Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 07, 1858, Image 1

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rump asp POILINTIND ar"
ii.sliaßLlr 46 .1. INAMPINIAIST:I
Tevni . o[ Publication.
TIMMS t-111,5n ale if paid within ,three rnontha
—s2;oo if delayed six mouths, and s2,bo hoot
within the year. these terms will be rigidly ad
hered to
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A D V katTISIrIiEZITS and Begrime Notices inner
id .t die ustrokotes, end erory description of
JOR PRINTING
ICX,ROU TED I* the neatestAnannar, at the lowesi
prices, and with the ulmoet despatch. Ifsvind
purchased a large collection of type, we ate pre•
pared to satisfy the ostlers of ow Mende.
fusintss IlineOrg.
I .e►Nl:eL LINN WILLIAM P WILSON.
Lim rt+gll %V 1111:1401‘ t "
ATTORNEVS MW
()ma. op Allegany street', in the building for.
wetly oeuupled by Ifurnes, McAllister, Hale A Co
E►nkeri
August ta- 35-Iyear.
WILLIAM U. BLAIR,
--oit.....Lith./Lozi.—T.Auzaat x. /141/
MARTIN STONE /L. lON,
AUCTIONEERS,
6•lternnte, P► , will attend to all 1111111[1.1,111rir
I. with punctuality•+
cmturtiric szia.iiiteiv,
WITH 8111T11, MURPHY A CO , WAY OOODS,
27 Market. St ,and 26 Church Alley , I a
J I, DODDINS, It D.
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'''
Desest?m,
---sirrreurrziokarmtvonseits,_
lumusronva, PA.
00i00 a haratotore on Biahop street, oppuolto am
Tempe ranee 11,414.
DR. JAJPIEII 8. RILUTCIIIIIOI.I,
PIII - 4:/er 0.1 1 Qt:ltc;F:(lS,
eueimosor to D r Wm J McKim, reareutfnlly len
d.", I {, rt.reOlunn) ber.),A lu Illy (lilt:J.l;i of
Fur I S MILL% and N 1,54111 . .t
Ilutsw Monty.
•A➢llllil. A. IVICNIIOI.6,
uottsh. l'A/NTltili AND (HAZER,
AND II A Nti
)Ini.Lwroiirm, PA
Wtli atleud to all orders ill his hut% with prompt
sews and de►patah jeld
MITCRuLL & HUSH
ATTORNEY'S AT LAW,
=I
L► C and 1) 0. littolthave entered in-
I uto.partaerslop in the practice of the Law, un
der Out name ter Mitt:half A IS.ott, lAA aft( sire
preempt end prUper attention te all buaiueu en
theta
(Rice in Reynold.' Arcade, near the Court
Meuse
I.4ullefohts, N.eizaker 16 4 if
/1.3111{1101'1 PIM,
Ch TBT AL LOU R A 1.) R T YVES,
.lieu daily (esueptmurulays) from g • ei to 5 r V
BY J N BARNHART,
In his splendid Bel OOP , In the Arcade Building,
Bellefonte, Penn.&
.1 AMIE% U. VlArlliaNy)• ....,-
ATTURNICI,' AT LAW,
111.Lartegra,
9064 ul3 High Strtet,upponte the residenoe cl
4,4 1 / 4 4. flurnoula.
I• 1
ATWOOD Ai OOVIS,
ATTUIINEI"S AT LAW,
C. • If .1 VIM P 4
01100 IA Mayer'! Aullding, uppwite this Fallon
r .411,
re' Holiness of all 140.15, pertiplog to the pro ,
resew. promptly atteudod to
I 1. rottsik
POTTER dir 114111VCIIEL14.
PHYSICIANS A SULU/EONS.
Dr Ono L P 01 1 .1.11 reurusetl In the Mirk
!louse dirently Appetite him former residence, and
1r .1 B Ihscratel.t. lu the hcouse lately oenutnell
by Wm Harris. Eaq , ,at griciri. at (Moe, neer
door oboe., Or Puttee. reetd•nue, where they can
he ooteru Led, unless prufessiunslly engaged
J. D. WINGATE,
REsiDE,N r DENTIST
Odin• and relodence on the North Mast Cone,
rattle /Adolend, user the Court Howie
L 1 WIII be fouled el hi. elbee °Evert two week■
la each month, sommouclosyn the Arta bun Amy of
ty. Ro os. .4..13 be wilt neiway ruling ptureatdna!
dutsee.
01$11111!‘ 41k 2111e111114ENI,
InWouisTn.
W0U1.1,11.1.11 AND LlNALeilvi ,
Lrupa, jtediotnes, Perfumery, Petals, OW, Var
, u!, Toilet 50.r.1, Brushes, Hair and
Toot& Btu/has, 'soar and Toilet Art tele*, Trussets
aid tibouldsr Braced, Garden deeds
Costumer* will Era our 0 , 001 complete Slid fresh,
and sill sold at moderate prises
Farmers sod Physicians from the wintry
are la vl Lod to eAstnitio our stock
~... MAUCH POTS I,
OPPOSITE Tllli WK3T IlltANclt BANK,
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SVILLIAM 11. HAY, PROPUII:TOR
N 0 -An thotobua wtlV nun to and (rum tho
Depot and Paakat Laudings, to this !loud, tree of
tharte
Rept 3 31.1 f
11./fIPOIIIT NA TI IA ~,
X. 4.) , Hulas,
U, N. Mo. I.lollitt
PIV. M. Myna Ar.
INTEREST PAIDVN SPECIAL DERSITS
MoALLISTEA, /TALK d CO.,
eSXTITS CO
IMPOSITI4 IigORIVED.
EILLI, UY EXCLIANO.C..A.S .11 VOUS .018
--430431:4'
COLLECTIONS MALE, A:41) PRocEED3 RE
MITTED PROMPTLY.
/NTSRESTiPAID ON sPEcz AIL DEPOSITS FOR
NINETY DA YS AND UNDER SIX MONTIIS
AT Tin RATR OF FOUR PERCENT
PER ANNUM—WOR SIX MONTIIS
AND CPWAADS AT THE RATE OF FVE PER
astir PER ANNUM
ItieltANAIZ 'ON TUE EAST CONSTANTLY ON
HAND.
It 001 C & JOU I'IIUNTINO
The Publishes, of Tnannocaseto I/ATCIe U
have, Itt eontmodon with their Newspaper Raub
dshatent, the snot extensive and emnpleta
- re JOB PR-LUTING OPP/a,
to be %and fn Central Pennsylvania, composed en
tirely of
And the !Moot and moot toobionablo Style of Man
sod Panay Type, and are prepared to execute all
kinds of
jkLOIL AND.-YANCY JOD viirMG.
In the vet" neatest style, end at ta t o t notat
—nob as
NAND BILLS, CIRCULARS,
BILL READS,
1100811 511.1.8, BALL T/OURTS,
AUCT tatv RILLS,AR DS,
PAMPHLRTS, RRORIPTII,
ROOKS CHECKS,
/MOW 4aLLs
andso manner,ltHAllea BLANKS,
Paoaaammt, ao ,to Ike
exlll/.00b13;45 VlS'Aida PRINTING
ecute/On the hmest
pIawPRINTING IN UOLORS, in %he most beau
titiOrareldnishied Oslo of the art.
ShOlOration tuaracileed la retard to neatness,
heapneu and pumdualitr laitltment of all
who".
ABNEY "it BOW,
.DllllLite iN DRY 000D8, GROOKAISS,
F , MAZDWARB, QUIENBWdIitI, 44e.
An Mods a OmniLey Product) t. In excitant
for Goods at toe hishtst etaclett pieta
Nutt* AM, Pet IF, 107 —he
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4 , BOTH LIBERTY AND PROPERTY ARE PRECARIOUS, UNLESS
wrinawrit.t.,
re paned away on the wine or time,
welt with the dead In obi ivilen'a clime,
to long mound ingikohe hi thrilling me yet,
ling Wei nations my holm forget.
• the he ad it olden Time,
the lut sullen net* hath lent ita *him* •
That hide me depart, my brother ill bore,
Claiming the lige the gay p Now Yeay."
I bebto borne On mf bosom, ind surging seem*,
The noble and poet to • doruknot rave,
And duped in (hie sou Intoel midnight storm,
To a ...Wry grave, bright.beaucies form
414earleigsiostawallsoarey•aamill be , übieg
lilies trembled with sighs, is they saw depart,
eheviabaderer4itowatleueacteurst-LireAttllsalla.,—._. _
• • t4' aistgnad to the tomb by his lay breath.
bIiLLIIYONTe,#A
IM
To many a circle I brought In my night,
Bright pluseures, and sweet but transient dolight,
Thoth.e paused assay from time's varied allure,
To return to Earth, in their beauty nu more.
litts.casoun, sree.
item tbm Democrat% W►tehmw.]
IT lIIIIITewitLIAMIL
I hai e come, like cloud otttba'sunttuer by
In a fraakiett path , and mu borne to die ,
Tho past's dying echo Old Time hatli caught,
And the inystioal future OA limb brought
I /MVO come. and bear on Toy glowing wing,
A ell ntiow o'er men). wheert to Bing,
The frico wreathed with eutilee uterbe gouttnoti with
• ta►r.
R' eh all lip cold 1• my amp tonouted blot
Could I raise the veil from my sable page,
And present to view ley varied stage,
Maiiiimarts would 'aeon at the wave drear nod
dark,
Ay WI mutt dash o'er their preseut, love lit bar
que. '
But still the tourmarbig stream of life,
With the waters of pleasure will iiften be rife
And each 'golden mopieut, each'preciout hour,
ISnar tiorrorre gear loaf or jobs blooming dower
- Phswroihßsarec,--
I gii . stellantous. '
--Love
“Lore laughs at lockstuitlia,” we are told.
but rat-traps are no aubject or taughtei,ereit
to the blind god himself', 118 I alien shun you
in the sequel of this I.ffief"
" But will you go to-night f"
EEEEIEJ
•• Yes, I will."
•• And at have old Bob behind the barn,
at twelve, you'll he waititig iu►tde, and we'll
drive to New York and YU, tnatrted right
straight off the rye{ 3"
I=l
Yea. When all the folks are in bed and
asleep, *teal out of the wash-house door.
go to the biro, get in, and disguise myself.
When you tome, put in your finger, lift the
latch, open the barn door, and I'll drop in
to your arms like a ripe apple. Oh, I do
so love to run iNay ! Won't it be delTht
cul
CEEKCISIDEZI
The speakers were Joe Cliotera end Mary
mut.. i t ft.iost neo mention Omit they were
lovers. Mary's father was a prosperous f.tr
gicr in Connecticut, and Mary herself one of
the'wildest, most light-headed, romantic,in
nocent and affectionate creatures ever made
after the "almost divine" model of mother
Eve. 'Joe wag a generous, impulsive youth,
whose parents had once meen-fisttenog days,
but had of late been unfortunate, and fallen
intocomparative poverty.
Harmer Miller, as he grew rich, grew am
bitious. Mary waahts only child. ale look
ed to her settlement in the world as a means
of his own social advancement, and had al
ready selected, to his 'Map eye, a suitable
match for her. Of course, Joe's attention,
therefore, did not meet with his applig i val
and while lie.was unwillints to
_pa thought
sonlett enough to reject Altkopeuly, lo= his
lack of means, he had suggested to that
young adventurer the propriety of absenting
hiriiself altogether from Mary's attractive I
presence. Thia'donc, he had assured Mary
of his, resolution to dippose of her hand ac
cording
to his own nOtions of femidine het-
•
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JAS. T. HALE
A. 0 Cintmg
I need not sayTlinTWeiSo
upon the mold of a thoughtless. loving, cc.
centric, and spirited child like-Mary, had a
peculiar effect. That very moment she de
termined to carry Joe Clovers. lle was evi
.dently-persecuted ! Persecution only wade
him too dearer to her. She liked him be
fore, bnt now.she loved Wm. In fact, the
more she thought of It, the more she was
convinced that ho was an angel, and that;
.perri.,:hA idolatry on her pert would only be
an act of noble devutibn.
-- -f-Faimer-Alilleshad_ leens4 aible men.
;and at all disposed to study human nature,
'he. would have adopted perhaps a very dif•
rferenteonrse towards his wayvesse,daugh.
.ter. Ile would have introduced his propos
ed son-iNlaw and forbidden her, •the saute
time, to induge in the slightest -regard for
him. The probability hi that .she would
have fallen desperately in love 114th him at
first si,;ht, and given Joe his cove without
rine:het cereroonyl but Partner Miller had a„
way of his own in all things, and he was
satisfied that, should Mary feel disposed to
play hen a trick, be was quite able to men•
age a Roland for her Oliver. ,
The very next morning after he had, Is
this manna, " opened his mind," as he call.
ed it, to his daughter, he Moistly happened
to see Joe Clavers mike bis fortive entrance
[in tie Beizieerailp Witehmai.j
The Old Year
=
B 1 TUB COLONIIIL.
IMO
" BELLEFONTE, PA
itiliNetertiteitOrtilloglaider#ll .
work, but not singing as usual, for she was
brooding over the parental cruelty.
Farmer Miller did — net pertnit marty — utim
utes to ellipse betbre he had placed himself
in the wash.bnuse,which adjoined the kitch
en, so thnt be might hear all that passed be•
tween the discomfited lovers. Ile did hear
the dialogue with which I have commenced
this histeritte. He possessed himself qr the
plan of the contemplated elopement, and he
was satisfied. -
"She iii going to tun away, is she 1" he
said to himself. teach hpn a . lesbon,
warrant me ; Al as for the, little (Aim',
I'll settle Aar business'veryleedily." •
After Ma that evening,. ary retired to
her little Sumo her beirt beating with
My for the approach of midnight. [ler sur•
lttay
arterwards, she found herself & rimmer.—
She tried the foac - . It vr43ulTl
no t move ! What was to be done ? Could
it have been fastened on her by accident ?
She callell fpr her fattier, and he came.
What's the matter, Mary I , ' was his
exc./lunation, without, Lowe-wary opening the
chamber door.
" door is fiat put I can't get out !"
',:o.141 , 1141104 4 11 1 rs.410 !9 16 we, .~ . :•r 4 -
bed, like a good girl, and Iltopeniti Tir m •
morning."
She knew it wits not of the slightest r use
to remonstrate. lie must, by some means,
have liscnrcretl her design. rihe could do
n o ibing but weep and bite her lips with rex
stioz.
The next thing the farmer did was to visit
the barn. As mtel, it had a large wagon
doer, in which was out for common use a
smaller entrance. The latter was only se
cured by the ordinary latch inside which
was lifted, in the customary way, by thrust
ing a finger through a small hole made in
the Saar, beneath the latch, for tin pur
pose.
Partner Miller remained in the barn long
enough to arrange. matters to suit his private
purpose, and then eutriing'out through the
stable that adjoined, or rather lay reirtly
beneath if. he balked quietly home, Whey
ing heartily to himself He first listened at
his daughter's door, and finding all
retired to his own room and.went to sleep.
__lnatalant midnight, horse and viagon
drew silently up, on the rued, behind Fs:e
mu' Miller's barn. Joe Clever* got stealth•
ily out of the vehicle ; jumped the fence and
crept cautionary Amami to the 'door of the
building in question, How happy he rot ,
In another moment, Mary sunlit be his
own ! lu the morning, she would be his
rdarling little wife. Farmer Miller would
storm, of coura ; but the farmer loved his
daughter dearly. He was proud of her.
would therefore, relent, forgiv e, and bless
them. Full of these delightful anticipations,
Joe thrust his finger in the hole of the barn
! door to reach the latch, but —, Ah f how
he yelled w ith pain. A steel-trap, adroitly
I placed on the inside, so as to catch any oh
° struiting article, had snapped,' and his bleed
ing finger was held fast with its iron teeth !
It was a cold night, and Joe's feelings
may be conjectured as ha stood there, shiv
ering and shaking, hour after hour, unable
torDOTO from the spot, held a prisoner by
' the savage instrument, his lacerated finger
occasioning bun exquisite agony, and his
heart (kitty sinking into his boots with the
!convietion that daybreak would'only expose
him to the farmer's indignation bud the vil
lage ridicule. _
Just at dawn, Farmer Miller chuckling
over the 'mecum of his ruse, went down to
the barn. There still stood Joe, and not far
oil the horse and agon. I need not say
how Joe implored pardon. and' promised ON
rything that could be desired to purchase it
and silence. Farmer Miller sod he finally
closed a bargain. Joe was released. Nay,
more, Fernier Miller gave him ono hundred
dollars, and Jou was in New York, before
noon, en 'Poqie for [own.
As for Mary —Offs incident occurred two
years ago, and t hare just kissed her that
baby. &the plsased her fiadtet, and seetua
have pleased herself in consequeate, quite as
tnurh.L-Suriday Times.
UNFIT TO Livi...—Vatrick Slavin who eras
recently hung at St. John, N. 3., for the
murder of theitielikevisia2-'-fauilly, ' , amine&
that, alter the old members of that kindly
had been butchered, a little g'rt, about three
years old, innocently held up her doll,, and
offered it to him if he would not kill her.—
The inhuman monster murdered her! Such
an Incarnate demon wait unfit to taint the at
mosphere.
Iloiimpn and Dunn. whose arrest in Phil
adeirdija we noticed a topple weeks ago, for
seising sannageoliadeof horse meat, werg
tried last, woes, bound guilty, and sentenced
to:eighteensmattinreemdke , stnant-iathasoult
ty prison, They are Taioe making sausages
for a white, at least. Shouldn't wonder if
they'd get a littio ddify_aboutit, too.
, CMy dear 'bind, I perceived Ott slept
during sersson.tnue last Sunday ; it is a very
bad habit.` ) said a worthy divine to one of
hlt panshoners. " Ib, Doctor, I could not
possibly keep awake, I was so drowsy."—
•• Would it net, tow ell, Colonel, to take it
little muff, to ;amp you awake 1" ~ D octor,"
was the reply, " would it not be well to put
a little mud in the sertnen !"
'‘ Is that dock right over there VI asked
a visitor. the othar day. " Bight over
there V' said, die kitty ; ."isd'ret tarkhera
elev." '
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plq ~ I) AY JAN T 1,858
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NWEI
Bachelors
hare put thei
rested beings, cbtertuss trigeheillith tut I ‘l , l l
a pair of scissors, and unity other titles are
given them t while on tite &her herd they
extol their state as one3f such peri* bliss,
that a change from egth to heaven would
be somewhat or a doubtful good. IC they
are so happy, why don't they enjoy) their
bil
happftwea rand hold their tongues a 'tit ?
'What do half the men get married r?—
Simply that they may have somobod as a
married man once slid, to pull off thiiar boots
when they are a hide balmy.' Thee fol-
Mira are sivrays talking of the loneliness of
bachelors. Loneliness, ?Timid 1 libels pet
ted to death With marriageable dengiters 7
~ .-111VI(e(1 to tha and to evening parties, and
i di, dro i rinijeteirivirewitchheemealird4
The I : echelon Who lives in clover I! his
days, and when he dies has flowers drawn
on lot grave by theitiets who couldet en
trap him I—The bachelor. lißho ttrews
flowers on the married man's gravr7—bis
N% iliOW I Not a bit of It ; she pulli doe n
the tombstone that a six weeks' grief has
not up in her heart, and gods "and gets mar
ried again, atm does. Who goes to bed ear
'—
'' Imola) , milks hands?
split, house hunting and tot Ling to do,
the young ones to wash, and the buy ser
vants to look after I—The married man.—
Who is iaLen up for whipping his wife ?
The married man. Who gets divorced ?
The married man. Pinally, - erho has got the
Senpt ors cit‘his side 7—The Visholor 1 St.
Pau; know what lie was talking about—"lle
that mamas does well ; but he that marries
not, does better."
Freemasonry and the Primo of Prussia.
Last night the usual quarterly communi
cation of the United Grand Lodge of the free
and Accepted Masons of England was held
the Masonic hall, under thtiresidency of
the Most Worshipful the Earl of Zetland,
(irand Master. It being kncrwn that his
Royal 'highness the Prince of Proms had ex
n4assaid-Wis.-..imanuon-of being.,presemt.as A
visitor, there was a largeohism ordinary at
,
(armoire of the representatives of the mai
-1
ordinate lodges, property clothed/mil jewel
lei], so that the appearance Of the lodge was '
Neely Impressive. -- TtnreWartrirnowir
as ON Temple was fitted up in a most (nag
' Pi ticent style ail a recepttetflOMs 4 onh Mag
nificent mirrors and cabinet work, Wade the
face 01 the organ was completely corre•led
by a tastefully arranged group of flags of
various nations, those of England and Prus
sia being the most conspicuous. Thls was '
surmounted by the l'resslati ragle.• re-
c. ption given to his Royal Iligtincirs in
(fraud fridge was most entitosiaisti4, and his
Royal highness, In acknowledging it, said ;
that although this was the first of osion of
his appearing in that halt among the arena
'. of England, his heart had always been
among them from the first day he had the
honor and happiness of beiog A ilteMll/111013.
The Grand Master, in the !time of the Grand
Lodge, presented Ins Royal highness with
a copy of the Book of Constitutions. his
Royal Highness, when retiring, expressed
the great pleasure he had derived from his
visit, and promised to honor ttiebrethren by
repeating it.
Our Thought*,
On the whole, it is or 64 great importance
for a man to take heed what thoughts ho en
tertains, as what company beim; for they
hare the same o*i ottitni sand. Bad
thoughts are as infectious as ha company ;
and good thoughts solace, instruct and en
tertain the mind, like good eompriy. And
this is one gtettt advantage of retirement,
(hat a man - may choose what company he
1 1 pleases Nom within himself. As in the world
we oftener light ih had company than m good.
' so in solitude we are troubled with impetti
' neat and unprofitable thoughts, than enter
tamed with agreeable and useful ones; and a
man_ that path so far lost the command or
himself, as to lie at the mercy or every foolish
and vexing thotight, firtnnett is the sante
situation as a boat whose door Isopon to all
wrners ; whom, thoogh ever so noisy, rude,
or troublesome, he cannot get rid of but
with this dillrerenes - , — tlat the latter bath
KUM 'recompense for Igo trouble, tha garmer
none at ail, but is rotted or hos pOOO-: •
quiet for nothing.—J. Mason.
A Regular Blue Law in Virginia.
Tho editor of the Norfolk Argue, in look
ing over some meet,' records of Virginia,
came across the following :
"At a gland asirethlaage held at James
(Attie in the year of our, Lins 916, were
passed many ackta to the girl Almlgh-
Lila God and instil/two gouge One ar..&-
tie's•Colonie ; among which
arneniled—ostlxigrapby-42-13[024-I=lM
scandalous suits to be ducked,". Whereat
often times many babbling wows °Aim slan
der-and switudattais their nciishberarfor which
their poor husbands are often brought into
chargeable and vexatious snits, m 4 cut in
peat damages-8o it therefore looted by
the authority aforesaid, That In sicticins of
4lander occasioned by the wife, asitforcsald,
after judgement found for the dasnaget, the
icemen shall be furnished bythioldni‘ Asa
if the dander be tw) enormous to be adjulged
at a greater *taw thin flvelsnooketdpounda
of totem°, then the women dad* docked
headdit4 beast once fair each :Are btta4re4
Iglt~ tobacco se adjudgett spinet her
hootimlllOf be Wiles to pay 1M One impoft
ed.'t
1 41$10,1kils•
thing it is for jounie
idiestoliara-anch a.hankering,for the sterner
Itex. Felt, Jr yid want to get married ; don't
foe conscience make, act like fools about it.
Don't get into • lit of nips every time you
sec a hat or a pair Of whiskers. Don't get
the iden into your heads that you must put
yourself into the way of every young man in
the neighborhood in order to attract notice,
for if you don't rim after the men, they will
run after zs r ise Mark that.
A husband hunter is the most a c testablo
of all young ladies. She is full of starch
puckcra she puts on many false airs, and I
She is rio nice that it appears ridiculous In
Clio eyes otetery decent person. She May
generally' be found'at the meeting, tinning
~e , ) , i rse„. ablaut Ruble* sle, Jalways at
social parties. and invariably takes • front-1
'teat at eotroe - rti. I She Irlis - Co - be - lbe 'beTte
of the place, and she -think;sbe is. Poor'
girl ! You are fitting yourself for an old
maid, just as sure as the Sabbath comes on
Sunday. Men will flirt with you, and Hatter'
you simply because they have no more idea
of making a wife of you than committing
suicide. If I was • young man I would hove
no more to do with such a fancy than I would
'ow, gir s, et lie y g..e • piece or ner
advice, and she knows from experience if
you practice it you will gain a reputation of
being worthy girls, and stands a fair chance
of getting respectable husbands. It is well
enough for you.to lean) to finger the piano,
work embeoldery, study grammar, etc., but
don't neglect poor gramima, or your dear
mother ; teach yourself to make bread and
get a meal of victuals read enough fur a
king no part of • housekeeper's duties
should be neglected ; if you do not get a
wealthy husband, you will need to know
how to do them) things, as you would have
them done. In the next place, don't pretend
to he what you are not. Affection is the
most despicable of accomplishments, and
will o•lyf.ause sensible people Ve„, laugh at
you No one hut a fool will be caught by
has a pay . thtnep_arvnt elan, ea• _
Lily to he sten through.
press plain, but neatly. Remember that
clothing Ives a girl so modest,becoromg,en4
lovely appearsnce as a neat dress. All the
and tulllwer are Immo:miry
If ,tU aro really handsome, they do not.
add to your beauty one practice : if you are
homely, they only make you boa worse.—
(lvirtleuien don't court your face and jewel.
ry but sour own dear selwetila '
tinger rings and folderols may do to look
at, but they add nothing to the value or a
wife--all young tnyn know that. If you know
bow to talk, do it naturally. and du not lie
so distressingly nice as tospoil all you say.
If sour neck in black. wear a lace coliar,but
don't be foolish enough to daub on paints,
thinking that people are so blind as not to
bee it,; and if youi cheeks are rosy, don't
apply pink saucers, for the deception will be
detected, and become the gossip of the neigh
borhood.
Bow to Tell a Good Teacher
A gentleman float hlwampville, State of
N. Y.. was telling how many dt&•rent occu
pations helm() attempted. Among others
he had trim! beboul teaching.
' tiow Jong did you tow) I" inquired a
bystander.
Wal, I did'ot teach Mk, that Is, I only
went to teach."
Did you hire out 1"
Wel, I did'nt hire out, I only lint to
out."
" Did you succeed "
•. 1% al, I give it up for some reason or an
other. You see I traveled into a district
and inquired for the trustees. Somebody
Raid Mr. Sniekles was the man I wanted to
see. So I found Mr. Sniekles—named my
object—introduced myself—and asked him
*hat be thought about letting inc try my
luck with the big unruly gals an 4 boys of
the district.'
" 11‘.wankilte knot If I witty et:insider.
ed Myself capable, and I told him I would'ut
mind his asking me s formiestions in rill':
metic or geography, or showin' my band.
writing. Ito said no never mind, he could
a leachet by his gelt.
" Lot the see you walk offa litda ways,'*
said he. " I can tell jiet as well as if I had
heard you examined," stye he.
lie eat in the door as he spoke, and I
Omit he looked a little skittish, but I was
considerably frustrated, and.ilitUnt mind it
much, so I turned and walked on as smart as
I ktiowed how, Ile said ho would tell me
when to stop, so I walked tflt t thought 1
hsegone far tmough—tben 'sPected suthin
was.to.,pay, and looked round. , .IVali.tbe
door was shut, and Mr. Sidoklea bad
'
Did you go back 1"
"Nisid,_no, I did'ut go taiek.
" Did you apply - fortnetkee-ashool -
" Wal, no, I did'ut apply for another
school," said tho gentlemen from Stamp
yille, " I rather think my appearance was
agginet me." •
VALID ST MIMI AoleasYaNt.—
.1 has Join been decided in Indianap
olis, by which it is declared that.ttianiage
iir_lndlauit requires no formalities to make
it legal eteept the mere agteeterent of the
palled ; that It is a civil contract only, and
differs froin other civil contracts merely 'in
Oils—that itoanuct be dieeolved, seen lay
manual consent.
- - - 11••••-• , --
randzir ,
)1 11 1 / 4 W,
- inmk.troest.tistemssmang•lnalLatuttail...
What'll peeing, another, dose
eltiee dawn, I've hard s funeral bell,
Btu* pealaii 011 1011 011.T.}
fled tie* there [lentos the solemn fall
Of feetatept sweeping bigiN
Look down the street, I hear attar feet,
Bums fuaere!'e pawing by.
The *Miler !nisei with •nsiont
But nothing there win. seen,
Except each oignotnnantnal Owe,
And whst h►d ►lweye been.
A moment yeolear mother, !lay:
&rang* smolt are no the ak r „
Lflc% angels singing on thedr way, 0.
Or voices deep to prayer! ,
Oh, lift my pillow high—more blgh--
rok I am I'4lo '
iroip
- —4 1 ,450 r, timer sr* ibex - --
VlO TOthilt raimullwr liaulatoel 114 4 , _
But no word oo ehe spunk ,
-.The hope that from her bosom tied,
Left tears opuu hut cheek
The night looked through the Casement old,
And aaw a cheek so R,—
A term in wooled, thin, mot dota—
l; o skill might there pre's!) ,
But that which conquer' Death yet beamed
Urea bar wasted brow a
And sweet, a though au angel dreamed
The sufferer rent ed now.
Ah, who the mother's grief may MS t
Or who may comfort bring
Ted, highabnre the ("emeriti belt,
She heard the angels sing'
A Shipload of corpses.
We take the following paragraph from the
&rim corregponcienae of the New Yuik
Times, Nor. 213th :
The line-of•battle sldki he which late
ly eapsi sett th broad hoontiny m the ltsy of
Finland, when closely surrounded by nu
(imams vessels of the fleet on their way from
Revel to eronstadt, has since been examin
ed by Englisli divers, at thWorder of the Rus
sian Government. ft will probably be still
in the recollection of your readers that tie
vessel hod in addition to shout 800 troops
and crew, fill 400 pwavengwrs on boat*
chiefly women and children, who with the
quantities of bulky house furniture, occupied
the vilule 'twcen decks. OuVof considers-
holes of the man-of-war had been left open,
and when 11. sudden atletall came tm rouhl
not bo closed in time : and so, when the
wind foolther the vessel keeled over, tilled,
and cap-sped. Such persons as were on
the deck at the tittle, were, at once washed
away, but the divers found not less than 1.-
100 corpses in the cabins, 'tween decks, and
' in the bold, all clinging to SOME portion oi,the
Limbers of the Ship, or to each other. The
horror of this fearftil sight appears to have
been aggrerated by the circumstances that
the bodies were already ftir gone in decompo
'llion, and with Jew eiterptiOnS, the eyes
of all the corpses wide. -open and glaring.
The effect of this dreadful speciaele on the
divers was such that one of thiim was total
ly unable for many days to recount the
ghastly scenes he had witnessed down, in
that hire of purifying corpses, and on his
persistent refused to repeat his visit there
was sent home.
A New 'Stoat ox SruansOx.—A friend
tells us a story of the Re... Mr. Spurgeon,
the English sensation preacher, which has
never been in print. Recently, during one
of his discourses, a respectable gentleman
wan so earned away by the eloquence with
which he invested the subject, that at the
close of a brilliant sentence he could not
avoid exclaiming flood !" All eyes were
of course tixed upon him for the moment,
and his embarrassment Cah be lirlitgined. At
the close at: the serums the gen tlertian went
up to Spurgeon, and asked hid pardein for an
interruption which, he Raid, the eicited state i
of his feelings must excuse.
" Hay no more, my dear air, sty no more,"
Was the minister's answer. ," Pa it again
Whenever the spirit moves you. If you hear
# presehett way anything that Airs the blood
within you, don't fail to shout out " flood"'
If every one were to do so. we should have
better preachers and better mon."
RCM TO ILIMP YOrNO AND 1iA27ri30)111.---
tint' Mormon: Brigham 'Young says
4.
Mormonism" keeps'men and women
youngiind handsome ; and when - they are
MT of the spirit of God there are none of
them but what will have's glow upon their
countenances, antl that, is whet makes you
and me young, for the spirit of God is with
us and within as.
A 11011.4 Llll hisca voice. In .11 more im
preesive and ecnrrineing tune it echoes the
nutructions of the lips which hive already
.0 fu aliiiintainafwbolmr. ftanioginmett
Dever callus. It Welts when the tongue is
silent ; and is either s constant attraction
inn i perpeittairipiiinT' on attinit i l
Seca, Ltd ahowif the attar° mind etcellence
of religion, both in duty and trial, both in
sorrows and in joys.
The following, on boopsi is an extract
frtnit leatah iii., 18 ." In that day the Lord
will take away the lititery of their tinkling
ontatnenta abut their het and their Coals,
their round lire - Jibe tde nioint.
Carl; la tos—roalta yourself an book
man, and then you way be sore there is one
raeosi lase to the World,
zi' -
'TgIMS : $ 1.50 fN APTAIVOR.
5.101L1,13113 3 ...dimming tee.
The Strangentes of Tria
• .t DT saissaaevotAsot,
e litty-flre Pare agq. tlfiersthrAt.
Unit . dattploion 11w - dirk - - lanyinref lb/a--
Tweed, in auld Scotia. Many jean had
rolled by the locks of sturdy Joins. Stu - art
and his gods wife had, become thickly ill
vend, yet no child had been horn to them.
Many a prayer had been oferecbto • the Vir
gil; (they were devout Catholics,) yet tb•
ie'6 , 6t" prattle of a babe in the Mono-71W
-well spriniof pleasure—waajnot rotachSafed
to them. Al fast 'their prayer was answer.
ed, and one cold Christmas morn, a wee ha
mortal was ushered into this world of ear*
and travail : great was the wonderment, and
far and wide; rejoiatito po;red in, in the
good old Scotch style: Many a beaker of,
mountain dew was qua ff,d,and tnatay;a hest-
- far birircirtgato descend te+ho- M 44-4 the
hula Effie,
TearX passed sway • the blue-eyed beatify
grew up n fair and comely maiden, and many
a youth's Wart beat the quicker did she be
stow nn thin but a passing glance. The
young girl social ever to dwell on the trs•
damns of her house, a be boasted of their de
scent from that unfortunate Charles, whose
execution by Cromwell was the turning
point in England's history. Ship leapt a deal
car to the many whiepera of lore and fealty
freely offered, so that in time the young Mon
shunned herl, and the OM - alma prediotad
that her haughty pride would here a s►d
(low dill.
At the close of the 'ter of 1819, bonsai
John Stuart and his wife emigrated to AMee
ice. In New York he prospered for a while,
but unfortunate spec-ohs/ions abserbid his
little property. Disease weakened his stal-
wart frame, and, in two years after his arr1.1.3,{
. 1 . 3 ,{ here, ha died ix-winces. Ilia wife did
not long survive him, and Effie was lefli
alone to buffet the world sa best she might.
Young, and well educated, she attracted` the
attention of eliminator Livingston, and he
offered her a situation f ati governess, at his
palatial !Wide on theisfanks of ourbeautiful
Hudson. The descendent of a King of sng•
lawd-wieetteit-twaowspi.- that- which, a few
s . etilrs htfGrv, eTle wmild have antoritd. ♦t
the Chancellor's Milne, her beauty and so
complishments were the talk of the neigh
borhood : while the fact of her high descent
u a ited to the tideregt lettintor- • &tau
a.statestnan and warrior aas proud of her
snide, and a distinguished lawyer, who w sa
afterwards President of. the Cntted States,
■crustily ph-Mend his hand, heart ■nd for
tune. Still she remained single. dttachsd
to the domestic troupe of the house wait II
light mulatto coachman, who bore I Tory
etriLing resemblance to the portraits of
Charles, by Vandyke. Iris handatwoe form
and Hashing black eyes won for him easy
conquests. among even the white guidons of
the neighborhood. Possessing that !race
mantel to the pare mulatto, gifted with
quirk powers of easimilaion, dressing well,
will it he helieved that he woo the heart of
the young governess. in whose veins Stowed
the blood of the royal house of Stuart
flue morning they disapptared : was
not known whether they were married or not,
although Mr. Livingston traced them to this
city. tler Otbctio wearied her after a white
—proved to be a drunken wretch, beat her,
robbed her of her jewels —telt her.' as
died, a few days eine°. Ite were present/A
her death-bed, and such a death-bedwa pray
Heaven we nosy never agaip.wilness.
Young girls, in all the duals of Tour beau
ty, intoxicated with the rich Incense of tlad.
tern beware of the . voice of tidi teruptar,
whether he exists in sour own bopm, or
triong your companions. Effie Stuart one.
as pure as the due of morn, it whose birth
hundreds of earnest lips wispered prayers
for her happinesit thiough life, died, a emm.
mon and loathsome thing, in oos of the low+
est dens of the Pate Posed.
MADISON Act. t, Ncw• York, Dithwitaber,
057. ^•• •• •
SiR DAVID DRIWITIIR arguca that PM Milk*
i ng of a world As quits labor unleai tha aur.
taos to attarwards stocked lei* ushabitaelts,
and with a very strict appeal in t,bil anal*.
Om furnished by seleleett,ite . ooiints molt
on what lutiniturrneeratnay do in adapting
rational creatures to conditions 4:4 all posai
idn kinds. Mks butt, tbolnliaoowerad
•111.
even. ep n .w ..'•
in perpetual actin night, are Slippage& by
Sir Day i4tetimea thottic_inhalimate, M la
well lomarn that, the majority of out men of
seit , nee ire opposed to this hpOOf resmaiwg.
tsking the ground, that with regard to the
planets of our system. the evidence, itinearly
Oonclusive that the math is taMrly Cr pits,
alone in.being tenstated by man. thtpielr;
as its density is bdt 1.1, et Uttl6 aloft tiwith
of arAter„Meestowieil as meetly. liquid; Ea.
tutu, is not heavier than cork, as made
niein4..of Wind and 441JPC/01 . __‘11_,
the outer Owlets are, regarded as matted
from their eater* ait well as the abases of
light anti bola. for tbrhisigatalslarLal Jiro*
The earth on the other lino& erbiolt the
largest et the Said &sae. el *the 0140'
ate sone of thi planetary system; and Of.
earth end water brave herd tliell We" litida•
bit relatioor, thus ottepthes h.,looBtholitlly and
exelealrely, M the. abs 00 labeie4Sl
- t•-• t r t -
The WilliVA Natal - CliV4Vt . to* di •
cacistps reibe47 colikbe mipsw4
Pent It 04311 y, if et sad 0400.110: I,t, will
dew Wass matter. awl Whets art,
injai* hours.
iiia:l