The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 15, 1885, Image 2

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    NEWS OF THE ‘WEEK.
~Willlam E. Woodruff, Sr,, died on
the th in Little Rock, in the 90th
year of his age. In 1819 he founded
the Arkansas Gazette,and when Arkan-
sas was admitted to the Union was its
first Rtate Treasurer.
~James T. Fanning, an actor,
known formerly throughout the United
States as an impersonator of ‘‘Unele
Tom,” was on the 19th, at his own
uest, sent to the House of Industry,
in ton, for six months, on a charge
of vagrancy. The old man asked that
his dog be allowed to go with him, and
this request was granted.
—Edwara Hanlon and John Tremer
on the 10th drew up articles of agree-
ment in Buffalo for five boat races. The
races will be in length two, three,
three and one-half, four and five miles
each, all with a turn unless otherwise
agreed upon. Each race is to be rowed
for $500 a side, with the privilege of
increasing the stakes. The dates of
the races are August 8th and 224, Sep-
tember 5th and 19th and October 3d.
They will be rowed upon waters mu-
tually agreed upon. In case of a fail
nre to agree, either as to the referee,
the course or the deta's of the races,
the final stockholier shall have full
power to name the course and the re-
feree. ‘I'he New York Clipper is the
final stakeholder. The first deposit is
to be $1250. The rules and regulations
f the National Association eof Ama-
our Oarsmen are to govern the races.
* ~The President on the 19th, appoin-
ted the following Collectors of Internal
Revenue: Robert Black, for the First
District of New York; Matthew II.
Vanderveer, for the Third District of
New Jersey; Francis S. Shields for the
District of Louisiana; George H. Da-
vison, for the Sixth District of Ken-
tucky; Thomas Hanlon, for the Seventh
District of Indiana; James W, New-
man, for the Eleventh District of Ohio,
Christian I. Knecht, for the Sixth Dis-
trict of Ohio; Adolph Biermann, for the
District of Minnesota.
~The five-story brick building at
Greenwich ard Reade streets, New
York, was burned out on the 21st, in
the upper stories. Heérmance Dickin-
son & Co., commission merchants, oc-
cupied most of the building. They
used the top stories for storing woollen
goods principally. Their loss on stock
will reach $35,000, while $15 000 will
cover the damage to the building. A
fireman was severely injured by falling
through a skylight.
—The grasshopper is doing much
damage in California. Specimens of
the insect have been sent from several
parts of the State to Professor Riley, at
Washington, and he finds them to be
the melanoplus devastator and the calc =
fenus differentialis, ‘The last named
is common to all parts of the land, and
seldom proves very destructive, while
the other is pecullar to the Pacific
slope, and is probably doing the present
work of destruction.”
—A telegram from Pittsburg says
that work was suspended on the 20th
in nearly every coal pit in the first two
Wo pools, and a general shut-down of
the river mines is looked for next week
Dull trade and overstocked markets are
ihe causes assigned for the suspensions.
—Thomas W. Bartley, ex-Lieutenant
Governor, Acting Governor and Chief
Justice of Ohio, died on the 20th, in
Washington. He was a leader in the
Democratic party, and published and
adited the Ameerican Register, a week.
ly paper. He was a brother-in-law of
General Sherman and Senator Sherman.
~The Dover (Delaware)
publishes eleven and a half columns of
letters from peach growers, indicating
that on the whole the yield will not be
30 large as the earller estimates fore.
shadowed. The June drop has been
unexpectedly heavy 1u most of the dis.
tricts.
—There is great excitement in the
Indian Territory, an outbreak of the
Cheyennes being threatened. General
Augur has ordered troops to the scene,
and has recommended the appointment
of & commission to Inquire into the
trouble.
—One assistant attorney and a num-
ber of law clerks —in fact, all the force
to whom the Civil Service rules do not
appiy—were discharged from the De-
partment of Justice on the 224
—Joseph W. Torrey, a well known
resident of Roxbury, Massachusetis,
died on the 22d. He had a literary rep-
utation, having been, when a young
man, connected with the Carpet Bag,
He was for many years President of the
Borneo Trading Company at Hong
Kong, also sharing the honorsand prof.
its of the Governorship of the Island of
Borneo, being created Rajah of Bor-
neo. At Bangkok, Siam, Mr, Torrey
was at one time United States Viee
Consul, and was afterwards Secretary
of the Legation,
—A cold wave swept down upon
Michigan on the 22d, and snow fell in
Grand Traverse county,
In Detroit, Michigan, on the 21st,
Daniel Scatten, a wealthy manufact-
urer, was visited by a polite burglar
who “regretted to disturb him, but
desired the valuables of the family,"
which he secured to the value of $100.
He then secured jewelry and silverware
valued at $300 from Poor Commissioner
Hearnes. He referred to his visit to
Judge Brown, of the United States
District Court, *‘and regretted that 1t
was pecessary for nim to fire at the
J but rejoiced that he did not
w him.”
~Some workmen on the Pennsylvania
Railroad stepped from one track to
at North Bend Cat, near Lan-
caster on the 224 to avoid a passing
They were run into by a mud
and three of them Henry Ken.
, William Conover and Joseph Me
Ilvaney— were killed,
~~, W. Hinckle, a soldier of
K, of the seventh Cavalry, statione
Dakota, passed through Chicago on
21st, on his way to Washington to
be placed in the insane asylum, IHis
nsanit the excessive
50 said to have
nds of plug tobacco a
A
‘was all y ail Lue mem
Secretaries Endicott aud Whituey, The
. .
Senline
case of Minister Kelly was considered
and that it is understood that the sen
timent of those present was in favor ol
IMs recall, The Indian troubles wer
also discussed, and remedial measures
were considered.
--The President on the 23d, appoln
ted W. W, H. Davis, of Doylestown, te
be Pension Agent at Philadelphia; Eq
ward H. Strobel, of New York, Sec
retary of Legation in Spain; Mark D
Wilber, of Brooklyn, United States
Attorney for Eastern New York
William H. Allen, United States Mar.
shal for Middie and Southern Alabama
William H. Denson, United States At.
torney for Middle and Northern Ala
bama, and Posey 5. Wilson, Assayer ol
the Mint at Denver, Colorado,
~—Richard T. Merrick, the distin.
guished lawyer, who has been ill tor
some time of congestion of the brah
died on the 23d in Washington, in the
9h year of his age.
— Estimates based on reports from 27
counties in Kansas, where the wheat
harvest is in progress, indicate that the
vield is 15 per cent. greater than the
June estimate of the State Board of
Agriculture.
—Vice President Hendricks on the
23d addressed the Law Department of
Y ale College on **The Supreme Court
of the United States,” The diplomas
will be given out on the 24th,
A committee of Philadelphians, head-
ed by Mayor Smith, called upon Presi-
dent Cleveland on the 23d and invited
him to visit the National Encampment
in Fairmount Park. The President
was unable to say whether he could
attend,
A severe storm visited Sulphur
Springs, Texas, on the 22d, wrecking
the Catholic and colored Methodist
churches, unroofing three business
locks, washing away bridges and dam
aging the crops.
—The Marriage License bill on the
24th received the signature of Gover
nor Pattison. The Governor also re
fused his signature to three bills. The
first was for additional copiesof Smull’
Hand-book. It was vetoed on the
same ground that the other bill on the
same subject was. The act in relation
to livery stable keepers was disapproved
because ‘‘the title does not reveal the
purpose of the act and it might, there
fore, be applied to other property.’
The third was an act authorizing
Courts of Common Pleas to fix by rule
fees of witnesses, The Governor holds
that *‘there is a law governing the sub
ject, and if this one went into effect il
would cause confusion and annoyance.’
Carter Harrison as Mayor of Chicago
was flied on the 24th,
Secretary Manning has requested
f Illinois, as Director of the Mint.
is understood that Mr. Burchard will
refuse to resign.
—In the National Encampment of
the Grand Army of the Republic at
mander-in-Chief delivered his annual
sidress, He said that four years ago
there was a membership of nearly 70,
)00. On March 31st, 1885, 38 Depart
members, while the report of the adju
tant general shows the membership
be 287.637
— During a circus performance al
Lapeer, Michigan, on the 23d, a large
elephant became enraged, tore up seals
and smashed things generally. After
sleaning out the tent he took 1 a
neighboring swamp.
number of people had
broken.
their limbs
~The War Department on the 24th,
received a despatch from Colonel Brad-
ley, at Fort Lewis, stating that the
trouble between the Ute Indians and
thefcowboys in that locality bas ended
— Twenty-two post office inspector
were appointed on the 24th. They
were selected from 601 applicants.
bushels grown in Lancaster county
Virginia, was sold on ‘change in Balti
more, on the 24th at §2 per bushel
Another inferior lot grown in Middlesex
county, in the same State, sold a $1,50.
~The Trustees of Delaware College,
at Wilmingion, decided on the 24th *to
lo away with the co-education of the
sexes at that institution.” The resig-
nation of President Purnell, who intro-
inced co-education’ into the college
about thirteen years ago, was accepted
-"} he President has issued “an exec
utive notice aanouncing a diplomatic
agreement” between the United States
and Great Britain continuing the privi.
leges granted by the Fisheries Treaty
throughout the season of 1885. He
will, as a part of this agreement, bring
the whole question of the fisheries be-
fore Congress in December next, and
recommend the appointment of a joint
commission by the Governments of the
United States and Great Britain to con-
suder the questions in the interest of
maintaining friendly intercourse be-
tween the countries,
~The Albany fvening Journal (Re-
publican) asserts that Mayor Banks, of
that city, is a candidate for the Demo-
cratic nomination for Governor of New
York, He is a friend of President
Cleveland and Secretary Manning.
«The President on the 25th made ten
removals of postmasters for “effensive”
partisanship, appointing new men to
fill the vacancies. Among the appoint
ments was # postmaster for Norfolk,
Virginia.
—James L. Stauton, General Ageut of
the ment of Justice, has tendered
his Hoar tou to take effect June 30th,
~The death of ex.-U. 8. Minister
Phelphs, at Lima, was caused vy fever,
contracted while on a pleasure thp to
Oroya. The Government is mak!
arrangements for the funeral, and h
honors will be paid the deceased Minis.
ter, 8
tong oar in the ag of Famk Riflar's
pipe factory in Newark, New Jer-
sey, burst on the 25th, demolishing the
boiler house, wrecking the engine room
and tearing out the rear wall of the
wain building. One man was injured,
France has cornpleted war vessels
costing over $26,000,000, y
THE TWILIGHT ROUR.
A ————_
twilight hour! I love it best,
#0618 My Very own;
I% rests my heart, to think awhile
Of days forever flown.
The present lost—1I live the past—
Ohl! those golden, happy days,
The jeys and blessed hopes were 1ine,
I bask in their glitt'ring rays.
The beauty of those blissful hours
Refloct in after years,
A balm falls on the lonely heart,
Though it be steeped in tears,
The witching of this thoughtful hous
Is wound around my soul;
I would not for my very life
Escape its sweet control.
Then let me yet enjoy awhile
This dear and precious time,
When I heur again the far-off bells,
For "tis memory makes the chime,
RRR TR i
THE CONJURER’S BRIDE.
Professor George Sholbach
magican,
conjurer with blocks
canes and trick tables.
was
and balls
He appeared
and handkerchiefs, he amused
audience with really wonderful feats,
consisted of *‘mind reading,” and it
was with that he most astonished and
confounded the
and Southern people among whom he
performed. Iie had a circuit of towns,
in each of which he appeared at regular
intervals, He never went off his
beaten track, and yet he always had
crowded house, for at each reappearance
he announced some startling
illusion which proved to be more aston-
{ ishing than any
{ of his tricks he imported from foreign
| countries; quite as many were of his
own invention. His personal appear-
ance was of some assistance t« for
be looked like a magician, His hair
was jet black, long and wavy. His
complexion was pale and bloodless,
His forehead was low, and under his
sharply marked black brows burned
a pair of coal black eyes, brilliant as
diamonds and restless as flame,
In Montrose, he was a great favorite,
He had given his
there a number of times,
admired much by the
He bad never, however,
friends among them. He was
teous to those who addressed him, but
he repelled all attempts at
new
preceding one. dome
} him,
entertainments
and was
townspeople,
made any
Cour.
bh
intimacy.
Among those who constantly attend-
od his entertainments was Irene Wash.
| burne, the daughter of the only edito
| in the place. She was only nin
| years of age and was remarkably h
| some, Her dark brown eyes and
coupled with a complexion in
and
| summer sea, her rosy lipsand milk-white
the
| blood came went like waves on
| teeth were loadstones that attracted
i many of the village beaux to her father’s
{ house, She was a very intelli girl
but was given to too much re of
| the somber tales of Poe and the weird
{ fancies of Shelley. Night after night
| she sat in the town hall when Sholbach
was giving his performances, chained
| by a strange fascination which she
could not explain. She shuddered with
| horror when the magicians keen, rest.
Tent
sading
found him gazing at her with a strangely
steady, burming look, as he often did,
| she wanted to ery out with horror, but
| could After each entertainment
| she vowed that she would never again
visit the hall when the professor was
{ there, but when his bills appeared in
the town she round herself irresistibiy
moved to go and sea him.
This had been the state of matlers
for some time, when suddenly Sholbach
threw off his reserve and began
make friends in Montrose,
in
after performing In the
4
DOS.
Twice,
town, he
wine and served them with cigars unti
they vowed that he was a royal good
to introduce him
man, The introduction was performed
and Sholbach made such a pleasant
impression on the editor that the latter
when again in town,
When Sholbach next appeared in
Montrose, the editor gave a little
reception to him after the entertain-
ment. Ones in the house of Wash.
burne, Sholbach appeared to have eyes
only for Irene. He devoted himself to
her, and attended to all her wants with
a grave and tender courtesy that could
not fail to make an impression on her,
But the impression was not such as the
magician wanted. While he fascinated
ber, he filled her with horror, He
reminded her of a snake.
“Why do you shrink from me?’ he
asked her,
“Do I shrink from you?” she asked,
She was afrald to acknowledge it;
she would not have dared to acknowl.
edge anything that might offend Bim,
for her mind was completely subser-
vient to his, He could have mesmer-
fzed her without a perceptible effort,
had he desired to do so,
“Yes, you do shrink from me," he
said, gravely.
They were alone on the piazza,
where the cold moonlight lent an add.
‘tional keonness to the glitter of Shol-
bach 's eyes.
“fuel ~am sorry,” she said, trying
sistibly fastened to his,
“Do you know,” he continued, *‘that
I perform in this town oftener than in
any other?’!
“Is that so?”
“Yes. And why flo you suppose 1
do it?”
“1 do not know.”
She did know,
given her life to stop him; but she was
powerless,
“I love you,” he whispered in a
She
hands,
“Why do you not answer me,” he
“I tell
shuddered and clasped her
love you,”
“I know it,” she said in a faint mur-
She could not move hand
“Then why do you not answer me?”
he asked,
She was silent.
“You love me, then. This silence
your shyness. I
have known it,”’
And leaning forward he clasped her
The charm was broken, Witha long,
quivering shriek, she broke from
arms and rushed madly into the parlor
among the startled guests, Sholbach
followed her, but she fled to her father
his
“Tuke him away!” she cried, **Take
? He will kill me with his
icy eyes—those serpent’s eyes,
him away!”
him away!
Take
The next morning Sholbach had dis-
from the town, after
nouncing that he would never return,
and Irene lay in a fever.
appeared anle-
A year had psssed away, and Irene
had Jong ago recovered her accustomed
health and spirits,
his had
i
Shoibach, true to
promise,
Montrose,
never come back
to
Manners, a stalwart young physician,
whose ability was unquestioned and
whose physical beauty was the envy of
every young man in the town, bad
found the way to Irene’s heart. She
loved and was loved return, and it
bad been arranged that they should be
at her un
in St
in
cle's magnificent
. Louis, in the fall. The
rolled on, and a week before the
day appointed for her wedding, Irene
and her parents, together
lover and his parents,
with Ler
went to the city,
The first thing
that met Irene”
arrived in St. Louis,
ving that Professor
exhibit
illusions for one week at
eyes
en she WAS a
George
Lis wonderfu
bach would
a certain hall,
The bill stated that the magician would
troduce his new feat of cutting off
W310 @
hand and restoring it to its place
n, without hurting man,
shuddered and turned pale when
saw thus bill, Her lover n
being told
tha
iat
otioed
'S
8,
and, on the cause,
laughed,
“My darling,” be sald, “you
to be cured of that trouble by this time,
Remember that in a few days you will
have a husband to protect you, Iknow
your horror is only temporary. I
shouldn't be sarprised if you asked me
to take you to see him in a few days,
ought
Was it prophetic?
Shoibach’s performance again grew
upon lrene, The simple knowledge
that she was in the same city with him
had a strange fascination for her, She
struggled against her growing desire to
see Sholbach, but found herself unable
At length, in sheer des-
poration, she asked her lover one even.
The desire to see
ing to take her to see the magician,
He laughed heartily.
“I knew you were cured
strange aversion for him.
of your
There's
ng like a hight heart and a good
digestion to remove unpleasant fancies,»
Accordingly, they went in the evea-
ing to the hall and secured seats near
stage. When Sholbach’s eyes fell
upon them he started as if he had been
shot. He fixed a burning glance upon
them, and in a moment understood
Then Sholbach bowed
slightly and smiled reassuringly,
From that time until near the close of
the entertainment he appeared to take
no notice of them,
The usual tricks had been performed
and he began his concluding feat.
A man was summoned from among the
audience to go upon the stage. Then
he removed his collar and necktie and
coat. Then Sholbach appeared with a
large knife, and suddenly seizing the
man plunged it into his throat. The
man screamed and struggled, The
blood poured from the wound. The
audience, convinced as they were that
the man was a confederate, were silent
with horror. Presently Sholbach
whirled the knife around with a quick
movement, and then held up the man’s
head. A murmur of horror ran through
the audience, The body was removed
and the Professor treated the audience
to a three munute lecture. He was in-
terrupted by the appearance at the
other end of the hall of the man who
had been decapitated, alive and smiling.
The audience heaved a sigh of relief
and then awarded the successful magi-
clan a round of applause,
“You may think,” said Sholbach,
“that the man who has just been on the
stage, was a confederate. Now, in
order to convince you that he was not.
will repeat the experiment,
As he sald this, Sholbach looked at
{ John Manners, The powerful young
| physician sudeenly felt an Irresistible
| demre to go upon the platform. He
| arose as if to start.
| Irene, in a tone of terror.
| **Yes,” Le replied, laughing;
want to find out how it was done,”
| “Let me go with you?”
And without waiting for his answer
she followed him,
“This is hardly the sort of exhibition
for a lady to look upon at close quar-
ters,”’ said Sholbach, *“*You had
ter sit behind this screen until
over.’
**Nol!
| house,
‘of
it is
nol” said a voice from the
“let the lady see bow you do
t, if she can,”
Sholbach bowed, and gave Irene a
chair on the side of the stage, opposite
to Manners. As he went off to get the
{ knife he paused for a single instant in
i front of her and glanced into her eyes,
| “Don’t you move or speak,” he
| whispered,
{ Poor girll She could not have
stirred if her life depended upon it.
Cold beads of perspiration broke cut
i down her spine,
| and nerveless,
{ the full
Sholbach
power of his will to bear on her
i
When the conjurer stood before Man-
The young physician, strong as he was,
felt himself growing weak before that
He endeavored speak, but
Sholbach frowned, and the words
seemed to freeze in his throat, The
conjurer did not take his eyes off the
physician while he spoke to the audience,
“This man is very powerful,” he
said, “and I must him time to
{ control his nerves before I begin, or he
{ might do me some injury.”
Then for a time he was silent. The
audience waited and watched the three
silent figures, At length, without tak-
ling his eyes from Manners, Sholbach
said:
“It is time)!
Then with sudden expression ol
frightful ferocity he plunged the knife
nto the throat of the man before
The head fell forward
rripped the side of the
vely for a moment;
was as still
sholbach asked some of the
look. to
«13 nd
AoW
a
i him,
and the hands
chair convul-
John Man-
were dead,
:
as if he
ners
in the
that
nged in
Hers Was
Mas Laat
front row whether they could see
s
i
the knife
the man's throat,
no doubt of it,
“As the hour is late.”
“Il w
put this screen in front
w in two minutes you
had really been
1 hey
.
sad Sholbach,
xbitation., 1
$
80,
33 suzad Asi
il not prolong this
©
of
"
tis man
will see him
enter that
Tt
I door,
No one had noticed Irene while Shol-
bach was forming his feat, but it
1
bv
sr
Pel
WAR DOW seen that she had fainted,
made a move
ment to go to ber asistance, but Shol-
bach stopped them with a wave of the
hand,
**I can bring her out of the faint in a
moment,” he said.
Then lifting ber as easily as if she
! had been a child he carried her off the
stage,
The andience waited until the
minutes had expired. Then they began
to look for the reappearance of Man-
pers from the front of the But
no cane, There was a deathly
silence in the house, and the stage
remained empty. Three, four, five,
ten minutes passed, and neither phy-
sician nor the conjurer appeared.
“*“There’s something wrong
| exclaimed a man sitting the
row.
So saying be sprang upon the stage
and overthrow the screen behind which
the magician had hidden Manners,
A horrible sight was exposed.
wo or three persons
+r
“Wo
stage,
one
here, 4,
front
*
it
The
| with the knife in his throat, the blood
| trickling slowly down his breast,
| dead.
| examine, There was no doubt about
it; a murder had been committed,
| calmly and boldly, in the presence of
| three hundred witnesses,
The building was searched, before
and behind the scenes. Then it was
found that both the conjurer and the
young woman had disappeared. The
police were informed, an alarm was
sent out; the news was telegraphed all
over the country, but to no purpose,
George Sholbach and his victim were
never seen again.
It is said that in Germany a conjurer
is traveling about and giving remark.
able second sight performances, his
assistant being a beautiful, pale weman,
who shudders continually, and whose
eyes are always fixed in a glassy stare,
but who never makes a mistake in ane
swering his questions. No one, how-
ever, has been able to identify the two
as George Sholbach and lrene Wash.
burne.
i
Moss ana Cotton,
The moss crop of Florida is said te
be worth more than the cotton erop,
and it can be placed on the market at
less expense. The demand exceeds the
supply, and there is not a county in the
State in which the product is not going
to waste,
; :
round of the ladder is an
ar Tle &R eh £4
FOOD FOR THOUGHT,
Yhe cobbler’s wife is badly shod,
Poverty is the mother of all arts,
Trust and you will not be trusted,
A danger foreseen is half avoided,
He doeth much, that loveth much,
This world belongs to the energetic,
On the day of victory no weariness is
felt,
Never
heir,
All
fair.
Too
flight.
A wrong cannot
object,
make your physician your
are not friends who speak us
much dispute puts truth to
be justified by its
Promise to pay is the father of bank-
ruptey.
He who knows nothing doubts of
nothing,
Examples are the best
youth,
Credit often
creditor,
Sentiment at variance with facts is a
bastard flower,
A short absence quickens love, a long
absence kills it,
Strive for the
against the werst,
{ Thoseare the most honorable who are
| the most useful,
What has been
| not be justly kept.
lessons for
ruins both debtor and
best, and provide
upjustly gained can-
The smiles of a pretty woman are
tears of the purse.
Impatience
than age or s
the
blood sooner
dries the
ITTOW,
No one can read another’s mind; few
can read their own.
As civilization
ait Alger
BiLY Ol 18 Gilin
advances, the neces-
iBNIeR,
sharpest stin
Adversity borrows
from our hopatience,
sometimes
Hever,
ure or Governmen
$L man.
meanest |
A wise man
| opinion, a fool
N 3 l risig
enaclied an hor
In the
you Knew the
+
£5
hut i8 a romance
hearts there,
Be graceful If you can;
can’t be graceful, be true,
but
The high-minded find easier
grant than to accept favors,
If men are so wicked with religion,
what would we be witnout it?
Who is lavish with promises is
| be penurious in performances,
The man who is always right
EVEry one else always wre
Wounds of the heart
mes that are healed by
The truly
keeper of his
A cheerful {ace is
invalid as healthy
The miller
grows only t
Work with 5}
can, without breaking yo
In delicate souls,
itself but under the 3
Recollection
apl wo
finde
ng.
Wise oan
segret but 1
an
agines
make hi
ail the
W
ve
WALL
x y yr §v 5 loath
youth on pain of death
8 perfected
the stream of the world.
in solitude; a
character in
There is always room for a man
force, and he makes room for ma
Those who
achieve anything;
are always busy rarely
haven't time,
eth away wrath, but
word to drive off a
A soft word ¢
it takes a very loud
bore.
To enjoy the pleasure of wealth, thou
shouldst first experience the fatigue of
labor.
Men's lives should be like the days—
growing more beautiful towards the
evening.
Nothing comes of
out grace works
naught.
He who saysthere is no such thing as
an honest man, you may besure is him-
self a knave.
Happiness is always the inacces
castle which sinks In ruin when we
foot on it.
No furniture is so charming as books,
even if you never open them or read a
single word.
Did a person know the value of an
| enemy he would purchase him with
pure gold.
Next to sound judgment
and pearls are the rarest t
{| met with,
The whisper of a beautiful woman
| can be heard further than the loudest
| call of duty.
} The power to do great things ganor-
{ally arises from the willingness to do
| little thangs,
! In all sciences the errors precede the
| truths, and it is better they should go
| first than last.
Minds of moderate calibre ordinarily
condemn everything which is far be-
| yond their range.
| Without courage there cannot be
| truth, and without truth there can be
| no other virtue.
A good constitution is like a money
box--Its full value is never known until
it has been broken.
Things sweet to see, and sweet de-
ceptions; applied to spacious but de-
Appearances,
oeitfal
Don't put away your in the
Sunday clothes; you
it every dar.
ets of
ave need
It is a virtue to restrain the
tongue, to know how to be silent even
though we are in the right.
Honorable ind travels the sane
road with duty, Providence has
closely linked both with happiness.
Surely the church is the place wherg
one day's truce ought to be allowed to
She Sunsenions and animosities of man.
The despotism of custom is on the
3 we are not content to know that
ing! are; we ask whether they eught
Don’t be discouraged when you make
Be Se on
nd Peightn: J Jou las
W ithe
law are
YiGience.,
of the
+3 5
Lit
, diamonds
hings to be
i