i8 THE BA TTALION. Six Words. A little court scene in Tennessee is thus described by the Clarksville Leaf-Chronicle; Aunt Cherry Mallory was recently put on the witness-stand to tell what she knew about the annihilation of a hog by a rail- w T ay locomotive. After being sworn she was asked by the lawyer if she saw the train kill this hog. “Yess,” she said, “I seed it.” “ Well,” said the lawyer, “tell the court, in as few words as possible, all you know about it.” “ I kin do dat in a mighty few words,” said Aunt Cherry, clearing her throat, and with one eye on the judge and one on the lawyer, she said: “Hit jes’ tooted and tuck ’im.” An editor has been inspired, after looking over his list of delinquent subscribers, to compose the following; “How dear to our heart is the old silver dollar, when some kind subscriber presents it to view; the liberty head without necktie or collar, and all the strange things which to us seem so new; the wide- spreading eagle, the arrows below it, the stars and the words with the strange things they tell; the coin of our fathers, we’re glad that we know it, for some time or other ’twill come in right well; the spreadeagle dollar, the star-spangled dollar, the old silver dollar we all love so well.” It isn’t always the cadet with brains Who in military has the greatest gains; There are exceptions to all rules, And fortune (or the commandant) often favors fools. Ex. Tell me not in accents weary That I bore you with this trash; What is life worth to anyone Who has not tasted the mess-hall hash? Ex.