El (.") L,(1) ; vc„,t),,), tlr.f i L . 12 , 4,7 ) J - Ler, A, k J ) 3 leehtafamilp journal-- la lb . II I I • I THE WAYNESBURG MESSENGER PUBLISHED BY R. W. JONES AND )AS. S. JENNINGS. Waynesburg, Greene County, Pa. irrOFFICE NEARLY OPPOSITE THE PUBIiIC SQUARE... Ca tt :2 ILt isrs,enterion.-52.00 in advance ; 51.25 at the ex piratioe of six months; 62.50 after the expiration of the year. • A ['VFW, I 'I"TIEN TII inserted at 1.50 per square for three insertions, and 00 eta. a square fur each addilich ai insertion; (ten lines ta teas C.411110.Ctl a square.) irr A liheral deduction made to yearly advertisers. PRINTING, of all kinds, executed in the best Ht le. and ott reasonable terms, at the "Messenger' .Job Os'ce. rdnputsbur g Ilusincss tarts. ATTORNEYS. ezn. L. wyt.y• J. A. 3. SUCHANAN. WYLY & BITCHANAN, Attorneys & Counsellors at Law, • WA YNES B URG, PA. r! itt meth*. in the Courts of Greene and adjoining cnunties. Collections and other legal tusiness will re ceive prompt attention. Office in the old Bank Building. .lan. t£l, •• A• PCRM•N PURBIABT & RITCHIE. A TTCANEYS AND COUNSELLOR: 3 AT LAW • Waynesburg, Pa. .T.3rOrrirr.—Allain Street, one door eat of the old 13 ink Building. Jusiness in Greene, Washington, and Fay rue Gon»ties, entrusted to thcui, will temlive grump attention. N. B —Particular attention will he given to the col lection of Pensions. Bounty Money. Back Pay, and other claims against the Government.. Sept. 11, 1861—Iv. R. A. WCONNELL. J. J. HUFFMAN. MI:CONNELL dit ZEVITDITAN, lITTORNEYS .4ND COUNSELLORS AT LAW Waynesburg, Pa. 133 - Office in the “Wright 11., se," East Door. Collections, &c.. will receive prompt attention. Waynesburg, April 23, 1862-Iy. DAVID CR4 lIVFORD, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office lo the Court House. Will attend promptly to all business entrusted to his care. Waynesburg., Pa.,July 30, 1663.—1 y. 121ZIED BLACK & PHELAN, ATTORNEYS AD COUSELLORS AT LAW Office in the N Court Hou N se, Waynetiturg. Sept. 11,1661-Iv. SOLDIERS' WAR CLAIMS! D• R. P. HUSS, ATTORNEY AT YAW, W•YNESBCRG, PENNA., HAS received from the War Ut partment at Wash-' in g toncity. D. C., official copies of the several laws passed by Congress, and all the necessary Forms and Instructions for the prosecution and collection of PENSIONS, BOUNTY, BACK PAY, due dis charged and disabled soldiers, their widows, orphan ehihiren, widowed mothers, fathers, swirls and broth. ers, which business, [upon due noticel will be attend edto promptly and accurately if entrusted to 'tin care. Office, No. 2, Campbells Row.—April 8, 1863. PICYSICIALNS Dr. T. W. Ross, 3P.l3.3rmilcsiesai. e3o 031.1.1"W•3 033., IVaynesburg, Greene Go., Pa. n i FFIOE AND RESIDENCE ON MAIN STREET, ki cam, and nearly opposite the Wright house. . Way neebu.g. Sept. 23, 1863,_ DR. A• G. CROSS WOULD very respectfully tender 'nig services as a PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, to the people or Waynesburg and vicinity. He hopes by a due appre ciation of human life and health, and strict attention to business, to merit a share of public patronage. Waynesburg. January 8, 1862. ATERCH.A.NTS AVM. A. PORTER, Whomsale and Retail Peale! in Foreign and Domes ( Pry Goods, Groceries, Notions, &c., Main street. Sept. 11. 1101 —ly. MINOR• & CO., Ivanters in Foreign and Domestic Dry Gonda, Oro Queensware, Hardware and Notions, opposite the Green Hodge. Main street. Sept. 11, BOOT AND SHOE DEALERS J. D. COS(..,RAY, Boot and Shoe maker, Main street, nearly opposite She "Farmer's and Drover's Bank." Every style of Boots and Shoes constantly on hand or made to order. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. GROCERIES & VARIETIES: JOHN MUNNELL, Dealer in Groceries and Confectionaries, and Variety Goody Of-nerdlly, Wilson's Ntw Building, Main street. Sept •I 1. 1861-Iy. WATCHES AND JEWELRY S. M. BAILY, Main street, opposite the Wright House keeps always on hand a large and elegant assortment of Watches and Jewelry. Irr Repairing of Clocks, Watches and Jewelry wil receive prompt attention. (Der. LS, 18611ly BOOKS , &c. LEWIS DAY, • Dealer in School and Miseethmeous (Books, Station ery, Ink, Magazines and Papers.. One door east'et Porter's store. n Street. Sept 11. Mit y ,SADDLES AND HARNESS. SAMUEL M'ALLISTER, Belittle, Harness and Trunk Maker. old Bank Build ni, M ainstreet. dept. 11, 1e61.-4... BANK. FAMERS' & DROVERS' BANK, Waynesburg, Pa. C. A. BLACK, Preset. .1. LA Z EAR, Cashier DISCOUNT DAT. WEDNESDAY Sent. 11. 1861-Iv. gitte lancing. DARN MAIL) HACK RUNNING REGULARLY BETV'EEN BYIESIE All lIICES' . THE undersigned respectfhlly informs the generous Public, that having the contract for the carrying otthe Mali betweett the above polite, lie bee placed upon the rnnte two nevrataci.COMMOlHOUll Hacks for the ac commodation of the traveling • t'opunuoite, One wil amiss the Mises Ildwie, Vrayiinggerg. every „ ern , 01 1 1.14qatidaggtft.**014 -111 eels*. vat win strive t taw* -Moir Wilma' Iswathe to . Pittsburgh, She same Woe and *Mai lit W.7ftanirtat s Pelp m ain# puled (44 Ike iwseao_6o. .11 , 1 era. nsomtypou -prieter. aWil, lilli, Pioullautougi. The mean diameter of our globe is exactly 7,938,889 miles; and were it solid throughout, its weight would be equal to five times that of a body of similar dimensions. But it cannot be solid throughout, though of the nature of its-interior we are of course not pos itive. Some philosophers have main tained that its interior is tilled with light only, but the more prevalent and ra tional opinion is that it is filled with fire—that the whole heart of the earth is one vast seething caldron. The rea sons for this are the rapid increase in the temperature of the earth, as we pen etrate into its bowels, and the existence of volcanoes and hot-springs upon its surfoce. Earthquakes, too, those dreadfid visitations that convulse the earth, and that not unfrequently mark large districts with ravage and destruc tion, attest the presence of internal fires. The rate of increment in the earth's temperature is one degree of Fahren heit's thermometer for every sixty feet, and at this rate we should find at the depth of one hundred miles a degree, of heat sufficient to keep in fusion any of the rocks to be found on the sin-thee, hence, the solid crust of the earth can not be more than sixty or eighty miles in thickness—a mere, brittle shell. Volcanoes are only vents or-chimneys to this great roaring furnace over which we every day walk so carelessly Through them escape those surcharged elements, which, if they had no means of exit, must explode our beautifid world into a million atoms, and leave a void in the grand system of creation. J G. P.ITCII/6 The following is a partial record of large fires which have occurred during July and which in most cases are be lieved to be of incendiary origin : July 1, Louisville, hospital stores, $1.000,500 ; July 1, Philadelphia, fac tory, $30,000 ; July 4, New York, pi ano factory, $160,000; July 4, Saratoga water cure establishment, $150,000 , July 5, Chicago, cooperage, $25,000 : July 7, Chicago, fur store, $70,000 ; July 8. Vassalboro, Me., mills, $30,000; July 8, Salmon Falls, Vt., " $300,000; July 11, New York, Steamer John Por ter, $500,00 ; July 13, Waterford, Me., railroad depot, $70,000 ; July 15, St. Louis, six steamers, $500,000 ; Juy 16, Brooklyn, N. Y., warehouses, $900,000; July 17, Lowell, Mass., tanneries, $l3O- 000; Juy 20, Farmington, Conn., store and barns, 50,000 ; July 22, Chicago, plaining mill, $60,000. July 22, Spring field, Mass., stores, $lOO,OOO ; July 22, Philadelphia, wagon fitctory, $300,000; July 22, Defiance, Ohio, woolen factory $lOO,OOO ; July 23. Lockport, N Y., machine shop, $12,000: July 24, Jamai ca, L. 1., hotel, crops, woods, &c., 830,- 000 ; July 25, Syracuse, Cranger block, $50,000. Total, $4,566,000. =I (From the Washington Inteiligeneerd A Curious Case of Burying Alive. A slight mistake was made day be fore yesterday iu one of the hospitals at City Point, which caused a flutter among the patients. A wounded sol dier was pronounced dead by a Sur geon, and the Ward Master caused him to be put in his coffin for burial. The brethren of the Christian Com mission attended the 'remains to the grave, opened the coffin, and were p'o ceeding with the burial service when the soldier's hand was observed to move, On closer examination it was discovered that life was not extinct.— The fatigue party detailed to bury the poor fellow refused to "let up on him," saying that they had orders to bury him and must do it. The humane gentleman of the Com mission intimated that they "would make a corpse of him" who should at tempt to bury the mat. before they were satisfied he ♦vas dead, and he was car ried back to the hospital. The Surgeon who ordered the burial was called for, who still contended that the man was dead, and the movement of the fingers was a muscular contraction sometimes observed in, defunct bodies. Other Surgeons, however, discovered pulsation, and the man lived till the next niJrning, when he was buried. Our iut:x•m:int says the case is to be report ed to the proper officers. A little girl residing near a pond in Massachusetts has succeeded in taming some of the fish, by throwing crumbs of bread, crackers, &c., into the water.— The species called perch seem to be the most tractable and docile. One of them often takes the end of her finger in his mouth, while another will glide gently into her hand and turn on one aide, and so remain, apparently reposing, till raised quite to the surface. The little girl walks out on a plank, sustain ed a few inches above the water, and before she reaches the end of the plank, the fish may be seen darting rapidly towards their feeding ground. The larger ones, especially, are disposed to drive off the smaller ones, but she keeps Order among them.by means of a stick with a sewing needle attached to _ the end of it, and when one picks a quarrel he gets a stab, and is off at once.; universal sentiment it "Stop Ais war if it is tor emancipation oWy." About the Earth. Carnival of Fire. Taming Fish. thoteb . to Volitio, /gritulturt, Yittrature, foreign, Domestic anb . Oeneral WAYNESBURG, GREENE COUNTY, M I WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1864. The Way to Eminence. That which other folks can do, Why, with patience, may not you ? Long i.go a little boy was entered at Har row school. He was put into a class beyond his years, and where all the scholars had the advantage of previous instruction, denied to him. His toaster chided him for his dullness, and all his efforts then could not raise him from the lowest place on the form. But, nothing daunted, he procured the grammars and other elementary books which his class fellows had gone through in previous terms He devoted the hours of play, and not a few of the hours of sleep, to the mastering of those ; till, in a few weeks, he gradually be gan to rise, and it was not long fill he shot fur ahead of all Lis companions, and became not only leader of the division, but the pride of Harrow. Yon may see the statue of that bay, whose career began with this fit of eu ergetic application, in St. Paul's cathedral ; for he lived to be the greatest oriental schol ar of modern Europe—it was Sir William Jones. When young scholars see the lofty pinna cle of attainment on which that name is now reposing, they feel as if it had been created there, rather than had travelled thither. No such thing. The most illustrious in the an nals of philosophy once knew no more than the most illiterate now do. And how (lid he arrive at his peerless dignity ? By dint of diligence ; by downright painstaking.— [Life in earnest. • Now is the Time to Sow Turnip Seed. An agricultural paper says : Let not farmers and gardeners fail to sow abun dant turnip seed this year, where other crops have failed on account of the drought, or the first crop has been se cured. Dig up the ground if it be ever so small a place, and plant turnip seed. There is sure to be a pressing demand for all kinds of vegetables the coming winter, and a great many can raise a profitable crop of turnips without ever knowing that they cost anything.— Turnips are good both foi the table and stock—for the former purpose very pleasantly taking the place of potatoes with many ; and if a man should by any chance raise more than he wants for his own use, we will warrant him a good price, and cash in hand, for all he wants to sell. According to the old saying, "25th of July, sow your turnips, wet or dry" But the seed can be profitably sown as late as the first week in August ; and if we have no rain be fore, it would probably be better to wait, as no seed could he expected to start with the ground parched as at present. But when there comes a shower, don't forget the turnips. ger English officers in India love to hunt the tiger and the tiger reciproca ting sometimes loves to hunt them.— The Bombay Times relates that Captains Wilmot and Dawson had been hunting in the lio. odic hills and had killed nine tigers They were on the point of re linquishing further sport when another tiger was seared up and wounded. Di rected by traces of blood and the roar ing of the brute, the two officers ap proach his lair on a patch of jungle on a hillside when from a height the tiger sprang upon them, knocked both over, and seizing Wilmot carried him off towards his i etreat, trbating the unfortu nate man as a cat does a rat. He called upon Dawson to fire, which he finally did and killed the animal, but Wilmot was fatally wounded and died that night Friendship Between Pickets. A unions rebel visitor came stealthi ly into our lines at Petersburg one night during last week. He was invited to remain and partake of a bout' . itul re past—coffee, pork, and "hard tack."— Consent soon followed the request. While refreshing his inner man, our guards were regaled with many a story, diverted with many quiet drolleries and quaint sayings. There is something strange in these meetings—where those who on the day before cursed each other in the heat of battle, and before early dawn, at the sound of the bugle horn, may slay each other when full of bread eaten sociably together. This man came by night, not to gain infor mation, but to eat his supper. During the day our pickets had been twitting them with what they had for supper. Soft bread, sour knout, and potatoes had just been issued. The rebels would not believe this to be a 'true bill.' Hence this man's visit. No one in imperfect health could relish food with so much gusto. He had brought with hint that excellent sauce—of late years grown fashionable—hunger. At ter staying his inordinate appetite with a marching ration, he took his depart ure. For Every Body. Let the business of every body alone and attend to your own. Don't buy what you don't want. Use every hour to advantage, and study to make leisure hours useful. Think twice before you spend a shill ing, and remember that you will have another to make for it. Find recreation in looking after your business, so that it will not be neglected in looking after recreation. Buy low, sell fair and take care of the profits. Look over your books regularly and it you find an error.trace it out. Should a stroke of misfortune come upon you in trade retrench, work hard, but never fly the track. COnfi•Ont diflic ties With unflinching orsever,nce; a they will die ' at lAst ; thoukh yeti she' 44 in the struggle; you will be bon • but shrink filial the task and you will be despised. Restless Nights. &Me , persons "toss and tumble" half the night, and get up in the mornig, weary, unretreshed, and tlspirited, wholly unfit either in body or mind for the duties of the day; they are not only incapaciatted for business, but are often rendered so ungracious in their manners, so irritable and fretful, as to spread a gloom over the whole household. To be able to go to bed and be in a sound. delicious sleep, an unconsious delicious ness in five minutes, but enjoyed in its remembrance, is a great happiness, an incalculable blessing, and one for which the most sincere and affectionate thanks should habitually go up to that benefi cient Providence which veuchsales the same through the instrumentalities of a wise and self-denying attention to the laws of our being Restless nights as to persons in ap parent good health arise hielly from— first, an overloaded stomach ; sec o nd, from worldly rare; third, tivm want of muscular activities proportioned to the needs of the system. Few will have restless nights vi ho take dinner at mid day, and nothing after that except a piece of cold bread and butter and a cup or two of some hot drink ; anything beyond that, as cake, pie, chipped beef, dough nuts, preserves, .and the like, only tempt nature to eat when there is really no cause for it, thus engendering dys pepsia and all its train of evils. Worldly care. For those who can not sleep from the unsatisfactory condi tion of their afThirs; who feel as if they were going behindhand ; or that they are about to encounter great losses, whether from thcir own remissness, the perfidy of friends, or unavoidable cir cumstances, we have a deep and sin cere sympathy. To such we say, live hopeful for better days ahead, and mean while strive dilligently, presistently, and with a brave heart to that end. But the more common cause of rest less nights is, that exercise has not been taken to, make the body tired enough:to demand sleep. Few will fail to sleep soundly •if the whole of daylight, or as much thereof as will pro duce moderate fatigue, is spent in steady work in the open air, or on horse back, or on foot. Many spoil all their sleep by attempting to force more on nature than she requires. Few per sons will fail to sleep s,,undly, while they do sleep, if they avoid sleeping in the daytime, will go to bed at a regular hour, and heroically resolve to get up the moment they wake, whether it is two, four, or six o'clock in the morning. In less than a week each one will find how much sleep his system requires ; thereafter give it that, and no more.— Ban lowvad of ficaith. Interesting to Farmers. Under an order from the office of In ternal Revenue, the income of a farmer must be estimated by including the total value of his crop harvested, and the profit realized upon a sale of stock. The 117th section of the act of June 30, 1864, re quires such income to be estimated by including the increased value of live stock, whether sold or on hand, and the amount of sugar, wool, butter, cheese, pork, beef, mutton, and other meats, hay and grain or other vegetables, or other productions of the estate of the farmer sold during the past year for which return is made, not including any part thereof unsold or on hand at the close of the year. To ascertain the in come resulting from a farm under this provision, it will be necessary to estimate the value of the live stock on hand at the beginning of the year, and to add thereto the amount paid for animals which are held alive at the close of the year. The sum thus obtained will be deducted from the amount obtained by adding the esti mated value of the live stock held at the close of the year to the amount received for animals sold during the year, the amount received for meats and vegeta bles, the productions of the farm sold during the year, or consumed by the farmer or his family, or consumed by animals kept for purposes of pleasure. The difference thus obtained will be charged as income, and will be subject to the proper deductions for the cost of carrying on the farm. No deduction can, however, be allowed for the cost of hay or grain produced upon the farm.— In other respects, the, same rules will be observed in estimating the income of a farmer as that of other persons. Four Children Smothered in a Chest. A terrible realization of the tale of Ginevra,. which R , gers has immortali zed in verse, was discovered in the town ship of Newburg yesterday. On Wed nesday afternoon last a man named Schoger, living near the Buckeye House (better known as Edward's Tavern,) on Kinsman street road, left the house with his wife to go into the field to work.— Their four children, aged from two to ten years, remained at. home. On re turning to the house, the parents sought in yaM for their children., Search was made around the premisjs, over the farm and throagh the woods, the whole neighborhood turning out to join in it, but without success. Yesterday morn ing, however, their own house was searched; and in it, in an old German chest, the ehildren were found, smother ed to death, their faces. black from fatrG_ cation. •In their ,play,the children had got,into the chest, 4,* t h e lid f a lli ng, and the spring etching, had bee im prisoned in * itv . ing tem. A Sad Story. Not many months ago, says the At lanta correspondent of the Mobile Reg ister, there arrives at a C , /nfederate port, upon one of the most notable of our blockade runners, a very unassuming woman—scarce such, indeed, for she was hardly out of her teens—of an extremely handsome person. She had come to Nassau from Paris, and sailed thence for the South. She brought with her an abundant wardrobe, and sufficiency - of means to last her two or three years at the present rates of living. Her object in visiting this country was to discover the fate of an only brother, a colonel in our service, who had placed her at Gen eva at school when the warbegan. She had not heard from him during six months, became anxious, and finally set out on her long and perilous journey Her brother had be.:ll killed at (-Zettys burg, and she found herself alone and a stranger in her native laud. She went first to Augusta, then to Mobile ; here she lost a trunk containing all her gold. At this critical juncture of affair s she met a very handsome field officer—fell in love—engaged first in a flirtation, then in an amour—and accompanied him as far as Atlanta on his way to the front. Ile fell at Chickamauga. What her life became you can guess. She died last week, and was tumbled into the ground in the public cemetery. There's a story for you—weep over it: "Somebody's Boy." Alt. yes! the veriest wreck that skulks along the by-paths of society once be longed to Somebodx ; and human na ture, selfish though it be, is too much bound into one finnily, and interwoven into a net-work of common sympathies and feeliags, not to thrill under this con sideration, if tlathfully pondered and ap plied. "The good man-," says an ele gant preacher, "does not. ask who the sufferer is, what is his name, or religion; he sees that he is a man, he feels that he is a neighbor, and he lifts him upon his knee, and dresses his wound, and re lieves his wants ; and the Savior says to us, every one, 'Go thou and do likewise.' I love the spirit of the good woman who was running to help some poor boy that was flung well-nigh lifeless upon the road, and her neighbors said, 'Why do you run thus? he is not your boy.' `No,' she said, 'but he is somebody's boy.' That is as it should be. 'One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.' And this principle," adds the writer, "should be kept in view pre eminently with the young." ekW - A young lady named White, of Du Page, Illinois, met an untimely end recently under the following circumstan ces: In the absence of all the titmily from home, except a soldier who was sick hi bed, Miss White wishing to make the coal fire burn more rapidly, took the Kerosene can, which contain ed about one gallon .of oil, and com menced pouring it on the glowing coals. An explosion immediately took place. The fire entered the can, bursting it open at every seam and making a re port that was heard at a great distance. The unfortunate girl was at once wrapt in a sheet of liquid fire. Inhaling the surrounding flame at every breath, and screaming most frightfully she ran for help. The sick soldier grasping the bed clothes, followed her to the garden and attempted to smother the devouring flames, but before they could be sub dued the work of death was done. She expired after about five hours of the most intense suffering. "TILL THE WHEELS RUST OFF."—One of the most careful railroad conductors that ever took a train over the Portland, Saco and Portsmoi.th Railroad, Wm. Aikerman, was inquired of by an impa tient passenger, while the train was holding up at a ttirn-out, how long he intended to wait there. A passing train was over due, and the passengers were in a hurry to get on, as all passengers are. "I shall wait," said Aikerman, "unless the missing train arrives, or I am directed by the proper authorities to go on, until the wheels rust of" These words should be written in gold for the guidance of ev, ry conductor. They tell the whole story in a nutshell. How many lives would have been saved that have been cruelly crushed out by rail road disasters, if the rule of this moJel conductor had been implicity obeyed ? or' Lady Wortly Montague, the fa mous wit and beauty, made the most sarcastic observation that was ever pub lished about her own sex. "It goes far," said my lady, "to reconcilp me to being a woman, when I reflect that I am thus in no danger of ever marrying one 1" What if a man load said that ? But see how another lady, the unhappy Countess'of Landstelt, ',averted the sen timent and turned the satire into the most delicate and generous of compli ments. "I never behold. a beautiful woman," said Lola Montez in one of her lectures, "but I fall in love with her myself; and wish I were a man that I might marry hee!" iThere are 580 tenement houses in New York, which contain by actual count, 10,935 families, or about 85 per sons to each ; 193 others, which con tain 11 r persons each; 71 others, which contain 140 each, ,and finally, 29—these mu*be most pro fi table—which have a totaopulation ofno less than 5.449 souls, or 187 to each house. EX tTIVR M.t sAis, , - WaAtiugt. txt„ln3y 1.% '64. j I himself Rut when they came out, be TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN : remained in—deliberately went out into Any propoAtlon which embraces the re- deep water, and was drowned. storation ot peace, the 4 intetwity d the.el,ole ! . 1 ----1....."!•-• tHiENI, AND THE ABANDONMENT OF 1 SLAVERY, AND WHICH COMES BY AND WITII AN AUTHORITY THAT CAN CONTROL TILE ARMIES NOW AT WAR AGAINST THE UNITED STATES, WILI: BE RECEIVED AND CONSIDERED BY 1 The Scholar's Influence. THE _EXECUTIVE GOVERNMENT OF "Good morning, Miss Effie ;can I speak THE UNITED STATES, and will be met wen you Es moment alone ?" stud a :ttle by liberal terms en substantial and col- , to net teacher, as soon as she entered *le lateral points, and the bearer or bearers thereof shall have safe conduct both ways. room. She was one of those rare beings. .113RAILIM LINCOLN. whose manners and appearance win instart love and confidence. Always happy herself, she helped largely in making others, by the mere presence of her cheerful face. Bat this morning her teacher saw a troubled look shading the sunshine, and at once yielded the desired privacy. "Olt ! Miss Effie, what shall Ido ? I said what was not true yesterday. I did break the rules. Won't you please give me a bad mark ? And can you forgive me ? Can you trust me any more ?" "My dear child," replied her teacher ; am sorry you have uttered a falsehood, bat re; ice in the moral courage which enables yon to make this noble confession. But how A Soldier in Luck--A Romantic Story ' --A Private falls Heir to a Fortune. The Detroit Free Press tells the fol lowing story : "At the first battle of Bull Hun there was a ,soldier by the name of Wilson, who, like many others on that memora ble occasion, straggled sway from his command. After walking or rather running for several hours he became, very much fatigued, and after taking good precaution that these were no rebels either within sound or sight, he lay down to sleep by the side of a fence and slept sweetly and soundly during ' the night. Late in the morning when the sun was near mid-noon, he awoke to find himself' in a strange land, and perhaps among the bitterest enemies of the country But the demand of hug get' so! , ri silenced the voice of prudence and caution. Seeing a maasion on a hill in the distance, surrounded by parks and meadows, orchards and evergreens, artificial fountains and natural streams of clear running water, in- fact, every thing to show that it was one of the first class old Virpinia plantations, the home of, courtly elegance, our soldier, tired with a Weary step and a fainting, famishing heart, knocked at the door of the mansion. He was cordially received, for the old Virginia planter was faithful among the faithful fc w. He remained long enough to to recruit his wasted ener gies and get information as to the most direct route to Washington. But the name of the young soldier was 'not for gotten by the planter, nor his manly bearing and genial temperament: The soldier re-enlisted in another regiment, and at the second battle of Bull Run was severely though not dangerously wounded. He was' taken to the hospi tal at Washington. his old Virginia friend learned of his illness. He sent to the hospital and obtained an order for permission to take him to his own home. lie was removed, when through the kindness of the planter and the at tention of his daughter the young man gradually recovered. A tender regard spung up between the young lady and the young soldier, and to cut very short, the turn the story in such cases made and provided usually takes, they were betrothed. The soldier returned to his northern home on flulough. here he learned of the sudden and severe indisposition of her who was soon to become his bride. He hastened to her side and buried her corpse. The old man before many weeks had elapsed told the young man that he intended to make him his heir, that he had no chil dren left, and no relatives, except those who were in rebellion, and that he should now share with him his estates. He at once gave him a deed to a considerable property in Chicago. The young mm a few weeks since visited that modern miracle and Babylon combined, and found that his little Chicago fortune would realize the handsome sum of $200,000, being offered $60,000 for a single block to which he had fallen heir. But this is not all in the strange and eventful story. The old man has but recently died, leaving all his fortune to this young soldier, which is now known to be over $BOO,OOO. “This 'over tale' we know will sound like fiction; but had not the facts come to us well substantiated, we should not have given them publicity." What we Suffer from. No mail suffers by bad fortune, but he who has been deceived by good. It: we grow fond of fortune's gifts, fancy that they belong to us, and are perpet ually to remain with us, Lfwe lean upon them and expect to be considered for them, we shall sink into all the bitter ness of grief; as soon as our vain and childish minds, untraught with solid pleasures, become destitute even of those which are imaginary. But it we do not suffer ourselves to be transported by prosperity, neither shall we be re duced by adversity. Oar souls will be proof against the dangers of both the - ,e states : • and, having explored our strength, we shall be sure of it ; for in the midst of felicity we shall have tried how we can hear misfortune.—[Boling broke. IW-A boy years old in Hartford, drowned himself on Monday in order to escape the cruel treatment to which he was subjected by his father. It seems that the latter had long been harsh to this boy, as to others of his family, and that the boy told .his mother that • • should drown . hiniself. lie was agai - whipped by his father very severely on Stinday morning. On Monday when he went in bathing With the oilier boys, he told them also of his intention to drown himself—but they thought light ly of this threat, and did not believe: even after his refusal to eons out when NEW SERIES.---VOL. 6, NO. 10. 1 they did, that he really meant to drown liunit4 Cult came yon to do it r "I ought not to have done so but Annie was saying something fanny, and you kii.ow I could not help but hear Lw., for she sits by my side, and then I laughed ; and before I thought, I talked too. And why I should have denied it, I cannot tell ; but I have been unhappy ever since, as you may know by my waking up last night, two or throe Macs, and every time chat tireadful story was my first thought. ! it was a sad night.” The poor child's tears were falling fast, and they gathered thickly in the teacher's dyes, as she mingled commendation with re proof. Grieved with, while she rejoiced over the trtily penitent child,. as her heart melted iu tenderness towards her, and she, understood better the fullness of God's par doning love towards sinners. But presently a new thought rose in my mind. Annie had been very rebellions and troublesome for several days. She was an almost insepara ble companion of tun gentle Ella. Might not Ella be made the means of leading her back to the right ? She determined to try. "Do you nut think," said she kindly, 'that if you had been firm in what you now see to be the right, you might have induced Annie to do right also ? "Not then, I think, Miss Effie," replied Ella ; `•but she loves me so much that If I spoke to her before hand, and proposed that both be good, lam almost sure she would. Sheleannot mean to be to naughty but she is proud, and when she begins she has to go on and she will never say she is sorry, ne mat bow badly she feels." Then as if fearing she had said Loo much against her friend,she has tily added, "You know she is very good sometimes." "Yes," replied her teacher, "and how blessed it will be to help her to be good all the time. Be assured, my child, you will be happier the more you try to help her to walk in the right war. Tile task will otttimes call for a great deal of self-control, but God will help you if you ask him. : 31i8s Elle, you may be sure I will do all I can, replied the girl, as she turned MEI No one who has never silently mourned over a loved objet, who, day by day, has shown a hard, defiant temper, can under stand how that teacher's heart was lightened by a sudden hope. A new power seemed awakened within het. as she that day per formed her accustomed duties. She felt that thg enthusiasm and earnest love of that child would not be employed in vain. Bet ter than all, she felt that the force of that child's mind was exerted by sympathy with her own. N.A. were her hopes vain. An nie's proud spirit will forget its accustomed stubbornness. She yielded to the influence of gentle fidelity, and ere long Was one of the best girls in the school. Blessed be the hand that prepares a plea sure for a child, for there is no saying when and where it may again bloom forth. Does not almost-everybody t member some kind hearted man, who showed him a kindness in the diAcet days of his childhood? The wri ter of this recollects himself, at this mo ment, a barefooted lad, standirig at the wooden fence of a poor little garden in his native village, while with longing eyes he gazed on the flowers which were blooming there quietly in the brightness of a Sabbath morning. The possessor came forth from his little cottage ; he was a wood -cutter by trade, and spent the whole week at work in the woods. He had come into theigarden to gather flowers to-stick in his coat when he went to church. He saw the boy, and breaking off the most beautiful of his carna tions—it was streaked with red and white— he gave it to him. Neither the giver nor the receiver spokeord, and with bounding steps the boy etWnne. And now hero, at a vast distance front that homeliktter so many events of so many years, the feeling of gratitude which agitated the breast of that boy expresses itselt on paper: The carsia tion has long since withered, but it nor blooms afresh.—[Douglas Jerrold. serWouldst the !calm to 'die we learn first to lire well. Aetfil*leage thy benefits by the return of other-14n efits, but never revenge injuries:—.[Co n , IiCIU3. Giving Joy to a Child.