• i . .. . ... 4 '6:S. 1.7 k.-ett . ''. -.;,'.' 1 . .1••• 5 . A • • • -• . ... . . . • . F• ,4, ri ' ' -,, . ..- • 1, , , ,t.1,." C .J,,, Sr '- A •- i •...1. . ..• • • r '''...' •• .. , 4 An..;,e• 11 ''..-". 'j ....: ••• 1 • 1' •1 • ''' '' ' . . 4. t , . ,_. . _ ,N . ' ," -., '.• it;,l4) , • . • . . . . . . ~f .. •40'..,-..-/: ...1-;,:: 0: ,:',_:-.' : , , . ~• ........ • , • ..,...r., . 11 - . , :''''rc•-• . . . , r . . .-- • ' . 1,,,,.. - 1 :. • . 4 . ,:///',.! ~ ' l , ; 56r 7 .1 . •*• 41 e 1'i 1 ,• ••••• . r • ' , r ' •' • : -4: ',k . %... .: : :. 7 : 1: :• ": e .4 1' 1.7 a 41.er ~--: . • ; , , .. •"' ,'', -,,,•,.. •:..:,' ; " - ' tr 2 r. it_. •• • dss s rODI., . r , • ter v.... . . ~ .1 • s.r • .. • . teeilli ll*.ll A"..' 4 ..,,. 5. ,. . ''':-PT,••'Crz., ' , , , s , . , . • , . f . , . • s33r "liTiT. M3lair. VOLUME XXII. vkiliN DELL G. Y. LIDY, MACHINE SHOP LUMBER YARD ! LHE suescribers having enlarged tneir shops and vn'iled the latest improved machinery for working Wood and Iron, aro now prepared to do till kinds of Work in their Line, and are manufac , suing the Willoughby's Gum-Spring Grain and Fey talizer Drill, Greatly Improved; The Cel ebrated Brinkerhoff Cornshellor ; Gibsons' Champiou Washing Machine; John Rid dlesberger's Patent Lifting Jacks. TflE PROPRIETORS OF THE WAYNESBORO' SASH AND tni p.i,ArtrDny having furnished their shops with the :detest im proved Machinery for this Branch of Business, they are now prepared to Manufacture and furnish all kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL , such as Sash, Doors, Frames, Shutters, Blinds, Mouldings, some Eighteen— Different -Styles ; Cor nice, rSiairing, Porticoes, &c. elooring, Weath erboarding, and ALL KINDS UNDER, furnished at short notice We tender our thanks to the community fcir their liberal patronage bestowed upon us and hope by ristet attention to Business to merit a continuance of the same. ANo agents for the sale of Dodge & Sovenson's Kirby Valley Chief, and World Combined Reap ing and M •wing Niachinnes, and the celebrated Clipper Mower. may 7, 1869] LIDY, FRICK & CO, DROVER & BAWL FIRST PREIIIU3I ELASTIC STITCH SEWING MACHINES, • 495 Broadway, New York. 730 Chootzeut street, Philadelphia. POINTS OF EXCELLENCE Beauty and Elasticity of stitch. Perfection and simplicity of Machinery, Using both threads directly 'Tom the spools. No tastening of scams by band and no waste of thr.ntl. Wide range of application without change of ad- justment, ' The seam retains its beauty and firmness after washing and ironing. Besides doing all kinas of work done by other Machines, these Machines ofecutc the most beauti ful and permanent Embroidery and ornamental work. Er The Highest Premiums at all the fairs and exhibitions of the United r:.:tutes and Europe, have bmn awarded the Grover & Baker Sewing Ma chines, and the work done by theta, wherever ex hibited for 'competition. [it' The vet) , highest pr;g-•, Tun Cam cv Tug Molex of 11 ()No% was cunf•rred on the representa tive of the Grover & Bake r Sewing MaCtuneb, at the Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1869, thus attest ing their great supetiority over all other kiewMg Ma chines. For sale by D. W. ROBISON, Waynesboro' NOTmu. The undersigned halving had 17 Spare' experience ns a practical operator on Sewing Ma. chines vv,,ulth recotnntend the braver & Daher Fam ily Il.laclaine as the cheapest and best toechine for family use. The sttnplicity of construction and elasticity of silt( h wade by these machines are two very important points to their favor. 250,000 of these teach ii es are toothily bearing witness to the truth of our assertions and the dentoud is steadily Vierensing. We have also shuttle machines on howl for Tail? prs ae4 Coach trimmers' use. Call and see us. D. W. KOl3I•ON, Main st„ Waynesboro', Pa. IA6L AintIVALV 1 - 17 - ELSH has just received a full assortment of yy Goods, in his line of business. his stock consists in part, of all the latest. styles of Men's and boys EATS AWD 0425, Men's, Women's, Mass's, Boy's and Children's BOOTS, GAITERS, SHOES an•l Slippers of every description. Ladies and Misses zat 2.) Z 3 a Bonnet Frarne2,Trimminas, Sundowns end Hats Dress Trimmings,. Hoop Skirts, Hair Nets, Hair Gloves, Parasols, Sun Umberellus, Fans, Ste. Scho•i4 Blank and MiseellauJoub Books,Station- Dry of all kinds; Notions and Fancy Goods. All of which will be sold as cheat) as the cheapest• Sept 20 • •l. It. NCII,Sti SOAP-MAKING. riONCENTRATED LYE, a full pound in 4 1 4,,,,/ box at 2b Cents. - tiA.l.' SOD A. in large or small quantities, sold low by W, A. REID. Fob 3 WANTED.-1 will exchange goods at a fair market price ibr I.l,teori, LAUD, Butter, Eggs, Cot ton Rags, small Oni.lis if delivered immediately, kiinip 'Jeans, &c. W. A. HEW. JACOB DRUM, D. B. RUSSELL, Ten o'clock and the echoes Die out in the silent hall, And I shade my eyes from the firelight That shadows the parlor wall. Over there in the corner, A gleam in the dancing light, Still precious beyond all telling, Lie the letters I burn to-night. The paiting is hard, my treasures, It will darken my life, I know, But the dream I have dreamed was a folly— It is better to let you go. And I brush from my throbbing temples Tho heavy, clinging hair, And-smother-my-anguislx v trying To believe I do not care. I gather them all together, Not heeding, though tear drops roll, Though the chime of a gladsome memory Is ringing through my soul. I gather them altogether, My idols, which proved but clay— Red flames-tenderly fold the'rn, They are burning my heart away. They drop from my quivering fingers Into the dame's dull roar, And I know that my dream is ended • Forever, and evermore. The dreaded task is over,. Uttered the last good-bye, And, the smoke of Ay burning incense Floats up to the blind, black sky. A THRILLING COURT SCENE There lived in the city of P—, in the State of Pennsylvania, a gentleman on the shady side of sixty, who, by industry and economy,.had amassed a large competence, sustaining in all the work of life a character above suspicion. He was the head of a fine family, and noted for his eccentricities and his peculiar style of-dre.ss. He was stoop. shouldered, limped a little, and for ten years previous to the time of the scene about to be narrated wore a -coat that had,turned red with age. It was in the middle..of the afternoon of a cloudy, dismal day in March .I.B—,when a old man entered one of the banks in the city named and presented a check for payment. The Cashier took it and paid over to the man $30,000, and he descended the steps into the street. In less than five minutes after he had left, the check was discovered to be a Jorgcry The proper authorities were immediately no- tified by the Cashier, who gave them a de scription, and, proseating him to the Cashier, asked him if that was the man. 'That is the man; 1 cannot be mistaken,' he replied. lie eyed him a little closer (be ing near-sighted) and throwing up his hands, he exclaimed, 'Mr. Rawlins (the gentletuas alluded to in the opening of the narrative,) can it be possible that you have committd this forgery ?' The old man protested his innocence, but to no avail, for he was led away to prison to await the sitting of the court: Ifis friends wished to go his hail, lint he obstinately refused to adept release, and lay in jail three months. The day of trial came, and, although de. fended by the best of legal talent, the evi• deuce against him was cone.usire, and he was its,uvicted. In. that state a day is set apart in which the condemned receive their sentence,, It was sentence day. The court room was filled with spectators, and the friends and relatives of the prisoner. It was a see rowful scene, and among the rarticipaiits was the wife and two lovely daughters of Mr, Rawlins ; their beautiful faces swollen with weeptng over the sad fate of their hither Oue by one the prisoners descended from the box and received their sentences. Rawlins was next in turn. There is an awful silence for some moments when the Judge, in a choking, trembling voice, for he was an intimate friend of the condemned, said : 'Mr. .Rawlins He arose and took a stand before the edge. The Judge proceeded : •llavo .you or any one in thereon a reason why the sent ence of the law should not be passed against you ?' Here a terrible silenes ensued, almost par alyzing the hearts of many p anxious ft lends ; when, all at once a prisoner in the box—a young wan--,arose and 'said, have `Your reasou; said the Judge. 'Because he is not guilty. 1 will ex plain.' What a mountain's weight of sorrow was lifted from the hearts Of some by the. pro. nunciation of these words not guilty. 'Proceed ! proaced !' cried a hundred voices. will. If you will send. some reliable MaLl—pa officer or two— with too to a Certain point on the' main highway leading out of the city, under a flat: stone . ot peculiar shape you will find $10,c)00 of tho aioney ; the balance I have lost at faro; They tuarted, followed by a crowd In an hour—an hour of anxiety and ezo,itenient they ieturacd, autitroduced ch..) money in 6nici the prisoner; (send to room N. 15, at the Linder louse, on, A— itrcer.. and you will liuti a hair trunk, which yeu Wi bring to we.''. WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTI, PENNSYLVANIA, THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1870. PC:O3EITIC)I3Ia. THE ASHES OF LIFE, -t a • a •• t "".starri,ll i%Teevcroslawrioor. , k ,4 In due time the trun k was b rought into court, and at the previous secret request of the Judge, through the Sheriff, he and the trunk were placed in one ante•room and Mr. Rawlins in' another. In a few minutes he, or Rawlins, no one knew which it was', took 'his place in the box, and the .fudge ordered the Sheriff• to summon the Cashier, which he did. lie now came in. 'Are you the Cashier of the bank in which that !Meek was forged for $30,000 ?' 'I inn sir.' 'Before passing sentence upon this man I would have you look at him and tell the court that he is the man,' said the Judge. 'He is the man 1 . I cannot be mistaken al though I am sorry to say it.' Here the prisoner suddenly twitched the whiskers from his face, threw off his bat and coat, and stood in his shirt sleeves a mere boy. The Cashier swooned, fell upon the floor, and was carried out of the court. room. 'I am the man,' said the prisoner 'who did the forging of that check. I came from En g,land-a-fe-w-marrths—ago-,—tieterntined-7to make a raise. I knew the man called Raw lins, and, knowing that he bore a good repu tation, morally and financially, I determined to personate him if possible; knowing that the man would be looked at and not the check. Hew. well I did it you all know; but I could not see an innocent man suffer for a crime that I bad committed.' Rawlins-was-disebarged-and-borne-off—tri umphantly on the shoulders of his Mends, and in consideration of the honesty of heart of the young man the Governor commuted his sentence from twenty to two years, he having been convicted on another charge. ' Enterprise Will Tell. Enterprise will show itself and bring about results. A few days since 'we had an illus tration of this in the record of. a Boston newsboy who plied his occupation in the Ar my of the Potomac until he got a fair start, then went to Washington and embarked in the grocery business, and finally returned home worth about thirty thousand dollars. Every one, of course, cannot be a Boston news-boy, nor have his chances, but it is en terprise that seizes and takes every advan tage of opportunities that ordinary humdrum business' men don't see. 'lf things are pushed,' said Sherman in his famous Rappa• hannock dispatch, 'we can capture Lee's ar my.' Then 'push things'•was the character istic and laconic reply of Grant, and all know the result. 'Push things' is the right way to do in every branch of trade. The - wide. awake, driving business man will accomplish more in one day than another would do_in_a_ week.. Never wait for trade to come, but meet it ball way. If you are manufacturing, aim to' - turn out the best kind of work, do it promptly and then tet people know it. Nev er slight a job because it does not pay well, but lot the walk speak fur itself' and prove your assertions, and it will pay well in the end. Shanl:l you be in a mercantile pur suit, aim to have the best articles in the mir ket for reaaunable prices, and though they may not net a large profit to-day, increase of trade will doulsle the gains on the morrow. Be prompt, be energetic, be careful and Te liable in business, and the louudatiou of a prmalient success is achieved. GOOD BYE.-It is a hard word to speak. Some may laugh that it should be, but let them. Icy . hearts are never kind. It is a word that has choked many an utterance, and started many a tear. The hand is clasped, the word spoken, we part and are out upon the ocean of time— we go to meet again where God only knows. It m•ty be soon ; it may be never. Take care that your '‘good bye' be not a cold one—it may be the last one you can give Ere you can meet your friends 'fit. - ;ain death's cold hand may have closed his -eyes and chained his lips forever. Ab ! he may have died in thinking that you loved him not. Again it may be long separa.. tiou. Friends crowd onward and give you their hand. flow do you detect in each 'good bye' the love that liagers' there ; and how you bear away with you the memory of th'ese parting words many, many days. We mint often separate' 'rear not yourself away with a careless boldness that defies all love, but wake your last words —give the heart full utterance—and if tears fall, What of it? Tears are not unmanly. A. certain amount of opposition is a great help to a man. Kites rise against the wind, and not with the wind; even a head wind' is better than none. No man ever worked his pas , -age anywhere in a dead calm. Let OA nan wax pale, therefore, because of op position, opposition is what he wants and must have to be good for anything. Uard• ship is the native soil of manhood and self. reliance. Be who cannot abide the storm without flinching, lids down by the wayside to be overlooked or forgotten Every mall must patiently abide his timo Ile must wait, not in listless idleness, not in puerile dejection ; but io e instant, ,steady Willing tits task, that when the occasion comes he way he equal to the occasion, The talent of suzeess is nothing. wore than doing what you can do well, without a thought of fame. If it conies at alt, .it will Come he caut.e it is out sought cutter. 1t is a very in: diseieet and troubtesome ambition which cares so much about:tat-no, and is shouting ever to hear tee echo of its own voice, Many men dedicate La:airless to the devil, and politics to the devil, mid shove religion into the cracks and crevices of tittle ; and make it the hypocritical out going of their leisure and laznicss, Whatever .he 'wind may do in winter, it Cannot be deuicd that in ..Fpring it turns over a new leaf. The Green Spot. The late Noah Winslow was fond of tell ing the following incident of his mercantile life, and be never closed the narration but with swimming eyes : During the financial Crisis and orash, of '57, when heavy men were sinking all around us, and banks were tottering, our house be came alarmed in view of the condition of its own affairs. The partners--three of us, of whom I was the senior—met in our private office for con sultation. Our junior had Made a careful in ventory of everything—of his bills receiva ble and bills payable, and his report wag, that twenty thousand dollamof ready money, to be held through the pressure, would Save us. WOout that we must go by the board —the result was inevitable. I went out up on the street, and among my friends, but in vain. Two whole days I strove, and begged, and then returned to the oounting•house in de spair. I sat .at my desk, expecting every moment to hear our junior sounding the ter. rible words,'our papers are protested when gen - Mersa — entered — my — depart nounced. I could not locate him nor call him to mind any way. 'Mr. Winslow,' he said, taking a seat at the end of my desk, '.I hear you are in need of money.' - The very face of that man inspired me. with confidence, and I told him how I was situated. ' 'Make your individual note, for one year, without interest, for / twenty thousand dollars, and I will give you a check. payable in gold . for that 'amount.' While I sat razing upon him in speechless astonishment, he continued, 'You don't remember me; but I remem ber you. I remember-when-you were a mem= ber of the Superintending School Committee of Bradford. [was a boy in the village school. My. father was dead ; my mother was poor ; and I was but a shabbily clad child, -though clean. When our class came out on examination day, you asked the qnes; tions. I fancied you would praise and pet the c*ldren of rich and fortunate parents, and pass me by. 'But it was not as I thought. In the end you passed by all the others, and came to me. You laid your hand on my head, and told me I did very well; and then you toad me I could do better still if I would try. You told me the way to honor and renoun were open to all alike, no one had a free pass.— All I had to do was to be resolved and push on. That, sir, was the turning point of my life. From that hour my soul has aspired, and I have never reached a great good with out_b less ing_you_in_my_heart—l_have—pros— pored and am wealthy; and now I offer you bare poor return for the soul wealth you gave me in that by-gone time. 'l. took the cheek,' said Winslow, 'and drew the gold and our house was saved. and whereat the end of the year,' he ad ded, 'do you suppose I found my not,-*- 'ln possession','he said,with streamlng eves, 'of my little orphaned granddaughter! Oh, hearts like that man's are what bring earth and heaven nearer together!' Ladies sometimes do not treat their hue bands as they ought. They not unfrequent ly learn the value of a good husband for the first time by the loss of him. Yet the hus band is the very roof-tree of the house—the keystone of the arch called home, lie is the bread-winner of the family, its , defense and its glory, the beginning and eliding of the golden chain of life,which surrounds it, its consoler, lawgiver, and its king. 'And yet we know how frail is that life of the husband and the father ! When he is taken away who shall fill his place When ho is sick, what gloomy clouds hover over the house! When ho is dead, what weeping agony ! Then poverty, like the murderous assassin, breaks in the window, starvationi like a famishing wolf, howls . at the door.— Widowhood is too °Pea an associate of sack. cloth and ashes. Orphanhood too often means desolation and woe. FAMILY RELATIONS A.CCORDING TO THE TALMUD.--If your wifo is of a short stature, bow down to her and hear her words in ref erence to domestic as well as worldly-affairs. The husband should ever be anxious that the proper respect ho paid to his wife, be cause the house is blessed only for her sake. Honor your wife, and you will be blessed with richness. Good and bad luck, pleasure and grief, joy and sorrow are in the hands of the wile Who takes unto himself a wile brings luck to the house or a yawning gulf. I have found a woman who is wore bitter than death—u bright jewel or an oppressive burden— Sanh. 100. Who lives without a wife knows no plea sure, no , bliss, no blessing. Who has to Wank su much to his wife will not only treat her - wall the utmost regard and respect,' but make , her position in the hoUse fully equal to his own., A wan without a wife is no man at all. In one of Mr. Lincoln's ftrst cases ho ap pe.ared to defend a man, accused of murder. Circum s tantial evidence told strongly against the prisoner, but haying suddenly and unex pectedly r"coived succor, Mr. Lincoln, arose and said that as the ease stood, he could not look for anything but a verdict against his client, but he asked, permission to put a new and very material witness upon the statid. Ho then called his witness, volt° proved to be the murdered man. Since the story has been told of how Judge Breeltinridgo married a girl whom ho saw jump over a , rail fence with a pail on her hea;l,'all tho girls in Oraog county, New Yoik, aro said to spend their time in watch ing the road, and wheuever they sco a car riage approach with a man in it, they seize their pails and go fora fence Tifek upon Travelers. One of the most wonderful robberies ever perpetrated—wonderful, at least, when one considers_ the means at the disposal of the robber—was the achievement of a French man, who, for a long time after it, was rec• oguized in his profession as 'the Cog of the Bandits. His claim to this title was based upon a single exploit—the robbing of a diligence, which feat be not only plaoned f but carried into successful execution, without any as sistance whatsoever. To do, this he made all his arrangements with the most careful completeness, and, we may be sure, fixed at night for the attack When the coach carried a freight worth robbing.. He studied closely the country through which the journey was to be made, and selected a point on the road where there was a very steep' hill,' with hedges and underwoed at either .. side: lie then procured a *umber of stout sticks about the length and thickness of the barrel of a gun, These he stuck inte,the hedges, let ting the ends of them' appear, as if they were the muzzles of guns directed by . persons in ‘mbrtrscatie - b - ehind the As the dill jiff. gence now eame toiling slowly up the hill, the driver aaw a man standing on the ; pat 6 way, and gesticulating violently. On ap proaching nearer, the man could be heard distinctly haranguing them. 'Ready ! Obey orders! No firing if there be do resistance!' And then the robber, walking slowly for. ward, stopped the horses, told the guard to h' b- ,own _is face aid hands on the ground, and that no violence would be offered to him. He then went to the door of the vehicle, and assuring the ladies, who were screaming for help ; that thoweed be under no alarm, begged each passenger, as ho stepped out to hand him his purse, and-then to lie down on face and bands near the guard. While all this drama was being enacted, the robber-chief kept shout inc, to his assistants not to fire uotil A they should get his signal. Thus one by one be handed all the passengers out, each giving up his purse as if it were a ticket, and then going and lying upon the wet grass aide by side with the guard. When the diligence was empty, our highwayman retired with all the valuable property ho desired to possess himself of, and escaped through the wood. The most amusing part of the story was. that amongst the traveers were several officers fully armed, who surrendered their swords at discretion, and joined - the other dupes on the grass. It is well to add that the robber was ultimately apprehended, and the greater part of the stolen property was found • upon him.• WHAT_ El APPSNED-111—A TUNNEra =-A - few days ago, on board the Express Train of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, bound iouthward, - under the care of conductor Free• coin, were a young lady and gentleman, seat• ed together, bearing the appearance of a ema-, ple recently married, or wishing most hear. ily they were. It was observed by the pas sengers that the lady had oa her lip a bit of black court plaster—probably she had a sore lip. This was noticed before the train had entered the tunnel at Phoenixville, which is 1950 feet. Atter the train had passed the tunnel the passengers saw another sight ! Per lo the court plaster, by some bees po elle, had changed lips, and now the young man had it bad. The mysterious changing of the plaster became the subject of conver sation among the other passengers and all on board indulged in a hearty laugh, as light began to dawn upon their wonderings Light began also to dawn upon the minds of the couple, when the train stopped at Phoenix ville, and violtut blushing ensued. The question is, 'What happened in the tunnel?' Cputomer (to a clerk in a hardware store) 'Show me u small, low•prioed shears.' Clerk (feeetiously)—'Perhaps you mean a pair of shears.' Customer (severely)—'l moan precisely what I raid.' Clerk . (definantly, opening a specimen ar ticle)—'Are there not two blades here? and don't two make a pair ?' Customer (triumphantly)—•You hug two legs, does that make you a pair of man ? The shears were done up in profound si. Inane. A Baltitnoro correspondent writes :-- 'Thunder sours milk and kills oysters. Yon may load a vessel to its utmost capacity, start for market, and ono good round clap of thunder will kill every oyster in the' vessel immediately. Pounding with an axe upon the neck of a vessel when oysters•are there on, or pounding upon the sides of a vessel with a heavy weight, will kill every oystar that feels the jar. But thunder fetches them the first, pop.' An old negro preaching in a Maine town, recently condemned the general tendency of men to wish they bud others opportuni- ties to do good, a►nd asked. •What would thd hummin, bird do %rid the eagle's wings ? A•nd whet could de eagle do Rid de hutuinin bud's wings ? ifredren, use de• wings of faith God has gibbon you, and God will care for both de eagles,, and de hutuinio bird's • is Dayton, Miss Shirk, ono of the females who rode in a Valandighaiu cart iu his day, under so inscription .White Husbands or Nape,' has married an unadulterated African named Leo [(lcily, to the everlasting disgrace of the tiarkey.—Detroit Tribune. An Irishman, in Wabash, Ind, a few days since, laid to two dishes of oysters, six large cups of (wilco, one down' bulled eggs, five rusks, and half a pund of busier, at one weal. Mr. Punch knows a young wan whole so lazy`that be not even labor under 'an inipressiou. 99600 3'ei' -Wear. An Irish Letter. The Irish have a reputation for a rather free misuse of the English language—at least numerous 'bulls' are credited t 4► them.— Here is one from an old exchange, beihg a letter from Aunt Peggy in • Ireland to her herhew Patrick in America,. announcing the death of hie uncle: DEAR NEDREW.-1 hive not written to you since my last before now, because as we have moved from our former place of living, & I did not know where the letter would find you, but I now with pleasure take , my pen to inform you of" the melancholy news of the very sudden death of your only living' uncle .Kilpatrick, who died very. suddenly last week after a lingering illness of five months. The poor man was in- violent convulsions the whole time of his sickgess, laying quiet and speechless, all the while talking incoherent. ly, and calling for water. I had no oppor• ' tunity of informing you of his death sooner, except I had wrote to you by last post, which went off two days before be died, and then you would have postage to pay. lamat a loss to tell what his death was occasioned by; but I fair was occasioned - 4 - hisli - : - srf,ickness, for ho was never ten days together during the whole time of his confinement; and I °be lieve his sickness was occationed by eating too much of rabbits, or peas and gravy stuffed with rabbits, I can t tell which ; but be that as it will, as Boon as he breathed his last, the doctors gave over all hopes of .his recovery. I need not tell you anythiog about_his age, for you know that December next he would have been twety-five years old lacking ten months, and had he lived till then he would have been just six months dead. Hitt property now devolves to his next of kin, who all died sometime ago ; so that I expect it will be divided between us ; and ,you know his property was very considerable; for-he had a fine, estate, which was sold to pay his debts and the remainder was lost on a horse. race but it was the opinion of everybody as • the time, that he would have won the race, if the hers° he run against had not been too fast for him. -I -never saw a man, and the doctors all said ,so, that observed directions and touk medicine better than he did. Fie said he had as lief drink gruel as wine, if it only had the same taste, and would as soon take jalap as to eat beef steak, if it only had the same relish. But, poor soul I. he will never eat or drink more. And now you have not a single living relation in the world, ex cept myself and our two cousins, who were killed in the late war. I can't well on this mournful subject, and seal my letter with black sealing wax- r and put on it,your uncle's coat of arms 4o I beg you not to break the seal when you open the latter; and doolopen eel till three or four days after you re. ceiveit by which time you will be prepared for these sorrowful tidings. When you come to this place, stop, and do_not real any more till my uext. Your affectionate Aunt, PEG OWEN. P. B. Don't write me again till you re °cite this. Saxe gives the following advice to the rising generation : In going to parties just mind what you are Beware of your head anti take care , of your hat, • . Lest you find that a favorite son of your mother Has an ache in the one and a brick in the other, The young man in Connecticut wha kiss ed the girls at the station, tbiokink they were his Platers, bus come to grief. He saw a finely dressed female at New Haven, quiet ly walked up to her, embraced- and kimied her, when he was greeted with, 'Golly ! what you 'bout dar,' and beheld one of Africa's darkest . brunettes. He retreated amid a thunder of applause. An urchin of six or seven years went into a barber shop in _Racine, Wisconsin, and or dered the barber to cut his hair as close as the shears would do it. lie was asked if his mother ordered it that way. 'No,' said he, 'but school commences next week, and we've ,got a school infirm that pulls hair, and Pro bound to fix her this term, you bet.' A resident of Columbus, Ohio, is said to have eaten at a single meal, a few days ago, in order to win a bet, an opossum weighing fourteen pounds and two loaves of bread.— Tne•aceotnpany tnetits were a bottle of catsup, six glasses of gin, five glasses of beet, and two cellos orsalt. A 'big loditte' strayed away from his camp and ,was lost. Ligi; ing the way back, he was asked, 'lndian lost ?"No,' said he dis. dainfuliy, 'lndian no •lost—wigwatn lost.'— Striking his breast he exeldinaed, here.' 'Well, Patrick, what have you to say a. bent stealing the pig ?"Well, ycr honor, you see it was jilt this: Pig took upon him to blupe in my bit uv garden for thra nights, and 1 jist sayzo.d. him for vint A person who was sent to prison for mar ryiug two wives, :mewed hitubelf by saying 'that when he haa Sue wtte she fought him, but when be got two they nught cacti other.' 'Vat vedder yid it be Nadal; r asked a Germano' bis uolgiator. •Vdd I don't kuuW, vot you tiuk ?' aux it will no. veuder as you tiuk."Vell, deu 'loft so too' Why Li a dog with a broken leg like a boy at arithweric C Itteause tie [met/owe three and. earrios nue ,( ' - iThowell lady is trust.: an anti Baptist that she ma% even us ippe4 'candles. • why is aWe -hem r tike a Juieklayer r Beatu.A ho raises sc,iley NUMBER 42