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VOLUME XIS ... • WAYNIS.Br _. k-------ii"."-----------------4.------ wpc•zzax6l , ‹.... .. 4 -1 . 2„ft.1.,:-; '--TN.. - r...±s - - "V,.i.. 1 ,-- ~. - NI i t There was e That I rem And thor • Bright And , • . W ., V INTER GOODS • which they feel confident thnt they will prr cheap compared to former prices and quali' We ask the ladies to call and look ow / Silks, Poplins, . Merinos, Dclains, Plaid goods, Coburgs, Twills, /.. Cashmeres The gentleme Cactimeres Fancy. Cassimores Plain, Cl' _..' . Satinets, Cords. _ ' _ Fustains, Tweeds --Witlra-completelne of _ j_ j_ Boots, Shoos, Gaiters, G'urn Shoos, Fancy Blankets, ITors e Blankets 6 MOND ARRIVAL) AT THE C HEAP CORNER OF Pain 8b HOEPLI 11, in the way of a large and handsome stock of New Winter Goods just received from the East The firm tender their thanks to the community for their very liberal patronage, and now ask them to call and see their present assortment of desirable 'WINTER GOODS, which they feel content thnt they will pronounce cheap compared to foriner prices and quality We ask the ladies to call and look over the array of urn Sandals and Buskins • Ladies Buffalo Over Shoes, L'adies will pleasn"‘-rir-fintraszortment-of-- 13raciloys Hoop Skirts, Balmoraln, Skirts for Misses kr, Children 'a'hali.:er and Ballardrale Flannels, Opera, Army and Grey Flannels, Wool and Cotton Yarns, all colors, Oolored and Wbite Cotten Flannels, Men's Undershirts and Drawers, ' Men's gonndnbonts, Ladies Breakfast Shawls, Long and square Shawls Blankets, Courlias, . Rugs, Gum Cloth, road Rags, Raskets, Packets, Butter Prints, Brooms; Coffee, Spices, &e. Grain Bags, Bagging, &e. The subscribers kindly ask the community to call and see their handsome stock of goods now oven and will vouch that persqns will he convinced ifita /trims have fallen," and greatly too, and to con vince yourselves of the ftcts just drop in and make aninspection of goods and prices. PRICE & ROEFLICH. Nov 23, ]866. 186 74 JUST RETURNED. 3.1 r. Metcalfe, Senior Partner of the firm of 3IETCALFE & HITESIREW gPaiLDIBERSEUEL% 2 3RAS just returned (coin the East where he he s boon since last week buyirig all such goods as sf hey are ant of, and also buying all,barga ins offored. Tho new goods will be opened to morrow, tsatur- Jay January sth. Those who want bargains in the Ery Goods airil Notion line go to No. 15 Main St. vbere you will be sure to find them. Goods of every description Wholesaled, at city jobbers prices. M. & H. chamberslieirg, Jan. 4, 1867. OHEAP, Eliga Vcents. gay Alpacas, Moliair.Peps _ A Itwool Delains n use directed to the beautiful line of thsA Vcstings. .1 cans, Flannels Children's Shoes Whips Bawls, Spoops, Ladles, Sagar, Teas, ;t, and item utiful 'Winona fur 12i Jf 10 cents at • ItlRD,4l4n; & ThiEsltEtted. "PCIOEITICIALM.B. r;," • • • _re.' •.' • ^- "1" .. " *. .' 'C•IIP' ‘:;‘. 4 z • , • - • G • . . There was a place in childhood, That I remember well; And there a voice of sweetest tone Bright fairy tales did tell; And gentle words and fond embrace, Were given with joy to me, When I was in that happy place, _ Upon my mother's knee. 'My mother dear, my -mother dear! My gentle, gentle mother. When fairy tales were ended, Good night she softly said, And kissed and laid mo down to sleep, Within my tiny bed; And holy words she taught me there, Methinks I yet tin see, Her Angel eye, as dose I knelt Beside my mother's knee. My mother dear, &c. - In sickness of my childhood, • The perils of my prime, The sorrows of my riper years, The cares of every time; When doubt of danger weighed me down, Then pleading all for me, It aas a fervent prayer to Heaven, That bent my mother's knees My mother dear, &c. One day a limner's lazy boy Was hoeing out the corn, And moodily had listened ng To heal the dinner horn, The welcome blast was heard at last, And down he dropped his hoe; But the old inanshouted in his ear— g'ol- _ y boy_ ROO out your_rowt" Although a "hard one" was the row, To use a plowman's phrase, The asTTCairoirS - h - a - v - e - it, —Beginning well to "haze,"— "I can" said he, and manfully He seized again his hoe, And the old-man smiled to see The boy hoe out his row. The lad this text remembered, And proved the moral well That perseverance to the end lAtlast_willnobly tell. Take courage then! resolve you can, And strike a vigorous blow; In life's great field of varied toil Always hoe out your 'row. WCZSICI3MI&X.JA.N"I". Burritt on Abraham Lincoln. gland,__hasjust-1 published a characteristic treatise on "The Mission of Great Sufferings," which is rep. resented in English papers as a work. of sin gular interest. One says: "Its discourses of , suffering, its mission and its power,. with wonderful profundity, intelligence and pa thos." In the last chapter, Mr. Burritt comes naturally to the tragic events of the present day, among which an appropriate place is given to Use like and death of Lin coin: Elililt .Burritt, no .. . . ' "We now come to another event which moved powerfully the whole of Christendom, and produced an effect upon the foremost nations which no occurrence of that or other order have ever accomplished. It was an event that came in a moment with no pre monition. It was the sudden extinction of one human life except its light. There was an honest hearted man who came up out of the commonest walks of flu; people, and was raised to the Presidential chair of the Amer ican reptiblic - to - represent and execute its will. The lifting up of that man to fill this high place split the nation in sunder. The chasm was dark and wide. The struggle to close it on one side and widen it on the oth er was long and terrible. Half a million of precious lives were thrown into the breach, and it ran red and deep with the best blood of the severed nation. The tall, gaunt man of furrowed face and 'plaintive eyes, wit) stood in his place with steady faith and pur pose, being in the stature of his elevation what Saul was to the Israelites 'from his shoulders upwards,' was from beginning to end the butt of satire and denunciation, much at home and more abroad. In a cer tain sense the people of the North sight have said, he bore the iniquities of us all For all who hated the northern cause hi t him and bruised his spirit with their hard and cruel sayings. "In addition to all ibis harden of reproach piled upoti his shoulders, because they were higher than the peoples" whose he was a.nd whom he served, hip personal antecedents end associations were thrown in his face in all the epithets that ridicule could invent. Foreign satirists lampooned him with their witicisms and caricatured him with their pencils. Friends fell away and foal fell on him, as the sanguinary conflict went on from year to year. The furrows' of his face deep. ened; the sallow ridges of his brow strewed the mole-walks of care were ploughing night and day his inner sonl. But as those sad, deep and solemn eyes withdrew furtbei in• ward, they beamed with the old steady light of faith and hope. dud according to his faith was it given to see that for which, his spirit prayed with longing most intense, lie w the long and bloody struggle concluded. Heawahe wide rent in the nation closing \ Witha foot on either side, ho stretched out hie long, gamut arms. and essayed to press the two sections, like estranged sisters, to Yarn, - Keg , Chocola to, WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY HORNING, MARCH I, 1867. NT MOTHER DEAR. ROE OUT YOUR ROW. hie• broad and tender breast. "His was a great life, but his .death was greater still—the greatest, perhaps, that .has moved:the world for. a thousand yeare.— When he stood with his tender arms around the North and Sou - th, holding them to his heart that-both might soften theirs at its spirit, his life's work was done. Then began the sublime mission of his death. While those sunken eyes were shining with the gladness of his soul at the glimpse given him as to Noses on Pisgah's top, of the Canaan aide of his country's future, in a moment their light was quenched forever on earth.— An assassin pierced his brain as with a bolt of lightning; and he fell, and great was the fall of that single man. With Lim fell a mil /ion enemies of his cause and country at home and abroad. If the last act of-his life was to close the rift in a continent, the first act of his death was to close the chasm between two hemispheres. Never before was Eng land brought so near "to his country. In the great overflow ostler sympathy thp mother country was flooded and tided toward her first barn daughter, weeping at the bier of the great departed; and she bent over the mourner with words of tender condolence.-'- Blood is thicker than water; and the latent instincts of nature came forth in generous speech and sentiment toward a sorrowing nation. In that overflow of fellow ; feelinm, the sympathy with the South and its unright eous cause was drowned, or burnt up by a spirit of indignation at the takine ° off, which seemed to consume at a breath the animus that had aided with secession- There was light as well as heat in that fire; and in the light thousands of southern sympathizers saw in a different aspect the cause they had upheld," Gen• Washington at Home. Gen. Washington stood six feet three in his slippers, and in the pritnn___of_Llife—was-1 - r - a - th - er — s en er t an otherwise, but as straight as an arrow. his form was well proportion- 1 ed and evenly balanced, so that he carried his tallness gracefully, and 'appeared strikingly -well-on-horse - back. There - has never . been __.a-more-active.-sinewy-figure than - his when he was a young man, it was only in later life that his movements became low and dignified. His wife was a plump, pretty lit tle woman, very sprightly and gay _in her__ young days, and quite as fond of having her own way as ladies usually are. She settled down into a good, plain domestic wife, who looked sharply aftt - nlier servants; and was seldom seen without her needles in full play. She was far from being what we should now call an educated woman. Scarcely any of the ladies of that day know nfuch more than to read their prayer book and,almantto, and keep simple accounts.—Washington probably never read a book Through in her life, and as to her spelling—the less the bet ter. Washington himself before he became a public man, was a bad speller. People were not so particular then, in such matters as they are now; and besides, there really was no settled system of spelling a hundred years ago. When the General wrote for a rhea& of paper, a beaver ' hatt, a suit of - ‘'eloatlies,' and a pair — o ‘rnatin' shoes, there was no Webster unabridged to keep people's spelltug within bounds. Nor was he much of a reader of books. He read a little of the History of England now.and then, and a pa. per from the Spectator on rainy days, but he had but little literary taste. He was es sentially an out of door man, and few things were more disagreeable to him thert_confina men at the desk, There was nothing in the house which could be called a library; he had a few old-fashioned books, which he seldom disturbed and never road long at a time.— The General and his wife - lived happily to gether, but it is evident that, like most heir. Cases, she was a little exacting, and it is high• ly probable that the great Washington was sometimes favored with a eurtaia lecture.— The celebrated authoress Miss Bremer, is au• thority for this surmise. She relates, that a gentleman once slept at Mount Vernon in the room next to that occupied by the mas ter and the mistress of the mansion; and when all the inmates were in bed, and the house was still he overheard through the thin partition, the voice of Mrs. Washington. He could not bet listen, and it was a curtain lecture which she was giving her lord, fie had done something during the day which she thought ought to have been done differ ently, and she was giving her opinion in somewhat animated tones. The great...man listened in silence till she had dome, and then without a remark upon the subject in Laud, said. - "Now, good sleep to yon, my dear." What an example to husbands I When Washington was appointed to com mand the- revolutionary armies, it is plain from his letters home that one of his great est objections to accepting the appointment was the `•uneasiness," as he termed it, that it would cause his wife to have hire absent from home.—James Parkin. EFFICACY or ONIONS.—A writer .says: "We are troubled often with severe coughs, the result of colds of standing, which may turn to consumption or premature• death [lard toughs cause sleepless nights by con stant irritation in the throat, and a strong effort to . throw off offensive matter from the lungs.. The remedy I propose has been tried by me, and recommended by me with good resulr, which is simply to take into the s tom ach before retiring for the night a piece of raw onion, after chewing. This esetalent in an uncooked state_ is 'very heating, and col feats the waters from the lungs and throat, causing immediate relief to the patient." If two men, riot being relatives, slion:43 each marry the daughter of the other, in what relationship will the off:Tring of said two marriages stand to each other? Our fire engines--play they be like old maids, ever ready, but never vvantodi Brigham Young. , The census of his IVives—llis First, Last, an d several Intermediates—Mary , Angell Young' is the first living and legal wife of the prophet. She is a native of New York,- and is a fine-ldokingintelligent woman. She is large, portly and dignified. tier hair is well sprinkled with the frosts of age; her clear hazel eyes and melancholy countenance indicate a soul where sorrow reigns supreme. She has bean much attached to her husband, and his infidelity has made deep inroads up on her mind„ Her deep seated , melancholy often produces flights of insanity, which in crease with her declining years. Lucy Decke ee y the first wife in "plurality," o the second 'woman." Lucy Decker was marrie to hue Seely, ankhad two children. Sb afterward be came a Mormon, and went to Nauvoo to re side. Her husband (Seely) was somewhat dissipated, but treated her well. She, how ever, saw Brother Brigham; and loved him. Ho visited her, told her that Seely could never give her an "exaltation" in the eter nal world; that he. being "high in_the priest hood," could make her a queen in the first resurrection. - She yielded to these induce. meats and the promptings of her inclination, left her husband, and was "sealed" to Brig ham Young. Lucy Decker has brown hair, dark eyes, small features, a fair skin and short of stat ure, but quite enmbompoint. She would seongly remind you of a New England wife, "fat, fair and forty." In common with near ly all the inmates of the harem, she is of ve ry ordinary intellect and limited education. Clara Decker, sister of Lucy Decker, is a short thick set person, very much like Lucy in appearance. She is much more intelli gent and agreeabla,than her sister, and in every way her supior. She is 'also. quite a favorite with the prophet, has three or four ch-ildrerr - and a ac to ser "hus- band.' Harriet Cook, was in early plurity, having been sealed to Brigham at vilVinter Quar ters,"_ou-the Missouri riveri - whilt, die "Won mons were on their way to Utah.--This was five years before polygamy was publicly pro claimed in Utah as a divine institution.— Harriet is very tall, has light hair, blue eyes, a fair complexion and short nose. She is rather_slender, but has much power of endu rance and a !ook of determination. • YOUNG'S LAST WIPE. Dr- Adonis, after various wanderings, has turned up in Utah. In a letter from the promised land he writes, under date of No vember 22, a e follows abo u t Brigham Young's last wife at the tabernacle o n Sun day last. The lady's name before marriage waer,Maria—Folsom.- -ller - former residence was Council Bluffs, lowa. She is an im perious looking young beauty, of the Grecian rather than the Roman order, and is very imperious and jealous. Like all passionate and jealous women, she — isnoble-heartell— Miss Folsom is I3righam's last wife and pet. Two of the President's daughters play at the theatre, and are great favorites with the Gen tile portion of the comtnunity. One is mar- rigid,, (lire.Clawson) and the other (Miss Jane) is single, but is being waited on by a distinguished editor."—Allhoctukee Macon. sin. The Mormon Girls Richard Williams, who delifered alecture at Buffalo, recently, on the Mormons, allu destas_follows-to-one-of -t-ho--disturbing ele ments among the Saints: Tliere is one element among themselves that is troublesome. The general testimony of the Gentiles who have lived in intimate social relations with them is that the young gills (to their honor be it said) aro mostly disaffected. Growing up with it, they have seen the institution with all its oboannations, and opposed as it is to all their holier feel. inns and better ineincts, no amount of spiri. tual thunder can entirel y control them. Here, as everywhere, they are a privileged class, and cannot very well be whipped or imprisoned. Like most of the descendants of Eve, they will talk, and are ever ready to elope with a Gentile who has the courage and can get away with them. They cannot marry a Gentile and remain peacefully at home. Very naturally they prefer a whole Gentile to one-tenth of a r ,Mormon. The most effectual way of breaking up the whole system would be to send.an army of 10,000 unmarried men there, and protect every man who married a Mormon woman and brought her to camp. 'We might in this way get rid of the nuisance without bloodshed or incur ling the odium of religions persecution. REMEMBER. TrIE SAIIIDATIL-At a respect able boarding-house in New York, a number of years ago, were fifteen young men. Six of them uniformily appeared-at the break fast table on sabbath morning, shaved, dress ed, and prepared for public worship, which they attended both forenoon arid afternoon All become highly respected and useful citi zene. The other nine were ordinarily ab sent from the breakfast-table on Sabbath morning. At noon they appeared at the dinner table shaved and dressed in a decent manner. In the afternoon they went out, but net ordinarily to church; nor were they usually en in the place of worship. One of-thynbs is now living, and in a reputable employment; the other eight became openly vicious. All these failed in business, and are now dead. Some of them came to an untimely and awfully tragic end. wealthy a Luau may Fay as did a worthy and wealthy citizen, "The keeping of the Sabbath saved me:" It will, if duly observed, save all. In the language of its Anther, "They shall ride upon the high places of the earth," "Jake, tell me the biggest lie you over old, and will give you a g.laEs of beer." "A lie! I never told a lie ininy life." "thaw the beer, key." F 0 .11 SAREN. By J boo The diamond likedew drops were pearly and pure: - And many bright objects invite and allure, All beam with a smile in the breeze of mom, But the love-tie is broken, all scatterci and torn. When etra nge birds are warding their heartlovin g And roses were blooming till round to my gaze, 'Twos then that:my hopes in the future were cast, But her pre . tended love was too fervent to last. She came with devotion, I thought with true love' Of all youthful fairies I esteemed her above; But ah! soon the sun of affection had set, _ She turned with a frown that I ne'ct shall forget. She map smile at her deeds with intrinsical glee, Still her image I cherish as a rose from the lea, The breath of the twilight with mystical lore. Seems to say in a whisper, she loves me no more Death in Doors• Multitudes of persons have a great horror of going out of doors for fear. of taking cold. If it is a little damp, or a little windy, or a little cold, they wait, wait, and wait. Mean• while weeks and even months pass away, and they never, durinff 4e the whole time, breathe a single breath of pure air. The re• suit is, they become so enfeebled that-their constitutions have no power of resistance; the least thing in the world gives them a cold all the time, and this is nothing more or less than consumption. Whereas, if an opposite practice had been followed of going out for an hour or two every day, regardless of the weather, so it is not actually falling rain, a very different result would have taken place. The tuthis,the---more-a-persan - is --- ry doors, the less easily does he take cold. it is a widely known fact that persons who camp ourevery night, or sleep under a tree Tor weekstomether,_seldnuLtake cold at-all. — The truth rs,_many_faf-eur---ailments-, : • those of a most fatal form, are taken in the house, and not out of doors, taken by re moving parts of clothing too soon after coming into the house; or lying down on 'a bed or sofa; when in a tired or esausted con dition from having engaged too vigorously in domestic employments. Many a pio has cosrat industrous man a' hundred dollars. A human MO many a time has paid for an apple dumpling. IVhen our wives get to work they become so interested in it that they find themselves in an utterly masted condition. Their am bition to complete a thing, to do some work well, sustains them until its completion, and the moment it is completed the mental and physical condition is one of exhaustion,when a breath of air will give a cold, to settle in the joints, to wake up next morning with inflammatory rheumatism; or with a feeling of stiffness or soreness, us if they had been pounded in a bag; or a sore throat to worry and trouble them for. months; or lung fever to put them in the grave in less than a week. — (furwives - sh - OURI work by the day, if they must work at all, and not by the" job, it is more economical in the end to see how little ' work they can do in an hour instead of how much. It is slow, steady, continuous labor, which brings health,'strength, and a good digestion. Fitful labor is ruinous to all.' The Farmer that would not Sell. Ikln — Coffin;ln - his "Four Years of iitg„" tells the following incident, which oc curred as our troops were moving to Gettys burg: When the sth Corps passed through the town of Liberty, a farmer rode into the vil lage mounted on his farm wagon. Bin load was covered with white table cloths. "What have you got to sell, old fellow? Bread, eh?' said a soldier, raising a ••corner of the cloth, and revealing loaves of sweet, soft, plain bread, of the finest wheat, with several bushels of ginger-cakes. "What do yoa ask fora loaf?" -"Haven't - any to self," said thefarmer. • "Ilaven'toany to sell? What are ye here for!" The fariner-made no reply. "See here, old fellow, won't poi sell me a bunk of your gingerbread!" said the soldier, producing an old wallet. "No." "Well; you're a mean old cuss. If. would be setving you rigl.t to tip you out of you old bread cart. Here we aro marching a night and ail day to protect your propel4l and fight the rebs:—We haven't had any breakfast, and may not have any dinner You are a act of mean cusses round here, I reckon, 'said the soldier. crowd of soldiers had gathered, and oth ers expresvd their indignation. The old farmer stood -up on his wacon seat, and took off the table-cloths, and replied: . "I didn't bring my bread here to sell.- My wife and daughters sat up all night to tazike it for you, and you're welcome to all I've g9t and I wish I had tea times as much. Help yourselves, boys." "Hurrah! hurrah! hurrah! Bully for you!" "You're a brick!" Three cheers for the old man!" "Three more for the girls!" They threw up their caps, and fairly danced with joy. The bread and cakes were gone in a twinkling. •'See here, my friend, I take back all the hard words I said about you," said the sol dier, shaking hands with the farmer, who sat on -his wagon overcome with emotion. GOOD I'OR. MANY,--A gentleman (Hain at a hotel in Chestnut street, a• fewo d ; .s skim s asked one of the waiters, an just from the Emerald Isle, and as green as grass, for a napkin. She, not knowing what was meant, replied, "Not one left, sir; •all gone. The redheaded gentleman ate the last." "The deuce he did," said the other, , "thee ask him if he won't have It fried towl, j 1 iu addition," [For'the Record Clasp thy band meekly over the still breast—they've:no more work• to do; close the weary eyes—they've no more tears to , the shed; part an p locks—there's.no more pain to bear. CI sod alike to dove's kind voice, and ealum y's stinging whisper. 0, if in that illed heart you have ruth lessly planted thorn; if from that pleading' eye you ha carelessly turned away; if your loving glance, nod kindly word and clasping band, have come—all too late—Then God forgive you! No frown gathers on that mar ble brow as you gaze—no SCO CI curls the Chiseled lip—no flush or V 01. 1 .0 cl feelings mounts to the blue veined temples. • God forgive you! - fur yourfeet, t must shrink appalled from death's cold rt r— 'your faltering tongue asks: Can this death? Your fading eye lingers lovingly on . the sunny earth, your clammy bands feel its last feeble flutter. 0, rapacious grave! yet another victim for thy voiceless keeping! What! no Words of greeting from the Tiousehold sleepers? No warm welcome from a sister's loving lips?— No throb of pleasure from the dear mater nal bosom? &met all! -• 0, if those broken limbs were never gath - ered up! If beyond death's swelling flood there were no eternal shore! If for the strug gling bark there were no port of peace! 11 athwart that lowering cloud sprang no bright bow of promise. The following story is told of a Yankee captain and his mate. Whenever there was a plum pudding made, by the captain's or- • dors all thc plums were put into one place next to the cagtain„wiw-after-hel-ping—frinP— se , passed it to the mate who never found any plums in this part of it. Well, after this game had been played for - some time, the mate prevailed on the steward to place the end which had ne_ plums in next to the am. •The captain no sooner saw the pudding than he discovered ho had the wrong end.,"of it. Picking up the dish., and turning it in his bands as if merely for ex .arnining the china, he said, "this dish cost me two shillings Liverpool," and put it down again as th withoinkt design, with the plums ne to iruse "Is it possible"' said the mate taking up the dish; "I shou n't suppose it was worth more than a shilling," acid, as if in perfect innocence, ho put down the dish' with the plum end next to himsolf_ The captain laughed, the mate laughed.-- The captain looked at the mete, the mato looked 'at the captain. "I tell you what, young one," said the captain, "you've found me out, so we'll just cut tho pudding length. wise thietTine, and have theplums fairly din. tributed hereafter." PINE LANOUAOE.-A Southern corres pondent in one of his letters informs us of novel and economical mode of courtship in Florida. "As you have never seen the lan guage of pine I will give it you here. A gentleman wishing to court a lady, and not wishing to 'face the music' i person, sends his lady-love a piece of pine, signifying, pine for thee;' and the, wishing to give a favorable answer, scuds him in return a pine knor, meaning, 'pine not; or if she wishes t o say NO, she sends a burned pine knot, thereby signifiinr, make light of .our •itie." M AHINCi A EWE ADOPT A LAME —No find the following in ono of out exchanges. It is worth a trial; "When you find a ewo with a dead lard, tileatiar , b *piteou3ly and mourning over it, if you wish to make her adopt another, catch, the ewe, milk her own milk upon the lamb, then remove the dead one out of her sight, step back out of the way and witness i the joy of the mother at the supposed restoration of her offspring.". • A gentleman traveling—in—lreland, over took a peasant and asked. ',Who lives in that house on the hill, Pal?" One Mr. Cassidy, sir; but he is dead—rest his sowU" "flow long big" he been dead?" asked the gentleman, ' "Well, yer honor, if he lived till next month he'd been dead just twelve months." '•Of What did he die?"`• "Troth, str,.he died of a Tuesday." NEVER.—When Cel. A— was in com mand at a post, just as the soldiers were cal• led mat for drill on a certais - rnorning, it was noticed that one of them had only blacked the fore parts of his shoes, leaving the back parts unblocked and of a dirty red color.— The Col. noticed it, and said, "Meson, you have not blacked the back parts of your. shoes." "Colonel," replied Hinson, "a good soldier never looks behind hina.". J. B. was a stingy old creature, eager for money; but he 'was a zealous member of a church,.and ostentatious in his religious ex ercises. "John." said Catharine to her broth er, "what could have made that stingy old wretch a Christian?" "I can toll you," said John; "he has read that the streets of the New Jerusalem are paved with gold, and ha is determined to ge ere." Why is a fire ? Bee better. A Some wires are so jealous that they don't like their spouses to embrace a fair opportu. atty. "Facts are very stubborn things,' said a husband to his wife. • "Are they?" she answered. "Then what a fact you must be" When is a greyhound not a. greyhound" When it turns a hare. err "St cet 2- NUNER 36- A Beautiful Sentiment. Alas, for love if thig'be all, And naught beyond. a parlor like a boo se the sooner it is pat o