. , . ~ . , . , , , , ~. • ' . , .. .•,i' • - , , . • . ;., , , . . . • . . . . ~ „ . . , .4' • , . , . - 5 ,,„,„, ~.... ~ 1.11, . ~ . . . . . ' I ‘,.. • , 47 , ..-..,-34, iorr".•• , • , • .: „ .•—.. , .. , , ,• . :,.. .4 ,'':-.',-,-- •:.- -: ;:•'.. - v. ,,, ;: , ‘ 4 -,,, : , ' ,'..,-,-•,_,; .• :. ~ , 7 ,' , '''.' , . . • . , . , . . . , .. . ' ' , . ' , .. • ati o ;,: ~ , ,- ,,kze"...:, .‘.4,-, - , , . . • . - - 0 • ‘ • ' . • . , ', ‘ l :' ' ' Vi" ,I..;:•‘L ,' ' 4 i :fi... '. . • - i.en' - ‘ l / 4 . , . . , . , . . . ' `•-, ' "' l, ..$., • : ',. 4. ' , : ‘ , :i , 4 . 1 ; ~.',,::' . ' , . . , _i!',.'" ...Y il:.. 1: y -IA .'' ' , ' • . . . , . , . • i... 1,.... / . ''" .k / e.' -:. i „, " ,' , , i. , ""if.;',''',7'' 1111 , .. , . IL - ' :.. 1. , : .. ‘1,t,...-.7';14,f;r•1'ee...4;:;;:.%),:1f.:', .. , 7 4' , ... ''1);.7. -: ' . • lOW „ .1. )... x......11 . .-. - ,:,,y . , 4 \ l , --3., 4,2,. . •. ~ • ...: 4 ..,.. , A ~r-4 . 3 , 4 p ." - • „.••• . •,, t. , , ''''';:.- "I''''';'-;- .:.;'-' ,''''F . ', !T.' 7 ,.',„ - . r. ' , Y , . ''..°'*,„-r c5, , , A., 5 ,:; ,. ;; : , .. 4 ,,'- 3;.. .„,,..... ~ ...: : :!.';'7-1, 4 , :, , '' :.. ' .. .. 7 ..,.y. :1 • • •• - . '''... , ..: . . .. . . . . ._ ~...g.... , .. , ~. . . 1: . ~ ~ ... , .... ~ . ~ . .. ..: . , .. . ....... . • . ...._ ~ ~, . . . . . . • • 137 . W. 331alis. VOLUME XXII. AMR/ GM. G. F., MDT, MACHINE SHOP LUMBER YARD jHE 'encsdribers having enlarged tneir shops and added the latest improved machinery for working Wood and Iron, are now prepared to do all kinds of Work in . their Line, and are raanufac. Luring the Willoughby's Gnm-Spring Grain and Fey talizer Drill, Greatly Improved; The Cel ebrated Brinkerhoff Cornsheller; Gibsons' Champion Wnshing Machine; John Rid dlesberger's Patent Lifting Jacks. THE PROPALETORS WAYNESBORO' imnin PaIDN'Y having furnished their shops with the latest im proved Machinery for this Branch of Business, they are new prepared to manufacture and tarnish all --kinds-of ' t~.`~~r ~r~ ' . ch--as-Sasll,—Doors,-.Eramea,ttVrir„ —}lll Tida Mau!dings, some Eighteen Different Styles; nice, Niuiring, Porticoes, &c. &c., Flooring, Weath erboarding, and ALL KINDS LUMBER, We tender our thanks to Coe community • far their liberal patronage bestowed upon us•and hope 'by ri.ta-attention-to-Dusiness-to-inoliva-continuanee of the-same. . - Also•acents for the sale of Dodge & StoYenson's -Ktrby Valley Chief, and World Combined' in; and M , wing Machines; and the ,celebrated Clipper Mower may 7, 18693 111 ME ERE MN," WAYNESBORO', PA:, P/4_.__4 , -Bir,LJRNS Alt RIEION PROPRIETOR, ao 241 ; ata.—Auld Larg Syne, mylf true love was sick to death, Trada, train, hia la, Fa tall hep at her latest breath Tra.fa, tra la, Der race of•life could hot he run, 'l'ra-la, tra-la, I d buy some Drugs •ot . A ralPrsou 'At the Drug Sane on air , Corner If I was bald without a hair,] 'fra ht, trn In, tra In, I'd laugh at that,.l would not care, 'frit la, tra In, tra la, I'd bring them back, yes, every one, 'l'm In. tra In, tan la. By Drugs I bought of Amberson At the Drug Store on the Corner. 1r I was tanned to darkest (lye, Tra'la, trii fa, tra la, I would not care, I would not cr,7, Pra la, nu Ia • tra la. For soon a bleaching would be donq 'fra la, tra la, tra la • By Prop I'd buy of Amberson At the Ihug Store on the Corner, Then three times three and tiger to, Tra tra la, tra la. • For what we know that they cgn do, Tra la, tea la, tra la, With chorus loud, the vict'ry won Tra I s, tea la. tra In, By Drugs. I bought of Amberson At the Drug Store on the Corner. TiRUGS—THE BEST AND PUREST ,AL ways on had at PtIN Ts . CHEMICAL AND 'MINERAL Paint, White Load and Cobra, the best assort ment in town at , • M EROSENE, OILS, VARNISHES, DYEIS all kinds at BRUSHES,PAINT,VARNISH,SASH, HAIR end Tooth Brushes at T RUSSES AND SUPPORTERS AT 1-Epp RANDY, WHISKY, WINES AND RUM 1.3f0r medicinal use one PATENT MEOICINES--ALL THE STAND aid Point Medicines of the day at TXTRACTS, FOR FLAVORING, PE RFU mery and toilet articles generally at TIHYSICI %NS PRESC RI PTIONS CA R laity compounded at ..The Corner Drug Store." July 16 11H81' 'TALL ARRIVAL!' WELSH has just received a full assattment of Goods, in his line of business. his stock coronas in part, of all tho latest styles of Meti's and bays • HATS .AND. 0. PS . Men's, Wome s n's, Misse's, Bop's and {Aildren's BOOTS, GAFFERS, SHOES end Slippers of ..every riesciiptioa. , Ladies and Misses • Z:l3 (3:;0 SZY t. 13 • a BonnetFrames,Trimutinirst Sundowns and_ Mats Dmas Trimmings,. Hoop ,Skirts, Hair Nets, Hair Coils, °Airy, teloves, Parasols, Sun I.7zaherellas. Fans, &c. School, Blank end Miscellaneous Books,Station. ery of all kinds; Notions.and Fancy Goods. 411 of which will tic sold as chean as the cheapest. Vent. 1:.0 • • J: IL WELSH "TAM FRICE, D. B. atIOSELL, SASH AND at short nOtice LTDY, rtztpK. &'CO WAINESBOkO', FRANKLIN WIJr4ITI, PENNSYLVANIA, THURSDAVMORNING, MARCH 3, 1870: p 7 sZlD_al °6i 41 it_44- 11 / 1 All CLOUDED STIRS. The daylight was fading softly " . And I shut up my book with a sigh, To wait for the larva of evening To brighten• the twilight shy And one after one they spangled The beautiful arch above, And answered my gaze as softly As the eyes of the friends I love. Dui soon o'er the blue sky's bosom A shadowy cloud was drawn, And the stars that bad beamed so brightly Were all froM their!laces gone; Yet I knew they wereialmly shining Wheil the tky is forever clear, And I knew that by patient waiting, I should see them at length appear. Then gently, oh I very gently A delicate breeze swept by, And brushed with its airy pinions The clouds from the azure sky ; And there, in their tranquil beauty, Like pearls in a crystal rill, TLe beautiful stare of heaven Were shoring above me mil JO! thus from-affection's circle The 'ewels of love de . art • . Thus falleth the clouds of darkness And gloom on the mournior h —'-Bet-when - frora - our - tearful faces The shadows of eqrth shall fall, When we put on dur robes immortal, Then, then shall we see them all. ,~ i ►~ 'c THE STORY OP A DIVER. It is_a strange b_usinesm The danger_fas. einates some e -but the-perilis never lost-sight of. I put on the helmet for the first time more than ten years ago, and yet I never resumed it without a feeling that it may be the last time I ever should go down. Of course one has more confidence after awhile, but there is something in being shut up in armor weighed down with a hundred pounds, and knowing that a leak in your life pipe is your death, that no diver cap get rid of.— And Ido not know that I should care to banish the feeling, for the sight of the clear blue sky, the genial sun, and the face of a fellow-man- after long hours among the fi4hes, makes you feel like one who Vas and. dealy been drawn away from the grasp of death. I have had some narrow escapes while pursuing my strange profession; every diver has, or has been unusually lucky to es cape them. I think the most dangerous place I ever got into was going down to examine the propeller Comet, sunk off Toledo In 'voila mg about her bottom, I got my. air f ipe coiled over a large sliver from the stoves hole, and could not reach it With my hands. Every time I sprang up co unlase the hose nay tender would give use the 'slack' of the line, thus letting me fall back aaaio did not - understand his dotk.s, and did not know what my signals on the life linen cant. It was two hours and a half [dote I was relieved, and there was not a moment that I was not looking to see the hose cut by the ragged wood. It's a strange feeling you have down there. You go walking over a vessel, tdamhering tip her sides, peering here and there, and the fooling that you are alone makes you nervous and uneasy. Sometimes a vessel einks down so fairly that she stand's up on . the bottom as trim and neat as if she rode on the surface.— Then you, can go down in the cabin, up the shrouds, walk all over her, just as easy as a sailor could abbe were still dashing away before the breeze. Only it seems so quiet, so tomblike; there are no waves down there —only a swaying back and forth of the wa ters, and a sea sawing o: the ship. You hear. nothing from above. The great fiqhes Will come swimming about, rubbing thefr noses against your glass, and staring with a won derful lock into your eyes. The very still ness sometimes gives life a chill. You hear just a moaning, wailing sound, like the last cotes of an organ, and you cannot help think ing of decd men floating over end around you. • • I have been awn especially to rescue the bodies of those' droweeo. About lour years ago the propeller Buckeye, belonging to the Northern Transportation Company, went down in the river St. Lawrence, in seventy. eight feet of water; and it was known that a mother and child-were sleeping in their State room at the time of her sinking. The father begged nettle, and ,offered me a great deal of money to take out the corpses, and though I dreaded the work, lat last consented. I bad been all over the wreck two or three times;aad knew just where the atate roam was. The dour was fast locked, and I waited a good. while before bursting it open. Of course a dead person couldn't harm you; but even in broad day, on shore, and With people _around you,, don't you know that the sight and presence of a dead person brings, up solemn thoughts and nervous feel logs ? 1 knew, how they would liak, how they were floating around in the town, and if the father hadn't been looking so wretched above, there was no money to tempt me in there: lint at last 1 . got a crowbar from for wards, and not letting myself think, gave the light door a blow which stove it in. The water came rushing out, the vessel just then lurched over towards my aide, and out they came, the woman first, her 'oyes wide open and hair trailing behind, arid in her ieft band she held the hued of the child. I knew ho'w .A.ll iri.C.3.9100113 Ci.!Eto*Lt• W i a1133.1,1, - Sr aTON7l7ol3Ell3Ciiii". they ivould : look, but I sareamed out, and jumped back. Her face was fearfully leis totted, allowing how.hard death had bean made, and the eyes looked through the gre4l waters at we in a wey that, made my ftelh creep. The child had died easily, l irs lltde white face giving one no sign Of terror. i - It was a good while before I fastened the line to them and, gave the signal to haul g u i p n , 00,4:, , following, This is one of the drawbacks to any feeling of curiosity a diver might Other wise have. 1 never. go down the hatchway or tit-- cabin steps; without thinking of a dead ...n floating about there. 'When the Lac La i = le stink on St. Clair flats, the engineer wa: caught in the rushing waters, and no trace wa: . ver found of his body.— His wife came to m-, leering that I was to go down to the wreck, a.d asked me to find the body if possible. I remembered this when I went down, and went groping through the engine-room io momentary expectation of encountering the dead body. I looked so long without finding it that 1 got nervous, add had started,for the ladder to go up, when I felt something strike my helmet and give way, and a chill went dancing over me as I thought the dead body was at hand.— But on reaching, I found that I had run a gainst the fire-hose ' the end of which was hanging down, and that which I se dreaded was stillbidden beyond my sight. A diver does not to go down more than' one hundred nod twenty feet; at that . depth the pressure is pa'nf'ul, and there is danger of internal injury. I can stay down for five or six. hours at a time at a hundred and fifteen or twenty feet, and do a good d"ej of bard work. Ia ha_seaters_oLLake__ Huron the diver can see thirty or forty feet uwaY, but_the_other_lakes_vvilLacreem_a_ves._ _ isol_That, ten fee atam_y_o_u. Up here, you seldOm think of accident or death, but a hundred feet of water washing over your bead would set you to thinking. A little stoppage of the air-pump, a leak in your hose a careless action on the part of your tender, and the weight of a mountain would press the life out of you before you could mote. And you may 'foul' your pipe ( or lino you elf; erd — in — yourt este - brit' g—on what you (Wad. loften get ruftiose Broiled stair or rail, and generally release it with• out much trouble ; the bear idea of what a slender thing holds back the clutch of death -oft my throat makes a coli sweat — start from every pore.—Englisk Magazine. A Beautiful Sentiment Sixteen• years ago Rev. J. W. Maffit, then in his prime, delivered a lecture which closed, with the following passage: 'The Phaaix, a fabled bird of antiquity, when it felt the advancing; chills of age, built its own funeral urn, and o. fired his pyre by means which nature's instincts taught. All its plumage and its . forrn efbeauty became ashes, but then would rise the young—beau tiful from the urn of death and chamber of dt , etry would the fledgeling came, with its eyes turned to she sun, and essaying its dirk velvet wings sprinkled with gold and hinged with silver, on the balmy air, rising a little higher, until at length, in the lull confidence of.flight, it gives a cry of joy, and seen be comes a glittering speck on the bosom of the asrial ocean. Lovely voyager of earth, bound on its heavenward journey to the sun I So rises the spirit bird from the twins of the body, the funeral urn which its Maker bath the death fires. Se towers away to its home in the pure elements of spirituality, intsile.et Pbee rix, to dip its proud wings into the fountain of eternal bliss. So shall dear pre cious humanity survive from its ashes of the burning world. So beautilully shall the urn changed soul soar within rho disc of eternity's luminary with undazzled eye arta unscorched wings—the Phi:o3hr. icumertality—taken to its rainbow home, and cradled on the beating bosom of eternal love. PROPRlETY.—Merriment at a funeral, or in the house of worship, is not only disgust ing, but painfully abhorrent to all our kind and respectful feelings There is a simple and beautiful propriety, pleasing to all', which gives grace to the manners, beauty to the person, sweetness to the disposition, and loveliness to the whole being, which all should strive to possess. It is to be neither too gay not too grave—too gleesome nor too sad; nor either of these at improper places. It is to be mirthful, without being silly ; joy. ous, without being foolish; sober, without being despondent, to speak plainly without giving offense to be grave ) without casting a shadow over others. In fine, it is' to be what every body loves and nobody 'dislikes, and just what makes us and others happy.— Thie is propriety ; and those who possess this richest flowering virtue 8f the soul, which breathes ambrosial sweetness along every walk of life, get the credit of posses• sing its counterpart, that rare quality of character honored everywhere, humbly claim. teued common sense, universally aoknowl• edged to be the best of all sense. Make no vows of enmity while %you ore smarting under a sense of uegteet or cruelty; pain speaks with little j ropriety,. Busy. bodies are almost always idlers. The less business a, ruse has the more he meddles with that of hit; neighbors. Make a note of this. Never.euffer your courage to exert itself io fierceness, your resolution in obstinacy, your wisdom iu cunning, nor your patience in sullenness and despair. Whatever parent gives his children good instruction anti sets them at the same time s bad example, may be oonsidered as bringing them food in one hand and poison in another. • • Justneake up your mipd kefore you. start out horn home that you will look on the sunniest side of everything, enjoy yoursilf as,toueh os yovari, and use every eudeavor to make the journey ita *agent to those around you,,aud it will be very silaular if soonboily . tuft the better tor it t H• t Pearls Of: Thought. Si/rely happiness,rale - eave s Hite the 4 . 10 , of heaven; „end ()Very countenance bright with suttlek_andsloVing with inno cent I enioyttelit ) ,is tilnirrot transmitting• to otia4i,e the rays of a supreme' and ever-Shin ing henevolonce. Ili thou art rich, then show the greatness of thy fortune; or what is better, the great pl-threoul-'-in-the-meekttess-ef-th-y-con. versation. Con descend to men of low estate, support the distressed, and. patronise the neglected 4 Be great. There are souls which fall from heaven flowers; bat ere the pure and fresh buds can open, they are trodden in the dust Ot the earthand lie soiled and crushed un der the-foul tread.of some brutal hoof. • What 'the sun is to nature, what God is to the stricken heart which kuows how to lean upon Him, are cheerful, persons in the house sod by the wayside. Be true to - your manhood's conviction, and in the end you will , not only be respected by the world, lint have the approval of your conscience. .\ ' As the a-41;owever rich it may be, can not be pt iiibtive without culture, so the mind, with 7.o.3:,linltivation, can never pro• duce good tit. To think of each other is good, to speak - kindly of each other is better, but to act kindly cLe, toward another, best of all. How much/ more we might make of our _family life, of 'our friendships," if every se cret thought of love blossomed into a deed? Base all your actions, upon a principle of right; preserve your integrity of character, and, doing this, never reckon the cost. Aid hot ir ri_w_lioarlittle_aome_enjoy_ the great things they possess, there would trot_be_so : much_env_y_ia_the_world. Marry 'of the waves of trouble 'like those of the ocean, will, if we await them calmly, break. at our feet and disappear. Otte of the dust important rules of the science of maniers is an almost absolute si lence in regard co yourself. There 14 nothing like a fixed, steady aim, with an honorable purpose. It dignifies na lure, and insures success. Underthe - greatest - provocationsot-igrour wiidom and duty t, bridle our passions Be deaf to the quarrelsome, blind to the scorner, and dumb to those who are inischie• vously inquisitive If you would not have affliction visit you twice listen at once to what it teaches. He who would govern others, first should be the master of himself. Endeavor for the best, and provide against the worst. What am I to Be ? This is an important question for all, but it has a special pertinency to the young.— The problem of their personal destiny, in the 'cause which deierwitie it, is net yet solved. What sort of men or women they will be, what position they willoccupy, and what part•they will not in the after-history of life, are questions as yet held is reserve. Being io the commencement of their jour. ney, •they have before. them the programme of the coming future. The child is the man in embryo, and the man is but the child matured. What the one is, usually decides what the other will be. Here is a lad of ten years, How will he appear in adult age? What position will he fill? What attainments will be possess 7 What will be hi - hits and character as then formed ':' his be an industrious, competent, virtu t ud well finished man, or an indolent, .le., lees, incompetent, and useless being God .tics established a coo. unction between the e -flier and later periods of life that we can no more, change than we C,113 tear the stare from their positions in space Childhood and youth form the ele mentary Lases of manhood. It is the sad misfortune and fault with a great many young people that they do not see this truth io season to profit by it; yet in after.years, they will see it, and in after years they will feel its power. There is no dodging it, and no chaugiog it. Later years may regret the follies of the earlier period; but this does not recover the period, or by any means remedy all its entailed evils Recollect this, young map, you who have a future of honor to secure, or of 'disgrgee to suffer. First, be right in tlie foundation princi. plesef life, and then be what you are with all your might.* "A MAN AND A BILOTITER" TN Tag VHS.- OIRIA. SENATE —lu thd Virginia 'Senate, a few days age, quite a sensation was created by Mr. Muscly, a'negro Senator from Grotch land. Ile mese to explain a vote he had given, wheel the President told him his ex planation was out of order, sod upon Mosely insisting upon speaking, ordered him to sit down. The' order was o!reyed., Subsequent ly, by general consent; Mesely , wan allowed to make his explanation, in the course of 13 , which he uttered this ate-thrust : "Moreover, gentlem n,'.l havesome of the best white blood of Vi , inia contain?, in my veins. On one, side Ic u claim as high and honorable descent as any, Senator in this, chamber, Gentlemen, Tam your brother ! I OW also the colored man ' s brother, I rep resent, both races 'I ant Angio-Saxou and Anglo-African, aod I desire to do justice to my kin on both sides ",. • Mosely is described as a dark mulatto, of good '•form, fine end intelligent face, about' 45 years of age, and u fineat and tolerably correct speaker. 'Now, speak)" you was t.;..l)ti turned'into an aniroal,'• Add Jim. 'what would you like to be, 'Oh, I'dte, a lic ; C; replied .'O, I'd be a lion,' because he's so—" Ob. no, don% be a lion, •interrupted little Tom, who had some recent paieful experience at school, 'be a wop, and Ilea, you eau sting the sc ! bool tattstet.' • eep our temper, an AR Incident of the War. When our troops undei Getieral McClellan, penetrated the mountain rine of West Vir. gtnia, in may, 11$01, they Tneountered in a quiet nook on the side of Laurel' Ridge, a 'venerable matron standing in the door of a log cabin. One of the= men imaged her with:, Well, old lady, whiney your flag?' .aiga it ot_noz agy L ! m4 f I Wel!, then, which aide are you for ?' don't know what you mean,' she an swered, in astonishment. 'Are you secesh r asked the man, amused At her ignorance. 'No, 1 hain't,' she rejoined, emphatically : • 'Are you Union ? . 'No, I tell you.' 'Well, what are you ?' 'l'm a good, plain taptist—that's what I am.' • . . Thd man laughed heartily, and at last one of them said : 'You'll not refuse to-hurrah for 'Old Abe,' will you, old lady ?' 4 Who is 'Old Abe ?' asked the dame, grow ing more astonished every minute. " 'Abraham Lincoln, the President of fhb United States.' - * i 'Why, hain't. Gin ral W ,ash ngton Prear. dent ?' 'No, ha's been dead for more than sixty years. iGia'ral Wasliiaoori dead !' she fa! screamed. Then rushing into the cabin / she called 'Sam ! Sam Z' , 'Well, what is it, mbther ?' said a voice within. _ltta_moment _she reapp.earetLat—the---doo with a veteran of fifty, who the M6O alter wards_learned_wae_har_aon. _' Why, only think, Sam,' she cried, excited ly. 'Wend Washington's dead. Sakes alive ! I wonder there going to happen next I' Circumstances Alter Cases A good story - is told of a colored member elect of the Virginia Assembly, who, being nearly white, was able' tikrisss at the leading -- W as bing ton - h - ote le - f or - a — Cuban. Here hi - a - Te`bt °thole] position brought bim in contact with hungry Virginian politicians who treated him with considerable deference,end were care ful to say nothing of his African origin.-. About this time an old_Yirginia_J_udge_eame along and recegniiing in the supposed Cuban one of hie former slaves and he, in turn, recognized the Judge, addressed him famil iarly. The old Judge was °furious at his presumption, saying : 'You impudent nigger, you, I don't want your . acquaintance.' 'Oh, but you may need my services, Judge,' said _the-humble legislator. 'No, I will die first,' replied the Judge,_growing more irate at the presumption of his ez•slave. Just here one of the Jhdge's friends, who was familiar with all the facts whispered in hie ear, that the negro was a member of the Assembly of Virginia, and that as (the Judge) was a can didate for a district judgeship—which, under the new constitution of ,Virginia is made elective by the assembly—it might be as well for him to treat the darkey civilly, with a view of getting hie vote. This put a new phase on things. The Judge's demeanor to ward the'darkey wag suddenly ehangedr— When he had. dispelled the late 'unpleasant ness' sufficiently, to admit of the proposition, the judge said, looking directly at the negro assemblyman.; 'Gentlemen, suppose we all go up to my room and take .a drink. PARTING mill DEAD-HEADS.—The Al bany Express had a supply 'of non-paying `patrons • It bids them good bye in the fol lowing tender terms: 'This week we strike from our list about fifty names who will 'not pay their dues to the printer. In doing so we take them by the band, and, with • tears is our eyes, bid them un effectionate farewell. Good-bye, old subs ! Take care of your selves. • Sometimes think of the Express, which you have had so long for -nothing.-- Sponge upon other printers now for awhile. A change of diet will doubtless be good for you. Poor old fellows! We are a little sorry to turn you out upon the dark night, without a lamp, but it must be so. &like for the nearest neighbor's light. He may let you in and feed you far a year or two, upon the strength of your honorable prom ism to pay at the end of time; rot our selves we have enough of those curios pledges to supply oureabinet for the present. We have labeled them carefully, and they are open to general inspection. With many thank' for your self-sacrificing indulgence to us, and your honest appreciation of obli gations existing toward our, °Erie, we again and finally say, farewell forever. A i icE YOUNG MAN.—The only practi• cal .jse in which Mr. Barham was, ever per sonally engaged, was as u boy at. Canterbury, when watt a school tallow, ,now . a valiant Major, 'famed for deaden! . Innis,' he entered a Quaker meeting house; looking around at the assembly, the 'latter held up a penny tart, and said solemnly • 'Whoever speaks first shall bare ,this 'Go thy way,' aaswered• a drab colored gentleman risiug, 'go.thy way ; and—' 'The pit's yoursosir,' exclaimed Barham, placing it before the astonished speaker, and hastily effecting his eicape. A Yankee one day asked his lawyer how an heiress might be carried off. !You caw not do it inch safety,' said the counsellor, 'hut I'll tell you, what you may do. Let her mottat'a horse and hold, a bridle arbip';. do yea then mount behind her, and you are safe, for she runs away with yon.' The next day the lawyer found that it was. his own. daughter who had 'tun away with his client, There is'a young. lady in town eo modest that ahe had. a young map. turned . 014 t: of iloorasfor saying that the witty had drifted: smoo p 14930. aexV. Hanging al !fustian& The DaVeuport (Iowa) Democrat says : Hans is good at,‘pitch,' tot not success. fut as a provider. He won't wake money for . hittiselt, and spends what Gretchen makes. She intervisired drtiggist. , He promised arsenic, smelt-a 'rat; put Hans on his guard; and gale Gretchen starch 'instead of poison. Hans threw ap his hand and went home. It • •!,-! rs i or an hour or two by the side of the would be murderess. The next day everything moved onlist the same. Haas didn't' eat a very badly breakfast, and went up town to buy his provender. At discos time he came home hungry,. and pitched into the victuals with unspeaka ble avidity.. Hie jaws soon lighted on the treacherous starch. Ile gave a yen' and doubled hinistilf up like a wounded boa con strictor. fell on the floor and had spasms. Inshort, he took on scollopit high. His wife eat . by,' Copying the spectacle and tenderly ingairiag i ,24W hat is der matter wit Hans r When he, bad become insensible she went up stairs, three at a time, and let down a good sized rope throUgh an auger hole into the room where Hans lay. Then she aims doWn and fastened the rope around his neck, peop• , peel ,him up in a Sitting position, and again _ went-up stairs. . But Hans had en inkling of her fell intent • and, coming to himself. with remarkable presence of mind he quickly undid the noose _from_his_ueck_andeslipped-it-around-the-leg of the dinner table, then he calmly sat down in a chair and awaited deielopments. The way that table lit across the floor the next minute was a caution. It was yanked all ut-ef-itha-pei-ari-every dish on .it smashed - into a thousand pieces, and they the piece of furniture-drawn-tight-up-againiit-the_cieiling._ _ Soon after was heard the voice of his beloved wife from the upper chamber window, calling out in accents of grief that her dear ord had committed suicide, and the neighbors 'cow ' menced to run to the house. Coming down stairs she met the irate Hans, who advanced threateningly, brandishing a formidable awiteb, with which he proceeded to belabor ' her moat unmercifully. Gretchen could not see chew it come to was l- 11.6t. oould swallow poigon with impunity, and giVes- it. up as a had job. Hans enjoys his onstomary• evening game, and has his opinion of a man who can't govern his household. A colored cook, expecting company of her own kidd, was at a loss to know how to en• Certain her friends. Her mistress field: 'Polly, you must make an apology.",, 'La, Misses, how can I make' it ? :Get no apples, no eggs, no butter, no Win to make it wid,' _ • ' Somebody says that Ike's last trick was to throw Mrs. Partington's gaiter in the alley, and then call the old lady down from the third story-to see an alley-gaiter have called her jut before he threw the gaiter from the window ; and asked her see •Shoo. Fly.' • - (.Iluisitive chap asked a soldier "with an empty sleeve, how he lost his arm. go a thistahing , machine,' answered the soldier. Were you rooning e the mullion ?' 'Well, no; Geo Grant bad obarge. Of all the deslaritions of love, the most admirable one was that which a young gen tleman made to a your lady, who asked him to show her the picture of the one he loved, when he immediately presented her with a mirror. ,• 'Biddy,' timid a lady to her servant, 'I wish you would step over and soo how old Mrs. Jones is this morning v In a low moments Biddy returned with the :information that .Mrs. Jones.was just seventy-two years, seven mouths and two, days old. A dyin g Irishman was asked by his con fessor if h e was ready to renounce the devil and all his works. 'o,' your • honor,' said Pat. 'don's ask me that ; I am going to a strange country, And 1 don't intend to mks 'myself enemies. 'I say,. boy, stop that ox r haven't got no stopper." Well, head him, then.' fle's already beaded, air? 'Confound your im• pertinence, turn hire !' 41e'srigbt side out already, sir.' 'Speak to hite,_you raseaLyoul' 'Good morning, kir. ' _ A little three-year old girl in New Orleans recently astociehed her mother, who attempt ed to correct her, by motioning her away with her chubby little hand and scornful:y saying : •Shoo, fly, don't budder me L' ~A sob on beinf walked/ The . 7 Aclue' r Piser says (gni (11 which the Almighty reaps the harvest of fools: • dentist ou.t West 1d• to give iQ the btber day ; a bid wan Vid "anew net.. of - teeth put in a five coMb, 1— - • - lir hp should a. man never, marry a woman • named Elmo ? - Because by sodoiag, be rive his own KEite//..) • Why jars hen immortal 7 Beomse heron never.. seta. The author of this 'eon' has gone - to ro'ost: •• - ",tV.hy sre;bald cads, like heaven Z BeL canoe there is uo , diCe)ing or parting there. Younglidies.4jp generally honest, bat they will hook drifses., for • like a muse book I Sbn lire. NOIBER 34 ticin in Psalms, pestilence that :(1, 'Bugs.'