. . .. , v., . .. CV 'it .. ~ .T} -rt .0 'r . , . .. I . ati: , t$ a ilteu.. 4 :. II ".. , •~f :•:: . ' : : .......:. xt , ' 14, - • Y h .3 . ' t , . • .' 4 "0...',... ~..i, - , ..; ''' /1: ' 1... 1 e l . . . ~ . . BY . W. BLAIR. _Y_OLITKE 24. ~.titti Vottrg. 11031 E AGAII Yes, there • it is, the old, old home ! The garden trim and neat, The gambrel roof of ancient shape, The rustic wooden seat; The very smoke, it curls aloft, As it was wont to do, When years ago, with heavy heart, I bade my home adieu. The rustic stile on which I lean, The fields all around me spread; The silver streamin yonder glade, The trees above my head ; The waving corn like yellow gold, The hedges thick and green, All tell me that I am back.again In some familiar scene. villelittle - ebureh - whose - old — gra-y-spi . Stands dark against, the sky, . Now throws a shadow over the grave Where both our brothers lie; there's the tree I loved to. climb And swing among its .oug ; The tree where happy lovers,.eame, To whisper lovers' vows. 'Bow many, many weary years Have passed since that glad time With shrinking feet I've often had The hills of lila to.climb. Climb on, brave heart, and do no£ fail ; Halfway, 0, never stop, For thongliAis gloomy in the vale, There's sunlight at the top. LitlirAtilatitous Neading. - MMEtEEIBRAVE - BIEN. Pretty Barbara Ferros would not mar ry. Her mother was in consternation.— " Vhy are you so stubborn, she asked, you have plenty of lovers." 'But they do not suit rue," said Bar bara, coolly tying her curls before the mirror. "Why not ?" "I want when I marry, a man who is brave, egnal to any emergency. If I give up my liberty, I want to be . taken care of." "Silly child ! what is the matter with Barney, the blacksmith ?" "He is big, but, I never learned that he was brave." "And you never learned that he was "What is the matter with Ernest, the gunsmith." "He's as placid as goat's milk." "That is no sign he is a coward. There is little Fritz. the tanner, he is quarel some enough for you, surely." "He is no bigger than a bantum cock. It is little he could do if the house was set upon by robbers." "It's not always strength that wins a -fight, girl. It takes brains as well as brawn. Come now, Barbara, give these fellows a fair trial." Barbara turned her face before the mirror, letting down, one raven tress and hooking up another. "I will mother." said she at last. That evening Ernest, the gunsmith, knocked at the door. "You sent for me, Barbara ?" he asked, going to the girl, who stood on the hearth coquetishly warming one foot and then the other. "Yes, Ernest," she replied. "I've been thinking of what you said the oth er night, when you were-here.", "Welt, Barbara?" Ernest spoke quietly, but - his dark blue eyes flashed, and he looking at her intently. "I cant to test you." "How ?" "I want to see if you dare do - a very disagreeable thing." "What lS It ? " , "There is an old coffin up stairs. It smells of mould. They say Redmond the murderer was buried in it, but the devil came after his body and left the coffin empty at the end of a week, and it was finally taken from the tomb. It is up stairsin the room my grandfather di ed in, anti they say that grandsire does not rest easy in .his grave, for some rea son though that -I know nothing about:— Dare you make that your bed to-night?" Ernest laughed. "Is that all ! I 'will do that and sleep soundly. Why pret ty one, did you think that 3 had weak nerves ?" "Your nerves will have a good proof if you undertake it. Remember, no one sleeps in that wing of the house." "I shall sleep the sounder." "Good night, then. I will send a lad to show you the chamber. If you stay there until morning, " said the imperious Barbara, with a nod of her pretty head, "I will marry you." • "You vow it." "I vow it ?" Ernest turned straightway, followed -the lad in waiting through dim rooms .and passages, up echoing stairs, along narrow, damp ways, where rats scuttled before them, to a low chamber.' The boy looked pale and scared, and evident ly wanted to hurry away, but Ernest made him stay until he took a survey of the room by the aid of his lamp. It was very large and full of recesses, with high windows in them, which were barred a .eross. He remembered that olcl grand sire Ferros, had been crazy several years :before his death, so that the precaution had been necessary for the safety of him self and others, In the centre of the room stood a coffin ; beside it was placed a chair. The room otherwise_ perfectly empty. Ernest stretched himself in the coffin. "Be kind enough to tell Miss Barbara that it's a very good it," said he. The boy went out and shut the door, leaving the gunsmith alone in the dark. Meanwhile, Barbara was talking with the blacksmith in the keeping room. "Barney," said she, pulling her hand away from his grasp when he would have kissed her, "I've a test to put you before I give my answer. Theie is a corpse lying in the chamber where my grand sire died, in the untennanted wing of the house. If you dare sit with it all night and let nothing drive you from your post you will not ask me to marry you in vain." "You will give a light and a bottle of wine, and a book to read ?" "Nothing." "Are these all the conditions you can orer me, Barbara?" "AU. And if you get frightened you need never look me in the thee." "I'll take them, then." —So-Barney_wo a' pow -laded to 11 °, 4 p. • ' by the lad, who nad been instructed in the secret, and whose voluntary stare at -- Efn - at's - pla - cid - firce - as it lay-in-th-e-cof fin, was of a corpse. He took his seat 9and-tbe-boy-lett-him- alone-with-the= darkness, the rats and the coffin. Soon after young Fritz, the tanner, arrived, flattered and hopeful, from the fact that Barbara had sent for him. "Have you' changed your mind Barbara ?" he asked: •`Nq; I shall not until I know that you can do a really brave thing." What shall it be ? I swear I shall sat isfy you Barbara. "1 have a T preposaLto_make_yfiu.__My plan resiinres_skill_m_welLas_mu_rup," "'fell me!" "Well, in this house is a man Watch ing a corpse. He has sworn not to leave his post until morning. If you can make him do it I shall be satisfied that =you are as smart and as brave as I require a husband to be." "Why nothing is so easy !" exclaimed Fritz. "I can scare him away. Furnish me with a white sheet, show me the room, and go to your rest, Barbara. You will find me at my post in the morning. Barbara did as he required, and saw the tanner step blithely away to his task. It was then nearly twelve o'clock and she sought her own chamber. Barney was sitting at his vigil, and so far all had been well. The night seemed very long, fbr he had no means of count ing the time. At timel3 a thrill went through him, for it seems as if he could hear icw suppressed breathing not ihr away, but he persuaded himself it was the wind blowing through the old house. Still it was very - lonely, and not at all cheerful. The face in the coffin gleamed whiter through the darkness. Tue rats squeak ed as if famine was upon them and they smelled flesh. The thought made him shudder. He got up and walked about but something made a slight noise, as if somebody was behind him, and he put his chair with the back against the wall and sat down again. He had been hard at work all day, and iu spite of every thing he grew sleepy And he noded and snored. Suddenly it seemed as if somebody had touched him. He awoke with a start and nobody near, though in the centre of the room stood a white figure. "Curse you get out of this!" he exclaimed in a a fright, using the very words that came to his tongue. The figure held up its its right, hand and approached him. He started to his feet. The spectre came nearer, pressing him into the corner. "The devil take you," cried Barney in his extremity. Involluntary he stepped back ; still the figure advanced, coming nearer and near er, and extended both arms as if to take him in a ghostly embrace. The hair started up on Barney's head, he grew desperate, and as the gleaming arms would have touched him lie fell upon the ghost like a whirlwind, tearing off the sheet, thumping and pounding, kicking and beating, more and more outraged at the resistance he met, which told him the truth. As the reader knows, Barney was' big and Fritz was little ; and while pum meling the tanner unmercifully, and Fritz was trying to lunge at Barney's stomach, to take the. wind out of him, both plunging and kicking like horses, they were petrified to hear a voice cry : "Take one of your size, Big Barney." Looking around, they saw the corpse sitting up in his coffin. This was too much. They released each other and sprang to the door. They never knew how they got out, but tbey ran home panting like stags. It was Barbara herself who came and opened the door upon Ernest next morn ing. "It's very early; one more little nap," said he turning over in his coffin. So she married him ; and though she sent Fritz and Barney invitations to the wedding, they did not appear. If they discovered the trick, they _ kept the knowledge to themselves and never will itwly faced J3arbara's laughing eyes t?a gain. In one of Courts out Nest, a juryman being called and pot answering, the usu al notice that he would be fined was pro nounced against him; which a person who stood by said to the, "You may Judge fine him as much as you . please hut I don't think that you will recover the fine, for I saw him 'hurried ab •ut a week pgo. • • a I a . 4I ti ;:. NII 7 , • II- :. :. ..;ps 4,, :;:. WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, HAY 30, 1872. REMINISCENCES BY HENRY A. WISE. It is generally held that there is very little of the romantic element in the Anaer kart PreSidency, and not without reason, for men enter the .Presidential offices Se late in life 'that they have' become a mat ter Of fact as soapsuds and sileratus ; •bitt ex-Governor Wise, of Virgil:di:tin his re cently published and very clever volume, "Semen decades of the Onion"--well de serves reading, gives' an account of PreSi dent Tyler's second marriage that is very interesting. Mr. Tylor become a widoWer while he was President, Josing a wife alto was a very noble woman,, a member of the well-known family of Christian, in the Old Dominion. He was a domestic man, and a pure man, and a second' marriage is the most 'natural - "thing in the world when a man has been happy in the first marriage; but then it is thought that a widower should' marry a lady of experi ence not unlike his own: Mr. Wise says that he was in Mr. Tyler's coach, taking a drive with him, in March, 1844, when he soon discovered that his friend would talk only of love and ladies. "We had always heard," said Mr.; Wise,"that an old fool is the worst of fools in love sick nessi-andlm-showed-the-usual-signs,--ofi contortions into hideous shapes of seem ing. He got out at last that he thought of marriage, and wanted to know our o pinion on the subject. "Well of course" you - lave sought ararfou - hduntsbme lii li ly honored dame of dignity, who can bring grace to the White House and add to your domestic comfort ? '"Oh no dame, but a sweet damsel." "Who, pray, of' damsel degree could or should au old President win ? He told us, and we uttered our as tonishment by asking, "Have you really won her ?" he replied, "Yes ; and why should I not?" 'We answered that he was too far advanced in life to be imprudent -in-a-love--scratm—H-ow-imprudent-?-hensi ed. "Easily—, you-are-mtLoaly-past—the middle age," '(he was then 54,) "but ycu are President of the United States, and that is a • dazzling dignity, which may charm a damsel more than the ma ;I • marries." "Pooh he cried chuckling. "Why, my dear sir, lam just full in my prime !" Ah, but has John Y. Mason told me about an old frieucl of his on the south side of the James, rich and full of acres, calling his African waiter, Toney, into council upon the tender topic of marrying a miss in her teens ? Toney 'shook 'his head and said, "Massa, you think you can ' stand dat ?" "Yes Toney; why not? She is so sweet, so beautiful, that she would make me rise from a bed of illness and weakness to woo her for .a bride; but I am yet strong, and I can now, as well as ever I could, make her happy !" "Yes ; but, Massa," says Tony, "you is now in your prime," dat's true ; but, when she is in her prime, where den Massa will your prime be ? He laughed heartily at Toney's philo sophical observation, but afterward, in seriousness, said that he longed for the renewal of his domestic life, and had been fairly caught by the liame'of Miss Gar diner. We remonstrated th his lifewas renewed in his children in That, he had daughters, full of grace, fit to do the honors of the White House, and some of them were the elders of his intended. What if family dissent should Make domes tic jars, and his latter days be troubled? He had, he said, always been too tender to the pledgs ofhis past love for them ever to withhold from him their filial confidence, or deny to him his parental authority to judge and act J . ()) his own happiness! We saw the game was up, and then said': 'We see you are• beyond counsel,and you have ever been too lucky for us now to doubt or distrust your fate. You are going to marry the dam sel, and we are not foolish enough to make two enemies by opposing the pas sion of the wooer and the won. The mar riage took place on the' 20th of June, 181 7 4. President Tyler being then in his 55 year, and the bride, Miss Julia Gardi ner, about 20, and whom we remember being' much spoken of as a beautiful girl, and a Washingthn Belle of those long gone days. She was a 'New York lady, of good family, as the phrase is, and de scended, we have heard, from old Lyon Gardiner, who flourished in the colonial 'age, and who gave his name to Gardiner's Bay and Gardiner's Island, on Long island Sound. The marriage proved a very happy one, and Mrs. Tyler, who has survived her husband more than ten years, d is not yet old. Mr. Tyler some years' tiller the marriage, said to Mr. Wise, when the latter noted that his friend kept 'a double-seated, four wheel ed wicker carriage for small children.' 'Yes you see how right it was; it was no vain boast when I told you I was in my prime. I have a household of goodly babies budding around me, and if you will go up with me to Sherwood, I will show you how bountifully and rapidly I have been blessed. They are all so near in age that they are like stair-steps, and the two youngest arc so much babies alike that each requires the nurse's coach ; and we have to have one with two seats!' So that marriage turned out well, despite the fact that the gentleman was old enough to be the lady's grand-father, and we are glad of it, for Mr. Tyler had so much in justice done him as a public man that he was entitled to compensation in his pri vate life. An old bachelor picking up a book, exclaimed upon seeing a wood-cut repre senting a man kneeling at the foot of a woman: "Before I would kneel to a woman I would encircle my neck witd a rope, and stretch it?' And then turning to a young woman, he inquired : "Do you not think it would be the best thing I could dor "It would undoubtedly be the best for the woman," was tho sarcas tic reply." John Tyler. Work. The following hri . ef, but trite and truth esay is from the pen of Dr. Chas. S. Hayshain, of Newton township, this coun ty. We take it-from the Ware; Gazett: When Adam was turned from the Gar den of Eden inconsequence of his trans gressing the'law imposed on him ,by his Creator, he .was informed that he should {earn hip , bread by the sweat of his brow,' and* earth shoUld only yield her in— crease to the earnest efforts of the inhabi tants thereof. This, although figurative, teach us that it was the intention of the Divine Creator of us all that man should not be, idle:. „ . , . You will always fiad that the laws 'of nature, which are those' of God, invaria bly point to the good of his creatures,and will, if you carefully study, discover that this seemingly hard sentence imposed qp on first parent,was not so great a mis fortune as it might appear to be. If you study the human system you will find that it is necessary for the proper de velopment of every function that it should be exercised, no matter whether those functions be animal Or intellectual. Man being compelled to work for his very sub sistence is compelled to exercise his .var -ious-or-garis;-and-in-this-way-heis-kept-* good health, both mentally and physical ly. ,The laws of nature are immutable, and those who transgress them are sure to suffer in the .end. Where-wei4e - an - ittdividt4 - who - d - cce not work, we see one who is in the way of every hody—who is generally' an intruder wherever he goes, and although his society may be for a while tolerated, his absence is as much desired wilds company, But as his senses are pftert obtuse he fails to see it, and sometimes we have fairly, to push him out of the way, in order to save his feelings, and prevent ourselves from doing that which we would 'not like to do, —ManiwasTilade-for-actiollis-Crod-said so, and if you will observe the people of our nation, you will find that only those wbo . aw the most active have apparently themost pleasure. Did you ever observe ly busy 11. -- tlCy busy man ? How happy he ar;- pearel,".to be ! He has had no time to at tend to the business of his neighbors. • He is entirely taken up by his own ailairs. 7 -r Yet strange as it may appear, he knows all that is going on in the nation, and Can give to his lazy neighbor all the infbrma tion he may desire. The brain of a busy man is in constant activity, and in conse quence of this is capable of appreciating things which are totally incomprehensi ble to those of lazy habits. We find those of the present day who try to make us believe that work is de grading, and only those who do nothing for a living areon their own words, re spectable. This feeling produces more injury to society than at first my be im agined. It takes hold , of the young, the uneducated; the immature mind, and by thus doing leads them on to destruction. It is necessary for every member of'a com munity to do their share towards the com mon weal, and in order to do this they must work—fbr only by work can they ac complish anything. IdlenesS is the parent of vice, and you will always find the idle ready for mischief or crime, and it has been seriously contemplated to compel every. parent to teach, or have taught, each and every one of the children some useful occupation, this being the only way in which crime may be prevented. It has been said by those who have been styled political economists that a man who can make an acre of ground prOduce twice :IS much as it did before he took hold of it, has done more for the good of the hu man race than he who gains a. gieat bat tle. Work ennobles not degrades a man. A man at work may not always be well dressed as his tastes would desire ; but he can always be decent, andneed never be ashamed. In one of the courts of London a brickmaker was summoned as a witness. He went.to the court-room from the brick yard, and, of course, his clothes was soil ed. "How dare you come here so dirty ?" asked the Judge. "I am as well dressed as you are,' answered .the workman. Ta ken all aback the Judge asked him to ex 'Jain. "I am in my working dlothes,you are in yours." The Judge acknowledged the corn, and so the matter ended. By work alone can we prosper; by work alone •can we be healthy ; by work alone can we be physically, mentally, and mor ally good, and you musttemember that if we find nothing for our own hands to do, the devil. will. FACTS ABOUT THE BlBLE.—These cur ious facts about the Bible were ascertain ed, it is said, by a convict, sentenced to . a long term of solitary confinement: The Bible contains 3,586,489 letters, 773,692 words, 31,173 verses, 1,180 chap ters, and 66 books. The word "and" oc curs 46,277 times. The word "Reverend" but once, which is in the 9th verse of the 11th Psalm. The middle verse is the Bth verse of the 118th Psalm. The 21st verse of the 7th chapter of Ezra contains all the letters of the alphabet except the let ter J. The finest chapter to read is the 26th chapter of the Acts of the Apostels. The 19th chapter of 11 Kings and the 37th chapter of Isaiah are alike. The longest verse is the 9th verse of the Bth chapter of Eshter. The shortest verse is the 36th verse of the 11th chapter of St. John. The Bth, 15th, 21st and 31st ver ses of the 107th Psalm are alike. All the verses of the 136th Psalm end alike. There are no words or names of more than six syllables. A man who has a strona , mind can bear to be insulted, can bear offences, because he is strong, The weak mind snaps and snails at a little ; the strong mind bears it like a rock, and it moveth not, though a thousand breakers dash upon it and east their pitiful malice in spray upon its summit. • WREN YOU AND I WERE *YOUNG I love to dream of olden days, When you and I were young, When happily life's golden rays Above our pathway hung ; And though the present brings its joy To gild the passing hours, I dream of days without alloy— A spring-time and its flowers. I love to think of those bright honrs, Though happy days come now— 'Tis well to prize the faded flowers• That bloom on youth's fair brow ; How bright the future then appeared How sweetly birds then sung, When loving friends our path cheered, When you and I were young ! • The loved companions of those days Have left us, one by' one—, And some have trod the golden ways To realms beyond the sun ; Yet death's hand shall bring to view ,The scene that hope had sung, Oh! may 'we meet the friends we knew When you and 1, were young T-0-Make-a-F-ashiorrable-Woman-- Take ninety pounds of flesh and bone but chiefly bones—wash clean, bore holes in the ear and cut of the small toes; bend the back to conform to the Grecian bend _ r3e ostou dip, the kangaroo droop, the Saratoga slope, or the bull-frog break, as the taste inclines; then add three yards of linen, one hundred yards of ruffles and seventy-five yards of edging, eighteen yds. dimity, one pair silk cotton hose with pat tent hip attachments, one pair of fidse calves, six yards flannel, embroidered.one pair Balmoral boots with heels three inch es' high, four pounds whalebone in strips; seventeen hundred and sixty yards of steel - wire; three quarters eta — milif - W ten ids --' - • --- wire he ' pouth 4 raw cotton or two wire hemis pheres , one wire basket to hold a bushel, four copies of the biggest newspaper you atn'get, one hundred and fifty yards of •s' ks anil other dreqq goods,fm—hundred. yards of point lace, fourteen hundred yds. fringe and other trimmings, twelve gross of buttons, one box of pearl powder, one saucer of carmine and an old bare's foot, one huphel of false hair frizzled and fret ted a la Manitujite, one bundle Japanese Twitches., with rats, mice and other var mints, one peck of hair pius,one lace hand kerchief, nine inches square, with patent holder, . Perfume with ottar. of roses, or Sprinkle With nine drops of the "Blessed Baby" or "West End." Stuff the head with fashionable novels, ball tickets play bills and wedding cards, some scandal, a great, deal of lost time and a very little sage ; add a half grain of common sense, three scruples of religion, and a modicum . of modesty. Season with vanity and af fectation and folly. Garnish witliearrings,• finger rings, breastpins, chains, bracelets, feathers and flowers to suit the taste.— Pearls and diamonds may be thrown in if you have them ; .if not, paste and pinch back from the dollar store will do. Whirl all around in a fashionable cir cle and stew by gaslight for six hours. Great care should be takenthat the thing is not overdone. If it does not rise sufficiently, add more copies of big newspapers, folded. This dish is highly ornamental, and will do to put at the head of your table on grand occasions, but is not suitable for every day use at home, being very expel siveand indigestible. If sometimes gives men the heartburn arid causes them to break, and is certain death to children. WHAT BETTER CAN YOU OFFER ? When you cast a slur at religion, stop and think whether you have anything bet ter to offer the wayfarer to guide him thro' life in ways of peace and respectability. Of all the thousands who are doing their best to tear down Christianity, who offers to build up a better and a stronger temple than they would destroy ? Were you in a house with a family of children, would you, while a fierce storm raged outside, tear its shelter from over their' heads, because it was not perfect in architecture, if you had no other house of safety into, which to conduct your fathily? As a rule, it is not well to change a faith in middle or mature life, which has car ried a soul thus far in safety through vi cissitudes and temptations. To love God, be charitable and tolerant to others' opin ions and actions, guarding' more our own house than our neighbor's, is the chief thing—leaving quarrels and disputes over creeds and dogmas to die out, as they are a curse to the huinan race. Grains of Gold. A woman who has never been pretty has never been young. Dishonesty is the tbrsaking of-perma nent for temporary advantages. Providence, it has not been inaptly said, provides for the provident. A noble heart, like the sun, -shows is greatest countenance in its lowest sta, te. Show me a people whose trade is dishonest and I will show you a peo ple whose religion is a sham. Minds of moderate calibre are apt to ignore everything that does not come within their own range. Great power and natural gifts do• not bring priviledges to their possessors so much as they brinw b duties. the superiority of some men is mere ly local. They are great because their associates are little. • The difficulty in fife is the same as the difficulty in grammar—to know when to make exceptions to the rules. It is a mortkying reflection for any man to consider whit he has done, .com pared with what he might have done. Subscribe for the Record Andersonville in 1/3'72. The National cemetery, north of the railroad, contains fifty acres and it is sur rounded by a white board fence, with an Osage orange hedge inside. Here are the graves of 13,716 Union solders, nearly 13 000 of whom died either within the stock ade or the hospitals of Andersonville dur ing the short period of fburteen months. The first burial was on February 27, 1864 and the last, April 28, 1865. During the summer of 1864 the deaths averaged over 100 a day. Placed side by side in trench es,-and as closely as possible, in rows of 150 each, the dead were 'buried by their 'comrades. -The graves occupied nine acres of the grounds and all are marked by a head board containing the name, rank, arm of the service, regiment, company, State and date of' death of each soldier. ANDERSoNVILLE Four handsome avenues with walks on either side, bordered by two rows of trees, leads to a circle where stands a tall .flag staff, from whose top - floats the star spang led banner. _ During the past two years 'many young trees have been planted,that will soon greatly increase the beauty of the enclosure. At the intersection of the paths-and usually- in close proximity to he - ft,ra• •vavyysts-have-been--put-up---bear ing tablets with appropriate inscriptions, two of which read as follows : ''On Fame's eternal camping , ground Their silent tents are spread, And glory guards withWolemn round. The bivouac of the dead." "The hopes, the fears, the blood the tears, That marked the bitter strife, Are now all crowned by victory, That saved the Nation's life." As was fitting and convenient, the stock ade was only three hundred yards from the cemetery and the roads so arranged that_the_wagons_could return from it by 44ty-of'the-bak-errand-receive the b uad to be distributed among the surviving souldiers. The stockade was constructed of large pine logs, twenty feet high,set five feet in the ground, and as closely as pos sible together. Within the interior space, seventeen feet from the logs, was the fam ions dead line,marked by small posts driv en into the clay and a board nailed on top of them. Fifty-two sentry boxes *ere plac ed upon the inner stockade, raised above the top of the palisades and reached by' ladders. Outside, seven forts, with field artillery, commaded the entire grounds. Within this enclosure of less than twen ty-six acres, there were confined at one time as many as 30,000 prisoners, without eithes shade or shelter, and dependent for water from a small brook that was the re ceptacle of the oflitll from the enemy's camp, situated a short distance above.— This was their only supply, except that small amount procured by digging holes in the ground, until August, 1864, when a spring of pure water burst forth from the dry, sandy hill-side within the stock ade. This was named`Providential Spring' and it appeared to our poor men as much an interposition of God to preserve their lives as when He, by the hand of Moses, slaked the eonsuming thirst of the Israel ites at the rock of Horeb. It would be impossible, were it not worse than useless, to discribe our feelings as we walked through the city of the dead, and trod the soil, every foot of which was moistened by the: , tears and reddened by the blood of so many patriots. What those 39,000 heroes suffered during the fburteen months they were shut upin that stockade, without a tree, shelter or blan— ket, faint from sickness, and pestilential air, scorched, drenched, mocked, hunger- ed,•starved—let us not draw the picture, but lover it up as too appalling for mor tal sight, and commit the decision of the cause to the righteous Judge of all the earth,—Rev. itlr. Craighead in Observer. A Fortune at a Word. I heard the other day of a Profitable transaction made by to young Israelites, who recently arrived here penniless and almost in rags, which, for shrewdness and success, has seldom been equaled. They were walking about the town looking . for employment, when they noticed in the custom house a quantity of damaged cof fee advertised to be sold at 'auction in a few days. At once forming their plan of operations, they immediately visited vari ous wholesale dealers, and offered to so cure them coffee at five per cent. discount. This was accepted, and orders received from reliable firms enough to cover the whole cargo in the custom house. On the day of the sale these two poverty stricken men were among the crowd of dealers assembled to inspect the various sacks of coffee.—When the bidding com menced, these two venturesome ones bid very low. The crowd looked at the poor devils once, thinking they wanted a sack or two, let their bid remain good, and it was knocked down to them at an extreme ly low figure. `How much do you want, more than one sack ?' inquired the auctioneer. `The whole cargo, sir,' they quickly re plied. There was a general laugh at their au dacity, which increased when the auction eer mockingly asked for their Pecurity. But the tables turned when the poor men very quietly drew out. orders from lead ing merchants, whose genuineness could not be denied, and these paupers of an hour before found themselves possessed of eighty thousand dollars without expend ing one cent to obtain it, or seeing the coffee at all.—New— Irk letter -to New BedArd Mercury. An excelleni, mother, in writing to one of her sons on. the birth of his eldest child, says: on, him an education, that his life ; teach him re ligion, thaehis dco4:ll2zlY - be haPPY." $2.00 PER YEAR NUMBER 52 flit and ,Numar. When is butter like Irish children ? When it is niade into little pats. Why is a large carpet like the late re belion ? Because it took such a lot of tax to put it down: It may sound like a parodox, yet the breaking of both wings of an. army is a pretty sure way to make it fly. If you can't coax a fish to bite, try your persuasive powers upon a cross dog and you will be sure to succeed. The last question that has troubled philosophers is this: Which milks a girl most pleasure, to hear herself prais ed' or another girl run down ? If your neighbor's hens are trouble some and steal across the way, don't let.' your angry passions rise ; fix a place for them to lay ! Why will people persist in calling scis sors and shears a pair of scissors, ctc. Be cause a man• has two legs does that make - hima - pairo . A gentlethan of Ellsworth, Maine, made a bet with.his 'Wife that he could unalress, go to bed, •et up, dress and then undress, - and - go'to--bed-againr- while-she- was pre:- paring to go to bed. He won his bet. Stubbs wonders where all the pillow cases go to. Ile sags lie never asked a a girl whai she was making, 'while engag ed in white sewing, without being . told it was a pillow ease. An Eastern man locked his wife into an upper room,and not being satisfied with this punishment, but wishing to aggravate hot still fui titer, 'seat • • bone. The youth innocently brought it; and said, "Mother, father sent this up, and says there is a bone for, you to pick." The gentle mother replied : "Take it back, and tetl him I say, 'he is not your father; and there's a bone for him to pick." A stolen kiss saved a girl's life in Leav enworth, for if theiman who did the deed had not pulled ber head forward just as ho did, a beam, which fell from the . upper floor, Would have dashed her, brains out. Such is the story, anyhow. And now the Leavenworth girls, when in - gentlemen's company, cast their eyes furitively at the ceiling, and act just as if they would as leaf have a beam fall as not, if they were certain the young men would pull their heads in time. Next to being married to the right per son there is nothing so' important in one's life as to live under one's own roof. There is Something more than a poetical charm in the expression of the wife ; We have our cozy house : it is thrice dear to us because it is our own. Wehave bought it with the saving of our earnings, Many were the soda fountains, the con fectionary saloons, and the necessities of the market we had to pass; many a time my noble husband denied himself the comfort of tobacco, the refreshing draught of beer; wore his . old clothes, and even patched up his boots; and I made my old bonnet do, wore the plainest clothes, did the plainest cooking; saving was the or der of the hour, and to 'have a home of our own' had been our united aim. Now we have it ; there's no landlord troubling us with raising the rent, and exacting this and that. There is no fear harbored in our bosom that iu sickness or old age we will be thrown out of house and home,and thtirnoney we have saved to pay rent is sttfficieut to keep us in comfort in the winter days - of life.' What a lesson do the above , words teach, and how well it would be if hun dreds of families would heed them, and instead of living in rented houses, which take a large share of their capital to fur nish, and quarter of their earnings to pay the rent, dress and eat accordingl would bravely curtail expenses;and con centrate their efforts on having a 'borne of their own.'—'Better a cottage, of your own than a rented palace.' One day a young man entered a Met.. chant's office in Boston, and with a: pale and careworn face, said ; "Sir, I am in need of help. I haw) been unable to meet certain payments, be ; cause certain parties have not done as they agreed by me, and I would like to have $lO,OOO. • I name to you because you were it friend to my fitther, and might be a friend to me." "Come in," said the r old merchant, "come in and have a glass of wine." "No." said the young' man, "I don't drink." "Have a cigar, then ?" "No, I never Ilioke," Well;" said the old gentleman, "I would like to accommodate yuu, but I don't think I can." "Very well," said the young man, a he was about to leave the rooni, "I thought, perharrA you might. Good-day, sir." "1-lold on," said • the merchant, "you don't drink?" "No:, "Nor smoke ?" "Nor gamble., or anything of that kind ?" "No, sir, I am Ftworietecdent of' the Sender School." "Well," Sai4i the merchant, "you sbail have it, and three times the amount if you wish. Your father let me $5,000 once, and asked mo the same questions. He trusted me, and I will frlist yen. No tlituzicti owe it to you for your father'a:trust.'‘':