11 The Democratic Watchman. BELLEFONTE, PA THE SKEIN Slip, yes, fillp your skein, my laity, Over my hands, and wind and n ind All the while with little pity, Tangling, tangling heart i. 1 ,1 Kitty! (.yea upon the wool' Not on ins, my beautifal ' Now you droop your oyes COMpletelY, Winding, winding titeitiily; herefore, wherefore %nide au aweelly On it thing that cannot See If you mostrinile, smile thin way— will hear It an I may, 'tit? the reinitool finger% ttittinti about the colored hell. - flow my heertjiesei. tone while tintiog! EOM I try to Fear ft MI Kitty, do yen knew or ear. , Ifs toy heart yottee wind K Illy, I mn Inn IliPloll' All the world to mint loth Ily, tlnly in smith. Elysian, tittle fairy finger. tly, , `Aurely, If they Iht too neat, I rhutil catch and it Is. , theist. dear 'fongled To put tint, fret not, K ' 'Though Kindly heOr the pout! For your huger so pretty, I t make me sin upon iblgro Mot sell . Nory. uttpl T g (natter !Wort ilitti - . . Now, 41..1 , me last thread holier+ Sadly room mdalna to anal thOil .1 . 1/ OW to Illy bawdy I am bedding llp toy heard Wind And ado,, I do not etIll• Hndlo or Goan—mid I null IR at \h! no (041 /Old .nitek 101 l Nlll.l If I nn bourn ern kvey 11.1111410 . , De you nutter shut poll find It 'lltrobblint non el.,' Ilti.n.' Tntnile.l. tangle I PIP OW IN:1111 RIMS them free ttgoi I lent), r/ Ft (Inc the Drum ICATIL 1111% , ), RUTTY--A SACKCLOTH AND ASH- ES FAIR I ow in thi. nnichlltt, lieVvr viiefillorietl It befori. I i“11,), it I ran t get out Of it Th., ...wing mnrhinr Lu.n u •.v is lily Rat—and then; Dal you Over !noel• the l almovt liner impossibility of gol fing out of a Rut after you have run' in it for a length of tune You. irrtaiul) have, if you ever had a decent regard for the opinions of Mherh—and how easy we get into almost any Rut I We are sub a rapid people that we don't stop to take .fight We are to anxious to get un - il4l mallet how and we are not particu lar about the other end. ISie ba,e s o little time, after wu have arrived at the mature conclusion that the world is n clam, to look about UP And not umil late In tfur day do vie f illy realize the fact that some how or other we haven't gone and done it as we proposed Some, though, more happily constituted than other, never arrive at that knowl ,'dGe We hoe the different Ruts lying stretched out before us, all r , turti ng from the saute station, and running away, WO louppoie, in the din•, 1.11.1 i w 1• want to go. And wo never ',op to Ii t" ourselves properly into any pm tieitltir one,blit with at whizz—buzz whap4,w4. run into the moot e.nvenient olio -and we scarcely ever c back again to the •terting place Dul you ever observe it? If it don't Inqiet' to he t h e right Rut, and it seldom duaw, we go weaving, and sawing, and twisting, and o r s'iing like a TVILBS violin out of tube An the fact that we [burly wear the Rut tolerably smooth, don't prove that we were even originally adapted to the Rut next to it. Not now But there we are. The more we run in the recur Rut, the more we can't run in any oth er. When we get fairly under any it is hard to reverse. We may he run into—tun against —and 11111 , 1111 ,, th WhOHIS knocked out; and our wobbling back into the same Rut is only a que.tion of time This hitting the wrong Rut pro duces wine queer things. We see SUMO sights that make us laugh very seriously, and it is a wise provision of Providence that the more we look about us the more we see Not applicable . to evert body, of course Shove over the bolting and . look : A man good for anything else is • very poor Leader in Israel's Rut, run ning easy and with plenty of " play.' The man who could have learned to con struct a good covering for your body out of Jamestown cassimere, is the Rut of a man whose bustuess it is to regulate the machinery of a body itself A •wind. ling, canting hypocrite in the Chrktiaii',- Rut. The truly good man jostbsi about, and not in any Rut to speak of A man pleading for a fellow In the Dock with whom be should vie. versa Ruts The intrinsic blackguard in the gentleman's Rut. The robber and plunderer in the patriot's Rut. Lust In virtue's Rut, running free, and the world approving. And so on, ad injimihsm. Why not ? Don't you like It? No. Gut botio Let them Rut. Carry • A Legislative Body somewhere, I un denttand, la about to do a , becoming thing--for • .I.egislative Body. These Bodies always do--when they do any thing for No Body. They very seldom getout of their Bet. An individual covered himself all over with well-de, served odium eighteen or nineteen bun= fired years ago. The end of his name next to himself has been used nearly ever since as a term of reproach. But things have changed since he last resumed specie PILVIVOt.....Tho world has become more uljlin' so ark la he views. Old tidily have peasonesray, and now things have got' lane distance in ad vance of their-nsiliont age. We bale throWn off all allegiance to the Errtine. hits Pest. We have emergen from the miters of ignorance !laid superstition wsth ssfvne end unruffled phunnge. And with\such n lovely opinion of ourselves I S:wve I We know heyPoran doubt taint all who had the impertinence to cools into the world before we were ready, were fools. And we know positivkly, world does net rest on the backs of four elephants and a big tortoise 'We know moil , than tlint, too. lint we won 't toll. Which , 111 , W8 the 111 . 1W.I'V.1 1 i ir t Mardi of the lnumin intelfact This Legislative Body proposes to pass nn " Enabling Act" In recon str.ict the memory of this 041511 odious iq l dividnal. Referred to ab. , Yo As I men tioned before The Act will be mile a Supplement to the (inti'm Laws Ow ing to the tact that the gefil lonian whose memory it pr0p....e4 toNinth/A. died game. And, therefore, liNnifter, it will be n 1110 i Mi , deniennor to speak er write of the gentleman ill quidion ns anybody else than phut) .1. i i AnioT Very well .Ain't we ‘• progre,ive? 1 T idauht,rdli Wo have not loose Wr fire vit Kr. I 1),, hour 7 We propose In 5414.1// thing , 1 2;enertilly Or din in the attempt Why will Warr v All suet• or Fiore are prex lONA this year Ex, ept fair weather Fair , het r gerierelli re , -nined tie Jl,e 3 generated Born 4gmn Melignant ferm i \Vhen• they hat e 11/111 loved out of my Rut for a •hurt time the other night ill it Ft' ighletrhood IS here Iln•v Ito litinkon time ,pontiine "*, ",,,I went, to n Saek, loth and A :hes fair for the le•t cult of a weak lus ter in ri . 110 1 ; got 111111, ruin t h ey wanted to her on my entrance 1 wag greeted with much sounding, brass and tinkling cym bals I wa . ,ti l ened I thought, it was good to In• either a Silent:loth Follower or a Week Fidel If you It ed In Pl./ ri lit It W era y. I bid n't know whore. The whole affair was 111 , 1111 P, in an earthly sense A tlxs Polyglot showed me around And I looked around as meth us I could see fur the 11Q1,0 iind confi.ten I sew above the end of Ft long table these %lg.. ge.tive word. Ile feedeth the young Ravens " And right under it Oys ter supper fat cents." I gut my Ideas mixed Si) that I couldn't di,tinguish one from another I Sit Win another place something about part:eking of the waters of something freely , without money and without price I paid Ilfteen cents for glues id the immediate vicinity And It wasn't water I wanted at all. lint I don't coot phtm 1 was directed to a Post Ofllee It was pre.ided aver by an angel in front of a large waterfall And IL wasn't a wet night, either. Over the office I waived --" Love one another " Just what I wanted to do Arid I told her so So I got a letter It wa , n't franked If it was, silt• forgot to men tion it. In the letter was written, in very high key—" Bill t yew glad,l yew cum a butt--yew won-ide old Plug Anr4eelinn " I continued •S l ni xed. But if A oleel inn will let rue know whore she puts up, I will send her something to relieve her orthrigraphy No cure— nu pay She can't go and be a reel an gel with that kind of a oirrr in her teeth In another place I notietal above a group or it sorts of 1 101 1 do -•' What ' shall we do be III) " - something I couldn't drake it out And just on the spur of the moment' without ever thinking, I said to at Sec ond Birth gentleman who ieeniod to have it in cluirge, that I didn't know. lie holed at Me as though a good joke had escaped frotn somewhere, Liol woo still rittining sit large. An announce merit at the upper end of the table that a Turkey supper could be had for fill eolith, thanks for all good gifts, restored me to kny usual oerellie equilibrium I offered n $1 in currener of the some de nomination of the Foir When the,, said ,tbey were Il v i '4.ostry Changers 1 looked tirotrrol, helpless and bewildered A gentleorm with a very decided Tite Mu ion.le look, robust his eyes th the ceiling as though he had art old grudge at it, and obs that the .bounteous table before him, t 50 cents a heed, re minded him ford y of the income par ablel of the story of the loaves and ashes —or Words to that effect. The light hurt my eyes so that I didn't hear dis tinctly. 1 asked him if his party inten ded to run a full ticket at the next elec tion. He looked blank. The light seemed to affect his eyes. Aud his thoughts were apparently (111 hie sub ject. I excused him. I was conducted to a Booth by a gentleman thin in flesh, who looked at the table as though he was afraid of sharing the fate of the Apocrypha. I was requested to buy an oil painting. It was • crude oil peintiog. I told the young lady who said she did the oiling that she was' a Model Ateltst. She remarked, sarcastically, that she wore clothes, if she knowect her self, as I might use by looking closely. And she didn't want the subject re nude. Would I be kind enough to close up ? I closed. I barely held my own with bar. She couldn't beer it. I saw dye or at; female Daft); Down Wlieye in • Manor, doing something for the banal- I reversed and braked up. One of thnm was resdlitg,' le 'adieu/holy Wiet— ,, Tel, the At tress rejoins at thee, and thr; cedars of Lebanon, saying, Sines thou art laid down, no feller is come up again - st us." I felt sorry for her. Says I, does your words point to ma? She didn't say. Says I again, what feller ? I was ' confused. I Who laid him down? Show mo the feller who won't courie up. Am I, fuller enough for any of you? r And 1 camo up against tin host looking ono sudden ly--and stopped. 1 remarked to her, encouragingly--" Let us 'Nage and Maul iamb other right away, and get some IL \Vara Dexter who can make it in 2:171,. under the saddle, to say for us as Kiel) as possible 44-. 41, Father, we thank thee for what these two have been to mull other''' When n feller with all time ear marks of it Changed heart -passed between mm. I hadn't limo to wait fur her wa s invited to take a cilium , in a raffle for a P Funk Cane It WAS intend.] for the most popular man. " But he couldn't come On ne count of time or Om young populars he. trosalsled with too much jani eramp The cane wits standing alone in unit cor nea, and near it an unfinished F. Bureau K nob reposed in fancied security True to his ni sinnets, he hail crawled in under the en n v Just shove their bends wal e written "I If such is the K ingdoin of " ! thought it said —'t Plymouth Church I ton subject to optical i (lo- Malmo. I have them bad sometimes I toll the nearest Sackcloth to earns,' MO I thin I ivuut to go I took it chance awl pot IT my ante itt the col. IcyUon bm z . 'Pitt, drat throw j scared live 1 wqs encouraged. A well dress ed Ashes sinpped me on the back and blandly remarlied that that is its a "but ly rising throw " 1 arose when 1)01k his hand off foe The next two Sir.s I completed thirtoon heads 'When I was requested tO gis e way for It - then threw fifteen and beat lime for High, and went out 1 tlesief keen ed until after wards that he shad three pennies with heads on both sides up his sleeve That set toi to thinking And I concluded if it twin would dol.ble• head three pennies - here below, and thereby endanger his t honeys for getting to whbre they nc,er turn tads-- Well, that he wasn t going to risk much un narrow ;mill. I was vexed I got more tangled then ever But I never quit eating I couldn't ntford it I had too eon h hrokri back grivern flint setup invested And. when I left that place 1 felt very !ouch like an over grown man, with two heads, several arms too many, and toes to spare, in boys' clothes I baiked nt as much of myself the ;4 , st morning its I could get into the glass, and tny tool assembled with very sugg,:sth eo f the fact that Inrge quantities 01 oysters on the half shell, tut key, 6,1.1, twnips and inde-crunitiatto (like had gone to oily oo.tirface by (oppo sition ;mites, without change of horse. At lied oico mint- 1 wotoo bruiting my Root, WIIII r 1 or) pr0,,11.4 . t of MOCee+s WIIOII I get back I 11 ~tilt there, and never go niia be a Etonneh for anybody again MEI C A !MY FOUR WOMEN'S NAMES Very few persons, it Ina) be suppos ed, know the meaning ultheir names, and just 8,4 may also he auppos ed, ever took the trouble of trying to find out. tiliskspeare's inquiry, "What la in a name ? would take cunsidera Lible Unite ,t 0 answer 11 the person ivies Itioneirrilionlil undertake to go over all the ground it covers. A writer who has been looking into this nuliject of 11111111,1 has gathered turd published the lot low ing interesting facts about the, .. lii a certain occasion, two French ambassadors were sent to the spaiiish eoilit to negotiate a marriage between one 01 the Castilian princesses and Louis VIII. The names of the royal women were ITrrtica and Blanche, the first of whom was the elder and more beatiful, and wag intend e d by th e ruing lor the French King, but the our hassattors resolutely persisted in their preference for Blanche, on fiCeollllt of her name, saying that Urraca. would net er 110. T hey were Rentable men. So Blanche wan made queen bPCLIIINe she had a lair !MUM, arid Blanche was always fair, if not beautiful. Is there not something in a name/ Mary. albeit sonic etymologists translate it Marah, (bitter) is one of the sweetest as well as commonest evergiven to women . I prefer to con sider it an signifying nailed, or, as another authority h as IL Mut of the . sea. Maria and *strip (the latter be ing French) are merely other forms or the same name, anti, of course, hate the same meaning. Mart ha means bitterness, which, slam! is too often significant of the lot of.women ; but our Martha, may be very sweet girls, in spite of the etymol ogists. • Anna, Annie, Hannah, and proba bly Nina and Nancy, are all from the same root, and signify gracious and kind, of ahich fact the fair owners of these cognomens will please to take no tice and govern themselves according ly. Jane, now generally familiarized into Jenny, though differently derived, has the Maine meaning as the. forego• Ellen was originally Helen, (Latin Helena ; French, Helene.) According ,to soine.ety mologista,, it has the mean Ong ofalluring, while others define it t as one who ides. Many a Helen, since slipot. 14,_ has proved aline , ieg,And SOM. 'AVG shown thil hi is dffe'to Idid. ' ira rs Only • va riation or•Ellinia • ' ' ' „ For Sarah,. (Hebrew, Bars, or Saris ; and Arabic, Zara ;) we find two defini tions—a princess and the morning star. Lucy signifies like light j and the natnq was anciently given to girls born at darbreak. (Aurora, Aureolia, and Aurero,) (golden, the dawn or morn ing redness;) Bertha, (bright) and Clara,"(elear,) ma' be !grouped with Lduisn (French, Louise) is the femi nine of I,OIIIP, and has the meaning of protector, or one who furnishes a place of refuge or cif rest. Fannie, or more formally, Frances, in frank, or free; Elizabeth (better ns Lizzie- Isabel and Eliza, true ; and. So phia, wisdom.) Cathari.w, or Katherine, derived Iron; the Greek, Kalinin. (pure or chaste), is one of the best of all our le Male !Nunes. It is pretty ip its Irish modification ; Kathleen, Stud most 'al: irnetive as Kate. Caroline, Charlotte, and Charlotta u are all fetninimt forms of Charles (Spanish, Carlos; German, Karl,) which comes (iota the Seim onic Krpl, a king; and the fair owners of fine IlarneB SIIOIIN, therefore, be queens --queens of hearts. Julia, of which Julietta and didiet, are simply' diminutives, signifies soft haired , Harriet, mitdress of the house ; and Alice, a princes. Finma should be tender, allection ate, motherly. The mime Is said lo signify, literally, one who nurses, cares lor, or watches over another ; but anoth er ail - Wormy. translates It industrious. Smarr signifies a lily, and Is a fitting tome fir a toll, slender, llowerlike of tau complexion, and nitti‘v grave As cotniallinns 11Pr Iles, 1,110111 (1111 hkei and ltdatilina lahitt hie lid) may he mentioned The last iw".ol Indian demotion, but might oppio priotelv gince the litirest of Augiu Sa - "II 111111111W+ Margaret comes to us irn) Ore [Jinn lkitirgarrta, a pearl. Hut number, and. It possible, a still more heauttiol Plight ham, eurroumly enough, attach 011 itsell to the name. 'l•he trertir.rn word ;nava, and arrwhrt, which words were Madge, and than with Nlargaret. Dairriea Were al -1.9 called mill/tots, marls or triargaret4, %Ilrerree we have the French notryrrri tcx, 11111,1(.6. Among the beautiful name.; le, Arc arc : Agnes, cha•le • Agatha, lotel • Amelia anti Amy (Irmo Ilse French verb ainier, to hovel, be loved „k.lt Ime, of noble birth 'lean or, all Irvulul ; tiertrittic, all ertrth t;racc, at or , Matilda, a ',rale maid I•nura, a laurel; radiam, or light of life, and blith, rich. B en t, iee wiona who blesses) iir a sweetly significant name. It in a lit vorite one in lolly, and Is not entirely uukuuwn here. It should be more COW own, and the aawe may be said ul Le olio, joy, Irene, peace; Lois, good; Blanche, fair; Mirauda, admirable— see filialtaiware in the "'rent pest - ) ; Eye and Eva, life giving or taithful ; Until, satisfied: and Salome, peaceful A 'mall is'ol Oriental origin, and sigiii• lies a virgin. Alma fa Witt the la) ou Latin, and means benign, emal or one who nurturer or cherishes. Corn is it maiden ; diunia, youthful (ever voting she should lie): and Barbara, strange or foreign. The promise of great beauty nut be ack now ledgeu by such a name as Ma bel (ma 1,(11( ), my fair one, Amanda, lovely , Itelienca, of enchanting beauty, or. best of all, Callao., 1111010, beautiful ; A imbel (from A nnali, or Hannah, and ;las) signifies kind and beautiful I have mentioned nevem' floral names. There nre others which one might wear an she would a crown of fragant blosnoms. For instance ; Rove and Rhoda, a rose, Viola, a violet; Florence. blooming; Flora, the goddess of flowers; Olive, the olive tree (or symbolically, peace); Althea, marsh mallow ((;reek, 6llhaia , ailhurtno, heal) , hence, also, very beautifully, at. well as appropriately, the healer ; and flowery joy. I have room for only a tew more out of the malty that might he offered, but must mention Minna ; love ; Stella and Estelle, a star ; Nora (Ilonora I, hon or ; Evedne, well pleasing ; {prettier as Milly), honey like; Made line, magnificent; Theodora, gift of God ; Pauline, little one; Amoret, lit tle love, Winnifred (Winny), winning race ; Una, born in the woods; and tyna, only one Manners and Morals Manners easily and rapidly mature into morale. As Chihli/00d advances to manhood, the tralisttion from bud manners to bad morale in almost im perceptible. Vulgar anti obscene forms of speech keep vulgar and obscene ob jecta before the mind, engender impure images in the imagination, and make unlawful desires prurient. From the prevalent state of the mind actions pro ceed, as water rises. from a fountain. fience what was origlirially only a word or phrase, becomes a thought, is mere triciously embellished by the imagina Lion, is inflamed by a vicious desire, gains strength and bo'dness by being always made welcome, until at under some urgent temptation, it da rfe, for once to put on the visible form tiff action, it is then ventured upon again and again, until mire frequently and less warily, and until repetition forges the chi insof habit', and then language, imagination, desire, and habit bind their victim in the prison house of sin. Iry this way, profane language wears sway the reverence for things sacred and holy, and a child who has been allowed to follow, and mock, and hoot at an intemperate man in the streets, is far more likely to become intemper ate h I msel f than if hell(' been accus tomed to regard him with sacred abhor rence, as use self brtitilled or demon. iced. So on the other hand, purity and chasteness of language tend to pre stave purity and ohs/tenses of thought ,and taate t they repel licentious imag 'Wings, delight ia.the upeallied and un. triinted, and all their tendencies and aptitudes are on the aide of virtue, THE FALSE NOTE UT ALIO!. CART N T i r e nor near grew shrub nor (ree— f bare hills stood up bleak behind And In between the mars)) welds gray Herne loony-erusled sand-drift lay Opening a paths ay to the sea The which I took to please my mind. In full eight of the open seas A patch of flowers I ehaneed to It ml, As if the May being thereabout Ilad from her apron spilled them out, And there I lay And took my ease 4 , And made a song to please my mind. Oet bed ! tf you should Into full long A nweetet you will never (Ind, Some flown n wore rod And POMO 111,10 while And in their low 111111 tendon light 1 reed tinted on my .toutt, Fitting the tomtit. to plow my mind. Notno eon-trawls on Me sands upthrown, And left the] e by rho %smarm wind, With lips nil outlet] in honotewk pout For tho old mothers Innis again !noted une,ond to their plteou“ moan,. set the 111111, IA please my mitpl. llul now I would 104 cry truth The towel K I had no; chant od to find, Nor 1%111 Sp , Cit led teltVOM along, Nor tint In that owl tune my tong, Fair that which plcnrcd my cycle , . youth 11 hilleth now to plentio my mind. And thin thing l do know for trite— A truer yon a 111 neve. find, No InHte stop e'er en 11g1.1.1y rung Itid Mut Nome echo gll tog totogne 111.1 like it hound lilt lie urtioo I s lit it the world wall lelt behind. Life in South Caroltna---An Inside View of Affairs---Wh'o Rule the Roast---Pleasure• of Negro Supre macy. The following pa agraphs toe from it private leper %%111101 toll ilo-Dognislied Democrat of this city by n pm ate gen denim), a re-olletit of South t'aroloia. The Legudadioe nI Ihi., Sratc i. how sitting lowing iii at rct en tv-tire negrov , , being two thud. of the jt hole 'number, the other thud w :Haile of Iv oulier. loon w rui;ll up 1 / t t carpet htt,..geis, as Hoy lire calk.' here !tilt down as It hoe in the catalogue, but, if their deed• ate to mark their true color, titer are an black an the blitekek ...TheNe men are recent t outer. in the State. They have not the remotest intere.t in the South, co•ept ao Inv ae they ('an etnieli thentselt e. hr 'Timmy° lizing all the otneeH. 'they lir e ally with the urgroes, dint (lots are sent by their voter; to the Le:41,11011re, a eeri‘iiii number tot chore?! 1111:11 being put On the ticket with them, an many as may be neemi‘try to pace juet such line tie they will dictate anti? time tu time, to enable them io carr) on their nefltriyiin purpw , cu. You can niell imagine how :t Chalet, the citizen of the once proud Stale 01 South 'arolina to see se%ciity 11%e lie (4roes, field handl+, many of them so ignorant they can neither rind nor write, making 'awe, under ,Imtation of the liniheal party to govern their runner masters, On 1 h./ ritar dieted, occupying the smite seals that I hale ncen in other dap, filled by Calliunii, Inm ates, Pinckney, Mrkitlie, Harper, Preston, Ikgare, Haytie, Hamilton; Clieves, Rutter, Handing:id. l'etigru, Earl, 11 :s; ivl, lon, Dews and man) others ot %%ell rcinealLered faint. I mind give you Home ilea a the dig nilird uor in which IMINIIII`SN in 0011 OCVLbittri ly done in our Legit.,'store. til Vie °the dot) a went! coin puny dented l'olumbia. As 41 usual 11l other placee, it paraded through the drecte in the morning of the night fixed lor the first performance. As the c ,valcanle ap proached the State Ilniuse, %%Ilene "the an , endiled nisdow of the Stale' acre deliberating on the deetint of the grave and ret erend ineigners, one of our noble arid approved good 111`.stern, hearing "the shrill trump, the spirit stirring drum, the ear piercing file," could not restrain binned', so rising in hie place, addressed the Speaker thus (as a repot , ter tAtileti): "1 say, tie [Mow Is coming. 1 moves do , here remolution--,lat dit , honorable body 'novel to the lei/ulna, to see de show The motion wan carried of course, nanine contrad tcente, and the members of the Legislature of the proud State of South Carolina, with one consent, im mediately moved to the windows "to nee de bliOW page Such n burlesque on the name of government an may daily he witnessed in •cur State, the his tory of the world curt produce no paral lel to. I roust not omit to remark that so thoroughly has the Radical party con• trived to carry out its plans, and to possess linen of sovereign away, that not an office in the State worth having is held by a South Carolinian. New England men have appropriated all the influential offices—the governor, lieu tenant governor, treasurer, controller, attorney general, the judges , senators iii congress, and members of congress, the collector of the port, assistant col lector (a negro), the mayor of Charles ton, the city attorney. and other offices, too numerous to mention, are filled by men who , emigrated from New England. to profit by reconstruction after the war, or rather, more properly from the destruction that follow teY peace. The principal authorities of the State are daily denounced loudly by the press, and it seems they cannot deny the charge that they are taking *dean tage of their official stations ' to be movers in certain iransactionsby which they are filling their pockets at the cost of the poor tar-payer, acting upon the hint given by logo Roderigo, "Put money in thy puree, honestly ifyou can, but put money in thy purse." In addition to this, the poor ignorant' negro legislator by way of letting him comb in for a s hare of the plunder, is put up to estimate his serime higher' than did the educated men who stopC in their day, sewed to none In the councils of the nation, not only having the effrontery to vote a doubliper diem allowance for themselves, bet to pro vide for its payment, in gold and In itch vance.. Thd Imposition 'of our carpetbag itovecramentexceirdsOrdinary endure hoe —What is to bogus end I -know mot. °Primed ,lib• South is by aim* we cannot eontrni, and astddened MI we au by the memory of the past, how low we have Nilluin from our once high 4* tate, we cannot look with n. conti:lent spirit from the present to . the itunre It is, indeed, night—ada.rk night-041; us; so rayless, loo k Wily I „ in I cannot discern in any direction ta r f a i n t es t gleam of the comin g lily, believe the only hope srmamin g for th e South—the down•trZtldeh, Insulted South—to mei* from the potent inth,. cecea ofthepolitital !Mitering to whorl, we are now so.mercilestity subjected I, by the triumph of the Demomatie p ar. ty.—Thero must be a strong, united el fort, then, at the next election to achi eve "a consiimmation so devoutly to h e wished."—New York World. Stick to your Bush.. Mr. Morgan was a rich and alsu a good man. The people of the los s respected him. sent him to Parlimtunt, and seldom undertook anything with out milting his advice. If n selupd house Wati to be latirt, the plan had i„ Lie talked over with him, Wido w p ranked him what are should plant in her field ; Farmer got his advice in buying cattle ; Mrs. It consulted him shout bringing up her boys. When naked lrow he WITH PO 91IreP" fill, Mr. Morgan maid : " I will tra, how it ‘ylitt. One dav; when I lad, it In v of hove and girla neie Mg ton distant pilaf lire to joie', a her tlelterriem, I wanted to go with item, lout Was fearful that my lather in, 111,1 !iot let me. When 1 told him Tiloat Wan going on, and he itt ()nee pave mr permisaien Co go with them, I (mild hanlly et,11.11111 nitarll with py :0,1 rit,4l,A 11110 the hitchen and got a Lip basket, and nal,e.l toothy, f,,r „ line, C. con. I had the leial,et on ore fir111,:1,14 „a„, In Ihr gate, when an tallier called nu' hark. Ile tool, of my Itan4 and Haul, iii a ten gently, "Jorrrli. afoot !Ur t 71.11 Mr, to Tile!, Lenora nr I ? pick lierriett, " I replied "Then aepli, 1 want to tell Noll ,The thing, Ii is this, when %on lied a melte ceod tonal', do not leave it to Mel n 1,411, r one The other boygirl+Ti iii r,lll about, picking a little here and a l itt l e there, wasting a great 411.11 Of :Mil not getting many la rries II %en do am they do, you will rome hole, Ile empty liasket. I rpm want be rr ,. Rtich tie your busli.— "I in ent with the party, and hat n capital time But it uns t her said. No sooner hail one fon d a jpiod Welt than he called all the re L ILlid they left dirk several H id tanMr to the new fittinilt re:inure Vi content more 1111111 a minute or two o, one place, they rambled over the %%lc', pasture, got cry tired, and at eight had very few berries. Nly latlior. words kept running in my ears. and I "stuck to my bush." When I with one I found another, and Thal, then I took another. - 1% litil night came I hind a large lini-kettill berries more than all the other. put together, and vino not ball' so tired ail Me ) were. I went home happy. Hot when I entered I found toy.father liail been taken ill. He took my bashemil of Hre hint k berries, and said done, .loseph. Was it not just io I told ton? Always stuck to your husk "Ile died a few days after, and I liar to inake my own way in the it u 1,l .i• best I could. lint my father's lion!• sunk deep into my mind, and 1 hoer forgot the experience of the w !lonic !wiry party, I "stuck to toy bush When I hail a fair place, and was do hug tolerably well, I did not !cone it and spend weeks anti months laid trig one a little better. When other young me nil . with 1,, toot we will mate a fortune in a few weir, "I shook my head and "stuck to inn bush." Presently my employers of feted to take rue into business %nail them. I stayed with the old bowie until the principals died, and then I had everything I wanted. The habit of sticking to my business led people to trust me, anti gave the a character I owe all I have and ant to this motto ritick to your bush."—Burat .N 4 Yorker. Truthful end Obedient "Charlie 'Charlie I" Clear and feat as a note struck trom a silver bell, the voice repl ed over the common "That's mother," cried one of the boys and he instantly threw down lee bat and picked up hes jacket arid cap "Don't go yet." "Have it oral" 'Finish this game l" "Try it awn" cried the playere, is noisy chorus. "I must go--right off—this very 111111 ute. I told her I'd come whenever she called." "Make believe you didn't hear I" they all exclaimed. . "But I did hear IV "Sbe don't know you did." "But I know it. and—" "Let him go," said a bystander. "You can't do any thing with bin) I n ie's tied to hie mother's apromstring." . 4 *That's I" said Charlie; "and it's to what every boy ought to be tied; and in a hard knot too." "But I woulthet be such a baby ent to run the minute she called," said one. "I don't call it babyish to keep one's word to hie mother," answered the obe• dient boy, a, beautiful light glowing ie his blue era. I call et manly; and the be, wlto don't keep his word tether will never keep it to any one else—you dee 'rho does I and he hurried away 1.0 his4otlagie home. Thirty years have passed since these boys played ball Oa the common,. Charles Grey is now a prosperous business man in a great city, and his mercanpile friends say to him that "his word is as good as a bond." We asked him onoehow he acquired et* a reputation. Atioording to a .414 In the Alabama Legislatufto, arehlteitedes, except on the pert of roettibstrithireO to be a pee• itentir ni44'lllA" '4 OO 'Out to hunt eggs i th,own r i p that she did 9ot tab, as t ere were several hque setandixig , about 1141:wilting.'