iElv liTir. flair. VOLUME XXII. TOII ALL tl~t*DllDO!___ 1100FLAND'8_GERNAN_BITT 110011 GEIMMUTORIC. Vreyared by Dr. 0. M. Jackson, Pbtlsodelptda. Tbelr introduction into this country from Germany occurred in 1895. • THEY CURED YOUR FATHERS AND MOTHERS, And will cure you end your children. They are T entirely different from the many preparations now in the country milled Bitters or Tonics. They are no 'tavern preps ration, or anything Rhetoric; but good, honest, reliable medicines. They TR'S greatest known retteditsfor Liver Complaint ► DYSPEPSIA, Nervous Debility, JAUNDICE, Diseases of the Kidneys, ERUPTIONS OF THE SKIN, and all Disease. arielna from a Dl.or. dered Liver, Stomach, or w IMPURITY OP THR BLOOD. Constipation, Platulence._lnward—Pilo Fullness of Blood to the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea, Heart bisgust for Food. Fulness Soarigt in the Stomach, Eructations, Sink. ing or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Swim. minor of the Head, Harried or Difficult Breathing, Fluttering Ci o at the Heart, Choking o r Suffocating Sensations when in a 1 4 y- in g Posture. Dimness of vieWn, il: : Or Webs before the Sight, Pain in the Head._ Deficiency • of Perspiration, Yellowness of the Skin and Eyes. Pain in the Side Back, Chest, Limbs, eta.. sudden Flushes of Heat, Burn. , ing in the Flesh., Constant Imaginings of- Evil and Great, Depression of SPiritll. 41l these indicate disease of the Lirer or Digestity , Organs, combined with impure blood, Hoofland's German Bitters its entirely vegetable, and contains no liquor. It is a coMpound of Fluid By. tracts. The fleets, Herbs, and Barks from which these extracts are made it 120- —a- athere 1-n—Get ninny. All the meAl4 cinal virtues —are—extracted- a se lent I 11e chemist. These extracts are then forwarded to this country to be used expressly for the manufacture of these Bitters. There is no alcoholic substance of any kind used in compounding the Bitters, hence it is the only Bitters that can be used in cases where alcoholic stimulants arc net advisable. Hoofland's German Tonic gs a eolukination of an the ingredients of the Biller, milk ovum Santa Cries Rum, Orange, de. It is used for the same diseases as the Ritter+, m cases where sons pure atedialie stioaded i.e required You will bear in gliad that thew remedies are entlekly different from ad'il others adoertised for the cure of the &seams name 4 these being scientific preparations of medicinal extracts, while the others are mere decoctions of runs in same form. The TONIC is decidedty one of the most plea sant and agreeable remedies erer offered to the public. Its task is exquisite. it is a pleasure to take it, while its Wogieivig. exhilarating, and mediona/ qualities haul *wog dko he knemm as the greatest rJ all toxic* DEBILITY. There is no medicine equal to Hoof Wee Dermas ]Fil Bitters or Tonic in ..ases of • &batty, They impart a tone and vigor to thesohots system, strengthen the appetite, cause an enjoyment of the food, enable the sto mach to digest it, purify the blood, give a good, sound, healthy complexion, eradicate the yellow tinge from the impart a bloom, to the cheeks, and change The patient fsum a short-breathed, emaciated, weak, and nersotur fioralid, to a/WU:faced, stout, and agoras/4,01m5. Weak and Delicate Children are made strong by using the Bitters or Toni*. In Met, they are Family Medi,. tines. They can be administered with perfect safety to a child three months "Id, the Meal dolloato tamale, ar a man at ninety, pia* .fronadirs an the bat Wood Purifiers user human, and will cure all diseases resulting from jiL i bad blood. Kee your bloodpure; keep your ,hitor in order; keep your digestive organs in a sound , healthy ea stilton, by the 15K V Mete remedies, and no disease will sow assail you. The best men in the country recommend them. Zr years of honest reputation go for anything lvou must try these preparations. FROM HON. GEO. W. WOODWARD, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Penneylvanta. PHILADELPHIA, March 16,1867• Ifind rooflaturs German Bitters" is not an rotor tailing beverage, Out it a good tonic, useful in disorders iqf the digtentoc organs, and of great benefit in cases of *Wily and leant of nervous action, in the aysteni ! ours truly, OM W. WOODWARD. FROM HOIS. JAMES THOMPSON, Judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. • PIIII4ADELPHIL April 2EI. Me. un ik m Ic on sides , i‘ Hoollandhe German lilt tens n a valuable medicine in case of attacks of I n digestion or Dyspepsia. I can certify this from my experience of DI Yours. with respect. JAMES THOMPSON. FROM REV. JoSEI U. KENNARD, D. D., Pastor of the Tenth Ba_ pt i st Church, rhiladelphla. Dn. .Itsoceett —Die* Els :--2 bass been frequent ! requested to connect my name with vecontrasndations o different hinds of, medicines, but regarding . the practice ms out of my appropriate sphere, I have us all cases de. dined; bad with a clear proof its 'lntricate instances, and particularly in my ownfill.Rity, of the =titaness of Dr, Afooitancrs Gartman falters, I depart for once from mit aroma course, teexpress myfull conviction that for yen, oral debility of the symera and especially for Liver I 3L4 4 1= Compleant, It is a safe and valuable p reparation. hs some cases it may tail; but molly, X doubt not, it will be very beneficial Co those who suffer Ikon the abort caws. PP" very relliextfullyt X H. KENNARD, EVA, below Coates sired, CAIITION. Hooftasses German Remedies are counterfeited. The /ermine have the sifmature of C. AL Jackson as thefront of the outs i de wrapper of each bottle, and the manse of Use article blown in each bottle. All others are anosterfeit. Price of the Bitters, $1 00 per bottle; Or, a half dozen for 445 00. Price of the Tonic, $1 50 per bottle; Or, a half dozen for #7 50. The tonic la put up in quart bottles. .IP , srio , t that it is Dr. Hooftand's German Rencolies that are so universally used and so highly ream ) mended ; and do not allow the Druggists to induce you to take anything else that he may say is just as good, because As Oakes a /arrrprof on it. These Remer dies will be seal by express to any locality upon applios• ion to the PRINCIPAL OFFICE, AT TEE GERMAN XEDICINE STORE, N 0.631. ARCS STREET, Plaktde;r4oto CHAS. M. EVANA Proprietor, Formerly C. X. JACKSON & CO. These Remedies are for sale by Drug. elms, Storelieepers, and Medicine Deals irst everywhere. . fB Do not forget to examine men Li ks wadi pm eft is order to get tiba Samaria. sept 25-'6e. WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 4, i 869. N'COMITIC)ALEa. FORETBR. BY AIRS..E ALBRO Forever! I have teamed to speak that word with calmness, now. Without one quiver of the lip, or thrObbing of the brow. - - What matters it bow hard to rend the ties Which bound me fast 1- What matters the long dreary strife —all that is with the past. You think perchance some tender word, like those you used to speak, Can cell the gladness to"my eye, the lost bloom to my cheek. I tell you nay —yon fallen tree_the _lightning flash bath riven. Might sooner lift its fresh green leaves to greet the blue Of heaven. Y-ou-came-when-meadows far and near were white with blossoming, And my young heart was beating high with an swering hopes of spr:ng ; You left me when the autumn leaves were lying dead and sere, - But none so crushed as my poor heart upon its early —bier. • Through winter frosts, through winter snows,- I passed from diath to life, And now I stand in icaceful calm above the storm and strife; . No shadows of thoe bygone days e'er comes to chill 'or blight; Becure upon the mountain t )ps I rest in Heaven's light. I ask no curse upon the years thy God may give h • - lask_but_to_l orget_that_thou_wert_emeraught_to Than go thy way where'er it lies, on near or distant shore, Thou'rt banished from my sight henceforth—my memory evermore! *ll-= . 1.4 irP tv, A Merchant's Story. A member of a large mercantile firm re cently gave a little bit of his experience in this wise ; was seventeen years old when I — left the country-store I had tended for three years, and came to Boston in search of a Ow.— Anxious, of course to appear to the best ad- vantage, I spent an unusual amount of time and solicitude upon my toilet; and when it was completed, I surveyed my reflection in the glass with no little satisfaction; glanc ing lastly and most approvingly upon a seal ring which embellished my little finger, and my cane, a very fine affair, which I had purchased with direct reference to this occa sion. My first day's experience was not en couraging; I traversed street after at' eet—up one side and down on the other-- without success. 1 fancied, toward the last, the clerks all knew my business the moment I entered the door, and they winked Ulna tnredly at my discomfiture as I passed out. But nature endowed me with a good degree of persistency, and the next day I 'started a • gain. Toward noon I entered a store where an elderly gentleman stood talking with a la dy by the door. I waited till the visitor .bad left the store, and then stated my errand. 'No sir,' was the answer, given in a peculiar ly crisp and decided manner. Possibly I looked the discouragement I began to feel ; for he added, in a kindlier tone, "Are you good at taking a hint 7 11 '1 don't know,' answered I while my face flushed painfully. 'What I wish to say is this,' said he, smiling at my embarrassment; 'if I were in want of a clerk, I would not employ a young man who came seeking employment with a flashy ring on his finger and swinging a fancy cane. For a moment mortified vanity struggled a gainst 'common sense, but sense got the vic tory, and I replied—with rather a shaky voice, I'm afraid—'l'm very much obliged to you,' and then beat a hasty retreat. As soon as I got out of sight, I slipped the ring into my pocket, and walked rapidly to the Worcester depot, I left the cane in charge of the baggage-master, 'until called for.' It is there now, for aught I know. At• any rate, I never called for it. That afternoon I obtained a situation with the firm of which I atu now a partner. Bow much my un fortunate finery had injures; my prospects the previous day I shell never know; but I never think of the old gentleman and • his plain dealing without feeling, as I told him at the time, very much obliged to him.' MANNzus.—There is nothing vvhiob adds so lunch to a young man's success in life— next to honesty of purpose—as the practice of good manners. A polite man will show good breeding wherever he goes—on the sidewalks,. in the buggy, as well as in,your parlor. If you meet a man who refuses to give you half the road, or to turn out'on the sidewalk, you may class him as a man with no sense of .justice in his soul. When we speak of polite men we do not wish to. be derstood as referriog to one who bows low and takes off his bat to ladies and men of po- sition, and turns away from the poor man ; bat we mean the honest face—the man who always carries a smile on his countenance, and who never turns his face away from the poor; we mean the man who has a kind sal utation when he meets you in the morning, and a pleasant' 'good night' in the evening; a man whose face is alWays void of offence. Such a man is bound to succeed—such a one will find friends ? Young men, be polite, .&za. Xricie.p4;334fLeaat Family Wervcrairoaxsois. 'TWO SOUTHERN GRAVES The following story is from the correspon dence of the Boston Traveler, descriptive of the cemetery at Newborn, N. 0. The young lady named was the daughter of Prof. Calvin Cutter, author of several work - s7on physiolo gy: _ lAt the end of the rows-are two graves, of which uncommon °are has been takes, and to which our attention was called by the keep er. They bear the following touehing in scriptions : No: 1744. 21 MASBAOHUSETTS. BETROTHED TO 0. E. Q. (The name - is not given on the board, but we learned that it was a member of Company E, of that ,llegiment The other reads as follows : MISS CARRIE E. CUTTER, BETROTHED To No, 1744. . BURIED AT HIS SIDE BY HER OWN REQUEST. Probably many in the old 21st will know the circumstances and tell the story of these two lovers, but the inscription on their head boards is all we know of their life of love or devotion at death. But other incidents we do know that are full of interest - to us, and we doubt not to your readers; which are re• called as we stand by the flag staff and read over the familiar names an the white boards befose us: .Follijamba, 10th Conn.' Ah, yes, that is the very grave they told us about, and, this is the SAD STORY OT LOVE they told us : 'The soldier lying in that grave was reared by kind parents in Hart ford, and at the age of twenty—an honest, intelligent young man—ho went to New Ha ven. There he became acquainted with a young lady by the name of Cutter, - who name to visit her brother, then in college. They became engaged to be married, and all was sunshine in the path of life. But the re bellion came, and she returned to her home in Harlem. to wait for his return from the war, to which he was determined to go. Two • crespoodenee-and—two--fu-r1 -cemented-their affection, until they felt that. Aro — earthly-obstacle-could-come-be twee n-t hem and the . sweet joys of life in store for them. But to the loving heart in Harlem there ono day came a report that her betrothed was killed. In wild suspense she waited for his letters, but none came. Her father wrote to the Colonel and to the Captain. They could only say he was 'missing.' With no thought of money or trouble,'or care, the old grey-headed father, whose daughter, since the death of his eon, was his all, searched unceasingly (or some clue to the missing one., oven venturing beyond the lines of the ene my. She, with that sublime fortitude which only a woman can command when trouble comes, and with that devotion which makes a woman's love so pure and sacred, shared the dangers and fatigue of a two years' search, knowing nothing, caring for nothing, unless it concerned her lover. Finally his grave was found in the woods near where the iPth once formed a skirmish line, and a little head board bearing his name, carved in crook ed lines with a pen-knife, marked his resting place. Word was sent to the mourners, and the nest conveyance brought them to the spot. For a while the daughter sat in the carriage, and would not get out, not daring to trust herself within view of the spot where lay-the dearest form she ever knew. -Come, Nellie,' said the old man, and with a forced calmness he assisted his daughter from the carriage. Going to the grave she walked around it—read slowly the inscription—and then folding her arms across her breast, she exclaimed, -Cth Charley,' and fell upon the grave a corpse. The old man alone in this world of grief, was led away by the driver, a maniac. Today, in the asylum at. New York, he is constantly inquiring in his delirium why his daughter is not married. Sad, sad tale. Almost too tragic to believe, yet hun dreds attest its truth. Alas! how many such incidents there have been since the war, that will never be recorded. TOE MANAGING WOMAN.—The managing women is a pearl among women; she is one of the prizes in the great lottery of life, and the man who draws her may rejoice for the balance of his days. Better than riches, she is a fortuue in herself—a gold mine never Sailing in its yield—a spring of pleas ant warera, whose banks are fringed with moss and flowers, when all around ie bleach ed white with sterile send. The managing woman can do anything; and she does every. thing well. Perceptive and executive, of quick sight and steady hand, she always knows exactly what is wanting, and supplies the deficiency with a tact and cleverness peculiar to herself. She knows the capabili ties of persons as well as things, for she• has an infinite knowledge of character. The man aging woman, if not always patient, is always energetic, and can never be disappointed into inaction. Though she has to teach the same thing over and over again and _though she finds her duties dense as box-wood, and hands inefficient , as fishes' fine, still she is never weary of her vocation of arranging and ordering, and never less than hopeful of a favorable result. The line of conduct, chosen by a young man during the five years from fifteen to twenty, will, almost every instance, determine his character in after life. As he is then care ful or careless, prudent or imprudent, indus trious or indolent, truthful or dissimulating inteligent or Ignorant, temperate or dissolute, so will he be in after years, and it needs no prophet to cast his horoscope, or calculate his chance in life. A party of young fellows found fault with the ' butter o n a boardiog•house table 'What is the matter with it ?' inquired the mistress. 'Just you ask it,' said one, 'it is old enough to speak for What a Price. 'What is the value of this estate ?' said a gentleman to another with whom be was-' , riding, as they passed a fine mansion sur rounded by fair and fertile fields. 'I don't know how much it is valued at, I know what it cost its late possessor. "How mucGT 'Hie soul.' • A solemn- pause followed this brief answer, for the ioquirer bad not sought first the king dom of God and His righteousness. The former owner referred to, was the eon of a pions laboring man. Early in life he professed faith in Christ, and he soon ob tained a subordinate position in a mercantile establishment in this city. He continued to maintain a reputable religious profession till be became a partner in the firm. Labors increased. lie gave less attention to Tagil* and more to his business, and the cares of the world choked the word. Ere he_became old be was so exceedingly rioh in money, but poor and miserly in soul, that none who knew him would have sus pected that he had ever borne the' snored name of Him who said, 'lt is more blessed to give than to receive.' At length he purchased the large landed estate referred to, built a costly mansion, sickened and died. Just before he died, he remarked, 'My prosperity has been my ruin.' Oh, what a price for which tobarter away immortal joy and everlasting life, yet—h-ow many'do it.'— Christian at Work. MENTAL ACTIVITY.--If the water run neth, it holdeth clear, sweet and fresh, but stagnation turneth it into a noisome puddle. If the air be sunned by the winds, it is pure and wholesome, but froth being shut up it" groweth thick and putrid. If metals be em ployed, they abide smooth and•splendid; but lay them up and they soon contrhot rust— If the earth is labored with oulture, it yield eth corn, but lying neglected, it will be over grown with bushes and thistles,. and the better the soil is, the ranker weeds it will produce. All nature is upheld in - its being, order, and Ah‘chs,b_y_constant-egitationtevety creature. is incessantly employed in action eonfortnable to its desigt-red—use;--In—like- manner, the preservation and improvement of the faculties depend on their constant ex ercise. ' To it God has annexed the best and most desirable reward—success to our under takings, wealth, honor, wisdom, virtue, and salvation. AIMLESS AMICATION.—Bore is the rich man's son who has been educated at great expense and pains, and who has graduated from college, and has come out a gentleman. He has studied not with a view to fitting himself for any avocation in life but with a view of being a gentleman. He reads not for the sake of knowing anything, but for the sake of being a gentleman. Soon his father breaks down; and be, when he is a. bout twentyfive years old, finds himself a poor 'man's son, and dependent on his own exertions. And be says to himself, 'What shall I do for a - living ?' - He asks his feet, and his feet say, 'I do not know.' He asks his head, and it says,' l l never learned any thing about , a living.' There is ,but one man that can befriend this poor wretch, and that is the sexton. Could anything be more useless than such a person? Clan there be anything more pitiable than such histories? And yet they are happening every day. RICIIES.—The moo with good, firm healyb is rich. Bo is the man with a oloar oonseience. So is the parent of vigorous, happy obil dren. So is the editor of a good paper, with a big subscription list. So is the clergyman whose coat the little children of the parish plank, as he passes them at their play. So is, that wife who has the whole heart of a good husband. So is the maiden whose horizon is not bounded by tbo 'coming man,' but who has a purpose in life, whether she ever meet him or not. , So is the young man who, laying his hand on his heart, oan say t have treated every woman I over taw as I should wish my sis ter treated by other men. So is the little child who goes I 3 sleep with a kiss on itei lips, and for whose waking a blessing waiis.—Ledger. WHAT NEST.--A gentleman riding near the city overtook a well dressed young man, and invited him to a seat in his carriage. 'What,' said the gentleman to the young stranger, 'are your plans for the future ?' am a clerk, said the young man, 'and my hope is to succeed, and to got into busi ness for myself.' • 'And what next.?' said the gentleman. 'Why I intend to marry, and. to set up an establishment of my own, said the youth. 'And what next ? 'lt is the lot of all. to die, and I of course cannot escape, 'replied the young man. 'And what next ?' once more inquired the gentleman, but the young man had no answer to wake; be bad no purpose that reached bo oed. the present life. flow many' young men are is precisely the same condition l Whatpertaina to the world tot coma has no place in all their plans. ' There is no better fertiliser for strawber ries than ashes. We .remember that one of the best crops we ever had, says an exohange, was raised when the only manure Was wood ashes. All soils will not alike be benefitted by such an application ; but it is always safe to use ashes in connection with other man urea. If ashes only are.used, there are few. Of weeds, all DO seeds can be introduced by the manure. Old men are like the wrecks . of time, thrown by the waves of one century upon the shores of another, [Correspondence or the"Villega Record." THE PACIFIC RAILROAD ! The Celebration ! A gratutevent —An posing demonstration—A prowl page in the history of CalifOrnia— Magnificent procession and brilliant illumination— The oration, poem, 4.e. - SAN FRANCISCO, May Bth, 1869. Mr. Editor. —This letter will go through direct by the .Pacific Railroad mil will try and give' you an idea of the celebration of its completion here. No brighter day ever 'dawned upon San Francisco than that of May Bth.. It seamed as if all nature joined in the grand jubilee of San Francisco upon the Completion- of the great work in which so much interest hat been felt on - loth aides of the Continent.-;- All kinds of business were suspended and Ait an early hour the etroets were, •thronged.-- 7 There seemed to be'a general disposition to decorate, and public and private 'henget vied with each other in the display of Alga. and bunting, while the vessels in the harbor and along the wharves were gaily decorated with all the flags and Signals in their lookers. It had been arranged by .Governor Stan ford to announce to ns the completion of our part of the road and simultaneously with the driving down of the last spike the electric spark was made to communicate with the great guns in_onr harbor. Eaoh.blow of Elie sledge=hammer - upon — the - spike - was echoed by the click of the telegraphic: - instruments The wires were connected with the City Hall, and the big bell pealed-out right merrily with every stroke of the hammer 800 miles away. Immediate!. the Grand Marshall iroceed- ed with his aide to the preeession'and the column moved forward in ten large divisions preceded by mounted trumpeters. Space will not permit to attempt a description of the order in which they moved. All trades and professions were represented. A striking feature was the Fire Department in their red shirts and fire suits. Each ,of the engines was highly burnished and pOlished with , steam up and along the route the whistle Ittevety-1-screemed conduit - 11v At her divia;-- ru - a - 11y. _not her division was distinguished by the first locomotive ever builtin-California-drawnron a truck-marked scriptiuu : in California-1850: Another now and high. ly finished one built entirely of California material was drawn through the streets by twenty-four gray horses—weighing almost as many tons. Hundreds of other features and inscriptions prominent and amusing might be mentioned. The literary exercises were of the highest order and were presided over by his Honor, the Mayor, who after a few brief remarks in troduced a celebrated singer from Scotland. He sang The Star Spangled Banner in a mag nificent style, the vast audience ° joining in the chorus. The applause which followed was deafening and he was obliged to sing it again. After the song the poet was pre. sented who delivered in excellent style the following, introducing it by this quotation from Whittier : "I bear the tramp of pioneers, Of nations yet to be, The #rst low wash of waves where soon Shall roll a human sea." Through toil-built mountain gates, We come, o , Sister States! With h ymns of praise; Where white Sierras rise, Where green plains face the skies, We grasp the victor's prize To crown our days ! The wild grand march is done ! The guarded ways ate won From sea to sea We see His mighty hand Now clasp this iron band To grace 9nr matchless land Where all is free! Glatt be the song we Bing! Columbia e Harp we airing With iron chords ; Swift shall grand music sweep, Round thrones beyond the deep, Till tyrants kneel and weep, Or grasp their swords ! Our Noifon pure and free, Give thanks, 0 God to Thee,. For wisdom taught! No grim war-harness,mars, Not one slave fetter scars These iron, music bars Her eons )ave wrought ! Ogle of our judges -followed in an oration which was in 'keeping with the event we cel ebrated. In the evening the city was brilliantly il luminated and the heavens ablaze with fly ing rockets. So you see we have celebrated to a man this—great enterprise—the greatest in this great age—where a traveler at the Capitol of Maine can step into a car and in eight days be set down io the Capitol of California.— Over the completicike of this grand national work we can afford to be jubilant. The large brains which conceived and pushedlorward this enterprisci deserves the thanks of the na tion ; this labor is one which redounds to the glory of the people. Through trials and ad versity, amid scoffs and sneers or 'lukewarm Ruppert, subject to the most grovelling sus pieions, they have °enflamed steadfast in pur. pose until now from the Summit of Achieve. meat they look down nixie a conquered world. They have conquered Nature, lev eled her bartioades, spanned chasms, bridged over rivers, shot through the bowels of moun tains, and today survey the work with more just pride than that which swelled the bosom of Napoleon when he reviewed his army on the summit of •the Alps. Never before in our history has occurred so great an event—' in which all could participate so heartily ani POEM. Ssi.oo. Paz* Tease with so little of mental reservation. Our po litical epochs—the declaration of our inde- - pendence, the triumph of revalution, the ab olition of slairery, the final rurrender of Re bellion; were all mighty 'Olll5 in the story of Man—mighty in their influence upon, the destiny of •Man: , But each had its 'honest thousands who turned aside the head. Mit this completion of the Great Work- no heart that's honest but in Whop some share.' All petty jealousies i all narrow,p,onservstoms and obstructive iodifference are sunk from sigh `May' we 'dot Veil fejolee ! Blending With tionse'Of , pride at What we have just finished is the . confidence that is but a be ginning, and while t the echoes of the Sledge which drove the Last Spike into the Last Tie are still ringing in the,ear , of imagination, there-are_brains. among its in labor ,with schemes ; beside which the great. Railroad kball'be great only flit it is first. We'have opened up a highway for the costly merchan dise of Asia; next tferehall compel the light ning to fake another. plunge under the cold sea t. 4 carry our orders to the merchants of the East,. our. West., During the present decade I believe we • shall give to geography, two Continents instead of one by severing the ligament which binds them. The van• guard• of the army of emigration is already on its Nay to this coast. When California shall have, the ton million of inhabitants for which nature has fitted her, and to Which art is extending iron facilities; when Oregon, Washington. Nevada, Arizona and other States 'and Territories which are yet te-be— shall have become densely populated the tide will set southward. _The plains of New Mex ico will - in time, teem with an agricultural population. Its barren mountains—barren only as to vegelable brit - fertile as to mineral— *Ont.—will be eirdpelled to yield riot} re turns .to the miner: Nor will the lido be stayed bythe_southern boundary of the Uni ted Mates., That boundary must give way before-it and in all probability the, present decade will witness the American farmer gar nering his crops in the fields of Sonora and Sinaloa. The other Mexican Stat, evitably follow and tho city of Mexico be. come the Capitol of the United States. This is no fanoy painting-4-1- believe—there are - those - living - who - eh a 11 -- loolc - uporrit — Upott -- thWachool atlasses of our children the Darien ship canal will mark the southern boundary of the American Union of States. C. F. S. A GOOD SHOT.—A gentleman remarking in a tavern that he had shot a hawk at ninety yards with No. 6 shot, another replied : 'Must have a good gun, but Uncle Dave here has one that beats it.' 'Ah I' said the first, 'how far will it kill a hawk with No. 6 shot 'I don't use allot or ball either,' answered Unele Dave himself. 'Then what do you use, Uncle Dave ?' 'I abet salt altogether. I kill my game PO far with my gnu that the game would spile before I could get it.' "When my mother says no, there's no yes in it." Here is a sermon in a nutshell,— Multitudes of parents say no but after a good deal of teasing and debate it finally becomes yes. Love and kindness are essentially ale• mente in the successful management of chil- dren, but firmness, decision, infletiblity and uniformity of treatment are no less impor. taut. A Pittsburg toper, on being consigoed to the lockup the other day, gave his name as Abe Lincoln. On being told , that he must• give his true name and further. informed that the late Mr. Lincoln was not addicted to drink, he.said his name was Andy Johnson, and he was positive that that party drank, He .passed. , . • " There is a peAr tree on the farm of J. W. Mathes, near Bethlehem, in Clark county, Indiana, that measures ten feet in eireum• ference. It has produced in one season a crop of sevents-fiye bushels, at picking time, and of course- must have produced several bushels more that fell off before picking time. The tree ie now sixty-years An exchange has the following; 'lt is said that there are iuoro editors unmarried titan any other class of, professional man. For the reason,. wo suppose, that the majori ty of them are men of fine sentiment, and do not wish so starve any body's sister, A cowardly fellow having . kicked a news- boy the other day for pestering him to buy an evening paper, t h e lad waited till nether boy adoisted the 'gentleman,' and then-ebont ed in the hearing of a II bystanders,' 'lt's oo use to try him, Jim, be can't read,' . A man in Main applied for two gallons of rum for 'wechasical purposes "Fot what me chanical purposes?' ioquired the agent 'For raising re.barn,'.was the,reply. Ladies Lte life watches--pretty enough to look at— sweet 'faces and delicate hands but somewhat difficult to *regulate' alter they ate a-going: ----- A .young kerl,in. Willem:lsis swallow(' for ty ,percusaioo cape. , 110 f mother has refrain ed from spanking her from fear of an emplcr aioo. • [loopa Dave been Oomparede to obstinate persona, because, they atand out, about Arian. Money—tho "root of all evil," to thoao who spend their lives rooting for it. ri . Vidoh eide,of a horse invariably has the moat hair on it ? Thejouteide. Brigham Young 416 eighteen Monnou Sunday-aehonb at Salt Lake. - Vows that a;43 made in a storm4msot gotten in 'a calor. Wanted...A snare to.,eibtob kick bat. NUMBER 66