. . ....... • ' ' ' ‘.• . ,-,( • . ~ , • .: , , _ • • . _ _ ~.. . • • , (I) ::‘,3404T:47 ; ...‘"-.....•'::t... z :,•,. 5 . -=• ,- . - • . ~.„.., ....... • Li , _ . ~,A.,„,....„5.,,,,,........_ , 1 I\ ( l i l i eJ i IE . I . 1 11 l' . • ____ ~ , _vAk. = -:: .• ~...- .. . sy .. ~..•1....1 . .., jail ., ._ . t . -'.• - 4.11.1 DZ , ~ '. 4 1k6111-. 0 7, .. • ',;;-• "`..7-..'.......-IPPPfr.:-.-...;;::::17,.=•*...r.1::;.. , , NM . ' 'V;C". • ". "'' ' ' .l... .. * . !, .....Z.. ^ , , ..: .‘.'c. - ',- 333 r NAT. 331.etir. lOLUME XXII. . I. 'AD'iIEtIVE-E 01 1 iALER TN DRUGS,. C-h-ern i c a PATENT MEDICINES, PREPARATIONS FOR THE HAIR, OILS, PAINTS, VARNISHESES, ate. &e. --o--- G:rPhysicians dealt with at 20 per cent. discount. Waznesboro' Hotel Building, WAYNESBORO', PA. March 27, 1868 "ECONOMY IS IVLILTII 1" SECOND ARRIVAL OF FALL AND WIN TER GOODS, ju,t received by HITESHEW GEH(2 We sell them as cheap as The cheapest and dis count five per cent all cash bills of ep . ' 1.00 and over. — Call and examine our sto4{ and receiva interact for your cash by purchasing a bill. Remember ttlJt "five cents saved is ton cents made." A. fine lot of Shawls and Balmards br sale by & GEAR A splendid assortment of Dress G.,otls for sale by firrusnEw & Gum. lifuslins, Gingham and all kinds of stap!e and fancy Dry Goods for sale by HITESHEW & EUE A full line of Hardware, Queensware, Ceder ware, Groceries, Notions, Hats, Boots, Shoes, Drugs, Ivlolicines, Paints, nod Oils for sale & Ginn, Carpets, floor and table Oil Cloth for:4lle by HITESIIKNY & GEHR, Ringgold, Md. N. B. We also have about 20,00 Q ket o I seasoned poplar timber, which we will sell at reasons ble prices. jan 1 CORNUCOPIA. Waynesboro , Bakery, Confectionary OYSTER SALOON. THE well known and popular Restaurant 'and Saloon formerly kept by Wm B. Croll-40. has been leased by the undersigned. They are devoting their entire time and attention to the business of ca tering for their friends and the•public, and ready to supply the luxuries of the season. OYSTERS, CRABS, LOBSTERS, TURTLES, TRIPE, CHICKENS, &c., &c., will be served up et short notice and by the beet of cooks. In fact and in short, we aim to keep a first class Eating House and to please the appetite of all who may favor us with a call. At all times the best ALE can be had on draught, for proof of which call and try the arti cle. We have a saloon fitted up expressly for the Ladies. Thankful for the encouragement we have re ceived thus far, we hope to merit a still greater share of public patrunage. nov 20] HENNEBERGER & HOOVER. MILLINERY GOODS ! TO THE LADIES! RS. C. L. ROLLIN I:IERGER has just re ceived a full supply of new Millinery goods. allies are invited to call and examine her stock. GOOD TEMPLAR REGALIAS supplied pr the material to make them furnished. • E *rICgL. MOTHER, HOME AND HEAVEN. The sounds that fall on mortal ear, As dewdrops pure at even, That soothe the breast or start the tear, Are mother, home and heaven. A mother—sweetest name on earth, NVe lisp it on the knee, And idolize its sacred worth In manhood's infancy. A home—that paradise below, Of sunshine and of flowers, Where - hallowed - kvs - perenni3l By calm, wluestcre.l bqwers And heaven—that port of endless peace, The haven of tha sou!, ° When H.'s corroding cares shall cease, Like sweeping waves to roll. O weep not then, though cruel time The ch iin of love has riven ; To every link, in yonder dime, Re-union shall be given. Oh, fall they not on mortal ear, As dew-drops pure at even, To soothe the breast, or stirt the tear, A mother, home and heaven ! A GOOD STORY FOR LAWYERS It is probable that every lawyer' of any . • • and of the celebrated Luther Martin, of Maryland. his great (Iron in the case of Aaron Burr, as well as liks dis plays_in_the_Seriate of the United States, will never be forgotten. Trifles in the his tory of genius are important, as we hope to show in this story. Itlr---M-a-rtin—was on his way to Annapolis, to attend the Suprerue Court of the State. A solitary passenger was in the stage with him; and as the weather was extremely cold, the passengers soon resorted to conversation to divert themselves from too much sensibili -47-to the inclement weather. The young man knew Martin by sight, and as he was also a lawyer, the thread of talk•soon began to spin itselt out of legal matters. 'Mr. Martin,' said the young man; am -just-entering upon my career as a lawyer, can you tell me the secret of your great sue cos If, sir, you will give mo from your experience, the key to distinction at the bar I will—' 'Will what?' exclaimed Martin, - 'Why, sir, I will pay your bill while you are at Annapolis,' 'Done. Stand to your bargain now, and I'will furnish you with the great secret of my success; it is contained in one little maxim which I laid down early to guide me. if you follow it you cannot fail to succeed It is this :"Always be sure of your evi dence.' , The listener was very attentive—smiled —threw himself back i n a philosophical posture, and gave his brain to the analysis, with true lawyer patience, of—'Always be sure of your evidence.' It was too cold a night for anything to be made peculiarly out of the old man's wis dom, and so the promising adept in maxim learning, gave himself up to stage dreams, in which be was knocking and pushing his way through the world by the all powerful words,.'Always be sure of your evidence ! The morning came, and Mr. Martin with his student took rooms at the beat hotel in the city. The only thing peculiar to the hotel, iu the eyes of the young man, was that the wines and the et eeteros of the fine living, seemed ti 2 recall very vividly the tuaxiai about the evidence. The young man watched Mr.. Martin.— Wheiever eating and drinking were eon. eerned he was a man indeed to he watched, especially in the latter, as he was immoder ately fond of the after-dinner, utter supper, atter everything • luxury of wine. A few dais were sufficient to show the iocipiest legalist that he would have to pay dearly for his knowledge, as Mr. Martin seemed resolved to make the most of his part of the con tract. H. & G Lawyers, whaher young or old, have le gal rights, and so the young man began to think of the study of self-protection. It was certainly a solemn duty It ran through all creation. Common to animals and men, it was a noble instinct not to be disobeyed, particularly where the hotel bills of a law yer were concerned. The subject daily grew on . the young man, It was all absorbtog to the mind and pocket: A week elapsed, Mr. Martin was ready to return to. Balti more. So was the young man, but not in the same stage with his illustrious teach er: Mr. Martin approached the counter in the bar room. The young man was an anxious spectator near him. •Mr. Clerk,' said Mr. Martin 'my young friend, Mr. , will settle my bill, agree able to the engagement.' The young man said nothing, but looked everything 'He will attend to it, Mr. Clerk, as we have already had a definite understanding on the subject. lie is pledged, profession ally pledged, to pay my bill,' he hurriedly repeated. Where is yoar evidence r asked the young man 'Evidence T' sneered Mr. Martin. (Yea vir,' said the young man demurely, .elhonsts be sure ofyour evidence, Mr. Martin. Can you prove the bargain. Mr. Martin saw the pnare, and pulled his oct 23 ft WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PVINSYLVANIA, FRIDAY MORNING Xx?.clorieri clecat WeevirEstwarbee33r. pocket book, paid the bill, and with great good humor assured the 'young man : 'You will do, sir, and get through the world with your profession without advice from me.' Good and Bad Luck. Henry Ward Beecher once remarked : 'When I see a tatterdemalion creeping out of a grocery late in the afternoon, with his hands stuck in his rockets, the rim of his hat turned up, and the crown knocked in, I know he has bad luck—for the worst of all luck is to be a sluggard and a tippler.' In that remark he struck the key note of all the croaking about bad luck. The bad luck men meet with, is a consequence of their own acts and mismanagement. Who ever heard of an early-rising, hard-working, honest man cow -•I plain of bad luck ? - A good character, gOod habits, and iron industry, are impregnable to the assaults of all the ill luck that fools ever dreamed of. We once knew a man who lost his leek in the river, where he idled away his time in fishing ; when lie should have been in his of flee. Another, with a lucrative business, lost his luck by amazing diligence in the at fairs of,other people instead of his own,— Another, who was honest and constant at hie work, erred by mijudgment; he lacked dis cretion. Hundre.is lose their luck by en,- dorsing, by sanguine speculitions, by -trust. log fraudulent men, by dishonest gains. A man never has ealaci_luck-wlio-has-a - •i • wile. --ne-liv_es_and " su ccesses--o f-such—to en as Stewart and Peabody were not governed by any snob a thing as 'good or bad luck.' They rose to their positions of power and hilluence by puck instead of luck; indomita ble perseverance, continuity of purpose, hon esty of intentionTin - tegrity - of - charactec - were --- the stepping stones, the Jacob's ladder of their SUCCOSS. Something to Set Us Thinking. Ninety years hence, not a single man or woman, now twenty years of age, will be a live. Ninety years !—Alas ! how many of the lively semis at present on the stage of life will make their exit, long ere ninety years shall have rolled away ! And could we be sure of ninety years, what aro they? 'A tale that is told;' a dream ; an empty sound, that passeth on the wings of the wind away, and is forgotten. Years shorten•as man ad . aces in age Like the degrees in longi tude, man's life declines as he travels toward the frozen pole, until it dwindles to a point and vanishes forever. Is it possible that life is of so short duration? Will ninety years erase all the golden names over the doors in town and country, and substitute others in their stead 7 Will all the new, blooMing beauties fade and disappear ; all the pride and passion, the love, hope-and joy, pass away in ninety years and be forgotten ? 'Ninety years,' says Death, 'do you think,l shall wait nine ty.years ? Behold, to day and to-mor row, and every day or aline When ninety years are -past, this generation will have mingled with the dust and be remembered no more I' DISAOREEABLE WOMEN,•-••A disagreea ble woman is like a vacuum; there is no place fer her in nature. She is a parody upon herself If there is a touch of beauty about her, she gives these she meets the sort of shock one would feel on taking what appears to be wine, and is in reality .vinegar. Fort unately she very seldom is beautiful, in the true sense of the word Nature does not lend itself to shams. It is pitilessly exact ing. Sweetness of face must result how sweetness of disposition. The face is not a mask, but a mirror. It reveals everything with terrible ingenuousness. Amiability is not to be simulated to the observant eye.— You cannot stamp the marks, the lines, the flowing curves of the agreeable on your face, unless you have the quality in your breast. For this reason the disagreeable woman is never really beautiful. Her features, at their best, remind you of etchings; the ef. Wets have been 'bit in' by acids The forms of the disagreeable in woman aro infinite, but the effect of all is the same. In place of at. traction there is revulsion; in place of love, pity—if not scorn; in place of happiness, friar discontent. The disagreeable woman is iiksome to every created thing, including herself, There is positively, only one way to deal with her'—turn her into a jiike. In that way she may be made tolerable like the Frenelituan".B slippers— useless, but just avail able as the basis of a gageut. There is a curious hill now pending, in the Legislature of Kentucky. It is to legalize the marriage of Dr. M. 11. Tborp and Jo. sephine Harvey, although the lady has a for mer husband still living from whom she has never been divorced. This former spou:•e was a Confederate officer, and was universal• ly believed to have beeii killed in the battle of Stone River. Some ten months after that event, the lady was wattled anew to Dr. Thorp, and was living iu felicity with him, when suddenly the dead husband reappeared upon the stage of life. Like a perfect gen. tleman, he made no disturbance, but offered the lady.thc choice between herself and her second and newer partner. She chose the latter, and Mr. Harvey gave his consent and blessing. But this did not. suffice to render the marriage legal, and for this purpose the parties have gone to the Legislature. The Finn of John Sears, who died tan years ago in Boston, is fourteen years old and the richest young man in America, the assessed value of his real estate being $20,000,000. He receives $2,500 yearly until he is 21, then $4,000 until 24, then $6,000 until 30, and after that $20,000 per annum. The three trustees have a salary of $5.000 each. and the commissions received from rents equal in Aount the salary of the President of the United States. Young Sears is now studying in Europe. Perils of the Young_. Young people, says t h e Philadelphia Ledger, cannot be too careful to avoid bad habits. If a young man be idle, he will make others idle. If he be dishonorable in business, or extravagant, or does not pay his debts, ho saps that credit, confidence and honor which is the life of business pros. perity. Where these or others vicious prin ciples prevail among the youth of a nation, it may sink into degradation, and eventually be destroyed. On the other hand, vbere an industrious, orderly, just, and honorable character pertains to the youth of a people, it insures the welfare and progress of the nation at large. In youth comes the crisis of life. Those who choose well, rise like the rowing sun, higher a'd higher, but those wle fail at this crisis, sink among the perils that surround them, often to rise no more. At no time are passions and energy so strong, and experience so weak, as at the poiftt where parents and guardians relin. quish authority, and the young man assumes the responsibility of directing himself. It is then that the mind and the body are strong, courage, hope and enterprise ardent and the appetites and inclinations.poweiful. Passions, when latent in- the breast, need but a spark of teml tation to inflame them. If they were all pure, and properly har monized, the young wan would pethaps find in them that which Would give strength to his virtue and an instinct, which, sup plyittliie'e-of-experienco, would guide him aright. But it is nut so. lie may have inherited the moral delinquencies of the pa rent as much as his physical disorders.— The currents a n d fashions of prevailing wickedness make it difficult for a young man to keep clear of them. What avails the skill of the mariner in the - midst - of the whirlpool ? He may steer by his compas., and set bis sails, and seem to be moving a right, while he is really_ drifting in the fa tal current. The young man, led by his youthful associates into 'the haunts of dissi pation, and vice, is being insensibly drawn into the fatal current. He may be amiable and even innocent at first, but after a time his face is flushed, and his brow contracted with anxiety; for he feels that be is rushing into the whirlpool of guilt that may end in his destruction. Good habits firmly fixed are the best thing to guide the youth through the jour ney of life in a wise and honorable manner. Money cannot do it; nor talents or educa tion, nor powerful connections and fashion able manners. -Neither can philosophy, or even innocence and amiability do it. All these may fade before temptation, like snow before the sun. Earnest and active devo tion to duty, to virtuous principles, and -the practice of honor, honesty,—mora ity an d justice, are necessary to combat the dangers by which the young are surrounded. Some habits should be checked; others stimulated, some need pruning, and others weeding out soot and branch. If taken in time, it will be a pleasant duty to keep the garden of the mind in order, but if the weeds gat the up per hand, the task will be one of increasing difficulty. Prince Tallyrand took part in thirteen revolutions, and was always the acknowledged leader. his plan was to watch the tendencies of public opinion, and always to take his stand a little way before the, foremost, so that they would seem to be coming up to him. lle once said that the secret of Lis success in life was to set his watch ten minutes ahead of the rest of man kind. Idleness is a common nerd, but is easily kept under, if industrious habits aro formed in time, and he whose day begins ten minutes sooner than that of those around him, will find the benefit of Tallyrand's max im. So, if a youug m; oin his business keeps a little in advance of what his employer could reasonably expect of him his reputation will be assured. No MONEY FOR Trt UNDER-NO ROD —At a 'parish meeting in one of the towns in the interior of Pennsylvania, where a new meet ing house bad just been erected, the ques tion was agitated with respect to having a lightning rod put up. Opinions wore freely interchanged, and the project seemed to meet with general favor, until an influential and wealthy old German thus lot himself swing, giV'ing utterance to a rather novel statement, one not in accordance with the generally received opinion of the established laws of Nature and providence : Now, gentlement I tells yen vat I finks. I titt/es we hash beeps to much trou ble and expetish, and none has gin tollais more as I to build a church for to Lord, and next sunday we gives it to him and if he will dounder his own house, den I says, let him dounder away—l gives no vote nor motiir.h for doundering rod This traitor, in parvo speech proved a settler of the question, the enterprise was a bandoned, the meeting was adjourned suite die, and the worthy parishioners liarrnonlz•ct beautifully over a glass of lager at the vii. lege inn. A MAN'S INDUCEMENT TO !♦TARRY —Al though enlightened men generally do not stop to think about the reason why they have mar ried, and continue to maintain the family union, if they will look at the subject closely they will find it is a longing for happiness, to build for themselves a home in the bosom of which they may settle down and 1)10 from the deceit, cold beartedness antl_cifremony of the world ; where nothing but love enters, whore there is no strife,, a 6 jealousies, heart burnings, envy or selfishness, nobody to cheat, defame or deceive them but all is love and unity.—Dr. Buford. An Iriihman who was engaged to^out ice, when handed a cross out saw to commence operations with, pulled out a copper coat, and turning - to his comrade, exclaimed: 'Now, Pat—fair play ! head .or tail, who goes be. low !' ;FEBUART 5, 1869. Too Much Work. An insane'and insatiable passion for no cumulation has seized upon the public mind. Money is literally the god of many of our peo ple, and the god of their families. For this they rise up before the sun is in the heavens, and labor long after his ibing. down. Fes this the ponderous wlieei of business rolls round, like the wheel of day and night, from January to December, with no pause to cool its fiery axle. is it any way surprising that under" an increasing pressure of labor a large proportion of Americans break down early in life, and often, when just in sight of the goal, sink into premature graves? It is not, however, the hard work we do, so at uch s as the fretting, care and anxiety we cherish, that exhausts our vital energies, and puts an early period to our fives. We fully believe that, with the exception of a few In dian tribes, Americans are the most solemn, people under the There is no other com munity on the whole face of the earth who carry about so habitually their business cares, or who, amid so many circumstances of cote fort, have so itt e enjoyment - in their lives. It is even hard for many of us to laugh : or if we do occasionally join in merriment, our laughter is not of the free and easy, oh treperous kind, which Milton has printed, as 'holding both i s sides.' or like Falstaff s without intervaliums,' hut rather like that which Tour Davis described Johnson's to be, 'a kind of good natured growl' By day and `by-tsight-we-eau think and dream of nothing but the iron realities of life Anxious, per plexing thought sits on the business uran'S brow as he rubs his eyes at daybreak ; the ,duties of the toilet are rushed through with a splash. a wipe and a brush ; breakfast is swallowed us if a fiery chariot were waiting at the doorstep; the place of business is flown to on the wings of steam ; the day is spent in straining to overtake complicated details of business too extensive for the mind's grasp;_ it costs a race to be in time for dinner, .even when it is postponed till night; and dinner is curtailed of its fair proportion of time, that he may solve some knotty problem of business that could not be solved during the day. The hour for sleep arrives, but tired nature's restorer refuses to 'knit up the ravel ed sleeve of care;' the overexcited and jaded brain keeps up its throbbings, and thus things go on jilt the poor bond slave of Mam mon finds his constitution shattered, the coffin-maker soon takes his dimensions io his mind's eye, and he descends at last to his everlasting rest, with the glorious satisfae: tion, perhaps, of having gained for all his and toil—his joyless days and sleepless nights —more money in funds than any other men on Change.— Exchange. Primitive Li:look-keeping. The Macon Telegraph relates the follow. leg : 'We have been just handed an African butter and mil!: account for a month, on a flip of paper as narrow and as .loog as our pencil. limg marks, we are told, mean quarts of milk, and short ones, in the same line, mean pounds of butter. The account shall be squared, and a receipt-be taken,— by throwing the bill into the stove. This kind of accounting puts us in mind of the Tar River merchant's bookkeeping. W dare say come of, our old readers can tell he man's name, for the story is it true one Tar River did a heavy mercantile business for that country— he was rich—he kept,his own books, but could never read nor wfite. If is manner was to put the outlines of the debtor's face at the fop of the ledger, and underneath were pen pictures of the 'articles purchased, or, where that was impossible', some ekbuliftie sign which the maker un derstood. 'One day there was n disputed account.— Purchaser was charged with a Cheese which he denied buying- 'What should I want with a cheese,— wilco we make Inore at homi than we can ott V 'lt was a poser, and Tar Water could on ly insist in reply upon the accuracy of his books. 'lf There's anything I 'do v alue myself up on, it is the accuracy .r books:. 'lmpossible,' says the debtor. 'lt must be, r says 'Par liver; 'now think over what you have had of me: 'Well, I have lied a saddle, trace chains, hoes, axes, and a —grindstone.' 'Good beacon,'-says Tar River, 'is it pos sible that in' charging that princi4Lno I for. got to make a hole in the middle, a nd so took it for cnewe 't I can hardly credit such an errar in my books !' ' The Chinamen, who walk over bridges built two thousand sears ago, who cultivated the cotton plant centuries before this coon. try was heard 31; and who fed silk worms before King Solomon built his throne, have fifty thousand square miles around Shanghai which they call the Garden of Stiina, and which have been tilled by countless genera. tions. This ales is as New Yolk and Penn sylvania combined, and ie all meadow laud raised but a few feet above the river—lakes, rivers, canals— a complete network of coin muuication ; the kind under the highest (Hal; three crops a year harvested population so dense that,•whetever you look, you see riven and women in blue pants and blouse, so nu. marous that you fancy some fair or muster is coming Off and all hands have turned out fora holiday. A young gentleman, very conceited ,and, vain of himself, bat who, by the way, was rather despised, with a face much pitted by the smelt pox, was riot tong atm addressed by a chap, who, attor.admiring him for some time, said—'When carved work cornea io faibioni you'll be the haudsomest man I ev er pat my oyes en To dispel darkness from about you; make light of your troubles. sta.cro IPar Year A Small-pox Remedy. A correspondent of the Stoektou (Califor• nia) /repaid -writes as follows : . ' • I herewith append a receipt wh ich has been used to my knowledge in hundreds of eases. It will prevent or cure the small-pox though the piftiliga are filled. When Jen ner discovered cowpox in England the world id science hurled an avalanche of fame upon his head; but when the rnrist•seientitie school of medicine in the world—that of Paris— published the receipt as a panacea for small pox, it passed unheeded. It is as unfailing as fate, and conquers in every instance: It is harmless when taken by a well person. It will also zure scarlet - fever -llert-is-the.ro •ceipt as I have used it, and eared my chil dren of scarlet fever ; hero it is 3s I have used it to cure the small pox ; when learned physicians slid the patient must die, it cured; Sulphate of zinc, one grain; foxglove (digitalis,) one grain; half' a teins poonful of smear; mix with two Ode spoonful Of water. When thoroughly !nixed, add four ounces cf woee. Take a sto,,tri C - Verrtitisee — h+tutel.r. 1;10 - ter disca , le will disappear in twelve hours.- For a child t•tualler doses according to age. f counties would compel their physicians to - `d of -t u-c t Its t :ere won:, oc tit) tire( po4, houses. If you cultic advice rod exporience, use this for that te'rrihlc Loom- A man who was up to a thing or two once offer , d to het that lie (multi prove that this side the river was the oth,r siore. Ilis chnl/emze waq soon accepted, and a het of-ten-dollars mad-e-;--44m0-,-po-in-titut—tt - osi te shore of the river he t•ltrewdly abked: 'ls not that one side of the river ?' ‘l7,' was the immediate answer 'A creed,' said the-ratan-i4md is not tins Ole other side?' 'Yes,' saio the other 'Then, Faid the' nom pay toe my ten dal art., for by your own eunt'ession I have proved hiMg side of the river is the other Ride.' The dumb founded antagonist overeonie by this. profound logic, immediately paid the money. AN ATTEMPT TO it Itse T ingeoius Yunkee who got out of money re sorted to a uovel expedient for replenishing his purse. tie announced that he would give lessons in whistling. Having collected a con4derable number cf . iptiEil4, he procord• ed - at—flow. — l 3, kT - ,twitn is instruc , Trepare to puck er,' was his first command, and every mouth WAS put in order 'Now pucker I' At this point his scholars fell to laughing so violent ly that there was no getting their faces straight for further exereise3; whereup)n the Yankee, well suited, pocked his pay nod dismissed his class. 1:11=EI 'Terms are things,' was once said by John Wilkes, and the temaik has come down to our day. A new, and it seems to us satis factory definition of the differeocei between two prominent religions societies of the day, comes from a, Buff do correspondent, that mi med between two five•year old misses: 'Anna, yon are a Unitarian.' 'Yes; and you are a Presbyterian.' -Now, t should like to know what is the difference.' 'Oh, 1 don't know. All th . o difference . I can see is, one is a 'larian, and the other kis itt 'terian! -- , ' Sueh. ' dowof children !• A Sun 00l teacher asked a Mae girl who was the first wan. She acknow ledged she did not know. The question was then put to an Irish girl, who aniwered, 'Adam, air,' with apparent satisfaction:— 'La,' said the first child, 'yen needn't feel so grand about it—he wasn't an Irishman.' 'My son,' wild an anxious father once, 'what wakes you use that nasty tobacoo Now the son w.. 13 a very liberal sort of per son, and, declining to consider the question in the spirit in which it was asked, replied, 'To get the juice, old codg.2r.' Beaver, ;Ni , has the meatiest woman in America She compelled a servant girl to walk two miles in the rain to g chano-e to past a washerwoman one •aull.ir and ninety• nine cents. The following is Aunt Bctsey's deserip• tion of her milk man : 'Ho is the meanest man in the world,' she exclaimed 'lle skims his mitt: on top, rhea turns it over and skiels it on the bottom.' What thip_ is that which was hnrn will). out a soul, and w lieu it pot it could only keep it time days, arid when it died, it went neitner to llea•ven ur ? uswor—The whale that swallowed jatiali. siild a bricklayer to his hod. man. if you uo et Pdtrick tell him to make liamto as we are Wat ling fur him' •tiure und I wil re; lied 3like ; -'but what will 1 tc.ll him a f don't mate hie) r Au editor, in notining the proposition to light a e‘:i tido town with rcil headed girls, says— , l WA: there we'd play tipsy ev ery night, and hug the lour:-pests.' There is a mnn in New York in prissuebion 01 n powerlui memory. 11e is employed by the Humane Society to 'rctoembei the poor.' There is only the difference of ato be. tweet/ some vegetables. Thro* up a pump kin and it will eJnie gown squash. Unjust riches curse the owner iu in keeping, Qui in trausinitturg, Tile.) curse his children in their fathe'r memory. We thiolt that a man carries the borrow. iog principle a trifle too far when he asks tut to loud biro our ears. `Necessity ie the rmither of invention: but it hag never been accurately ascertained who is the lather. NUMBER m