The Waynesboro' village record. (Waynesboro', Pa.) 1871-1900, October 19, 1871, Image 1

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VOLUME 24.
_OroftssimillAarti
PHYSICIAN-AND. SURGEON,
• WAYNEBBOW, PA.
Office at "the Waynesboro'. "Corner Drug 7
Store." pane 29.—tf:
B.
Has resumed the practice of Medicine.
OFFICE-In the Walker Building—near
the Bowden House. :Night calls should be
made at his residence on Main Street, ad.
joining the Western School House: -
July 20-tf
JOHN A.,IIIirsSONG,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
- n - AVING been admited to Practice Law
■■ ~• at the aeteral Courts in Franklin Coun
ty, all business entrusted to his care will be
promptly attended to. Post Office address
Mercersburg, Pa.
• LBW We DE7BIGH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WAYNESBORO', PA,
Will give prompt and close attention to all
business entrusted to his care. Office next
.door to the Bowden House, in the Walker
113r13
.JOSEPH DOUGI-11A.S,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WAYNESBORO', PA.
Practices in the several Courts of Franklin
-and adjacent.Cuunties.
N. R.—Real Estate leased and sold, and
:Fire Insurance effected on reasonable terms.
December 10, 187 L
DENTIST,
GREENCASTLE, PA
Experienced in Dentistry, will insert you
:.sets of Teeth at prices to suit the times.
Feb. 16, 1871.
13., STRIPOKILEL J
(FORSIF,RLY OF 3./ERCENSSURO, PA.,)
FFERShis Professional services to the
citizens of Waynesboro' and vicinity
Da. STRICKLER has relinquished:an exten
sive practice at Mercersburg, where he has
been prominently engaged for a number of
years in the practice of his profession.
He has opened an Office in Waynesboro',
..at the residence of George Besore, Esq., his
Father-in-law, where he can be found at all
times when not professionally engaged.
July 2Q, 187L—tf.
• A. K BRANISHOLTS,
RESIDENT DENTIST,
•
•
WAYNESBORO',
Can be found at all times at his office where
he is prepared to insert teeth on the best.
;basis in use and at prices to suit the times.
'Teeth extracted, without pain by the use of
chloroform, eather, nitrous oxid egas or the
freezing process, in a manner surpassed by
none.
We the undersigned being acquainted - unth
A. K. Branisholts for the past year, can rec
43mineml him to the public generally to ,be
a Dentist well qualified to perform all 4:ope
rations belonging to Dentistry in the most
=skillful manner.,
Drs. J. B. AMBERSON, L N. SNIVELY,
E. A. HERRING, J. M. RIPPLE,
J. J. OELLIG, A. S. BONBRA.KE,
T. D. FRENCII
sept 29.tf]
MILMAYEBY GOODS I
TO THE LADIES!
MRS. C. L. HOLLINi3ERGER has :just
-LVireceived a full supply of new Millinery
;goods. Ladies are invited to calland examine
her stock.
lapr 20.
Z. C_MR,A_CIC3BrEaI_ h ,`
' PHOTOGRAPHER,
S. F Corner of the Diamond,
WAYNESBORO', PA.,
AS at all times a fine assortment of He
.l.lll.tures Frames and Mouldings. Call and
e specimen pictures.
June tf.
c
- - 1,77 0 ..T-J ,
- DEALER DI
lr Aryl's's AND IL* '.TR' Y
883 'WEST BALTIMORE STREET,
',BALTIMORE, 3.1 p.
ler
Watches Repaired and Warranted. 3a
Siiis - 4 - eulelry Made and Bepaired.9lßa
• July 13, 187 L-g. •
SURVEYING AND MEN,
E undersigned having had -some ten
SHE
experience as a practical Surveyor
is prepared to do all kinds .of Surveying,
laying out and dividing up lands, also all
kinds of writing usually done by .Serivemers.
Parties wishing work done can call on, or
.address the undersigned at Wa.ynesboro', Pa.
feb 2—tf] A B. STOLE.
2E3A.1213MR1
THE subscriber informs the public that he
continues the Barbering business in the
room next door to Mr. Reid's Grocery Store,
and is at all times prepared to do hair cut
ting, shaving,s hampooning etc. in the best
style. The patronage of the public is respect
fully solicited.
Aug 23 187 L W. A. PRICE.
EW ffilittlftEßYi MR 13
IIiRS. KATE (1 TOVE announces to
, % at the ladies of WaSynesbor R
o' and vicinity
that she has commenced the Millinery bus
iness in front room next door to the Hard
ware Store of S. B. Rinehart, and has open
ed out a full line of Spring and Summer
f3oods, embracing an the latest styles.
Ladies are invited to call and examine
he rgoods. May 11-tf
COIWEXT CNOCAVE
_spectacles, at
ALEX. LEEDS.
zeted
[ Written for the Village Record.]
Thoughts occassioned by attending a S. S.
Festival, held near Waynesboro, Frank
lin Co., Fa:
J.n,
D8Y431241E MUM
I shall not soon forget that day,
Perehande the thoughtless may,
Day; fraugh:t with memories sad and street,
Fled With its acts away, - •
From mountain top to valley green,
•
Bathed brightly in sunlight,
While sparkling streams and songsterri• gay,
Hailed us with wx • • e g
When we ; as strangers hastened on,
. To join the merry throng,
To celebrate a festive day,
The aged and the young, '
Beneath the shady boughs we me_ti
Upon a carpet green, •
While smiling softly trent above,
The glorious sun was seen.
The-young, the beautiful were there,
Perchance the high, the low,
The_iviae,the good, the rich arid poor,
All, roaming to an.fro,
Each heart seemed bounding light with. joy,
As laugh and jest past round,
Then seated on our carpet gfeen,
We spread our, luxuries down.
With all the dainty things of earth,
The appetite to please,
While generous friends still kindly prompt,
• —Fa.rtake-of-this,—that,-these
No pomp, no ceremony show — ,
No fashionable air,
weet-smiling-nature-all-around, ,
he puxe - in' heart-tohee
But pleasures of that joyous day,
-ike-others-will-havelled
When memory dwells on those kind hearts,
Who tears of pity shed.
For oh the gentle kind were there,
Amid that happy throng,
To drop - a tear in sorrow's cup,
To help the weak along,
And I, of those, shall often think ;
(How sweet to memory yet,)
Tho' strangers still in name and form,
I never shall forget.
Who with that mother dropped a. tear,
When from her heart was wrung,
The cry, lost, lost my darling child
A mothers little son;
Those words of sympathy and love,
The,willing feet that ran,
To seek the little wanderer up,
The thoughtless lit lamb.
And when at last, the little one,
Is guided to her arm,
Found by a . stranger, - wandering far,
In team and sad alarm.
What tears of joy and gratitude,
Fell on that mother's ear;
From stranger's lips ne'er heard before,
Again may never hear.
Accept y.e sympathetic one,
The prayer this heart would send,
Thaflheast's as:warm, sincere as thine,
Smile on thee to life's end,'
And thou unknown. one, ever feel
Within.a mother's soul, •
There blooms the flower gratitude,
For bringing to the fold,
Her little wandering boy, so dear
Found on the highway of despair,
Weeping sad alone
For mother, friends and home.
Or if like him your footsteps stray,
Beyond the pasture green,
May angels bring thee back again,
To duty's path serene,
And bring thee, to a Savior's breast,
• From sin and death away,
This, this, the tribute I would give,
This shall I humbly pray.
Met in the golden morn of day,
We parted .at its close,
Cheered by Luna's silver beams,
Speaking of sweet repose;
Fatewell bright joyous, festive day,
Farewell each loving heart.
Met once upon life's ocean vast,
Met, but alas 1 to part,
Shall we when storms of life are past,
As friends of Jesus meet, . .
To celebrate His feast of love
At our Redeemer's feet?
God grant indeed it may be thus,
. The loving kind, sincere,
Meet oft as strangers in life's path,
No more, as strangers There!
Woodsboro" Sept. 22, 1871.
gtlisttilaittons gradipg.
MOTHER AUSTIN'S PLOT.
Julius Austin was a- rielk firmer. He
owned many and fertile acres near the ci
ty of Buffalo, into which a ' lad drove;
every morning throughtmt , ffthe season,'.'
with fruit and vegetables: onthered from,
the "old Austin' place," as . the Wm was
called. Julius was g.:o=loOking enough,
and in a general way, pretty sensible,; but
he'had sonic: striking peculiarities of char
acter. He iflr4,3ed with such a critical ob
servance or"thia fashion'," that when a
broad, he might haVe been considered a
walking advertisement, had his tailor's
name only been appended to his habili
ments. And as to his hair—why, bless
you, one would think that the wind dared
not touch it, ever,so light .Every partic
ular hair always kept itself in a /tort so
sort of way, as though it had been glued
in position. Julius was young, too--cer
•
-„
NE SP.43.4*RDEVOTTI TO tITERATOIRE, - ZOCAI4 AND G ETC:
WAYNE StORIY; PIANKLIN , COUNTY, PA„ ,i'HURSDAY; Akii)BEß 19, 1871.
tainly not more than tiventr-five or sik so
that age coup not have rendered him
What his . , neighlors tivegred , he was s "a
man..,as y was. ongc
.04e day Julius entered the room where
his :mother , who was the presiding genius
of his house, sat knitti n g with 'a gloomy
relent He had
_been hoeing beans in the
garden, and his mother, from the window
where she was sitting, had noticed that
every now and then he had straightened.
himself, and with his left hand resting on
his hoe,
_hid gesticulated with his right
and made sundry motions with his head
in a manner which convicted the old lady
ily on his mind ;" so she was not at,_all
surprised when he left his work and cme
into the house. But she 'Was not quite
prepared for the annoincement.
"Mother, I shall have to get married."
"Law bless you, Julius—how you do
talkf
"It's just here ) " continued Julius, as he
twirled his hat on his left forefinger. "You
know Molly is going to set up for herself
in a month, and you are troubled so much
with the rheumatism that you won't be
able to get around tc see to things, and
=lly T ht-at=hl - =lbow. l.=
ime-one-right-at Aer-e.t.
She don't cook worth a snap since Mol
ly has been busy. over her wedding fix
ings4She hasn't brought in a meal this
fortnight that was fit-to elit— Why, ' the
stomach of a horse couldn't stand such
puddings and pies as she makes."
"Well," said Mrs. Austin, thoughtful
ly, "I s'pose all you've got to do is to say
the word. You and Bessie Barton have
-b-r
iten - keeping, - stea - dy - arnipany - nigh - about
a year,"
"Bessie Barton is no wife for me. I
would as soon think of 'marrying Sally,
there in the kitchen, as her."
-ned-her-kr!
IrsAustin-dropi. _-ner-knitting—an.
looked over her spectacles at her son in
"Why, Julius. What's the fuss ?"
- "There's - been - no great fuss, - only I told
her that if John Gillman wants to court
her now as bad as he, used to, I shan't
stand in his way. To come to the point,
mother, I want a wife who knows how to
cook and fix all sorts of victuals, and do
it up brown, too ; and I've found out
that Bessie can't get up any ordinary din
ner that anybody but a starving man
could swallow."
"And you used to be always harping
about the good dishes they, served at Hen
ry Barton's."
"Guess you haven't heard me say any
thing about.the dinner I ate there yester
day," said Julius, dryly, an 1 Mrs. Aus
tin shoved her spectacles up over her fore
head and exclaimed :
"Dear me ! Now, Julius you . don't say
"Yes—Henry would have me stay.—
Mrs. Barton was sick abed, and the hired
girl was away, so I had a chance'to find
out that the good dinners I'd had there
before weren't cooked by Miss Bessie, for
of all dinners I ever tasted,•my yesterday's
one was the cap-sheaf. The beef was burnt
black, and the pudding was soggy, and
the salad was enough to make a dog sick."
"No wonder, Julius," said Mrs. Austin,
somewhat anxiously, for. Bessie was her
particular favorite. "No wonder, I should
think, with her mother sick and needing
to be waited on, and the girl gone, and
half a dozen extra ahnds to work in the
harvest. One pair of hands can't do every
thing, nor one head think of everything
at once. I know that much."
"Nonsense, mother. It's no more work
—and I've heard more than one say so—
to cook for a dozen than one when a body
is about it. Isn't it just as easy to roast
a large peice of meat as a small one, and
to stir up a big pndoling as a little oner'
This was man's logic, and Mrs. Austin
being only a woman, of course could not
meet it ; so she made no answer.
"To tell the truth," Julius pursued with
a small measure of embarrassment, "I'm
sorry—not that I found it out, for it's a
lucky thing for me that I did—but that
is so, for in other respects Bessie is as
smart as steel." -- And Julius looked for
the moment as though to give her up caus
ed him real pain.
Mrs. Auston was not so disappointed as
to let the curiosity said to be so natural
to her sex remain long dormant.
"Well, Julius, who are you going to
marry ?" '
e "That's just what I don't know myself,
but I've hit on a plan by which I can get
the kind of wife I. want without the both
er of courting. I've vritten an advertise
ment stating my needs, desires, &c., and
this afternoon I shall take.it to the print
ing office,."
Mrs.. Austin dropped her knitting again
and ejaculated : •
"Tear me, what is the world coming to?
Here•he wants to do away with the good
old fashion of courting, and marry a per
fectstranger. What heathenish nonsense?"
gOld fogyism is passed away. . The
world is growing wiser,".said Julius, sage
ly as he foldedA closely. written sheet of
paper which he deposited...carefully in his
pocket, then tapping...the pocket signifi
cantly, he added,,.‘!.This.will get me a wife
that you will be .proud Mark my
word about that." •
While Julius had been conversing with
his mother he had likeivise been busy in
brughing his hair, adjusting his collar and
putting on his coat, and noir taking his
hat and gloves,
he went out, saddled a
horse and took his way to the city for the
express and only purpose of having his ad
vertisement inserted in one of the dailies.
Mrs. Austin watched him until he dis
appeared, with a troubled countenance,
then suddenly a shrewd smile flitted over
her face. She arose from her seat, say
ing : •
"Yes, Julius, I shall be proud of the
wife that I.am going to help you to get.
I know all about these things, and I'll
warrant Bessie was mortified near about
to deitb over that very dinner. She - knows
how to cook. I've been there te lea when
I know she made the cake 'and biscuits
dliad - thon -- light and rich as - a cor
and baked to aturn."
How much richnesS there might or
might not be in a cork,. Mrs. Austin did
not stop to consider, but telling Sally to
have the bay mare before the• buggy, the
little woman made herself ready for a
drive.
The'next day 4 - ulius drew from hiiipock
et a newpaper and shoiied his mother a
long and very explicit matrimonial ad
vertisement to which the not very poeti
, is is - 0 '4l V
. tii: l, was a : -
Suddenly Mrs, Austin was Wonderfully
taken up with her son's plan forgetting a
wife.
"She couldn't see after all," she said,
"why the advertisement wouldn't be just
e s mg.
The next day brought a half dozen let
ters in as many different styles of writ
ing in answer to the advertisement. Ju
lius proudly showed them to his mother,
who declared "that she was sure every
one of them came from somebody's men
folksi - -the-writiokl-scrmannieh - ."
She excepted, one, however, which was
certainly delicately penned and signed
"Dora Mead."
_"_You_don't_want to write_to_the_whole
posse, do you ?" said his mother. "If I
were you I'd begin with this little dainty
one." .
So Dora Mead's letter received an an
swer. More came from her and were
promptly replied to, and at the end of a
fortnight Julius felt intimately acquain
ted with a lady he had never seen. He
knew her side color if lildr_and_e,yes,_and
what_wns ofmore_satisfaction-to-hiin-,-h -
knew - that-she-could-prepare-the most
tera ding dishes fit for a prince, for by
is I esire she had written out and sent
him her methods for making various
sorts of edibles. These recipes MrsZAus
tin had indulged her son by "trying,"_ and
Julius had been enchanted by the lucious
results, and the happy fellow was sure
that thus is the easiest manner possible he
had found a woman worthy to be his
wife.
Julius was so perfectly satisfied that he
did not ask permission, nor desire to see
the future Mrs. Julius until he should
see her in her bridal -robes. The day for
the wedding was:finally set,and Julius was
a little surprised and a good deal vexed
when Dora insisted upon the wedding•
taking place at Henryjßarton's. His fam
ily, she wrote, were the nearest kin she
had in the world, and since they were per- .
fectly willing, - she should very much pre
fer being married at their house.
"I don't believe I care anything for
Bessie now," muttered Julius, as he read
DOra's Letter. "I'm determined I won't
any way since lam going to marry an
other, but---, well confound it,l. don't'
like the notion of having Bessie by when
lam married; but Dora seems so set a
bout it I suppoded I shall have to let her
have her way."
Julius was uncommonly serious and re:
ticent, as, with his mother by hie side he
drove to the house of Henry Barton on
the day appointed for his wedding. He
was going to the very house where he had
passed so many happy hours with Bessie.
Going there to be married, not to-her, as
his heart at this late hour told -him he
should be, but to another, one whom he
had never seen, about whom--he kneW
nothing save that she could name ingre
dientS; and the quantity of each, necessa
ry to make certain delectable dishes.—
But was not this enough? Julius tried
to reason with himself that it was. He
thought of Bessie's spoiled dinner, and
tried "to steal his heart more sorely against
her but in vain, he was in Bessie's home
—breathing the air she breathed, seeing
the scenes with which she was familiar.
her birds were singing in the cage over
his head, - her flowers were blooming in
the window. Everything spoke ..to him
of her. He felt- that moment that he
loved her only, and he-vas thinking of
her when his thoughts should have been
given to his bride, until some one came
for him. .The few. guesps who had been
invited; and minister, Were waiting in the
parlor, and the bride -was • -in readiness.
Mechanically Julius followed his con
ductor to the room- where . for the fait
time he was to , behold his bride. The
door was thrown open. His mother was
in the room looking mysteriously myrth-'
ful. Two or-three of the , neighbor's girls
who, from their dress; were to act a
bridesmade,- were there,.aml Bessie, also
dressed inWhite, with a few pale roses in
her hair. .
But where was the bride ?
Julius stood in awkward , sileace.;look
ing about the room.
"You wonder where she is ; .Dora
Mend I Mean," said his mother, "Come,
Bessie, don't stand there Cushing . ; so
come forward and let this dainty , . epicure
know how he has been outwitted."
Bessie looked almost ready to sink with
shame. Covering her face with her hands
she dropped into a seat.
"Lawful sakos7 said -Mrs. Austin,
persuasively ;."you. needn't, take on so,
Just because your name
and
Bessie Barton•
instead of Dora Mead, and as for you, Ju
lius, I know by your looks that you re a
nything but sorry !that there's no Dora
here to meet you; though," she whispered,
"youd' better step up and ask her, over
And Julius was only too happy to do
as his mother suggesaa;.ind when he led
his bride, blushing!`celestial rosy red"
before the aged. minister, who can tell how
many degrees happier he felt than. an
hour before he had expected that the e
vent of his marriage with Dora Mead
could make him.
A paper that takes—A sheriff's war
rant.
, „,_ AP
A murder trial of ,extraortlipary inter
• • • I • e_diare m t
Brown coda Circuit Court, at Mt. Ster
ling. The facts are - of thrilling interest.
Two years and ajialf ago two men star
ted from Texas in a• wagon, labeled in ,
large letters, "P. Dallas, Texas."
They-traVeled'tbroxigh - Aikansas and Mb ,
souri, and crossed the Mississippi river at
Hannibal.
Almost immediately afterward
imEt missing; but iiiitraveiing Compaaiion
continued on in Pike county, offering to,
and on reaching • :Pittsfield; Pike county,
registered his name .as Wm.. IL Stout- r -
The body of the man Kimball was short
ly afterward found -in a slough in Pike
county, evidently having tieen murdered. .
Nothing more was heard of the sr ppos
ed_murderer-after-leaving-the-hotel--a
Pittsfield for over two years. Li the mean
time, the counties .of Pike and Menard,
where the murdered man had relations
residing, each offered $5OO reward for the
apprehension of the murderer. Filially ?
some six months ago detectives got trace
Stout, : a_telegraph_opemtot_of
re - G -I ti - d - ilalhtiCllebraska, who answered
the description of. Kimball's companion.
They got a requisition, went to Nebras
ka, arrested him and brought hinitoPitts 7
- field, from where the case was tfy -
Change of venue to Brown county.
On the trail, the City Marshal of Han
nibal identified the prisoner as Kimball's
companion when passing though that city.
Three others recognized him as the one who
crossed the river at that point with Kim
ball, while others testified that he is the
same man who continued on with and
• iithe_horsesivith_theiwagon
• n-the-other-hank-it-was-in-evidenc:
that the_prisoner (Stout) handled the des
•atches in reference to himself as the sus-
petted murderer 'of - Kimball, and was
thus advisedjust when he might expect
to be arrested, and yet made no effort to
escape; that, while confined in the Pine
field jail, the prisoner confined with him
broke out and escaped, but he refused to
go, and went himself to the jailor and hi
formed him of the escape of his fellow,-
prisoner ; and that, when asked why he
did not escape also, replied that he . was
"innocent, and would. stay and fight it
out on that line if it took all summer..''
Four entirely trustworthy.'attd resion- .
sible men-Lone of theta 'a , member o fthe
State ;Constitutional ecaweAtioa—came
all the way from Grand Island, Nebrzia- -
ka, a distance of seven hundreimiles, at
their own expel*, to testify in behalf :of`
Stout, whom they believed - wai
cent man, and did testify" thirfor'tliree
month before the murder ofkimball;aitd .
for six months thereafter ; theprisener Was
not and could not have been absentifrom
Grand Island , three days at anyone,time.
The depositions - of font oliei - resiiients
of drand'lslends were read in testimony,
to the sale-effect; and. with the addition
al proof that the prisOner's name was on
the register in. the Grand Island Hotel,
and that he was in bed there. the very
night it is supposed Kimball Was murder
ed. Yet, strange to say; a Brown;county
jury concludesthat all this -evidence in
the behalf of the prisoner is not sufficient
grounds upon which to base a "reasona
ble doubt" of his guilt, and therefore re
turn a verdict of guilty, and send khn to
the penitentiary for 20 years. •
How They Eeaped.
. . ,
In the war of 1812 an . enterprising,
dashing Aniericaii ofFicer;' with ' a 'Sthal..l
- boat-crew on one of the upperlakes made.
what nowra-ilays , we. - -would call: a.. raid
upon a British post, on the •shore of , the
lake, and seizing some dozen English, sol
diers as prisoners and a boat-loadorappila
made with all - poisible' speed for - the . A
merican post some thirty miles distant.
A British boat's crew was quickly, Atart
ed in hot pursuit. — With'the first morn
ing light the pursuer's Were descried last
gaining on the pursued. Every - exertion
at escape wag made, but soon a musket
shot sending a spray of water near the A
. boat, told that an attempt to es
cape by main strength at the 'OBlB was
useless, and safety could'only be secured
by some: :witty, Adfivioe. • iSuddenly„. as -a
second spray of-water was, sent ,up bz i a
pasling stit,,tha voic'e of the; - *fain of
the Ameriimn beat Was•heard, "Throw o
verboard a red-mak". and a moment 'after
overlap, theJalie monk onefoithe British
,prisoners. The Yankees now plied l ull
pars' W:hile idea the iiiinistete r Were - Busily
IWitatliegtittrairid4vat
from4he Water; by which time the Yank
ms were elm ofeinsket-range. Bending
-with.redogble4, vigor to their oars, the
BrAtishurpre again in ear pursuit, and
once more did the musket-shots 'fall a
bottethaitern and sides of the pursued. -
. !Throiv..overboard another red-coat,"
cried IlmAmerican raider, and another
British soldier' splashed into the water to
deli,iy'by his rescue the Taunus.
This simple operation was'so successful
ly repeated that the raiders at last enter
ed under the protection of the guns of the
American post with half their prisoners
and all their spoil. ' • I
• A lady says she knows a • man who•
prayed night and morning, preached on
Sunday, and was a rich farmer beside. 4--
His wife milked the cows in all sorts of
weather, cut most of the wood built the
fires, churned, economized, and died of
consumption. He put a weed on his hat,
tried to resign himself to the "dispensation ,
of providence," when he ought to
,have
been tried for woman slaughter in the
first degree, and sentenced to chop wood
and mil knows in the rain all the restof
Why is this Republic like a child learn
ing to wAlk ? Because you must stand.
by "it,'et it will fall.
- A7Wes.tera:Cl4se,
A Good Doctor.
An exchange gives its readers some a
ee-how-te-ehosfra--doetor: The a
is as good for the doctor as for patient.—
'Here it is :
Avoid a metro man, for you may be
sure he will be a mean doctor, just as cer
tain, as he would be . a.mean - husband. •
Shun a doctor that you can buy to help
you .out of a scrape—a good doctor can
not bi bought.
Avoid the untidy, coarse, blundering
fellow', for the man'who is clumsy in-hitch
ing his horse, you may be sure, is-not lian-
Avoid the doctor who , flatters you and
humors your appetites. „ . , •
Avoid, the empty. blow-horn who boasts
of his numerous cases and tells yomoisee
ing forty , or fifty patients a day' whsle; he
spends two hours to, convince you of. the
fact—Put-him-down-aa-a-foo
-To be a good doctor, one must first ; be:
a man in the true sense of the word. , t , ;.; t
He shouldhesa. moral man, honed
his dealings. -
Helmut have good dense, or he cannot
be a good,dootor. .
one should trust his life in:the hands - of
an intemperate doctor. , , ,
It is a good sign if he tells you how to
keep we11...:.
q ROW titic"--
...c is a good sign if the members , of his
own family respect yon. -
It is a good sign if thachildrcn like him.
It-is a good sign -if he is neat and hail=
dy in making pilltiand ,folding powders. -
It is,a sign if he still a student, and
keeps posted in all the latest . improve
ments, known tothe profession for alleviat
ng human suffering. - •
MightHave-Been.
We heir a great deal about this phraSe;
it might have been." . Sentimental onth;
s and love-lorn lassies,- growling ; old *he
-lors-and -flpickyr- ' old-spinstem„altjain.in_
this contemptible . whine, "it . might - have
' been." But the wards have another
meaning well waph:lp)ang for, too. In
stead of mourning 'Over the irretrievable
past, and sighing, "it might haie been
I better weshould do a far:more s ensible
thing if we picked up , Our: crumbs, and
said,, "it might lave beeii worse." Tak
ing time through, there is no more cause
for sorrow thq+joy . ; all bittei complain
ing only- brings us so much the more
speedily to that place which is the i
quint
essence; of everything doleful. It snot
I very likely that any of is . will .be - called
,to endUre more than good old Job. When
earthly hrisisings were taken from him, he
dlornot.raise a , great hue and'ary, bit pa-'
Said; "The Lard gave, and the Lord
hith taken away; blessed be the name of
the Lord."
If ever we are so happy as to. get to
Heaven, then we may see that much which
'we call trouble and sorow now,, are real
lyour greatest blessings_ ;
_and our, utter
ruin might have liaenyronght imsourand
in body if circumstances had been as we
so often blindly `wished they 'Might have
been.
Then we shall see that, ofall . giad.words
of tongue or pen, the gladdest are_ . these,
"It might have been.."-
Tii Vc4ather in 'Mars:
The .planet Xars hasyecently, been the
• .object of nnnsuallylc*ful inspection by'
,English astronomers, and some curious re
salts have been reached. The oceans are
easily distinguished from the continents,
the, former generally wearing a green-hlun
tint, and the land a well-marked red hue..
Over . th ese pass clouds at times, or what.
the observers consider to be such wlieziev
er they seca whitish light gralliallY re;
placing .these ordina ry colors. 9n a-re
cent cpc4`ion,,csmparing the observatiens
of two astronomers, it was found that a .
certain well-known' sea was partially Con
aealed froni view by a great cland:mit.si
spreading over many thousand - Rinke
miles of the surface. As the hours ,i4st
the cloud seemed to be , melting , away,
whether by the sun's heat or beCansiii they
.had fallen in rains was,:eof Ontin, not de
,terndnable,, until, the sharS
,that, had , •
concealed wholly restored fa viear
,l3,eferring...these phenomena to the day' of
.the. pilinit, it - was ascertained- that the
clou,dl Caine up in the early forenoon
and, paskaff' about soon. It was seen that,.
as a rule, the moiningi and SVanings,.are
tnistYr and that , as *.itA YiarVin"4.4 l l*C e
cloudy than
• I • I 4,
THE . WAY TO Succitti.=-;-Forituie i su'or
cess, Thane are never gained" but
by piously;:determiledly, bravely strik
ing, gro - Wing,living in a thing' till , it is
fairly accomplished. In short,'yon must
carrya thbigihrough if
_you want to see
anybody - or anything. No matter if it
does cost you the pleasure, the•society, the
the thousand people giatifications of life
No matter for these.
,Stick to the thing ,
.and ctt.rry:t through. Believe you were
made for the matter, and that no one
elee'cim do it. Put fourth your whole en
ergies Be awake, electrify yourself, and
go fourth to the' taalf.,: Only once learn
to carry a thing.thraigh in all its ..atim
pleteness and - proportion, and. you, will
become a hem. - You will think -better pf ,
yourself; others will think bettor4if. you:
The world in its very heart-admires_ the
stern, determined doer. It sees
best sight, its brightest object, its richest
treasure. Drive 'tight` along, then;"' in,
whatever you undertake'. :Consider yol*-4-
self amply sufficient for the4eed. - : - ...You' i ll
.be.BUccelaul• • • : 1 .
olora(ll2..ketle, Thiegf.d.
with taking a ham by Egging a wet rag,
on a nail :mein -tiaq
scarcity of water, in
` - ,They say thatEintteritrypitvatplit
4vi'style by. bathing, if they.ttatit to; but,
that they will not Indulge in such Bet-
Urn VhP. , r.ll sti-' • '
$2,00 PER YEAR,
NUXBER V.
%Ito it and humor
ne v y'lle I'.
•
Where did Noah strike the firstenailtn )
the ark. On the head..
In the darkest hour of misfortune,
there is a hand to guide, a love to save._
When is a ship like a scarf pin? When
t is on the bosom of a heavy swell.
boy in Boston the other . day;
An ugly disease in females—the wrig
gles. , common tience' is the only reme
dy.
Albntos "nay be said to be dip nets
ota;volo,l,»iitayrJ
Saratoga girls organized an Anti-Kiss
ing,Soeiety—init,l' out of the 23 mem
' bets were fined the first week.
strains—Trying to lift
The swedes
. Two 'Aliasissippiaim recently tried; to
persuade a mule the.way he should go.—
Oneleaves &lax e famil
r "out twest" 'has r"1":\
on 'accuttnt of the if ./
..-
er. .
The femaleb
tired from bus in
rival of a "little.-
'There are sOM , limp - per verSea 'Joe
"Last ilightitdrew from off my
sleeveNklittle golden hair.".. _ Lucky , for
•you thatkyour didn't, find it before
you did.
In response for an inquiry of .. aLscientifie
publication—whence comes ileas? a wes
tern journal says it doe' .4otcare`
but would like to knoesvherein the tlitui-
dar theyigaio when yoitgo
A young man 'who was sank to .Maine
to examine the condition of a .inilVafter
a late freshet, reported •by due ctiorse of
mail as follows : "I find. a• dam. b)i , the
mill-site, but no mill by tildam-site."
A Lynchburg colored woman fell.thir- •
!.y feet out of uthird story *dew, strik
ing the head foremost.. They are
filling,up the hole. She wasn't
'An Irishman who was..receatir.ann
over by a whole train of cars . ,,gotv and
asked fad& cap thefiniCibmg, and if
oteWards said he, `eould.notly,n:sjAh a
nother * ll for - tin 4.°11/1.113:'''.:
i r kn Indiana paper assertg,affieetireftil
ly sonndingpublie opinkiii:;thafthos,elneu
-who catch- fleas, and, after depiining The
poor things of their iegs, scU-them forita
seed, must stop it, as the people, won't 4h e
humbngged any .
A MirruaL MISTAKE.—Two gentlenken
were riding-in . a stagecoach ; when one of
them .missing his handkeraluef, -rashly ac
cused, the other,of larkientelen it ;_ but
soon finding% had-the good pumpers, to
beg „pardon for the-affront, saying that it
was &mistake ; to which the other - replied
with great readiness aid kind feeling;
"Dont' . be uneasy ; it -was a , -mutual.
mistakil you took mafoi a.. thief, .and.. I
took you fora gautietm
When a negro jiiryin..lStississiplett,nt.
ottetieliberate„ cpe jurgor. Ackty4;:ainther
"Is, a. kinging„,case r "To, be sure,"
waiEhranswer "Welt" iiiiid`thErfiist
bodor, "I heered onederirlw*ii - ttay'dat
oys gose cumin' hack-here:end hatit-us
if we hang him.. Lim. golorlanging, and
have.dat boy's gore feller me No sir."
Verdict of manslaughter: T •
• - • .
1114-Lisn-AVAPou.-How beautifully
.flescriptivezoflifc's.sluirt StfuLdreum_As
the tszi.of Dr. Chal
mers- •
-- "Thetbne in . whielrfii a isirat small
-inonieribtfthis-workl'a 4 history:: -It- is a
flight of,a *am; it lila Aram; of vani
2ty..LitAkkefitpicigbnee.,9f. mptegr.;, it
is a flower which every breath of heaven
can wither iota taltjyhich
as remenaberance vanishes ; it .is a day
the silence or n darken
and 'eVershadhit In n - finv yews eurbSs;da
will be laid in- the-oold: grave; , and- the
:reen:tdrecover vs...._Ther.rhatiren.mho
Sogteidtqr ps Filllkrit uPPA our graves
they will weep e fur us a `few days ; they
*lll - filk - oT tis fora "teiv'Ais` When viur
memory shall disappear *um the- fake' of
the eartli a liid - noca tongue Shall be found
^-"• ' - • -
.TAMING. UFO THE. BRIDEGROOM.- Mr.
Spillman hadjusknaarried a second. wile.
On the.day after: their wedding M. S. re-
— "T. intend, Ifxs.-Spillmat!'fo enlarge my
.„ : . . • •
Liu - .MM. OW (lair'', =T. deac.'.- re
.Elied Mis.'Sppi_lln an,
Mr. 1: intend
to ebtaygt3 in dairy." '
"Say our dairy Mr..Spillman.!'•
"Siji-Vm43eiryviaaYour-7 2 ' screamed
rishe.,:seiairrOha• ploy.
1 -` 3I Y dairy_!_ - 1 131. "5R. 1 10.• the
!ins - bind. . - . „
" Odr datry'ritrAryl sestet edd the
, Ir.ife,:erathricisiatteaitorrord , witiraAlow
on the back of her cringing spunie:— •
.er the bed
TirpmEgirnder 'the , hat
- arra zbratalae& o tidantiothauider
csigatfdclifitgna 014altto,tvi'llitiag :for a
lull in tube Btu's", ;At iaschia wif.e saw
otnitruuslin - hitt'ira' out at the fciiie of
the bed, ilce.aSurtlalotn
irowlosikitag fos : fl esiaimed
the lady r • -
!oohing 10e our dear!'
eydi
ed and killed a
or them.