. . , . , .. -......., . .... - ..... + . „r :' • 4 ' .: P: • . , *. ,' r.:r ~. !: . ! ‘ r ~' ..'.. , C l *? OW ' . . . 11 CIIIL) . .... ~ .. . . ... .4 • " • ::„,... ,t,,,, ~J. 7.0 ..•,..,.....,, ~, • ..,..., ;:..c.. ~, r .` •a" - ... v.. ;.1.-- . 4..,:1..q . ..V'Ti / - . -firt , ‘,..' :- . 1 •.... r ,i, • .:,,, '. . : ...;-.." .• • ~ :, • .. , . . . . . . _ _ 1. - . 1 ili o, a f ,I' l ,„ . ASS , ..... air . aIOw La , f 110"...!': . '.‘ •"." . • .. ~, , . , _ .. .' . • i t fs. • 1 ..•• r. 1.., 1 .. . ':. '1; ' , .._ _ .... ..... . . ~...., . . . •,. . 1 , . . . ~ ;.J - : .iF , ~ ~-, 1., .; .., .. r, , O''.: ,11 5 1 1 t , ':..iA , . ... , . _ ..„ _. .. , . . . , . 1- ;11'.11 . :", ..'', • , -,, _ ' ,:12 iti , ~li '' r .• -- • , '". ~ ' ,•;; -' . • ':" Or t C. , ;''i ..' ' :'' ' ' r " , -% n - .6/ ' 1 '.:''i: r l. '':lli "..iti.3:l. - '.., 1 .. , fr.11.11.!;': ~;) - - ':!.'21%.,;,:' , . - ', ..:' '::!',.1" ,- ;'., ~, ' ,„ .• . ~ - ... ._ . . . . . ' : -1;" " BY W. BLAZE. • . ' • - A FAMILY NEWSPAPER---DEVOTED TO LITERATDRE,'LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS. ETC. • 7 : r • .0 " • 4 „it %Eli..• ••-- it) • •: TOJ.iiall 2,6. Allut gottru • • i1a...(1 , 031' • - • There's a green little Eiriot civered over with flowcars . , • •' A Sweet little nook,' that we cell by-gone hours; , • • And the gernewthat,,bedeekit are the names of dear friends, Which shall blossom in beauty till life's sea soii ends: , . lie may miss each sweet face;and the dear welcome sound . Of-naanes4hat€oryees found ; But engraVed on the heart's. secret tablet they stand, " . And revive at the touch ,of fond - memory's wand. . some quietly sleep' in the still; silent grave; "Perhaps some_repose 'neath the ocein'sAlark some nave wandered afar; but, wherever they be, Their names are still dear to the heart's memory These were bright days of joy iire shall nev- • • er fortet, When the cheek with the tear - ofgrief Inv er was wet. And it seemed that life's snmmer.time al ways would last : • But we I°4 at them.now through the veil of the past. • And we speak of them now as the dear by gone hours, That memory plants with the fairest of flowers, To waft all their fragrance adown the long years, Causing rainbows to smile through life's showers of tears. a:tsunami's pleading. THE WILL. Toward the end, of a gusty October da about the year 1830, a barrister of the" Temple was sitting reading; when the o pening of a door and the servant's • an nouncement of "a gentleman" interrupted him., He rose •to receive his.visitor, who proved to be a perfect stranger ; a person of very gentlemanly but 'extremely tad fashioned appearance. He wasAressed in a,grave-colored suit of antiquecut; a neat, tight gray wig surrounded his serious and even solemn physiognomy ; silk stockings rolled at the knee, enormous shoebuckels of gold, a cane headed with the same met al, and, a , broad-brimmed and uncooked hat completed his equipment, which was in the fashion of the last years of William the Third or the first of his successor.— Having stiffly bowed in the exact way prescribed ,by the" etiquette of the era to which he seemed' to belong, he took pos session of the chair ofered to him by his host, and, after a preparatory hem, thus began, in a slow and serious manner . 1 "I think, sir, you are the lawyer em ployed by the S— family, whose proper ty in Yorkshire you are therefore aware is about to be sold." • "I have; sir." answered,' the ..barrister, "full instructions and potters to Complete the disposal of it, which, though a painful duty, to. me, must be performed." "It is a duty• you may dispense with," said, the 'Visitor, waving his hand "the property need not be sold." - "May -I presume to ask, sir, whether you arc any re ion to the Jim:lily ? If so, you mus acquainted witlythe solute essity of selling it, in' conse quence of the claim of another branch of the family, just returned from beyond the sea, who as heir-at-law, is naturally pos- Sessor of the estate in delimit of a will to the contrary, and who desires its valuein money instead of the land. The ,present possessor is unable to buy it, and must therefore depart." "You -are mistaken," replied the old gentlemen, rather testily. "You seem not to know of the will of Mr. S—'s great grandfather,' by` which he not only left that, his real.estate, to his favorite grand son, this gentleman's father,--but even en tailed it on his great-great-great grand son." "Such a will, sir," said the barrister, "was, indeed, supposed for many years to exist, and in virtue of' it Mr. S—has, un til now, peaceably enjoyed the property'; but, on the claimant's application, a re newed search having been made for it, either the belief proves vitally unfound ed,•or it has been lost or destroyed. Cab inets, chests, every room, inhabited and uninhabited, have been ransacked in vain. Mr. S—has now given up all hope of find.: ing it. The sale is to be completed in the course of next week, and the fine old place must pass into the hands of strang ers" "You are mistaken again, young man," said the stranger , striking his cane on the floor. "I say, sir, the will exists ! Go im mediately," continued he, in an authora tive tone ; "travel night and day. You may save an old family from disgrace and ruin." In the end room of.the left wing, now uninhabited, is a closet in the wall." "We have looked there," interrupted the barrister. "Silence, sir ! There is a closet, I say ; in that closet is a large iron chest ; that chest has a false bottom, and underneath that is the de3d. I am certain of what I say. I saw the paper deposited there, no matter when or by whom. Go ; you will find it worth your trouble. My name, sir, is:Hugh I am - pots nosir, personally known , tA) tho proprietor. ofi.s.l7)jalli, r but I am his relation,;apd have,his ,welfare at heart. Xeiject not.to fOIIOW MY , advice." 'So saying, " the - old gentleniair rade, 1,4,4iin bowed, and at ihA' door pueoti".bis , tiat a. fashion: that would, have: ienchantbd an elegance-of- Queen Anne's. day, and, slid= ing. the silken string of his can on the finger of his right hand; on _which 114 . la wyer luid . .remailed a very fine Airilliant ring, he descended the stairs and depart. ed,.leaving the barriater in the utmost as lonishment. At first he felt half inclined to consider - the whole as a hoax ;11iep; a gain, when he thought'orthe • ge#le man's 'grave manner. and the. intiinate .krinwledga hi3iinust have possessed,of the ,house to be - .able to 4sprbe theidos.o; Bo exactly in which the, chest was, be could not buthelieve hiin 'to be sineergi '" - ' . ronf4l xliberatiOnOie decided , upon immediate 'departure and •arrivedon the evening ofithe fourth day at S—, Hall. Tlie sale bad been the only theme of conversation, at every . place he had passed throtiih Within twenty miles of his destination, and much'andloudly was it lamented that the 'squire, should be leaving)tis_houseibrev_er, and thatpoor. Mr. John would, never enjoy his rights, as they persisted in calling the possession 6( the estate.' Oh his entrance' into the man sion, signs of approaching removal 'every wheremet his eye. - Packages filled the hall; • servants, with sorrowful counte nances, were hurrying about, and the family were lingering sadly, over the last dinner they, were ever to partake of in their old; regrked house. • Mr. S—.greeted'his ,friend with a sur prise which changed to incredulity when , the barrister, requesting his . private ear, declared the season of his appearance. "It cannot be," , said he. "Is it likely that no one should ever have heard of the hiding of the deed'but the old gentleman you mention .? Depend upon it, you have been deceived, my dear friend. lam on ly sorry you should have taken so much trouble to se little pUrpose." The barrister mentioned the name ,of his visitor. "Hugh S—!" exclaimed the Gentleman laughing ; "I have not a relation in the world of that name "It is worth the trying, however," said the lawyer, "and, since I have come so far, I will finish the adventure. Mr. S—, seeing his friend so determin ed, at length consented to satisfy him; and accompanied him toward the apartment he , specified. ' As they crossed one of the rooms in theirway, he suddenly stopped before a large full-length, picture. "For Heaven's sake," cried he, "who is this?" "My grand-uncle," -returned Mr. S—, "a good old fellow as ever lived. I wish with all my heart he was alive now ;, but he 'has been dead these thirty yeari." "What was his name?" ' "Hugh S—, the only one of theTamily of that name." "That is the man who called:upon •me. Mi . dress, his hat, his very ring are there." They proceeded to the closet, lifted the false• bottom of the trunk, and—found the deed ! .•, ; • Tie kind old - uncle was never, again seen. ' LAND OF WONDERS.—The• greatest 1 cataract in the world. is the falls of the. Niagara, where; the, water from the great ' upper lakes corals a river ,O three-fourth of' a mile in width, and then,' being suds qienly contracted, 'plunges over the rocks in: two .colums•to a depth of 17( : feet. The greatest cave in the world is the: Mam moth' Cave in Kentucky, where any one' Cali make a voyage On the water subter ranean rives and catch fish without:eyes. The greatest river in the known world is the Mississippi, 4,000 miles long. The largest valley-in the world -is the Valley of the Mississippi. , It contains 500,000 square miles, and i, one of the most fer, tile regions of the globe. The greatest city Park in the world is in Philadelphia. It contains over 5,000 'acres.. The greatest grain port in the world is in Chicago.— The largest lake in the world is Lake Su ; porior, which-is truly an inland-sea, being 430-miles long and 1,000 feet deep. The largest Railroad at present is the Pacific, Over 2,ooo . miles in length. The greatest mass of solid iron in the World is the mountain of Missouri. It is'34o' feet high and two miles' in curcuit. The best spe-: -chnen of Grecian architecture iu theworld is the Girard College for Orphans, Phila-. delphia. The largest aqueduct the world)is the Croton aqueduct; N. 'Y. Itt cost $12,000,000. The largest deposits of anthracite coal in the world are in Penn sylvania, the mines which supply the mar ket with millions of tons annually, and appear to be inexhaustible.—American Engineer. OUTWARD BEAUTY.—Believe me, there is many a road into our hearts besides our ears and brains ; many a sight, rind many a sound, and accent, even of which we have never thought at all, sinks into our memory, and helps to shape our charac ters ; and thus children brought up among beautiful sights and sweet sounds, will most likely show the fruiti of their nurs ing by , thoughtfulness, and affection, and nobleness of mind, even by the.ex pression of the countenance. Those who live in towns should carefully remember this, for their oWn sakes; for their wives' sakes, for their children's sakes. Never lose an opportunity. of seeing ; ' nytbing beautiful. Beauty is God's handwriting. --ymvayside sacrament ; welcome it in ev-, er fair face, every fair sky, every fair flower, and thank, for it, Him, ( the four-, tarn of all loveliness, and think ,rtin aim ply and earnestly, with all your eyes ; it is a charmed draught, a cup of blessing. Water !reddens the rose ; whiskey Ai nose ; and tight boots, the toes. • ' WAYNESBORO";'FR , • t': Early!;Marriages: , „Therelhaydleeniso .atany:articles pub.: i°:;fictlf ) ; ,, Tow°P,liettl 3 iPlYstr,atiVP of .tfia4Y(l,izt-ages,4lWaP arising froth. wily rdarrlaged, - ,thit , we' ' tenOt'ed•' to' give 'the' folroWing.;-•oit the iithestlaide - of:the question.... :Th-'e' , practic'eLo r f early; iiiarriagedj, so commoitin• the United,: States, •is one of i the worst features of •society. ;Under. the Ancmt fayerable.eiraumstances,.iftvolm_too_ Many cOniiderations;and'entalls too , ma ny liabilities 'all' parties tii''be entered into r ithout deep and, serious refieitiod. It' enough wh'erfyonng people love' .eactrother• tdthinlethat :they cannot live• apart ; but it is notAvellLotio4 l / I f9.!P,INto to t0g 1 .7 7itht%t' PP IO .4994EAYI BI 9Th ibr • the faun. The ,cotiiiiion" saying that cost 'no 'more to 'maintain' tvo' theft one 'is a fallaey,'Whichis eVeb , dardisposed to - tlrc - satiefaction'Totiff - dellider tdirW. — .l3 - e? bodies,a,nd minds of the yeung . nedd deieloinient, in the school'of experi ence:' What Could helightly . borne at , thirtretnitild be their4nin'at"eighteen. l : ll : .Nattire t rat that lags has' not ripe,nedl , us, I ipontally• plAysically,andall premature dev9lopme n ts •mupt be f_earfully atoned' for- in-after . ndw ita - 'own Weaktiess. - Ladling . depth 'and sound juidgnient, :what 3t,' , ador'es today, it is:often indifferent , to; orti the morrow. Men, have married: oulthe strength of first affections and Awakened from 'the:dream to 'find themselires utterly and irreirieira bly miserable. There is 'a halo, about 'youth it is not well to trust over-muth.— .Better mistrust it altogether, and depend upon manhood, in the future. The affec tion that cannot "learn'to' labor 'and to wait,",can never endure for any length of time. • • Aboire all others the' poor should avoid early marriages. In a single state,'pov erty is hard' enough •to endure ; but the double poverty of marriage is net - te be yond endurance- Occasionally when ro bust health and industry are vouchsafed these difficulties may be surmounted ; but when this is•not the case—and how fre quently is it so in early marriages—want and distress soon.' rob love of its charm and life of its bloom. Affection will not make the pot boil, neither will it pay the house rent and buy new dresses. Whitt was irksome to 'be .bOrne also, becomes doubly so -when "the law has bound its victim , to 'another for life. • Then••there are 'the innocents, who .should not suffer, but who do suffer, for 'the folly' of their parents. .The..thousands, of ragged, idle and vicious children in our streets and poOrlionees are' the' fruits of early and iniprovident 'irfarritigeb, and half the•inie.: cry of the poorer classes results. from: the. same cause. ,I3ukrich : or poor, the gen erality, of early marriages are unhappy, and should serve as warnings to the young and ardent who contemplate such folly. An Infant in the Ohio Elver. ..Ileturning,ort•a steamer from New Orr leans, we were esPecially;interested in one lady passenger—a widow with one child —whose''devotion to' her child was very tonehin,g. Tears stde ' diin the eyes of 'her black nurse, as she besought her mistress "not tellove her 'babe' too much ; or the Lord would take him away from her.' , ' • We passed through the canal at Louis ville, and stopPeda • few' :minutes. •at !the wharf. The nurse walked-, out with the; guard. at , the stern , of , the, boat, when by a. sudden effort the child sprang from her aims'into t the swi ft carrel - it that' swept to ward the , falls; and entirely disappeared.' The confussion which ensued attracted , the attention of a gentleman hastily asked for some article of ,clothing_the child had worn.. Thenurse give him. tiny aptoii she had torn off in trying to retain her hold. .• Turning to a splendid Newfoundland dog that 1-vas:, • eagerly. wAlettit% his . counteuance,!he,pointedfirst to the apron, and then, the place where the child sank. 'ln,'an'ingtant i the`bilble 'd'og leaped - into the' rushing 'tivitter'iind ''disap peared.:•••• ;. ;;. ! -• !. • • .11y this ; time .the excitement was in- - Ouse, and .some person.s•op. shore, snppos ing' the dog was lost as Well as the child, procured 'a• boat and started in 'search of the' Just at. this •thement the • dog • wati,seen-far away with something in his month,. , Bravely he struggled with the current, but it was evident his strength was 'failin'g,' and f in'ore'' than ono breast ' gars' a'sigti of relitf 'as the boat reached' him;and it was announced that the - child , and it wereltill,ahve., They brought the child preserveron shore. ,• Vitha'Single glance to satisfy' :herself that heilialk , was reirlYv living, she riish ed fol Ward, *sinking beside the dog, threw her arms around his, neck, and burst into tears. Not many could•view the sight unmoved ; as she kissed his shaggy head, she looked up.a4,his owner and said: • - "Oh! sir, I must haie this noble dog! I am 'Hell ;' take whatever you'will but giVe me only child's preserver. • The gentleman• smiles, and, Italie patted' his dog's•head, said.;: • • . "I am very glad, mada m, that he has beep of service to you, but•nothing in the world eoull induce me to part withhim." , The dog looked as If he perfectly un derstood what they said, and, giving his side a , shake, laid , himself down at his master's feet; with an ,expression in his' large' eyes that' said plainer than words, "No, nothing shall part üb.'x . • A oaptive robin has gust ied";in Troy at the age of sixteen years:' For the first ten years uf his imprisoned Jifethe was very musical, singing from morning till night: 'Since' then he has been less 'active, and his head 'and' neelilieCiime wholly destitute of feathers.. 'For 'the last year he has.beenitotally blind; .not being able to find his perch, and he-bas remained constantly on the bottom' . of cage. • . •; • • ' Read the advertisements. IN COUNTY, pit., THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1873. BIit.INUROBBIAL Be 'careful. ye, whose wedded hearts '‘" Are lovingly 'united`r • Be heedful, lest an enemy . • Steal on you ,uninvitedl • A little r wily, serpent form • With graceful., luring posies— Or, coming in, a different gise, thorn among the ,roses ! Be careful, ye, whose marriage bells Now, merrily are ringing ; Be-heedful of the bitter word, The answer keen and 'stinging— The iharp retort, the angry eye • It'S vividlightning flashing— The rock on which so many hopes - A$ daily, hourly, dashing. • " ' "Bear and forbear," the only *tip ---Tirtremtlife's - prith - gloge er, • Then come and welcome. shining' sun, Or come dark, cloudy weather ; • Two wedded hearts, conjoined in one, That cannot live asunder, HaVe put Love's armor on— • .. woriklciok on 'and' wonder ! p . ie,,Geysq Region. One who has visited.the wonderful Gey ser region:in.the YellOWstone NatiOnal Park, near the line of 'the Northern Pa cific Railroad, expresses the belief that this:collection of natural marvels will be ofinore importance to the revenues of the railroad in. the multitudes of tourists it will attracf;than would be a-city-oMI, 000 peoplif Midway 'on the route. Hon. N. T. Langford, Government Superinten dent of the Park, says, in a recent official report : " There are 2000 hot springs, large and small, in this basin, and of this number probably 2QO are Geysers. The whole basiu-is—enveloped in steamand-seercit a distance, is like the approach to a clus ter of manufactories. The Geysers pro ject water with terrific force, and in fabu lous quantities, and hi every conceivable form, to heights varying from twenty to two hundred and fifty feet. These seen in the rays of a midday sun, or in the beams of a full moon. are inexpressibly grand. Unlike any' other scenery in the world, they amaze the beholder by their magni• tulle and novelty. _* * * * * * Ten miles farther down the river are the two great cataracts, and the Grand Canyon' of the Yellowstone, perhaps the most stupendous elements in the Park.— The upper fall is 115 feet in height; the lower, which, plunges directly into the Canyon,• is 350 feet, and the Canyon it self, Varying froia one to' three thousand feet iii depth, is forty miles in length, and for the whole distance presents to the eye the most wonderful chasm in the world. Juts of hot vapor issue from its sides, and color them with the most brilliant dyes of nature. From its profound depths stars are visible in the day time. Nothing has been, nothing can be said, tis magnify the wonders of this national pleasure ground. It is all, and more than all, that it has been represented. In the tataltigue of earthly wonders it is the greateSt, and must ever remain so. It confers 'a distinctive character upon our most uniqueselements of nature nre com bined, seemingly to produce, upon, the most stupendous scale, an exhibition un like 'any other upon the globe. It should be'stistatned. 'Our government, having adopted it, should fosteriti and. render it accessible to ;the - people of 411 lands, who, in future time, will come in crowds •to visit it. l'he Art of, Cousining. A country. gentleman •lately arrived at, Boston, and immediately, repaired to the. honk; of a relative ' a lady who bad mar ried a merchant. The parties were glad to see him, and invited him to'niake their house his , halite,' ashe declared his inten tion of remaining in the city only. , a day • or tvTo. The husband of the lady, ettx to show his attention to a relative and friend of his wife, took the gentleman's horse to a livery •stable in Hanover street. Finally his visit became a visitation, and the merchant • found, after the lapse of eleven days, besides lodging and board the gentleman, a pretty considerable bill lia'd run up at the livery stable. Ac. cordingly he went to the man who kept the, livery stable, and told him when ; the gentleman took 14s horse he would pay thebill. • "Veiy well," said the stable keeper, "I understand you." Accordingly in a short time, the coun try gentleman went to the stable and el.- dered Es horse to be got ready. The bill of course was'presented to him. "Cv," said the gentleman, my relative, will pay this. , "Very good, sir," said the stable keep er, "please get an order from Mr. —. It will be the same as money." ' The horse was put up again, and down went; the country gentleman to the Long Wharf, where the mamba kept. "Well," said he, am going now." "Are you," said the.gentleman. " Well, goad-bye, sir." ' "Well, about my horse ; the man said the bill raust.be paid for his keeping." . "Well, I suppose that is all very right, sir." "Yes—well. but you know I'm your wite's Cousin." • . ,`-'1 7. 435 t ,'! said the merchant, "I know you are,,hu,t your , horse is not."' A Lancaster county girl agreed to kiss a.yoUng man every day for two year* if be ,would quit smoking. He has made nightly pilgrimages to the garden gate anclJeceived the promised reward for six months, but she has taking to eating on ions and garlic, and he is getting thin.— He avows his determination to stay with her, however, and we believe he will, for such is - love. • Be Always Neat. Some folks are very charming at even ing parties but surprise them in the morn ing when not looking for, company, and 'the enchantment is :gone. There is good sense in the following" advice to young ladies : Tour everyday toilet is part of your character. A little girl who looks lilts a "fury" or a "sloven" in the morning is notto'betrusted, however finely shimay look in the evening. No matter how bumble, a room may be, there are eight things it should contain'; a mirror, wash stand, soap, towel, comb, hair brush, nail biush and tooth brush. These are lust as essential as your breakfast before which y.ou Should make good 'use of them. Pa rents who fail to provide their children with such appliances not only make a _greaLtaistnke, but-commit-a-sin-of-omis— sion. Look tidy in the morning, and after dinner work is over, improve your toilet. Make it a rdle of your daily life to "dress up" for the afternoon. Your dress may or need not be anything better than cali co, but with a ribbon or some hit.of orna ment you can have an air of self-respect and- satisfaction that invariably comes with being well-dresseck A -girl with fine sensibilities cannot elp feeling embarrassed and -awkward in a fagged and dirty dress, with hair Un kempt, should a stranger or a neighbor come in. Moreover, your self-respect should demand the decent apparreling of tour bod • . You should El . • a to look as well as you can, even if you know nobody will see you but yourself. Help One Another. This little sentence should be written on every heart,slamped on every mem ory. It should 'be the golden rule prac tide, not only in every—householdbut - 1 throughout the world. By helping one another we not only remove thorns from the pathway and anxiety from the mind, but we feel a sense. of pleasure in our hearts, knowing we are doing a duty to a fellow creature. A helping hand or an encouraging word is no loss to us, yet it ,is a benefit to oth ers. Who has 'not felt the power of a lit tle sentence? Who has . not needed the encouragement and aid' a kind friend? How soothing wheit perplexed with some task that is both difficult and burden some, to feel a gentle hand on the shoul der, and to hear a kind voice whispering, "Do not be discouraged ; I see your trou bles, let me help you." What strength is inspired, hope, created, what swcet grat itude is felt ; and the great difficulty dis 7 solves as dew before the sunshine. Yes, let us help 'one another, by endeavoring to strengthen and encourage the weak ; and lifting the burden of care from the weary and oppressed, that life may glide smoothly on, and the fount of bitterness yield sweet waters; and He, whose will ing hand is ever ready to aid us, will re ward our bumble endeavors, and every good deed will be "bread upon the water, to return after many days," if not to us, at least to those we love. A GRECIAN THINKER.—A Sophist wishing to-puzzle Thalesthe Milesian, one of the wise men of Greece, proposed to him the. following difficult questions in rapid succession. The Philosopher re plied to them all without the least hesi tation;and with how much propriety and with how much propriety and decision our readers can judge , for themselves : What is the oldest of all things? God—because he always existed, What is the most beautiful ? The world—because it is the work of ,Goa. What is the greatest of all things? Space—because it contains all that is created. What is the quickest of all things ? Thought—because in a moment it can fly to the end of the universe. What is the strongest? Necessity—because it makes men face all the, dangers of life. What is the most difficult?' ' To know yourself. What is the most constant? Hope—because it still remains with man after he has lost everything else. Luther and Melancthon. On a certain occasion a.messenger was sent to Jou4ter to inform him that Me lancthen Was dying. He at once hasten ed to his Pick'bed, and found him present ing sev,Ml signs of the nearness of death. He mournfully bent over him ; and, sob bing, gave utteranee to a sorrowful excla mation. This' roused Melancthon from his stupor; he looked into the face of Lu ther, and said, "0, Luther, is it you ? Why don't you let me depart in peace?" "We cannot spare you'yet, Philip," was the .reply. Turning around, he fell up on his knees, and fervently wrestled with. God for his friend's recovery for upwards of an hour; he then went from his knees to the bed, and took him by the hand.— Again Melanethon said, "Dear Luther, why don't you let me depart in peace ?" "No, no, Philip, we cannot spare you yet from the field of labor," was the reply.— Luther then ordered some soup, andkwhen Melancthon declined to take it, saying, "Dear Luther, why will you not. let me go home and be at rest ?" "We cannot spare you yet, Philip," was still there ply. He then added, - "Philip, take this soup, or I will excommunicate you." The sick man took the soup, and soon com menced to grow better, regained his wont ed health, and labored for years in the cause of the Reformation. When Luther returned home.he said to his wife, with a bounding joy, "God gave me my brother Melanethon back in direct answer to pray er." Pay* a you go. The Lie of a Lifetime A solicitor of the, town of,Ross, in Here fordshire, England, named J. H. Skyrme, died suddenly a few weeks ago. Few.men to all appearances, are more sincerely mourned than he was. All the newspa pers in the' neighborhood published lau datory obituaries ;• societies passed resolu tions of respect and condolence ; the shops of the town were closed on the day of his - funeralT ---- He - was-reporte - d - to - be4ich, and had been universally respected. There was, apparently no doubt, nor reason for any, that the life which bad just do: had-been- an—unustmliyikon-orable prosperous one • and yet the necessary in vestigation of his affairs revealed alniost -immediately that he was very far from such a man as his neighbors and:friends had supposed. His, whole life had. been a~iQ, and bicLbppinpq.4 _transactions—were based on forgery. Pretending to' make investments for his clients, he had appro priated their money . to his own use,', and imposed sham mortgages upon them Its a pretended security for their loans. Ho had also forged other papers, had pledged his 'Clients' title deeds, and 'left his bank account overdrawn to the amount of twen ty thousand pounds. Almost all his neigh bors were his victims, and he left no as sets. He is now supposed to have poison ed himselfto avoid exposure, which could not have been far off. MILK AEI MEDICINE.—The London Milk Journal says, on the authority of Dr. Benjamin Clarke, that in the East warm mi is use , to a great ex tent 4.9 a specific for diarrhoea. Aipint every four hours will check the most vio lent diarrhcea, stomach-ache, incipient cholera and dyssentery. The milk should never be boiled, but only heated suffici ently to be agreeably warm, not too hot to drink. Milk_which _ll as_been_boiled_ is unfit for use. This writer gives several instances to show the value of this sub stance in arresting this disease, among which is the following. The writer says, "It has never failed in curing in six or twelve hours, and I have tried it, I think, fifty times. I have also given it to a dy ing man who had been subject to dysen tery eight months, latterly accompanied by one continual diarrhcea, and it acted on him like a charm. In two days his diarrhcea was gone, in three weeks he be came a hale, fat man, and now nothing that may, occur will ever shake his faith in hat milk. That ,clergyman out in Indianapolis, while preaching his sermon one Sunday evening, perceived a young man and young woman under the gaiety in the act of kissing each other behind a hymn book, did not loose his temper. He did not fly into an unseemingly rage, and call upon the sexton to rush up the aisle and dis band the rioters. No ! He remained calm. He beamed mildly at the offender over his spectacles, and when the young man kissed., her the fifteenth time, he merely broke down his sermon short in in the middle of "thirdly," and offered a fervent prayer in behalf of the young man with the pink necktie, and the maiden in the blue bonnet and gray shawl, who were profaning the sanctuary by kissing one another in pew No. 68. And the congre gation said "Amen." Then' the woman suddenly pulled her veil down, and the young man sat there and swore softly to himself. He does not go to church as much now as he did. Timm BITE.-A sailor went into , a shop in Milwaukee and purchased goods to the amount of fitly cents. Throwing down a bill, he sOd:'"There's a' two-dol lar bill . ; give me the change." . • 'A glance showed the storekeeper that the bill was a,"V," and hastily sweeping it into the drawer, he gave back the change. After Jack was gone the man went to the draw er and found that the' bill was a "V," to be sate, but'a little the Worst counterfeit he, ever seen. Indignant at the treatment Jack was found by the storekeeper and threatened ; but Jack was ready and showed by a comrade that be received but a dollar and a half in - change, so he could not have given the man the bill.— After a little talk the matter was allow ed to drop by the storekeeper, who proba bly learned something he did not know before. •THE LAW MAT IS - WANTED."•A well known minister, Speaking at a recent tem perance onvention. in Boston describing the kind of law. we need on the subject of, temperance, said,We want another law, passed, talked, written up. • preached eve rywhere, and that is the law of individu• al self-control, which makes a man feel his responsibility to other men and to his God. When we have created that idea of self-respeet we may trust a man every- Where; though grog •shops may be as thick as holes in the ice in the spring." If tem perance people bad bent their energies in this direction twenty-five years ago, the temperance cause would stand on a better footing to-day. Larry F— tells a good story of one of the luaggage-m asters at a station on the Boston and Albany Railroad, a fat, good natured droll follow, whose jokes have be come quite popular• on the road.- His name is Bill. A few mornings since, while in the performance of his duty of changing baggage, an ugly little Scotch terrier got in ills way, and he gave him a smart kick, which sent him over the track yelping.— The• owner of the dog soon appeared in high dudgeon, wanting to know why he kicked his dog. "Was that your dog?". asked Bill. "Certainly it was ; what right have you to kick him ?" "He's mad I" said Bill. "No, he's not mad, either," said the owner. "Well, I should be, if anybody kicked J me in that way," responded Bill. $2,00 PER YEAR, m'it aud alantor. I "Weight for the wagon,',' sang the fat ,lady. Spots on the sou — freckles on your boy's face. ,A-Maine-roan-has put up ; oo-leis land sign reading, "No guniN aloud Jlear.'.' )ur minerals," is tliellettli asking a p• -OD '..tA A German doctor maintains that la.- t: dies of weak nerves should not hp perrilift tad M sleep alone. Who said they shciiih32 • -hotel-in—Giape-Street;Syraeuse - , - br: fore which there is alarge watering trough has a sign bearing the suggestive words, "Milkmen's Retreat." . An old bachelor, who supposed himself to be woman-proof, unexpectedly. fount himself caught the other day in the mesh s of a bru-nette.:: • An Irishinan havindbeen told thatttig price ofbread had'been lowered exdlaiiiiz •• ed, "This is the first time I ever rejoiced at the fa ll of my best friend." • We.all need resistance to our errors on every side. Woe unto us TThen all men* s . eak " all men shall give way to us ! "It's a very solemn thing to be mar ried 1" said Aunt Hamer. "Yes, but it's a deal more solemn not to be," said bliss Bartlet, a spinster, aged forty. ji,_greater_tban_that_of_Niagaxa, Yosemite or Mammoth Cave, though each. of these is, in itself, without parallel. But the most grandest, Most wonderftil, and "What makes a little dog wag his Min". asked one darkey of another, "Cause de dog is stronger dan de tail ; if de tail was de strongest it would wag the dog would'ut , it, say ?" Of all the disagreeable habits the world is tormented with, scolding is the most annoying. To hear a saw ftle4or hear a peacock scream, or an Indiaal yell, is music compared with it. . Busy not thyself in searching into other men's lives ; the errors, of thy , own are, more than thou canst answer for. It more concerns thee to mend one fault in thyself than to find out a thousand' in others. A man assigned to a room in a hotel, at Sedalia ; Mo., founiia lady's night-gown that had been forgotten by the lady occu pant. He sent it to the clerk with the message i "This of no use to me etaP ty." "My dear sir," said a dying parishoner to his clergyman, "if I should will the church $lO,OOO, would it improve my prospects in the next world 2' "I can't assure you it would ; but there would be no harm in trying. A stranger, seated at a table of his pi ous host, commenced eating 'When WS host, checking him,'said; "We 'say some thing before taking food." To which the stranger replied, "Talk, onaq4At turn my stomach now." . , •- • ; "Ma'am," said a littlebof mridav". school teacher, "is coffer-danAirearine" "No, my dear, what makes you ask r "Only that Uncle, John said, !,',Jiadn't it been for Ayer's Cherry PeCtentl, Malt Lucy would cough4r-dam head off." A lady dealer in hair goods down east, heads her advertisement in the local news-, paper With this travesty, by Dr. Faits : . "How vain are all things here beTow— How Eilse and yet how fair! But if for false things you will go, I Invest at once in hair." George Maley, a famous Methodist preacher, once in addressing himself. es- - pecially to the colored people of-his con gregation, cried out: "Yqu, ,may dear. black brethren; God bless your , black, greasy hides! when'yOu get-to heaVen, you will be jappanned all over frith' 00rj,." "Papa didn't ,you whip mtoncefor, bit ing' Tommy ?" "Yes, my child ; and you hurt him ye ry Much." • ' • . . " "Well then, papa, you •ought to whip sister's music teacher, too ; he bit, sister yesterday afternoon right on the cheek,_ and I know it hurt her, becauSe' she put her arms around his neck and died to' choke him." . One of the custom-house officials on the dock yesterday observed a woman coming off the boat with a bundle iu Mr arms, and as he thought she rather sought to e vade him he, he f►llciwed her and said, "Please unroll that bundle; itlooks rath• er suspicious." "Perhaps it does," repli ed the woman, uncovering the head and face of a bright-eyed baby,' "but I've got seven more of 'em on the other side." • The Utica Herald says : the man who thought anybody could milk a cow. don't think so' any more. He-bought . a cow ' yesterday, and last evening took a new, • tin pail and raison box, and started for the stable. Be revolved out of the stable, through a window in just three minutes: '' At the same time the tin pail was Ileord• wandering among the rafters, and the rai son box came bounding of the door.. The. hired girl made a reconnoisantie hilforee,' ' and reported that the cow was .standii. on her horns_ o to speak, and _5y.72 , -.lf!!g: 7 her hind legs fur new worlds to .compter.. NUMBER 7