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PITBLISIIED Br 11. W. XINES AND JAS. S. JENNINGS. - Weynesburg, Greene County, Pa. BrOrNion NEARLY OPPOSITE THE PUBLIC ttl2VIMMit etrAWCIptPTION.-92.00 in advance ; $2.25 at the ex- Oradea Of el mouths; $2.50 after the expiration of the year. AnnornskussiTs inserted at 551.25 per square for Eltree insertiotis, and 37 cts. a oquare for each addition al insertion; (ten lines or less counted a square.) A liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. r . Jos Para na°, of all kinds, executed in the best ilay.e. and op reasonable terms, at the "Messenger" Jab {Ace. *IN atutsburg Tushass Cabs. ATTORNEYS. ROB. IA WYLY. J. A. J. BUCHANAN, D. R. P. HURD WYLY, BUCHANAN & HUSS, ailtor s vorys & Counsellors at Law, 'WAYNESBURG, PA. Int prseilee in Om Courts 01 Greene and adjoining o A rn lied. Collections and other legal business will re eillte'pronifit attention. Mice on the South side of Main street, in the Old 8171141,16. Jan. 28. 1863.-13, AL. rtnourt. / G. FITCRII PUSUILAW & RITCEIE. Art SYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW • - Wetretesbiarg, Pa. jiltillir - Orrtea---Main Street, one door east of Old Btnk Building. .rosiness to Greene, Washington, and Fay rtlitta Counties, entrusted to them, will receive pronip 40ttention. N. B —Particular allention will he given to the co l mil of -paranoia. bounty Money. tuck Pay, and .dr claims againattlte Government. Nat --tar . L. L. ircoNNELL. J. J. HUFFMAN. 31111M0111011111 & NIIFFINIAN, ericaNtais AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW ' Waynesburg, Pa. us • files In the "Wright East Door. krions, &c.. will receive prompt attention. iirneshorg. April 23, • DAVID CR A W FORD, Spey and Counsellor at Law. Office In the Tlrinse. Will attend promptly to all business lasted to his care. nynesburg. Pa., July 30. 1803.-Iy. 4. %LAW. JOHN PRIFLAN• BLACK £ PUELAN, kTToStli ET'S AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW Office la the Court Haute, Waynesburg. lisps. 1,1,1861-Iv.. iatirallitil , WAR CLAM=! D. R. P. HUSS . -.. ja:j e r a ,..... d 67doTtei disabled A b f:r i a s. dmLncl.:: s o ld iers ,e: i r W c a i A r l l ll ctl E :e s p Department ß ii re u w au : ' :: " : a se rt os a N er . ::' a ie, B ar h an - 1 , we palsied by Congress, and all the necessary Forms - Instructions for the prosecution and collection of jr.JMOXS, BOUNT.r. B R C S P."/Y, due dis ci, widowed mothers, lather., Motets and broth . . Which business, [upon due notice] will be attend . to pay and acennitely if entrusted to his care. la the old Bank Building.—April 8, 1863. - O. W. G. WADDELL, ATTORNEY & COUNSELLOR AT LAW, a'APPICE in the RECISTEIr's OFFICE, Court ' 4 O House, Waynesburg, .renua, liminess of all lira& solicited. Has received official copies of all the - , ♦ passed by Congress, aisd O'er necessary instruc -1 NSIONS, BOUNTIES, BACK PAY, discharged and disabled soldiers, widows, Orphan . is te ll :n pro . t ac h ris e c::w ile a b c t i t t c i e l A i i n i b d u:s d r in io ess . if intrustaiedaytol3h,is,6c3ere PZYBIOIANS Drpr T. W. Ross, 3e2ajractimilart. c 4 aliwrzeicara., Waynesburg, Greene Co., Pa. Arms AND ItEr3ll/ENCE ON MAIN STREET, 13 asst, and nearly opposite the Wright house. Wistansbu-g, Sept. 23, 1863. DR. A. G. GROSS AI r o ;ITLD very respectfully tender his services as a YV lIIiSICIAN AND DUDGEON, to the people or •Wayaesburg and vicinity. He hopes by a due appre- ATI of human life aadhealth, and strict attention to thou ess, to merit a share of public patronage. aynesburg. January 8, 1862. NEZIKIHILWIES. WM. A. PORTER, 'berm& and Retail Daslet in Foreign and Domes (Wry Goods, Groceries, Notions, &e., Main street. 0/K.11.1861-Iy. IL CLARK, Seater In Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Queens lows and trwiewa, in the Ilanidton Sinews, opposite *Lie court House, Main street. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. MINOR & CO., moss in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Gre .eartes, GMeeesware, Ilardwars and Notions, opposite Ow Green House. Male. street. $e t. 11,1661-Iy, MOOT AND SHOE DEALERS J. D. COS(RAy, loot and Mine maker. Main street, n'arty opposite lb. ‘‘Pormner's and Drover's Bank." Every style or &ow' said Shoes constantly on hand or made to order. dieirc. 11, 1861-Iy. GROCERIES & VARIETIES JOSEPH YATER, in timcerins end Confectioneries, Notions, i ii rues. rerininitrieE,l.Averpnol Ware, &e., Glass nt A r nt Cash hi g n I d e dinl g a n n4ll. l .4 , o le k:n . g Glues Plates. 11, 1661-Iy. JOHN MUNNELL, --- Dealer in Cfneeries and ,Cnufectintiaries, and Variety Goods Genera Iy, Wilson's Ntw Building, Main West, Gide. ii. 1861--ly. wirwrcorns AND JEWELRY • S. Di. BAILY, zit," Asset, opposite the Wright house keeps S.:on.hind at, large and 'elegant assortment of Wind Jewelry. wing o f clocks, Watches and Jewelry wit rerimra flnit 3 Pt lber. 15. 1064_1 v DOORS , &c. LEWIS DAY, woof im ffithool and Mitten-moons peo k k v .. et at i nn . Ilkaplanes and Papatt: One doer east et Pnlior•l4 Stone. Hein Street. Awl.. 11. 1861 lv. SAIMPLES ANDIEA,REMSS. SAMUEL WALLISrER, 0 1 6111 M, inirrieie and Trauttihket. old Bank Bun- Nth e se - id, If. 111.4-1-. , VANE. FAMERS , it DROVIMP RANK, Welpaerbeiprivilva. 4". NAVP4 rlslieimwiattA 4NP141.641: 0411411611 X , , • 01 '• iortilautouo. An Item for the Home Circle. The following sensible article on do mestic philosophy we find in one of our exchanges : "If the ultimate conse quences of one's acts are to be laid to his charge, the man who invented rock ing-cradles for children rests under a fearful load of responsibility. The down right murder of tens of thousands of in flints, and the weakened brains of hun dreds of adults, are undoubted results of his invention. To rock a child iu a cra dle, or to swing him in a crib, amounts to just this : the rapid motion disturbs the natural flow of the blood and pro ! duces stupor or drowsines. Can any I body suppose for a moment that such an operation is a healthful one ? Every one knows the dizzy and often sickening effect of moving rapidly in a swing ; yet wherein does this differ from the mo tion a child receives when rocked in a 1 cradle ? It is equivalent to lying in a i ship berth during a violent storm, and that sickens nine persons out of ten.,-- 1 A very gentle, slow motion may some times be soothing, though always of 1 doubtful expediency, but to move a cra dle as rapidly as the swing of a pendu lum three feet long, that is once in a second, is positive cruelty. We always feel like grasping and staying the arms of a mother or nurse who, to secure quietude, swings the cradle or crib with a rapidity equal to that of a pendulum a foot long. If any mother is disposed to laugh at our suggesCons or consider them whimsical, we beg of her to have a bed or cot hung on cords, then lie down in it herself, and then swing it with the same rapidity that she allows the cradle to be rocked. What she will experi ence in both head or stomach is just what the infant experiences. We in sist that this rocking of children is a useless habit. If not accustomed to rocking, they will go to sleep quite as well when lying quietly, as when shak en in a cradle. If they do not, there is trouble from sickness, or hunger, or more likely from an overloaded stomach; and though the rocking may produce a temporary stupor, the trouble is made worse thereafter by the unnatural means taken to produce quiet for the time being. (From the London Morning Post, 30th.] Horrible Affair.--A Man Partially Eat en by Lions, in London. Yesterday fornoon, about half-past ten o'clock, the Agriculture Hall, Isling ton, was the scene of a shockino. occur rence. In addition to the sudden roar ing of the lions forming part of the equestrian exhibition at that establish ment, loud screams were heard proceed ing from the direction in which the an imals were kept in their caravan during the intervals of the performance. The body of a man, named Thomas Greaves, who had within the last two or three days commenced his duties as a new keeper and feeder of the animals, was found drawn up close to the cage.— Some of the employees immediately sized the long iron rods, with a species of hoe at the end, by which the cage is cleansed, and rushed to the spot. It was then discovered that one of the large lions had the man's right hand in his mouth, whilst another had seized him by the thick part of the fore-arm, and had dragged the limb • through the bars of the cage nearly up to the armpit. Hav ing no hot irons, the men at once set to work belaboring the animals over the skulls and eyes, in order to make them let go their hoid. These proceedings, at the out set, only tended to increase the ferocity of the animals, who, amidst loud roars, commenced tearing the flesh from their victim's arm and hand with their claws. It was not until the brutes were. nearly blinded with the blows in flicted upon their eyes that they were induced to relinquish their grip, when the poor fellow's mangled limb was drawn through the bars, but with some difficulty, and he fell fainting into the arms of those who had rescued him from his horrible position.— Ature for Scandal. Take of good nature one ounce ; of an herb called by the Indians gnind your oWn business;* one ounce; mix with a 'little charity for others' and two or three sprigs of 'keep your tongue between your teeth;' simmer them together in a vessel called circumspection for a short time, and it will be fit tbr use. Appli cation—The symptom is. a a violent itching in the tongue and roof of the mouth which invariably takes, place wheu you are in company with a spe cies of animals called gossips. When you feel a fit of the dliorder coming_on, take a teaspoonful of the mixture; hold it in your mouth, which you will keep closely shut till you get home, and you will find a complete cure. Should you apprehendu relapse, keep a small bot tleful about you, and repeat the dose on the slightest symptom. LoNory rrr.—The following is extract ed from the parish register of Llanmdes, Glamorgan. The entry is evidently i original, and of the date-Oren ' anditre writing, is clearl—"lvin Yoritit,-littried jet or a Satarditye the xiirt Ito of ' Ilith 41:fontiRk: Be`,W as • a id ; : . ~ .. • . (~,:i...5 , -, to + b fkwitiOrilhe, ante 40111 7 '' ' ' • ,'" heli *4 4 04° ,46' , . .. r , .tt* 4 . , ' • - - :.,-. .41. ... WAYNESBURG, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1864. The Singing Fish of Ceylon. theOn occasion of a visit which I made to Batticaloa in September, 1848, I made some inquiries relative to a story which I had heard of musical sounds, said to be heard issuing from the bottom of the lake, at several places, both above and below the ferry, opposite the old Dutch Fort, and which the natives suppose to proceed from some fish peculiar to the locality. The re port was confirmed to me in all its particulars, and one of the spots whence the sounds pro ceeded was pointed out between the pier and and a rock which intersects th channel, two or three hundred yards to the eastward.— They were said to be heard at night, and most distinctly when the moon was nearest the full, and they were described as resem bling the faint sweet note of the lEolian harp. I sent for one of the fishermen, who said they were perfectly aware of the fact, and that their fathers had always known of the exist ence of the musical sounds heard, they said, at the spot alluded to, but only during the dry season, and they cease when the lake is swollen by the. freshet after the rain. They believed them to proceed from a shell, which is known by the Taniil name of (oomE COOLOOROE CRADOE,) or the "crying shell," a name in which the sound seems to have been adopted as an echo of the sense. I sent them in search of the shell, and they return ed bringing me some living specimens of dif ferent shells, chiefly LITTORINA and CERITA ICAL In the evening, when the moon had risen, I took a boat and accompanied the fisherman to the spot. We rowed about 200 yards northeast of the jetty by the fort gate; there was not a breath of wind, nor a ripple, except that caused by the dip of our oars ; and, on coming to the point mentioned, I distinctly heard the sound in question.— They came up from the water like the gentle thrills of a musical chord, or tbe.faint vibra tions of a wine glass when the rim is rubbed by a wet finger. It was not one sustained note, but a multitude of tiny sounds, each clear and distinct in itself ; the sweeter treble mingling with the lowest bass. On apply ing the ear to the wood-work of the boat the vibration was greatly increased in volume by conduction. The sounds varied considerably at .differ ent points, as we moved across the lake, as if the number of the animals from which they proceeded . was greatest in particular spots: and occasionally we rowed out of hearing of them altogether, until, on return to the original loyalty, the sounds were at once renewed. This fact seems to indicate that the cause of the sounds, Whatever they may be, are stationary at several points ; and this agrees with the statement of the natives that they are produced by molluscs, and not by fish. They came evidently and sensibly from the depth of the lake, and there was nothing in the surrounding circum stances to support a conjecture that they could be the reverberation of noises made by insects on the shore, conveyed along the surface of the water, for they were loudest and most distinct at those points where the nature of the land and the Intervention of the fort and its buildings forbade the possi bility of this kind of conduction. Sounds somewhat similar are heard under water at places on the western coast of In dia, especially in the harbor of Bombay At Caldera, in Chili, musical cadences are stat ed to issue from the sea near the landing placer; they are described as rising and fall ing fully four notes, resembling the tones of harp-stritgs. and mingling like those at Batticaloa, till they produce:a musical dis cord of great delicacy and sweetness. The animals from which they proceed have not been identified at either place, and the mystery remains unsolved, whether those at Batticaloa are given forth by fishes or by mollusces.—[Sir J. Emerson Tenni:Vs Cey lon. A Good Act and a Wise Investment. Some time since General Thomas as sessed a number of Tennessee rebels in the sum of *30,000 for the murder, by guerrillas, of one Michigan and two Wisconsin soldiers. The Milwaukie Wisconsin says of the -xtrair : "This money has been brought to Wisconsin. The widow of one of the soldiers, liv ing at or near Delavan, in Walworth county, received her $lO,OOO in. cash, and her friends brought it to one of the Milwaukie banks, a day or two since, and invested it all in Government se curities. The assessment and the pay ment of it afterwards to the widow of the•murdered soldier was a noble act on the part of General Thomas; but the investment of it by the widow iu the war-bonds of thd country was a still more noble act. It evinced a.cionficlence, on her part, in the future of the coun try for which the life of her husband had been given.up, and it also displayed the' most priseworthy recognition of the justice and :kindness. manifested to her by the Government." SMALL Pox.—This, loathsome disease is spreading itself with fearful rapidity over the sOttntry. In aneinnati it is worm than ever before knoin ; in Cleveland It is said there are upwards of twjave hundred eases ; and in qAurck f4F Oftee:B 1 8-'0714,1t in4:184418v4440 , 4:44a4 scp4ary baspigods. Bic* ivelly for it br paesingi„ Romance in Real Life. On Tuesday, in the Police Court, a singular occurrence in real life took place which in this city, at least, has seldom transpired. The facts are these: About five years ago, a man named Edward Carey left an affectionate and beautiful wife and three interesting children, to seek a for tune in the mines of California. For one year after his arrival in the gold country, Carey wrote constantly to his wife, and enclosed frequent sums of money. Suddenly the correspondence ceased, and Mrs. Carey receiving no money, was compelled to adopt other means to obtain a livelihood for herself and little ones. In a few weeks there after Mrs. Carey received information that her husband had been killed in the mines, which was corroborated by a subsequent letter received from For three years she lived, as she supposed she was, a widow and receiving I attentions of an Italian named Joseph Reibe, who succeeded in gaining her affections, she consented to marriage, and about a year ago the two were legally united in the bonds of wedlock, and have ever since lived quite happily together. On Sunday last, as the church bells were summon ing to the House of God the worship pers of the true Being, Edward Carey, who had arrived direct from California by the morning train, was making in quiries in the neighborhood (in which his family resided when he left Cincin nati,) for his wife and children. His neighbors and friends stood amazed, and trembled upon beholding the man whom they had long since believed to " be dead. Upon being assured that it was Carey, who was not dead but liv ing, he was astounded with the intelli gence that his wife, who had also be lieved that he had "gone to that bourne whence no traveler retnrns," was again married to another man, with whom she was living in domestic felicity. As certaining the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Reibe, the afflicted husband hastened to ascertain whether what he had heard was true or false. Knocking at the door, a tall Italian, measuring six feet one and one half inches, came to the door. Carey inquired : "Does Mrs. Reibe live here l" Italiau.—"She does—will you walk in 1" Carey.—" Yes, sir; will you please tell her that a gentleman desires to see her ?" The Italian consented, and on going to the door leading into the dining room, called his wife by her first name. She answered, and, all full of smiles, came running down into the parlor.— Upon seeing her husband, who rose from his seat to meet her, she screamed out "My God, Carey!" and fell faint ing to the floor. The husbands both hastened to raise her from the floor, when Carey informed Reibe that he was Edward Carey, the lady's lawful husband. Reibe also claimed her as his wife; and added, "I shall never give her up." Before the wife had fully re covered from her fainting attack the two husbands had become engaged in angry, violent words, resulting in Carey's drawing a pistol upon Reibe, and by the latter being forcibly ejected from his house. Reibe on Monday morning, had a warrant sworn out in the Police Court, charging Carey with disorderly conduct ' and provoking him to commit a breach of the peace. Carey was arrested, and when arraigned before Judge Warren, in the presence of Reibe and tile wife, he asked the court to hear an explana tion before he entered his plea. Judge Warren consented, and Carey stated that he and Reibe both claimed the lady (pointing to Mrs. Carey Reibe) as wife, and he believing himself to be the legal claimant, had become disorderly in demanding peremptorily of Reibe that he should give her up. Reibe, through the Prosecuting Attorney, Mr. Straub, exhibited to the Court the mar riage certificate, and the question was at once raised, "What further proceedings could be had in that Court?" The wife, who like Niobe ' all in tears, was called up and asked by the Court if either of these men was her husband T S!..e replied that she had been married to both, but haNing learned that her first husband was dead, she formed an attachment for Reibe three years after ward and married him. After assurin g the Court of her deeply seated attach ment always for Carey, and now her warm affection for Reibe, who had been to her an - affectiOnate and devoted hus band, the Court inquired of her, viz: "What do you now propose to do ; live with your first husband, who is le gally such, or your last husband, who by misapprehension, and unintentionally, you have made your husband ?" The lady replied, "MY duty and ray desire are to live with my first husband, Edward Carey" The sconewhich followed can never be nescribed. Carey and his wife ap proached each other - and wept aloud, while the disappointed Italian, seated in his chair like a statue, presented a pic ture. of despair and disappointment.— Freseutly. his .40 . iuge , were. overcome, and he grieviously wept, eliciting the 'sympathy et all. • Carey • and:hiawife, .arum in men, left the cmpt, . . 4000, aftvrw`P ing kindly admonition .from the Court that he, mut t, be resi askti theo4 -rum* -oter no — r . ol*, orie. arthw Mutt itieflly oh4rfaied terribly mortified at the fate which had befallen him. Carey and his family are preparing to leave the city, and Reibe, all alone in a deserted house, refuses to be comforted. —From the Cincinnati In quirer, 26th. Eating Between Meals. Among the slight causes of impaired digestion, is to be reckoned the very general habit of eating between meals. The powerful digestion of the growing boy:makes light of all such irregulari ties; but to see adults and often those by no means in robust health eating muffins, buttered toast, or bread and butter, a couple of hours after a heavy dinner, is a distressing spectacle to the physiologist. It takes at least four hours to digest a dinner, and during that period the stomach should be allowed to repose. A little tea or any other li quid is beneficial rather than otherwise, but solid food is a mere incumbrance. There is no gastric juice ready to digest it ; and if any reader, having at all a delicate digestion, will attend to his sensations after eating muffins or toast at tea, unless his dinner has bad sonic time to digest, he will need no sentence of explanation to convince him of the serious error prevalent in English fain ilie4 of making tea a light meal, quick ly succeeding a substantial dinner.— Regularity in the hours of eat* is fir from necessary ; but regularity of inter vals is of primary importance. It mat ters but little at what hour you lunch or dine, provided you allow the proper in tervals to elapse between breakfast and luncheon ; and between luncheon and dinner. What are those intervals ? This is a question each must settle for himself. Much depends upon the amount eaten at each meal, much also on the rapidity with which each per son digests. Less than four hours should never be allowed after a heavy meal of meat. Five hours is - about the average for men in active work. But those who dine late—at six or seven— should never take food again till break fast next day, unless they have been at a theatre, or dancing, or exerting 'themselves in legislation, in which case a slight supper is requisite. Are Hoop Skirts Healthful? The intelligence from Paris that ladies are making their appearance in hoops five yards around, revives a question we had thought Tong since settled, "Are hoop skirts healthful ?" It is con ceded by all observers that the modern hoop skirt is one of the most healthful devices of the age. No sensible per son can fail to appreciate its benefits.— We do not advocate the hoops wont during the primitive and anti-shoddy days of our grandmothers, made of sub stantial hickory, but those made of light flexible steel. A medical writer, says, "if we must live in houses warmed by furnaces and eighteen feet by five stories high, for pity's sake let us dis tribute the load of dress our climate requires, so as to allow every part of the body to be used to carry it up stairs.— Let the jacket or the shoulder straps give the chest its share of work in word let our wives and daughters shoul der their loads, if they would have 'their days prolonged in the land." We can not exactly see the necessity of a hoop of such ample dimensions as those re ported to be worn in Paris; but it should be of suffillik diameter to allow a full step ; if it restricts the step in the slightest degree, it is too small. The heavy quilted skirts, formerly worn, were most pernicious to health; and even the light hoop skirts worn should be hooked to the jacket, and not allow ed to rest ou the hips The lower limbs should be free and unrestricted in their motions, as quick and energetic walking* contributes greatly to the growth of the vital organs, and in or der to insure this the hip must be re lieved of the enormous weight of skirts formerly worn. Disinfecting Agents Either of the tillowing will answer the purpose, While they cost but a trifle: 1. One pint of the liquor of chloride of zinc, in one pailful of wateT, and one pound of chloride of lime in another pailful of water. This is perhaps the most effective of anything that can be used, and when thrown upon decayed vegetable matter of any description, will effectually destroy all offensive odors. 2. Two or three pounds of sulphate of iron (copperas) dissolved in a pailful of water, will, in many cases, he suffi cient to remove all offensive odors. 3. Chloride of lime is better to scatter about in damp places, in yards, in damp cellars and upon heaps of filth. —&ientijic American. A Hint to Farmers The folloWing hint ; published farther west, is Just asapplieftble here. There are three things easily raised and har vested, for which, the farmers may de pend upon it, there will be an enor mous demand and higi, prices paid dur ing the War. We reter to potatoes, beans and onions. The farmers could not do -a better thing for themselves and their country than to .plant thee ;vegetableti . very extensively. if it ap'- pests, as the Spring'hdiAnce - s," that tfie whole crop is likely tb" be short, kid .4at, will be soiree; onions 4 petatoes *atel'imiiiiiirrnst be had to filth vicktuiti: A Painful Narrative. The following is an extract from a letter written by a lady residing in Seaton, near Axminister, England: There is a small fishing village near here that is literally plague-stricken with mea sles; the children are dying by dozens. The inhabitants are all sailors and fishermen, and at this time of the year always in want. The children do not die of the complaint, but of weakness and starvation afterwards.— We are all at work boiling soup and doing what we can flu• the poor starved things.— They conic over the hill twenty at a time, and receive a blanket, sheet, 4 lbs. of bread, 2 oz. of tea and four yards of flannel. The bell is tolling constantly - , and five or six children are brought over here in a cart to be buried daily. The village altogether is like a thing you dream ot. The mothers themselves look like hungry wolves, without a feeling left for their (lead children. I ha% e only seen one woman crying, un til I said a kind word, such as "the summer is coming, please God," and they sob as if they would go into hysterics from weakness. In one den I visited, flare were six children lying before the fireplace, and I asked the woman if they were hungry. 'No,' she said 'thank God they are not so hungry as • I am fur I have nothing to give them.. could eat the table board." I can only give them my work and strength, and the dead children are the best ot poor things. I found a true hearted farmer's wife, who lends me her kitchen and boils the soup for them. These poor children die in the dark, and the moth ers have to watch thr daylight to see them, ti not having a candle in the house. It is sad work, and I feel ashamed of myself every night when I come home and set down to a good tea. I Myself have spent three days in Beer, and I think the misery beats anything I ever beheld. Distinguished Shoemakers. Linnreus the founder of the science of j botany, was apprenticed to a ; shoe making in Sweden ; but afterwards, ta ken notice of in consequence of his ability, was sent to college. David Parens, the elder, who was afterwards a celebrated professor of theology at Hiedelberg, was at one time apprenticed. to a shoemaker. J. Prendell, who died some time since at Gray's Buildings, London, and who was a profound and scientific scholar, pursued through life the trade of a shoemaker. Hans Sachs, one of the German poets, was the son of a tailor, and afterwards served an ap prenticeship to a shoemaker. Benedict Baddonin, one of the most learned men of the sixteenth century, was a shoema ker, as was likewise his lather. He wrote a treatise on the shoemaking of the ancients, which he traced up to the titne of Adarn himself. To these may be added Holcroft, and Gifford, for so many years editor of the Quarterly Re view; and Bloomfield, the author of "The Farmer's Boy," and other poems —all of whom were shoemakers.. John Brand, the Secretary of the Antiquarian Society of London, and author of sever al learned works, was originally a shoe maker, but fortunately found means to complete his studies at Oxford Univers ity. Indolence. Labor is law and whoever repulses it as a bore must , have it as a punishment. You do not wish to be a laborer, and you will be a slave ; toil only lets you loose on one side to seize you again on the other; you do not wish to be its friend and you will be its negro ; you do not care for the honest fatigue of men, and you are about to know the sweat of the damned ; while others sin g you will groan. Your desire is to do nothing ? Well, you will not have a week, a day, an hour without feeling crushed. What is a feather for other's, will be a rock for you. Life will become a monster around you, and coming, going, breathing will be so many terri ble tasks for you. What precipices are sloth and pleasure ; to do nothing is a melancholy resolution. To live in indolence on the social substance, to be useless, this leads straight to the bot tom of misery. Wo to the man who wishes to be a parasite for he will be a vermin. To become a rogue is incon venient, and it is not nearly so hard to be an honest and industrious man.— Tctor Hugo. tcirA person having occasion to visit an old couple at Durham, of extremely penurious habits, found them holding counsel together upon a matter which apparently weighed heavily on the minds of both ; and thinking it was re specting the probable dissolntlon of the wife, who was lying dangerously ill, proceeded to offer them all the consola tion in his power; but was cut short by being informed that that was not exactly the subject they were dlscuss ing, but one which afflicted them still more deeply, the cost of her funeral ; and, to his astonishment, they contin ued their ghastly calculations 'until -every item in the catalogue, from cofi fin to nightcap, had been gone through, With much grumbling at the rapacity of "the undertakers," when the bright thought suddenly struck- the husband, 'and he exolaiAned, " Well, Janet, lass, -ye may not die after all, ye ken."-- "'Deed ; suadl hope got, Robert," re-. ptpc.o4sl boopmate, iu a low feeble Stee l 64 filr lAm, ' N its sure that we eau iirorifi;t." NEW SERIES.---VOL 5,1 A .40. Senator Grimes has in a bill in the United States Senate , ' t ing $20,000 to be equally divided in im proving two distinct routes to Idaho.— One is from Fort Abercrombie by Way of Fort "Benton, and the other is from Niobrarah, on the Missouri 4w, through the valley of the Niobramb and Gallatin, in Idaho. It appears that the communication between the territory of Idaho and the States is not only rarapr ed difficult by reason of the bad ter of the roads now traveled, hitt 'Witt they are so infested by Indians, and par ties worse than Indians, that there ism security for the transit of treasure or for the emigrants. There are now several ways of reach ing Idaho, and in prospect of the large emigration to that region the coming spring and summer, the following table of distances by different routes is inter esting From Chica g o to Omaha, From Omaha to Fort Kearney, From Leavenworth City to Fort Kearney, From Fort Kenrney to South Pass, via North Platte, 563 From South Pass, via Lander Road to Bannock City, From South Pass to Bannock City, via Fort Bridger, 500 From Salt Lake City to Bannock City, 286 From St. Paul to Bannock City, Fort Abercrombie and the North ern route, 1120 From St. Louis to Fort Benton, which is the head of navigation on the Missouri River, 3270 From Fort Benton to the mines From Fort Benton to Fort Ws*. walla, Oregon, A gentleman who was recently Lir& ted in the bonds of matrimony to the rovely daughter of one of our most refi .peeted citizens, received just befotothe ceremony a gift of a $lOO bill from his papa-in-law, as a trifle of "pin- norm'" for his wife. Ile slipped the bill' under - his glove, where he had already placed $5 intended for the officiating elergyidan. In the delerious excitement of the hour, he pressed into the hand the wrong bill, and as the Dever looked at the money on such eceasinns, neither of them discovered the IniStake till some hours afterward. What was the surprise of the bride when her hus band handed her ass bill with the re mark that it was a "little pin -money" from her father. "I should think tt was a little," said the lady; and then the mistake came oat. Neither bride or groom would of comae be an diaeour teous as to think of claiming retititioaw' for such an error, at such a time, and the clergyman was overpowered with the liberality of "young—" The la dy told the "funny incident" ton friend or two, however, and the clergyman understands it now.--Miarge Jenrnal. " How easy it is to be neat and ekan ! How easy to arrange the rooms in graceful propriety ! HoW easy to in vest our houses with truest elegance ! Elegance resides not with the upholster er or the draper—it ia not put up with hangings and curtains—it is not in the mosaics, carpetings, the rosenteod, the mahogany, the candelabra, er the mar ble ornaments ; it exists in the spirit pie siding over the chambers of the dw.ol - Contentment must al ways be most graceful; it sheds a serenity over the scene of its abode ; it transforms a *mite into a garden. The house lightened by these intimations of a nobler and brighter life may be wanting in inn& which the discontented desire, bat to its inhabitants it will be a palace, um outvying the Oriental in brilliancy and glory. HOW TO FOLD A LADY'S DREiS.- Take the exact quarters of the from the bottom of the skirt to the sleeves, double them together with the bosom out ; then on a bed lay the skiii perfectly smooth, and begin at the bot tom. to told it up, just the width of the trunk or drawer. The waist and sleeves will fold nicely together, and must be laid outside folds of the skirt. Then double over the ends, to fit the. length of the trunk or valise, and it may be car ried very smoothly without taking much room. REVOLUTIONARY' PENSIONERS.---Neasty every Revolutionary star has set. It appears from a letter of the Commis sioner of Pensions that only twelve of the soldiers of the Revolution are now living, whose ages range from 94 to 105 years, and whose pensions only amount to from $24 to $96 per annum. aka - The women of Holland and-Bel gium, who make their linen so henati fully white, use borax instead of soda, as a washing preparation, in the pstri portion of a large handful of Wan power to about ten gallons of water., Its effect is to soften the Imi - dolt wetqr, Sir "What's whisky htengintiwide 4 1 0 4 4, al lose dealer in the astmenams. "winging tuna to the gelitme,, notlienib, 4141,0hildren to WlU'Akr *WM The Routes to Idaho. A Lucky Minister. The Home of Taste. Miles. 400 195 EM 400 88Q