133 r - vv.' sitar. VOLUME XIX racmyrxcid&zih. I LESSON IN ITSELF SEBUM .A lesson in itself sub ime; A lesson worth enshrining, s-this;="L►ake no heed of ti Save when the sun is shining." These'rriotto words a dial bore, And wisdom never teaches To but= heart a better lore, Than this short sentence preaches. As•life is sometimes bright and fair, And sometimes dark and lonely; Let us forget all pain and care. • And note its bright hours only. There is'no grove on earth's broad chart, Buttes some bird to cheer it; So hope sings on in every heart,, Although we may tot hear it: And if to-day the heavy wing Of sorrow is oppressing; Perchance to-morrow's sun will bring ' • ' The weary heart a blessing. 'or - life is houlutimeirbright - amd - fair And sometimes dark and lonely, Then let's forget its toil and care, • And note its bright hours only. We bid the joyous moments haste, And then forget their glitter— We take the'Cup of life and taste ' Isi-o-portioa-but-the-bitrer• But we should teach our hearts to deem Its sweetest drops the strongest; As-pleasant-hours-should-ever seem- To linger found us longest. And-life is sometimes bright and fair, And sometimes dark and lonely, Let us forget its toil and care, And note its bright hours cm y. The darkest shadows of the night Are jukt before the morning; Then let us wait the coning light, All boding phantoms scorning; And ignite we're passing on the tide Of time's fast ebbing river, Let's pluck the blossoms by its side, And bless the Gracious Giver. As life is sometimes bright and fair, And sometimes dark and lonely, We shalt forget its pain and care, And note its bright hours only. THE HONE CALL 93ring home the battle flags, all stained and torn With sunning shell and grimy battle smoke, The flags that through the fierce tight ye have borne Amid the hissing lead and saber's stroke, And place them on each waiting armory wall, That they may speak of the great past to all. __Rriiig_home4our-musketarstand-them-one - by - 0 In the vast arsenals, and then leave them there, The glorious work which called them forth is done, The din of war is no more in the air; The battle•echoes fade and fade away, , And peace is dawning on a broader day. Bring back the cannon, let the spidsr spin Her thin-laced web within them where they stand, No more their throats shall wake with dreadful din The drowsy hamlets of our wide-spread land, Or cabt Ahem into bells that ne'er shall cease To fillthe air with sweet-toned notes of peace. Bring home the leathern knapsacks ye have borne • With bending backs along the dusky ways, The mounted cross•belts ye've so proudly worn; A new light shines from brighter, happier days, The cloud of war is swiftly.paising by, And on& again the sun shinei in the sky. Bring back your swords, and lay them by at home; Ah, is it not a proud, a noble thought To know your children in the years to come Snall•point to these and ,say, 'Our fathers fought!' Bring back your 'swords, and hang them on you; walls, To grasp again when'cr your country calls. Come home, ye veterans ; welcome, welcome home! "Come," say the lips of mothers and wives,;' Your childrees _joyous voices echo "come!" We,,thank the God of battles for your lives ; And now the morning dawning on the night Breaks in the future beautiful and bright. ~:r POVEII,TY'q. FALSE PIUDE.—A religisus vonteinpontry says very justly: "The idea 13f 'reipeetable'employmenti is the rock upon which thousands split and ship-wreck them selves and all who depeod on them. All em ployments are respectable that bring honest gain. The laborer who is willing to turn his hands to anything, is _as respectable as the clerk or draper store-tender. Indeed the man Who is ready to work whenever work offers, -whatever it may be,. rather than . lie —id-le-er--beg—, is-a—far—more—zespectable—ma , than one who turns up his hose at hard Is tar, weaties his friends with ' his' complaints that he cab ' got nothing respectable to do podkets their' benefactions without tbankful- Gess, and goes on from 'day to day, a'useless lazy grumbler." , . 'Forty years Israel wandered in the wilder ness; 'before le entered upon .the promised hied, and forty years transfers every foi tune in out l4nd to new owners. And if any, man is grieved beeautio . of the bigneis of his in ! eotne tax lee bud wipolii eyes. Tea (than. ea to one his *Wren, won't :have Any :in eomeito he taxed .up0n.. ... Why is love like a tinek's foot? Becuse it of otter' lies hidden 'in the Beast. Wittri.ll7' , NcivvosParbei‘ • Neutral .I.lr'k_Nicatt4s,34.4..xk.cl. WAYMSBOR -SPELLING4SCHOOLS , Have you .f!irgotten 'them? When from all the region round • about, ,they, gathered into the log•school house, with' its huge fire place, that yawned like the main entrance to Avernus. How the sleigh •bells—,the old ashioned bells biT in the .tniddle of the string, and "growing smolt - by - degrees-an. beautifully less," towards the broad-brass buckleschimmed-in-every-direction-long before night—the gathering of the clans. Then came one to school, "the Mastee— •ive-him-tbe u for he is entitled to ft—Master and all bundled into tie red double sleigh, strewn with an abundance of straw, and tucked up like a Christmas pie with half a Beare of good, large buffalorobes. There was half a dozen -cutters, each with a young man and maiden, they two and no more.- And thefe again a pair of jumpers, mounting a great' outlandish looking bin, heaped_up,_pressed down, and running over, Scripture measure, with - m — : -- mill - colleetions-of humanity, picked up en route, from a dozen homes, and all as merry.as kittens in a bas ket of wool. And the bright eyes, red lips, that one caught a glimpse of beneath those pink-lined, quilted hoods, and the silvery laugh that escaped the mufflers, and fur tip pets they wore then—who does not remem ber them? Who can ever forget them? The-school house, designated to be the a renaof-the-conflict,- has been swept and gar nished; boughs of evergreen adorn the'smoke stained and battered walls, The pellets of chewed paper have all been swept from the ceiling, and two pails of Water have been brought from the spring, and set on a bench in the centry, with an immemorial tin cup —a wise provision indeed, for 'tis warm in that-spelling _room. The big boys have, fanned and replenish ed the fire, till the old chimney fairly jars with-the roaring_flames,_add aparks_fiy_out_i at the top, like a furnace, the on-flame of the battle. The two "Masters" are there; the two schools are there; and such a hum; and such 0 , • • • 'I 1 h ill the , swarm? The ferule comes docin upon — the deelr'i with emphasis. What the roll-call is to ar mies; that "rule" is to whispering, laughing young company. The challengers are arranged on one side of the house; the challenged on the other. Back seats, middle seats, low, front seats, all 'filled. Some of the fathers and grandfath ers, who could, no doubt, upon such an oc casion, "Shoulder a crutch, and show how field's were won." occupy" the bench of honor, nearest the desk. Now the preliminaries; the reputed best spellers on each aide choosen. "Susan Brown !" Oat comes a round-eyed little creature, blushing like a peony. Such a little thing, and choses first. "Moses Jones 1" Out comes Moses, an awkward fellow, with a. shock of red hair shockingly harvested, surmounting his broad brow. The oirls lau.h "Elementary," isn't worth knowing. "Jane Murray !" Out trips Jane, fluttered as a bride and takes her place nest to the caller. She's a pretty girl, but a sorry speller. Don't you helir the whispers round the house? "Why, that is John's .sweetheart." John is the leader, and a battle lost with Jatie by his side, would be sweeter than a victory won without her. And so they go, "calling names," until five or six champions stand forth ready to do battle, and the contest is fairly begun at last. Down goes one after another, as words of three sylables are followed by those of four, and these again by words of similar pronun ciation, and divers singifications, until Moses and Sussn alone remain. The spelling book is exhausted, yet there, they stand. Dictionaries are Awned over, memories are ransacked for. "Words of learned length and sound," un til, by and by, Moses conies down like a tre e , and Susan flutters there still, like a little leaf alott, that the forest and the fall have tor gOtten. I'ollysyllables follow, and by and by, Su inn hesitates just a breath or two, and-twen ty tongues are working their way through th e-labyri n letters-in-a-twin k ling—Lit tle, Susan sinks into the chink left for her on the crowded seat, and there is a lull in the battle. • Then they all stand in solid phalanx by schools, and the struggle is, tb spell each Oth er down. And down they go, like the leaves in winter weather, and the victory is declar ed for our district, and the school is dismiss ed. •Then comes the hurrahing and bundling, the whispering and glancing, the pairiog_.off and tumbling in. There are hearts thailut ter and hearts that ache; mittens that are not worn, hcmes'that are not realised, and fond looks that are not ieturoed: There is a jinn •ling at the door; one after another :of the sleighs dash np, receive their nestling freight, .1 I: go IL. "Our Master". covers the fire, and puts out the candles, (don't you remember how be used to pinch the smoking wick. with fore finger and Ihumb r and then - thrust such help less luminary' head first into the socket?) and we wait for him. The Ulla ring faintly in the woods, over the hill, in the valley. They are gone. The school house is dark and tenantless, and we are herealone with the night. Merry, care-free company; Some of them are eorrowing; some are dead, and all, we fear, are changed I . SPELL I Ah 1 the "spell, that has come over that crowd of young Aiream ert—over -you, over us, will , it, ever., be die.; solved ? -- it fa "the-white-ratliance-efoternt ty I' FRANKLIN COUNTY, -PENNSYLVANIA,.FRIDAY' MORNING, JUNE 23, 1865. Otir Mist Ores About, ailh` Other ' Not one mail it ten thousand Bens thoie with _whom he associates as they really are. If the prayer of Burns were granted, and we could see ourselves as others see us ourself much more would in all probability be more numerous than they are bow. The truth' is, that we regard each other through :-variety-of_lenaes,n. one of which is °cot.. reef. Passion and prejudices, love an. ate, b - on - evoleuee - and - etroyFspeetaclis-our - eyes and utterly prevent ns from observing aeon rately. Many whom we deem the porcelain of human clay are mere dirt and'a still great er trer-ot-thesi • • 1 IT "black books," are no further off from heav en, and perchance a little nearer, than the censors who condemn them. We habitually undervalue or overvalue each other, and in estimating character the shrewdest of us on ly now and then ,makes true appraisal of ' the virtues and defects Of our closest intimates. It is not just or fair to look at character from a stand-point-of_one's_own selection. A man's profile may be unprepossessing, and yet his full face agreeable. We once saw a young man, whose timidity was a standing joke with his companions, leap into a river and save a boy from drowning, while his tormentors stood panic-struck on the bank. The mer chant who gives curt answers in his counting house may be a tender husband and father, and a kind helper. of the desolake and op pressed. On the other hand, yoTir good hu mored person, who is all smiles and sunshine in public, may carry .something as hard as the nether millstone in the place where his heart ought to he. Such anomalies are com mon. Time is this comfort, however, for those whose misjudgments of their fellow mortals lean to the kindly, side—such mis takes go to their credit in the great account. Ho who thinks better of his neighbors than they deserve, cannot be a bad man, for the standard-by-which-his jildgement is guided is the goodness of his own heart, It is only the base who bel:eves all men .base—or, in other words, like themselves. Few, howev er, are all evil. Even Nero did a good turn to somebody, for when Rome was rejoicing over kis — de - nth BOUM luvely • , grave with flowers. Public men are seldom or never fairly judged—at least, while living. However pure, they cannot escape calumny. However correct, they are sure to find eulo gists. History, may do them justice; but they rarely get it while alive, either from friends or foes. • Kentucky and Slavery. The Louis Ville Journal has entered the arena in favor of the constitutional amend ment in Kentucky with considerable energy, and is doing most, noble duty. In its issue of the 30th ult., it says: Nobody not tit for Bedlam or any asylum for idiots supposes; that, hereafter, any good can come of slavery, so called in- Kentucky. Nobody thinks that anything but confusion and agitation and strife and all manner of e vil can grow out of it. Any attempt of this State to-remain a . slave State in name and in law, the only slave State in the whole of the broad Union, a solitary slave State in the now in the I midst of thirty-five .ast of thirty-live or forty tree States, the scoff of the whole world, a thing of shame and odiuin in the eyes of all the nations, a tract of land to be scorned and shunned • by every immigrant seeking a home upon our continent—any such attempt, we say, world be the very error of direst and wildest luna cy. If our people wish to make their noble State a theatre of bitterness and fierce con tentions for-years whilst harmony and peace shall be prevailing all around her, if they want to make her a pariah.yin the midst of her sisters, and an object of jealousy. and dis favor with the Government and the country, they know very well how to bring these cup es upon her. PIETY QUAINTLY ExritEssEn.—At a fu- neral at St. Augustine, Fla , a short time since, a colored preacher was enlarging on the gratitude that the freedmen owed to God for the marvelous deliverance that he had wrought in their behalf. llis climax was somewhat in this wise: ' "My brethren, Gen. Sherman has done much for us by bringing so many of our peo ple out of bondage; Gen. Saxton has been ,our benefactor by defending us from being imposed. on and . giving 'us . landsi; brother Lynch has deserved our thanks by his care for our spiritual welfare; bat remember, my brethren, that the Lord has. done more for ui — than any other mass!" GlRLS.—There are two kinds of girls.— One is the kind that appears best abroad— the girls that are good for balls, rides, par ties, visits, &e., and whose chief delight is in such things. - The other is the kind that ap- pear best at home, the girls that are useful and cheerful in the dining room, and all the precincts of home. They differ widely in character. One is often a torment at home, the other a blessing; one is a moth, consum ing everything about her. The other a Bun. beam, diffusing life and gladness to all around her. PaAYER•—In the very moment, when thou prayest, a treasure is laid up for you in heav en. No Christian's prayer fills back from t e c osed gates of heaven; each nutersthtir: like a messenger dove;,some bring' back im mediate visible answers; but all enrich , our store Cr blessing there, and all return to the heart with the fragrance of petted ou them, from the holy place where they ' , have been. The Christian, oven when he is walking for recreation, in his converse with others, in silence,.in reading, in all rational pursuits, finds opportunity tor prayer, And although he is only thinking, of God in the little chain. her of his seal,. and calling. on his Father with,.eileut asperation, God is.near him, and with him,; for he'is still speaking to him.— Gregory. A General shouldn't stand too straight.- 7 fie ought to leau a little upon his staff. A Broadside Dialogue; "And so, Squire you don't take a 'county • ' paper ?" - "NO,. Major, I get the' citfpaper on tench better terms; I take a couple of them." "But Squire, the county papers often prove a great convenience to us." "Why, I don't know any convenience i,hey are to me." -41Tth-l-fam-you-sold-last-fall-was-advertis -ed-in-one-of-t hem r and-thereby-you,ob tained a customer. Did you not ?" "Very true, Major, but I paid three dol lars for it." "And on made more than three hundred dollars by it. Now, if your neighbors not maintained the press and kept it up and ready •for the use, you would have been without the means to advertise your . proper ty?, "And your brother's death with a long Obituary notice. And the destruction of our neighbor Rigg's house by fire. You know these things , are exaggerated till the authen tic account of the newspaper Sets th - em all right." • - U, true, but—" "And when your cousin Splash was up for the Legislature, you appeared much gratified at his defense which cost him no thing." "Yes, yea, but those things are new to the reader. They cause the people to take the paper." . "No, Squire Grudge; not if all were like you. Now, I tell yuu, the day will surely come when somebody will write a long eulo gy on your life and character, and the prin ter will put it in type with a heavy black cut over it, and with all your riches, this will be done for your( grave as a pauper. Your wealth, liberality, and all such things will be spoken of, but the printer's boy as he spells the words in arranging the type to these say ings, will remark of you—"Pouroneaudevil, he is even sponging his obituary 1' Good morning, Squire;" A Vermont Anecdote. The Rev. Zeb Twitehell was the most no- esli e s o is minister m ermont for shrewd and laughable sayings. In the pulpit he maintained a suitable amount of gravity of manner and expression, but out of the pulpit he overflowed with fun. Occasionally he would, if emergency seem ed to require, introduce something queer in to a senile° tor the sake of arousing the flag ging attention of his hearers. 16 was he who originated the story of the groat mosqui toes. Seeing that his audience was getting slee py, ho paused in his discourse and digressed as follows: . 'Brethren, you haven't any idea of the suf fering of. our missionaries in the new settle ments, on account of the mosquitoes. The mosquitoes in some of those regions are.enor• mous. A great many of them will weigh a pound, and they will get on logs and bark when the missionaries are going along.' By this time all cars and eyes were open and he proceeded to finish his discourse. The nexlday one of his_bearers_callad_ him to account for telling lies in the pul pit. 'There never was a mosquito that weighed a pound,' said he. 'But I didn't say ono of . would weigh a pound; I said a great m sy • them would weigh a pound, and I th . s lc a million of thew would. 'But you said they barked at the mission aries. 'No, no, brother. I said they would get oc loge and bark.. " A REMINISCENCE Or MR. LINCOLN,-OR the day of the receipt of the capitulation of Lee, the Cabinet meeting was held an hour earlier than usual. Neither the President nor any member was able, for the time, to give utterance to his feelings. At the sug gestion of Mr. Lincoln, all dropped on their knees and offered,' in silence and io tears, their humble and heartfelt acknowledgments to the Almighty for the' triumph ho had granted to the national cause. The same day, in the afternoon, the President was in a frame of mind peculiarly happy. To his wife he said: "The war is now about over; we have had a long and wearisome four years' siege, and we must travel a little this summer and recruit. It must be without fuss or display. You must write Bob that hr lit comeher^ -id — resign his captain- .e must some home An ! g, cal. oy and go to his books. Let him prepare to earn his living as I did, depending on his own bands and brains." On the morning of the; day of his death kindred conversations were held as to the manner.of spending the simmer ) and what disposition should be made of "Bob" and "Tad," as be called his two sons, Robert and Thaddeus.— Wcseern Chris tian 'Advocate. =3= Ammo. FOR PARDON.-- at on. Loagstreet recently took at Lynchburg, the preliminary amnesty oath, and is now permitted to come hither by the Government ter the purpose - of - making - special-application-for-pardon -and restoration to full civil rights, Sven should he not succeed, his example must 'have a powerful effect on the minds of the South trbectrmost-active-in-the-retellioa New York oity ie said to contain 150,000 Germans. Of these 43,000 are Roman Cato• and . 61,000 are Protestants. President Lincoln was a member , of a Masonic Lodge in Springfield a waster wa son. A Mt's. Bacon, of Virginia City, who at. tended the ball recently given by General McDowell, in San Francisco, wore jowela worth $lOO,OOO. Well dressed bacon, that It is enchanting; to see a. soft tem.• in a lovely wolucu's eye. „Wo cannot imagine a more beautiful witter'in such a diamond. Something for' Everybody When you walk in the 'street with a 'lady keep your bands out of your pockets; and your cigar out of your mouth. We would sooner be caught stealing than in the act of smoking while milking with a lady. Don't doge sides with her on'croSsing the street,. it is quite , as proper that you should fan through cellar doors and other traps set by - careless-people,-as-that-she shouid.—Always 7take-the-right-hand-wh EMl — you - meet - another - 1 person, and don't stop. At table take the dish the host offers you, and don't ,pass it to the nearest neighbor, even if a lady; it is ungenerous to reprove your host or hostess a ohi - IT fa' Th-F o lip or her face. _dere is a point want's self-abnegation becomes rudeness, add' this id precisely that point. The , person who gives the entertainment has a perfect right to lay which shall be served first. Don't offer your chair to a new comer, unless it is the only one of the kind and. the best in the room.. Rise when another guest leaves the house where you aro entertained, but do nut follow to - the - door;--Yeu- may thus spoil-a more cordial leave-taking. Don't sit cross legged in presence • of ladies, or in company of ceremony. Keep your fingers 'out o f your button holes, and your hands from off your lap. Make yourself.as comfortable as can without incommoding any one.— Your host, it a gentleman, always likes to see his guests comfortable and contented.— Be neither a pump nor a pumper, but alter nately resume both conditions. Ask and answer questions . with diplomatic propriety. Speak well of people, or speak • not at all.— Nothing indicates At cater defect of collo quial ability than vituperation, or angry declamation. Maintain repose if the earth quakes... Don't squeeze a lady's hand, for, besides being a vulgar demonstration of affec tion, ladies often wear rings. The slightest possible pressure is in good taste. But there is a_difference_between_the_respectful_and the real kindly, scarcely perceptible, press sure of the whole hand and a persistent grip that leaves the fingers white for an hour, and a lady disgusted with you for a week. Al. ways wear a clean shirt and_collar r and do not tail to use-a-teet-h-lyrusk ---- A - 11 - rnw is respectfully submitted to those who would be recognized as persons of good breeding. Poisoning of Andrew Johnson. Our theory of the poisoning of Andrew Johnson on the day of inauguration, when it was the original intention of the assassins .to have slain the President, has received a singular confirmation in the testimony of one of the late witnesses on the assassination tri al before the military court at Washington. Marcus P. Norton, of Troy, in this State, testified on Saturday week that he had seen Atzerodt, to whom had been confided the murder of the Vice President elect, and O'- Laughlin, who was to have killed Gen. Grant, in company with Booth at the National Ho tel in Washington, on the 2d or tld of March, and overheard a conversation among these partieS. in which it was said that "if the mat ter succeeded us well with Johnson as with Old Buchanan, they would be pretty well anan was poisoned at the National hotel at the time of his inauguration in 1856; and this allusion by the assassins to that circutn stance, taken together with Mr. Johnson's singular illness at the time of his inaugura tion, and the proofs that Booth had stood pOsted at the Capitol to shoot Mr Lincoln on that very morning, seem to be conclusive that the singular condition of the Vice Pres ident on that occasion was to be attributed to the influence of poison. His powerful physical nature triumphed over the insidious drug, and hence the allusion in the subse quent circular which - gave directions to the assassins. that each of them must ,bear in Mind that "the cup once had failed."— Wilkes Spirit of Ike Times. • From Dubuque, lowa, a friend writes: A well known lawyer of this city being sent for' to counsel some men accused of horse-stealing, in the jail at Waverley, Bre mer county, in that State, was sent for also by an Irishman in another room in the same prison. "Well, Pat, what do you want with me ?" "Your Honor, I just heard there was a lawyer in jail, and sure I wanted to see him." "Well, what'do you want with me ?"_ "An' what should I want wid .ou but to get me out of th - 0" 'And what are you here for ?" "Just for burglary 1 belave they call it." "And what is the testimony against you?" "And mover a bit at all. Only I tould the Justice of the Peace myself that I did it." . "Well i if you have confessed it, I don't' see but what you'll have to stay here." "An' is it that you say ? Sure, now, and in the counthry I came from nivit a bit would they‘kape anybody in jail on such a thrifliny ividence as thug ! " WHERE DID THAI' MAN GO To.—ln a COT -tain-hotetin-this-village,-there 4r-employed-a bar tender, who is in the habit of taking his "tod" pretty freely, but always makes it a point never to drink in the presence of his aqui - . A few—dtrys-ago-w-hile-lus--was-i. the actof drawing ;his "tea" preparatory to 'taking a drink, the employer came into the barroom rather unexpectedly. rindiog him self caught in the act, he set the tumbler and its contents on the counter, and casting his eyes around with a.190k of surprise, ex claimed! "- t • • "Where in thunder the man that or dered that drink go to!" If we find .that wo , nro. not much to •him whose hospitality we have been ett o pying, that he does not need 114, that we - Ore in no way essential to. his pleasure,,l.tlreti do we feel ourselves thrust out ordoors, no matter what be proffers; us ' "HAVE •YOU PACKED UP?"-We OnCEI went, upon invitation, to dine with a very clever and entelligent gentleman of the city, who professed to beallniversalist, but whose wife was a deVoted .Christian. While seated around the table laden with life's luxuries, the conversation turned upon the subject of the necessity of personal religion, when the husband related the following beautiful inci dent, which, ho said, , had given him much serious-thought:throne - mreasiwn, wheat e pious mother had been instructing her chil dren in the truths of her religion,and telling them that she"eitfected to go to heaven, a thoughtful little girl ,said, after musing in once-for-some. men "Ma, have you packed up ?" - "Why do you ask such a question, my child ?" saici the mother, "Because you said yo,u were going to heav en," said the little inaueeut, "And I sometimes thinki", confessed the Universalist, "that .there is some packing up necessary, before we can go to heaven. __How many poor Sinners are hoping that they will at last gO to heaven, and yet have never set about the needful preparations ! The summons to appear before God will.lind them whelly unprepared, and in that hoar all their hopes , will die.—Uumberianti Tr es byterian. A Boy's LAWSUIT.--thider a great tree, close to the village, two boys found a wal nut. , "It"belongs to me," said Ignatius, "for I was the first to see it." "No, it belongs to rue," cried Bernard, "for I was the first to pick it up," and so they began to quarrel in earnest. "I will settle the dispute," said an older boy, who had just come up. He placed him self between the two boys, broke the nut in two, and said• one —pike -of shell belongs to him who-first saw-tho-nut,-the-other-pieee_of_the shell belongs to him who first picked it up ; but the kernel I keep for judging the ease. And this," he said, as he sat down and lausthed,is --- suits." During the visit of President Lincoln to the Woody field of Gettysburg, he entered a hospital near by, and heard a wounded and dying soldier taking final leave of his wife. "Good bye, Carrie," said the soldier, "Meet we iu Heaven." President Lincoln paused a moment gave $5O to Carrie, dropped a tear and advanced to other scenes of anguish.— As President Lincoln was as good as good ness could be, wo trust and we believe that he is now in Heaven, where so many bravo soldie'rs have gone before him, EFFACING THE TRACKS OF WAIL.--11 is a'curious fact that the track of the march of Sherman's army is already nearly effaced, and on the very forts taken by Grant vege tation is already luxuriant. The soil.viudi cates its fertility oven among the linos of bat tle. The peopth—or rather the . secesh—aro very clamorous for the United States Gov- ernmen ore - tu ei ru ges an ra► ways at his own expense, and would like to see it reconstruct Richmond. • This is very much in the vein of the Frenchmen, who, accord ing to Dr. Franklin, having failed in making a deadly assault on his enemy with a red-hot poker, asked him it he would not at least pay him for heating it. • An Irishman, who was once on a journey said he never liked to see tables full of books and newspapers -where he stopped at night. "Fm," said he, "I can never find any whis key at such places." The Chicago Times think that as Wash• ington was known as the father of his coun try;•Jeff Davis ought hereafter, to be known as mother of the Confederacy. An elderly maiden, meeting a.newly'rnar ried man, who bad once been. her servant, carrying borne a cradle, exclaimed ) "Ab, John, these are the fruits of marriage."— "No, Madam," replied •John, "this be only the fruit badzet." Small debts are like small shot; they rattle on every side, and can scarcely be escaped without a wound, great debts are like can non; of loud noise, but little danger. Harry .Turn married a cousin of the same namo. When interrogated as to why ho did so, he replied 'that it had always been a max• im.of his, that one goad turn deserves anoth er.' A Western chap, - in describing a gale of wind, says. , • ''A white dog, while attempt ing to weather the gale, was caught with his mouth wide open, and turned completely in side out.' . A all , thin, square-built gentleman was seen walking down the street a few days a go, when all of a sudden he was observed to urn roan Why is a blazing fire like a generous hear t? Because it exhibits a grate-ful ult.. If a lady is asked how many rings she has she can say with truth there is no end to them: • - If a man marries a 'sensible woman, it is probably afrei a severe disappointment in not marrying a fools . , Why is a lovely •youn g l a dy hi nge ? muse she is somothnig to a dun), • • , • • • Why Wit , absurb, to expect a peetty to, be. ••• wild'!. • Because shu comuut be plain. '1 • • B 1 gger thin the Muwinoth Cove—the eav,n in et tes.rehO. =1" 013.60 rer. -roar NUMBER 2 =MC= U _ 11W