusta jail, was asked when he came out how he liked k. "I had a bully time," said he. "There were 7 6 inmates of the jail, and not a d d Democrat amongst the lot. 1 &3T Hoop skirts like gun barrels are not dangerous unless they have something in them. But when the former are charg ed, powdered, waddeJ, waterfall-capped— they should be bandied with the greatest cauticn,. In many instances it is dangerous' to eveu look at them. "I'm on the trail of a dear," as the', fellow said when he stepped on the dress of. a beauty in the street. "Caught in her own net," as a maiil said when he saw one of the fair sex hitched iu her crineline. x '■ VOL. 5 NO. 41