ingofTthe collars, sleeve* and trimmings worked 
by the u woman she had bought almost in spite 
of Mr. Fosbrook, and saved him the trouble he 
should have had with that self-willed, obstinate¬ 
looking man, Elva's husband. The poor crea¬ 
ture was so much better without him. Did not 
all her friends see how contentedly she eat in 
her own little room, on the back verandah, work¬ 
ing away from morning iill night? That woman 
was a treasure/* Elva's daughter was not in 
such favors with the “missis,” though a gentler, 
more sweet-tempered girl could not have been 
found among black or white. Indeed, there was 
something both soft and sad in Letty's look and 
manner, which made one believe in omens when 
her after-fate was come. It was perhaps the gen¬ 
tleness and sweetness of her disposition, as well 
as their early playtimes, which made the young 
heiress cling so fondly to her humble companion, 
and take such delight in her society, even when 
grown-up life, with its duties and distinctions, 
came on. 
^Umcvtiscmmts 
Lo ! the long slender spears how they quiver and flash, 
Where the clouds send their cavalry down; 
Rank and file, by the millioa, the rain lancers dash, 
Over mountain, and river, and town; 
Thick the battle-drops fall—but they drip not in blood; 
The trophy of war is the green, fresh bud; 
O, the rain, the plentiful rain ! 
The pastures Uc baked and the furrow is bare, 
The wells they yawn empty aud dry; 
But a rushing of waters Is heard in the air, 
And a rainbow leaps out in the sky. 
Hark ' the heavy drops peltiug the sycamore leaves, 
How they wash the wide pavement and sweep from the 
eaves i 
O, the rain, the plentiful rain I 
See ! the weaver throws wide his one swinging pane, 
The kind drops dance on the floor; 
And his wife brings her flower pots to drink the sweet 
rain, 
On the step at the half open door; 
At the time on the skylight, far ever his he«ui, 
Smiles the poor cripple lad on his hospital tied; 
O, the rain, the plentiful rain ! 
And away, far from men, where the high mountains 
tower, 
The little green mosses rejoice, 
And the bud headed heather nods to the shower, 
Aud the hill torrents lift up their voice; 
And the pools In the hollows mimic the flight 
Of the rain, as their thousand points dart up in light 1 
O, the rain, the plentiful rain ! 
And deep in the fir-wood below, near the plain, 
A single thrush pipes full and Bweet! 
How days of clear shining will come after rain, 
Waving meadow* aud thick growing wheat I 
So the voice of hope sings in the heart of our fears, 
Of the harvest that springs from a great nation’s tears I 
O, the rain, the plentiful rain ! 
ANCY I'OI LTRT- For Sa’ 
i’ ' 1 Box Cm, Syracuse. X. V 
A WITTY IRISH SOLDIER, 
Thebe is a private in the New York 47th, on 
Morris Island, named Miles O'Reilly, who is a 
genuine Irish wit. He lately wrote some sarcas¬ 
tic poetry on military matters there, which was 
not considered quite rcBpeciful to his superiors, 
and he was put under arrest. He immediately 
sent, a poetic petition to .Secretary Stanton, which 
the President saw, and was so much amused with 
it that he sent him a free pardon. The conclu¬ 
ding portion of Paddy O'Reilly’s petition is as 
follows: 
Och! Stanton, our great “god o’ war/’ 
My condition in pity now sec, 
An’ if you have got any bowels to milt 
Let your bowels be milted for me, 
For I come of the dayeintest people 
In the beautiful town of Tbralee, 
Where purities an’ whisky is plenty, 
(An divil resay ve the provost marshal we have there, at 
all at all, though we have the *'peelers’‘—bad ’cess to ’em 
—who are worse, if Buch a thing wor possible)— 
An’ they how both heart an’ knee 
To men like the grim ould Admiral— 
A type of the oulden time ! 
God be good to you, Misther Stanton, 
An’ look kindly on me case; 
An’ to the man with Methusaleh’s beard 
An’ the patriarchial face, 
(I mane ould Uncle Gideon,) 
Just ax him to show me grace, 
For which I will, as in duty bound— 
If he gets me out o’ this place— 
Do for him an’ for you all that ever I can— 
(Votin' airly an’ votin’ often for ye* both, or for aither of 
you, if yez ever chance to he candydates in any disthriek 
or in any county where I can get widin ten rods of the 
ballot-box,) 
An’ now my name I thrace— 
Miles O'Reilly, who wrote of the Admiral, 
An’ is havin’ a hard ould time. 
RULE STOCKS. 
sale. Address 
a0 £5 for 
BRaGG. f.l KT1SS ,t CO. 
_ Paw P aw, Michigan. 
CAKCE-NIA m It PL REA.—-The great remelr fY,r Small 
be furnished at So ¥1 tloi.: *s a nm' 
tdo i.OJOL specimens gratis. “ JUU > 
0. T. HOBBS. Randolph, Crawford Co. P* 
daybreak. Miss Letitia and her mother seemed 
to have recovered their good humor. The Colo¬ 
nel continued his visit, as expected. They were 
never without company to dinner to tea: I was 
always invited. Mr. FoBbrook having taken a 
particular fancy to tne, and thus I had an oppor¬ 
tunity of seeing that attentions were still paid to 
the daughter of the house; but her play-fellow 
and foster-sister was not in the request she had 
been; Petty was manifestly kept out of sight, and 
under surveillance; and when the poor girl did 
! chance to become visible, it was sad to see the 
resigned and helpless Borrow that had settled on 
her fair young face. I am not sure that the 
Colonel had not interested her also: I observed 
her peeping out at his comings and goings from 
back windows and hidden corners, though Letty 
had not much opportunity for that, as Mrs. Foe- 
brook now sent her to work with her mother, 
remarking that “Eiva was a prudent, sensible 
creature, and would keep nonsense out of the 
girl's head.” 
I don’t know how Eiva fulfilled the expected 
duty; but coming to talk on particular business 
with Mr. Fosbrook one afternoon — a time when 
Southern ladies are generally fast within doors— 
I found the Colonel leaning over the rails of the 
back verandah, 
\ EU i RI n «s —FVL.ire:r.r:!t.,, the heft hard 
J-A Kasi-bekrt. and S rex. it, most valuable eari' 
bTKAWBMSRY. For Descriptive Circulars addr. « ' 
71S4t WILLIAM I’AKRY, CinnaSoson. X. j. 
S‘10 00 A,; DNTt- « ANTEO.-In every town i 
UIU.UU. the loyal states, r 10 potititelu marie fror 
everr Jl invested. Sells very rapidly Every ho usgkeei 
er will have it. Munph-s -eat free for 50 cerrt.. r|,*t wi 
readily retail for S5, with erreetiorrs arid whole‘ala terms t 
Agents, by M. £ BtRI.INi.AME, WiLett. N- Y. 713-21 
They had never been seen separate, 
except when her mother wanted Letty, and Miss 
Letitia had to go to lessons, to which the young 
lady was not partial; and when, at last,, the 
bringing-out time came, and she wrb expected to 
be admired and married in due time, Miss Leti¬ 
tia still protested that Letty and she should 
never part, but live together as mistress and 
maid, “just like mama and ELva.” 
The young lady was in that mind wheu her 
fifteenth birthday arrived. CardH of invitation 
had been issued three weeks before to the half 
of Charleston. I bad the honor of receiving 
one, and can vouch that it was a large and well- 
dressed gathering; but the principal guest of the 
evening was Colonel Fosbrook. Though never 
on bad terms with the proprietor, bo had been 
seldom at the hall. Some said its lady was not 
D i.uh Kill, tilt A PE \ IMA A \ n KrsSFLL 
STHAH KERRY PLANTS-The ho ft lot of Del£ 
warp o,ratio ’, iao« lu the Unit, d State*, oftl.r.,. *fo, crown 
out utier ipr sale. Price owing to quality And q-mruitv 
*»?»T*£ t S* w, T rr7 .. n ' aU nt 50 cte i- ta -i 160 . or 
$20 fJ 1,000, genuine by ,1. KERCH. 
Waterloo, Seneca Chl. X Y. 
( hVNT’ER llOSI*ITAl«—Quacers cured without j-tin or 
Y2 the use of t'ie knife. Tumorous White swelling. Goi- 
4vw •*- ...,, ,, "MB HWI'III IPOI* 
trt\ Licer* anti Hi! Chrome digues Ruccf^ftillv treated. 
Urcnlajs ceserftin* trea*m»*nit *ent free of char? • Ad- 
dress. DBS. BA BCOCK * TOR fa, 
716-tf 27 Bond Street. New York. 
F A Ik .11 IO It SALE.— The farm, long known as 
the Judge. Miuth farm, located in the town of Men- 
aon. Monroe County, nod about two and one-half miles 
from the Contra! Depot, in tbs village of Houeore Falls 
is offered for pale on rensonatae terms. 
Said Farm contamsnbmit three hundred acres ,,f land, 
well wet- red, well fenced, and in a blah state of coltiva- 
Iiod 1 here i.< on thy faru.good tarn i house, ..Is rye era in 
barn eighty by thirty ft -t, with nodertronnd stables, a 
good lit.rso b.tru, corn houm arid other nece»*ury out¬ 
building*, an «ppl* erreham or grafted fruit, two w od lots 
one on eac.b end of the fami. aud lOnUlmng about rwentv- 
i*£ h Ti “’ rn , iB . 1,,r >y "V'es of alluvial Hats, 
roahjne the fitnn very de«ira:,le cither for stock 01 grain 
purposes. A large p-oportion of the purchase money can 
m^v',‘ J ,- on ]'{? n< ’ 1 '." m_ortgnir,'. t ut'.her information can 
r b L„ b . ,T’- hT Addrepaing ttie Htibscriber*, or by culling on 
th 6 ni at th(ur 00 twlii farm. 710-41 
Dated. Honeoye Falls, September, itsiS. ^ ' ^HTH. 
( ) N |- 'IILI.niN APPLE MKHI.I VG.S FOR SALE at 
tile hlr.a Nurseries, st. 81,50 and S on pet t.ood. Also, 
! * lar «’' f, "CH and good assortment of healthy .mil well 
irrown Fruit and Ornamental Trees. Grape Vines. .Shrubs, 
“?» a * Exceedingly low prices Older- re-pectfuIIv solicit- 
ed T„-^l‘ lress ' E - J - FETriBONF. A Stl.V 
7 it>- 1 st Elba. Genosre Co . X. Y. 
'J'HE EUREKA FEED CUTTER. 
-k Cutttf to th* U'aittn of J armr, ». 
This Machii e ha* irurorlant improveiuenta. It i iic-heh 
ano Cl T.- Uie hear!..’ corn stalks and liav and straw with 
great rapidltv. by baud or bone power Knit es are ,-ylin- 
ariOAi wrih fhtar cut, and one can be ratilu giouua'and 
kept in complete cutting order by ordinary farm help. It 
is well made, easily operated, aimplo, durable and eflective 
Hundreds are in operation to tbe perfect rriliPt.iciiooVt'the 
owners. Orders promptly attended to Send for a Clrcu- 
M'mufaeUired only by H K PARSOXS. AGT„ 
Novelty M'orks. Harrisburg, Pa. 
jgl LBS FO11 FALL PLANTING. 
Mv I LLUSTRATEf) DESCiuPTIV F BULB TATA J OGUE 
for the Autumn of 1*03. is now published nnd will t,e -ent 
tree to all rehoapp!', by ni.nl. It contains a list of tlie best 
HYA-i'i.arns is qcc SBB. Tp i.;i'S, Ckow.v Imperui.s, Snow 
tSAU.>, l.jl.ms, Jcc.. with prices I 7111 
Afldrese, JAMES VICK, Rochester, X Y. 
ftftfl * MONT" • We wan-.A geut* „ AURj r mopri ex- 
d 7 ,;/ Pense* l itid. to sell our f., r ,0 /• , Ori- 
tstitul Jtur/u i‘ji, and !>. o'..' a: useful and . uriou* iitu- 15 
Circulars/re,. Addr-f, rH A W A-(Jl.A If K Bidder or L 
here I^etty sat at work. Ho 
was evidently talking to tbe girl; she had let her 
muslin fall, and was picking it up all in a flush. 
The Colonel Faw he was caught, but was too 
much of a gentleman to show it—bade me good- 
day without changing his position, asked If I had 
seen the mortMtig papers, if there wat« any news; 
but did not observe that there were a pair of 
fierce, cold, jealous eyes taking note of him from 
the tvindow above, where the Venetian blind 
concealed his excellent hostess. The Colonel 
walked into the house with me, and Letty went 
on with her sewing. I saw her sitting there 
when my business was done, stitching away; bnt 
the flush had faded then, and she ktoked sad and 
thoughtful. 
All the way home I had thoughts about the 
Colonel’s intentions, and Mrs. Fosbrook’s next 
move ; it was no affair of mine, but one could not 
help feeling an interest in poor Letty and tbe 
ill-luck that seemed closing round her. 
That same week the Colonel went oil' to join his 
regiment: I happened to be particularly busy 
_?.t* a I ... .iV.I ... .e *lt . . t » 
[From Chambers’ Journal. ] 
THE BLACK EXCHANGE 
LITTLE JOKERS 
AN ATTORNEY’S STORY, 
“ Wu v is i the happiest of the voweds?” The 
answer is:—“Because i is in the midst of bliss. 
Foote expressed t he belief that, a certain miser 
would take tbe beam out of his own eye, if he 
knew where he could sell the timber. 
The truth seen through a port-bole:—When a 
ship goes into port, she usually steadies; but 
when port gets into a man he usually reels. 
Which, asks an agricultural chap, is the queen 
of roses m tne garden? and answers, the rose of 
ihe watering pot, lor it rains over all the others. 
The captains of some of our new “substitute” 
troops, say it is dangerons to make the rear rank 
t ike close order for tear it should pick the pock¬ 
ets of the front rank. 
An inventive Yankee has produced an appar 
vatus which he says is a cure for snoring. He 
fastens upon the nose a gutta-percha tube leading 
to the Tympanum of the ear. Whenever the 
suorer «nores he himself receives the first impres¬ 
sion, finds how disagreeable it is, and, of course, 
Mr first setting up was in Charleston, South 
Carolina, where 1 got a profitable practice among 
the neighboring planters, ami became man of 
business to Arthur Fosbrook, Esq. lie was. like 
most Southern gentlemen, a good shot, a good 
rider, a good billiard-player, a polished man of 
the world, and a bit of a bun vivunl. Mrs. Fo- 
brook was known to be a great deal more 
straight-laced and serious. She was great in 
church-going, uncommonly proper, and could 
talk religion and morality by the mile; but, 
when it suited the lady's whims or tempers, she 
was capable of doing hard or sly things which 
her husband would not have thought of. It was 
said she had been a belle in her youth; but 
American belleship quickly passes—it had gone 
from Mrs. Fosbrook for many a year, and left 
her faded, but very genteel; what the women 
call lady-like; well-informed, too, out of schools 
and books, but narrow-minded by nature, and 
strougly inclined to censorioneness and jealousy. 
The daughter, Mies Letitia. was expected to 
fill her mother's place in the world of youth and 
fashion; and the aLrl Lad some beauty, but no 
resemblance to either of her parents. Her com¬ 
plexion was remarkably dark; her features had 
a full, almost coarse cast; it would have been 
treason to say so. but they slightly approached 
the negro mould. 
the crowded ball-room, and observing that, 
though attentive lo all ihe ladies, n.* became a 
Southern gentleman, he showed a particular 
regard for the daughter of the house, and the 
belie of the evening. I forget how long her 
mother and female friends had been occupied 
with what she should wear. The young lady’s 
complexion puzzled them. At last they fixed 
upon amber satin, with gold ornaments, in 
which, I must say, Miss Letitia looked well. 
They had at the same time agreed—because 
nothing else would serve the heiress—on dress¬ 
ing Letty handsomely, but in white, which no 
Southern lady will 
i.lC MOM II. — Agent* w.' rjTe’J in 
’ Or lotKirluee out new 41 I.jttlb 
:jik, price only tli. For partic/ars, 
rib stamp. 
S. PAGE, Gt-n’i Airi. Toledo, Ohio. 
E - Ou» of the bSBt in Western New 
beautiful and near HR. an l muntet. 
via, N. Y. 703-tf 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yortter 
GEOGRAPHICAL ENIGMA. 
wear, being, wonderful to 
say. the negroes’ chosen color, and allowing her 
to appear in public as Miss Letitia's personal at¬ 
tendant. 
I suppose Colonel Fosbrook had never seen 
> the girl before; but at the close of the first dance, 
as he was conducting Miss Letitia to her seat, 
Letty came up in the discharge of her duties. 
How contented aud happy, yet timid withal, the 
sweet girl looked, as she handed the heiress her 
expensive Parisian fan. Never did man ap- 
proaehiug forty look so struck as the Colonel: 
he said nothing for a few minutes, bnt his eyes 
were fixed on Letty; she saw it, blushed deeply, 
and stole away behind her mistress, while he 
inquired of Mr. Fosbrook. who came up at tbe 
moment. 4< Where on earth did you find that 
lovely girl?” 
“Oh, my daughter's maid,” said Fosbrook. 
with his accustomed ease. 
“She is not a negro?” said the Colonel. 
“Yes, I assure you. I bought her mother in 
Charleston. She is wonderfully fair, I musi 
allow, and a very good girl. Letitia has always 
She was tall and well-devel¬ 
oped for her years, had fine black eyes, and hair 
of the same color; they said it was rather too 
wavy, and could never be dressed in smooth 
bands. But people liked Miss Letitia better 
than her mother, for she was livelier and more 
good-natured than ever thuL excellent lady could 
have been, though quite as proud of herself, her 
rank, and her fashion, and somewhat tinctured 
with the maternal Inclination to jealousy. Miss 
Letitia had a companion, or rather playfellow, 
whom nobody that frequented the house could 
miss knowing, she was so constantly with the 
young lady and in the family rooms. Her name 
was Letitia, too: but they called her Letty, by 
way of proper distinction, for the blood of Africa 
was in her veins, and she was tbe daughter of a 
slave. Letty's mother, unlike the rest of Mr. 
Fosbrook's negroes, was not a native of his 
estate, but had been purchased, together with 
her unborn child, atjthe sale of n deceased West 
Indian's establishment; she had been parted 
from her husband, it was said, through Mrs. Fos¬ 
brook’s determination to have the woman, but 
not the mau, in her household. She was not a 
complete African, but something whiter than a 
mulatto—I think it was a Spanish trace she had 
—and they called her Eiva, probably an abbre¬ 
viation of Elvira. A thin, wiry, eariy-withered 
woman she looked; but thpre was a piercing 
intelligence in her keen, black eyes, not common 
to the negro race; she was more grave and 
silent, too, than is their wont—was thought to 
have a deal of discretion, and known to be great 
in needle-work. Her European origin accounted 
to most people for this superiority, and it also 
helped to account for the surprising beauty of 
her daughter. Letty was positively f a i r< xvith 
finely-cut features, long glossy hair, aud a figure 
so finely moulded, yet so slender, that she might 
have stood for the youngest of the graces. To a 
strauger it was astonishing that the girl could 
have come of African blood; but one gets accus¬ 
tomed to any wonder. Everybody knew her to 
be Elva’s daughter, born on the same day as 
Miss Letitia, and allowed to grow up as* her 
playfellow and foster-sister; for Eiva was made 
nurse to the infant heiress, having, either by her 
wisdom or good luck, acquired the particular 
confidence aud cold-blooded liking of Mrs. Fos¬ 
brook. and continued to be her right-hand wo¬ 
man and family seamstress till the time my story 
commences. 
The quantity of fine needle-work she did for 
Mrs. Fosbrook was something to be astonished 
at The good lady took a sort of pride in show- 
OfiAIG MIOEOSOOPi. 
I am composed of 21 letters. 
My 7, 10, 3, 14 is a State in the United States. 
My 5, 20, 11, S is a river in Europe. 
My 11,17, 0,10 (s a town in England. 
My 4,12,10, 4 Is a sea in Asia. 
My 6. S, 14, 2, 0, 3, 17 is one ol' the United States. 
My 15, 2, 3, 5 is a lake in North America. 
My 10, 14 17| 2, 17 10 is a mountain in Asia. 
My 1. 21, 0, 9,10 is a river in the Western part of the 
United States. 
My 18, S, 2, 15, 10, 2, 17 is a town in Italy. 
My 13, £1, 7, 2, 3, 4, 14 is n State in the United States. 
My whole is a proverb. 
Naples, N. V., 1863. Helen Garfield. 
nr Answer in two weeks 
This is the !.e«t ana cneapest Microscope 
in the woti.I for general u««. Ii requite- no 
focal adjustment, magnifies about one bun- 
ured diMUieterti, oi ten thousand time- and 
Is so simple that « child can use it. ii will be 
sent by mail, postage paid, on the receipt of 
Two Dollnis au l Twenty-jive Cec.tr or with 
nx beautiful mounted objects for Three ')ol- 
£E8T TAMILI 3EWIM MACHINE 
WilEELiEIi A: WILSON 
H A ^J 1{ 1 L ' (J - were awarded the First FrmintI 
at the Great Internationa: Exhibition, London, l-rt.\ 
Principal Office, 505 Rriiitdtvay, 
665 a. W. IIIKIIliE, ,V*riiL, KoeheMer, S, V. 
ion non A * ,,| A thees, 6 tc a feet 
A•' J V / A/ high,at $8 per hundred. 
20,000 Standsi'd Fear Trees. 6 to 7 tV-t high, at tSS 5T- ky 
10.00(1 Dwarf Pear Trees. S to 5 feet iiiih, at $l(j t(jit 
20 ,U 0 O White Grape and Cherry Currants; 'Diana 
Grape Vines A large stock of Peach trees. Cherry trees. 
Plum Gees, Gooseberries, Raspberries. Blackberries,StTvr- 
bernea, most of the u»w varieties ofNativs Grapes, fie.. Ac. 
All <xf IhJtbesl UVi'-i r- Itariftiet grmm «*,v»w*eWti.- 
Local and I'ravzhiio Agmtf Wanted. 
Wholesale and Descriptive Catalogues sent to all appli¬ 
cants who inclose stamps to pre-pay postage 
Address E. WuDY ft SON, 
6 °l Niagara Nurseries, I .oak port, X Y 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker 
NAMES OF PLACES ENIGMATICALLY 
EXPRESSED. 
A point of the compass and a harbor. 
A man’s name and a weight. 
A hard substance and part of a whip. 
A liquid and to inter 
A man’s name and a feint. 
A kind of wood and an eminence. 
A man’s name and a fortified place. 
A hard substance and a place of crossing. 
A girl’s name and a summer house. 
A kind of tree and fountains. 
Geneseo, N Y , 1S6S. 
Answer in two weeks. 
MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER, 
THH LARGEST CIRCULATED 
Agricultural, Literary and Family Newspaper. 
LS PUBLISHED EVRHY SATURDAY BY 
J». JB. T. MOORE, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
ANAGRAMS. 
TIMMS) IJY JO : 
Two Dollarb a Year —To Clubs line Agent*as follow*: 
Three Copies one year, for $6; Six, and one free to clu 
agent, for S)0: Ten, and one free, toi 815; and any greater 
number at same rate —only 81.50 per copy. Club paper* 
directed to individuals and sent to ae many different Post- 
Offices as desired. As we pre-pay American postage on 
copies sent abroad, $1 Tu -s the lowest Club rate for Canada, 
and 82.50 to Europe, — but during the present rate of ex¬ 
change, Canaria Agents or Subscribers remitting for the 
Rural .b bills of their awn specie-paylnc hanks iriii net be 
oharged postage 
Adhere to Terms.—W e endeavor to aahere strictly to 
subscription terms ano no person is authorized to off(r tfii 
Rural at. tit* Chao imolitht.il rattt. Agents and friends 
are at liberty to pure a lean ss many copies of the Rural as 
they are disposed to pay tor at club rate, but we do not wish 
the paper offered, in any case, below price. 
The Postage on the Rural New-Yorker is only 5 c te 
per quarter to any part of this State, (except Monroe coun¬ 
ty, where it goes free,) and the same to any other Loyal 
State, iTpaid quarterly in advance where received. 
Direct to Rochester, N. Y.—All persons having occa¬ 
sion to address the Rural Nsw-Yorkeh, will please direct 
to Rochtftrr (Y. 1'., and not, as many do, to New York, 
Albany, Buffalo, Sc, Money Letters intended for near* 
requently directed and mailed to the above places. 
Dent me man 
O rulin vote. 
I vote all. 
A grave. 
New Jersey, 1863. 
t3T Answer in two weeks, 
Mi son sire, 
Rested. 
Quit anty. 
Sour cidul. 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMAS, &c., IN No. 717. 
Answer to Miscellaneous Enigma:—Do unto others as 
yon would that they should do unto you. 
Answer to Geographical Enigma:—Moore’s Rural New- 
Yorker. 
Answer to Anagram; 
We have a little favorite, 
The fairest of all things; 
Should you see her, you would call her, 
A cherub without wings; 
Or a fairy, bird, or blossom— 
You may call her what you will, 
To each she bears resemblance, 
But herself is better still. 
A cniLD is never nappy from having his own 
way. Decide for him and he has but one thing 
to do; put him to please himself, and he is 
troubled with everything and satisfied with 
nothing. 
