£l)c Xaiiuister InteUigmca: VOL. LXIII. THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER. bLISHED EVERT TUXSDAT, AT 80. 8 NORTH DUU STRUT. 3T GEO. SANDERSON* 4 , TEBUB. Subscription. —Two Dollars per annum, payable in ad vance. No subscription discontinued until all arrear ages are paid, unless at the option of the Kditor. Advertisements. —Advertisements, not exceeding one - square, (12 lines,) will be inserted three times for one dollar, and twenty-five cents for each additional inser tion. Those of greater length in proportion. Job Printing— Such as Hand Bills, Posters, Pamphlets, Blanks, Labels, Ac.,.Ac., executed with accuracy and on the shortest notice. THE BEST OF HUSBANDS. 0, I have a husband as good &9 can be; No woman could a better than he ! Sometimes, indeed, he'may chance to be wrong, But his love for me is uncommonly strong 1 He has one little fault that makes me fret, He has always less money, by far, than debt; Moreover, he wallops me, now and then, Bat, excepting that, he’s the best of men 1 I own he is dreadfully given to drink; And, besides, he is rather too fond, X think, Of playing atoards and dice ; but then, Excepting that, he’s the best of men! He loves to chat with the girls, I know, (’Tie the way with men; they’re always so,) But what care I for his flirting, when, Excepting that, he’s the best of men! I oan’t but say I think he is rash To pawn my pewter, and spend the cash; But how can I scold my darling, when, Excepting that, he’s the best of men! When soaked with tipple, he’s hardly polite, But knocks the crockery, left and right, And pulls my hair, and growls again, But, excepting that, he’s the best of men! Yes, such is the loyalty I have shown ; But I have a spouse who is all my own ; As good, indeed, as a man can be; And who oould ask for a better than he ? THE CLERK’S MARRIAGE. 1 You are a brave young man, or a fool ish one.’ ‘ Why do you say that V ‘ To think of marriage.’ ‘ What had bravery or folly to do in the ‘ The young lady is poor.’ ‘I do not wed her for money.’ • *’ ‘ There would be some hope for you if she were the possessor of some twenty or thirty thousand dollars. Bat being as poor as ycurself, the folly of this purpose stands out in bold relief. Look before yon leap, my friend, there’s trouble for you on the other side.’ 4 1 am not sordid, Mr. Blair.’ The young man’s fine face glowed, and his eyes flashed with a repressed indignation. «Not sordid enough, Adrian, for the .marriage, as society is now constituted. There are two sides to the question of mar riage ; the sentimental side and the mat ter-of-fact side. Now have you looked only on the sentimental side ; suppose we con sider the matter-of-faot aspects. You are a olerk receiving a salary of §l,OOO. How mnoh have you saved V ‘ Nothing to speak of.’ 1 Nothing ! So much the worse. If it oost you §l,OOO a year to live, from' whence is to come the means of support ing a wife and family V ‘Oh I’ve been careless and wasteful in expenditures, as most young men are. I had only myself to provide for, and was self-indulgent. But that must cease of course.’ ‘ Granted, for argument’s sake. The young lady you propose to marry is named Rosa Newell. ‘ Yes.’ ‘ A charming young girl; well educated, finely accomplished ; used to good society, as we say ; and just suited for my friend Adrian, if Bhe had money, or he an inoome of three or four thousand a year. But the idea of making her a happy wife, in the city of New York on a thousand dollars, is simply preposterous. It can’t be done, sir, and the attempt will prove ruinous to the happiness of both parties to so foolish an agreement. It is a matter of the easiest demonstration, Adrian; and I wonder that so good an accountant as you are should ere this have tried this question by mathe matical rules. Let me do it for you. And first we look at Rosa’s present sphere of life. She has a home with a Mr. Hart, an uncle, and is living in rather a luxurious way. Mr. Hart is a man who thinks a deal of appearances, and maintains a do mestic establishment that does not oost less than four thousand dollars a year. His house rent is equal to your salary. Now, in taking Rosa from this home, into what kind of a one can you plaoe her ?’ A sober hue of thought came over the young man’s faoe. ‘ You can’t afford to rent a house at even one-half the oost of Mr. Hart’s even if you were able to buy the furniture,’ continued Mr. Blair. ‘ We will board of course,’ said Adrian. ‘ Housekeeping is not to be thought of in the beginning.’ l lf not in the beginning, how after wards V The young man looked quite bewildered but did not answer. ‘ What are yon now paying for board V ‘Five dollars a week.’ ‘ You would require a parlor and bed room after marriage.’ ‘ Yes.’ ‘At a oost of not less than fifteen dol lars a week.’ ‘We could hardly afford the parlor.’ ‘ Hardly,’ said his friend. ‘ Well, give up the parlor, and take a pleasant front ohamber on the second floor, at twelve dol lars a week. But the house is not first class nor the location very desirable. These are not to be had in New York at twelve dollars a week. You cannot afford for Rosa the elegance of her present home. Three dollars more a week for washing and etoeteras, and your income is drawn up at the rate of seven hundred and eighty dol lars a year. Two hundred and twenty left for clothing and other expenses. And, so far, it has taken nearly three times that sum to meet yonr own demands. It has a bad look, Adrian.’ ‘ I was wasteful and self-indulgent,’ said the young man, in a voice from which the confident toneß had departed. ‘ It will scarcely oost Rosa and me for clothing one-half of what I expend.’ ‘ Say one-half, and your inoome will not reach the demand. What was your tailor’s bill last year V ‘ One hundred and sixty dollars.’ Say two hundred, including boots, hats, etceteras.’ ‘ Yes.’ ‘You could hardly get this below a hundred and fifty.’ ‘ Perhaps not.’ ‘The young man’s voice was growing husky. ‘ That will leave seventy dollars for your wife’s olothing, and nothing for pleasure, ' recreation, little luxuries, unanticipated but 'unavoidable expenses. And if.it be so with you two in good health, what will i be the condition of things in siokness and with Children to . support and educate.— Adrian, my young Mend, {here is debt, embarrassment, disappointment and miser able life npon yon. Pause and retrace your steps before it is too late. If yon love Rosa, spare her from this impending fate. Leave her in her pleasant home, or to grace that of a man better able than ; yon are to provide her with the external ! blessings of life. Yon cannot marry on a thousand dollars a year, and it is folly to think of it.’ ‘We could get board for ten dollars a week said Adrian. ‘ That would soaroely help the business at all. At beßt, it wpnld only make a difference in the amonnt of your indebted ness at the close of each year. It is folly for you to thins of it, my young friend. — Yon cannot afford to marry.’ l lt has a dark look, but there is no holding up now,’ replied Adrian, in a gloomy way. We have mutually pledged each other, and the day of onr marriage has been appointed.’ ‘ I am sorry for yon,’ said the friend, a bachelor of forty, who, on an inoome of fifteen hundred dollars a year, could see no possible chanoe for a happy marriage in the city of New York, and preferred celibacy to the embarrassments whioh he saw hundreds of friends enconnter in their attempts to live in style ont of all propor tion to their reßonroes. ‘I am sorry for you,’ he repeated; ‘but if you will bend your neck to the yoke, yon must not com plain of the burden you will find yourself compelled to bear.’ Strange as it may appear, the young clerk, Henry Adrian, had never before looked this matter of inoome, expenditure, and style of living, fair in the front. The actual aspect of the oase, when clearly seen,threw his mind into a state of troubled bewilderment. He went over and over again the calculations suggested by Mr. Blair, a book keeper in the establishment where he was employed, cutting off a little from one proposed expenditure and anoth er, but not being able to get the cost of living down to the Tange of his salary, except when the style was so far below that in whioh his wife must move, that he turned half sick from its contemplation. The more steadily he looked at the truth, the more heavily came the pressure of its stony weight upon his heart; to go for ward was little less than madness, and yet how could he hold back now ? ‘ Rosa sat alone, reading, in one of her uncle’s parlors, waiting for her lover.— He was later than usual, so late that the book began to lose its interest, and at last lay closed upon her lap; while a shade fell over her expfeotant face. A single glance at Rosa’s countenance revealed the fact that she was a girl of some oharaoter. There was no soft voluptuous languor about her, but an ereotness of position as she sat; and a firmness of tone in all her features that indicated an active mind and self-relianoe. An hour later than usual Adrian came. ‘ Are you siok, Henry ?’ asked Rosa as she took his hand, and fixed her eyes on his sober face. ‘ Not, sick, bnt troubled in mind,’ he replied without evasion. ‘ Why are you troubled, Henry ?’ And Rosa drew an arm tenderly around her lover. ‘ Sit down, and 1 will tell you. The trouble concerns us both, Rosa.’ The young girl’s face grew pale. They sat down close together, holding each oth ers hands. But in Adrian’s countenance there was a resolute expression, suoh as wesee on the countenance of a man who had settled a question of difficult solu tion. ‘ The day fixed for our marriage is only two months distant,’ he said. The tone in which he spoke chilled the heart of Rosa. She did not answer but kept her gaze upon his face. ‘ Rosa we mußt reoonsider this matter. We have aoted without forethought.’ Her face became paler, her lips fell apart, her eyes had a frightened expres sion. ‘ I love you, Rosa, tenderly, truly. My heart is not turning from you. I would hasten, rather than retard, the day of our marriage. But there are considerations beyond that day, which have presented themselves, and demand sober considera tion. In a word, Rosa, I cannot afford to marry. My inoome will not justify the step.’ The frightened look went out of Rosa’s eyes. ‘ It was wrong in me ever to have sought your love.’ Her hand tightened on his, and she sank close to his side. ‘ I am a olerk, with only a thousand dollars of income, and I do not see muoh beyond to hope for. Rosa, the furniture in these parlors oost twice the amount of my salary. The rent of the house in which you now live, is equal to what I receive in a year. I cannot take you from all this elegance into a third olass boarding house, the best my means will provide. No, no, Rosa, it would be unjust, selfish, wrong, cruel. How blind in me ever to have thought of so degrading the one I love !’ The young’ man was strongly agitated. ‘And is this all that troubles you, Henry V -‘ls it not enough ? Can 1 look at the the two alternatives that present them selves, and. not grow heart-sick l If we each taking different ways in life—oh, Rosa, I am not strong enough to choose that alternative!’ And his form trembled under the pres sure of excitement. ‘ You love me, Henry V The voice of Rosa was calm, yet bur dened with feeling. ‘As my own life, darling ! Have I not said so a hundred limes V : . ‘ And even as my life do I love you, Henry!’ For several moments; her faoe lay. hid den in his bosom. Then, lifting it, Rosa said: .1, ‘ I am glad you have spoken on this subject, Henry. T could not approaoh it myself, but now that we have it before us let it be well considered. Your income is one thousand dollars V ‘ Yes.’ < A sum large enough to supply all the real wants of two persons who have. inde pendence enough not to be enslaved by a mere love of appearance.’ ‘Why, darling it will require more than half of. my salary to pay for respectable boarding.’. : < Taking it for granted that, after; our marriage,. T am to.sitdojyp in a boarding house; .with jhapds feMpMad; .depend ent on your labor. But 1 Bhall.not .sp a THAT COTTOTHT IB lEI MOST ISOSFDOUB wUial LABOB OOMMAHDS TUB 6BBATBBT RUWABD.” BTJGHAHAN. LANCASTER CITY, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 28,1862. construe my relation to my husband. I will be a help mate-for him.' I will stand by his side ; sharing life’s burdens.’ ‘ All that is in your heart, darling, I know,’ said Adrian. ‘ But we are hedged around by social forms that act as a hind rance. ‘You cannot help me. Sooiety will demand of us a certain style of living and we must oonform to it or be pushed aside from all circles of refinement, taste and intelligence. I cannot accept this ostracism for you, Rosa. It is not right. ‘As if a false, heartless world were more to me than a true, loving husband. Henry, the central point of sooial happi ness is home ; as the home is so will our lives be—rather let me say, as we are, so will our homes be—centres of gloom or brightness, and what others may think of us is really of little aoeount in making .up the sum of our enjoyment as we pass through life, but what we are in ourselves is everything. We must be the centres of our own world of happiness, or our lives will be incomplete. Can a fine establish- ment like this, in whioh 1 live in weak de pendence, fill the measure of my desiros ? Can it bring peace and contentment ? No, no, Henry ? The humblest apartment shared with you would be a palace to my soul, instead. I am not speaking with the romantic enthusiasm of an ardent girl, but soberly, truthfully, Henry. No, dearest, we will not make our lives miser able by living apart, beoause we cannot make a fine appearance in other people’s eyes. God has given love for each other and the means of happiness if we will use them. Let us take Mb good gifts in thank fulness. You have an inoome of one thou sand dollars. We must not expeot to live as those of two, or three, or four thousand dollars a year. Be that folly far from us Henry. I am equal to the self-denial it will require,if the word ‘self denial’ is to be used. Are you not, also ? Oh, Henry ! is there any joy to be imag ined beyond that whioh flows from the oonjuhetion of two loving hearts ? and shall pride and a weak spirit of sooial con formity come in to rob us of our bless ings ?’ The young man had oome sternly re solved to put off the 'day of marriage.— He parted from his betrothed that night looking forward with golden-hued hopes for its arrival. They had talked over the future, practically and sensibly. The lover’s fond pride, whioh had looked to a fair sooial appearanoe for his young wife, gave place to a better view of things.— He saw his love had fixed itself upon a true woman, and that the sphere in whioh their lot was oast all attainable happiness was in store for them, if they would but open their hearts in an orderly way for its reception. One thing said to him by Rosa in that evening’s talk we repeat, for the sake of young wives or maidens on the eve of marriage : ‘ Be mine, dear Henry,’ said she, ‘ the task of ordering and regulating our do mestic affairs in conformity to your means. I will give all thought to that. Your in come is fixed, and I shall exactly know the range of expenditures we must adopt. Do not fear debt and embarrassment.— These wretohed forms shall never enter your homo wMle I stand sentinel at the door. If the husband gives his life and care to work, shall not the wife do the same 1 If he provides to the best of his ability, shall she not dispense with wise frugality his earnings ? She that fails to do this, is not worthy of her position.’ ‘ And so you are bent on this folly ?’ said the bachelor clerk, on the day pre ceding that on which Adrian was to be married. ‘ Yes, if you choose to oall it folly,’ was the answer. ‘ Where are you going 1 to Saratoga V ‘ We shall go nowhere.’ ‘ What 1 Will you not make a bridal ‘ No. A olerk who only receives a salary of one thousand dollars can’t afford to spend it in making a bridal tour.’ Mr. Blair shrugged his shoulders, and arohed his eyebrows, as muoh as to say, if I couldn’t afford to make a bridal tour, I’d not marry. On the day after Adrian’s wedding, he was at his usual place in the counting room. He reoeived from his fellow clerks a few feeble congratulations, and most of them thought him a fool, to burden himself with a wife not worth a dollar. ‘ When I marry, I’ll better my condi tion—not make it worse,’ was the unspoken thought of more than one. ‘ Where are you boarding, asked Mr. Blair, indifferently, two or three weeks after Adrian’s marriage. ‘ Nowhere,’ was the reply, ‘we are at housekeeping.’ ‘ What V ‘ At housekeeping.’ ‘ What is your rent V ‘ Two hundred dollars, and a half of that my good little wife is to pay in music les sons to our landlord’s diughters. We have two pleasant rooms in a third story, I furnished these with the money it would have taken for the bridal tour. Rosa hps the use of the kitchen, and insists on doing her own cooking and house work for the present. I demurred, and do demur, but she says that ‘ work is worship,’ if per formed conscientiously and dutifully, as she is performing it. And with this we are very happy, Mr. Blair, as you shall witness. To-morrow you must go home with me, take tea, and spend the eve ning 1 Mr. Blair aocepted the invitation. He had met Rosa occasionally before her mar riage, and knew her to be a bright, ac complished young woman, fitted to move in refined and intelligent ciroles; and he felt some ouriosity to see her in the new position of mistress and maid to her own household. The Third Avenue oarß bore the two men a long distance from the oity’s throbbing heart, to the more quiet exteri ors, where they alighted, and after a short walk, entered a modest looking house with well attended shrubbory in a little front garden. To the third story they ascended, and there the young wife met them. Not blushing and with stammering apologies for their poor home but with suoh ease and sweet self-possession, and suoh loving smiles about her lips that Mr. Biair found himself transferred to an earthly paradise. As soon as- time ciame for observation, he took note of what was around him'. The furniture of. the room into whioh he had been ushered, could scaroely have been plainer. In the centre stood-a -small breakfast table, oovered with a snowy cloth ' and set- for three persons. Four cane-seat chairs, a work-stand, a hanging-shelf for ; ‘bogks; and a mantis ornament; or tyro, of -no special value, an ingrain oarpet on- the floor, and plain white curtains, looped' baok with blue ribbons, made up the complete inventory, for there was a piano against the wall, the dark case and plain style of which showed it to be no recent purchase. The instrument had been Rosa’s as the observant visitor correotly inferred. After a pleasant talk of some minutes Rosa left the room, and not long after re turned, bearing a tray on which were tea, toast, butter, biscuit, cold tongue and sweetmeats. There was a beautiful glow on her face as she entered, but nothing of shame or hurt pride. With her own fair hands she arranged the table, and then took her place at the head to serve her husband and his friend. The heart of Mr. Blair glowed and stirred with a new im pulse as he looked into the pure, sweet, happy faoe of the young wife, as she poured out the tea and served the meal whioh she had prepared. After supper Rosa removed the things, add was absent nearly half an hour. She returned through her chamber, which ad joined their little parlor, breakfast and sitting room, all in one, with just the slightest change in her attire, and looking as fresh, happy and beautiful as if enter taining a drawing room full of company. The evening passed in reading and pleas ant conversation. As Mr. Blair was about retiring, Adri an said: ‘ Do you think, now, that we were fools to marry ?’ Rosa stood with her hands drawn within the arm of her husband and olasped, with a faoe radiantly happy. A shade crept over Mr. Blair’s counte nance. ‘ Not fools, but wise as others might be if they were courageous enough to do as you have done, Mrs. Adrian;’ and he took the young wife’s hand. ‘ I honor your bravery, yonr independence, your true love that was not overshadowed by world liness, that mildew of the heart, that blight on our sooial life. You are a thousand tinfes happier in your beautiful seclusion than any fas Mon-loving wife, or slave to external appearance, can ever be.' ‘ I love my husband, and I live for him.’ Rosa leaned dose to the manly form by her side. ‘ I understood, when we were mar ried, that he was a life toiler ; that onr home was to be established and sustained by the work of his hands, and I under stood, as well, that I was not his superior, but only bis equal, and that if it was right and honorable for him to work, it would be no less right and honorable for me. — Was I to sit idle, and have a servant to wait on me when his was a lot of toil? No, no, no ! I had my part to perform as well as he, and I am performing it to the best of my ability.’ ‘ You are a true woman, a wise woman, a good woman,’ said Mr. Blair, with ardor, ‘ and you will be as happy as you deserve to be. I thought Harry a fool to marry on a thousand dollars, and told him so. But I take baok my words. If such women as you were plentiful we oould all marry, and find our salaries ample. Good night, and may God bless you.’ And the bachelor clerk, who could not afford to marry on fifteen hundred a year, went to his lonely home —lonely, though peopled thickly—and, sitting down in his desolate chamber, dreamed of the sweet picture of domestio felicity he had seen, and sighed for a sweet Mding place from the world, and all its false professions and heartless show. Parson Suxely’s Experiment A SKETCH FOR WEATHER GRUMBLERS, The small parish at Fallowdale had been for some time without a pastor. The members were nearly all farmers, and they did not have muoh money to be stow upon the support of a olergyman; yet they were willing to pay for anything that could promise them any due return of good. In course of time it happened that the Rev. Abraham Surley visited Fallow dale, and, as a Sabbath passed during his sojourn, he held a meeting in the Bmall church: The people were pleased with his preaohing, and some of them proposed in viting him to remain with them, and take oharge of their spiritual welfare. Upon the merits of this proposition there was a long discussion. Parson Surely bad signified his willingness to take a per manent residence at Fallowdale, but the members of the parish oould not so readi ly agree to hire him. ‘ I don’t see the use of hiring a parson,’ said Mr. Sharp, an old farmer of the plaoe. ‘He oan do us no good. A parson oan’t learn me anything.’ To this it was answered that stated re ligious meetings would be of great benefit to some of the younger people, and also a Bource of good to all. < I-don’t know about that. I’ve heard tell of a parson that oould pray for rain, and have it to oome at any time. Now if we could hit upon-BUoh a parson as that I would go in for hiring him.’ This opened a new idea to the unsophis ticated minds of Fallowdale. The farmers often suffered from long droughts, and af ter arguing a while longer, they agreed to hire Parson Surley, on the condition that he should give them rain whenever they wished for it, and, on the other hand, that he would also give them fair weather when required. • Deacons Smith and Townsend were dep utized to make this arrangement known to the parsen, and the people remained in the ohuroh while the messengers went upon their errand. When the Deacon returned, Mr. Surely accompanied them. He smiled as he entered the churoh, and with a bow he saluted the people there assembled. ‘Well, my friends,’ he said as he asoend ed the platform in front of the desk. * I have heard your request to me, and strange as it mayjppear, I have oome to aooept your proposal; but Ido it only on one oondition, and that is that your request for a change of weather must be unaui- This appeared very reasonable, since every member of the parish had a deep in terest in the farming business, and ere long it was arranged that Mr. Surely should become the pastor, and that he should give the people rain when they wanted it. When Mr. Surely returned to his lodg ings, his wife was utterly astounded on learning the nature of the oontraot her husband had entered into.; but the pastor smiled and bade her wait for the result, ‘But you know you cannot make it rain,’. ponas^d ; ;Mrs. Surely; ‘and you know, too, that the farmers here will be wanting rain very often when there is none for them. You will be disgraeed.’ ‘ I will teaoh them » lesson,’ returned the pastor. ‘ Ay, bpt you cannot be as good as your word ; and when you have taught it to them, they will turn you off.’ ‘ We shall see,’ was Mr. Surety’s reply, and he took up a book and commenced reading. Time flew on, and the hot days of mid summer were at hand. For three weeks it had not.rained, and the young oorn was beginning to onrl up beneath the effeots of the drought. In. this extremity the peo ple bethought themselves of the promise of their pastor, and hastened to Mm. ‘ Come,’ said Sharp, whose hilly farm was suffering severely, ‘ we want rain.— You remember your promise.’ ‘ Certainly,’ returned Mr. Surely. ‘lf you will call for a meeting of the members of the parish, I will be with them this eve ning.’ With this the applicants were perfectly satisfied, and forthwith they hastened to call the flock together. ‘ Now, you will see the hour of your disgraoe,’ said Mrs. Surely, after the vis itors had gone. ‘ Oh, lam sorry you ever undertook to deceive them so.’ ‘ I did not deceive them.’ ‘ Yes you surely did.’ ‘ We shall see.’ ‘ So we shall see,’ added the lady. The hour of the meeting came round, and Parson Surely met Ms people at the ohuroh. They were all there—some anx ious, the remainder curious. ‘ Now, my friends,’ said the pastor ris ing upon the platform. ‘ I have come to hear your request. What is it ?’ ‘We want rain,’ bluntly spoke Farmer Sharp, ‘ and you know you promised to give it to us.’ ‘ Ay—rain—rain,’ repeated half a dozen voices. ‘ Very well. Now when do yon want to have it?’ ' ‘To-night. Let it rain all night long,’ said Sharp, to whioh several others im mediately assented. ‘ No, no, not to-night,’ cried Deacon Smith. ‘ I have six or seven tons of well made hay in the field, and I would not have it wet for anything.’ ‘ So have I hay out,’ added Mr. Peok. ‘ We won’t have it rain to-night.’ ‘ Then let it be to-morrow.’ ‘ It will take me nil day to-morrow do get my hay in,’ said Smith. Thus the objections came up for two succeeding days, and at length, by way of compromise, Mr. Sharp proposed that they should have rain in just four days. ‘ For,’ said he, ‘by that time all the hay which is now out can be got in, and we need not out any— ’ ‘Stop, stop,’ uttered Mrs. Sharp, pulling her worthy husband by the sleeve. ‘ That is the day we have set to go to Snow-hill. It musn’t rain then.' This was law for Mr. Sharp, so he pro posed that the rain should come in one week, and then sat down. But this would not do. ‘lf we oan’t have rain before then, we’d better not have it at all,’ said they. In short the meeting resulted in just no conclusion at all, for the good people found it utterly impossible to agree upon a time when it should rain. ‘ Until you can make up your minds on this point,’ said the pastor, as he was about leaving the ohuroh, ‘ we must all trust in the Lord.’ And after this the people fol lowed Mm from the churoh. Both Deacon Smith and Mr. Peck got their hay safely in; but on the very day Mr. Sharp was to have started for Snow hill, it began to rain in good earnest. Mr. Sharp lost his visit bat he met the disap pointment with good grace, for his orops smiled at the rain. Ere another month had passed by, another meeting was called for a petition for rain, but with the same result as before. Many of the people had their muck to dig, and rain would prevent them. Some wanted it immediately—some in one, some in two, and some in three days, while other parishioners wanted to put it off longer. So Mr. Surely had no ocoasion to oall for rain. One year rolled by, and up to that time the people of Eallowdale had never onoe been able to agree upon the exaot kind of weather they would have, and the result was that they began to open their eyes to the fact that this world would be a strange plaoe if its inhabitants should govern it. On the last Sabbath in the first year of Mr. Surely’s settlement at Eallowdale, he offered to break up his connection with the parish; but the people would not listen to it; they had become attached to him and the meeting, and they wished him to stay. ‘ But I oan no longer rest under our former contraot with regard to the weather,’ said the pastor. ‘ Nor do we wish you to,’ returned Sharp. ‘ Only preach to üb, and teaoh us and our children how to live, and help us to be sooial, contented and happy.’ ‘ And,’ added the pastor, while a tear of pride stood in his eye, ‘ all things above our proper sphere we will leave with God, for he doeth all things well.’ The White Sparrow. “ Sleep le the worst of thieves; He steals half oar lives.” In most parts of Germany, there passes ourrent among the people this proverb : “ He that would thrive Most the white sparrow soe.” The meaning of this proverb is not, at first sight, so apparent as that of some others that oiroulate amongst ns, such as ( Early habits make the man, ‘ Honesty is the best polioy,’ &o.; but the moral sig nification it is intended to convey is not the less true and important. I will, there fore, here relate the story oonneoted with its origin, even as I received it- myself, from the lips of an old and valued friend. There was an old farmer with whom ev erything appeared to grow worse from year to year. His cattle died one by one, and the prodnoe of his- land was not the half of what it ought to be; in fact, all his property was, to use a very familiar ex pression, ‘ going to the dogs.’ Ia short, scarcely a week passed by that either the tax-gatherer or the pawn-broker did not OQtne to his window, and,. addressing him with a oourteons bow, say—- ‘ I am really very sorry,. Herr Ruck wart, to be compelled to put you to inoon venie'noe, but I am obliged to do my duty.’ . The old friends of Hen Ruqkwartj aTso. tried to do their dpty to him. They ad-’ vised, they entreated and they helped Mm, but all in vain, and so one after' another gave Mm up in despair, deolaring with a sigh, that as for poor Ruckwart, there was no use in trying to help him —he was past being helped. He had one friend, however, whose heart was in the right place, and who was not only a good man, but a very clear-sighted one. This friend thought he would not give Herr Ruckwart up altogether, with out making one more attempt to save him. So one day he. led the conversation, as if accidentally, to the subjeot of sparrows, relating many anecdotes of these birds, and observing how greatly they had mul tiplied of late, and how very cunning and voracious they had become. Herr Ruokwart shook his head gravely, in answer to this observation, and said— ‘ They are indeed most destructive erea tures. For my part, I have not the slight est doubt that it is mainly owing to their depredations that my harvest has of late years been so unproductive.' To this oonjeoture his old friend made no rejoinder; but after a moment’s pause, he continued the conversation by another interrogatory— ‘ Neighbor, have you ever seen a white sparrow ?’ ‘ No,’ replied Ruokwart; ‘ the sparrows which alight in my fields are all the com mon grey sort.’ ‘ That is very probable, too,’ rejoinded his friend. ‘ The habits of the white spar row are peculiar to itself. Only one comes into the world every year, and being so different from Ms fellows, other Bparrows take a dislike for it, and peok at it when it appears among them. For this reason it seeks its food early in the morning, be fose the rest of the feathered tribe are astir, and then goes back to its nest, where it remains for the rest of the day.’ * That is-very f’ exclaimed Ruok wart. ‘ I must really try and ■ got a sight at that sparrow—and if possible I will catch it, too.’ On the morning following this conver sation, the .farmer rose with the snn, and sallied forth into the field. He walked around his farm, searched his farmyard in every quarter, examining the roof of his garners and the trees of his orchards, to see whether he oould discover any traces of the wonderful white sparrow ! Bnt the white sparrow, to the great disappointment of the farmer, would not show itself, or stir from its imaginary nest. What vexedethe farmer still more, how ever, was that although the sun stood Mgh in the heavens by the time he had conclud ed his round, not one of the farm laborers were astir. They, too, seemed resolved not to stir from their nests. Meanwhile, the cattle were bellowing in their stalls with hunger, and not a soul was near to ’eed them Herr Ruokwart was reflecting on the disadvantages of this state of things, when suddenly he perceived a lad coming ont of the house, oarrying a sack of wheat on his shoulders. He seemed to be in great haste to get out of the preoincts of the farm, and Herr Ruokwart soon peroeived that his steps were bent towards a public house, where Casper had unhappily a long soore to pay. He hastened after the as tonished youth, who believed his master to be still in the enjoyment of his morning nap, and quiokly relieved him of his burden. The farmer next bent his steps to the cowhouse, and peeping to see whether the white sparrow had perohanoe taken refuge there, he discovered, to his dismay, that the milk-maid was handing a liberal portion of milk through the window to her neigh bor, to mix with her morning onp of coffee. ‘ A pretty sort of housekeeping this is,’ thought the farmer to himself, as he hastened to his wife’s apartment, and roused her from her slumbers. ‘As sure as my name is Ruckwart,’ he exolaimed in an angry tone, ‘ there must be an end to these lazy habits. Everything is going wrong for the want of somebody to look after them. So far as I am concerned,’ thought the good farmer to himself, ‘ I will rise every day at the same hour 1 rose this morning, and then 1 shall get my farm cleared of those who do not intend to do their duty properly. Besides, who knows but some fine morning or other, I may suc ceed in catohing the white sparrow !’ Days and weeks passed on. The farmer adhered to his resolution, but he soon for got the white sparrow, and only looked after oattle and his corn-fields. Soon everything around him wore a flourishing aspeot, and men began to ob serve that Herr Rnokwart (Backward) now well deserved to bo called Herr Vorwart (Forward.) In dne course of time his old friend again came to spend the day with him; and inquired in a humorous tone— ‘ Well, my fine fellow, how are you get ting on now ! have yon yet suoceeded in catohing a glimpse of the white sparrow V The farmer only replied to this question by a smile, and .then, holding ont his hand to his old friend, he said— ‘ God bless you, Herder 1 you have saved me and my family from ruin.’ Often, in after years, when Herr Ruck wart was a prosperous man, respected by neighbors, and beloved by his well ordered household, he was wont to relate this his tory of his early life, and thus, by degrees, the saying passed into a proverb—* He that wonld thrive, must the white sparrow see.’ The: Lancaster intelligencer JOB PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT, No. 8 NORTH DUKE STREET, LANCASTER, PA. The Jobbing Department is thoroughly famished with new and elegant type of pyery description, and is under the charge of a practical and experienced Job Printer/ - The Proprietors are prepared to PRINT CHECKS, NOTES, LEGAL BLANKB, . CARDS AND CIRCULARS, BILL HEADS AND HANDBILLS, PROGRAMMES AND POSTERS, PAPER BOOKS AND PAMPHLETS, BALL TICKETS AND INVITATIONS, PRINTING IN COLORS AND PLAIN PRINTING, with neatnees, accuracy and dispatch, on the most reasona ble terms, and in a manner not excelled by any establish ment in the city. . ... Orders from a distance, by mail or otherwise, promptly attended to. G^ d^n) EßgoN 4 gQN> Intelligencer Office, ■ No. 8 North Dnfce street, Lancaster, Pa. —NCORPORATBD 18 10 1 HARTFORD FIBS INSURANCE COMPANY, OP HARTFORD, CONN. CAPITAL AND ASSETS *936,70ft.&0. H. HUNTINGTON, President, P. C. Ailtw, Secretary. Policies issued and losses equitably adjusted and paid immediately upon satisfactory proofs, in New Fork funds, by the undersigned, the DULx AUTHORIZES) AGENT. JAMES BLACK, . oct 23 ly 41) Agent for Lancaster Co. American life issurance asd TRUST COMPANY. CAPITAL SHOCK, s_6 00, 0 0 0 Company's Balding, Wnlnutstrecri* S/E. owner of Fourth PHILADELPHIA.' T.TTT6 INBUBANOB ATTHBUSUAL MUTUAL KATES, or at Joint Stock'Bates, at about2o percent, less, or at ToW AKtone. tt. : KM rtrwt, AtmM torUaeu taroonntor gOOBTHUS FOR THB TIHBII« «- a NECKsanxis every household. “W» JOHNS k CUOSLEY’S AMXglOAir OBMXIfT QLUX The Strongest Glue in the World. The Cheapest Glue in the World. « The Host Durable Glue in the World. The Only Reliable Ghxe in the World. The Bert Glue in the World. AMERICAN CEMENT otUf E ‘ Is the only article of the kind erer prodnoed which WILL WITHSTAND WATER. IT WILL MEND WOOD, Bare your broken Furniture. IT WILL MEND LEATHER, Mend your Harness, Stamps, Belts, Boots, Ac. IT WILL MEND GLASS, ' Save the pieces of that expensive Oat Glia Bottle. IT WILL MEND IVORY, Don’t throw away that broken Ivory Fan, it laeMOy re paired. IT.WILL MEND CHINA* Tour broken China OupaandSaueera oan be made as good - IT WILL MEND MARBLE, That piece knocked out of your Marble Mantle can be pu on as strong as evet- IT WILL MEND PORCELAIN, No matter if that broken-Pitcher did not oost but a shll ling,a shilling saved ita shilling earned. IT WILL MEND ALABASTER, That costly Alabaster Vase is broken and you oan’t match it, mend it, it will never show when put together. IT WILL MEND BONE, OOBAL, LATA, AND IN FACT EVERY THING BUT METALS. Any article cemented With AMERICAN CEMENT GLUE will not show, where it is mended. EXTRACTS “ Every Housekeeper'should have a supply of Johns A Crosley’B American Cement Glue.”—-New Tbrk Timet. “ It is so convenient to have in the house.”—- New Tork Express. «it is always ready; this commends it to everybody. Independent. “ We have tried It, and find it as useful in our house as water.”— Wilkes? Spirit tf the Timet. economy is wealth $lO.OO per year saved in every family by One Bottle of AMERICAN OEMBNTGLUE Price 25 Ceuta per Bottle. Price 25 Cents per Bottle. Price 25 Cents per Bottle. Price 25 Cents per Bottle. Price 25 Oentß per Bottle. Price 25 Oenta per Bottle. VERY LIBERAL REDUCTION TO WHOLESALE TERMS CASH For Sale by all Druggists and Storekeepers generally throughout the country. JOHNS a OSOSLEY, (Sole Manufacturers,) 78 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK, Comer of Liberty Street. Important to House Owners. Important to Builders. Important to Railroad Companies. Important to Farmers. To all whom this may oonoern, and it con corn* everybody. JOHNS * OROSLEY'S IMPROVED GUTTA PERCHA CEMENT ROOFING, The Cheapest and most durable Roofing in use. IT IS FIRE AND WATER PROOF. It can be applied to new and old Roofß of all kindi, steep or flat, and to Shinge Roofe without removing the Shingle*. THE COST IS ONLY ABOUT ONE-THIRD THAT OF TIN, AND IT IS TWICE AS DURABLE. This article has been thoroughly tested In New York city and all parts of the United States, Canada, West Indies and Central and South America, on boildtng* of all kinds, such as Factories, Foundries, Churches, Railroad Depots, Care, and on Public Buildings generally, Government Buildings, 4c., by the principal Buildersj Architects and others, during the past four-years, and has proved to be the Cheapest and most durable Roofing in use; It Is In every respect a Fire, Water, Weather and Time' Proof oovering for Roofs of ail kinds. This is the only material manufactured in the United States which combines the very desirable properties of Elasticity and Durability, which are universally acknowl edged to be possessed by Gutta Percha and India Rubber. NO HEAT IS REQUIRED IN MAKING APPLICATION. The expense of applying it la trifling, as an ordinary 800 can be covered and finished the same day. IT CAN BE APPLIED BY ANYONE, and when finished forms a perfectly Fire- Proof surface, with an elastic body, which cannot be Injured by Heat, Cold or Storms, Shrinking of Roof Boards, nor any exter nal action whatever. . 1: LIQUID GUTTA PEBOHA CEMENT, For Coating Metals of all Kinds when exposed, to the Action of the Weather, and / - POE AND REPAIRING METAI. ROOTS OF ALL KINDS. This is the only Composition known which will success fully resist extreme changes of all climates, for. shy length of time, when applied to metals, to which it adheres firmly, forming a body eqnal to three coats of ordinary paint, costs much, less, and will last three times ax long} And from its elasticity is not injured by, the contraction and expansion of Tin and other Metal Boob,consequent upon sadden changes of the weather. It will not crack In cold or run in wann weather, and will notwashoff. ... . Leaky Tin and other Metal Boots can be readily repaired with GUTTA PEBCHA CEMENT, and prevented bom further corrosion and leaking, thereby ensuring a ‘perfect ly water tight roof for many years. - This Cement is peculiarly adapted for the preservation of Iron Bailings, Stores, Ranges, Safes, Agricultural, Imple ments, Ac., also foi; general manufacturers* use. GDTTAPEBCHA 0 IK.i HI for preserving and repairing Tin and other Metal ‘Boob of every description, from its great elasticity, ft not UjUUil by *h<> contraction and expansion of Metals, and crack in cold or mn in warm weather. . . • j. . These materials are adapted to all climates, and -w# Are nreoared to supply orders from any part of the ooiu}sg > ,' > at Short notice, for GUTTA PEBCHA BOOHING ln.roUs, ready prepared for use, and GUTTA PEROHA' OBM3SNT. In barrels, with fall printed directions fomppUeattarL. AGENTS WANIB D g, We will make liberal and satisfactory artatttpnfotats with responsible parties who would like to estabnm than selves in a lncratire and permanent, bus inaas^ ODE TEEMS ABBOA9 We can give abundant proof of all we data in Avocj of our Improved Roofing Materials, having applied ttka, w several thousand Boob in New York city and”vicinity. • - JOHNS » Wnmil WiAIHOOSI,' 78 WILLIAM gate,*'’ 7 Corner of Liberty Street, Full descriptive Circulars and Prices trill be'ftarnfc&id on application. ;1 DH.tr® ASD CHEMICAL. The snbscriberh&Ying remoTed.hls etoreto. building nearly opposite his old s»md, the Cross Keys Hdtel, has'now on' hand stock of articles belonging to the Drag b u rfn tfjyOT Wyp f In part of Oils, Adds, gpiees, |Betd»* Alwhol, PoFWd Articles, SarsaparUlas, Ac.. Ac., to wbich the atteiiuOh 01 oonntry merchants, physicians and consumers uMgensm ta &S« : . “rn H E OHIO a /: iw. vilut X Aaos Sum Mosey whtkb—in \a Ordinanre of; Mfet Md o»ttnon.pgmdjMf the „ City of Lancaster, passed the 6th day.of Angast,lOTl,ttre undersigned isadthnSedito dont toliqnidate City loans now duo wd_dom»ndidjJßMi Is, therefore, to gfrehotioethst proposals tfe,JMd«<«fSg ■ amount not exreedlng ten thpnsand,dpllarsoriU fegEjfl** 1 * ot the Mayor's offleo, for which -Coupons of-daraaimif of loan, will be Issued heerlnfcAjyr lsftAt ll f9&?*- deemable in ton years from date. Matoe’s Omit lB. “‘J’gj- rm.'EXHSWAWB \f. 9< NO® Sole Manqfacttarm, NBW^tOKK*