. • -'-4." . ... - - . . .. ~. i' . .. . . . . . . , .. • - C -4•4 ". :_ - . .')' - 11)‘ • . . . '',; ' r. 1 • -- " k.......: ' ' N, . "... • • • ------ -- . .-. 1 i-: . , , , - • ----/ 1 , r ‘ C i ' . . 111 11 1 11 .-- • t''''‘, I l l \ . (r_ \ . ' r, 1 I I 1 I 1 I 1 1 1/41...,.5: 1 1 1 k.... 1,...- . 1 ..' %.,--, (11. ~ k... I 1)11 1....1 A ) L L th: \\ 11. ri...L s \, , t ~.._ A , , [ \ . i 4. k. , ,LL ~. . . !!‘) , AO) floptr---iltuottb to Politics, Agriculture, fittratart, e *iturt, Art, pap, powestic nub @nerd juteltignia l fcc. IiraTABLISHED IN 1813. THE WAYNESBURG MESSENGER, PUBLISHED BY aw W. JONES & JAMES S. lENNINGS WAYMNBURG, eItEENE CO., PA grovracic NEARLY OPPOBITE THE PUBLIC sguAties...cg 1131ItMaki Ingssesirriorr.-1112.00 in advance,; 82.25 at the ex pinttiosAf six mouths; 44.50 Mier .the expiration .of the year. ADVWCWISIIIENTS inserted et $1.45 per square for three insertions, md 45 eta. a square for each addition al insertion; (ten lines or leas counted a square.) ffir••A liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. HsCrJos PRINTIKO, offal kinds, executed in the best style, and on reasonable mime, .gt the "Messenger" Job Orrice. agatstarg 13usittess Carbs. ATTORSEIt. ,ClBO. WYLY. I. ♦. J. DUCIIANAAT, D. LP. MAL WILY, BUCHANAN & HUSS, Attorneys & Counsel/as* Ast Ugly!' WAYNSSBURG, PA. W ift practice in the Courts of Greene and adjoining counties. Collections and other legal business will re ceive prompt attention. Office on the tiouth sisle of Main street, In the Old Munk Building. .Jan. 28. 1863.-13, a. ••,EVE P HAE• MAN & RITCHIE .1 O. , RITCHIE. IM ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW, Wayukesbutrg, Pa. OrOrtxrx — Mein Street,ane door east .of the old Btnk Building. ci-Ln jus t nes s in Greene. Washington, and Fay aka Counties, entrusted to them, wilt receive prompt attention. Sept. 11,1861-Iy. IL vv. DOWNEY, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW [ErOffice in I eilwith's Building, opposite the Court House, Waynesburg, Pa. B. A. ICCONNELL. J. J. JI,U,IPIPMAN. ME'CONNIILL & zurramior, ITTORNEYS ANA COUNSELLORS AT LAW Waynesburg, Pa. - 0111rstelia tttie Jl. se," East Door: will receive prompt attention. Waynesburg, April 23, 1862-Iy, DAVID CRAWFORD, Attorney and Counsellor at Lew. Office 4tt iteyers' Bulkling, adjoining the Poet Office. Sept. 11, Ib6l-11y. 01J. JOHN PLIBLAN. BLACK & PUELAN, ATTORNEYS C ourt RS Al LAW. Office in tker Howe, Waynesburg. dept. 11,1861-Iv. SOLDIERS' WAR OLA.I7OLIII X). R. P. MEICIOSES, AITORN EY AT LAW, W•TNESBURE, PENNA., A 8 received from the War 1. the Wash ington city D. C., official conies of We s,veral aws passed by Congress, and all the necessary Forms sod Instructions for the prosecution and collection of PENSIONS, 80D.N17. BACK PAY, due dim itharged and disabled sokkiere, their widows, orphan ithildren, widowed mothers, fathers, sisters and broth egg, which business, [upon due police) will be attend ed so owooly, and accormely.alehtrusted to his care. Office in the old hawk Building.—April 6, 1663. G. W. a. INTADDILTIL, ATTORNEY & COUNSELLOR AT LAW OFFICE in unntibeli's Row spposite. ttie Rstutturn House. Waynesburg. Penna. Busitiess of all kinds solicited. Ilas received official crudes of all the laws Passed by Colagressritatd other necessary instruc tions Mir the collection of PENSIONS, BOUNTIES, BACK PAY, Rao disrharged and disabled soldiers, widows, tirplian children. dr.c... which business if intrusted to his rare WIN le promptly attended to. dab' 13.'63. PHYSICIANS B. M. BLACHLEY, M. D. PUTSICIZAN &. SURGEON, Oillao—Blaahlees Building, Main Bt., ESPECTFUI LY announces to the citizens of In, Waynesburg and vicinity that he lies returned from the Hospital Corps of the ArMY and resumed the prac tice of tuedtcina at this place. Way neshunt, June 11, 138: 1}.4 D. A. G. CROSS 3 11 - OULU Very respectfully tender his services as a PIIVOIGIAN APSU SURGEON, to the people nt Nara and vicinity. Ile hopes by a due appre ciation of human lire aad hearth. and strict attention to business, to merit a share of public patrimara. Waynesburg. January b, 1661. PR: 4,3 T, *GOY bZi3PECTFULLY oanrioes to the arrow; of Waynesburg tad arkPiritY. V I PbfeirinN geon. Other ipi xinaira the Rep./Wean offiae. He Ipupee by a dye 14riek ) of qw: lows of Witten life I Pr i * l t* 01 / nu ve ntediglithit. end atria attention lo bueininte, IP writ a liberal Ow uf Alb& patronage. April a, 1964: DRUGS M. A. RARVEY, Maguire and Apothecary, and dealer in Paint, and fills, the most celebrated Patent Medromen. and Pure likens fur medicinal purposes. pt. i i, 1861-Iy. MZROWTB I= WM. A. PORTER, Whoiesale and Detail Dealer in Foreign and Doman i; Dry Goods. Groceries, Notions, ta.,Main street. Sept. I 1, igeit R. CLARK, ,900 pr in Ury Goode, Ortmeriss, flardwase, Queens err notions, in the Hamilton House. opposite f.t i rort Hons.. Main street. Sept. IL 1861-Iy. • NONOR Co., Deafens in Foreign and Domestic Dry 44994. Gin modes, Queettsware, Hardware and Notions, tpe*, rtpe Green (Souse . Main west. '" SW. Li, 11111.1.11, OT AND SHOE DEALIMS. J. 1), VOSO RAY, ,Boot and Bilo . e hmtcnr, Main street, n••arly opiptsite tits "'Pim/sees and Drover's Hank." Every style ot 'S e cu oots end Mimes tistandy on nand or made to order. " 11.1861-Iy. asocm.ple & wiauvrzza. JOSEPII 'CATER, Diadem hi Groceries atid Confectioneries. No99ps, Medicines. Periiiiiinripe, Liverpool Ware, &c., Glos of Ell sized. and Gilt Moulding led banking Glass Plates. riirGash paid fur /we'd nada& Appha. di.. 11, IdBl-17. JOHN MUNNELL, Dealer in tirrtearied and Coufectineariee, and Variety fa eo d. Generoy, Willson's New Duilding, Nail street. SOK ' 11. 800811. &c. !.EWIS DAY, 10 4 00. in school and Ildioseneneone Hooka. Minion obt; 'OM 11114nnlikep Ind rayon'. One m an or ridternAafto4 l 4 lll 9!lL * fein. 11, ly. iottilantout. BEGINNINGS IN LIFE. Beginnings are difficult. It is very hard to begin rightly in a new work .or office of any kind. And I am thinking not merely of the iner tia to be overcome in taking to work; though that is a great fact. In writ ing a sermon or an essay, the first page is much the hardest. You know it costs a locomotive engine a great effort to start its train ; once the train is off, the engine keeps it going at great .speed with a tenth or less of the first heavy pull. ,But I am thiuking now,of the many fool ish things which you are share to say ar.d do in your ignorance, and in the novelty of the situation. Even a Lord Chancellor has behaved very abaardly in his first experience of his great elevation. It would be a great blessing to many men to be taken elsewhere, and. have a fresh et 4 art. As a general rule, a elergy man should not stay all his life in his first parish. His parislaoners will never forget the foolish things •be did at his first coming, in his inexperienced youth. 'I here, he can not get over these; but .elsewhere he would have the good of them without the ill. He would have the experience, dearly bought; while the story of the blunders and troubles by which it was bought would he forgotten. 1 dare say there are peo ple, miserable and useless wbere they are, who, if they only could get away to a new place, and begin again, would be MI right. In that new place they would avoid the er rors and follies by which they have made their present place too hot to ' hold them. Give them a new start; give them another chance ; and I taught by their experience of the , scrapes and unhappiness into which they got by their hasty words, their ill temper, their suspicion and im patience, their domineering . spirit, and their determination in little things to have their own way ; you would find them do excellently.— Yea, there is something admirable about a beginning I There is some.' thing cheering to the poor fellow who bas get the page on which he is writing hopelessly blotted and be fouled, when you turn over a new leaf, and give him the fresh unsul lied expanse to commence anew ! It is like wiping out a debt that nev er can be paid, and that keeps the poor struggling head under water ; but wipe it out, and oh ! with what new lite will the relieved men go through ail his duty. It is a terri ble thing to drag a lengthening chain ; to know that, do what you may, the old blot remains, and can not be got rid of. I know various people, soured, useless :end uniappy, who (I am sure) would be set right forever it they could but be taken away from the muddle which they have got themselves, and allowed to begin again something else. I wish I wore the patrons of six livings in the Church. I think I could make something good and happy of six men who are turned to poor iii&count now. But, alas thatin many things there are no second chance-! You take the wrong turning ; and you are compelled to go on in it, long atter you have found that it is wrong. You have made your bed and you must lie on it. -And it is sad to think bow early in life all life /Day be married. A mere boy or girl may get into the dismal lane which has no turning; and out of which they never can get, to start afresh in a better track. flow many of us, my readers, would be infinite ly better and happier it we could but begin again rig Country Parson. THE TOMB OF THE LAST SIGNER, The ancient Neat Pi Charles Car roll, of tharolltou, and his tomb, is about fifteen miles from Baltimore. Entering the gateway, we drove through a noble avenue, planted on each side with tress of every variety, and soon found ourselves in front of the Carroll mansion, which is a long comfortable two story building, ter, minuted tit the north end by the chapel, which has button:to famous as the repository of the remains of the gallant old signer of the Declaim. tion of Independence. His tomb is set in the wall on the left altar, and presents a shield and ottroll of white marble, on which is carved in relief a pen and roll of parchment, cur. rounded by thirteen stars; a Latin inscription, appropriate to his great act, appears ou a scroll in tue cen tre. .Below this are some fi gures in basSO • revroseuting Fame with inverted torch, and history guarding a funeral urn. The chapel js cruciform and con tains.a handsome' marble altar, some tine old pictures, a good organ, and is decorated with rich stud windows of stain ed g i 4t s S. Ibe # o o l ', wl icl is eleva ted, contains some fourteen or six.- teen pews which aro occupied by the family of Mr. Carroll and their friends. . The body of the Church con - ,ains about forty commodious pews, where his slaves who arecare- I fully instructed in the Catholic faith, sit and kneel. .." WAYNESBURG, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1863. TAKE OARE OF YOURSELF. "Take care of yourself," is a prin ciple which, in some respects, is not neglected by mankind in general.,, but is not often carried out in the way it ought to be. Take care of your self; for, be ,a,saured, from the very outset, list if you do not take care of yourself, there are none to be found who will perform this office for you. In taking care of yourself, your health, your reputation, your interests, your happiness, are to be considered, and whatever else com bines with them to make up the fu dividual known as yourself. A con trary course may secure your tem porary popularity, but nothing mole. People may call you a clever follow, .and all that ; but heed them not, for the day may come, unless there be a prudent change in your tactics, when the same people pass you with a smile of contemptuous pity, as the man who did not know how to take care of himself; .and ON you will find but a poor reward for sacrificing to the good of others. Your individ ual self, remember, is a sacred trust ,confitled to your keeping; and as that trust is discharged, so will be your happiness. It is a groat fault to neglect your own advancement in life; see to it always., by every means of a fair and honorable character. It is folly to stand aside while others punt and struggle for a prize which might as well be yours as theirs, Assert your own eltlims, your own dignity, and heed not the sneers that may assail your corning forward. It is ever so. If you are successful( these sneers will be changed at List into applause. What are great men, successful men, self-made men—all men whom the world Admires ? What, but men wbo have taken ear(' of themselyes? It is not, perhaps, that all of them are endowed with lofty qualities; this was not necessary to the end ; but it is evident that they have been firm and inflexible in taking cam of themselves. Those nearest to them have doubrAe often thought they were cold, selfish, and wanting in generous sympathisersperhaps, even considered them monomaniac 3. But let it be remembered that if you ta) good care of yourself; it is essentii that you devote yourself to a purposi always fixing your energies on t( end you have in view, and laborik iiiteadily until that view has been a , tamed. All else must be secondiu and insignificant. If you pause 1 chase butterflies, and play amon g the roses more than is necessary nourish strength, some one else, wi better jinderstauds bow to take ea, of himself, steps fleetly beyond yo , place of enervating repose, and y , will never recover the lost ground, Up, then And be doing. ;.Waste nut, want hot," was we written on the walls of the iudustri ous man's kitchen; "Take cure yourself," should be placed in letters of gold before the eyes of the young that it may never, even for a mo ment, be forgotten, Pay no regard to unreasonable sneers about taking care of Number One. It is your spe cial business ou earth to take care of that number, and to have a sharp eye on Number One's welfare Who else is there to care of that number? Will Tom do it ? or will Dick ? No, nor ;Lary either. If you acknowledge the correct ness of this maxim, awake at onr from your dreams of intorestednes , and look at the tate of those wl were careless of Number One. Si them in middle life; observe them old age. Alas ! what sorrow, whi suffering, what remorse ! Be wit therefore, while it is morning ; for paying attention to yourself. wil, be able to assist those who stagy in need of your assistance ; tu there is no greater happiness th, this. A NEW -DISEASE. We see it stated in the Philadel phia correspondence of the Balti more Gazette, that a disease has re cently made its appearance at Manayunk, which closely resembles the spotted plague of Basteru coun tries. The disease, it is supposed, has been introduced here by the' large importations of woolen rags recently made for the manufacture of shoddy. Rags have been for years imported from Smyrna, in Asia minor, for making paper, but the material has been different, and the strong acids in which they were steeped for the purpose of extracting all coloring matter from them, serv ed to neutralize awl destroy alt dole terimis influences which might, by chance, be lurking in any portion of them. The rags now importer however, are woolen rags, and th,. are not subjected to the action of strong acids. They are torn to shreds, and then worked up into shoddy blankets and cloth. If the fact, then, (says the same correspondent) of the appearance of the plague he true, as theme is reason to eelieve that it is, from the number and character of the cases which have proved fatal, the matter is one of the most serious importance, and it is impossible to say where its con sequonces_ may end. We see it stated that ,a similar dis• ease has made its appearance in ti. yielaity of Washington cit=y. DON'T FORE= ME. How often do we hear the word "Don't forget me" when separating from oar friends, How often theof come to our ears in every variety y tone—from the light, impulsive school girl's to the deep, tremulous .accents of those who love us as on ly true and faithful hearts can love, "Don't fbrget me," lisps the rosy checked cherub, scarcely concious of the import of the words. "Don't forget me," says the aged man, whose hair is white with the frosts of many winters. All wish to be remembered. All wish some little nook of the heart preserved for their words-and images. But are• they all forgotten ? Ask the lonely being resting his head upon his hands, and listening to the wild requiem of the wailing winds, while the thick shades of approaching darkness fold their wings around him—ask him if those he once lovedthose who once cast sunshine in bis path of life—and no longer remembered through the long lapse of time which has inter vened ? if the day of separation and those from whom he separated are now mouldering beneath the dust of later scenes and trials ? Ask him if the sylph like from which stood by his side, the sweet blue eyes which sought his with tears of sor row are no longer remembered ? Ask him if the half whispered last request, "Don't forget me," is un heeded ? As.k him .and he will tell you that the friends of former days are still enbalmed by memory's mag ic power, and their images are still within his heart ; that the sylph like form and soft blue eyes have al ways in fancy remained the same,.; And that the last request is whispered in hie ear by every passing breeze. Oh ! there is no fbunt upon earth more sacred, than the fountafn of memory! There is no costly gem hidden in the depths of earth so precious as the relics contained in the heart. There are no words so fiwett, as those affection breathes as the images, the heart images, of Our friends. TEN Battle Near Memphis We published an item on Saturday giv ing an account of a battle reported to ave taken place within a few wiles Mmuullis. A Cairo correspondent con. . - 318 the news, as follows :—We have re ,ble information trout Memphis that, 'withstanding our troops fell back to 'in a distance of nine miles, we there tanked Gen. During's command, and, giving thew a good drubbing, Inla id in taking 700 prisoners, besides issariee stores, &c , as we ll as lei amount of negroes, made and 'iu such cases, a ad who will be tue to join and be drilled in some - invents that ' ijunu k t, Gen. The Desperate Flight at Frank lin, La. The New Orleans Era publishes a full account of General Grover's ex pedition and the fight near Frank lin. After sketching the first day's skirmishing, itproceeds asfollows to recount the particulars of the fight on the second day :—As the troops came up, to their right was a thick forest of large trees, behind which tbec.neoy was concealed, having al so a wooden fence between them-and their opposers. Preparations were made at once for a desperate attack. The Twenty-fifth Connecticut regi ment was ordered into action on the left of the 1.1u.e, .aud in ;the .advance. They met the-enemy .a-waiting their approach in a piece of woods, where their artillery was supported by a fftroug force of infantry and cavalry. When a charge was ordered,to force the rebels from their position and take their artillery, the Thirteenth bed to , charge through a plowed field and over two fences. Notwithstand ing these obstacles, this regiment succeeded in capturing two caissons, six horses, two swords, and a splen did flag from the enemy. The flag was of fine silk, six feet in length, bordered with rich silver tinsel, and bore upon it the inscription—" The Ladiesof Franklin to the St Mary's Canztoneers." Soon after the charge of the thirteenth, the enemy fell back defeated. The force opposed to us was not large, but had the advan tage of position, and of making a surprise. The total force of the reb els, bath here and at the batteries be low. did-not exceed 10,900 men.— Our loss was considerable, and that of the enemy must have correspond ed with ours. Already nearly fifteen hundred prisoners have been taken, including some characters well known at New Orleans. We have sent 179 of our own wounded to New Orleans. ADVANTAGES Or YEARS. You are "getting into years." Yos the years are getting into you— the ripe, rich years, the genial, mel low years, the lusty, luscious years. One by one the crudities of youth are falling off from you, the vanity, .eotism, the isolation, the bewilder mt, the uncertainty. Nearer and lal•or you are approaching yourself. ou are consolidating your forces. are becoming master of the sit uation. Every *wrong road into which you have wandered has brought you, by the knowledge of that mistake, so much closer to the truth. You no longer draw your bow at a venture, but shoot straight, the mark. Your possibilities con centrate, and your path is 4 cleared. On the ruins of shattered plans you find your vantage ground. Your broken hopes, your thwarted purpo ses, your defeated aspirations be come a staff of strength with which lu mount to. sublimer heights. - .D 1N ith self-possession and seThcom nand return the possession and coin land of all things. The title deed ' creation, forfeited, is reclaimed. le king has come to his own again. ,rtliand sea and sky pour out their ,rgess of love All the past crowds iwn to lay its treasures at your ,eet.—Gail Hamilton. A VALUABLE HINT. In the Ohio Valley Farmer a cor- Ispondent gives a capital hint to -mers, whose flocks of sheep are oubled with sheep-killing dogs, how get rid of the said dogs pretty of Anally, which we take great pleas in reprinting for the benefit of mers generally. It is this: "If a sheep is killed or crippled by dog, the night thereafter house up your sheep at& your dogs that would not have killed : then re , the dead sheep out of reach of ;s, first cutting out the liver, or der lean part of it, into which put ychnine a little more than the ;e of a largo grain of wheat; leave A in place of the sheep, and my .d for it, next morning you will almost certain to find the guilty near by. If the first night iuld fail, try again; he will be sure come back as soon as ho is hungry. in, ii a sheep is only worried and killed, any other lean meat will in • place of mutton. By this method you will be sure to get the guilty dog; when by the old method of hunting him up, it is very doubt ful if you do." Strychnine can be obtained at any drag store. Care must be taken in handling it, as it is the deadliest of poisons. A Dog Story. The other day, while an Eastern bound train, ovor the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, was standing at Mar tinsburg, Va., a man tied a large dog to the rear end of the train intend ing to return and release the animal before the train started. But the man did not return and the train sturted—the dog trotted along be hind. The train being sornowhat behind time soon commenced ma,k -jag about forty miles an hour. The dog put in his best licks, but he could not keep up, and it was not long until the life was battered tout of him. The dog was not discover ed until the train reached Harper's Ferry, at which there was very lit , dog left. POLAND. The latest ,news from Europe ,does not warrant, the conclusion that there will be a general European war, though the Polish insurrection is spreading and gainimg a foothold in some of the old Polish provinces.— England, France and Austria, it is true, have sent to St. Petersburg analogous notes; but between such a proceeding and an ultimatum present ed by three powerful allies, there is a world of difference. The truth is, the sympathy of the French, Eng lish and Austrians, is fhr ahead of the disposition and ability of their respective governments to inter vene by force of arm's. Sweden, ,t,o be sure, is arming, but merely by way of precaution; while Italy is quite willing to pay a debt of grati tude to France—in expectation of other favors England's sympathies for Poland aro merely producing a stage effect, no statesman of Europe believing that, she will expend a . shilling or sacrifice a man for an ab stract idea. There is no treaty in commerce in prospective, no chance of acquiring.a sea-port, no booty of any sort—in short, nothing to excite the enthusiasm of a British states man. As regards Franco, she has a diffi cult problem to solve. The army and the people, especially the labor ing classes, strongly sympathize with the Poles, and so does the Catholic clergy of France, and Count Waltewski, the natural cousin of the Emperor. But the Emperor Napoleon himself looks further into the future, where ho sees that to ac complish the destinies of Franco, Russia must be her fast ally. His role, thereforo, is simply that of a mediator, whatever form he may se lect to express his concern for Po land. The Emperor Alexander knows this, and will overlook the form of the French diplomatic notes, in view of the embarrassing situation in which Napoleon 111. is placed by the sympathies of the French people. It is the Prince Napoleon who loudly and openly espoused the cause of the Poles, and we find that he is go ing to Egypt, the Isthmus of Suez, and the Lord knows where. He is allowed, perhaps ordered, to travel in any direction except that of War saw. Austria is peculiarly circumstanced, and must take care of her Polish province of Galicia, whatever conces sions she is willing to make to her own Polish subjects, and to the Pol ish subjects of Russia; she has no idea of giving up five millions of her subjects, after having surrendered nearly three millions by the peace of Villafranca. Neither can Prussia surrender the Duchy of Poing', be cause that would reduce her to a power of the second rank. The reunion of all the Polish prov inces into a powerful kingdom, we fear, will not result from the concert of European powers; and the bravely of the insurgents and their historic reminiscences are the only allies on whom they can really count in their present heroic struggles. That the Emperor of Russia will be compelled to make concessions to his rebellious subjects, far greater than those contained in his amnesty, we do not doubt; that these con cessions may hereafter lead to a greater national development of the Poles, we also believe; but the re union of Poland can only be the result of a general European war, and a reconstruction of the whole political map of Europe—perhaps of Asia. A NEW LIFE-PRESERVER. Much interest has been excited in Paris, by the dispatch of two official representatives of the marine to Marseilles, by the Emperor's special desire, in order to report upon the success of the unimmergible tunic, which has been tried amidst the heaviest seas raging during the reign of the mistral. Five sailors had been chosen from the various ships of war lying in the harbour. Only one of the number could swim. All five, however, wore soon beheld far out at sea, walking over the waves as se renely as if they had been crossing a hayfield in summer time, and were merely compellea to step higher, in order to avoid treading on the hay. The tunic is wade in the form of an ordinary paletot, and is easly put on and taken nil. Ono of the sailors was cooly smoking a cigar during the whole time of the experiment, while another was eating and drink ing from a little tray which he carried before him. The last and most con clusive, because most French, exper iment was the game of dominoes played by two of thoparties, who, in spite . of the tumbling and tossing of the ugliest sea over behold, main tained with the greatest gravity the excitement of the game to the very last. • Star Everything is very cheap in Japan. A first class house can bo purchased for thirty dollars. Ser vants work for fifty cents a month. For the use of a horse and groom, one dollar and a half: A person can live comfortably in Japan for two cants& day, dr six cents a week. ' ,NEW SERIES.--VOL. 4, NO. 49. "ROE OUT SOUR ROW," One lazy day, a farmer's buy, Was hoeing out the corn, And moodily he listened long, To hear the dinner horn. The welcome blast was heard at last, And down he dropped hie hoe; But the good man shouted in his ear, "i 4 41Y, hoe out your row I" Although a "hard one" was the row, To use a ploughman's phrase, And the lad, as sailors have it, Beginning well to "haze"— "I can l" said he, and manfully, He seized again his hoe, And the good man smiled to sea The boy .hoe out his row. The lad the test remembered, And proved the moral well, That perseverance to the end, At last will nobly tell. Take courage, man ! resolve you can, And strike a vigorous blow ; In Life's great field of varied toil, Always hoe out your row. DRAINING A MASSIGAL.LANE. In Southern Italy, not far froth the frontiers of the Roman States, an interesting work of engineering is now being prosecuted. This is noth ing loss than the attempt to drain the famous Lake Fueino. This lake Is simply a great pool surrounded by mountains. Last year the watese of this lake were drawn off through a tunnel, four milesin length, which had required eight years to eat ; and drains are now being cut in the seat of the lake for rendering the recov ered soil fit for cultivation. The lake covered 40,000 acres of land, which in a few years will be coverted into arable land. Julius Cmsar planned the draining of this lake nearly nine teen hundred years ago, but the Em peror Claudius made the first at tempt. Pliny describes the wonders of a tunnel following the sides of..a mounta'n as a depth of a hundred_ feet And it was, indeed, ari 'aston ishing attempt in those days, when the engineers had none of the applii ancee of modern science. Cla m employed 30,000 men in the attempt for eleven years, and exhausted the public treasury. When he believed that his work was complete, he (tele brated the event by one of the great est naumachia, or water-fights of Roman tizzies, in which 19,000 men, divided into two fleets, fought to death "to make a holiday." Claudius, Agrippina* and yowls Nero—who, a few months later, be came master of the empire—the im perial court and immense crowd of spectators were present at this fear ful and imposing gladiatorial con test. W hen . the play was termina ted, the dam which stayed the wa ters from the tunnel was removed, and they rushed in with a roar, but they soon rolled back. The tun nel was a failure ! The cause of this failure remained hidden for centu ries. The work was re commenced under Trajan and Adrian, still later by Frederick IL, in 1240; by Al phonso 1., of Arragon, in the seventeenth century; and lastly by Frederick I , King of Naples, in the eighteenth century ; but all failed.— In 1826, Afan de Rivera, Chief of the Public Works in the kingdom of Na ples, obtained leave to clean out the cut or drain made by ClaudiuP. This work was finished in 1835, but the problem of draining the lake was as tar off as ever. At length, in 1853, a Neapolitan company obtained per mission to drain the lake, and take the reclaimed bed for their remuner ation. On investigation, it appeared that the tunnel constructed under Claudius had not been so devised as to draw the water from the lake ; the Emperor had been cheated by his Minister of Public Works. The engineer of the modern company nally decided to destroy the Roman work, and make one of double the di mensions. PAPER MAKER'S 0010INATIOS. This respectable body of gentle men met, we are informed, in this city last week, and resolved, in view of the slight decline in the pride of pa per, owing to an overstocked mar ket, and the diminished use by pub lishers, to put their mills on three fourths time. By this it is hoped so to decrease the supply of white pa per, that they will bo able to con tinue the high prices, and possibly even. advance on them. When the publishers petitioned Congress to repeal the duty on paper, and thus enable them to import it from, abroad, it will lie remembered that it was most positively denied by the members of the organization that there was any purpose or . wish on their part to keep up the price of paper beyond a fair market value. In private they wore no less explicit in their denial of any intention to interfere with the running of paper mills, so as to diminish the quantity of paper manufactured. But what he this last action but an attempt to do WO r if paper .con tin nes to as high as it has for months past, the public will be at On loss to mildew stand the cause.—.N. Y. Tires. 4'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers