,‘ ..-- . . ~.1.7 , ''' -• ' : ' . . - • , ... .. .., . • 407:*:.1e.r • rl , ii ~, .i• .s l . :..... ,i -: . . r . . _.., .. ~ , ~,,„ ..,., g - I ... E ti .. ..... ~... . , .., ~,.....„.. ~ .• , . .%. *. I .c / 1 .‘,,,. • I 0 , . --:, '‘ •:%' . SI i :-. .. % 44,-- ,''• ' . . ~. _...,//' ~. i ~ --> • l' - - • ••'— 1 , . 1- '• ' •,, . % 4%. ,:'•- .4' , ..--- - -- -:•• 4, .--,,..• -,;- .. • , :.= . . .• , ..- ...—.; •-•• ~- ; • ,..•• • •••':2's • ='•••--,..' /-'-',.-• --- 'r .: A .s 4 i.„.., .....„. e..,,,...„,.......„..,.".- 'e: . 1. - 4::t,•:,,t.--.•- • -.. ~ _ • ---,•,• • - • 137' 'VV. plait. VOLUME XXI. , 71 1 y.„ ,y, 41. MEANICIIVIEIL IEmiTIKTIIEM3IO R u -G's MEDICINES, tIiED 311_ PLANTS, ire. dice., Go to Fourt ::X3L:Q.UTM. EMRIZ,ZYa.:3.:, Waynesboro', May 24, 1867 BEAVER, DEALER IN Ladies, Misses, Cidldren, Mae (nut. Bop BOOTSA e7:110E-3 5 , Hats, Caps, Trunks, etc. Scgars, Tobacco, the very sn-la old kind of rap pee bnufi, Candies, 1`: to.s, Cloves. Cinnamon, Pip per. Baking Soda, Glazer, Baking Mollas4es, shoe and ktiove Blacking, Esnence of CoffrA, P.per Col lars a nd Cuffs, ;lavenders, Bose, Paper, Ink and ISteel pens. , TH Tfi ,NETALT. SET OE SOLE. Soaps, Tally White, Hair Oil, Perfamer ies , Matches, Kerosene, &c. Etc. Goveram‘mt Blankets. Also Gum Blankets. , Many more articles needed and lased by everybody. Room on the north•eaet Corner in the Diamond, WAYD:IISBCRO'. Citizens and perzunq living. in the Country will find a large and well celected mock of first eines goons at as low fizures as can be sold in the noun- r . . Sept. 20 1867 pA INTS for FARMERS an'l others.—The Graf ton Mineral Paint Co., are now manufacturing the Best, Cheapest. and most Durable Paint in use: two coats well put a-', mixed with pure Linseed Oil, will last l 0 or 15 years• it is et a light brown or beautiful chocolate color, and crn be changed tc green, lead, stone, drab, olive or cream, to suit the consumer. It is valuable, fur Enuse ; Barns, Fen ces, Carriage and Car makers, Pails, and Woorkis -ware, Agricultural Ireplementrt. Canal Boats, Ves sels, and -Ships' Bottoms, Ga nves,- Metal , and :?liin gle Roofs, (it being "Ire and Ws tcr proof), Floor Oil Uloths, (one Manufricturer hiving used 5090 bbls. the past vear,) and as a paint for any purpose is unsurpassed for body, durability, elasticity, and adhesiveness. Warrented in all cases a above. bend for a circular 'which gives full particulars. None genuine -9 leza branded in a trade mark Graf ton Mineral Paint Adress DANIEL EIDN7 FAA.. 2E4 Pearl St. N. Y. For sale at the Hardv.-are store of GEISER & RHIN EH ART, who are also agents for Bidwell's Carriage Grease. Oct.4-6m. u B N . , - 77 Azy 1 - 71 THE subscribers will pay the highest cash pr ice for Lumber, to be delivered this seacon,, and will,also want a lar,p lot for next season. . Sept. 6—tf, GEISER, PRICE & CO. LATOl:lNGE;:ztracts—TanDla, Lemon and roOmn g e Concentrated, ..erfect in purity and delicacy of llavor, REM'S. 0 BAL. S Semites fra:a Bow to st ore awl 1 for isle chea p by ii naionseowa. w , cum NILL it Co si "bid RUT HAT, Hi 1,1 Street, .Chagtbers )arg jllolPaOs a sure sign t•, s: yis are bear be Cheep and Faehtonable Hat EnepoOnm of 1 OnCHERT, $llll. trgifi ~ MEttab== 11111111 S WAYNISBORO', TRANKLIN COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY HORNING, FEBRUARY i 4 ,-1808. PCIOEITIC).A.X.a. REMEMBER PRE POOR. emember thepoor,for bleak winds are blowing, And brightly the frost-pearls are glistning around; The E tream lets have ceased all their musical flow- And snow drifts lie scattered all over the ground. Remember the poor in their comfortless dwellings, 111-clad and ill-fed, o'er-burdened with care, Oh, turn not away with a look so repelling, Thy kindness may save them, perhaps, ,from de- Remember the poor when the hearth-stone is cheer ful, And happy hearts gather around its blaze; There are hearts that are sad and eyes that are tearful, As bright ite thine own in Choir sunnier d eye tirtfoTtune may scatter t I present possessions, And plenty to poverty leave thee a prey; How bitterly then wilt thou think of the blessings That charity asks from thy riches to-day. Remember the poor as ye thankfully gather Each round his rich table with luxury spread; - Thou, too, ait a pensioner on a rich Father, Fur health and for friendship, for raiment and bread-; If He hath been bountiful, with a like spirit, Dhpense of that bounty what Charity claims; Far greater the treasure thy soul shall inherit When thy bread on the waters returaeth again Remember the poor—this thou art commanded— Thy Saviour thus kindly remembered the poor, The:destiiute Thou.sha lt-not send _cm pty-handed,--- Unclad and unwermed and unfed from thy door.' Thy peace in this life shall be like the deep river, And dying, thy welcome to heaven shall be— Ye faithful and blessed of my Father—come hitt* Ye did it to others—yo did it to me.' TO INA, litY 8. T. V. I babe loved thee truly, dearest, • E'cn to my heart tlt-u e'er west nearest VinoA-Ilave-learnedsthy=worth, With noblrost virtues thou art graced, Which ne'er in life can be etracest, So constant in thy birth. I do fondly love thee, dearest, And thou to my true heart art nearest; So loved, all else above; Thou art so gentle, true and kind; In thee all beauties center find And crown thee queen of love. I will ever love thee, dearest, And to my heartlthoolt e'er be nearest, For thou art sweetly true; A beauttous flower among the sweets, Thy fragrance gladdens all it meets, And teaches thou art true. "Mc Z X.a lizrja - . Boundlessness of Creation. About the time - of the invention u' the tel mops, another instrument was formed, which laid open a sacra no less wonderful, and rewarded the exquisite irit of man.-- This was the usicrosetti,e. l'he one led me to see a system in every star the other leads me to see a rorld in eveiy atom. TII3 one taught me that this mighty globe, with ,the whole but den of its people and its countries, is but a grain of sand on the high field of immensity; the other teaches me that every gram of stud play harbor within it the tribes_ and fatuities of a busy I °putative. The one -told me that in the leaves of every forest, and in the flowers of every gar den, and in the waters et every rivulet, there are worlds teeming with life; and numbefloss 2 , 3 are the glories of the firtuenent. The otie has sug gested to inc, that beyond and above all that is visible to mat,there re'ay be fields of creation which sweep immeasurably along and carry the impress of the Almighty's hand l to the remotest Beeline of the universe; the other suggests to me, that within and beneath all that miouteeess which the aided eye of Wan has been able to explore, there may be a re• gion of ievisibles; and that, could we draw aside the mysterious curtain which shrouds it from out senses, we might see a theatre of as many wonders as astronomy has wit& dad, a universe within the complies ore point on small as to elude till the powers of the mi croscope, but _where the wonder working God finds room for the exercise of all bin at tributes, where he can raise another mechan iam of worlds, red fill and orrianite them fall with the evidence of his glory —Chulmera. GOLD DUST.—In the United &Mee Mint at Pbtledelphiu, when the visitor reaches the gold workint,•-room, the guide tells him that the singulsr floor is a network cf wooden bars to catch all the Ening particles of the precious metzl W hen the day's labour is done, the floor, which in in sections or parts, is removed, and the golden dust in swept up, to be melted and coined. About 080,000 an nually are in this way saved. - . Life's highest improvements and success in this respect, like the sweeping of the gold room, depend on the 'spare moments'--the careful use of the fragments. No worker for time and eternity ever reached high success without this wise economy, in which Christ gave no. by precept and example, the peifect illustration. A work of art— A widow trying to got a but+band. .312. il3.C.l.OrteXlclorLt Family N'evv►,svta;p®x'. A SHORT PATENT SERMON. By request I will preach upon this occa• sion from the following text: 'Beauty is a bl issorn that soon fadeth away. But virtue, once gotten, will never decay; If beauty and virtue in woman be, If she's - unmarried . pray send her to me' MY HEARERS.—There is quite a differ ence between beauty and virtue, in regard to their real worth. The one is short-lived and fleeting, and the other is enduring and • lasting. Beauty is but an ephemeral; and alluring blaze, that attracts the foolish in sects of pride and fashion, often-times in a single day, to inevitable destruction, and then is extinguished forever; but virtue is a bril• liant spark, that continues to glow, even in the embers of declining age, and is destined to shine like a cat's eye in a dark garret, through the Countless'. ages of eternity:— Beauty is - but a Mos - set - 1i thut unfolds its charms while its petals are wet with the morning dews of youth. It soon begins to wilt beneath tho withering noontide sun of maturity—that boding afternoon hour of ex• istence, the 3 o'clock P. N. , of a` mortal's life, immediately succeeds, and we find that the fond flowers are too fatally touched with the corrosive sublimate of Decay to admit of Decrepitude, when a lingering leaf -of twenty may perchun_c_e_edilLhang upon th. present shrub, but almost every trace of its loaner loveliness is obliterated by the hoar _f r oats arni_shas e,n—fro-re=t h time. The nigi.r. of death then ensues, and the blossom of beauty, that lately was so inviting and fair, is crushed in the dust, as -void of attraction as the shattered fragMenta of a toad-stool in a cotvyard. Beauty, my friends, is aluio.,t any thit.g that is fleeting and false. it is a ralnhor7 that glows for -a moment and then sinks into the mirk bosom of-it-s - matern - alcloud—itiTs the rosy blush of morning that soon pales in the broad glare of day—it is the crimson winged harbinger of a'summer's evening that lights itself to bed with a blaze of glory, and is soon aound asleep beneath the dark mantle of night, In short, beauty is like the gaudy colors of figured calico—very pretty fer a time, but exceedingly liable to fade by a few washings in the hot suds of matrimo ny. [For the RECORD My Dear Friends—Now I come to some thing more substantial, as the man said who found a bullet in a venison steak. I have reference to female virtne.ilf_beaut•—be but the blossom, surely virtue is the f rag ranee of the flower. You may strip the corolla of its leaves, and endeavor to pre serve them by skill, ingenuity, or art, and you will find that they will wither and de cay in spite of your utmost exertions; and if you extract the fragrance of the flowers, and cork it up tightly - with the stopple of pro dente, watchfulness and caution, it will last forever. Therefore wore Ito make a choice from the fair daughters of the earth, I should say, give me virtue. .1 will leave it.to your individual tastes, my friends, whether you would not prefer butter that looks pale and unpalatable, but yet is rich and rebelishing, to that which appears fair upon the outside, but is fowl and frowsy within. I know very well that you would choose the former. Ny Hearers-11 hat is the teal worth of be: uty without virtue? Its but a base coun aka coin, that passes current among the foolish and unsu-peeting, but with the wise and disctimintitig it IS decidedly no go. A woman decked with the ornaments of personal attraction but dt ethnic of moral superiority, may receive the, homage of the weak sons of sin, the adoration of wham is certainly not to be prized above the value ut's July oyster. Look at her as she flirts and flourishes along that pestiferous path that leads straightway to perdition. The lilies of loveliness grace her snowy brow, the artificial roses.of health seem to bloom upon her cheek; forty - thousand devils are in her inviting eye, and she seems bound for the gates of paradise, rather than fur the realms of endless torment but, my friends, examine her as you would a watch, take a look at the insides, and ' see if she needs tit) cleaning. You wilt, find that the luainspring of mortality has wholly lost its mastic temper, that the regulator of her thoughts and actions is entirely out of order, and the balance wheel of her mind has ceased to perform its duty, for the want of a single dr , p of the oil of resolution. You will see that the once fruitful soil of her heart, which , 'nourished the protnieing plants of vu tue, is now overgrown by the rank weeds of vice, I and that every bud of youthful hope is tram pled to earth beneath the giant footsteps of that itumeter of all monsters. hly Dear Hearers— If there can be found such a mixture in this adulterated world, of beauty and virtue combined, in a single - in dividual of the - feminine gender, I pray you to send her to me forth with, es I have a no tion to take unto myself a wife, ere the dayr come when I shall say I have no pleasure in them, and a wife isn't wintli the wear of shoe-leather consumed iu running after her. (live me a Wife who is both good looking and good named, and I will be happy, con tented and satisfied as long es Providence allows me to stain the fair carpet of his crea tion with my polluted footsteps; and may rot, my unmarried brethren, entertain sen timents similar to my own, and abide by them to the last 'do mote it be. Charaster is not shaped by trifles any, more than marble is sculptured by puffs of air Only by hard struggles, and stern conflicts with temptation, and resolute -self-mastery, does the divine principle assert its suprema cy and put its immortal loveliness into every faculty and mood of mind. The sharpness of our trials end the hardness of our lot allow what sterling stuff we are made of, and how long we are to het. BY DOW, JR A Few Words on Saving. An old Dtitchman once remarked that he 'had become rich by always being poor.'— This assertion may seem to involve a soliciam. His meaning doubtless was that he bad a voided display, and habitually and from choice had steered clear of , those extrava• gances which are with many such fruitful sources of perplexity and want. Franklin remarked that 'a penny saved is two-pence earned,' and there is a world of wisdom in the old adage that 'a stitch in time •saves nine.% Economy may be practiced in many ways by the farmer, which are less practica ble or wholly closed to others. And the ob servance of this important virtue—for a vir tue it certainly is—there is no necessity for his appearing mean or parsimonious It is by no means opposed to rteatoesB or to• the just and•habitual observance of those essen tial and highly important duties imposed upon us as members of the great biotin hood of man. The man who endeavors ecru pulously to live within the limits of his means, wbo labors in a patched frock and clouted shoes, may be no less deserving of respect than he whose wealth is exhibited daily on his back. The strictest economy is by no means incompatible with the bright est virtues. On the farm,•and in all the va rious datails of rural anti domestic life, pru• deuce and a just economy of time and means are incumbent in an emtoent degree. The earth-itself is composed of atoms, anti — the most gigantic fortunes consist of aggregated items, insignificant in themselves, till:livid flu,- 11115 - when trt - considurea, oiriniffe - ale when contem plated in unity and as a whole In the man agement of a farm, all needless expenditure. should be systematically avoided, and the in• come made to - exceed the outlay Pecuniary embarrassment should always be regarded as a contingency of evil boding, and if conten ded against with energy - and persevering for= titude, it rarely_failstalf_sueeess._ Debt r with but little hope of its removal, is a millstone dragging us down, and crushing the life blood out of us. Be careful therefore in in curring any pecuniary tesponFibility which does not prevent a clear deliverance with the advantages which an intelligent action ought always to insure. A•farroer who purchases a good farm and can pay down one third of the price gives a mortgage for the other two•thirds, and poz sesses the heart and tedolution to wink it faithfully and well, enters upon the true path to success. lie will labor witty the en couraging knowledge that each Jay's exer tions lessen bis indebtednese_and_hrings_him_ nearer to the goal who, he shall be disen tbralled and is e freeholder in its most cheer ing sense. But without due eon imp in every _de• partment, in the dwelling as 'well as in the barns and the fields, this gratifying achieve ment may not be reached unties in life, or may be indefinitely poHtponed. A pru dent oveaight, therefore, over all the opera tions of a farm, in order that everything may be done that ought to be done and nethirf i be wasted, will exert a powerful influence in placing a family on the high road to an ear• ly independencti. A REMARKABLE STORY.—A gentleman, in whose credibility the wont implicit con fidence may be pLiced, reldres the follow icg singular story. The panics, and the material facts involved, are personally known to hint A young lady named Holes 'Hunter living 4etween Dyensburg and Punceton, Ken tucky, during a protracted religious meet ing held in the month of November, under the influence of religious excitement,,felt in to a trance, and remained in a state of rip parent unconsciousness for a petiod of five days. When she was aroused from the state of lethargy into which she had fallen, 6he rebated the experithace of the five days, during which she professed to have passed into the other world and witnessed the glories of Paradise as well as the horrors of the bottomless . pit. Jut the remarkable feature of the story is that she predicted that three young men, then apparently in the moat rubust health, would die before the year wds out. A week after the prediction was made one of the young men took sick, nod died in a few days. A week or ten days latei the second died, and on the first day of the new year the third one expired.—Evans vitic Juuniut. OCCUPAT:ON.—Whara glorious thing it is fur the human heart. Those who work hard beldu tli yield themselves entirely up to fancied or real sorrow. When g.tief sits down, fold its hands, and mournfully feeds upon ite own tears weaving the ditu.shadows, that a little e.7.ertion intl , ht sweep into a funeral pall, the a troug spirit is shorn of its might, and sorrow beeumen our master When troubles flow upon you dark said heavily, toil not with the waves—wrestle not with the torrent !—rather seek, by oc cupation, to divert the dark waters that threaten to overwhelm you iuto a thousand channels which the . duties of life always present. Before you dream of it, those waters will fertilize the present, and give birth to fresh flowers that Will become puro and holy, in the sunshine . which • penetrates to the path of duty,' in spite of every ob steele. 'Griot after all, is but a selfish feel ing, and most selfish ifthe man who yields himself' to• the indulgence ,of any passion' which brings uu joy to his fellow man. Franklin 57119 an observing s and sensible man, and his conclusions were seldom incor rect. . He said : 'A newspaper and a Bible in every house, a good school in every the-. trict, all studied and appreciated as they merit, are the principal supports of virtue; morality, and civil liberty.► • Such is the blessing of a benevolent heart that, lot,the world frown as it will, it cannot possibly bereave it of all happinuss, since it cult rej •ice in the 1 ru s priity of others. Fashionable . lnvalidism. Fanny Fern almost alwayb writes practi cally, and to the [Mint.' *The' following from her pen is well worthy' the perusual. of all whom it may concern I hope to live to see the time when it will be considered a disgrace to be such ; when people with flat chests and stooping shoul ders will creep round the backwah like oth er violators of known laws. Those who in herit sickly constitutions have my sincerest pity. I only request one favor of them, that they cease perpetuating themselves till they are physically on a sound basis.•. But a - WO man who laces so tightly that,she breathes only by a rare accident; who vibrates con stantly between the coufectionet's shop and the dentist's office; who has ball 'rube's and jewels in plenty, but who owns neither an upbrella nor a water-proof cloak, , :n.'n a pair of thick boots; who lies in bed tail soon, nev er exercises, and complains of 'total want of appetite,' save for pastry and pickles ; she is simply a disgusting nuisance.— Sentiment is all very nice; but, were I a man I would beware of a woman that 'couldn't eat.' Why don't she take a nice 'little bit' of beefsteak with her breakfast, and a nice walk—not ride—after it 'I Why don't she stop munching sweet stuff between _ weals 'I Why don't she go to bed at a decent time, and lead a clean, healthy lite? The doctors and confectioners have ridden in their car• rages long enough, let the butchers and shoemakers take a turn at it. A man or a wonma who 'can't eat' is _never sound_o_n_any- question. It is wasting breath to converse with them. They take field of everything by the wrong handle. Of course it makes then, very mad to whisper pityingly, ‘dyspep sia,' when they advance seine distorted o pinion; but 1 always do it. They are not: going to muddle my brain with their theo -riescbecause their internal works are in a _sta_to..eLph_ystelil-disorganization_Let-thernH go into a lunatic_usylum and be properly treated till they can learn how they are put together, and how to manage theuas.elves sen sibly. how I rejoice in a man or a Woman with a chest; -who can look the sun in the eye, and step off as if they had net wooden legs. It is a rare sight. It a woman now has an errand round the corner she must have a car riage to go there; and the men more dead than alive, so lethargic are they with con• stant smoking, creep into cars and omnibuss es, and curl up in a corner, dreading noth ing so much as a little wholesome exertion. The more 'tired'Ole) , ate, the ly they smoke; like the women who, drink perpetual tea 'to keep them up.' Keep them up! 'leavens I I and fifty -five, and I feel half the time as if I were just made. To be sure I was born in Name, where the timber and-the human race last; but I don't eat pastry, nor candy, nor lee cream. I don't drink tea—bah ! I walk, net ride. I own stout boots, and pretty ones too! I have waterproof cloak, and no dia. monds. I like a nice bit of beefsteak, cud anybody _else who wants it, may eat Tap. I go to bed at ten, and get up at six. I dash out in the rain, because it feels good on my face I don't care for my .cluthes, but I will be well; and after I am buried, I warn you, don't let any fresh air or sunlight down en I my coffin, it you don't want me to get up. MONEY GETTINCI.—Some people think that it is necessary to be mean and' 'miserly in order to become wealthy. There never was a greater mistake. Any man of com• mon intelligence may be prosperous if lie chooses to iahor diligently and faithfully in a calling which he thoroughly understands. Of course prudence is indispensibie to sizz• cobs—prudence, maid, not niggardly mean ness. flee man, who commencing with little or nothing, has resolved to rice, must also resolve to sacrifice nothing to appearance.— He cannot gain one true friend, our obtain any popularity thut will be really useful to him in his efforts to achieve independence, by endeavoring to SCOLD to have that, which he has not. The yorld is shrewder than Pretension supposed it to be. It is a.euriona world—looks sharply into people's private affairs, and if an individual makes a show be yond his means, soon discovers anti distrusts him. No onn who has a fortune to make, or who desires to receive even a 'moderate competence, can afford to s incur the .world's distrust, Therefore,' if you are at, the foot of the lad Aer and want to mount, go up in your work day guise anti don't effect purple and flue linen. The step mother of A braharn Lincoln still lives near FAriniogton, Coles couuty, 111. in a one-story log cabin, contaitang two rooms Aunt Sally Ltuculn, as the villagers call het, is now eighty years old, and very feeb'e.-- She is a plum, uusophisticated old lady,yith a frank, open couutenance, a, wsrtn . heart, full of kindness towards.others, tall and slen der, and in many respects very. taunts like the late President—enough so to he his own mother, Aud, as lie was but nine yearn of age at the time of her marriage with his fa• Cher, it is not improbable that she had much to do in forming ...his ammeter. She still speaks of Abraham as her "good boy," and praises his ol'edieneo. 6he says that "Abra. Lam and his stepbrother never quarrelled but once, and that you know is a pood deal , for stepbrothers." About a mile and a half Irons her Mil cabin is the grave 01 TVIOOIII3 Lincoln, father of the President. It is mai ked .by a piece of clapboard, on which is rudely carved only the initials "There fhiti soy; a recent Scotch writer, ‘•hetween u dinfors add law yers ;" The wore lawyers there Aro the lon ger tim.cuses continue while the more doe, fort there era the lese,itunee there is for the patient to lust. T,lce,fi'rst lead, you from one judgetontit to another; the latter send you double-Oiolc to, your final judgome ---f•-••• Who iuveute.il 11,Ltc11c..8 ? Adam rind 141-e 5i5.0.0413 X 2 ezz 1. A-Yankee Trade A certain farmer; who in-the course_ of a year putehased several dollars' worth of goods (and always paid for them), called at ihe store of a villsgo merchant— his regular place of dealing—with two dozen broow which he offered fur sale. The merchant - , (who, by the way, is fund of a good bargain') examined his stock and said : 'Well, Cyrus . , I will give you a shilling a piece for these brooms' Cyrus seemed astonished at the offer, and quickly replied : 'Oh, no, Joho, I can't begin to take that for 'ern, no bow, but I'll let you have 'em for twenty cents apiee, and not a coat lees.' 'Cyrus, you are crazy,' exclaimed John.— hy see here.' showing a fine lot of brooms, 'is au article a great deal better than yours, (which was true,) which I am retailing at twelve and a half ccnni Grace.' (Which was . not true by seven and a hall cents. `Don't care for that,' answered Cyrus,— . your brooms are chear..enough, but you can not have mine for loss than twenty tents, a nyhow,' and pretenuing to be more than half angry, shouldered his brootnsoami 6 tar ted for the door:" The merchant getting nervous over the logs of a good customer, and fearing that he might go to another stele and never return, said : 'See hero, Cyrus. hold on awhile. If I give you twenty cebt4 for your brooms, you I will not object to take the price of thew out !=i-n,goode?-1 I don't care if I do,' replied Cyrus. 'Well as you are an old en,tother, I W:11 allow you twenty cents lor this lot Let me see—twenty-four times twenty wakes just four hundred and eighty cents What lulu! _of goods will you have, Cyrus'.' 'Well,_now,-John,-reckon it don't make no difference to you what sort of goods I -takttoes—ir?' 'Oh, no, not at all—not at all,' said the merchant, 'Well, then, as it don't make any differ• erenec.l will take the amount in than brooms fur twelve and a hall cents apiece Let me sec—four dollars and eighty cents will get thirty brooms and ten cents over. It dont make much diffierence, John, about the ten cents, but as you ere a clever fellow, I be lieve I'll take the change in terbacker, %Vhcn.Cyrus went out of the door pith his brooms and 'terbseker,' John was seized with a serious breaking out at the mouth, during which time he was distinctly heard _to_violate—tho—third — commaistlment several times by the bystanders, who all enjlyed the joke. A gentleman tells of an acquaintance of his In North Carolina, who was noted Lir ineudaeiV. Ile relates the following : Said some one to the liar: 'Do you re member the time the gars fell some yearn 'Yes,' said Mendax. 'Well,' remarked the other, 'I have heard it was all deception—that toe stars did not actually fall.' 'Don't you believe it r returned Meedax, with a knowing look, 'they fell in my paid as big as gcese eggs—l've gut one of them yet, only the children played with it so nation they have wore the shiny points off.' Two Dutchmen lived close together, and they had been last 11leads, but they kit out and hated each other like Indians. Oao of them got sick and sew lor his neighbor, say ihg : 'llanß, I am gang to die, will you forgive me, anti be Iriefals ' 'Ye-, if )ou die, I will,' &aid flans, 'but if you gets well again, der ui•f grudge will staud good ' Two students reeeti4g on the road a hot. ler, they tell to bantering him, and told' the follow they would prove hiru to b'o'a horse or au ass. said the hostler, can proveyour saddle la be a mule:' 'A mule cried ono of them. 'flow can that be 1' 'l3.2c:wise,' said tbe hostler, 'it is something between an uss and a horse !' r There ;s no funeral so sad to follow as the funeral of our own youth, which we have Seen pamperin g with food desires, authitiOlis hopes, and all the bright berries - which hang - LLL)o,isonutts clusters over the path of life.. • , . b.i*ik men drink iu etocvds because they are afraid to drink by themgelved. It se quire2 a goad deal of courage to. stand up atone and pour a glass of whisky tio.:wn your throat, if a man is without enemies I wouldn't give ten cents for his friends. Tho tu4,12 who can please everybody hasn't got sense eLsough to displease anybody. 01;;;e of the Chinese in, California have ; silver watches so large that they use the (mi..' to try potatoes in. The tools and machinery on many farms are more Injured 1 . ,:v expo4ure to the weather than by the vicar of actual ti,e. When is a young man's atm like the gospel? Wheel it inaketh glad the. waist pl,tues A meet thing on ice— teaching a aikteen year old bundle 431 etlico haw t,, skate. Why is love like the letter It 7 .Begatme it makes many a Mary marry. The man who MA a bold stand, resolved to bring it hack. . . When was Noah in America? Whim be ICUS ou the Ark-Lind 9aw. M MBEI( 3