Clearfield Republican. (Clearfield, Pa.) 1851-1937, June 16, 1858, Image 1

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    J. H. LARRIINER, 1 Editors,& Publishers.
R. PENT WILED, Jr., f
VOL VIIII.-NO 26.
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& WARD:
SELECT POETRY.
;a all
RE.
pri
ea—
ash-
, us,
• Fun-
NEAR THE LAKE W HERE DROOPED
THE IV I L LOW.
Near the lake where drooped the willow,
Long time ago,
Where the rock thrown bank the billow,
Brighter than snow—
Dwelt a maid, holoceci and cherished,
By high nod low
But with autumn's leaf she perished,
Long time ago!
use,
, d to
the,
Rock, and tree, rind flowing water,
Long tint() ligo—
and hoe, rind bio,siiintaught tier,
LOVC . AOi to know,
While to my fend words she listened,
Murmuring low,
Tenderly her dove eyes glistened,
Long time ago.
too
Pat
Mingled were our hearts forever—
Long time ago,
C/113 I now forget her? Never!
No, lust one ! no !
To those her grave tlio: , e tears are given,
Ever to now—
She's the sta^ I tnissed from heaven,
Long time ago.
The carriage - ittoprted at the door, and in
a few minutes, Margaret hale enteral the
apartment where her husband sat, wholly
absorbed in poring over day -booßs
ledgers.
'"fhose tiresome accounts still," :he ex
claimed. " Will you never find ,ime for
anything else but business, Ralph ? Have
you no taste for anything beyond figures?"
"Margaret !" but the. Sailiiess in the tone
was unheeded, as she eontinued—
bad such a charming evening nt
Mrs. C's, Capt. UM related many interest
ing incidents of hix residence in Egypt,.
and Mr. Warren, the famous young poet,
read "Maud" and some of the most beau
tiful passages in "Aurora Leigh," I must
rend to you some of Ronthey's Oreat
Thoughts on duty."
She went hastily to her chamber for the
volume. When she returnol her quiet
entrance was unheard by her husband,
whose pen was rapidly moving along the
almost interminable columns of figures.—
Witlran impression of impatience, almost
of scorn, resting on her face, she hastily
g
'6Olll
- 41 4
111 a
~Uy
TM
ON
turned away.
"And this is the end of all my dreams of
marriage," said she on reaching her room.
"Ile has a taste for drudgery. Ilis pur
suits and tastes are all common-place, am!
I need, to find those who will appreciate,
with me, Ale,„books I.love, and the beauti
ful in art, for which he haS neither eye
nor ear. Why did he not, marry a woman
who had neither heart nor mind to be con
tinually unsatisfied 1"
In the room she had left, Ralph Halo
sat hour after hour, till his brain was wea
ry and his eyelids drooped. Then laying
aside his books, he remained a long time
in deep thought,
"God bless my Margaret," he prayed,
"and giVe Inc stvenght to bear all things.
Give me power to make her happy."
Putting far away all thoughts of her
husband's teal nobleness oteharacter, jeal
ousy preserving the memory of every slight
difference in their tastes and pursuits.—
Margaret cherished the spirit of 'discon
tent, till it embittered every hour of her
life, and sent suffering she never dreamed
of, to the heart of her husband, who would
gladly have sacrificed every earthly good
for her happiness.
A sudden and severe ill came to her,
while Ralph was in a distant city. One
day during, her slow recovery, the aged
minister who had babtized her in infan
cy, was slanting by her side.
-'Margaret," he said, after steadily
watching her troubled face, "you are very
unhappy, I have seen it a long time.—
. 1 should not recognize •in you my once
,cheerful and happy .child. May I not
knovi what great sorrow has come to you?"
Then with sobs and tears she told him
"fall her unhappiness.
After a short silence, the old man spoke ;
again ; and there was sadness, almost
sisternness in his voice. "Years ago-Mar
.wet a wealthy New York merchant be
eanae involved in a speculation, -whose fail-'
lug suddenly took from him, the accumu
!kited wealth of •his years -of commercial
• :ntetprise. There wore a few years of
. e . ary , Vain strugglings to regain what he
iost, then deep,despondency, a ling -` qing disease and death. His wife and
our children were left pennyless. The
dest child, a boy of sixteen, had finished
', •, preparatory_atudies, and was about to
, ter college. By this stroke, he found
at his :prospects. for the future weie
ouded ; but with a noble self-forgetful
ess he turned cherfully into the way fate
marked out. for him, and walked reso
tely into it.
,BAohtaifleda.eituationivith a merchant,
.
.
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.
BY OBORGE P. 110R1113
from the 2V01101,11 I . ‘ U.
The Wife's Mistake
who had knoWn his father, where his faith
fulness and untiring devotion to his du
ties, *on the confidence of nil who knew •
1- 1 V hat American is there who does not
hinst• During the first years of her widow
hood, the mother had taught. a private feel a sacred interest in that sweet place,
on the shores of the quiet Potomac, once
school for young ladies; and it was the
boy'S highest ambit.ign to relieve her ennobled by Washington's presence, .ond
of now hallowed by his ashes? It is the
this necessity, and giVe her the rest her
Mecca of the republic- -a spot where her
feeble health required. I cannot tell youpilgrim e
-sons come, with reverential hon
atll his privations, his - Willing sacrifice of age to stand beneath the noble old trees
every recreation, his continued self-denial,
that he might lighten the burden of those • wheSe shadow one fell on the broad and
godlike brow of Washington himself'!
so dear to him. Our first visit to the Mount Vernon, two
Year after year success crowned hise f
forts. ' In the village where his mother yeas ego, was in the golden flush of ,, au
tun n. I well remember the crimson and
had passed the years of her childhood and
t russet robes of the quiet woods that fring-
he first years of her married life, he par- the water side, and the rude, narrow
chased a pleasant residence for her, and bridge, built far out in the 'river, over
then, a lucrative business being opened
to
At the
hien
timethe
o w t e l s ,
i t s
a l t o,. l s .i
v e a a l n i t i e er ei t .: ( l , . ei d
en t which we were compelled to pass before
we could reach the shore. And then, the
revealed to him the fact that the
widow). 'steep ascent up through a scarcely trod
pat la whose outlines were scarcely dis
and invalid daughter of one whose fortune den
cernahle throngh the bright drifts .of
was, by his father's advice, risked in that The dying sailor professed to remember
unfortunate speculation which had
se , brown and orange leave:sew h it'll II ut t ere d her well ; said that she was the' Ittst wild!'
in
e ' - ':_!.lown through the warm, blue air—the
changed his own life, agile. living perished, and that lie never forgot her
Creme poverty, To him the are indebted I
' russet ferns, the purple asters. the gale(- look of despair as she took the lust stop
• •
cn - roils • , whose fiery torches hung like
for the pleasant home that now shelters from the fatal plank. On reading this
I lines of flame along the natural terraces,
~ ,
them, and for the delicate thoughtful min- account I regarded it es a fiction ; but on
l and the sweet wild mint, WhOSO fl'11g1.1111(2t1 ""ay, Mi,44er, who ' s boss here?"
ration to their daily comfort. conversing to day with an officer of them s'
from that Ots The psoprietor has . just stepped out, vy, lie assures me of its probable truth,
- 11 Cow, when the commercial world is I eVen nMV se e) " insellefabla
sir.'
(lauded, and disasolrs croaal thick end t " l ' er da Y at M • nnlit Vern": end states that on one of Ids passages home
-Well• he this • • • • •
But this time it was a bright. winter k 1 • . 41. reta iling shop?"
fast upon him, ;Is tipon others, his anxious .some years ago, his vessel brought two pi
' neon, when our littli• parts•
steed once 11l I! teeing man hardly cone
thoughts turn to the neither and s uffer- ; answe re d - rates in - ir.ms, who were subsequently ex
ilic. enemy's thoughts, ..
ing
sister. in the little
village home
whose iner.• en the tannoth shere--ene at• those , - • simply : , tN f •1- ' •
, • clay`' e hen the (-slender tell us it is Febru- I syes, sir; aIN toacslde and
retail store." geareda _ ei el . Ice recent offences, and
combsrt depends upon him, to tie• oilier
• lien to -- . "times you under , '11(
111 1.11.011111t 0 C011triltill•
lonely tilt - voile, to which his t lion ell t fulness rY. diet they had been no-mbers of the same
, •'d ient :Ise end warm brew that s 'led- or ""h v( - '' re 'lied the clerk, tetra - •• • : -
imparts its enly- light, and to his oe n.„,., -„ , , "," I' ' ' ;•l' 1 , - c , P, 111 crew end falai ‘in td • ' themurder . '
, • r e a e in of
• uiv nseit'. '','lte sunny slope.; nue s t eel , up a .lontill • fat ilk lady
.) CUStOiner. " What
home, and the youeg \VII, Who , 0 1, : u1 1 ,1. ' • Mrs. Allstssn fnol her companions.
can 141,, f;; ;I • (eu so
ness is dearer to him then file. For this l"' "ks ":`":" a del"te ti "g e " f v e lvet gree"' Whet chiefly caused- , my eeepticism on
. :Ind maitre seemed as if far the "V , ell es the Culp weather is coming on,
Margaret, Ralph Ilale' }_ice; Ili , day , : to in- li ght i . , , •
. the subject was the fact that - Mr. Parton,
mei of the conling,pring-tim,! I tholl , ht I moueht as well come sue ;dye
cessant toil, and willinely sacs iliees sociel Igive the recent biographer of Burr, leaves the
. . I Probably ne arivao• residence in the wool a iota"
pleasuses he is eminently fitted te enjev. , ,• • fate of the daughter enveloped in myste
•l don't understand
, .ntted State; elm beast a fines view than ' you, stranger," re- ,
1 have. been ill these three lione s. Withd closes the record of' her noble arid
, Theast Vernon From the house pros- plied the c•erk who 1 ea• to• - • 0 ' an
, . ', e au think that
a love that is almost reverence, his inntle , ' ' • - abeautiful life with her b' 1 '
ten ar sation on
t is visible Or illi. 1;1•01111, (aright river, the iciloW Was in the wising box.
er and sister speak his munceind with Foll ' 1 1( . 4 ,', • , sails board the brig. which he declares has nev
heart thank God for his life— that iit .,,
~0 ; wee quiet sO gliding slowly over its it "Zactly so ; well, l'll tell you."
, „ er since been heard from '
and mihe on euiles of ,
°Exphtin what you imam, my friend, -
filled with the beauty 01 self - m. I "" n I Y I anse'l ern at a loss DOW to understand if the,
n i fi•oin the water sate( the clerk as lie sow him produce a
The widow end deughter whose hearts he I ": r -a
e' shares, , rising 1 • confession alluded to by my naval friend
I side, and forming one of the finest natural bundle from under Ids coat.
has made glad, tell ef numberless acts of,i ' well,
squire,
as I
said before, the s
e , , was made public, as it undoubtedly was,
temifis imaginable , . '''' e ins ewe
kindness, of his delicate :and unceasina
, p' ' i l i ' l l t ic house• s - . 7 1f.• 1 •on a bit orstameth, weather's canting on, end I that' I might
' ' ' how Mr. Parton could have failed,•
among
wate•iffulness, and daily they ask Gou' ls s , le I s , It •• • : " t ' a "` -. 1
• -. , , as _ we l_e_t ie i• •i• • , his extensive and industrious researehes,
' lit , n ta
ye lawn ;it tiny opening intlifptioe.eist.- . •, , - IXIII ior it.: I:some-twig- a t. It odv ., ;oleer e tk _ e
_ fart ~.„ .
blessing on hint whose rife is a blet;sine to 1 • sYtratever-oepiasion
fs 1 t h e
, ar ande.uhd - naves, Whose Interlacing bewstil Collier Winter, tell ye. I did, but,"
others.may be entertained of the father, the me
branches are so plainly outfitted il.'lin , :t. -fat veneer 1 hope you wil l . •
In his own lieme, the Wire WhO; e love 1 . • • • ~• c •
ren t it, ministry 1 the blue heavens ; and its old-fashioned tytmt, so I ; may serve you," interrupted the •
should bless Line whosered as one of the loveliest and Most excel
portico, a sort of teintinuation of the (a y e s, clerk.seeing there were h number of Clli- 1
Sllol.lld comfort end strengthen him, I , ' l eaf of •Ameriean women, and the Tt_Wela
slippOrtytt tO,' l . 1111.1..!:,*(.t. liietllllz,Cf.lo pillar,. I•'lllet .9 vyatting to . be served, 1., t wlio, in
turns coldly end unfeelluely from Lim, i , tion at her untimely fate can only serve
prefers the hrtopin, , , ,,
of
~il_ seems almol!,t !11.,, , a inemmy of the pest Vogt, hadrich ;littlest forgotten their errands in , to inv,.. , t that menses
with a
mom, :
L; helender
It is Here, as the a,ttemlants the , eenversotion between the clerk
ens to 1.11,1 own gat ification, laseate e the ' century, and matt .1 1 • •
lc to s int erest,
; tell us, that the ernecheir, of N 1 aslensto , n ;Ind los drill ,istemer.
- • o'' 1 14. ' + i 1 1 1• • 4 1 1. I '
14m-,lng dutiesi -4., 4. 4111111 A 11, ...mg
°Ceso•lnle •-• • • • always
was I,l'l 11.1 t ./ •-1.
I N , ( 1., 1(11 . 1111111er eVCI - 1111.j.:3 :it I,V!IS
,-- ...... ..., :noire, , CLIt11.111) , I
- e 1 Ri.w. lisewstow Noean, fin Eeises ,, pelifin
Lours, leavine him little leisure time ler : over the sunken , tone 11 ,, ,es f orm i ng i t ., 111) i;:t1S1110S1-.1 111 a s. lltlrl'y, and just as euiels ; „h e se n a in, is called the -Sfssuish Spur-
the claims of : sOciei V, Or for the high heel
heetual
endure whi , , 1 few
attion who , c pee:anent flat he wits
, want to pace for teats:d i ms:ter Still 1.-t you re-tail there :: \' v eu,,: Ile •i, ; I n Eri,•ol,l;;in, hut set
]e,
, Lou!.; . : ,„,a „ o . 1„, , ,, is ee a s; ,,, ( a ss „; N , l ,_ .1111'tS . Let 'em emne ,, ,slown to :dealt tile ; a s _ ii 1 1 f a . 1 •
sses fo. •.%„..) eeseee ... a- em ot tem, ,
lives are not wimpy de ented to it."
,I • ii •1 en the eresse'stot est! et Peses 1,,, e I I knee— !:.e“ - .. I 'ion't wear •' - "
1.1. L t 1 ~.,.....
.1 .1, 1, , , • ~ . k ,01,1-, iis ilCl' , Wl`l* lii iill'!' 1111 ()eel, dl }Hi ob-1
"Oh Ralph, I ifave ewer known ve:e
I warn 11W11V IIV tlo, Feet, 01 11 e-Olin:stm Plce elsse nos - be hies med. leo os mo • ieet is a, deliver tla• ..i‘ e l , (h.; .1 -ea- '
I have so cruelly misjudged yeti," said the • • • • • ' •
I A wide, sunny old hall opens from this ii ,t, ie., es av, cent he deecribed. The laud :.: :„ whieh 1,,, .foes -'-, .--)..-" - .
"It'' "CrP)\"n•lng
weeping wife. . 1 portico extending through from door to'bursts of laughter whichl II
as.te"ed eery s 1 ••• •' l ' ,
"The old man centinued: "Some men I , ' - • '•• " ; caris:env:a. Ile speaks with fluency and
heer—not a nttrrow modern entry, lint a to . couvince the, poor fellow lie bad COin- 1 ev.ei with elegance, makes no et tempt tit
talk pOetrv, steno Write it in mord., and ;
The true he. i genuine cad Virginia halt, which looks like nutted himself, and his lens; legs " - ( 11 e put. enereetteal preltehing, says that he !he:
some write it in their lives., , three or four spacious rooms thrown into in milieu et the rate of . 2. 41). The last we .1
,u, ,
one doetrilet to expound andenferCe,
rOiSIIIWIdeIOpOCtS haVC.l,llng,tlie beauty of one s. and hung with quaint. old maps of saw of. w nutaore
' him he was standing neat• a lamp . an d d i savows t h e m e r e ses e a a„l c h„,.,,, a ,,,„ e d
sele d almegation an of cease - less devotion
, faresen countries, which still look down post : inquiring whether or not there as • t ;
v. But sou ie. the feever of his
to duty, which have been their inspirit- on visit with their discolored lines, a shirt re-tailing stoic somewhere ii the 1 • earnestness., that the ° largest edifice in
tion, Ralph Hale lots lived. The woman
though l ; ;1 ' —
he who once gazed on them has town. I Glasgow was not eapable of con t.:;i:,in , the
who, has won the deepest love of such a' gorse into an undiscovered country, of - --------- --- I multitudes who flocked to hear hint, fluor
heart should reverently and gratefully witi,h rho world has
c neither map nor . • ..• •
1 3, ,RAGR1PIPA —The "note and queryl • ;
(- 1 -' the hiallestao the lowest; nor were tssigt
cherish it, as the richest blessing of -her ;
j chart. , Partment in newspapers—'specially the addressee on .Sabbath sufficient to Medi
life." .
' .- The library, the parlor, the dinineroom literary hebdomadels—furnishes at• l• :
"Ins . the demand upon his ministratienoe Ideli
In the twilight of that day, Margaret I are all I. • of •- '1
' ' ' '' : :
A... : p otes interest, but more palate- . amount ot ignorance, imbecility, verdancy,: were enn io ete o ta reie gaeus the we ,o s e To e
was ovaitina her husband's return. —A
: utterly the former. • Once it must have impudence and nonsense. The Buti'elo t I iI ;
; .'res•ivossan ministers or th e Free Church
mid the bitter self reproachings that dark- been a splendid room ; the remains of its • R e public; devotes half a - column, in bun- I and - United Presbyterian Chine(, and one
ened the hour, gleamed a new. and holy 'departed grandeur may still be traced in :lesque, cif this sort of literature, and gives: of the established clergy, admitted him
light. Her igh purposes were aroused :
its faded frescoes., dim eibpaintings, and a lot of answers to imaginary questions, !to their pulpits ; and the ministers of all
within her. In the future she would • massive chairs. It is said that One is the which are exceedingly amusing. The'fact • the churches received front the example
make divinely real in her life, the beau- same furniture that adorned this library of not publishing the questions,. lint luau- lof this goed.man a lesson on the impel.-
tiful ideas which had filled her heart with when W ashington sat by the hearth, or ,
steers,
the reader to infer them front the an-, tance of earnest' preaching. Many inqui
unsatisfied longings. She, too, would live perused
the quaint pages of the weekly ste ers, greatly heightens the fun of the revs who had been awakened by the ad
for others, and first of all for. hint whom
. newspaper at the open window. Ills fa- • thin •
a. Here aro some specimens of the dressesf.lir Nertl vi iced • nil e e •
she had Si) misunderstood. I yorite arm-chair stands just within the Repsh/ic's replies to correspondents :' - °•': I ' ' L
-. . 0n5 • .1.3-.
!Cd with hun cloning the week. ilis vis i t,.
A hurried step in the entrance-hall, !hall, and everyvisitor who enters the Enquirer. The 4th ofdoes '
July not oc- there is reason to believe, was productive
then on the stairs,-and the next moment . house must, of course,take a. seat in it, to : cur oh the ‘lnd of February, nor is it, as of much spiritual good. This geotleman
she was clasped in her husband's arms. I ~
I prove its id ent it y you suppose. commemorative of anything a f ew years ago was a terrible reprobate,—'
"You have been very ill, (said a voice ; passing out at the beck doe • : :
as enter thine that ever happened to the Rochester
hiultering with emotion,) but thank God. e . , ' ,• , . door, the s ~ .* He had a shooting lodge in the Highlands
race:miens, wow,: are 1101, so attractive at : (-sane I wheresho induleed in tel loose and pro
you are safe! now, my Margaret." this season of the year, although, during I . Robertson. He was not hid in the slop lf • `--
'gate practices. _After his conversion, he
"Oh, yes, I am safe indeed, now " saidthey are kept• '
' the summer, are in excellent `pail, he was under the bed. I devoted his labors as a christian man ex
-Margaret's heart. order. But the bright 'edgings of' . Mother d
0 . box l . ; Reversean spank. elusively to those districts where he had
In that hour. all was clear between them '
which surround every Hewer-bed, mei the Bride. Victoria pins can be had at S• '
• , formerly rendered•himself most notorious
—With new resolves for the future, with evergreensbate a pleasant e Let, ,0. arnum s.
cheerful evere • ff• 11 •• ' 1 and obnoxious by his, profligacy. In his ex
deeper love for each other, and a prayer bathed,they. ' thed' I
• - Statistics,. Seven times five are thirty- '
pressions of self reproach, which of course
for strength, another page of life was Cur-
shine ;am
ned for them. • hand, though narrow and old-fashion- i Helen You can, keep them up with •
, (ion, he has eepeatedly declared that he
:Ye is afterwards, Margaret, tt proud .
ed, are full Of blushing roses, cult : ethos lelastics. * : : ' had been guilty of all the sins in the deem
and happy wife, wrote: "I cannot tell you • 1 p
geraniums, am aze ms. . Medicus. Apply shoemaker's wax, and logueexcePt murder. Mr. North is no
all he haw been to me—my guide when., I Hero are exposed for sale tiny bouquets, squeeze it. fanatic. I}e is it calm-minded man, thee
was ignorant, my strength when I fat (ter- arranged with the rare taste that all nes Geographer. Rochester is pn the canal •
roughly imbued with Christian principle,
eel, my best earthly friend always. N hat groes that Beene intuitively to possess—ref-eastof
Lockport. • ; and profoundly impresstssi . with a sense of
do I not. owe you for revealing the mistaP - ' 'al . f• ; '
s's ics of ouna w och are eagerly Stumuckake Fifteen dross each of
I , the duty laid upon lion 01 - ' making known
which had almost wrecked the happiness 1 .Vernon• .
sought up, at exorbitant prices, by all pat- laudanum and camphor, and rub it. I the great salvation. No preaching - since
of both." riotic Yanke s. At every available van- Ambition. Very few men will descend the days of Whitfield, has produced such
tage-ground is a o posted a gray-headed 'so far. To he spoken of for Alderman in- a powerful effect upon the popular mind
old aggro. with die. of sticks, (we l l. volvas loss of reputation, friends and citi- as this remarkable man's ackh•esses ; and
Which lie continually ejaculates— - zenship. You can imagine what a man their poWer lies not in their logical struc
"Nice hickory sticks, massa—rale Mount must be to be electednis such. I ture, but s in their earnestness.,
Vernon wood! Buy one, sah, to 'member
I I -s- .
Gineral Washington by?"
USE Pl.Vrr - OF a RAV Y.—Dr A WNXOa 10 a
DEADLY BlNs.—Bdring an editor whne as'
Of course every one buys oneof these me- • • late number of the iS'eaipea Man artre on
writing. -
merntoes, firmly believing in the old dar- - , -Diet." assumina the popition the "the
Boring an editor while not writing.
key's solemn asseveration that th - y - are Reading his
exchanges without his per use
' of oil would ' decrease the victims of
"cut close to de Gineral's tomb," although • • consumption nine tenths, and that this is
1 mission.
we don't hesitate to say that if the Mount • the whole secret of the success of cod-liver
Vernon woods had a een cut down three or elea.,e, oil," quotes the following summary of oh-
Vernon woods
times over, they wouldn't have yield- - .":
1 Asking his permission to read the ex
.
"original", - servations oft this subject, made by Dr.
Hooking his scissors, when
eel half the number of "genuine hickory Hooker :
matter is wanted by the devil. ,
canes" dint, have been palmed off on un- matter • • •1. Of all the persons berween the ages
Hookin , his
a, pen when he has selections fifteen and
suspecting strangers by these sable deceiv- of fifteen an twenty-two, more than one
to furnish. .
e. I
- fifth eat no fat meat.
ens . ,
Laying profane hands on the proof.
B I • -2. Of persons at the age of forty-five, all
But the solemn old tomb itself! It is .
less than one in fifty, use fat
like a shrine, in its venerable age and un- . -tabus Witte—The will of Governor' excepting
pretending simplicity. You can only see Blanchard, of- Plymouth, proved in 1783, meate e ,
a structure of gray, mossy stone, with an- contains rho-following singular obtuse:— 3 . t" persons who, between the ages of
„iron gate, which formsthe entrance 6f the •'l. desire my body to be kept so long as it fifteen and twenty-two, avoid fat meat, a
family vault of the:Washingtons. A aim may nut be offensive, and that one of my few acquits) an appetite for it, and live to
pie sarcophagus is just visible inside, and toes or fingers may be out off, to secure a a good old age, while the greater portion
there were the pleasant shadows of the certaintrof my being dead. I further re- die of phthisis before thirty-five. I
moving trees eanoustsfall, slumber the hal- quest my dear wife, that as oho has been 4. Of persons_ dying with phthishi, ,be
dowed ashes of him who was the morning- troubled with. .one.old fool, she will not tween the ages of twelve and forty five,
star of our republic. • - think of Marrying a second." , nine-tenths, atleast have never used fat
What a OOUt Mat to the .burial places of •-1 meat: . • ,
kings and ooquerers .He 'Sleeps not. in BeercncLoits are not -so stupid as invol: Mostindiiiiluals - Who avoid fat meat, al
the gloom of great catnedrala, or in the untary maidens would have us believe.— so use little butter or oily gravies, though..
light of consecrated tapers, among sculp- One of these inveterates behag:asked, the many compensate for this want, in part at
tared effigies and. sable plumes, ~but-wrap- other day, why he did not- secure some least, by a free use of those.articles, and
ped in the green arms of th 9 fragrant fond one's company. in-his voyage on the • also milk, eggs, and 'various sacharine sib- .
earth, with the moving boughs 'and mur- ocean of life, replied, "I would, if Lwas• stances.. But they constitute an imper.
nutrias river for a dirge. His grave is in 'sure an ocean would be Pacific: ' , 1 feet substitute for fat meat; without which
V d ,
_ -
°RIC:II , 7 OF TDE ODD FELLOWS. — Many per
sons who are under the impression that
the society of Odd,-Fellows is an origina
tion of modern times will be somewhat
surprised to learn that its origin dates as
far back as the time of Nero, and was es
tablished by the Roman soldiers in tiro
year 55. At that time they were called
"Fellow citizens," the present name being
given them by Titus Caesar twenty-four
years afterwards, and they were so called
from singular character of their meetings, I
and from their knowing each other 'by
night or day by means of ;mystical signs
and language. Bt the same time he gran-1
ted them a dispensation. engraved on a ,
plate of gold, bearing different emblems of
morality. In the fifth century the order
was established ip the Spanish ddrninronsy .
and in. Portugal in the sixth coqiury. It
did not reach France and Englard until
the eleventh century. It was then estab
lished in the latter country by John de
Neville who, assisted by five knights from
France formed a Grand lodge in London.
This ancient fraternity has now its lodges
in every quarter of the globe, and by its
usefulness and benevolent character, com
mands the respect and countenance-of all
w ho are acquainted with its nature and
purposes.
sown is not well, says Henry Ward
Beecher, far men to pray cream and live
slim-milk.
CI EA'RFIELD, PA I , WEDNESDAIr JUNE- 14, 1858.
, A Visit to Mount Vernon
"EXCELSIOR."
the wide heart of the American nation,
and his memory needs no lengthy inscrip
tion or solemn ceremonies to keep it alive!
Time red, level light of sunset is hegining
to checker the floor of the old port fro as
we descend thcslope °nee more. We have
los! the idle glyety ith which we climb
ed up a few hours ago, and we step lightly
and speak softly, like the pilgrims coming
from the shinlow hf some 01d temple at.
Jerusalem. And as the swift little boat
dears us away over the calm waters of the
Potomac, we look back regretfully ht the
high (devotion where the sunset is shining
dpwn on the mossy roof of Mount Vernon,
an7l:Wn tim tomb of Washington.
9EO ASII IIs:GTON WI'LLY!'?
it'ashington City, Feb., 1858.
.1 green looking customer observed a
sign hanging over a grocery store, readi,ig
thus--" Wholesale and Retail Shire.', Ile
worked his way through the x.'rowd
of ja
dies and gentlemen until he got facing one
of the clerks who was exhibiting some tine
sugars to a young lady, when he broke out
with.
A HARD CUSTOMER
The Daughter of Aaron Burr.
[Corrnkponclence of the Pcmayleahb Inquirer.[
An item of news just now going the
rounds, relates ilia: a sa,lor who recently
died iu Texas confessed on his death bed '
that lie was onc„of a crew of mutineers
who some forty years ago took possession
of a brig on its passage, 'from th ar leston
to New York, and caused all the officers
and passengers to walk the plank. For
forty years the wretched man had carried
about with h ut the dreadful secret, and I
died at bust in an agony Of despair.
What. gives this story additioual interest
is the fact that the vessel referred to is the
one on which. Mrs. Theodocia Allston, the
beloved daughter of Aaron liturr,took pas
sage for New "York for the purpOse of
meeting her parent in the darkest days of
. his existence,and which never having been
heard of, was supposed to have foundered
at sea.
liIES-VOl2 111. -=NO 21.
NEW SE
sooner or 10,ter, the hot/ is almost sure to
show the affects of deficient cidorificatioit
How ,John Phoenix Got in the Ladies'
Car.
John Phuinix thus tells an inc'ilent
connected with a ride on the New V'ol•k -
Central Railroad. He relates it in a letter
to the Knickerbocker Magazine, and puts
it on record to serve as ri caution to future
innocent travelers. He says: -
"I had obm et red at each change of the
cars, and they were frequent, when the
general scramble took place, ono car was
defended from the assault by a stalwart
Irishman, who, deaf to menaces, .unsoften- •
ed by entreaty uncorrupted by bribes,
maintained his post for the benefit of, the
“leddies." "Leddies car, aye, you please— ,
forard ear for gentlemen without leddies.".
Ned I say that this car was:the most corn
fortablo of the train, and with that stern
resolve which ever distinguished me in the
discharge of my duty towards myself,
determined to get into it, cost what it
might So whim 'we changed cars at Uti
ca, I rushed forth and seeing a nice young
person,' with a pretty flee. bonnet and
shawl, And a large portmanteau, urging
her way through the crowd, I stepped up
by her side, and with my native grace and
gallantry offered my. arm and assistance,
They were gratefully accepted, and proud
of may success 1 urged my fair charge up
to the platform of the ladies' car. My old
enemy was holding the door. "I's
your leddy, sir," said he. With an inwArd
apology to 31r.. I.'lavuix for the great Hi+
justice done to her charms by the admis ,
sion, I replied 'y3,' Judge of my tonal'
when this low employee of a monopoli
zing and unaccommodmiting Railroa'd, ad
dresfied yco upanion with the tone and
nuMner of an old acquaintance,
Sal, I guess you've done well, but I don't
think his family will think much of the
inatch.“.
ELEPHANTS IN INDIA.-A C'alcutttt dor
respondent of the New York Cummero;a! i •
in giving an account of a visit to Barrack ,
pore, says:
AV-essaw .the. recently arri v ed. elepha n
from Burniali ; they looked:in good condo
Lion. There were ninety of them at that
stables and many were traveling about.
through the different streets and roads. I
had it litre upon one of the largest, wlei
kneeled down to enable me to mount hint
and sonic of them made us a salaam with
their trunks when told to do so by their'
keeper, or 'mahout' as the driver is callc4
I They ale intelligent animals. A story men
told me of a number of elephants in one 0!'
the Morussil districts. One of them lin ,
coi:•initted a fault, in refusing to carry :1
li Lt additional burden, when told by the
l eal.i.a that he would get extra grog for
it.` lie was tried by court martial in tlo•
presence of twenty of •lii4 elephantiTe
brethrcn . nnd convicted, and on the ke,
pet's reading the .entente. all raised theif
trunks in acknowledge nient of its justice
Another was appointed to flog him, wide!:
lie did by giving Urn fifty lashes with his
trunk, and the culprit received the whole
meekly, well knowing that he deserved it •
They are very entitling as to weighih:t
their food with their trunks when on 0
march, and if there is an ounce short they
will discover it and insist on the regulnf
allowance. NVlein traveling they ea Ir
have' it gallon or grog per day, iust as sail ,
ors and soldiers have their glass. Thes•o
animals were at Barruckpure recruiting Lit* ,
ter the voyage, and were soon to he sent
up the country to d service in Englaiel.ti
A l'uoa Sou..—An inquisitive Yanked
was standing at a tavern door, in the low
er part of Jersey, ‘vatelling a funeral pass
by. At the head of it was a large manure
cart, moving along very slowly, and mak
ing no effort to turn out of the procession.
The Yankee was astonished at this want
of attention on the Part of tho driver o4'
said cart, and turning to a Philadelphian
who was standiug by, he remarked :
"I guess the folks ain't very perlito
lwout here; •to hum, where I lire, they al*
ways turn out for a funeral."
-4.„)11, that't part el the procession," re
marked the Philadelphidn,gravely,
"Du tell'! Yeou don't say so! lieow7"
exclaimed the astonished Yankee.
"Why you see, it is a very poor, sandy
soil about hore, awl nothing comes up
they plant, unless they manutre ; it well ;
so, when they bury a fellow, they throw
a whole, cart load in the grave to make
him rise at the judgment day 1"
The Yankee miuled,
rA kind hearted once waited
upon a physician tO r quest him to pro
scribe for her husband's eyes which, wen:
very sore
"Let him wash them every morning
with brandy."
A few weeks after the doctor chanced t:'
meet the %vire.
"Well, has your husband followed my
adv lee ?"
"He has done everything in his power
to do it, doctor, but 'he never could get
the brandy higher than his mouth, poor .
fellow."
An outside passenger of a coach had his
hat blown over a bridge, and carried away
by the stream. A,
"Is it not very singular, (said he to a
gentleman beside him,) that my hat took
that direction ?"
"Not at all,(said the other,) it is natural
for a beaver to take water."_
A gentleman eomplained- to old Bards
ter that some malicious person had out og
his horse's tail, which, ashe meant to bell
bim, would be a great hindrance.
"Then, (said Charles) you must sell lobu
wholesale.'
"Wholsale I (says the other;) how kir
"Because you cannot retailhim
!Marge love is ever accompardect
fear and reference',
~~ 1
TERMS
-1 $1 25 per Annum.
- i s
''sk •---4