jES7 • 331Et3,r. VOLUME XX NEW SPRING AND 2UNNIEINJBDS,I GEORGE STOVER 1 - 1 SS - RETURNED - FROM - P rLA-DLL PHU WITEI A SUPPLY OF Ky. Gools • . NOTIONS, INMSIVARE 4.1“) GRocE . RiEs-, Star To which he invites the attention of of his patrons and the, public generally. March, 80, 1866 AMERICAN LIFE INSURANCE AND TRUST CO, Corner Fourth and Walnut Streets, Philadelphia incorporated 1850. Charter Perpetual. A tither ized Capital, $500,000. Pahl Up Cap tW, $250,000 Philadelphia, Feb. 4, 1861. The Trustees have this day declare& ,a Dividend' of FIFTY PER CENT, on all premiums received upon Nlerem. Pumas during the year ending De cember 31m, 1863, and in force at that date, the a bove amount to be credited to said Policies, and have also ordered the Dividend of tB6O on P o licies issued during that year to be paid, as the annual premiums on ,said-Polieies are received. OFFICERS. President—Alexander Whilldin. .Secretary and Treasurer—John S. 'Wilson. :Actuary—John C Sims. BOA RI) OF TRuSTEES=Alexander «'hill 11n, Edgar Thomson, Coorge Nugent, Hon. Jas. .Pollock, Albert C. Roberts. P. B. Atingle, Samuel Work, William J. Howard, Hon. Joseph Allison, Samuel 'F. BOJine, John Aik man, Charles F. Benz litt, Isaac Hazlehurst. WM. G.TEED, Chamberahurg Pa., is the general Agent of the American Life insurikuce and Trust Ci.mpany fur Franklin Co. 'Jos.,l)conss, Agent for Waynesboro' and vicin ity. IZEFERENCES.—Jons Pamirs and Wti.t,vx BnoTnsnros• Call and get a pamphlet. 4os. DOUGLAS, Agent. Ort. 13, 1836, EAGLE HOTEL. Central Square, Hagerstown, Md 7Lc , , HE above well•known and established Hotel has been re-opened and entirely renovated, by t undcraigned, and now offers to the public every comfort and attraction found in the • best hotels.— THE TABLE is bountifully supplied with every delicacy the market will afford, THE SALOON contains the choicest liquors. and• is constantly and nkilfuffy attended. TILE STABLE is thoroughly repaired, and earful Ostlers always ready to ac comuiodute 7tomers. JOHN FISHER, Proprietor., :• Hagerstown, June 2 —ff. , ' BARBERING I BARBERING I 17111 E subscriber would inform his customers rd _IL the public generally that he purposes contin uing the Barbering business, next door to the New Grocery. having .purrhaepd the interest of C. C. Rikiyual in the Shop andiis now prapareato do hair cutting, shaving, shampoontng. etc., in the best kyle,- The patninage of the public is respectfully solicited.., • IVA!. A PRICE. / 4 49 11 , lA* . . WAYNESBORO, FRANKLIN COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 19, 1866. 3PCPIEITICIAg [ORIGINAL.] BEATRICE MI BEAUTIFUL QUEEN EY SIDNEY OF O. • • I crown thee sovereign of my heart, Beatrice my beautiful Queen. I would love thee as thou art, Beatrice my beautiful Queen, . Enraptured I gaze on thy peerless form, . Enchanted by the matchless beauty of thine eyes That cause so many-sighs, From me whO durst not adore. Thy smile is like a sun beam, • ' Beatrice my beautiful Queen. Thy laugh is music, like the murmur of a stream, Beatrice my beautiful Queen. When thou dust speak, methinks the gods (loth bark, For thy sweet voice must charm their very souls, So like the magic echo of a lute That rolls through vale and park, Venus bears to thee a diadem, Beatrice my beautiful Queen. Juno adds a glittering gem, Beatrice my beautiful Queen. The gods do tiomage.to thy wonderous charms, They bow a; beauty's splendid shrine with great alarms, . . For fear mankind should rob them of their treasure From which they.find much pleasure. One night I kissed thee in my dreams, Beatrice my beautiful Queen. But alas the joy was transient, as the lightnings gleams, liestiice my beautiful Queen. I lingered but a moment in that blissful slate. The next I had awoke, oh cruel fate, Elysium with its glory faded' from me, Veatriee, glieen_ of my_beart_had _vanished —I was free. DREAMING AND DOING. TM W. B. CIAFENEY 'Tis well, perhaps, in childhood's dam To dream o'er life, and idly plan The noble acts and deeds to be Accomplished by tire future man : But as years pars, a doer be Within this "wide, wide world of strife;' Aye, mortal, make activity The crowning Ajax of your life. Work fur the right, where'er you he, And Lot for Mammon's gilded pelf; Work • in the ranks of Faith and Hope, For God, your neighbors and yourselt Bury your dreams in Letho's stream, And act in mercy, truth and love; This will secure F • lvsium's crown, Victorious,•in Heavcn above ! Then up! shake off all wakeful dreams; Join in the good work always near; Dwell not upon Herculean tasks, • 1)0 every humble act revere; The brooks and riVera from ttie sea, And oaks were acorns once, we know— • Tile plods of life, with master skill, To an eternal mount may grow Sorrow for the Dead. We cannot but weep for the dead. Even when every feeling, when our reason, warn us that the transition to them frond life to immortality is full of happiness, that they hare welcomed the voice of the angel of death as the harbinger of peace, the herald of joy. We weep over, the grave, even when we know it is the bed of rest for which the weary sufferer' longed, as the way-worn traveler for his home. When compelled to look; us it were, from the chambers of re joicing upon the dismal, dark abode of the dead; our hearts are chilled as it stands in re lation to ourselves, the happy, the rich, the loved; we forget to contemplate it in relation to the wretched, the poor, the desolate. who are gone to occupy it. Even in our sorrow for the dead, our tears are stained, by the set fishness that makes half our mortality; the shadow of death falls upon ourselves, and af ter the first bitter pang, the conviction that something we loved is gone beyond the voice . of our affection, . we begin to sorrow, partly, for that we too must die! If the recollection of a ditty, of a kindness, can give us a fere taste of the charity that may be felt in heav en, it is when the object upon whom It ha - s beep conferred, has passed the precints of the Comb, To be conscious that we have cheered the heart that has ceased to beat, is one of the first best consolations that softens our grief fot "the dead we have buried out of sight." TUE COST or WA,U.—Crive me the money that has been paid in war, and I will put chase every foot of land upon the globe. I will clothe every man, woman and child, in an attire that kings and queens would be proud of. I will build a school-house upon every bill-side, and!in every valley over the whole habitable earth I will build an acad emy in every town, and endow it; a college iu every State, and fill it with able profes sors. I will crown every - bill•with a church, e It:merited to the promulgation of the ges ot-peace. I will Support io the pulpit an able teacher of righteousness, so that on every Sabbath morning . the chime on one hill should answer to the chime on another round the earth's broad circumference, and the voice.of prayer and the. song. of praise titiould ascend like a • universal - holocaust. to heaven.,--Steppitv: . .E 3 Famllg Zirestrytrisitristriew i Iricleepertclemit 12.1t)c)13. all 101.z.bie0et9. Only a Look and a word. Two little boys stood together on the corn er of a street. The face ef the elder was flushed with anger, but the younger was cry. ing, as if his poor little heart would break " What is the matter with that child?" asked a gentleman, of the larger, "did you _ . strike him?" "No, I didntt do anything to him I only gave him a look and a word, and he began to cry like a-baby, just for that!" "Only a look and a word!" Ah, but what kind of a look and a word were they, think you, dear little readers? Surely not those of love and gentleness, or (hey wonld not have made the little boy cry so bitterly. Only a look and a word! These are both little things, a glance shot from the eye—a motion from the lip, that is all. But it is the meaning of the gloomy, the idea convey ed by the word which gave them their pow er; they come from the heart and go to the heart. They have done more good in the world than gold—more evil than war and pestilence. HOW the mother's look and word can quiet children's fears and quell their passions? Bow dear is the first word from baby lips —how fondly treasured in the heart the last word of the beloved dead? Little things thennay be, but they are mighty messen gers for good or evil. They fly forth, like the gentle dove, bearing blessings on their airy wings; like the raven, they brood with darkness and discord over this beautiful earth. They can pour oil upon the troubled waters and apply balm to the wounded spir it;. or they eau scatter fire brands, arrows• and death, Kind words are looked upon like jewels in the breast, never to be forgotten, and per haps to cheer by their memory, a long, sad life, while words of cruelty or carelessness are like swords in the bosom, wounding and leaving sears which will be borne to the grave by the victim. Do you think there Is any bruised heart which bears the mark of such a word from you? If there is a living one which you have wounded, hasten to heal it, for life is short; to-morrow may be too lute.— onlychildren, use the power of the eye only for good. , If you find cold or' angry os.starting—to-your-eyear4uat—elose-tho lids and keep them in if harsh or cruel words rise upon the tongue, shut the teeth and lips. These are the defences whereby yon may imprison these poisoned arrows, that they may escape not on their mission of unkindness. You may be small and weak, and poor, so that you see no way in which you can bless others. Scatter, like a show er of jewels, loving glances wherever you go, and you will soon see what happiness of ten conies from only a look and a word. What Congress Demands of the South. The Amendment to the Constitution pro posed by Congress as the basis of the re-ad mission of the rebellious States to represen tation to that body is briefly as follows : First—The first clause secures civil liberty to all• citizens of the United States Whether • native born or naturalized; declaring that no State shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its, jurisdiction Abe .equal protection-of—the — laws. Can any honest man oppose this ? Second—The second clause equalizes the power of the white man in all the States.-- It prevents the representation in Congress by the disloyal whites of the Southern States of the negro population, and prevents the white man in Mississippi and South Catalina from casting two votes for President to one east by the white man in Marylind or Pennsyl vania. Can any honest white man dispute theinstice of this ? '.liird—The third clause excludes from holding office, either under the United States or any State, all persons who, as officers of the United States, or as executive, legisla tive or judicial officers of any State, have heretofore taken an oath to support tho,Con stitution of the United States, and have en gaged in insurrection against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof, unless Congress by a two-thirds vote shrill remove such disability. The object of this is to exclude loading Rebels from office, and to place the control of the insurreotionary States in loyal hands. .Who but a Rebel, and a leading Rebel at that, can object to This proposition ? Fourth—The fourth clause guarantees the payment of the public debt, and of the pen sums and bounties granted for services ren dered in suppressing the rebellion—prohibits the assumption or payment of the Rebel debt, or for slaves emancipated. What loyal heart does not respond to this proposition as just and right? • When Admiral Farragut was ton years of age, his father, then an officer of rank in the United Stat's Navy, and high in the es• timation 'of 'the Government, said, in his son's hearing, w'aen be (the boy) was old e nough to make a contract and keep it, he had a bargain to offer him. The son rose up and asked his father , to state the terms of the compact, The . , admiral said: “The proposal I intend to make is this; !f you will nat smoke• or chew tobacco, drink intoxicating drinks nor strong wines, till you are twenty-one years of age, I will then give you $1,0011." "I tun old enough to make that bargain now," said young Farragut, will accept that offer." The bargain was closed. And on the at tainment Farragut's nolority the cash was handed out. • Said a erazy.woman of a penurious, stin g y MAO, "Do you see: that man? You could blow.' his soul throw a bumming bird's quill into a .rnosquitu% •d e t . and the mnrquito wonld!t wink,:"‘• Dove• Tailing. • In the Western stage coaches with their three seats, each seat accommodating three passengers, the •arrangement of leg•plaeing not unfrequently leads to fierce outbreaks of ire. An old lady got into a coach at Peoria, ose uncompromising ro y an. .- pishness of temper, combined with a most unaceommottating pair of legs, rendered her the most undesirable via-a via that a trave ler could be' affected with. The modest bashfullness of the individual sitting before her prevented his remonstrating against the injustice of the proceeding; so, after unmiti gated suffering for fifty miles, borne with Christian resignation, he disappeared frpm the place of his martrydom, and his place was occupied by a bard-featured captain of one of the lake stembosts, known as the Old Commodore, whose sternness and deter mination of purpose plainly indicated that he was warned of the purgatory in store for him, and was resolved to grapple gallantly with the difficulty. As he took bis seat, and bent his head to the right and left over his knees, looking as it were for a place to bestow his legs, an o minous silence prevailed in the rocking coach end ail anxiously waited the result of the at tack which this bold man was evidently meditating. The skipper prtainly imagined that Lis pantomimic) indication of discomfort would have a slight effect; but when the contrary was the v:..lt,—tuid—tlrei — tigeompromising knees wedged him into the corner. he bent toward his tormentor, and solemely exelaina ed: "I guess, warm, it's got to be sooner or later; so you and I, warm, must dove tail." . The lady bounded from her seat, aghast at the mysterious proposition, exclaiming. "Must what sir?" . "Dove-tail, maim. You and Vie got to dove-tail, and no two ways about it." "Dove-tail me, yon inhuman savage?" she roarded out, shakingler fist, in the face of the skipper, who leaned back into his cor ner. "Dove-tail a lone waman in a Christian country! If there is a law on earth, air, and in, the State of Illiuoy, I'll have you hang ed! "Driver, stop the coach!" she shrieked em_the_win.4 , 44 It I I . this man? My husband shall know of this as sure as shooting! Open the door, I say, and lot.me out!" And in spite of all our expostulation and explanation of the science of "dove•tailing" —t ha t is, mutually accommodating each other's legs—she left the coach, and sought shelter in a house at the roadside: and we beard her, as we drove on , muttering: "Dove tail me, will they? The' Irijun sava ges; if there's a law in Illinoy, I'll have him hanged:" Not Bad. One of our "Down East" active young' men, not a hundred miles from ,Boston, was master era small .oraft, usually employed in the coasting business. It so happened, on a certain time, that our hero was run into by a steamer, and so serious was the collis ion 'that not only was the craft badly crip pled, but its worthy master almost came -to an untimely end. He was not far from port when the catastrophe took place, so hasten ing to the city ho demanded_of_the—steam [Mat company damages which they refused to pay His rage knew no bounds, He would have justice. • Starting up town he in quired for the best lawyer in the city. He was directed to Choate & Bell. Finding the place he strode in and asked if "Squire Choate was in." Ile received a reply that Mr. .Choate was in, but was engaged inside, and at the same time services offered by one of the lawyers in the outer office. "No," said ho, "I don't want any understrappers. I came here and want to see Squire Choate." In a short time he was told ..hat he could see Mr. Choate. Proceeding to Mr Choate's room, he offered his large hand to the great lawyer, with the remark, ."Ilow are ye, Squire? I've got a big case for ye." Mr. Choate found that he had an original ehatacter to deal with, and listened to his complaint. Mr. Choate wrote a letter and told him to take it to the com pany. Bit our friend objected. "No, that wont do; just slay a writ on to urn. Yes, write urn a letter and they'll put - their pro perty out of their hands. Thai's the way the lawyers do down home. Pu t urn through." After some persuasion on the part of Mr. Choate, our friend reluctantly took the let- ter and departed for the other party. When they saw th 6 letter written in those unintel ligible crow's tracks, with that unique sig nature of Rufus Choate, a terror of all hav ing acquaintance with the coin t when he ap peared as their opponent, they quickly set tled with the Captain on his own terms. Our friend was mightily pleased, and his gratitude to Choate knew no bounds. Rush mg into the gentleman's office, he said most eagerly: "Squire yer got um; forked right over; what's per bill? Mr. Choate replied, thal as he had spent no time he would char g e him nothing. The Captain was indignant. "That ain't the way we .do business Clown our.way. I can afford to pay you well, and I will.' fie drew a dollar from his pooket, and pushing it toward the great attorney said: "Squire, you did a big ihidg for me, and I will pay you well for it; here is a dol lar; 'taint a coat too much." MY WunE..-She tied the Ile* cravat which she so kindly made me; then smooth ,ed with care. my hat, and with her arms de layed me; she brushed my 'glossy hair,' and said 4 it, was so curly!' - While going down the stair she oried.-.Cotne home, 'tear ear- Itowhappy then, was 1,, wilt all I e'er desired; I fortune could defy .while that I was admircdt, we parted ut the, door-her smile deserved. s sonnet!' "Dear tore', but . ()le thing. more-,-,I Want—a new fait bonnoit! A VERY APT REPLY.- , 4. .soldier Who served with distinction as Colonel of a Miehi. gan regiment ,was. approached by an officer who supports Johnson, •with a suggestion that, as military men, they• ought to pay their respects to President Johnson upon "s - arrival - at - Toled _ "You may but I will not." replied the Michigan Colonel, •"for I have PO respect for him." "But," quoth the Johnsonian, "you will go with us and show your respect for Giant and Farragut, who acoompany hint, won't you?" "My dear sir," replied the Colonel, there was once in old lady who kept a boarding house for laborers One morning she came across a piece of tainted beef which she pur chased cheap and boiled for dinner. -It 'smelt to heaven' and not a hoarder would touch it. That evening she sliced and fried it, but it wouldn't do—it still smelt. The newt morning she Made hash of it, but it smelt louder and louder, when a boarder, who could stand , it no longer, spoke his mind; Look here, old lady, you may bile it, you may fry it, or you may spile good potatoes by hashiu it with 'em, but that meat, stinks, and you can't crowd it down me in any, shape. "Now," continued the very positive Colo nel, "you may take Johnson boiled, fried or sandwiched between two as good potatoes as Grant and Farragn t, and he still stinks.— You can't crowd him down m e at any price." The The conversatiott closed abruptly. Accidental Insurance• . Between Kenosha and Milwankie an agent of the Travelers insurance Company of Hart ford entered the oar, and having issued tick ets to several passengers, approached an el delly lady who, it afterwards appeared, was deaf: 'Madam, would you like to insure against accidents?' inquired the" agent, at the same time-exhibiting his tickets. 'I got my tiekot down to Kenosha.' 'Not a railroad ticket, madam; I want to knoW if you would like to insure your life against accidents.' 'l'm going to Oshkosh to visit my darling Lp_there and Imajnat. got a baby.' The agent raised hie voice a little `Would you like to insure your life against aociden 'She's been married two years and a half, and that's the first child. It's a gal.' Agent still louder— '', am an insurance agent, madam. Don't you want to insure your life against acci dent?' "She got along first-rate, and is doing as well as could be expected.' . Agent at the top of his voice— 'l am an insurance agout, madam; can't I insure your life against accident?' 'O, I didn't understand you,' said the old lady 'No, her name is Johnson, my name is Evans, and I live five mile's from Keno sha: The Moral Market. The following report of clatters in the mor al market has been made. We hope it is not en_tirely_ correct. Honor—Scarce. .oil stock exhausted and the new crop will be a complete fail ure. Virtue—Old growth nearly consumed.— Young—growth prospects very unpromis• ing. . Honesty—none in market. • Patriotism—First quality scarce—none to be disposed, of. Second quality easily bought on speculation at 100 per cent. discount. Prudence—All in the hands of old stock• holders. Modesty—Stock badly damagod—aono for sale. ,„ Viee—maraet overstoeked. Pride—Market glutted. Politeness—Cheap. Holders unwilling to dispose of Stook at the present rates. Scandal—None at "wholesale, dealt in brief. ly by hawkers and peddlers at retail. Love—None offered—except for the green hacks. Talent--:Scarco article. Sold exclusively for oash. Consistency—Out of fashion. Coo9eit—"Going to waste by scho)l-bas kets full. TnE WRONG LADY —A gentleman, wliose lady was suffering from a cold, got up at mid night and went below to fetch a mustard poultice. In his agitation' he mistook the room on his return, and went into one where there was a light burning as dimly as that he left—a rooraaltogether similar, and •ap parently his Wife in bed fast asleep. lie ap. plied the mustard poultice to her chest, and sat quietly waiting at her bedside till it be gan to draw. It did draw; but it drew an infurated scream from the young lady who had been the subject of his unconscious so licitude, At the sound of the unaccustom ed voice, the nature of the accident which had befallen him and his patient was at once visible, and he, rushed headlong from the arms of the mustard woman into the arms ci his own. Both parties told their story the next day, and had to retire amid the laugh ter of all the occupants. • • The following is a verbatim renort of a speech delivered at s. religious meeting in a town in. Massaohnsetts, by a good pious dea con- It is a queer combination of terms cm.- tally : "illy, female brethren, it is ,of the. most 6.nightest invortanee that we should be clothed in white remnant; A. stupid fellow being seen, one day in a singular attitude, stooping d,wn with his }mad bOween his legs, was asked the rea son, to whiahte,teplied that he wisliok( to see' ow the_pain in the back of his. head lo; kecL' • iiiastio I:Pew -41443ar. HAPPY EVERT/ bAY..-=Sydney Smith eat the following from, a n ewspaper and rinser. , ved'it for himself:— .'"When you rise in the morning, forte a resolution - to make the' day a happy one to a fellow-ereature., It is eta done. a left -off 7 - ie-man w o needs it, a kind word to the sorrowful, an encouraging expres sion'• to the striving--trifles in themSeßes light as 'do it, at least for the twen ty-four haute. •And if you are young, de pend upon it, will tell when you are old;.and if you are old rest assured it will send you gently and happily down the stream of time to eteiWity. By the most simple arithme , tick! sums, hick at the result. If you send one person, only one, happily through • the day; that is three hundred and sixty-five in the course of the year. And supposing you live forty years only after you commence that course of medicine, you have. made 14,- 606 beings happy; at all events, for a time." During the late election campaign in Penn sylvania, the following amusing incident oc curred at a political meeting, much to the discomfiture of a spread eagle orator. He spoke with earnest gesticulation, as follows: Air. President and Fellow- Citize2ta would that on the morning of the 10th of October next, I had the wings of a bird. would fly to every county, to every town, 'aye, to every village and every hamlet in this• kilned land, and proclaim to every man, woman and child, the success of the par ty., ; • At this moment a small boy in the crowd called . out : 'Dry up ! you darned old fool. Yoe'd'get shot for a goose before you flew a mile Stamp speaker wilted, and small boy took the floor, A MISTAKE IN A BARBER'S SHOP.—An amusing mistake occurred in a Baltimore bar ber's shop a few days Since. Two gentlemen hung ttp their coats and sat down to be shav ed at about the same time. ' One of them for whom the operation was completed first. a rose, and 'by.mistake donned the other's coat' in the pooket of which was a wallet contain s2,soo. Off be walked, but a policeman soon overtook him. When the charge a gainst-him-was-explaitred-he became ,greatly alarmed about the safety of his own coat,, in the pooket of which was the sum of 5,000. Explanations followed, coats were exchang ed, and each found his Money sate. Young lady ,sweeping the street with a trail two yards long. A young man stepped upon it, partly tearing it from the waist: She turned slowly upon him and•said;— 'Sir, you,are a rowdy.' Ile retorted, !Madame, you are a dowdy.' 'lf I were a man, 1 would thrash you,' said she. 'lf you were pretty, I would kiss you,' said he. This is insufferable,' said The lady gather ing up her calico and turning away. .That is true,' he replied, 'whether \ ypur remark applies to yourself, your dress, or Eke, weather.' There is a story of a celebrated French preacher, who ondelivering-a-serman-on - the duty of wives, see opposite in this congregation a woman who has been guilty of the sin of disobedience to her husband, and in order to point her out to universal condemnation I will fling my breviary at her bead. He lifted his book, and every female head instantly duakei. A man, when asked a few days ago, what induced him to make a lawyer of hig son, TO plied: "Oh, he was always a lying little fellow; and I thought I,d humor him io his lea rig propensity." A scared individual who was dodging an infuriated bull behind a tree, exclaimed : "You ungrateful beast, you; yoU wouldn't toss a consistent vegitarian, who never ate beef in his life, would you Y Is that the re turn you make.?" A friend sap:ales either head and ears in love, or else hes got the colic—he can't tell which, as he is not certain which •he tasted last, kisses or watermelons. A young lady down east advertised for tho young man that "embraced au opportu nity; and says if he will come over to their town .ho can do.better. The too freiluent we of authority imparen it. If thunder were continual, it would. ex. cite no more sensation than the noise of a When you go to bed, why is your slipper like an unsuccessful dun ? Because it is put a till the nest day. Why are washerwomen the silliest of peo ple ? Because they put out their tubs to catch soft water when it rains hard. Qo a ehild being told that he mast be bro ken ola bad habit, be naively replied: Pa pa, hadn't I. better be mended r A woman shouldn't be too sweet, to Be smeared with honey is to be:teased. by in- Why was Adam the happfeat man that ever-lived? • . - ••' Because Au-hadn't Amy- mether-in-lest. Always 5e as' witty as you can with your parting,- bow—yotir last speech is the (me re membered. ' What kind of braces do. !adios prefett-- Embraces,. . ' "AF whatleieeil were - most nohappy?l, In the . • , • : NUMBER - 16