~...... _....... . __..... . . , _ . . -. . . _ .. . .. I, . , '-- - - - i f I . '• ' , - N .... , • t .. , ."77 , "••••..../ 1 , , . . e i • - - : - j \ . ' ' \• ' \"t '1 ' . 1 i k p, . ~or 1 1 , , , I '''''''%• \ '..... , . , 1 ; ' L_ - . 1.,,il ' ' ~ ~ ill , t ~,,, ~ t , , ...... .... , •., , A 004 Vaper---Ptuottli to Attics, Agin,ttxrr, fittratut, sritut, Art, /wig pudic anb • turd )ntriligint, of,inomwasiDow:iNl THE WAYNESBURG MESSENGER, PUBLISHED BY L W. JONES & JAMES 8, JENNINGS, WAYNESBURG, GREENE CO., PA. AWOPIPICS NBARLY OPPOSITS THU PUBLIC squent..z2 WZMVICIEt titaanatrnos.-181 50 in advance; Si 78 at th e ex . ..pienition ofaix months: $2 00 within the year; $2 50 -00er thesxpiration of the year. Adsvgirrupiamers inserted at 81 00 per square for three insertions, and 25 cents &square for each addition. 011$4meertion; (ten lines or less counted insquare.) ••IA liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. .le PRINTING , of all kinds, executed in the best and oa reasonable terms, at the'llessenger" Job aptsburg usituss curbs. ATTORNEYS. I. A. J. BUCHANAN. WM. C. LINDBNIr. EIFOILLNAN Si LINDSEY, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW, TV synesburg, P. Mike on the North side of Main Street, two doors West of the "Republican" Office. Jan. 1, 1862. ♦. 41..,RUR1111.7A. ,o.virelits PURMAN &11,ITCHIX, INOIIINS AND COUNSEWDS AT LAW, Waynesbnart, Ps. - 113" All business in Greene, Washington, and Fay etto-nnties, entrusted to them, wilt receive prompt attention. Sept. 11,1861-Iy. R. W. DOWNEY, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office in Led with's Building. opposite the Court House. Sept. 11,1881-Iy. DAVID CRAWFORD, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office in Sayers' Building, adjoining the Poet Office. dept. 11, last—ly. O. A. BLACK. JOHN PHNLAN. BLACK & PHELAN, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLOR/3 AT LAW Office in the Court House, Waynesburg. Bept. 11,1861-Iy. PHYSIOLANS DR. D. W. BRADEN, Phyaieian and Surgeon. Office in the Old Bank ibinstreet. Sept. 11, 1881--Iy. DRUGS DR. W. L. CREIGH, Physician and Surgeon, Led dealer in Drugs, Medicines. Oils, Paints, Sce.., Ike., Main street, a few doors east of the Bank. Sept. 11,1861—1 y. M. A. HiIi,RVEY, Dntggist and Apothecary, and dealer in Paints and Oils, the most celebrated Patent Medicines, and Pure Liquors for medicinal purposes. Sept. 1881-Iy. MEEIROILdNTS WM. A. POW ER, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Foreign and Domes tic Dry Goods, Groceries, Notions, &c., Main street. Sept. ii, 1861-Iy. GEO. HOSKINSON, Opposite the Court House, keeps always on hand a .lisitt stock of Seasonable Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots ad Shoes, and Notions generally. Sept. 11, 186 I—Ly. ANDREW WILSON, Dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Drugs, Notions, Hardware, Queensware, Stoneware, Looking Glasses, erns and Nails, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Main street, one door east of the Old Bank. Sept. 11. 11561—/y. R. CLARK, Dealer in Dry Goods. Groceries, Hardware, Queens ware and notions, one door wen of the Adams House, Diehl street. Sept. It, 1861-Iy. MINOR & CO., Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Gro wigs, Queensware, Hardware and Notions, opposite tatareen Houso. Main street. Sept. 11, 1961-Iy, OLOTHT.NG N. CLARK, Dealer in Men and Boy's Clothing, Cloths, Case- Satinets. Hats and Caps, Ike., Main guts.% op. pings tbs Court House. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. A. J. SOWERS, Dealer in Men and Boy's Clothing, Gentlemen's Fur adshisig Goods, Boots and Shoes, HiUs and Cape, Old Ilint Building, Main street. Sept. 11, 1861-4 m BOOT AND SILOS DZAUDRB J. D. COSGRAY, Soot and Shoe maker. Main street, nearly opposite! ells "Farmer's and Drover's Bank." Every style of Soots and Shoes constantly on hand or made to order. Sept. 11, 113111-Iy. S. B. RICKEY, Soot and Shoe maker, Seyer , s Corner, Main street. Soots and Shoes of every variety always on hand or snide to order on short notice. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. GROCERIES & VARIETIES JOSEPH YATER, Dealer in Groceries and Confectioneries, Notions, PerlUmeries, Liverpool Ware, &c., Glass of all sizes, and Gilt Moulding and Looking Glass Plates. IDOVash paid for good eating Apples. Slept. 11, 1881-Iy. JOHN MUNNELL, Dealer in Groceries and Confectionaries, and Variety Goods Generally, Wilson's New Building, Main street. Sept.. 11, 1861-Iy. 80083.&a. LEWIS DAY, Destern' School and Miscellaneous Books, Station -wry. ink, Magazines and Papers, Wilson's Old Build 11111.Maut street. Sept. 11, 1061-Iy. BANK _ _ ----- FAMERS' & DROVERS' BANK, Waysiteablarg, SISSISE HOOK, Pres't. J. LAZZAft, Cashier. DISCOUNT DaY, WEDNESDAY. 110861-Iy. k •~ !_, SAMUEL M'ALLISTER, lignites and Trunk Sieber, Mein street, three -Mee yieu if the Adams Mane. ll* li t lE*l-Iy. Toamwm:ffil HOOP ER & HAGER, ildWiteletuntre and wholesale and Mail &aka in Telso .ir and Snair. angar Caged) PP% AC. Thirdly" Main street. Sept. 11 . . 18114--ty.W *Mr IMIPS . q . "." 414101%16111,. Nut intrg. POEM BY COL. BAKER. A melancholy interest now attaches to the following graphic tribute of a brave man to his comrades who fell in Mexico. How truly it can be said of him and those who perished with him at Ball's Bluff, "In kindred hearts their memories live, And history guards their fame !" TO THE MEMORY OF THE DEAD OF THE FOURTH ILLINOIS REGIMENT BR COL. E. D. BIKER Where rolls the rushing Rio Grande Here peacefully they sleep ; Far from their native Northern land, Far from their friends, who weep, No rolling drum disturbs their rest, Beneath the sandy sod— The mould lies heavy on each breast. The spirit is with God• They heard their country's call, and cam• To battle for her rights ; Each bosom filled with martial flame, And kindling for the fight. Light was their measured footstep when They moved to meet the foe; Alas, that hearts so fiery then, Should soon be cold and low: They did not die in eager strife, Upon a well fought field ; Not from the red wound poured their life. Where cowering foemen yield. Death's ghastly shade was slowly east Upon each manly brow; But, calm and fearless to the last, They sleep in silence now. Yet shall a grateful country give Her honors to their name. In kindred hearts their memories live, And history guards their fame. Nor unremembered do they sleep Upon a foreign strand, Though near their grave. the wild waves sweep, Thou rushing Rio Grande. gttert Bisuilarg. RETRIBUTION. Profane as well as sacred history is full of instances of fearful retribu tion attending actual or contempla ted crimes. Thus we read that Pope Alexander VI. prepared a jar of pois oned sweetmeats with which to de stroy the wealthy Cardinal Corneto. He ate of it himself, and died in agony. Louis the Debonnaiee, son and successor of Charlemagne, put his nephew Bernard to death, and forced his three natural brothers to assume the clerical tonsure. This was done at the instigation of his queen. She died, and he married again. His second wife was unfaith ful, and gave birth to a spurious son. His own three sons treated him as unnaturally as he had treated his three brothers ; and finally the spur ious child succeeded to the Empire of France; so that all of Louis' crimes to secure France to his descen dants were completely frustrated, and he gained nothing but a similar unnatural treatment to that which he had shown. Anne Boleyn, maid of honor to Queen Catherine, encoura ged the addresses of Henry VIII., and thereby stimulated him to divorce his lawful wife. When Catherine died of grief and mortification, Anne could not conceal her exultation, and said that she was then a queen in deed. But at that very moment re payment in kind was awaiting the re joicing queen. The lustful monarch had looked with unhallowed love upon Jane Seymour, one of her own maids of honor, and Anne was brought to the block to make room for her rival. But justice was not meted out merely to the wretched Anne. Cardinal Wolsey, who con spired against Catherine, and encour aged Henry to divorce her, was him self soon after disgraced and di vorced from all his wealth and dignity Cranmer, who was active in the same wicked deed, but from different mo tives from Wolsey, was burned years after by the daughter of the disgraced queen. Mary thirsted for the blood of the man who wronged her mother, and her hatred of Cranmer, more than her love of Catholicism, brought him to the stake. Napoleon di vorced the noble Josephine, so that the crown of France might be trans mitted to his own descendants. A grandson of the divorced empress is now on the throne, and the race of Napolean Bonaparte is extinct. The imperious and vindictive Sarah cast out Hagar and Ishmael into the wil derness, saying, "The son of this bondwoman shall not be heir with my BOtt i even with - Isaac." Bat all that country is sow possessed by the de scendants of the bond-woman, while the children of Isaac are scattered over the face of the whole earth. And what is the history of the dif ferent dynasties that have tyranni sed over mankind bat the record of murder and usurpation, and then, in turn, dethronement and death ? They 'Flux up ir,t' blocl sad_ gtey went sp at Ap blood. Whai. a blsok '', :1 :1 crin ol g4l9 ,-* 4o *.t - tlits -;01 t4. ~ 6 114. 1 " 1 " 11 ' A iratit tE - - --,- _ . . .. .. WAYNESBUEG, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1862. dagger or poisoned bowl, upon the traitors themselves. These consti tute jtlmost one half their annals. It is but little better in modern history. We have the same circle—beginning in conspiracy and murder, and com ing back to the starting point of con spiracy and murder. We meet this bloody round of treachery and ven geance again and again in England during the dark era of the "War of the Roses." Edward IV. and his brutal brothers murdered Henry VI., the Prince of Wales, and thousands of the adherents of the house of Lan caster. And then the royal trio turned their fury against one another. Clarence was murdered by his broth ers. Edward perished in the prime of his life; his death being hastened by the cares and anxieties attending the usurped crown, by remorse for his brother's death, and by his in dulgence in those pleasures which his assumed rank gave him. His two sons were murdered by command of their uncle Richard, and Richard him self slain in battle. And nearly all who aided the fierce brothers in their cruelties came to untimely ends. It is remarkable how few great conquerors have died natural deaths. Alexander the Great perished in his thirty-third year; it matters little by poison (as some suppose) or by excess in drinking. In either case, his con quests led to his death : for his career of victory brought about him a crowd of sycophants, who paid him the most idolatrous homage, and eneouraged him in his excesses. Hannibal de stroyed himself by poison to escape from falling into the hands of his en emies. Ctesar fell beneath the dag gers of his former friends in the sen ate-house of Rome. Napolean died in his fifty-second year; his death be ing hastened by his confinement, by mortification at the loss of his pow er, and by the vexatious treatment to which he was subjected. Charles XII. was killed by a cannon ball.— Gustavus Adolphus fell in battle on the plains of Lutzen; even that vir tuous monarch forming no exception to the law, "He that killeth with the sword must be killed by the sword." The greatest of warriors, Marshal Turenne, was killed with a cannon ball at Saltbach. The brutal Suwar roff died of a broken heart, because of the neglect of his royal master, Paul. A similar fate was that of Gonsalvo de Cordova, the "Great Captain," as the Spaniards still de light to call him. He died in retire ment, an exile from court, and under the displeasure of his sovereign.— The declining years of Cortes were embittered by the envy and malice of his enemies. Alvarado, his lieu tenant, who won such an enviable notoriety for his cruelty and rapaci ty, filled at length a bloody grave.— The remorseless Francisco Pizarro fell by the hands of wretches as piti less as himself. Diego Almagro, who had sigpalized himself by his cruelty to the Peruvian monarch, Atahualpa, was strangled to death whilst a pris oner. And so many hundreds of oth er instances might be given to show that God does avenge the shedding of the blood of those made in his own image. Parallel to the fate of warriors and conquerors is that of tyrants and wicked rulers. How few of these have been peimitted to live out half their days ! The licentious monster, Domitiau, fell by the hand of the as sassin. The fiddling fool and bloody knave, Nero, poisoned himself. The ferocious Caligula was killed by con spirators, after a reign of four years. The brutal Commodus was first poi soned and then strangled. The sav age fratricide, Carcalla, was stabbed with a dagger. The effeminate, su perstitious vindictive Elagabalus was assassinated by the Pretorian guards. The remorseless giant, Maximin, was slain in his tent. The cruel debauch ee, Gallienus, was killed by a dart from the hand of a conspirator.— Carimis, who, Gibbon says, united the extravagances of Elagabalus with the cruelties of Domitian, fell by the hand of an injured husband. Gailius, distinguished for his treachery and bloodthirstiness, was betrayed and murdered, &c., &c. And if we come down to the arkest and most dis graceful of all the periods and histo ry—the era of the French Revolution —what colimentary is afforded on the text, "As thou bast done, it shall be done to thee; thy reward shall re turn upon thine own head." Obadi ah 15. Row few of the traffickers in blood were permitted to close their lives in peace! How fearful was the retribution upon the ruthless Trium virate, Danton, Marat, and Robespi ere ! Danton was sentenced to the guillotine by the revolutionary tribu nal which he himself had established: Marat was stabbed to the heart by Charlotte Corday. She pretended that she had important information respecting his intended victims in Caen, and time get access to his per son. "She Mond him in the bath, where he eagerly inquired after the proscribed _deputies at Caen. Being told their maw , 'They shall soon meet S theAW pasisint tbey serve ' LS- NW de. glaia I 10114 1 A ii "4 ls A im * •bitlik 41 6+4". ir 111P111 on Robespiere, the greatest monster of the three, was still more signal.— His lower jaw was shattered by a pistol ball; he was then dragged by the, heels over the pavernentsinto his own quarters, and laid on the very table on which he had signed so many death-warrants. There he lay for nine hours, enduring agony unutter able from his wound, half frantic with terror of death, and cowering under the jeers and taunts of the mob. He was next taken to the very cell in which he had a few days be fore confined some of his victims.— At 4 o'clock next morning he was ta ken to the scaffold, erected on the I very spot where his royal victims, Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette, had been executed. "The blood from his jaws burst through the bandage and overflowed his dress; his face was deadly pale. He shut his eyes, but could not close his ears against 'the imprecations of the multitude.— A woman, breaking from the crowd, exclaimed, 'Murderer of all my kin dred, your agony fills me with joy ; descend to hell, covered with the curses of every mother in France !' Twenty of his comrades were execu ted before him. When he> ascended the scaffold, the executioner tore the bandage from his face; the lower jaw fell upon his breast, and he utter ed a yell which filled every heart with horror. For some minutes the frightful figure was held up to the view of the multitude; he was then placed under the axe ' and the last sounds which reached his ear were their exulting shouts, which were prolonged some minutes after his death. 'Yes, Robespiere, there is a God!' said a man, approaching the lifeless body of ono so lately the ob ject of dread. His fall was felt by all present as an immediate manifesation of the Divinity." The butcher, Couthon, was guillotined. So was his colleague, the sanguinary atheist, St. Just. After the deaths of Marat and Dan ton, Couthon and St. Just, with Ro bespiere, constituted the second rev olutionary triumvirate. They suffer ed with him on the same spot where the royal family had suffered, and where the allied sovereigns, on their mission of vengeance and retribution, "took their station, when their vic torious armies entered Paris, on the 31st of March, 1814." Fouquier Tin ville, the public accusor, probably the blackest-hearted villain of them all, was brought to the block (soon after the fall of Robespiere) amid the exe crations of an immense multitude.— Herbert one of the most pitiless of all "the terrorists," the "projector of the "feasts of reason," in contempt of religion and a future state, manifest ed the utmost terror when his own head was brought under the revolv ing axe. Some of the terrors of that after-life, which he had affected to disbelieve, were made by retributive justice to be his portion even in this. The "first apostle of liberty," as he called himself, Camille Desmoulins, was followed to execution by thous ands of the kindred of those he had murdered. The wretch met his death amid the curses of the infuriated mob, and he in turn cursing them with the most vindictive hate until the fatal axe fell. Arsimilar fate be fell Sechelles, Henriot, Coffinhal, Si mon, and all the leaders of the in fernal Jacobin club, with perhaps two exceptions. Collot D'Herbois died in confinement and exile. Ba rere lived to be an old man, and died universally hated, after having en dured during his long life a thousand deaths from fear, disgrace, and the stings of conscience. The Giron dists, who had been first to sow the storm of revolution, were the first to reap the whirlwind of destruction.— Their leaders, Verginaud, Brissot, &e., went to the place of execution sing ing the revolutionary song which they had composed to excite the passions of the people. Truly "did they eat of the fruits of their own ways and were filled with their own devices." And were not the horrors of the "Reign of Terror," and the dreadful sufferings entailed upon France by a war of twenty-two years with near ly all Europe, the results of the ret ributive justice of God? France, as a nation, had defied the power of God, and even denied his existence. As they would not have Him to reign over them, He left them to them selves—to the dominion of their own evil passions and depraved appetites. They were just lot alone, as they wished to be. And the pathway of blood from Moscow to the mountains to Spain was traced by their own hands. Even the corrupt Sieyes could perceive that the punishment of Heav en was to leave his enemies to work their own will. . . These wretches had declared that it was their mission "to dethrone the King of heaven as well as the mon archs of the earth." The Goddess of Reason was to be worshipped in stead of the only wise God?' Accopt ingly, a veiled prostitute was brought into the national assembly. One of the leaders of the municipality arose, and unveiling the figure said : "Mor tals, cease totremble before the thun ders got &cilia whom year fears have 151% elemeted.' - lietteaferth 4 ~ ' W , , 10 4 4, 1 :, ~ 'IiAo• ' 4-11104 ' I lage bells were silent ; the Sabbath was obliterated. Infancy entered the world without a blessing, and age left it without a hope. In lieu of the services of the Church, the fetes of ;the new worship were performed by the most abandoned females; it ap peared as if the Christian truth had been succeeded by the orgies of the Babylonian priests, or the grossness of the Hindoo theocracy. On every tenth day a revolutionary leader as cended the pulpit and preached athe ism to the bewildered audience; Ma ' rat was defied, and even the instru ment of death sanctified by the name of the 'Holy Guillotine.' On all the the public cemetries the inscription was placed, 'DEATH IS AN ETERNAL , SLEEP: The comedian, Monort, in the church of St. Boa, carried im piety to its utmost length. 'God, if I you exist,' said he, 'avenge your in jured name. I bid you defiance. You remain silent; you dare not launch your thunders. Who, after this, will believe in your existence ?" God demonstrated his existence far more effectually by leaving this wretched people to work out their ewn ruin, than by striking the silly blasphemer dead on the spot. After one million twenty-two thousand and three hundred and fifty-one victims had fallen during the Reign of Ter ror. a peasant standing over the dead body of the chief murderer, felt the demonstration of the Divine Being to be complete, and exclaimed—" Yes Robespiere, there is a God !" But not only was the demonstration to to be written out in blood—the cor ollary also was to be traced in the tears of agony of the God-forsaken people. The revolutionary tribunal was overthrown, but to establish a military despotism. When Robes piere fell, Napolean arose. France had yet to wade through blood for twenty years. Four million one hun dred and three thousand of her sons were drafted for war, and their bones were scattered. over every country in Europe, and even found a last resting place in Africa and Asia.— finally a foreign army entered the capital of the nation, and imposed upon the people a sovereign whom they detested. Surely the experiment of living without God has been tried on a suf ficiently large scale to prove that no greater curse can befall a nation than for Providence to desert those that desert him. Of all l'orms of retribu tion, this is the most terrible. The prayer of States, as well as of indi viduals, should e, "Leave us not, neither forsake us, 0 God of our sal vation." We cannot close this subject with out noticing the marked displeasure of God toward the inventors of in struments of torture and destruction, and also towards the devisers of hor rible punishments. A cardinal in vented a cage of peculirr structure for the punishment of heretics. lie himself was confined for many years in it. Some historians relate a simi lar story of Tamerlane confining Ba jazet in the cage intended for the Tartar chief. The whole account is, however, discredited by others. A figure, known as "The Maiden," was devised for the punishment of Prot estants. It was an image of the Virgin Mary, with extended arms. The vic tim was forced forward to the figure, when the arms clasped him in a dead ly embrace, while hundreds of con cealed lancetspierced his body. The author of this infernal device was the first to suffer by it. The Guillo tine takes its name from the man who contrived and perished by it. It has been said that the fatal blow which terminated the life of the Texan war rior, Col. Bowie, was from his own terrible knife. Charles IL, king of Navarre, was a, noted poisoner. His clothes caught fire, when saturated with brandy, and the murderous wretch had his flesh burned off to the bones. Aaron, a courtier, rec ommended to the usurperer, Andron icus, to put out the eyes and cut off the tongues of his enemies. The cruel adviser was treated in precisely this manner by Isaac Angelus, who dethroned and put to death Adroni cus, A. D., 1203. St. Croix, a noted poisoner of the sixteenth century, perished by the fumes of the poisons he was making in his laboratory. The last instance that we will give is one deeply engraven on the Amer ican heart The universal verdict of the world has long since pronounced our Washington the greatest of war riors, the greatest of statesmen, and I the purest of men. Macaulay closes his eulogy upon Hampden with these words : "It was when the vices and I ignorance which the old tyranny had generated threatened the new free dom with destruction, that England missed that sobriety, that self com mand, that perfect soundness of judgment, that Rerfect rectitude of intention, to which the history of rev olutions furnishes no parallel, or fur nishes a parallel in Washington alone." I Even Byron lamented that earth, had ' no more seed to produce a second Washington. The character of the illustrious Virginian is reveraneed in despotic Russia, as well as in free 1444kad, The liay Spaniard [4 4 9 1 1 itt e9P1144 w^-tha mercurial Paenehgai4-' No one now cierogabstion the poll- cy or the motives of the hero, sage and Christian, but in the dark ages of '77 when he and his army were en during every privation at Valley Forge, an attempt was made to ruin his character and deprive him of his command. Gen. Conway was the chief conspirator, and Gen. Gates, who was to be the successor ofWash ington, was deeply implicated in the plot. Anonymous communications were sent to Congress, and also to Henry, then Govenor of Virginia, ac cusing Washington of too great pru dence in battle, and of incapacity to command an army. Now notice the result : Conway was compelled to resign his Inspector-General's office; he was driven into a duel with Gen. Cadwallader, and was finally forced to hide himself; to escape the indig nation of the army. Gates himself showed the utmost incapacity four years after, at Camden, and such an excess of prudence that he reached Charlottes, eighty miles distant, be fore any of the fugitives from his army, except a few of his personal guard, And as he had tried to su persede Washington, he himself was superseded in command of the South ern army by Greene, who had been true to washington. Watch Making in Geneva. I was introduced into the watch makers' workshops by M. Viande, one of the merchants of Geneva, a man of great humanity, and also of rare amiability of disposition and character: I could not have bad a better guide, even with regard to the moral inquiries which I wished to make. We began with the schools of pu pils, where young girls learn, for a term of three years, to make every part of a watch. After this time, they select that particular part for which they have most inclanation, or in the doing of which they are most expert. The perfected pupil may be sure, on leaving the school, of obtaining immediate employment among the watch-makers. Young girls from twelve to eighteen years of age appear very 401 thy and well eared for. Each one has her own little table and her own window niche for her work. The manufacture of pocket-watches is, at the present time, carried to a great extent at Geneva. An immense number are required for the Chinese market. A well-equipped Chinaman, I have been told, carries a watch on each side of his breast, that he may be able to regujate the one by the other. Wealthy Chinese cover the walls of their rooms with watches.— These watches are of a more orna mental character, and have morellia gree work upon them than those made for Europeans. Long live the Chinese ! At one of the greatest and best conducted manufactories of Geneva nothing but watch-faces are prepared, and elderly, well-dressed, and well looking woman sat by twenties and thirties in clean, well-warmed rooms, working upon watch-faces. "Do you not get tired of always doing the same work ?" I inquired of some of them. "Oh, no l" replied they and showed me that each little dial had to pass through fifty different operations be fore it was finished. This kept the attention awake, and prevented any sense of monotony. They work here from eight o'clock in the morning till six or seven in the evening, and thus earn about fifty francs a month. "Are you able to lay by anything for old age, or in case of sickness ?" I inquired from a mother who had worked there with her daughter side by side for ten years. "Oh, no!" they replied; "we have no longer been able to do that, since provisions have been so dear." "Nor yet for a little journey of pleasure or holiday in the summer?" "We never think of such a thing.-- We should by that means lose not only our money, but also our time, and possibly our place." "Is not such a life as this heavy and void of interest?" "We have Sundays for rest and re freshment, and the evenings for read ing, or occupation of another kind.— Besides which, we need not, during our work, be continually thinking of it." They seemed perfectly satisfied. The workwomen who are able to execute certain more difficult parts of the watch get higher wages, and can earn from five to ten francs a day. In the meantime this great division of labor causes the great part of the women not to earn much more than their maintenance. "My grandmother made whole watches," s aid an old women, with a sigh, who was sitting at home with her daughter, employed in one single operation on a little cog, for the great manufactory ; "an at that time women were much higher in the work than they are now, and also got higher payment. They were few in number, but extremely dexterous. Now they are innumerable, but their dexterity is employed upon u mere nothing—a very crumb. ' And this was true, as far as the old weaken was coneerned t ,flkthe whole of her work consiste d lk 0 111 14: 1 4 one little hole in a einiai 11010 plate; inth NEW SERIES.--VOL. 8, NO. 82, a little machine, which resembled a tiny spinning wheel. Her daughter was seated at another little machtie, and was merely making a little al teration in the hole which her moth er bad drilled ; and six hundred of such holes must be made before they could earn three francs. The female worker, in the fall and highest meaning of her vocation, in the complete fullness of her life, is a character which I have not met with here, as I have done in Sweden. I remember, there, a little work table, at which is seated a woman, still young, working from early morning till late in the evening— sometimes even till late in the bight —because work is her delight,'and her preservance and power of work are astonishing—her eye continually fixed upon her work, even daring conversation, whilst her skillful hand guides the graving -tool, and engraves letters, numbers. or tasteful ersa manta, on articles of gold or silver , — chronometers, pocket watches, rings, Sm. But the inner life is not cum pied therewith. It gazes clearly around, and comprehends, with love, every transaction which tends either to the advantage of the Fatherland or the honor of humanity. She is near-sighted at her work, but far sighted as regards the great work in society. Her heart beats warmly far this, and the little work-table hae a place in its realm. How distinguish ed a place this is, her nunKimus friends know, but not she herself-- the unpretending artist, the good cit izen and friend, the noble worker.— Life in the Old World. The Treatment of Diptheria. The Philadelphia Ledger of yestir. day has an article on Diptheria, In which some very excellent and pritt tical advice is given relative to-the treatment of the disease. After de scribing the symptoms of the dis ease, which are generally sorenbreof the throat, followed by the avower mace of a white or sometimes yak*. ish coating matter on the lungeatt side, our cotemporary says : It is well known that the best mode of treating scarlet fever, measles, and even typhoid fever, is to regard them as the effects of some poisonous WA ter inhaled through the lasso and carried perhaps, as the oxygen ghs is carried through the capillaries tf that organ in the circulatoryeyetson. In scarlet fever and measles the Wit treatment has been heretofore not to bleed or reduce the system, but rath er to stimulate it so as to aid it to throw off the surface of the poison which in those cases bIOSSODIEI out on the skin and dies there. The Maine sort of general treatment is fOnnd most useful in diptheria. If a ehild has an ordinary attack of sickness or sore throat, a little abstineuce or opening medicine will generally reduce it. But in a disease of thus kind, on the contrary, a generous diet and a gentle stimulation treat ment seems to strengthen nature sled throw off the disease. Whether diptberia is eontagioneer not has been doubted. In all proba. bility it is not. But it may and does become epidemic in the atmos phere. Wherever there is exposure to it, fresh, pure air is one of the best preventatives and even mediciela both fur the individual patient and for the prevention of the spread of the disease. A room well aired and lighted and warmed, so freely as to allow of a constant change, without draft, or any extreme of heat oteold, will of itself do much in the way of medicine. But there is no time tobe lost in the commencement of active treatment the moment the disease shows itself.. To cleance and keep clean the throat, and prevent un healthy and corrupt matter from forming or accumulating there, is IA itself a work of no ordinary Gargles for the throat, that will dim ulate the mucous membrane to healthy action, or cauterization, as needed, together with the keeping up of the strength of the general system, will require no little management and promptitude. It should be borne in mint:l*st the proper treatment of eackeasitas it arises is of vast importance, 'not only to the life and health of the in dividual patient, but, in fact, of the whole community. An hour or two, of neglect by a sleepy nurse, render a case virulent in itself WWI Inky pestilent to a whole neighborhood; while careful nursing and scientftle treatment may and will modify the type which a disease assumes, until it entirely dies away, or becomes in time easily manageable by discreet family nursing. THE TWO ANGELS, There are two angels that attend, unstop. Each one of us ; and in great books record Our good and evil deeds. He who writes down The good ones, after every action, ckwes His volume; and ascends with it terGed. The other ke eps his dreadful ailay4sit ape* Till sunset, that too ens, tent / which' deem The record oti the Wien fades awes dad leases a line f white across the pass. A. I Mir .n.,hnly life is a Toi2e_ ; W i when ere tongue is client Wit el * I constant attraction ors . T: .L 1 I Life, to the youtitk:lll.l i•egnevelf,le ~,tee akiid tit With 1 ending Inlet . ewe/ 4 W ..- , s.m - o: . c(1. , . ~ El