The agitator. (Wellsborough, Tioga County, Pa.) 1854-1865, January 04, 1855, Image 1

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    THE-A&ISATOR,
iu isdtota;,lsW^SSsssSF ,> *'** , 1
Thwr»d*rjffiralag. 4.
iij.Hi riy«flfcgßaa/Ti nri
. KBW7TfiAl«itß&rin6l ! 9 «04
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b *s«’iCu: ?Tiir-tmiy MJCITS'# .s**l boo | *
Batall ?' ' ...
n qol* b<rarilßon»’l>«r^Mt'in ; ll» New. /- *
. ; Th« hloUvjigo,Hirocoida»go-p ~’ .uni- , ''=
, s . •■
Ana ripened with it* Waning age— ~. ( •,... L
Thpio obeli survive iu burial night v
~ r, /„,« :l I V :U-.l j '-.ITS ‘■■ I
, Bulapifot »ye, . ~ ;
Bj IvMt Wrdrifr'wdabb&ijhtilhd wold. ••• >
TbeOfd Yearlodfia New Shall be,- : j“
iL wamingpyfojen «flta:»A*«,—., o'.S > V
Andmany ahahdaian to act Jree;: , ■ ;.’ •■
Before iU mighty polity is to*... , '
f Oordwn faMsudf So fair In'nime,
(fc boastfutwhile thomightietl ahime .
Thai ever reigrjod on tljis grew earth* ,
Frowns down on ercry fryemin's kearth.
So pronil of whit Its martyrs Bought '' ll! '
With blood and treasure, and with lift:
Undreaming tint tliework they Wrought
In council and in deadly strife
Should hy their children be defiled.
Undreaming that their mouldering bones
Should be disturbed by sighs and groans, ’
By sound of scourge and clank of chains
Upon llicjr sacred burial plains;
Undreaming thaf their rusted brands
Should serve as gyves for'freemen’* hands,
Or that Columbia’s honored shield
Should bear njion a gory field,
Scourges for stripe* and bolls for stars I
That freemen's backs should glow with scars,
That crush the freeman’s manhood out, ’
And haunt him like the bolbrand bars
Where felons drag their chains about 1
Our own fair land—land of the brave!.
Home of the free—home of the slave!
Ulopia! blest Freedom’s fold,
Where men are scourged, and bought and sold'.
Where Woman—last create and best—'
Earth’s crowning joy by man confessed—
As if Cnlnmhia's pnde to mock,
SUi throned upon tlie AUCTION-BLOCK'. !
O, let us boast, but not forget,
Columbia's not Utopia yet.
Troubled .Europe—war-worn Europe,
l\lar*hals bercoptending hosts.
Rocks, from Southern pen to Polar,
WUh the strife upon her coasts.
Turk and Russ nnd Gaul and Briton,
Mingle in u bloody fray,
War'ii red glare Ihcir torch funereal,
And ihcir dirge the trumpet'* bray.
And there await* a mightier shock
Than Europe’« thrones has shaken yet;
A fiercer blast her courts shall rock,
'And pence for her awaken yet.
Forced un by Falo to Freedom’s goal,
Her,sin.slmll be for*4ken yet;
And Tyranny?* Sebusloiml
- By Freemen bIiuII be taken yet!
There is a sound of mourning in our land—
A sad, continual flow of tears and groans ;
And signs of Man’* bereavement, on cadi hand
FI tsh up in widow*’ wails and.orphans’ mount.
A mocking demhn has tniirped the thrones %
Of sweet domestic peace and wedded Iflisa—.
Mid with excess, men worship slock* and stones,
Rum’s haled Serpents on our hoarth*l<>rtca him—
0, hath this groaning land a mightier wo than this 1
The Ladies—oh, what can we say, of Columbia’s
cherry.lipped daughters I
Who lead us poor mortals adown bv Love’s ever
sweet-springing waters.
Who lighten our labors and sorrows, who sack us,
and lease us and bless as,
Who, when we refuse them a favor, to conquer have
but to carets us.
Who steal both our hearts and our pnrses, howe’er
much we grumble—the witches!—
Who sympathize with our misfortunes and—dam
oar old stockings and—pantaloons!! \
0, ye who ail by your blazing fires,
Secure from the cold without;
Forgetful alike of ihn drifting mow
And the norlh.wind’s boisterous shout;
Remember, full many a poor man sits
Unmanned, by a fire lews hearth,
Id the midst of a circle of tearful ones —
Passing away from earth !
The Giver of Good would have us be,
Bach mao to each, a brother; *
Then let us though Fortune frown or smile,
Never forget each other.
I CALENDAR FOR 1855. g
s*3 **i c/in r-t c<* H s;
C 2 at Sp* > dc rC i •p , >
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o' c'l
• f !> j _
• • 1 2l 3| 4
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t0£1415161718
1E2232425
jg| 28 2330 31..
iL'i-s’e!'? b
TOnll 12131415,
Sfi^Jßlua«2l22.
25262728.....
TO ..1.. ..1..) 12 3
Ua J 4 5 6 7 b) 010
®51112131415;16)7
TO S'l B*l9 20 24
|g’ p52G27 2«23 3U3lj
'l’3, ! 4 sl'b'?)
Sgi 8 3 10.11121314
fgS 151617181920 21
TO ?32 23 2425 26 27 28
to' 23 31)!.
g* .... 1| 2 3,4 fi
SSU 6 7 8. 3101112
to IT 1314 1516 17 1813
g? 232425 26
TO’ 2728293031 ..'..
®4'3|'4;s'6 7 B's
TO s*o 111213141516
ton 171819 20 2132 23
|24 2526972820 30
5 6
m 3
1920
2627
2-3
I 910
i J6J7
2324
Religions DeiomlkitlbnliJ 1 &c:.' of tfoga
1 ! Oowxty.-
' m‘s» •; /- f U< 4 *' ""
PRESBYTERIANS. ,u
10i Hanses of 7:,Pastors lo
catedasTullowi in.:, ■ ~; i, u,t„ :■■.•/-
Wel/gfiacodjih— Rev. -J. F. Catkin«,N> ?
Pine Creek—' «.Vv : .:i,v r.Vi
Lawroncevillt—Rev. Mr. Batnes.
Elkkmd—Rev. Mrif-LockWoodl*- ’;.^^ 5
Tiop»-^ltßv. .O’.
e. B. Benedict.
&Wowbi»i , g— }l 4f )-
rßercter’slsland^Rev.-Mr.WooabootfiM
Farmington— «r I |
Richmond,-—No Pastor.
1 Church. Wcllaboro’—Rev, A. A. Marple’
:HUh
I l i.i.'V-i ,I'aLi ,&.H'}.'JJ yV.JMfd ,
U yUr\» M .! i*l
u !Wpw;lw S ; u ■;
Be******"*^
■■'■ i"
■ Ma^fiel J, 4 L, ; Rqgerj< ( [ -
A- fr«*sP« =Mwi resk
*uBticfl Moijsnclfl* ■>'■'! ■' )
tlv / |
14 Congregntions,6 Meeling"Hoiiiiee i and.
one-now building, ■ 10 .Ordained /Ministers
and I Licentiate. 683 member*. 1 ': The
Churches are located in -Delmar, Cherry
Flats,' T/ogo, Mansfield, ■ Covington, Bloss*
burg, Sullivan, Jackson, East’Jackson; Chat
ham, Middlebury, ‘Farmington, Brookfield &
Charleston. There is a house, built the past
year in Gatlin'. Hollow, a Union House,
Methodist and Baptist^
' Welsh Unitarian's one Church in Charges*
ton; Catholics one Church at BlossbuVg;
Lutherans one Church at the Block House.
There are several congregations of Wesleyan
Methodists and Universalisis/but they have
no regular houses. of worship.
TIOGA COUNTY OFFICIAL RECORD,
Judge— Hon. fe. G. While, Wellsborough.
Associates 1 H,,n - E - D y er > Cnvin^nn -
Associates £ Hon g Lnlvrpnc< , v;((e
•Sheriff— H. A. Guterfisey, Wellsborough.;
Prot’y, dj-e.—i. p. Donaldson, “ l
Register, <fyc. —W. D.-Bniley, «
1 Benj. Vhndusen, Chatham.
Commissioners > Aus’in Lmhmp, Lrtwrence.
7 O. B. Wells, Jiicksnn,
Comm'rs Clerk—A . J. Snfield, Wellabnro’.
Treasurer —Hmry Rn'hlmnp, l Elk land. •'
Tren's Clerk —Tims, Allen, Wellsborough.
Surveyor— Dnid Hebe, Delmar.
Corontr—inri Ruse; Riiilnnd,
i Charles Rvnn. Lawrence.
Auditors > A\mll,<s PiUs, Richmond.
7 A/ E. Niles. Ch'iriestrm. *'
Dist. Attorney — J. W. Ry»n, Lawrenceville.
Thomas Allen, . • Wellsborough.
A. S. B'ewsier, . • “
S. B. Smoke, \ • Kll*lr.r,4'. -•-
J. N. Bache, . . Wellsborough.
C. O. Bumnn, • . Knoxville. •
A. P. Cone, - . Wellsborough.
P. Damon, t • , • . .Lawrunc^vilie.
J, Emery, ... Willsbofough,
J. W, - • Tioga."
Wm. Garreison, - - . -
James Lowrey, • • We/lsborough,
A. J. Motiroe, • - Knoxville.
K. Parkhursl, • . “, i ,
J. W. feyon,» - - Lawreoceville.
D. Rmhhone, - - Blossburg.
F, E. Smith, ' • • Tioga,
C, H. Seymour, - - “
B. B. Strang, r • . Westfield.
A. Streeter, - • “
Henry Sherwood, - ] - Wellshorougli,
Julius Sherwood • • “
L. P. Willjaton, - - “
S. F. Wilson,
H. W. Williams, . . «
R. T. Wood, - • Elklond,
Every day in the journal ihat with the first
gleam of the sun is flung within,our portals,
we rend the littlo.semence :—“ Married yes
terday,” so and so. Every duy there is h
wedding feast in the mansions of the
earth ; n clasping of hands and unt’on/of
hearts in the dim aisles of some holy temple;
a pledginu of eternal love and constancy du
ring all the hours that are yet to comedown,
like spring flowers upon life’s pathway,—
Each day spipe ,new marriage crown is pul
on, and she who wears iv leading upon him
whose love is the btighlesl jewel set amidst
its leaves, steals away from the “ dear old
home,” and nestles tremblingly in the. latry.
cot where love’s hand has trained the honey
suckle over„rtie latticed porch, and placed
jEolian lyres 1 in all the casements.,
MABBIED YKSTEIIDAy.”
4* 5 6 1
2' 3
lO T&SfiV ti?Vv.iv -rtyr!'.?
r iU 9:11 otlU-i-JnjZS
■Sl'-Wr*
BAPTISTS, v-v
ATTORNEYS,
“ Jlnrvlcd Yesterday.’!.
There are pearls and gold shining now a mid
, the.flowers that fringe Ipva’e pathway; ,apd
stars gleaming, like a chandelier in lhe. firma r ,
meniof hope. There are harp? .tinkling now'
whoye,melody is sweeter than.the sound of
evening belli, and joy falling like a sh'i«er
ofametfiygts upon the hearts.(fiaf yesterday
were wed, . Lite now is become beautiful, —
The. soul spars upwards frofti: |lie_dps(, lij(e
it» page. ,'.Thep6. if, mel
ody i$ Pive.ty.place: yeB,,i^r,e f ,arejtMeisJn,
path.^ith’crowns whonre
pressing onward with sung and prayer; *
(, “ «AfBim,KEST,E|tD^
It sec W noar 9 !opg, distance
A long road final , resj. t ( Rut £im(i,ify3,
ahadowf w|il,come, and
Ma.rd grnndluiher wlho.
were “married rnayhap wdl,,
lurp.back (o (ha recordSjOf. .the’
silvn%;,)f)e ,ysile r t^epi^ri'pg*jjbai
kHPimer Jjs .^one l .,ihe,tr,;ii(fiesji^eod|d l arid,
Kith his dnosen people.— Ncwirk Daty
two gfiTltjsd ()S
are placed,-wreai t-a anp no war note , ,
WISH YOU ALL A HAPPY NEW YEAR
« !L'<l
-w t.rft m ~*&afSgTl
MMI
if v in a
HEtMratf;
droi
wtoyp'iM&T'tliu vu ZTt r.sz-<j y/zd-yutil J*i.')7
■ J, * a ,u ‘ ) OAMiiiV, •O&i&’itolr,', ■-
'll! JUi.-iiT .11,•■I - ') It. Hl-Q.l ft I;--.;!; 4 ,J >;! j ,
here end Wbltt'iKe'bcbtNvid tfiwigh'fct
Klrii)rflla'd9.ttut''td: fetch matted
’biit PgaeSs-wo are dpfitty fair Way tbriiv
Oil* 'grit "hrif&Ugh', tSiW by’jirtgtjj
;l o'ii 7 "* 6bihl
%jns ,: i®ydf %fte r Why. 1 - r Mri{ Biichafisfr Pnd
spry'eflhdgh ; 'tfiey
linin ' an ■(fie'feJd Fogy, fashion,'and Hot aMvifys’
tfeVdy io coftid un'lir Ihe scratch', but with
'ijj«qi';9&fl>'9lj]e, ajd Mr.
Sanders spurnn on 'tolher side, and Mr.Spyle
driven.up behind, wemake out lo git o good
pull out of’them sometimes. Wo have got' 1
vhinsS8 > dn faf a iihe4d here ihiivMr.
Sickles and Mr,.Sanders thinks that I had'
bellerwrite n‘ message to you and the cabinet
home,andgive some ''instructions how (o
-geton.
I’ll tell you what ’tis, Giiiernl, (when I
call you Gineral I sometimes enamost feel ns
if I was wriiin to Gineral Jackson again,) I
■say,''Ginernlp'l’ll tell you*what Vm, them
three S’a, (Sickles, Sunders, Soule,) ure the
three smartest chaps that ever growed in
North America. They make Europe sian
round, and no mistake. Mr, Sou ley holds
Spain bcfwpen'his rhumb and lore linger, and
whisks her about jest as he’an mind to, Queen’
andatl ; Mr. Sunders lavs down (he Demo
to-France, and stuns a pretty fair
•chance of being chose President of the New
French Republic after Napoleon goes out;
and as for old'Johnny Bull,"I'll be licked it* I
ihink the critter dares lo slir an inch while
Mr. Sanders holds him by the horns,
I snpntiße you’ve seen ihom levers—how
Mr. Sickles snubbed Peahmly, the great
Merchant,(ranker, about the 4th of July din
ner. Capital wasn’t it'! Ye see Mr. Peabody
gin a 4tftof July dinner. He's-always doin'
•*ieh things, rtrgivin’ money away (or some
thin nr other; they say he’s got monev einuigh
to buy a kingdom. Wall, he, invited'Mr.
Sickles Income in and jino the rest of nsnnd
haven good set down. Bin. ye see, Mr.
Peabody did not-kbow how much patriotism
nnd real democratic grit there was stored
away in Mr.Sickle’* breast; he had no idea
nn’t j and ihtii was the rock ho split on.—
You'll hardly believe me, Gineral, uhen I
SUV it. hut it’s a tact —Mr. Pi!iibodu2_liml P->*
gtiMimen there to help cut that dinner I ' It’s
a melancholy fact, but it’s true. If ha had
hHlf’n-table foil'of ca'nnihles «e could all n
stood it nnd fit our way through i but -Mr.
Sickles coiilri’nt stand Englishmen. He.ha>)
100 much -Democratic Wood to' him for that.
To mix np Democrats nnd Englishmen at the
same'table is-awful. But ;that wns'nt the
worst of it. ■■ When Mr. Sickles got there he
could'nl hardly,believe hi* own eyes; for
there was a portraile of the Queen hung right
•tip in the same room with Ginernl Washing'
ton! Was’ni that a stumper 1 No wonder
Mr. Sickle’s Democratic blood biled over.—
But that wns’m-ihe worst of it. When they
come to give!he toasts they toasted the Queen.
The rest of Iha folks stood up to- drink the
toast, buf Mr. .Sickles sot down as hard ns or
brick ,* and'he fell so disgusied ihat he could’nt
eat another mouthful.- And’when the musi£,
to increase the insult,- struck up “ God save
the Queen;” Mr. Sickles took up his hat and
marched out. "There is spunk that young
America ought to be proud of. Thai Mr.
Buchanan did’nt lake his hat and march out
on, shows that he is an old fogy.
We’voheld our Congress nnd got things in
a middling good trnin ; though ns I said be
fore, we Imin’t brought mailers to n head yot.-
We manage belter than your Congress does.
VVe did'nl stop lomake so manyj long-winded
speeches, but talked right to the pint nnd gnt
through In «'fr» days. The members chose
me President.of the Congress 'he first thing;
for they said that I was nearest kimor Ginernl
Jackson, of any of Vtn nnd the honor bo.
longed in mo; so I had to lake the cheer. —
[ returned th inks for the honor, of course,
rtild thelf proceeded to business.' 1 begun by
oaMift*-fnr the reporfs of lho committees (hut
bad the business in hands before we met.
;' ;|"CJilU<«J'for thejnport on England first, out
r of'iApecl‘|o- , ter being bur venerable old
mother. Mr; Sicldea who was the bend of
thaToommineer reported-that John Bull was
ari obstinate old 1 fogy, ond had found it ■ very
Hard, id make ony- impression upon him. The
'peOple'all seemed to -be tied to- the Queen’s
iipKm-stritjgspand did’nl- appear to care no
mora'- ribbtit' Democracy than a .horse- does
atWulils'elWdlnlher. Still he hnd fniihto
;believa initt they could he 'made'to take it,
and comps'-he-was readylo off
co«t : and-roll up-bin? sleeves-and -pitch 'into
‘*etw: "i [Cheersi] .’oo-i ,
■I Upon*the question of accepiingi Mir, Sick*
'let’s-report, Mr.'Buchanan roseand-saidhs
iohjecled'to ihe termuoldifoov. he never, did*
|likS'iHe I’'tefnt, 1 ’'tefnt, nnd hhr thought t it? would -dpi
Jmoteniitirr -than- good tin the' reportpßnd' to’
ii»VeA»ha»;4i •"
f - Mr.'iSanddra'said-no j' ihsi was.iha cream
of ithh reportand’- hecobjecfed.to ; ita .djeibd
'stfucfc'iout.o li -war then put
Btichnnnn land -■.■Mr;- Mason-'voied-io
strike it 'out,-aniiherestvaiedlinkeepii-ini
so'-bld fogf'stands 'in -the report by-a i large
.mwjdrityf ton iv.';»*a* edt qnnub; lityrMtH-'u
j f, - l | <(heß caffed for the rrport'bmifrrihce; *' -
j tnadba (bug report j-bul the
>bbM«lnce' WBantoii;»ho Ishrrwtefa'id ncrop in
FtWteo'w*9n’i '<(oile ripbenchigh' tot- harvest;
fijipnleqtr-hsd flliedtttay ipeapJe’d head-(aifulf
1 bfihe>?Eaßtclrh wanand |-lory; tthtfl-ilihe'yc
pouldn’t tftiilltnothpar'i'.tifset-,fk>Btpir<paid;
1 Mr.-SenAe/d, 1 lime comio,’
boys; wail a little longer,” [Cheers]
,'jjjUuX wtiietSKylhuVX
,CIOlKv3 li'Jtl) j£ ; g
£
;pil *‘{u,si;slli.7 it; i t
«-.1 s
•nftfimp B# WJslftif#’!'?- # w>q
k£2_PCJ tcftui lid) liiikiuTL 'Lit HXtzt.
■ —, . > — w ——- - —• — — i - i ■« i i « —— i
—^BDe'ii.*
ia owi> faa<ai)l I ti.jUE.j.'ts-b.-Ahi'ii* tokmo ?d> '■ >yJsm reO-off' jt .‘*-.bwfi-«l,artf—.{toj i;r»>tK»4S ■■
(Wjifet With"- d y n wv|sa Lfait to
wait a Ijfile fonger,
i i i ,fln { ) ( l r^ei g r t
. „
>*; J ;|faeir.cii}fed,.;fof thoreporl.qm %u0..,* ,
ifM*. SQglajnrQsepjWUh fi«uUi,ht* : eyea,iipd ;
e W3Q«x<aadjh}»ider pa. hie toog«t4,>4Jo,repor.,
ted that if there was any i target-,
i flingjsunbeams outjof ,*covycumber-herhould
i idatit j andihe had,coma; peskjwiipar Jciitdlio’
• Jhecflameßf Dernoctbcyi ftontv ooecnd of
■ Ho> had. chtjtflbtNlie' cream
■Bpmlisb Democracy* clMmed ii welli and the
* iKvim: on the tbp of
the buttermilk t and bo ihoughtforrtwbil&lbe
business wsddone; bin when he lookedtrtlo
‘ihe chttrn again"; tdhisamazontebt iHc witch
craft of- despotism; hadgol ‘ lhe''uppcf hahd,
and the butter Was all meltin 1 back ihtjb the
' butternlilk.'' Cuii'aiiys he, oa trudntT fnclisoh
flogged the'Britisn at New Orlepjis', I'll have
' B red hot hol'so sfiob in put in ihal‘churn, ahd
’ •had milter rriiiSt ’cdme." [Cheers)
.Soyou see, Ginernl, ho\V "things are over
here. ' VVe can't do much just yet, but yuo
mby depend on inhere is great limes ahead.
You ami Mr. Mardy and ihoresl must hold
on and try to keep things snugi and tight at
hiime till we gel but dovernm.enl under way
over here, »bd we’ll cut out' sdma work for
you to do.befure lpng; and ihen matters and
things,that we don’t send over any particular
direcnopsnbout,. yotiand the cabinet tjiust
try to getalong wifh,aml;-maa(igp.. accordin’
to your best discretjpi);, -.Jiut,., you better bo
getting your .force ready as fast as .possible,
. for we may ciill.Tori Vm,«(. any moment.—-
.You better enlist the old D.owningville com
pany, and get cousin Sergeant Joel >to take
command of it., .Xjel Mr. Murcy. to plan out
the uniform,.and gel my Triend Cushing to
address ’em and (ill ’em foil of grit and gin
ger, so they can’i-be held .buck, but whl be
ready at n mortteiit’s Warning to “ match” and
carry democracy all over Europe ." aind Asia
'and America.
Postscript. don!t know, but the muss
is.beeun, and wnmay hnveto send over by
the tiexi' 1 steamer for S;t rgen ntJnej'npd his
company to come oh. ’ The. French Emper
or has got fritened. or mad about matters, 1
don’t know which,'and has' snubbed. Mr;
Srtuley and forbid his settin a fool bit his land.
He turned him right nut of the doors of
Frauct! nnd told him to go about hrs buiness
somewhere. This was when Mr.• Snulqy
was mi his way home to Spain from our
were very earful not to hold it in France nor
Spain ( nor . Euglitnd. so ns not to stir up a
muss with ihts: Governments before it was
time. But, Napoleon has becnfnolishetiough
to put his foot in it, nnd now we’vehll ngreed
thm he hns got to knock under and-back out,
or smell thunder.
In haste arid same agitation I remtjin yoiir
old friend and Mimsjjcf., General’nf la rue.
MAJOR JACK DOWNING.
Old Deacon, gufford.
Old Deacon ■ Su fiord—or, as ho was famiU
inrly called Deacon Jo—was a rigid - ’ disci
plinn F);in, and being (he senior church deli
cun, looked aCier (.he delinquents with a sharp
e>o. Deacon Jo was in thehnbil ol parcel
ling out the SBrm'on,”'giving to 'ench one of
the congregation,their portion, according as
they needed. . ,
One warm Sabbath afternoon, the pastor;
thinking that those who had no interest in the
subject df religion would likely full
asleep, prepared hihiseff 16 preutli rliVdotlylu
ihe church. The deacon was'.jin "hand, to
“ pnrceroui” the seynon, as fust as Jt come
from the lips of (fye minister. The 'pastor
commenced wiljj' his, close-fisted, penurious
brethren, plainly, but earnestly!;,
. That helong»,(o brqtherGram,” said tho
dencon. . .. , , ~,
The next remark was designed for .(hose
who weni about doing good, but ainde sa
much noise"end parade.about it as to destroy,
a great part of the good they intended lodp.
“That is'.sister Urimpkins(”i said deacon
Jo, “ no mistaking that.’’—t - n
The p-istor continued hie sermon; but th'tf
deacon, who.hdd' worked- hard during the
week,'fell'lnio a dozing slumber. 'Neverthe
less,' ftl(trough-the f hody of the deucdti • tea a
sleeping’; the wus'rictive; fend whether
etiKperforified their 1 function or nbt, each'
, portion was ns faithfully “ parcelled buy 0,9
though the'dea'con' htid'betfri wide'awake.
. .' breihfeq,” concluded?, the
parson, there'(s u class nf persons who lislen
attentively loie.very sermon,.but <■who ate ’Bo
freehearted nmL benevolent that they do not
retain any forjbemselVeit.ibul’ parcel U out
among their-brcthreni nnAfeislers.” , *0
- ,l That's-iirinpby'ihunderi'lssid
the sound of his voice’s waking him '/‘ and
/ detaree ir!” '/.j a
‘ Whether ihodeacohcontlnuad (ha practice'
'offijf parctpmg qtjjf.lho;: sermon.pftetWnrds,
we ,9re ua»bl,y ! ld«ty 1 . but we. presumat.jfohs
[didt-thai- iwtitbptta&fflail'ptiritbn for himself.':
i ■i?; l a-graH;7.tr' •’.lf -,u
j a j i> 13: .1 e J.Cy l,;i» 10 ucp^Bk_^n.
■the heart. .If wegyg^/f^jj^e.doipgn.geqs
- item °
ilnpg-cnursq^f^
has its usee, r Jwt imnuttving. purring, gpi}.
IgOfldnesa,)? pj», ppe cagtgS;
are oommiuedibyLUteo overflowing srtjlt blood.,
and.- robustness.,vy'-./.-OHi.-.;..-o-- j. ,;,bvii
r -■> -■ j 1 1 j- tt . - j;u .Mtn
i n a maritime
moire SS?'-
nleWsiyr.j ,*(,*KIOV 1b aiawkif. -wit a bosBMyT
I A Kentuckian Sflf%
bq<w if|fid^*asw,eted ■» -s-vp «8' «vnr*m*ic .rail-'
“ About ten bariereof Whisky, besidsswltah
♦a waste for bread,”
•
WWI l 1 vust/ ~
t
-U. ~ .i. -- * f
-otv,- iOl T ,\ - V-*
Tbß of a leHe'r from’ k'
! Yahkefe M cbrre*pertidem oft be Galvestdn'NewS
, i’ v - ■■ - J - •*• . «•* ’
'■’’WktllJ tpdrup %irt|hfir*t rste.gbdd fta-'
rrbet ttrß biffard laMe. I
‘1 n'aWd' was intlroduiiied.'lo his wiTei’a finn
Tollman—looked asthoUgh she lived onlaf.
fib*, l He? fade 1 tt*'a* 1 «0 fdll'af Tan.-’ Alter ' a
whiK—ilW we’d jhtd girl,'and
abbot j he- gardeniandabout lha u 'veatbar in
come three or fouf'ehildren, Inffin’, and skip
nipV as.,merry a$ Mi'ckeia.. Thera.-%m D 9
1 dboUt 'fine
and I siartedTor my saddle-
Hb? l !*® a *°* «f sugar for
ihe children as [ went along. ' ;
Come here,” said..!,ypu Utile rogue,
and tell me what your name is."
The oldest.one came to me end says:
“My name li.Peter SrnJih,''
“ what is yopr, name, sirT 1 ’
B»b Smith ” . .., .. ,v; .
, The next said his. .name was Bi\l Srpilh,
and thefourth-said his name was Tommy
Smith, I. gave ’em sugar candy, and bid
Smiih waa so ticklpd that she .laughed
ull;(be time’.. Mr,. Smith looked on but did’ol
say, much,
, “ Wfiy,” said-1, “ Mrs, Smith,,! would not
ijß,kc a good deal for them four bby«, lf I had
'em-T-lhey are so beautiful and sprightly.’'
“ No,’’says she, laffin,' “1 set a good deal
on ’em, but we spoil ’’em too much.” ,
“ No, no,” eays I, “ ihey'ro rale well be
haved.children; and.by gracious,’.’ says I,
pretending to be stariled by a striking resem
bbince-benveen the boyi and the.father* ondl
looked at 'Mr. Smith;- - “ 1 neverdid -See any
thing equal toil,” saysl ; “ youreyes, mouth,
forehead, arid perfect -picture' of hair, .eir,”
tapping the oldest bn the pale,- I -thought
Mrs, Smith would have died laffin’, at - that;
hferorms fell down by her side, and she ebook
the whole house (tiffin’. 1
" Dn you'think so, Col. Jones t” said she,
looking towards Mr. Smith, and* I thought
she’d go dff irt fa. laffin’ fit.'
' “ Yes,”.says'!, 11 1 do, taily.”
" Hu, ha,' hnw !” says Mr. Smiths kind o’
Inffin’, b you are too hard on mo now. with
your jokes.”
“ I ain’t inkin’ at all,” says I; “ they tire
handsome children, and do iopk wilder fully
lik% you.” ''j'
' Just ihe it a girl brought d light in, and I’ll
be darned if the little brats didn’t turn out to
be niccerfir—of ’em. and -their hair
was ns cofly as the blackest" nigger 1 * t 'Mr,
and Mrs. Smith never had any children, and
they sort of pettvd them niggers as-play
things.'
I never felt as streaked as I did when I
found out how things stood. }f I hadn’t kiss
ed the nasty things, {could a got over it; but
kissing ’em showed i wasinearnest. Though
I-was,‘soA soaping ’em all the time, how to
get over ilia scrape I didn’t know.- Mrs.
Smith laughed so hard when she saw how
confused, I was, that she almost suffoca
ted.
' A'little afterwards, there was a whole fam
ily of. relnliona arrived from the city and turn
ed the matter off; but the next morning 1
could see that Mr. Smith did not like the re
membrance of what 1 had said, and I don't
believe lie’lf vote for mo when the election
•entries;!''' I ’sped Mrs. Smith kept the old fel
low under the joke sometime. '
Yont’c a JBrlck.
A certain college professor had assembled
his class at the commencement of the term,
and was reading over (he listof names to see
that (all. were present! It chanced that, one of
the number was unknown to the professor,
having just entered tho class.
“ VVhat !ja'your name, sir ?” _asked the
professor, looking through his spectacles.
You are a brick'.’’ was the startling re-
I'lyW ’' ; . " • -■
■„ ‘‘ Sir,* 1 said the processor, ha!T,.alartihgou(
of. his.chair m.ihe supposed impertinence,.Jig
sure riipt hfthud understood him cor- 4
redly,/ 1 Sir, l-did no,I. exactly .understand
your answer.” ? . . ......
You' are a, brick,” was again , the com
posed reply, . ,-, ~ ~
TltisJ* intolerabla!” sajdvthe professor,
his foce 'reddeuing. “ Bawttrc, young man,
attempt to'insult me.” .
■ ‘' Insult you !’’ said the student, in turn as
tonished, “ hmrhaver I done it ?”
“ Did you* not say I was a brick I” returned
theprofes-mr with stifledindigntttion. ...... ’
No, sir you osked rne myvvname, and I;
’answered your question.' ' My name, is U. R.*
A/'Brick—CJfiah Reynolds Anderson Brick-.”
i- “Ah indeed!” ; murmured the-professor,
sinking-back 1 inld hisscatih confusion, n lt
WaS'a.ifriScbricepiion on my r p#rt; , Will you
cOQiririeriCfl the lesson, Mr—aherri—Mr.—
Brjck." •. ' •
vtV nit . liltUe ©urn Brook.
.’^‘cter^
fils fHiher. .* , wt .
*<!$&&& l i. x ¥ dan ?
Vfr\'m -.Vf 4-‘
-e> a**
mnkMiiml ,-,v«
; ftwsy a .)h«(ld.l{9.v wM.
■ qny^hoW.’VWisMjlhe ,W<
'B4)«jleripg s lhrpujb4bovWJ»ler. ag^^^AP l : ?
: but PI
btoofeidlid«ty < .i«BddP
■ cai|tg«|top!'ta f thw.^«i*!<^^
i Thetilergyinan sotight aalrniervieiV
-tttßrmmhßrdmtniidiaiefyiiatid-PAWplPibPd^f
T 1
( i
u
Ajfflo j t •j,
T^JTT'T'w
4NBinggt»h>U town frhi»4wirtejrt£i»fraied,
iff Uftto <Ubi*i i w«Mmly-|ba< B»m*4»f a
«»*», toMhend w/wM?*o» •;!>»** jaw Med
ywojVter**# hthhejd aloftaatWirilorfog
-iSalitji hadapaated with hitJMiUMyrftjalpthea
iUdt*.:‘'-rTMr«V a-%, «
Huhda*ibtookinad,iwp wouidhave hai a
JiUl* 4, lip un-this; brook ,00l yl ’apwlJt’a.ao
•mall it arp-Hiißfifih,a h.'r ; ; ; . .<. ;
•v!> V ■ ’;.,
*' - a^jAldW' hia 4 /itrne far
Worte'pfeturrt tjjaniba TCllowiw, from (ha
-' T y - ■*••- " s '■
.” SctNii-<-Fa»hionabl« atteel.'-Pferttyof
four story' block*, - big pitta 1 windows,'with
•Ophira : of- good* -behind./ Timerf’Wintpr
morning. Shaver and Piqphem 'discovered
•walking tnu'eiher towards their place* oPbuai*
ne«.- i -‘
" B, v (Ioqi) HowVyouir hew’ church 1 ; ‘
" Pi'rlourishloj; finely. Tbeiteeple.ahrn
finished will ’be two hundred ■ fteP'high.*—
s Thlnlf of that I * How’* yoor bew chort-ITI .
’S, All right. You beat Uaon ateeplee ;
curt it already built, and measures only iv
hundred and ninety. We give that up. But
we shall knock you on organa. 'Ours cost
85000.
P. You do floor us on organs, that's a.fact.
Bui per contra, wa shall throw your chande
liers into (he shade. Ours is ordered from
the test firm In Paris, with a carte blanche
bs to cost; i may mention incidentally, (hat
{ paid a bundred'dollars towards it.
S/Well as to chandeliers, I field the palm,
but our pulpit and fixings will leave you-nd
where. 'The pulpit is to be. mahogany and
so are'the sofas andchairs. The bible alono
comes to twp hundred dollars. The covers
of'tho sacred volume are edged and elapsed
with gold; actual weight nine ounces, I
may add, that I donated all but fifty dollars
of it. (Aside—beat him that time.)
P. Yon have us there again. Such gener
ous rivalry in the great cause of religion is
cheering. Though we may differ on some
small points, [they belong to different denom
inations',] we yet work together for. the com
ing triumph'jaf true. Christianity.. *' * ■-
Si Beautiful-! h[y sentiments exactly.
(A child with a skeleton face, and her lit
tle leg, with cold, solicits charity. 8. and I*,
bjj common-impulse look very hard into va
cancy ahead. The child importunes. At
lastS. altnosl.aiumbles over her,-and is fore*
edtodoilce thoT:tiny wretch.)
S.v (Majestically,) Can’t help you. Never
give a cent to. beggars. Invariable' rule.
P. (Putting'on'bo extra touch of frigidity,)
Jast my 1 principles. Thank you for expres
sing them So well. If folks will be lazy, let
’em starve.
(S. and P. move at a faster gait, while (he
morsel of a mendicant sits down on a chilly
stone, sticks her dirty, knuckles into her eyes,
and has a good cry.)
P. Here’s my place. Good morning.
JTStHe — Shrewd ’tnlmliug P.j-btiC i’ll'get the
start of him yet, ’’
P. Good morning. Aside—Sharp fellow,
but I’ll knock him on the next trade.
(S. writes a notice to a family of poor tem
ants, while P. goes down to the store and
b allies the clerks.)
Cdrtain falls.
Popping The Question.
Jedediflh Hodge was'dead In lovp with the
heautcbus Sally Hammond], hut owing to an
unconquerable feeling of diffidence, he had
never been able la screw up bis courage' to
the slicking point requisite to enable him to
inform her of- his predilection. t Thrca seve
ral times he Had dressed up in his *■ Sunday,
go-io.njeetmg-fuin’s,” and made bis, way io
her father’s house, determined this lime to
“do or die." But, unluckily, his courage
oozed away, and became small by degrees,
and beautifully less, /as the politicians say.)
till, when he was fairly in her presence, he
was barely able Ip remarkthalil Was a warm
.evening, Sally, at length, got tired of tb's
ofl-rejierated observation, and resolved to help
him out of his' predicament, for, like a true
woman, she had not (ailed to perceive what'
Jededinh was trying to comb at, but couldn’t.
For the fout-rh lime, Jedediah came, but did
not succeed any better. 'Sally comnn ncrd
lier attack by’inlbrmmg him, that Mary' Sortu
ers, knd intimate friend, was gbiogtd ho rear
ried. | . '• " 5 - r
' “ Youdoh’t say so,” said s Jedediah, thm lc;,
ing the only idqa. that occured to him,'except
one. nnd’ihail he didn’t darb givd utlerprifoe
id. 1 ;; 7 r «- " ■ ■
,l Yes,” said,'Sally,‘‘she’s going ; to htr
niarried next lt seems father queer
that"she'should be married before me, cohsid*
ering she’k a y'eaf yoiiogar."' • .'?r
There was u pause..
11 Sally.'nAer a‘liiffe
hesitation, : “T)I tell youJ gomeihing, v if ybu’lJ
promise, certain, true,jhat you won’t. nev6*
relfVnybody"” ' ‘ PV, '\ ■ ' ; - r , *■
No, i l'woh’f, , ’sald Jetfediah, Stout'y ’proud
of iKe coAfidencc? reppsed in'bim. - •, '
“ f( is’pt much .after all,” cat*
ling down hereyes, “ only £ dreomv : and I
don’t know whether! ought to lell yM after
al.lj ,tjjoiJg|i fp bp pure,
abouivou J in ft.’*' ‘ . V’’-’’ 71 -•
,, His
‘!,iW;l*cn-afraid! you’ll tpll'afer aii.'* ?! !
ghall^_a>lgWreT^Qm.fi^
ypu and I
" {edediah sM rt&l, 1 lit struck'by r a : gplirftW
io UsttfefV l Jbojiitd’ aWhOpjaSiwlW^
SMjBWWawjMWB^
Be just acid (jgf not. . .
-'t L