BY FRED'K L. BAKER. $lOO Reward. FOR A MEDICINE That will cure Coughs, Tickling in the Throat, influenza, Whooping Cough, Or relieve Consumptive Cough, AS qtrreit AS entle gum. OVER FIVE THOUSAND BOTTLES Have been sold in its native town, and not a single instance of its failure is known. Welave, in our possession, any quantity of certificates,-some of them from eminent phys icians, who have used it in their practice, and given it the pre-eminence over•any other com pound. It does not dry up a Cough, but loosens it, so as lo enable the patient TO EXPECTORATE FREELY. Two or three doges will invariably cure tickling in the throat. ' A Half Bottle has often completely cured the MOST STUBBORN 'COUGH, and yet; though it is so sure and speedy in its operation, it is perfectly harmless, being pure ly vegetable. It is very agreeable to the taste and may be administered to children of any age. En cases of Croup we wall guarrantee a curt., if taken in season. rjr—No FAMILY should be without it. It is Within the reach of all, the PRICE BEING ONLY 25 CENTS. And if an investment and a thorough trial does not "back up" the above statement, the money will be refunded. We say this-know ing its meritu and feeling confident that one trial will secure for it a home in every house hold. iIZP•Do not waste away with Coughing, when so small an investment will cure you. It may be had of any respectable druggist, who, will furnish you with a circular, of genuine certificates' of Wes it lime made. C. GI. CLARK, Proprietors,. Sept. 24-6 in I New-Haven, Ct. Fancy Furs ALL KINDS OF FANCY-UR.SI For Ladies and Children's Wea3 I wish to return my thanks to my friends of Lancaster and surrounding counties, !or their very liberal patronage extended to me during the last few years, and would say to them that I now have in store, of my own importation and manufacture a very extensive assortment of an the different kinds and qualities of fancy furs for ladies and children, that will be worn during the Full and Winter seasons. tieing the dtrect Importer of all my FURS „ from Europe, and having them all manufactu red under my own supervision -enables me to offer my customers and the public a much- HANDSOMER SET OF FURS for the same money. Ladies please give inc a call before purchasing ! Please rememberthe name, number and street. TORN FAREIRA, 718 ARCII-BT., Sept. 17-5018.] PIIILADELPIIIA, PREPAB,E FOR WINTER. A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF WINTER GOODS DAS JUST BEEN OPENED BY SPANGLER 4- PATTERSON. If you want a good Black or Brown French Cloth, or a superior Castor Beaver Cloth, cr a Arstrate Cassimere for a Business Suit, you cart get it at ' Spangle) $• Patterson's.. Do y,01.1 want a good quality of heavy or fine Gloves, 'Fur or Merino Comforts ' Cravats, Neck Ties,' Collars; Undershirt 4 or Drawers, Fancy Woolen Shirting, Shaker-knit Wool Hose, or Army Kerieys, go to • Spangler Ar Patterson's. Ladies will find a good assortment of fashion - 'enable Silks, Colored Alpaccas, Poplins, Meritioes,, DeLaines Prints, Shawls, Bat morals, Soot s, Hoods, Nubian; Embroide ries, Gloves, Belts, Undergarments,Hosiery, Skirts, Sm., at Spangler er Paterson'e. A lot of ' , Domestic Blankets, Cotithirerpanes, Scotch Cover ids, Sheeting.% Tickings, Cana burgs, Cheeks, Minding, Gingham, fag and Ingrain Carpet, just'received by Spangler Patteriim. Dinner and Tea Setts, the finest white Gran ite Ware in the roost modern paterns, to gether with ' `a variety of new style Glass Wiwi); and Common, Crockery, embracing everything in' that line% requited for house hold, purposes to be had cheap at - Spangler 4. Pattereon,s.• Fine Syrups, Raisins, Cranberries, Baking Molasses, Teas,.Sugars, Spices, &c., at SP./ANGLER 4 , PATTERSON'S'. A First-class Fanners ) Magazine for Pennsylvania. . ---- .......... ---". 1864.] THE PENNSYLVANIA ' [1864. - I F-ARMER AND , GARDENER; . nrvirriri tiO '' 1.. - ... .„, . Agriculture, Horticulture and Rural Affairs. -"', EDITED AND PUBLISHED BY . -' WM.' S. Yourw&, , Co., W . 2 : North, Sixth- street, Philadelphia. ''.-1 441(8: ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. it § The Sixth Volume commences with the inttAiturber. , Saving obtained the services of eminent and e ntrAir tilt: ta e tzt i til e ta l t , i .St y i f k . _fez the-eurtent.volime.- as. one of the, heft., ever ,„ . iistled,,iiii, i orgaality, proctical thought and lefrableirdovnati* .._ SEND FOR A ' SPECIM E N,. . „ kkOTAGN.E, a,ad ,othei Table. Wi ll em ,guirranievii top4t 4 pure, and aold.aalgw as can tocloligfitia pliiißdtilphia or.New-Nrarli. D. 13r.ruAgiur Picot Building. O LANDLORDS! ,Jilat„received, Se q tch 1404 d, Iriah 114 S ,—wa'nua- Rige*ek Dt BUY on ."of bealitiful SOFT - MATStst. Cauza.,l4.,92.lviaTkevat TOTO UR NITA COM:MINE, For stile by DR. LANDIS )aT.....',.,....-ttfian N,btftithut thuuspillania 4guriml: golottb yittraturt, agritutturt, Ran of tht lota' guttilifonct, FOR RATS, MICE, 'ROACHES, ANTS, BED-BUGS; MOTHS IN FURSAWooLins, &C.. INSECTS ON PLANTS, FOWLS, Animals, efc. Put up in 25c., 50c. and $1 Boxes - , Bottles, and Flasks. Thie . e and Five dollars sizes for Hotels Public Institutions, &o. "Only infallible remedies known." "Free from POiSOiIS." "Not[dangerous to the Human!. Family." a Rats come out of their holes to die." Sold wholesale in all large cities. try Sold by all druggists and retailers eve rywhere.e BEWA RE of all worthless imitations!! See- that "COSTAR'S" name is on each 804, flottle,,and Flask, before you buy. Address . • HENRY 10POSTAR, . Principal :Depot, 482 Broadway, N. Y. &)Sold by all wholesale and retail Drug gists in Marietta, Pa. [lO-30 . . „ . 32).r, aaearLe c WOULD TAKE THIS Method of informing. their patrons and i a friends that they have just received a COMPLETE_ AND WF:Lt SELECTED STOCK OF 1:3 r g" cdEivric A'lB, TOILET 'ARTICtES, DYE-STUFFS, PERFUMERY, Also, a well assorted stock of Coal Oil Lamps, Shade; Globes, Burners, &c„ Inks, Pens, Paper and Envelopes, Fresh Seidlils Powders, Citrate of Magnesia, Cologne of the best quality, Hair Oits,,Pomades, Sago, Tapioca, Bermuda Arrow Root, Pure iiiIWCY FtTHU JOHN FIREIRA, 7IS ARCH-ST:, below Eighth, south Ground Spices, Pocket Books, Soaps, Combs, Brushes, Gum Rattles, Balls and Rings, Taylors' Shaving. Compound, Burnett's Cocoaine and Kallist.m, Flavoring . Extracts of Lemon, Vanilla, Pine Apple, Bose, Strawberry and Al- mond, Infant Powder, Powder • and Puff' Boxes, Balm of a Thousand Flowers, Re., &c., &c. IQ" Family Receipts carefully compounded side; PHILADELPHIA, 111 PORT F.R, Manufacturer of AND DEALER IN Prescriptions correctly filled at all hours. M' Calls answered by the Doctor at all hours. I T UNKEL'S CELEBRATED RITTER WINE OF IRON. Bitter Wine of .Iron. Bitter Wine of. Iron. Bitter Wine of Iron. The Great Tonic The Great Tonic The Great Tonic The Great Tonic For. Dyspepsia.and Indigestion, For D,yspepsis and Indigestion,. For Dyspepsia and Indigestion, For Dyspepsia and Indigestion. For weak Stomachs and General Debility. For, weak stomachs and General Dsbility. For weak stomachs and. General Debility. For weak stomachs and General Debility: Reliable and sure to do good, Reliable and sure to do good, Reliable and sure to do good, Reliable and sure to do good, And cannot do Harm. And cannot do Harm. • And cannot do And cannot do Harm. It costs but little and purifies the blood, It costs but little and purifies the Blood, It costs but little, and purifies the blood, - 'lt costs but little and purifies the blood, We now only ask a Trial -We now only ask a Trial We now only.asitalTrial . We now only ask a Trial Of this' valuable' Tonie. Of•this' Valuable Tonic.` - Of this valuable Tonic. Of this valuable Tonle. Only 7.5 e. and One Dollar per Bottle. Only 75e and $1 per Battle. - Orly 75c And $l, per bottle. , Only 75c and $1 per Bottle. llianyjaeltereit solely by S. A.`KUNKE'L ir Bro. It:P' Nose genuine without their signature. Far sale ty Dr.. BEANS* t: 0.; Market7et., Marietta, Pa.., and by all respectable. Druggists throughout the- Country. [2-26w PHIL ADELPIIIA 1864. 1 1864. PAPER HANGINGS. TIOWELL & BOURKE, I ' ' • MANUFACTURERS OF: WALL; PAPERS' VD WINDOW CURTAIN PAPERS, Corner of Fourth and Market‘streets.. PHILADELPHIA. N. 8.--A fine stock of ,LINEN . SHADES con stantly on hand. ' ' (3in A DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE; - • _A .. : ESTATE of Elfzabeth Shuman, . Late of the- Borough of Marietta, deceased. Letters of administration on said estate hav ing been granted to the undersigned,. all per sons indelatedthereto are requested to make ininiediatpoettl m eEnent,and,timise.haying,claims or deiiiiithis skaihsithe saepresentahem without delay for settlement toi the undersign ed, •residing at Maytown, in East Donegia township.- l D. LONGENECKER. !LA'I'ED'WA.RF.: A. Large and tine tliocit 'if Plited *areal H. L. & R. J. Zonal's. - orrierefiglirili Queen Street & `Ceiter Square j) Lanelatet, IV. Tea Setta, in variety, Coffee Um'i: Flickers, Goblets, Suit Stands, Cake Baskets, aid .. .gaskets, Spoons, Forks, Knives, daters ace;"&igitt nianufaetnrei's faxes. . L. & F. J. ZAH.M,S. Cor. frinth 'Queen st. and Centre Square, Lam ' caste4ißit. =Our Priaa.are moderate and all gonds.warnintedtetbe as.retelesented. Mr LA TlNG . atte#o4 , ;? at moderate. ratrea,. I MPORTANTTO MA.RR/EO TRULY A BLESSING!! I will send,free , of ckarge, to any lady who will send in her name and addres€,directions how to•preeent the extreme pain'of child-birth; • also how to have perfeetty healthy and- beau tifuLehildreni also one other netrrantrivi*t anP seetq l •the only 'lure and sae re tidies kites 'discovered:- • ' Ipakuvtiwtaloveoffer is to inducteevery , l44 to teat iny remedies. Aillress MAD :131E DULENTAUZ, M. D. '3m 767 Broadwr-b N. Y. MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 1864. HOOFLAND'S DR. GERM AN BITTERS, Prepared by Dr. C. M. Jackson, Philadelphia, Pa. IS NOT A BAR-ROOM DRINK; OR A SUBSTITUTE FOR RUM,• Or an Intoxicating. Beverage, but a highly con centrated Vegetable Extract, a Pine Tonic, free from alcoholic stimulent or injurious „drugs; and will effectually cure Complaint, • Dykpcpsia, and Taundick HOOFLANDI £ERAAW BITTERS WILL CURE EVERY ,CASE OP Chronic or Nervous Debility, , Disease of the Kidneys, and Diseases arising from a Disordered Stomach. OBSERVE TUE FOLLOWING SYMPTOMS resulting from disorders of the digestive organs: Conitipation, In ward Piles, Fulness or Blood to the Head, acidity of. the Stomach r Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust for Food, Fullness or weighein the - StotnisCh, sour eructations, sink gag or fluttering of the: Pit of. the Stomach, iwimming of the Head, hurried and difficult Breathing, fluttering at tlit heart,: choking or, suffocating - sensations when"in a lying 'posture, dimness of vission, dots or webs before the sight, fever and dull , pain in, the head, defici ency of perspiration; yellownees of the 'Blom and-eyes, pain in the-side, back, chest r limbs, sudden flushes of heat, burning in the flesb, constant inurtaginings of evil, and giearde pression of-spirits. HOOFLAND'S BERMAN BITTERS WILL. GIVE YOU A Good Appetite, Strong Nerves; - .ffeatthy, Nerves, Steady Nerves, Brisk' Feelings,' . . r „ Energetic Feelings, Heathy Feelings, A Good Constitution, A Strong Constitution,' A Healthy Constitution, A Sound Constitution. WILT. MAKE THE WEAK STRONG, Will make the Will make the Will make the Will make the Sallow Complexion Clear, Will make the. Dull eye Clear and Bright, 'Will prove a blessing in every fathily. nt"Can be used with perfect safety by male or Female, Old or Young. PARTICULAR NOTICE. There are Many preparations soid under the name of Bitters, put up in quart bottles, com pounded of the cheapest Whiskey or 'common Rum, costing from 20 to 40 centi per gallon,. the taste disguised by Anise or Coriandefseed. This class of Bitters has caused and will con .inue to cause, as long as- they. can be,,sold, aundreds to die the death of a drunkard. By their use the systernis kept continually under the influence of alcoholic, stimulants of the worst kind, the desire for liquor is created. and kept - up, and the result' is. all the ,hOrrers,it tendant upon a drunkard's life and death. Be ware of them. 'For those who desire and will-have a liquor bitters, we publish the following receipt Get one bottle Hoofiand's Girman Bitters and mix with' three quarts of good Whiskey or Brandy, 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,lind wilt cost much less. You will bane all the virtues of Hoofiand's Bit ters in connection with a good article' of liquor and at a much less price then these inferior preparationsswill cost you. DELICATE CHILDREN. Thoae suffering from mararaitus, wasting aWay, with scarcely any flesh on their banes, are cured in a very short time; one- baps in such cases, will have moat surprhairig effect. Resulting from Fevers of any kind—these bit ters will renew your strength in a short time. FEVER AND Aorm.---Tife chilli will not re turn if these Bitters are used. No person in a fever and ague district shoUld be without them From Rev. J. Newton Brown, D. 1)., Editor of the Encyclopeclia of .Religimis Knowledge. Although not disposed to favor or recommend Patent Medicines - m general, throtigh dratiust of their ingredients and effects; I yet know of no sutlici Int reason why a man ma),not tes tify to the bent3fiti he believes himself to have received from anr sinat.le preparation, in the hope,thnt he may thus contribute to the bene fit of others. I do this more readily in regard to DooflautPs German Sitters, prepared by. Dr. C. M. Jackson because'l was prejUdiead against them for a number .of: years,. under. the impression :that they were chiefly an alcoholic mixture. lam indebted to my friend Itob 2 t Shoemaker, - e'sq., for the removal or this prejudice by proper tests, and for encouragement tatry them; when suffering from great and long debility. The use of three bottles of these bitters, at the be ginning of the present year, was followed by evident relief, and restoration to a degree•of bodily and mental vigor which I had not felt for'six motiths'before, and had ahrfost dikpnir ed.of regaining. I therefore thank God and my friend for directing me to, the •uae of them. L NEWTON BROWN. Philadelphia, June 23, 1362: ATTENTION, SOLDIERS. AITD . THE - FRFENDEF . OF -80EDIERS. • We callthe aftentionof all having rbliitions or, friends in the army to the fact that "-Hoof landliGerman Birters'? will.cure nine-tenths of the disdasis induced privation and ex posues incident to camp life. lii the lists published alropsc daily in Vie newspapers, on theitirriiral orthe sick; if' will be noticed that a 'very larke proportion are auffering - from de bility. Every case of that,kind can be readi ly cored by Iloolland's aerman Bitters. We have no hesitatior , in statingthat, if these bit ters are freely used. among mg soldiers, hund reds of. lives might be saved that otherwise would be rost. The Isropriebirs are , daily reeeiving, thaiikful letters. from; sufferers in, the army and hospi talS,whii have been restored tiitimilth by the use of these - Bittersieent ID them ,by,their , friends. Beware of,eounterfeifs See ,that the sig nature of "C. Jackson,”'is Oa the wrapper of each bottle. - • P ILLC)-E S-- Largo Size, sl:oo.pqr bottle.,.or dozenlpy $5. Medium sip, 75e per tiottle, dozeraer $4 The larger s 'Mei On account-of Aht-quantity the bottles!hold, are much the cheaper., 'Should your nearest druggist not haip `the article, do not be put off by any of the intoxi cating preparations. that: may, be offered, in its place, but send to us, and we _will' 'roma id, securely packed, by express. • - Principal Officeand Manufactory, Flo. 631 i AnCir ' JONES & EVANS, tEdecessoreto , C. AL' racinidn & Co :0 , etorS. For sale by Druggists and i ,Dealers in every the United States. jmay 30-ly Publistab tbezz Zaturkata/fEnzitEn2 OFFICE: Cavan's Roir, FThet Street, five doors below . Flikry's Hotel. 'TERNS, 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 : (DIG Square (12 lines, or, less) 50 cents for the first insertion and, 25 centilor each subsequent insertion. Pro fessional and Business cards, of six line's or less at $3 per annum. Notices in the reading col- urrins,lme cents a-line. Marriages's:rid Deaths; the simple announcement, FREE : but for, any 'additional lines, five cents a line. Aliberal deduction roade•M yearly and half' yearly ,advertisers. , Having recentled added a large lot of new. Job and Card type, Cuts, Borders, &c., to the Job, Office of "The Mariettian," which will insure the 'fine execution of all -kinds of Jos & CARD P n SITING, from the smallest Card to the largest Poster, at prices to suit the Wartimes." Never stopped by stone or pebble, See liow gaily speeds the stream! Winding on through 'tangled rushes, Never stayed by'rain or gleam. Hark how , gayly sings the streamlet, Ever sings its, glad refrain; , Sings in' eddying and in leaping, " Try, try, try again " see the gallant river flowing, Ever without thought of rest, Over rocis, 'neath iron bridges, Round the islets on its breast. • • Hark !'the river, as it flowath, Ever sings its gladrefrain, As it rolls by town and city— " Try, try, try again!" See the glorious ocean bounding— Proud, triumphant winner free ; Leaping over barriers conquered, Toiling, restless, victor Sea! Hark ! the glorious ocean chanting, Ever stags its glad refiain, Joining with the stream and river, "Try, try, try again !" Delicate Heatty, Thin Stout, Depressed Lively, Courage ! onward! patient working Makes us masters overall;.' Leaf:by leaf the flower unfoldeth ; Stone by stone we build the wall. Bark ! from those who've toiled and labered . Breaks the, glad triumphant strain ; They have reached the mountain sum mit. as 'standing id the corner of a square about the hour of dinner, when one of his countrymen, observing the worthy father in perplexity, thits addressed hint : "0 ! Fattier O'Leary, how is 'your riverance ante ?" "Ah I you don't understand ; that is just it am invited to dine at one of the houses , in this square., and i have forgotten, the name, and I'never looked at the number, and now it's nearly seven O'clock." "Is that !di ?"• was the cry ; just now be aisy, your riverance, I'll settle that for yon." So eaying, away flew the good-natured • Irishman - round the square,'glancing at the kitchens, and wheb he discovered a fire that denoted hospitality, he thun dered at the door and inquired,— "Is' Father O'Leary here?" As might be expected, again and againte was repulsed. At length an angry foot-inen eXclaimed— "No;`bother on Father O'Leary, he is not here ; bat he was to dine here to day, and the cook is in a rage, and says the dinner will be spoilt. All is wait ing for Father O'Leary." Paddy;, eapiug from the door, as, if the steps'pa been on fire, rushed up to the astonished priest, saying,— "All is right, pier riverance; you dine at 43, and a mighty good dinner you'll get." "0 Pat," said the grateful pastor, "the blessings of a hungry man be upon ,you." "Long, life And happiness to Your reverence I have got Your malady, I only wish I had your cure." , FLIES DESTROYED. —A pint of sweet milk, a quarter of a pound of sugar, two Ounces of ground pepper simmer to gether fel. ten minutes, and place it in shaUow dishes. If this is true, there is no necessity , for using poisonous anti dee about the house. GRAfiLkM IBREAD.--"Pake 'ALLOT unbolted flour' `off Iwheit, wet' it with !lukewarm ciatettidd -salt - and yeast, knead' in enough more of this flour to make it astir- add a - and when ~ riaep, bake inmediumsized vA-yonng , huff down East adver 'tifaibi Vie yiatiotha - who iietabr 'end , An oppOrtaiiiti,"inid'iesysihtii if If. *ill come over to their town he can do • tter, (Srm aaatn. “Try, try, try again !” tL SHREwi) IRrsilarAN.--in Irish-priest "Mightily put out, Pat," was the re "Pat oat !- who'd , put•out your river THE BRIDE IN HER NEW HOME, BY /MS. STOWE Youeg people who cannot expect by any reasonable possibility to keep more than two or thrqe - servants, if .they hap pm to have . . the, means in the outset, furnish a house with, just such &diale cts in England- would suit an• establ'• 1- mentof siiteen.."We have,seen ses in England having two or three h use= maids, and tables served by a butlerttnd two waiters, where the furpiture, car pets, china, crystal, and silv,er:were in one and the same style with some es= tablishments in America where the family was hard pressed to keep three Irish, servants. This want , of servants-is the -one thing that must modify everything in Ameri can life ; it is,land will long continue to be, a leading feature in the-life of a country, so rich in openings for man. arid woman that domestic service can be only, the stepping-stone , to something higher. Nevertheless, we -Americans are great -travelers; we are sensitive, appreciative, fond of novelty, apt to re ceive and incorporate into our own life what seems fail. and graceful in that of other people. -Our women's wardrobes are made elaborate with the thousand elegancies of French toilet—onr houses filled with .a thousand knick-knacks of which onrplain ancestors never dreamed. Cleopatra did not set sail on- the Nile in more state and beauty than that in which our young American bride is of ten ushered into her new home. Her 'Wardrobe all gossamer lace and quaint frill and crimp and embroidery, her it house a museum of elegant and costly gewgaws; and amid the whole. collec tion of elegancies and fragilities, she, perhaps, the frailest. Then . comes the tug of war. The young wife becomes a mother, and while the is retired to her chamber, blunder lag Biddy rusts the elegant knives, or takes off the ivory' handles by soaking in hot water—the silver is washed in 'greasy soap-snds, and refreshed now and then with a thump; which cocks the nose the teapot away, or makes the handle assume an air offirtinken defiance. The fragile china it"; chipped here and there around its, edges with those minute gaps so vexatious to a woman's soul ; the handles $y hither and thither , in wild confusion of Biddy's washing-day hurry, when cook wants her to help hang out the clothes. Meanwhile, Bridget sweeps the parlor with , a hard broom, and shakes out showers of ashes> from the grate, forgetting to cover the damask lounges, and they directly look as rusty and time-worn as if they had come from an auction. store ; and all togpther unite in making such havoc of the delicate ruffles and laces of the bridal outfit and baby layette, that, when the poor young wife comes out of ber chamber after her nurse has left her, and, weakened and embarrassed with the demands of the new-corner, begins to look • once more into the affairs of her little world, she is ready to sink with vexation and _dis couragement. Poor little princess ! Her clothes are made as princesses wear them, her baby's clothes like a young duke's, her house furnished like•a lord's, and only Bridget and. Biddy and Polly to do the work of cook, scullery-maid, butler, footman, laundress, nurs,ery-maid, house-maid, and lady's-maid. Such,. is the array that in the Old Country would be deemed necessary, to take care of an establishment got up like hers. Every thing in it is too fine—not too fine to be pretty, not in bad taste in itself, but too fine for the situation, too fine for com fort or liberty. What °brines in abouse so furnished 2 Too' often, ceaseless , fretting of the nerves, in the wife's, despairing, consci entious efforts to keep: things as they shonid,be. There is no freedom in a house- where things are too expensive and choice .to be freely handled and easily replaced. Life becomes a series of petty embarrassments and restrictions, something is always going wrong, and the Man ends his fireside oPpresSiVe— the various articles of his parlor and ta ble seem' like so 'many temper-traps and 'epring2gurii; menaCing explosion and &astir. ' • - ' '• There way be, indeed, the most per=- feet- hoinef•feeling, the utmost - coSiness and restfulness, in apartinents crusted with l gitdiez, carpeted with velvet, and upholstered with. sathi I have seen ,such,, , ithere i the horneAce, look and air ,oflr, use was as genuine'as in a West ern log-cabin ; bet, this was in a range of princely income that„made all these Agy to litt'alStaifitd ViCePlitced as the mogicaihZiVVfqiii 4 draiii)Stic furniture. But so long as articles must VOL. 10.-NO. 33. be shrooded from aim, or used with fear and trembling, because the cost is above "the general level of oar means, we had better be without them, even though the must lucky of accidents may put their possession in our power.— Atlantic 211 i thly. BoTs.—A boy is the spirit of mischief embodied ; a perfect teetotum ; spinning round like a jenny, or tumbling heels over head. Re must invariably go through the process of leaping over every chair in hie reach, makes drum heads of the doors, turns the tin pans into cymbals, takes the best knives out to, dig worms, and loses them, hunts np the molasses cask and leaves the molas ses running, is boon companion to the sugar barrel, searches up all the pie and preserves after supper and eats them, goes to the apples ,every ten minutes, hides his old cap order to wear hie best one, cuts hir.boots accidentally if he wants a new pair, tears his clothes for fun, jumps into the riddles for fun, and ,for ditto tracks, your carpets, and cuts your furniture.. Be, is romping, shouting, blustering, and in all bat his best estate a terrible torment, especial ly to his sisters. Be don't pretend to much until he 'ii twelve, then the 'rage for frock coats and high dickies Ctika. triences. At fourteen, he` 'is too - big to split wood or go after water, and the time these interesting offices Might to 'be performed, contrives to be invisible ; whether concealed' in the garret, - w ith . -some old worm-eaten novel for's coin panion, ensconced in the window-giod, trying to learn legerdemain tricks, Cr bound off on some expedition that turns out• to be in most cases more deplorable than explorable—to coin a word. At fifteen he has tolerable experience; of the world—but, from fifteen to twenty, may we be clear from the track when he is in eight ; he knows' more then thin Washington and Franklin together ; in other words, he knows more then than be will ever know again. Suet hail one of these young specimens "boys" at six teen, and see how wrathy he gets! If he does not answer you precisely as the little urchin did, who angrily exclaimed, "don't call me boy ; I've smoked these two years," he will give yon a withering look that is meant to annihilate you, turn on his heel, and, with a curl of the lip, mutter disdainfully, "who do you call boy ?" and 0 ! the emphasis. But jesting aside—an honest, blunt, merry mischievous boy is something to be proud of, whether as brother or son ; for in all his scrapes, his , good heart ge,ts the better of him, and leads him soon to repentance; and be sure he will remem ber his fault—at least five minutes. lige It is not, very easy to keep up' a conversation with women in company. It is thought a piece of rudeness to dif fer from them: it is not =quite fair to ask them a reason for what they say.— You are afraid of pressing too hard upon them : -but where you cannot differ openly and unreservedly, you cannot heartily agree. It is not so in France. There the women talk of things in gen eral, and reason better than the men- in this country. They are mistresses of the intellectual foils. They are adepts in all the' topics. They !Mow what , is to be said for and against' all ,sorts of questions, and are lively and full of mis chief into, the bargetin. They are very subtle. They put you to your trumps immediately. Yqnr logic is more in requisition even than' yon gallantry.-- Yon must, argue as well as bow yourself into the- good graces of these modern Amazons. .*hat a situation for an Englishman to be placed in I The other evening a gentleman's button caught hold of the'fringe of a 'lady's shawl. "I am attached to you - ," said the gentleman, laughing, while;' he was industrinusly trying to get loose.— "The attachrnent is Mutual," was' the good:humored reply. ea- An old man said, ”When I was young, I was poor ; when old, I became rich ; but in each - Condition I found-die appointment. When the faculties of enjoyment were, I had not the means ; when the means came, the faculties were gone." am not anxious," said good Mr. Adams of Falkirk, in the middle of the last century, and he was then near his journey's end—"l, am not anxious .either to live or die ; if I die, I shall be with god, and if I live, he will be with me." - !Er "Ideas," says,Volta re, : "are like beardamen only get Ahem when' ,they grow up, 'and women never have any."