BY FRED'K L. BAKER. Not aitobout A Highly Concentrated Vegetable Extract. A PURE TONIC. DR. HOOFLANDIS GERMAN BITTERS PREPARED BY DR, C. M. JACKSON, PHIL'A, PA. WILL effectually cure Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, chronic or nervous Debility, diseases of the Kidneys, and bad dis eases afistng from a disordered Liver or Stom ach. Such as Constipation, inward Piles, tul ness or blood to the head, acidity of the Stem. ach, Nausea, Heartburn, disgust for food, ful ness or weight in the stomach, sour Eructations, sinking or fluttering at the pit of the Stomach, swimming of the Head, hurried and difficult Breathing, fluttering at the Heart, choking or suffocating sensations when in a lying posture, dimness of Vision, dots or webs before the Sight; fever and dull pain in the Head, defi ciency of Perspiration, yellowness of the Skin and Eyes pain iu the Side, Back, Chest, Limbs, &c., sudden flushes of Heat, burning in the Flesh, constant imaginings of Evil, and grief, depression of Spirits. And will positively prevent Yellow Fever, Billions Fever &c.— They contain no Alchohol or bad Wnisky.— They WILL CURE the above diseases in ninety nine cases out of a hundred. The proprietors have thousands of letters from the most eminent Clergymen, Lawyers, Physicians, and Citizens, testifying of their own pers2nal knowledge, to the beneficial ef fects and medical virtues of these Bitters, Do you want something to strengthen you ? Do you want a good appetite? Do you want to build up your constitution? Do you want to feel well Do you want to , get rid of Ner vousness? Do you want energy? Do you want to sleep well 7 Do you want a brisk and vigorous feeling 7 If you do, use kloorLAND'B German Bitters. PARTICULAR Noxter..—There are many vreparations sold under the name of Bitters, put up in quart bottles, compounded of the cheapest whisky or common rum, costing from 20 to 90 cents per gallon, the taste disguised by Anise or Coriander Seed. This class of Bitters has caused and will con tinue to cause, as long as they can be sold, hundreds to die the death of the drunkard.— By their use the system is kept continually under the influence of ttichohalic stimulants of the worst kind, the desire for liquor is created and kept up, and the result is all the horrors attendant upon a drunkard's life and death. For those who desire and will have a Liquor Bitters, we publish the following receipt Get one bottle of Hoolland's Bitters and mix with three quarts of geed brandy or whisky, and the result will be a preparation that will far excel in medicinal virtues and true excellence any of the numerous Liquor Bitters in the market, and will cost much less. Yqu will have all the virtues of Hoolland's Bitters in connection with a good article of liquor, at a much less price than these inferior prepara tions will cost you. ATTENTION SOLDI ERB I We call the atten tion of all having relations or friends in the army to the fact that “Hooflanirs German Bitters" will cure nine-tenths of the diseases induced by exposures and privations incident to camp life. In the lists, published almost daily in the newspapers, on the arrival of the sick, it will be noticed theta very large pro portion are suffering from debility. Every case of that kind can be readily culed by lloofland's German Bitters. Diseases result ing from disorders of the digestive organs are speedily removed. We have no hesitation in stating that, if these Bitters were freely used among our soldiers, hundreds of lives might be saved that otherwise will be lost. We call the particular attention to the fol lowing remarkable and well authenticate, cure of one of the nation's heroes, whose life to use his language, "has been saved by the Bitters ;" PHILADELPHIA, August 23d, 1862. Messrs. Jones tr liveans.—Well, gentleman, your Hoolland's German Bitters have saved my life. There is no mistake in this. It is vouch ed for by numbers of my comrades, some of whose names are appended, and who are fully cognizant of all the circumstances of my ease. I am, and have been for the last four years, a member of Sherman's celebrated battery, and under the immediate command of Cap tain R. B. Ayres. Through the exposure at tendant upon my arduous duties, I was attack ed in November last with inllamation of the lungs, and was for seventy-two days in the hospital. This was followed by great debility, heightened by an attack of dysentery. I was then removed from the White . House, - and sent to this city on board the Steamer "Slate of Maine," tram which I !andel on the 28th, of June. Since that time I have been about as low as any one could .and still retain a spark of vitality. For a week or more I was scarcely able to swallow anything , and if I did immediately thrown a morsel down, it was thrown up again. I could not even keep a glass of water on my.stomach. Life could not last under these circumstances: and, accordingly, the physi cians who had been working faithfully, though unsuccessfully to rescue me from the grasp of the dread Archer, frankly told me they could do no more for me, and advised me to see a clergyman, and to make such disposi tion of my limitel funds us best suited me.— An acquaintance who visited me at the hospi tal, Mr. Frederick Steinbron, of Sixth below Arch street, advised me, as a forlorn hope, to try your Bitters, and kindly procured a bottle. From the time I commenced taking Diem the gloomy shado of death receded, and lam now, thank God for it, getting better. Tho' I have taken but two botttes, I have gained ten pounds, and I feel sanguine of being per mitted to rejoin my wife and daughter, from whom I baVe heard nothing for eighteen months I for, gentlemen, I am a loyal Virgin ian, from the vicinity of Front Royal. To your invaluable Bitters I owe the certainty of life which haa'taken the place of vague fears —to your Bitters will I owe the glourious pri vilege of again, clasping to my bosom those who are dearest' to me in life. Very truly youra, Isaaz DIA LONE. We fully concur in the truth of the above statement, as we had despaired of seeing our comrade, Mr. Malone, restored to health. John Cuddleback, lst•New York Battery. George A. Ackley, Co. C., llth Maine. Lewis Chevalier, 92d New York. 1. E. Spencer, Ist Artillery, Battery F. J. B. Fasewell, Co. 13, 3d Vermont. Henry B. Serome, Co. B. do. Henry T. Macdonald, Co. C. 6th Maine. John F. Ward, Co. E.-sth Maine. Nathaniel B. Thomas, Co. F., 95th Penn. John Jenkins, Co. B. 106th'Penn. Beware of counterfeits ! See that the sig nature of "C. M. Jackson," is on the wrapper of each bottle. Price per bottle 7d cents, or half dozen fur $4; 00. nearest druggist not have the article, do not be put oil by any of the intoxi 'Ming preparations that may tie offered in its lace, but send to us, and we. will forward, ccurely packed, by e.Xpreas. Principal Office and Manufactory, No. -631 ARCH STAP.ET. JONES it EVANS, . (Successors to C. M. Jackson eic-Co ,) Proprietors'. 101'• Fore e b ru g. Dealers iri • r se. town , tI.Jt • . c ':l;iti aritt,::::iall alubtptakittVatiulbauia *urn': Ptbuttb ta DZzfzts, yiterature, agritnlturt, alttus 1121 lt, ) {rtal flit.iligente, die Niaritthan IS PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY, AT a—pear; Papal& in alrbanit OFFITT : CRTILL'S Row, Front Street, five doors below Flury'a Hotel. TERMS, One Dollar a Year, payable in ad vance, and if subscriptions be not paid within six months $1.25 will be charged, but if de layed until the expiration of the year, $1.50 will be charged. ADVERTISING RATES : One square (12 lines, or less) 50 cents for the first insertion and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion. Pro fessional and Business cal ds, of six lines orless at $3 per annum. Notices in the reading col umns, fire cents a-line. Marriages and Deaths, the simple announcement, ritEE ; but for any additional lines, five cents a line. - A liberal deduction made to yearly and half Yearly advertisers. Having recentled added a large lot of new Job and Card type, Cuts, Borders, to the Job Office of "The Mariettian," which will 'insure the fine execution of all kinds.Of JOB & C.ARD PRINTING, from ' the smallest Carrto the largest Poster, at prices to suit .the War times. . Louisville Journalisms Men and women, who feel compla cently about all the thefts, robberies; burnings, and murders, perpetrated by John - Morgan's band, go into actual spasms of rage and fury on account of John's halfshaved head. We don't ap prove the tonsorial operation upon the big bandit's top-piece, but his friends should remember that the whole Mor gan has been •"half shaved" frequently with his own full consent. For our selves, we are a good deal more indig nant at the robbery and assassination of scores and hundreds of innocent peo ple by Morgan and his men than we are at the passing of a barber's mowing-ma chine over one hemisphere of the head of the rebel-leader whose brains have for years been safely lodged in the head of another man. .Beauregard denounces the Greek fire with which Gilmore's shells sent into Charleston are charged, "as a most vil lainous compound, unworthy civilized nations." We have no doubt the peo ple of Sodom thought the rain of brim stone and fire.out of heaven, which con sumed them in the iniquity of the city, was a villainous compound, but the hand of retribution was not stayed on that account! A. lady who resents a paragraph of ours about a wig for John Morgan en closes us a lock of very pretty hair as a contribution to a wig for ourself. We don't want such an article at present, dear girl, bat, as you seem to-be one of the hair-pulling , sort, we expect, that, if we, were to meet you, we should soon need a wig, and get only abig scratch. The rioters, who attacked the New York Tribune office, were repulsed by a stream of hot water from tbe Tribune's boiler. If that hasn't made them cold water men, nothing can. It was proba bly quite as efficient as the discourse of a cold-water lecturer haranguing from the top of a pump. A young rebel woman lately wrote to us from Shelby that she had got up at midnight to thrust our paper out of her bedchamber. We wrote back that we thought it likely she would have treated us in the same manner. And she got very mad at the imputation. The Richmond Enquirer says that "the neck of a true Southern man is not ready for the collarr." It wouldn't perhaps be a very important matter that a rebel hasn't a collar for his neck if he only had the rest of the shirt for his back. It is stated that there is a Spanish girl seventeen years old at Lyons, France, who can lift a weight of 500 pounds with her hair. We have seen many a young girl, who, having beauti: ful hair, could draw a whole regiment'ot men with it. - The Vonfederate Government has what it calls a treasury, building at Rich mond. It has no more use for one than a wooden-legged man has for .corn plas ters, or John Morgan for comb and Hair brush. H a man were to go to sleep in one of the very best of the rebel prisons and wake up in one of the very worst of the Federal ones, he, would probably begin to shout under the impression that he was in Heaven. • ..... ...... . ...... The Southern people should take every statement of their ~ newspapers 'with a grain of salt ;" but unfortunate ly they haven't a grain of salt to take it with. •We have just been through portions of Tennessee recently held by the rebel troops. The whole region is stripped. It is as bare as John Merman's scalp. MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 18.63. For The Mariettiern : BEFORE AND AFTER; or, Five Phases of Married Life, By Grantellus CHAPTER IV. [Ji ROMANTIC PHASE—After:I "She stood beside the washtub, ' Her red hands in the suds, And at her slip-shod feet there laid A pile of dirty 'duds Her husband stood beside her _ The crossest man alive, The last was aged twenty-nine, The first was twenty-five." Before Augustus Leander Pliancy, and Laura Amanda spasm, had been three little months married, they begin to realize, that in , starting- out to meet-the bridegroom, they had taken no oil in their lamps. • The very foundation of the moral and 'social building They'in tended to erect, was-conceived and laid upon 'false principles and motives- of action; and therefore, there was' little hope• of a harmonious and en`during- su perstructure. The hey-day - and the er citement of the honey-moon had passed or was passing—that honey- - moon: of three little months, but which in an 'or derly marriage , union, should last as long as the present. and future life of the married partners last—asd the butter flies of society, that flutter , around: an attractive centre for a brief period, were one by o - ne, With faded colors,-and diniin: ished attachments,-:Subsiding to their common level, or creeping into the nooks and crevices of society; either to sink into oblivion, or be reanimated at the return of another social spring. The dread necessity now began to stare Mr. Augustus in the face, "like an unman nerly child," that, it became incumbent upon him, not only to provide shoed, and stockings, and stays, to perpetuate the pretty feet and ankles, and .neat- waist of Laura, but. that more"pressing still, he would be compelled -to provide ttie needful bread and other edibles to keep these in motion. But not these alone; for a house and household utensils must be provided, and that too without delay, as Laura—never too obedient to her stepmother—had in three months con: , trived entirely to "wear out her wel come," as well as the welcome' of 'her lank and cigar-puffing husband. .Poor Laura found, too, that in' order to re tain even the semblance of the - affection of her hasband—or as much of it as he was capable of bestowing upon any ob ject out of himself—she would be doom ed to a life" of washing, and starching, and ironing, and fixing up, a shabby. wardrobe of dickies and cravats. Both. Augustus and Laura—or rather Mr. and. Mrs. Pliancy, in carrying out their ideas of domestic .duty and economy, were governed by the same principles of util ity. The two very first articles towards housekeeping which were purchased, and which exhausted all their stock of funds on hand, were a ten-dollar mirror and a five-dollar caster. Here they could see reflected the gods whom they had bees unconsciously worshipping, and could contemplate the vessels to hold the seasoning of their ideal "fish, flesh and fowl," without possessing a scale, a hair, or a feather, of the real animals, nor yet "the fat to fry 'em." But, they had made a splurge, and it - furnished materi al-to talk about, both to themselves and their gossiping neighbors. But whilst they neither of them possessed the neces- . sary judgement to carry housekeeping into successful and harmonious opera tion, they each regarded themselves as perfect, and mutually censured each other, arid severely criticised each other's acts. This led them both into opposite, extremes ; and because they saw (al though they would not acknowledge it) that they had made an expenditure quite beyond their circumstances, therefore, as a 'retrenchment, the next outlay, in addition to being injudicious as . to kind, Was of such a quality, as to exclude them" entirely from the classes of usefulness,. or economy. Laura's imitation dam - ask window , curtains, at a dime a yard, turned fro'm a bright scarlet to a sickly and garigreened hue, after two - weeks" exposure to a vernal sun; and Angus- , tus' patent boot jack for two shillings,• was, demolished at the second trial to, draw, off an obstinate and closely-adher ing hoof. The things most essential to housekeeping, were finally contributed by their parents, in order to get them started in the world on their own ac count,—now that they , had voluntarily assumed the responsibility—and that they might be relieved from 'a pair of unprofitable and fastidious boarders. It is very likely that they never would have gotten their household affairs bra work* , lug condition, bad they not received this opportune assistance ; and when the thine. w " rmf ;n mation-1;17. new machinery—it had not run long un- I til there was a "flare-up" or a "breakl down," caused by the absence of some trifling, but absolutely necessary,,cog in the, driving wheel. The first dish of Soup which Mrs. Phancy served up, was destitute of salt ; nor was there a spoon in the house—save two tea.spoons—with" which to eat it . ; and these were not suf ficient to accommodate the seedy friend, --additiOnal—who had called in to as sist them in the discuision of their chowder: . Perhaps their greatestmis take—a mistake, by-the-by, that is made by many of the inexperiened in the world—a mistake to which reflects a very Selfish aspect of the human heart— was in the fact that in all their utensils, they selected them only with a view to their accommodation of Iwo: The con. sequender was, as their family of-children increased, things all be'camd too" and they were compelled to suffer the inconvenience, dr levy a "contribution upon- the patience and accommodating spirit of their neighbors, by borrowing: About the first purchase of Mr: Pliancy, for•the culinary department. was, a hitge snapping turtle; A l an ,enormous price; when they ,ye,t had not a, single instru ment to kill it, jinra vessel in which to cook it, and, lacked the very "staff of life.". But this, became -a common oc currence with Augustus ;•for he would often bring home a - box of cigars, to, find his family' witheut bread'; or a new-fash iOned dickey. and cravat, when he had not a whole shirt, or when the tattered ends of that nether garment saluted the open 'day, throtigh the fractured seat of a pair of seedy breaches. 'Laura fora time was equally inappropriate in her contributions to the household and her self, whether it,was something-4o eat or something_ to. wear-,but through necesl sity she became -mare ,practical, and a& quired a knowledge of :domestic duties much more expeditiously than her ease= loving, husband. She became, however, careleas about. lier neat foot and ankle,; and her beautiful waist, from neglect and other manses, lost much of its former 61enderness. This told sadly upon her husbarid, for he found that his ideal of female 'excellence and loveliness, was departing from her whom he romanti cally magnified as the goddess of his prospective household. lt may well be imagined that such a wedded pair could have very little happiness,—very little of the real delight that inures to an or derly and judicous marriage. Their thoughts, "their minds, and affections, were centred in things too trivial and, sensuous, to react inanyof these peace ful and beatific emotions, that are the reward of a conscious well-meaning and well doing. Mr. and Mrs. Phancy be fore they 'had been married six months, discovered that they had no real love for each other;,and what retarded the culture of affection, or placed its culture beyond their pre.sent power, was, that they elerislied a supreme love for them selves ; and what was not concentrated individually in themselves,,,was devoted to the world. True, Mr. Pliancy did not become. quite a "loafer," nor yet did. Mrs. Pliancy become quite a "slattern ;" but there were strong tendencies in that direction on the part of both of them, which were in a measure curbed, by their early imbibed poetical and romantic ideas of married life. Time wore on, and as each cycle of a brace of years returned, a "little strang er" was added .to the household of the. Phallus. These little Phanceys acted as an intermediate betweeti, what was fast becoming two parental extremes, constituting a sort of family Every additional little Phancy was re garded by the parents, rather as 'a curse than as a blessing, and yet they were in reality blessing's ; because,laut for these, there would not have been a single bond of union betweeifthetn, "It often seems sig,g,u'ar indeed, that children so rapidly multiply under 'circumstances the Most unfavorable,—to our finite apprehen sions—and_ in places tbe most unwel come ; whilst many others are yearning for them„and seem, to be 'situated so as to be enabled, to 'contribute amply to their moral, their intellectual, a:nd the t ir physical Wants ;'and yet such ,persons are often not blessed With their presence; Mr. and Mrs, Phancy did not really want any children, because it interfered with the romance of their contemplated establishment. Children and their lit tle wants- sadly interfered with M. Pliancy's cigar boxhis dickies and cravats ; and with his wife's neat waist, and ankles, and feet ; and - therefore they were-at first ratlierlooked iipqn as lit: tle unwelcome intruders.; until:EPpnreil al affection for them . was cultivated-and developed in time._But their advent entailed upon their mother a, world of labor, and.kept her constantly on the trot, in washing, • and ,scrubbing, and making, and mending, and keeping them out of mischief, Mr. Augustus Leander Pliancy, also,,througlr a necessity.which he could not evade or shirk, was-com pelled to labor, and to labor hard to sustain himself and family ; and this la bor seemed all the harder,- because he had not mentallyor physically made any previous provision for it. Ills ideas of a poetical and romantic life—no more than his wife's—did not embrace work in the catalogue of its pleasures, and therefore the labor they now felt• them selves compelled, to perform, was met and endured unwillingly, and with a frown or a mil. Even with their hard earnings,, and with 'little or no, affection . between them, they contrived to, keep up ~a sort of, . appearance that they were happy and thrifty, anti had a little circle of friends with whom they exchanged visits. That is,—,Mrs. Pliancy could claim a half day, or a whole day, now and then, in which to entertain a visitor or two ; and Augustus .could , give an evening,,but,wo betide the stranger that came to the house suddenly, in an unap pointed hour, for things were sure to bp found in an "awful plight.". This state of, things need not have been so,.e.venin people of their circumstances, had they made an attempt to govern their domes tic affairs with something like a system of order. "Eat, the great bane of their househOld was, that when they ought to have been actively employed, they were engaged in gossip or in -idleness—or what was nearly as fatal to their,orderly progress—in reading some trashy tale of romance. Therefore, when .a friend called, upon thern,at a proper hour, they were usually found in the "suds and the sulks r ", or in some Occupation Condi tion out of time and place ;_and such visits, instead of 'being welcomed as cheerful and instructive re-uaions, were contemplated and met .as, a sort of ..a social terror. Not that Mr. and Mrs. Pliancy had no love or desire for company—far from it—but that they, desired their company to call at sun time as would suit their own conveni ence, when it was notorious throughout the whole village of Catgut, that theii convenience always ran athwart the or dinary duties and labors of all, in their own circumstances, by whom they were surrounded. Neither Mr. nor Mrs. Phancy possessed that decision ofchar acter so necessary in having times and places for things, and keeping them selves true to those times and places.:-- If an obstrnsive neighbor "popped in'' on them, at an improper time and for a trivial and improper purpose, they bad not the address; nor yet the necessary courage, to exhibit frankly, that as soon as they could claim an immunity from their present and immediate obligations, they would be happy to entertain - them ; but on the contrary, their individuality seemed to be entirely abserbed by their visitors.; every necessary household op eratiOn being far the time suspended, and they themselves as powerless as 'a fretful bird under the charms of a snake. And although they at the bottom of their hearts may have wished such visits and such .visitors at the bottom .of the ocean, yet.they at the same time put on the semblance of affability, and, would even make something of an effort to impress upon the minds of their visitors. that they were happy -to see them, and consequently,that they should net be in a hurry, but make themselves at home. But if they suffered these things from, their impractical ideas of domestic life, they were also constantly inflicting their own visits upon their neighbors at times as inappropriate to them.;, so that their romantic and poetic aspirations before marriage, bred notbing but an'acrid aid corroded hearted fruit in their &wrestle,- relations aftfrNards. If any unlooked-for . contingency, of the simplest and most trivial nature; happened or arose in the family-of M.r., and Mrs. Phancy—and where there are, a number of-children that have rapidly mundane sphere, ea.cli other on this sphere, there will always be contingen cies more or, Jess serious,—they never had the presence of mind to meet .and provide for any of them--not the very least and simplest of them. Habitually indulging ikthe .morbid fannies , "of -tire merely rornantic,,er -what in their, e,sti„ 'nation passed,egrrent for romance i they accordiegly. eschewed or repudiated everything of wreally practical and 1180-1 ful nature ; and hence, when there was a sudden nec,esslty for any-of thqelittle knowledges and demesi,iereseerces in the capacity of the most ordinary, of their associates, they found themselves VOL. 10.--. NO. 8. entirely lacking, and dependent upon the charlatantism of any imposter who might feel disposed to practice upon their ig norance and credulity, If one of their children accidentally received a slight contusion, or cut its finger, or burnt its foot----andeit seemed as, if some ,of their . , children were al constantly suffer .- , ing in this way—in their first alarm they never knew what ought to, be done; and when they - at last ;recovered from their first terror, the nett,'filiug done was in visiting its nether region with tbe bot 7 tom of a slip Per, or "a hither and thither boxing of the ears, instead of a haulage and affectionate ministration to its dis tressed or painful coriditidn. It may well be conceived that this habit of 'the parents rendered the children careleas of each other's wants and feelings', if they did not, b way ,of a s sort of retalia tion, fnfiipt', pains, and penalties upon each other upon every, slight. occasion. The more their familypincreased in pups bere, thempre extensivelx_thip . sork l ef conduct among them ,prevailed • for, the presence of childrenthe i fataily being living ideidentals that had,neyepentered into, their romantic programme of life, they treated them praetleally,aaintruders the greater part of the, time, ,whatever feelings, of affectioafrliey.,may i have cater tamped for, them„:when the etilLsmall voice of conscience could OfentiveLn-r In accordance with the maxim that "like master like man,' . ' also i the dreri were melancholly, fretful moody,and manifested a disposition for such things only as ministered to their own individual gratifications,---whicb happened to.be also of a merely roman tic and impractical' character.. Mr—and Mrs. Phancy. had bisthief: them. een taught, theoretically, An their. youthful days, that there t was a, Ood; , "in. whorls welive and ruov,e andlhave :our beings'.' and that his general andrpArtionlar Oro= vidence inelnded la created. beings -4.; that not a sparrow could fall without his knowledge, and that the :very ,hairs upon their heads were all numbered,— This they learned by Jote, and'lmaily other thinga-ef, like, nature, from , their catechisms_ and. other books-; hist, like the tens of thoneands,of others who have been bred and, brought up under the gospel, it was only theoretical.:, They never made any attempt to 'reduce any of this knowledge to practice in their daily life, and therefore -in the most im portant relation connecteed with the destinies of mankind, they permitted themselves to be led by a sort of in stinct or a blind impulse, without at all considering the practicability of - what they were about doing',' - or whether they had rightly considered all its weigthy responsibilities. ' But 'they even 'now did not turn a single thought in that direction. They did not 'pray for,-nor practice mutual forhearance ; but on the contrary, were conetantly, when alone, spiteful, censorious,. mid recriminating; but in the presence cif others they were' mutually hypocritical.,... This , was. the only affection in which they , werisassiin- Hated, and that was an evil one. .cane, day of their life was a picture of !lie . whole, or'nearry so, for there was :little. variety in it. Mrs. Phaticy y was needy all the time in the wash, or the .scrub, or weeding in the garden, or performing some other drudgery long aftr.tite pve-, ning or noonday Weal sfieuld have been: served up; whilst A2r. Pliancy would grumly wait; hie frown Sternly fixed up on his quarreling and fretful which only could-rbe, kept in subjection by his presence. Sontetirnee;'! as-9 a sharpener of his appetite; ,he was or derail to split a obillet'! of Woad. 'undei a penalty of going to his work, ,or his bed, either dinnerless or supperlests. Ate last when u : heavy wash was over„ ! . , • • 2 The clothes hung out to dry, And Tom had•stuek•his { t ig er iri The little baby's eye; • •• , The boy was "spanked," a supper made Upon a crust of lircad, And then the bride and bildegfooni „ Went grumbAng off. to '? • Cr A geyntleinan riding .througp,Sy denhain Bassin board with ,"Ibis,O,9ttaze for Sail" painted On it. ,As.ho Tm ways ready for_a pleasantj9ke,.und, see lug: a woman in front of the" house, he stopped and asked ?het% Wiry "when the cottage ma's tb ' "-glatit as soon as,the man. domes who catrraiie the wind,".was ,111-ir Ur. clergyman, beint . 're cently absent from liome, his. soil,: of four years, was asked to pronouncs the blessirig: '`.N'o," 'replied,.."l — ddift like the look's '`Of their! titers !" INF hiod'etly in woman is like,.colox on her Cheek—decidedly bewails& if not put on. M=