. . . . . _ • ~... . , . ...." -" . N. ‘ .. •• - 111 ; '''' ', ' ••• • . __ -_ - _ j • .. - N • _ • • ' ( ""!,% I I " 7i ,1 f - t or_ (ir 'l, ii‘ . .. ) .!l\,'i : - r1 - It\ - .. :..._ i t I .i ;.• , 1 \\,,i , \ , 1 : _ : • L -. 7 ,1 k Itl f 1 L r z :,.. ' l / 4 -14) i ( Li ,1 o.li . i , 1 --<- ''•• ' \ -. \‘.---- \•... . - A 1 i .1 . .) • ..../ 4 \• •••••• V'' ' ' -'‘ i 'k, % \ - * • . . . . . „ t .4 my., gi • hig fang Anrnat--- i' &alto in. ri,o ri3 ‘tatiurt -. - Xilurt or esh( -anb Qbtnerat lot :,' liti t * t , trat IS 083 1441 a. 1111TaIMIIED IN 1813. ,111010 MG MINIM russaavn BY IL W. lONIS AND JAS. S. JENNINGS. litsytieetwrg, Greene County, Pa. VID'IIII I IIOIII "EARLY 'OPPOSITS TUE PTAILIG eI,VARIC../22 '2 3151itel % • -011111.-111.00 In advance ; 11435 at the ea. 1111c M m ne nil Ittollthat OM atter the expiration of t . rive inserted at 8135 per square for 'One bee - na, and 37 eta. a c oun tedr each addition -4i impattian; (ten lines or less a square.) • liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. Jos Patasitio, of all Mods, executed in the best and on reasonable terms, at the "Messenger" Ihrusturg 'gusintss garbs. ATTOSN'ETS Va. 4 Wrar. 7. A. P. 11VCRAIIAN, D. B. P. num, WILY, FITCHANAN & lIUSS, atuiesa r . Counsellors at Law, IVAYITSBURG, PA. will intake In the Comte of Greene and adjoining dlipt.e. Coalelione and other legal Madness will re doll re pro* attentiOn. Ogee On the South slide of Main street, In the Old - ng. Jan. 18. 1863.-13, J 0. ItITOU/11. MiIIRAN A Rr'reillAr. ztvNiams AND COUNSHLWAB AT LAW Waynesburg" Pa. a--Mail street, one door east of do old Bank Building. ilDrAll Amines' in Greenlet, Washington, and Fag am Counties. entrusted to them, win receive swam N. I --Psalmist attention will be given to the col- Vallsa of Pensions. Bounty Money. But Pay, and iallsee 41101100 arlftlittbelaOrOillol0 01 . AV. 11.1801 --la. 1r84311112‘1.. J. J. HUFFMAN. 4111‘ 1. murky * BUMMICAB, bra 4XD COUNSILLLORS AT LAW WaynesOurg, Pa. lana.ee te the "Wriibt lit toe," Rost Dom. kc.. will rot:Moe prompt attendee. , erg, Aprilin, 18611-Iy. DAVID CRAWFORD, B.llolbersad (banseitar at Law. Oats to the rat, Massa, Will emend promptly to all basilica VISA to his care. • ta, Pa., Jetty 38, 1863.—1 y. ast imam VICACIt & MPTOPINETS AND COUNSELLORS AT LL w 11. tie Coen lbws. WayseMAirg. qO61 -Iv. Ilwaiwoutss . WAR (mammal! B. IL P. HUBS, : Mei, CZ AT LAW, watillisenao. ritirsts.; LiAl Setteived from the War Department at Wash hqpion chat, D. Z., official copies of the several e pipmed by Congrees, and all the nemweary POEMS l i tZi l a °ll. DVb `b. F . ,"` 06 , 7 `4l4°ll2li: r . i rd and disabled soldiers, their widow!, orphan nOtridowed mothers, Cathent, , sistets and broth • . wbieh 'toilettes, town due notice] will be attend /Ito meamtly and acchratclyif entrusted to his care. 01 ja the sid hankilMileng...-Aprit 8, M. O. W. G WADDELL, Alk i natNEY & COUNStbLOR AT LAW. In the ItlitiqBTllll4l OPTICS, Coen IVC* ltio rentembets., Peens. pus!Tiens of ail ElHas received official copies of all the puttied by Oentress, and other necesitagy instruc ting the eetteethett C ON4 BOUNTIES, BACK PAY, elialitiOidield disabled soldiers, widows, Orphan dot" which biaseiella if Intrusted to his care Ira pftfeaptly attended to. May 13, 'll3. PirIrSICIANS Dr. T. W. Ross, iirIiarIBICASSER. lIEWAE.IIKIO424IEL. Waynesburg, Greene Co., Pa. g. AND RESIDENCE ON MAIN STREET. *early Apposite the Wrigla.trouse. Inrirate_L_A.lB63. •B A. G. CROSS • EmsD envy rinpeetfully tender his 'entices as a . PHYSICIAN AND SURGSON, to the people of rg Mid vkinity. He hopes-by a due appre- OM/ma li fe and health, sad strict attention to sni„ to learn. a Share of public patronage. „January 8, Ildl. , ~188©S&wr$• WM. A. PORTE ig R, Grenades, lilocriende Retail Realm in Fen and Danes allsiramede. Grenades, -Notions, Re or ., Main sweet. 11.18N—Iy. R. CLARK, wawa Dry Goode, Groceries, Hardware, Queens were and matins, in the .iientileon House, opposite Op Gout Mao. Main street. 'Sept. 11, IBM —ty. MINOR at CO., goilai4Weida and Wm.* Vry Goods. Gro ittlie were, flard and Nations, opposite =rig" Min. NO& liirtet. 11 , 1 0 10 1101—,47. YOST AND 11801111111411WIRS J. D. COSGRAY, applesdlnise iogrlr,. street, nearly opposite Ole 'ParlaW*o and Drover's Sank." Every style or SlOWand Shoos ermetantly on kand or made le order. Sept. 14 111917-Iy. aßocomiliss-& v JOSEPii YATER, 11Zeri is s Oroenries and Confeet,ioneries. Netiou, SI Perfumeries, Lliforpoot Ware, ke., Mame of alt r a * a 44 Gilt Moulding and Looking Ohms Plato. ,Cdsti paid for good eating Apple*. . It. IBBl—iy ___ • JOHN MITN NELL, glider in armories amt Confeetionsiiet, and Variety il lt. 41.1 11: 11an 1811r1 W ly il" . " I New if Mien atreeL lIMINTSI3IB AND • JEWEL*: S. IC BAILY, viiii aim, Isplltbsite the Wright House keeps IFitt ir bead a large alit magma asmAsatemit air am Jrawairs. et cleats, Watches and Jewelry all , mcgooccatn. Ohm. ig. 10110-ly '—' - _ . 1110411111,111. - LEWIS DAY, IWe la Semi sai.lnit z iknia BD** Statisre sal M i ft ga_tttaa Rad ' bailee; Main Nltrept. • Ono 4166 a pµ w g em 11. raal lv. glikinnize 4igo AVAANzas 10~aad Tnuit 11414- I= vat 1. rt • The mail ! The mail ! And sun-burned cheeks awl eager eyes Come crowding round the Captain's tent, 'Each out stretched hand receives the prize. For fond perusal meant. 'Unless distressing news be told, These letters nought of pain convey, For friends at home will never scold The lad that's tar away. The mail ! The mail ! And toil-stained palms are closing there— How rough ! how very coarsely moulded On dainty missives, fresh and fair, By filly fingers folded. For kindly thoughts pursue tho youth Who battles with his country's foe, For soiled attire, nor guise uncouth Prevents their genial flow. The mail 1 The mail ! A father's word of pride and cheer ; A mother's trembling admonition ; A. sister's blessing—oh, how dear 1 A brother's generous wishing. And many missives, frank and bright, From early friend and neighbor boy ; Each page a volume of delight—,A brimming cup of joy. The mail ! The mail ! And stillnessrtdes the boisterous throng, And "silence half an hour" prevails, The Heaven of those who wait so long The coming of the mails. Each reads his own, and these alone, No soldier seeks to play the spy, And letters, wheresoever thrown, Are safe from every eye. ' Chisel in hand, stood a sculptor boy, With his marble block before him, And his face lit up with a smile of joy, As an angel dream passed o'er him ; Ile earved the dream on the shapeless stone, With many a sharp incision ; With heaven's own light the sculpture shone He had gat that angel "take. JOHN PNWLAN Sculptors of life are we as we stand With our surds uncovered before us; Waiting the hour when at God's command, Oar life-dream passes o'er us. If we carve it then, on the yielding stone, With many a sharp incision, Its heavenly beauty shall be our own, Our lives that angel vision. , il;J'4(iorellautouli. The Sleswiek-flotstein:Business. Here is a brief statement of the pres ent condition of German opinion in re= sped to Prince Frederic of Holstein, admirably, illustrating the harmonious tendencidif of German politics : Nine States have recognized Frederic as Duke of Holstein; these are Baden, Weimar, Coburg-Gotha, Meinigen, Al tenburg, Brunswick, Soudershausen, Reuss-S'chletz and Waldeck. Eight recognize him as entitled to be Duke of Holstein ; these are Bavaria, Wirtemberg, Hesse-Darmstadt, Ham burg, Reuss-Goeiz, Anhelt, Frankfort and Bremen. Three are disposed to recognize him ; these are Saxony, Rudolatadt and Mechlenburg-Scheverin. Five are indisposed to recognition ; these are Hanover, Electorol Hesse, Lichtensein, Nassau and Mecklenburg- Strelitz. Two are decidedly hostile to him ; these are Prussia and Austria. Three don't know their own mind ; these are Oldenburg, Hamburg and Lu. beck. Two keep profoundly dark on the alibi ject ; these are the great Kingdoms, Lippe-Detmold and auenburg-Lip- Meanwhile Duke Frederic is taking ; pp a policy of his owsomd proposes to 'order the Federal troops out of "his Duchy" by way of indficilig -the Dined to let him remain in it? This is a high ly original conception on the part of the Duke, and bothers his friends consider ably. A bit of Advice for Boys. 'You are made to be kind,' says Horace Mann, 'generous and magnanimous. If there is any boy in sehool who has a dub foot, don't let him know that you ever saw it.— If there is a poor boy with ragged clothes, don't talk about rags When he is in haring. If there is a lame boy, assign him apart of the gam. Which dem- not require running. It there is a hungry ose,.gbildhim a part of year dinner. If time ia :omei help him .to giea bier lamens. if imam 'Height one, be net egminso ahem.; bor Mum twit proud of his talents, and another iot taivielatint! them, there are two greet ihnitg* more Wadi than k let or strow ixtylmati4nrid le l / 4 ?ad is sorry far it, for-'m Viiinottet • 44, tte 'letkolni not to lelloQ l lOU akit'w by thei I*4lll4kg it ' Soldiers' Letters: A Beautiful Thought. WAYNESBURG, GRKENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1864. Intemperance. I was much interested, a few days since, in reading an article on the subject of In temperance written by Dr. J. C. Gunn. It will be found in the work of that gentleman entitled 'Gunn's New Domestic Physician.'— I propose to make a few extracts from this treatise, hopeing that, in the Providence of God, it may do something towards eradicat ing an evil habit, which destroys the body, ruins the mind, blasts every font hope and cherished expectation, brings down age In sorrow to the tomb, sends youth to an early grave, and gives the undying spirit of man into the band of the evil one, to take up its unending abode in that 'dark pit where there is no water ; but where there is 'weeping, and wailing, and gnashing of teeth,' forever, and ever. Intemperance not only destroys the health, but it inflicts ruin upon the innocent and helpless, for it invades the family and social circle, and spreads woe and sorrow all around; it cuts down youth in all its vigor, manhood in its strength, and age in its weakness ; it breaks the father's heart, bereaves the doting mother, extinguishes natural affection, erases conjugal love, blots out filial attachment, blights parental hope, and brings down mourning age in sorrow to the grave. It produces weakness not strength, sickness not health, death not life. It makes wives wid ows, children orphans, fathers friendless, and all of them at last beggars. It produces fevers, feeds rheumatism, nurses the gout, welcomes epidemics, invites disease, imparts pestilence, embraces con sumption, cherishes dyspepsia, and encour ages appoplexy and paralytic affections. It covers the land with idleness and poverty, disease and crime ; it fills our jails, supplies our alms-houses, and furnishes subjects for par asylums ; it engenders controversies, fosters quarrels., and cherishes riots ; it con demns law, spurns order ; it crowds the penitentiaries, and furnishes victims for the scaffold ; it is the life-blood of the gambler, the food of the counterfeiter, the prop of the highvyman, and the support of the mid night incendiary and assassin, the friend and the companion of the brothel. It countenances the liar, respects the thief, and esteems the blasphemer; it violates ob ligations, reverences fraud, and honors in famy; it defames benevolenCe, hates love, scorns virtue, and slanders innocence; it in cites the father to butcher his innocent chil dren, helps the husband to kill his wife, awl the child to grind the parricidal ax. It burns man, consumes woman, detests life, curses God, and despises heaven; it su borns witnesses, nurses perjury, defiles the ury-box, and stains the judicial ermine; it bribes votes, corrupts elections, poisons our institutions, and endangers our government; it degrades the citizen, degrades the legisla ture, and dishonors the statesman. It brings shame not honor, terror not safety, despair not hope, misery not happiness; and now, as with the malevolence of a fiend, it calmly surveys its frightful desolation, and insatiate with havoc, it poisons felicity, kills peace, ruins morals, blights confidence, slays reputation, and wipes out national honor, then curses the world, and laughs at the ruin it has inflicted upon the human race. It is liquor that mars the whole consisten cy and blights the noblest energies of the soul; it wrecks and withers forever the hap piness of the domestic fireside; it clogs and dampens all the generous and affectionate avenues of the heart; it makes man a drone in the busy hive of society, an encumbrance to himself, and a source of unhappiness to all around him; it deprives him ot his nat ural energies, and makes him disregardful .of the wants of the innocent beings who are nearest to him, and dependent upon him; it transforms gifted man (fashioned in the ex-; press image of his Maker,) into a brute, and causes him to forfeit the affections and break the heart-of the innocent and confid ing being whom God has made inseparable from himself, and who should lcok up to him for comfort, protection and support ; it cantles hint contemptuously to disregard the kind admonitions of a merciful Savior. Li quor! 9h, how many earthly Edens bast then made .desaate i How many starved and orphan children bast thou cast upon the cold charities of an unfriendly world! How many graves hest thou filled with confiding and broken-hearted wives! What sad wrecks had thou made of brilliant talents and splen did geniuses ! Would to God there were one universal temperance society, and all mankind were members of it; the glorious 1 cause of Christ would* adynnesa} and my-r -bids of bare-Moted orphans and broken-heart ea wires would chant praises to heaven for. the success of the temperance cause, the. lost ;would be reclaimed and bleeding hearts heeled Lem pleading for the diaeonsolete mother, the hapless orphan,' and the broken-hearted and distracted wife. I come with the tears of dlsappointed love and the auguisit of a wounded Wirt. I plead in the name and behalfef suffering virtue, neglected and aban doned for revel and riot. I imagine I hear a voice from the dark and dismal mansions of tha 464 sallatf' Oh, ye iNtillofdindpatinn turd to 7 0 PrOdigia• who , riataed wanton w ith r ,thvgilha. of a heastem heviderree *maid behellt the . cakapimionfrat *sr lass oleo glory ; but ere the morning dew has escaped on the breeze it sickens, withers, dies. Here the object of virtuous affection ; there the promise of connubial bliss : this the hope of his country, and that the encouragement and consolation of religion—all poisoned by intemperance, all doomed to a premature and disgraceful death. Look at these and be ad monished., The following fact as related by Prof. Se wall, is a serious warning to men who drink ardent spirits. A man was taken up dead in the streets of London, after having drunk a great quanity of whiskey. He was carried to Westminster Hospital, and there dissected.— In the ventricles of the brain was found a considerable quantity of limpid fluid, impreg nated with whiskey, both to the sense of smell and taste, and even to the test of in flammability. The liqind appeared as strong as one third whiskey, and two-thirds water. What strong infatuation is it that tempts men to drink alcoholic liquors, when facts and reason, and nature and religion, are continually warning them of the train of disasters and evils consequent thereon ! When physicians demonstrate to us the poisonous, deadly influence of ardent spirits upon the system,and all experience illustrates the truth, why have men not sense and con sistency to forsake the miserably foolish practice of drinking poisons, Beware of one more glass I San Francisco. A correspondent of the Milwaukee News thus pictures San Francisco : "It is a beautiful city, full of life, business, and money. It is unlike other cities--unlike them in every cus tom, appearance, and manner of living. People live independently and queerly. The prudence of northern society would receive a severe shock to hear of ladies and gentlemen living in furnished rent ed rooms, eating at a restaurant, and owning a residence one or two miles outside the city limits, to which they retire as buits their convenience, stay ing at one place at Bight, another dur ing the day, and boarding at restaur ants. Not such restaurants as you have in your, northern cities—under ground, windows of stained glass, a bar, and fit only for loafers—but ele gant saloons, fitted up with taste and style, with dressing rooms for both la dies and gentlemen, private and public entrances, a reading-room, and every thing equal to a splendid hotel. Every other building nearly has fur nished rooms to let, and restaurants are to be found in all parts of the city, near every corner and every place of public business. People look happy, content ed, and mind their own business, and seem to be very busy at that. No crowds or clubs of lazy men stand on the corners peering into the faces of passers-by, or loaf around the steps of hotels and saloons, with nothing to do but pick their teeth and revel in petty gossip. Everybody has employment. Rich and poor dress in the height of fashion, and wear the most costly of fabrics. Montgomery street is almost a palace of stores—and store palaces. I should be considered an immense falsi fier if I should tell the weight of apples, pears, and grapes in this State. Think of pears weighing from one and a half to three rounds—potatoes (not fruit, however,) ditto—and grapes weighing five and six pounds the bunch —the most delicious tasting grapes in the world are to be found in California. San Francisco has almost a foreign ap pearance, yet enough of good old Amer ica to make it a home for the American who endures the foreign habits which have become ruling customs from the foreign majority which once existed.— Spanish customs, names, and fashions prevail over the cit. People never speak of a park, but a plaza, a lovely spot in the heart of the city, now fra grant with fresh blooming flowers and the shade trees that encircle it. The Spanish custom of ladies remaining in doors until three o'clock in the after noon is carried out by the ladies in San Francisco generally. You see few la dies in the street before that time.— The Chinamen, or rather the Chinese population, form a prominent fea ture of the city. They are on every street, and one part of the city is devo ted entirely to their trade and business. At any hour of the day the poor China man can be seen with his two baskets on his shoulders, his hair in long braid quite to his feet, gathering up the paper and rags in the street. 'The principal and best paying occupation of the poor er classes of Chinese is washing ; their odd looking signs are hung out all over the city. They look queer indeed, and we would imagine the nanies meaning less; for instance, "Chung We," "Sing Tean," and "Ya Chong." The German Boy. Among the chddren in one of the Sabbath Schools in New York was a little German boy, whose parents were very poor. From the time he entered the school he was ratnark able fpr his eagerness learn, and his docili ty. Risleaciter's hopes were, hooever, frus trated by a madden illheea, -which cot him down in a few dais. Awing his sickness the snperintisodent, of phis achnokrint, to see- . him, and forMirlsim perfectly - , y- 'wait ing.' That afternoon he .. rose in, his elbow and iminimed, ,do bear dial music 7 40 bettOifial You hear it ?" Mahar, ttook4l4s mind affected, tried to hushbits,e reo , pealed thewords, lookingsaniit3 time with eager eyes. -Mak iiiikb.ort to sing*singularly SlNfilt VAN, 'I *loci r... angols coining, coming.' Vitale bal, - a llYn *b_ olPh. !roe. , Afb I.lke gt hair the adeptsAinsintr—i•— • As ha • A prominent officer attached to the ambulance corps of the French army in Italy, Dr. Armand, has published the result of some curious and interesting observations made by himself and others upon the battle-fields of the late Na poleonic war with Austria. The posi tion which the bodies of the slain as sume, under the effect of mortal wounds in various parts of the body, upon the expression of the features, as well as up on the- general attilude, were the sub jects of somewhat novel investigation, which might have been pursued on a grand scale in this country for the past two years. In a number of cases the dead soldier was found almost in the speaking atti tude of life. A Hungarian hussar, killed at the same moment with his horse, was only slightly moved in his saddle, and sat there dead, holding the point of his saber in advance, in the po sition of charging. A parallel case oc cured in the death of an Austrian artil leryman. Those wounded in the head, it was remarked, generally fell with the face and abdoman flat to the ground.— Wounds in the chest and heart produc ed a like posture of the body, though in the latter cases modifications of the po sition and expression more frequently took place than in the former. A Zou ave struck full in the chest was "doubled upon his musket, as if taking a position to charge bayonet, his face full of ener gy, with an attitude more menacing than that of a lion." In wounds of tho abdomen the agony seemed to have been prolonged ; the face was contracted, the hands crossed and closed upon the stomach, the. body doubled upon itself and laying partly on the side. But the report of Dr. Armand, after all, contains no cases so remarkable as two which have been observed upon one of our own battle-fields,—that of Shilo. On that bloody field, when the carnage was over, a soldier was found standing. his legs somewhat spread apart, and his arms thrown convulsively out ward, his posture that of a living man, agitated, perhaps, by a strong emotion ; he was nevertheless stone dead, a ghast ly monument of seeming life along the hecatomb of fallen corpses. Another body lay partially prostrated on one side, the right hand holding to the mouth a piece of cheese, which the set teeth were almost in the act of grasping. Lying upon the back, with the arms extended, and the knees drawn up towards the face, was a posture frequently to be ob served, on this as well as otebther fields. The living attitude of the dead soldier still standing upon his feet, and the grim mockery of life in the apparent offer of food to a corpse, are hardly sur passed by any reported incident of war. The facts are derived from au officer who witnessed the usual spectacle.--N. T. Journal of Commove. The Hindus regard the monkey as a sacred animal ; they therefore feed it, or let it help itself to food, and speak kindly to it, calling it pleasant names.— . In a former birth they say that monkeys were men, and that they could speak now if they chose to do so; but they wiignot speak, lest they should be made to work. Let me give you an instance of how these creatures conduct themselves, and how they are regarded by the Hindus. Early one fine . morning, in the year 1857, two of them oame walking down the middle of a street in the pattah of Bangalore, in their usual style, with tails erect, swaying to and fro, probably to secure something tasteful for breakfast. Peeping hither and thither as they stroll ed leisurely along, they surveyed nu merous fruit and vegetable stalls, and stopped frequently to examine them ; but the owners of the fruit were either too watchfql in guarding their property, or they were too irreligious to admit the claims of Hanuman's descendants, for none of the coveted spoil could our friends profit by. They looked wistful ly, _sad grinned ; or they showed their teeth in anger, and, chattering abuse, passed on. Presently, however, they espied a stall-keeper, an old man, squatted on the grontid, eastern fashion, with a fan in his hand, fanning vigorously to keep the flies from his fine collection of sweet meats. Before him they stopped, and held a parley of an amusing kind, which proved them to be keen observers.— They found that the owner of the sweet meats was perhaps feeble with age ; or they judged from his countenance that he was good-natured and irresolute ; or they may have thought that he was de vout, and prepared to respect their de mands. At any rate, they deemed him fiir game ; so they proceeded, to his 4iscomltuire, and to the sustaining of their ownleputation. One of them boldly attempted to Mize a nice, lucious lump of candied sweets. Mie Ad man remonstrated, gen in hand ; Ilkiye-yese4olbbe. ,setio, no ; my younger, brOther, do not fie so.- The monkey renewed hit ef fort to possess hiosseltof the !greets, sod tlaes old Man eoutheued,demes.tet_ lyehroarii, "less is r itari alp *en he suggested; 4 91"rinfir is a itch tan —he is very chatitalle." ckey POW, :OW bird es W. mi his fatt:, thaw, Attitude of the Slain. A Story about Monkeys. hind, quietly thrust his paw forward, and bore off the booty, which they both re tired to share, leaving the poor old man to bemoan his fate, and lament the freaks of his gods.—Missionary Record. Narrow Escape from Another Tragedy. A Panama correspondent writing con cerning the late horrible calamity at San tiago, Chili, says : I informed you in my last that the government had issued a decree ordering the demolition of the Church of the Compania, in which the terrible accident occurred. Since then another decree has been made, forbid ding any church service after dark.— The latter order has met with the most terrible opposition from the women, who have presented petitions of the most formidable length to the govern ment, asking that evening services— their favorite amusement•---shall not be dispensed with. It has almost become a war of the sexes. The number of lives lost on the occasion was more than first mentioned. The superinten dent of the cemetery reports having buried two thousand one hundred and ten bodies. This does not include those who have since died of their injuries and the charred masses that could not be distinguished. It is safe to say that not less than two thousand five hundred persons perished in that; conflagration. A list of two thousand and thirty names is published that are known to have perished. Others will be discov ered from time to time, and many will remain unknown. Notwithstanding the warning given by this first catastrophe, another almost exactly like it came very near occur ring in another church in the aurae city only twenty-three days after. On the 31st of December, while services were being performed in the Church of San Lsidro, some artificial flowers became ignited from one of the candles on the altar. Of course, when the fire was dis covered, an immediate rush for the doors took place. Women, screaming and fainting, fell in every direction, the doors becoming choked, and exit was almost impossible. Providentially the fire was at once extinguished, or we should have had a re-petition of the Bth of December. The confusion was so great that the church was at once closed and the remainder of the service dispens ed with. As in the first instance, near ly all the congregation, or by far the greater part, were women. A Touching Incident. An officer, just returned from the South West, relates a touching incident of the loyalty and tendency of many of the inhabitants of that nominally secesh land. After the battle of Bean Station, the rebels were guilty of all manner of indignity toward the slain. They strip ped their bodies, and shot persons who came near the battle-field to show any attention to the dead. The body of a little drummer-boy was left naked and exposed. Near by, in an humble house, there 'arere two young girls, the eldest but sixteen, who resolved to give the body a decent burial. They took the night for their task. With hammer and nails in hand, and boards on their shoul ders, they sought the place where the body of the dead drummer-boy lay.— From their own scanty wardrobe they clothed the body for the grave. With their own hands they made a rude cof fin, in which they reverently put the dead body. They dug the grave and lowered the body into it, and covered it over. The noise of the hammering brought some of the rebels to the spot. The sight was too much for them. Not a word was spoken, no one interfered, and when the sacred rites of the burial were performed, all separated, and the little drummer-boy sleeps undisturbed in his grave on the battle-field. Such tenderness and heroism deserve to run along the line of coming generations with the story of the woman who broke the alabaster box on the feet of the Saviour, and with her who of her penury cast her two mites into the treasury. Neglected Duty. No man has any right to manage his allitirs in such a way that his sudden death would bring burdens and losses on other people. There imay be rare cases where a man really cannot help entanglements, or where, from inexperi ence or lack of judgment, he has brought his affairs into such a state that the interests of others depend upon his life • but /A 0 should make all possible haste to extricate himself from such a position. Honor and honesty demand that he should so conduct his business that his death should cause no one to be wronged. And as to dying, although all men everywhere believe that all other men will surely die, yet they unite in thiuking that they themselno are ex ceptions to this fate ; or, at least they act sit if they thought so ; this is radical ly wrong. It is every man's duty in every transaction in Moto be influeno • ad by the Ibleit that at, say day, or at any hour he may die. erThe tallest man in the United Kingdom same behind the bar of a abbe boatel it Livertool. HOU oven Seqc *Air is bigu upwards of 223 1 0 4444445miiik AseCial siramet . lb v is*Vea O l* br Me a taw Misb•- imi., M em _401100. NEW SERIES.--VOL. 5, 037. gk e 4 atet, From the American The sap of the sugar or, /411Lifildo when it first flows in the to appearance nearly as elear as pure water, and in reality it canasias scarcely anything but srSpc INK sugar is more el ob .'uusseol7 4l 'figok etable state than from the knees of thy other plant yielding sugar for commerce. If the sap be pure and clear ad it &yrs from the tree, it is onl necessary to bed it down in *lean vesse ls , taking care not to burn it., and edam magician* tomes"- trated, to preserve it as molasses, or af ter boiling more, to pour it into mould It is so easily and cheaply rrodueed that sugar makers have been very care less about it, using utensils of the rudest character. The amount of uncrystal lisable sugar or molasses oeceeserily produced is very small, but as the ma, lasses is quite as mink valued as auger in most markets, this has led to some neglect of the sap, and dettivioantof the character of both sugar and molasses. Let the first fact stated above, be fix ed in the mind, viz., thatparc Imp yi!ikda nearly pure sugar, and that the colmag, the quality, and much of the labor of sugar making, result from foreign anb stances that get into the sap w . in in the troughs, etc- Remember leer, that in the abscence of these fbrelgtHiva- . terials the amount of crystalisied sr. obtained will be much. greater. We see then, the importance of securing the greatest possible cleanliness, in, es tay thing connected with collecting and manufacturing the sap. Expatiate to the air produces fermentatico, and ininishes the crystalized sugar rapidly; therefore, covered vessels, and bo g as fast as the sap flows, are irat Fermentation of the sap also_injulra the peculiar "maple flavor" which is so greatly relished. The qu< the sap, that is the amount of moist* the' barrel of sap, varies consitiouhiy frous.‘ year to year, but we know of HO SOME ate experiments touching it, nor to dp termine the character' of other sUbstan ces present in the sw. . The wooden sap ilonglbt rind potash kettles aro still in use in some par& -of the country, but. eutesprielsg sew • makers use wooden buckets ,whiph : preferable to tin, aid, ev pans, and the augur it mush to . The sap is sometimes co ' sugar house in "leaders* or smil assedl en troughs, which would be imprened by scalding them out ewe a dal , to prevent souring. In like manner the buckets ought to be scalded txclsiskinsM.. The trees are tapped withholf-intds au gers, and the hole enlarged , sti alt teenth of an inch larger bit,:hafprs, close of the flowing soma. The eap spouts are six or eight intliihritilitigth. One inch square, or tarried rikandAtiv ing a one-fourth inch -hole based through them. The ends are tapered off, and they are driven into the helm of the trees so as to barely holl. If tubs are used to collect the itai l / 4, there should be holes of about ten inches square cut to pour in the sap, land over them linen towels should be laid, to strain out sticks leaves, ete,if the ar ran gements of the buckets, , et.b. e j p so perfect as to exclude all Mtn, as is desirable. After this, the sap oval ire ' kept covered. The storing tubs-should stand on higher ground than the belling pan, so that the sap will tiow,freils ewe to the other. During the boiling, shim as often as scum rises. It is 'seldom that much skimming is riecemery.— When the cooled syrup is nearly sa thick as good mob/see, draw it eir ate a tub to settle, straining thungh nel strainer, here any sediment di ll be deposited. After the syrup haat abi ded clear, draw it off; and , lxioil a ditwoh again, until it is thiek. "lough to vigor off. When the sugar is to iisk "Aker' or "stirred," it must be boiled until a spoonful of it put upon snot be perfectly brittle when eold. Thelkisdils sugar is taken from the ire anal vim granulation has conunempad, sad errs mass is thickened considen&y, 0 the moulds rapidly. If' it is to be Ward, at the same time commence " the kettle being held Ar ltaly, Mid -setraz the mass till it hat the mummy* 447 brown sugar of the shops. When the sugar is to be drained it IS usually liarer. from the fire before it woad cod and after standing until itraa- later quite thoroughly, it is ladlil ele into tubs with talm bottoms, musei. inches above the tree, 3 er 4 Wins Los ing in the false bottom, and eov= saucers or plugged by round sticks. The sugar is ladled into the tubs, and when settled the plugs are loosened awl partly withdraw% se that, the molasses will run Tbia may be drawn off faun die an, of the tuba. iirAn English writer - thov' easeribea the Duke of ..401. about whose succession to t of Holstein, Lew. a thnistesed with war, as a tall maa, (ortirliir kei ` lll O4 with hazel We, blue era, iis l **7 l .' brows, “good" complexion, unnanw acarkewhat slow but stately, asap speech readmit., with skisi spandbaltr *WA "AlMY,"Joili Watastainftrithelpt 'A Alit ablutions& bilit km, ft. Maple Sugar Milkiag;: vbs. 41/111 El