Star and banner. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1847-1864, May 27, 1853, Image 1

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" D. A: & C..H. BUEHLER
VOLUME XXIV.
Inum
'SW app COM.
111111slo laßylirip.
Veer tiro W --
,Larwbata eloqila boamoan
IMtalYtw
• th i ll raad h t i l =Pr
OW dogs vitro' portal--
Molt holm bad L
- Nodsit * Owosso& ratadovor—
, , Thri01100 1 4 0 " 41 ";
itia fai th 'am sod maids for atorrlso—
tia*loot iitiqoutdo.
arriltrilitaror'r rips* roes.,
drake *awls—.
• giilowlrara polatt to oarthet,loosurp—
r 4aat , 1 8 0:spre. bar I.
1111da Irma pilau* windows
loakola dorataartio.
111PE 4 1004 tO7 40,64trfrwri agelt
HP,
*boa r e dolor Itarse alto *park
' VFW bliilk,,ahraias WON
0* a lirlialat, ti bar lOW brobt—
, ,Bisrairrlitailorre L
,
$00.111411100 Wolaatia.
tM •i rrMi t
dab. kola ow rod oral& far. aarvirs--
.1 bay* WA" hiaolo.
Alfirtro o o , 4 l 4 l,ll W cciluVelo
ray22 l sritad.loy ...hoed
Intowsits.
Ye *Wool sasekiiiieitet throws!
%Wm of VOW. 1 1 0 1 4* *Ad *twit , * I
41 • 1 46.9 1 , - . 1 4 1 di I dill svme
01. 0 0 6 WW I
eihtekqeoUrro.'ihne the eye to the
rqual!lovoi mold* thoi
raise =At
Pof bor sod doe lammo trio
car -
flodier ages' bliW4wilk «Moir itgaTTY
An'thealif *AOM.I.WwIs wqol nip
grad , saiskwiti .tbe vialat 1540 1 7 &gem
Agit iski****o OA Ow pin whew
xf wittiVeps';lll . ised pal:.. "he Inetaii•
kini4s. *ln MONO? •1
Ino• '
Lily therm kissed by the gimes early rtis,
aria sanbliin ' , Ofpistits; Ode of Moo saki
laserests Ise. eddied a ovidifintithea. _
ilesiseull***6ll44lolloo LOW* sad
10111 , 111., ,.. • "W
4101001116611144 r• I , th wires et *MIK
tho L loweatilluth. bidebOY
Sat Kai kr* de - om Oleo* tell.
antlsesektioit,ibso diva.
011 . Mitts ,
Often is the morning whoa ,we woken.
zw . As* whildjib voce.
evaqi*A4bY..loll N ty otk Wirer." sad
•Wisiber boil' Natio yawns . Poe op
Shit most lurtOeffut of Olt iletilkinf—
"thu Eaton irtitan wt, to Soma."
All over the worid.is ends and balk by
she prince sod by the peanut, ria that
town beautiful ployertepoatod-..but stenos
an, it sownissuossist wbea lisped by the
sumity.baised etrAW et Ws aushot's.Anso.
, hissit duo Ws beading foorumrsta, hair put
astily Aia
the. y AM* /undo rokled,
she rairersottnotewbsat OWN& •hefeoks
sbongit it• asw •n•fiwaloir in Ws suothees
eyes.
As ski iambs upon , tito todwon—tising
with Sod iforobodlnsuould knows , not ;tie*
she shall pennon amostfookmer Soleness
--smear steal upon her senses tbs. inoo.
uointkitg of iti ttl eaierta. Sims Satoni.—
Mu wary •babis wre,kosidus tangos' lily to.
awards heaven. bass imbed that
toetbst by Itwirloor
wow* they Oar
1431iss, en *roar *Hy taird."
Her settiliesti wog within bar • else
jump@ God will new Smoke• leer:land
with tear she thanks Him, th a t. she user
uttight ptiy. • '
And arelherelltdratitldren who never
ear nOttr *Wier in An lbw. Mather;
*Awe itt , till shat boldly and beautiful in
ileavotitistliedruerthi that 'they put their
babes to sleep Without teachingthaw thepon
vi, hi t th eyielt I When night folds
hats .littain about them, and the
amen down, silvering the meadows
and smelling the trees, do they not tell
them whp, in His goodness made all this
beauttr wad how with sweet confidence
ibexlibtOletniut in Him 1
Whip me, init Mmet err.
kpkaggrdedier had L devoted gnat *Um
don to elhodlaStion of bis sou, who had
Marl* leithlasished repainting o w
ami Cage Af.fourteen, whop weitdateto
led An at deliberate falsehood.
The father's ((Fief was great, aid hi &-
Windt* to punish the offender seventy.
He !snide the subject one of prayer; for h
WWI ttidttiportant, in his esteem, to be par
,olW we , a common occurrence of the
sikkg'.l. EWA= celled his eon, and prepar
id to rindliet the punishment. Bnt the
fountain of the father's heart was broken
itOrtrept *loud. For a moment the
tad seemed confused. He saw the sing-
f& ilbeWeeallove end justice in his parent's
.eninoutd broke out with all his usual
If s 14014 1 0 1 1 1 0, 1 at 'Wither, father, whip me
*is yap pltase; but don't cry."
t
totakwlegitined. The father saw
'this lad's character was sensibly a ir ee .
i'llinlibinithhi , incident. Ile grew up, and
•Ailtillity• one of .the most distinguished
Cliiii,sitsitt 'Wasters in America.
• •
,-;k - .4,.,,,,. r Titim Allll CQUltAo6otlB.—There is
a
?
~I i ii....., 9 ,o,r e i r u r n u o li n ; a ne p x r t ov to idce f e a n ith,in a
Nana lapin himself is his ,salvation. It
iaika,searst of all power and success. It
041,411 1 1Woret of all good luck-r4o called.
i i ketakas atrianstrong as the pillared iron,
'4;l o llllatitt M. the ,springing steel. Awl
white others bow to china) and aPeidellg,
be makes chance and accident bow to him ;
',sad he moulds them to his purposes, and
._ 1 .
Alptiliillpekom to the car of his fortune.
Glooo Rsasotarro.—"lf you are not a
- twister Ood, lam afraid of you," said a
he passed a counting-room
l.wite' , Bebbetir and saw it open. The next
•diytkir:iefused to sell his produce to the
teebbitivdireaker on any credit whatever.
illwitutted i wisely. In three months the
seldwilkiimulter was a bankrupt.
It If only at im'ltisT i tkat know bow
Much glory there is in being good.
;.:MM.
sr .11110.. Brom t
`There it *pod, in fie hide greaWrair;
on a tied ebony. Mend, In the window
the °drawing room. The rich
Was bit 6 theireostir fringes incept ail*
os eilber aids of 4t,• -sitoilleard•glitisted
erg sew awl fat oiful , 4eiliewhishlidakh
-n wiped to:.lEntry,'stislyet this
rtisa woo Pis &hat aO ll-111
it. ]O 416' ON*
- •
id* As* ,delieleres .asesaiptialogualit
to its amearino 4alloso owfmtoits•
build boats as 11 1 'lt
_Were alatisolier
melting away In its own riel's
wion Ad, Mica :star, makesny3thissike
the Hein perfect lower I
Bet the 11101114* 41014,6111101141100
the window ranged semstitingialroithu t ,
theMoso. "Sealed on is Gammas, in a
deep evens, aid 'Wei* oegaitillerith a
boot; lay what mined the 'Wag mint&
[part of that so lovely a pier,
slosh .so pals, at spitibmiribic Atielee fon
of high the fair forehdefiabl, , •/
d0T 1 00 4 14. 21 # 11 the oxparibmt ;Oa
beirW at , erosth r at sonverfal yet so sib-•
"dead liidireest—ilasereed Martin pietas.
ore anisin. • • • •
911 masetir-Blaresse . echoo4 *WM,
and, imesiaal mica in- a isweetlimpallest
L toes. • ass , iyolarlheido setderomdlywn
`,will am 11 4 'Mu and. apafkling.
the ItS7.4ssiel .e hale 1614 10 4 'l
born of misehief andmotion,
eiagarii a loot that soaresly• - esessed to o
tmit" la writ, eta needle ao ilipiAed•
by dimple'', that U masted like a unmanned
mailer cif osee. "Covey Flamm' / say,"
ssidlre.fstle fairy late views dila vie%
good, mealiest velitne,- atut-tak. irith *i
r iper .little mortet—eleesii Mom g fret,
yoo,,elood, i,ey,deer."
I' ThoSsicappuitienikaa ahjassi-901*-
alp sad •liokisg erpi revealed jses she ayes
yoir eepetited 'to se* beneath Ipfdl► lids
eyes deep, pathisis spod rietA,e4,o4ceia, or
of ed,Palk. ' •
44 .Laap,mmain,"- ,said the Qoaducilislye,'
“moo been -abating-whit yet ere id do
with your pet rose, when . you 4a,to
Yorie.—as te ors frig , eenstarpatkat you
iroll4PS to do;,floe /wow itmaultbs a
ead-pley do sari it,with•limb ► assmar.
beds aa I am. I do Melo," that's
a 'feet : that is. 1 like a mgclatlongnet,
golgtand#o4 Wrlto•Mosirq ; bta
aa.so4ll Wie eendimead fassimethatises•
smeary to bards.' grwwimr, roe 20 eta
in'that
%Lie jovial quite espy mita that,
4 1 0)" , 1 1 1 4111 2 0 0ammida40 11 4 "rye
aolatactioa at waft upon- year talents ;
I bete awasylani for lay fayttil4."
"Oh I then yea know lust *at I , w a ai
goko' g to s 7; Biro. Istindoll I pnwagiii
lisabeat Aptakip; , to yea;.lris ; kerb
yssissday r and I was very plastic en lice
subjoin, tiding 'ber the loss your favorite
lona sustain, and so, fort 4, nit she old
kw 0444 She.l l M4ld .be 4tt hOles it: I*
imn gressAsose, .it is in molt 11 lasi state
nov o se Mil of Inds. i Soli hail Itosir
you would like/ of In 610 to give it to
by; Irk TT , slurp. re.SIRAX-54 1 1.4 1 w'
AA you Atwor-7'_
"Nsj o goto s .rao osaydiiikl bin eth•
erwbooogord
“Who Asa it be to ? yet 'bite so few
bstionterhoro:"
"0 1 401iiowelpr
ifilet detains, Illeseeee."
essisia, yes bees the little pot
girl t 6 trires ise siveteessibt" '
"1"1,11 -lie Xlo,.B,YrilbePs
tw•kilik4644ooilnorom
atith your ether ..akeiberty. old idiah
sitsp- left pew ebildree,
Making ear, andknitti*oneks fair MI the
little dirty lollies'*, tlie,r9gicut ,rmgod &-
about. de,belians *Wpm Ism made
mere walla in those two vile, ilbesiilliog
alleys lark of our house than ever you
have in Chestnut street, thong!' yon .know
every body's been belt dying to , me you;
and now, to crown all, you must give, this
ehoioe little bijou to a aempstress girl,
when one of your most intimate friends,,in
your own class, would value it ao highly.
What in the world can people in their air.
cumstanoes want with.dowers ?"
"Just the same that I do," replied Flo
rence, calmly. "have you never noticed
that the little girl never comes hero with
out looking ,wistfully at the opening buds ?
and don't you remember the morning when
she asked me so prettily it I would let her
mother come and see it, she was so fond of
: . flowers ?"
"But, Floronce, only think of this rare
flower standing on a table, with ham, eggs,
cheese, and flour, and stifled in the close
little room where Mrs. Stephens aod her
dangliter manage to wash, iron, cook, and
nobody knows what. beeides."
"Well, Kato, and if I were obliged to
live in one coarse room, and wash, iron,
and cook, as you say—if I bad to spend
every moment of my 'time in hard toil,
with .no prospect from my window but a
brick sideqra,Br, or a dirty lane, such a
flower as this would be untold Impiness to
"Psiaw, porenco-441. oontinontni;
be
aides, I don't think it mill grow with Am
GETTY&BURG, PA., FRIDAY VENING, MAY 27080.
is • gem-hosio lower, sad mod to
Salado 'Swipe •
• PiCll4 lartilaa t a fainraHaever *abet
wimithea its awaar-ka. via, ; !sad.
Wog atObeaa, ithatavatahni she Va AS,
les.ourbisa .4 sigma* oktbia
eausetbgousituemwLdeW...Ths
beautiful thing, that teed lambs a* tin
glade:U*lU' Totimillease Ad ay lit
'lleisowswill
Sliphetesi rosigauk ACOOrief,
- 4 4W01441014101tricr Wakes ate
likm itoorupoigcssio leudivto gift
them something naelbl.---mbealtdotpobt.
toes or $ harft
"MY , viP 64 490. ;S. orN4 )4Por
wsm.bq,lN4.;F.bs Amifbit Os** $ 0
*Alai fatkProoLcrafitairo" , w4i , nol
Mid „ 'PT ii *tante'. c
,110$ 1 *";4
that we may hare it in our power to : give.
tipmmtharktheret.mt 0 4 -4 ho. Prior
ishaimanibmfeelinimiatik a keonteeMn of
throbbautfaleirbiek rusts.**tiliai.bs;
cloo 4 4,/ are . 4 1 / 11 0 ireo l o llllo Procure
it oarSrltoo4oll-. door litepigrop,
for. slaaPple-3 Ittimow ohs Imoeid , enjoy
bitikandiflowerso andlesatieumamah as I
soot Wit bob:ladle was ha
loiikMi wide 'Magri in ouViirma*tonsto
mall,* net one brantifal tthingoart the
'
eommaliti. From' anearsity, her 'Tomb,
her clothing, ill that 4e 7 ban,: Autst
amme.sai plain- iron should share slow
the almost raiptata)that , the' the Blatt hit •
when I•offeret` tthein my dale"
"pear me tblo Ai/ . be • Sr* , ' nit/
neleX*OgghtoNlooo,v• ,14edn'44,10,
that these hard-wonting, people „bad any
idea , of tatted"
"Then why
. do you see so often the Ge
raoi°l° or R°6o o aref ul ly 4"irrilea•i,kr old
Arwteci tea-po, in, the pppleft , : own, ., or
.rhoMorl ll l. Worieo./0 11 ,,k04 isPibriirood
made to , twine
,ammad. trm wiadow.
net ! 4€lo sbOW 10011, ev.e l 3 oll ,n h eq t
IldWas tho:hatutifal remem
'bet, lipw,biacy our wherWoraan oat pp a,
whole, night after A a 1 / 1 , 4 4°./1'.1. \ !Prk-0, 4
, she Mtght maim her Irst baby, a pretty,
tie them to be baitilawi
." 11. ° 8 4 reolem4 o ;r , and ,low I • laughed
at yea for ,imthMgoaehia,taity Innis cap
for - • • .
•mityet , lCeityg I think Amadei look of
'.'-k 1 41 1 0.44;11,1 11 0 111 .,ikL* 1 0
04:Parfelti:PPrfi*Mritani,* new,
Ikea nod nap,lnmeotnething finitelrostlt
cresting do land. As 'odd not kayo
thanked moisten, if). bid sent ler s batu
rel of flour."
"Well, I never, before thought of giving
the poor anything but what they really
needed, and I have always been Willing to
do ,that, when I could without going far
out of spy way."
"Well, cumin, W our ,Heavenly rather
gave tows se we oftee,give. we should live
only cum Andes. Oa 'proViaion.
lying about'the world, lutesid .cf all the
beadtiful variety of trees, finite, - and flow l
era which now delight. us."
ousind suppeee yocare
righk.bat,pooy hoe mow ien,,way, poor
Wad itrio4oootooll to hol&.o woimeit
Woo et um; sow go **you am troy :"
sod , tho ISt*. lady waging a
litoltsiotoictbefore :the sisal with. wet
utisfaetionl
* * * • * •
It wee a very emtal room,' and 'bilked I
by only bun Wlndow. 'thews Was no csis'r
pOt on ttelltsW ; there was a, dean 'bit
issusely ounia bed in ope
board. ids stew &tee andliatee itethe
other; a eked of droves; and before th e
wises* stood a ensalLehervy , stand, Otte
aevri,and indeed the •enly article in the
ream thatoseamedne. 4. pale sickly Asa*
ing woman of about laity, wee leaning
beak bt.her r!)41)5 chair, her spa dosed,
lata.betSpOW.o"priveewi as if in, pain,—
/The roolied,ll4inirli.aa forwaA a few
I moment", mil:ea be hapd,upoik her eyes,
I and then latignidly rwritned the fine stitch•
ing on which she bad been buy since
morning.,,The door openedeand a slender
little: girl of shoat twelve years of age,an
teredrhar.large blue *yes dilated,.and ab
solutely radiant with delight, as she held
up the small vase with the Rose-tree in it.
~ Q h see ! Mother, see 1 there's one in
full bloom, and two more half out, beauti
ful buds 1"
The poor woman's face brightened, as
she looked first on the Rose, and then on
her sickly girl, on whose face she had not
seen so bright a color for months.
"God bless her !" said she, involun
tarily.
"Miss Florence 1 I know you would feel
so, mother ; don't it make your headache
better to see this flower ? Now you won't
look so wishful at the gardeners' stands in
the market, will you ? We have a Rose
handsomer than any of theirs. Why it
awns tome, than it. is worth as much to
us as our whole little garden need to be.
See how many more buds there are on it,
just count, and only smell the flower.!--
Where shall we put it 1" and Mary skip.
TA about the room, placing her treasure
first in one position then iu another, and
walking off to see the effect, till her mother
gently reminded her that the Rose-tree
could not preserve its beauty without enn•
light..
i F E A RL. EBB ANL FREE
"Oh • yes, truly I" Mary ; "well,
thee, items used boo* this new stand.
liror glad' 1 arn that Ire lave such a hand
some • Dew stead for it, it will look so
towob,,bettar." And Mr} Stephens laid
1 ,
down her . aail (old piece of news
work
paper on widish the tram wee duly de-
PAWL
,
"'There," maid Mary. etching the ar-
MOW' eagerly,. 4 t will do; no,
though it deesriot, show th the bads—
Oyu it farther aron
then, it's right ;" .an .1
190nd to vim the
tiomotter wbioh she
mother should , go rou'
the outside to see bow
HBO* kind It WU iu
think of giving this to
mthoogh she has done e
given us so many tibia l yet this present
seem' the best of ill, use it seemed as
'fibs tboggb►of us, . a ksew just how
we felt, mid so few.doiet,
.oYesiindeed," , said les. Stephens sigh-
Vain a leVtli that small .gift,
made inihat Ws •.Ilow much fast.
e~s ,Seegue and gm flew the lives
)oig day- ;tr. , 0 in the ,happi.
Imisanf her child, al a ;forgot that she ,
pads headasbe, .ind, ,she sapped her
thi
lie
aremintoup df, to . she Alt stronger
tbamshe; hed douche e time.
That Rose I its inil .
died not with
3 .
that fiat day.. all the long; cold
winter that.Aolitnrod, watehing, tend
legend Amish/mg* flower awakened
a **sand pleasant oaf thoeght that
bertibek ithi, sot and weariness of
their life. - Elmo , . the : fair-growing
thing pnt•feeth. Witty ; a bud,
ea
shalliar it mew shoot, — tire:cited
fresh-delight, in„. its . As it
Stood in the tvitelow, t paint -by. would
sensetimea st:Op And by, its
bestity,. sad ' , aka& he proud and item*
mat *my peer did err the seri ous and 11
oftrationt Wide, ti - In dl!ereuea
when she waw the eye a visnote visitor
rest,stimiring), en" vothc
ilut. little idid 3 .know when she
‘ntat
gave that gift; tbattit wined around
it an invisible thread, winched fox into
tkoltaiKotkor.4tol4 - ~1 ) ,,,_ 1 . ,
__,
..
~, Omoseld! efivirentiti einiiiiPtilli,la;
tall graceful young tom lled at the lowly.
room to receive . and tar for some linen :1
that the widow had beeniaking. Ile wea l
a way-farer and s stratiO in the place, to.
commended through ,th charity of some
of Mr. Stephen's weds. Ilia eye, as
he was going oat, rester tdotiringly upon
tho Base. Ile mopped Old looked ettria
emirs& it. i
"it was gloms to us/timid little, Mary,.
quickly, "'by a young tidy As sweet and
beautifigsr shot is.". i . :... . . ,
' , A.6 1" arid the streger. turning Ind
kin ism herr &pair °Seery laighiuyee,
Abused "Dud rather. susti4sith ithe
i4y. of 4 the oemoussiosdo. used how ease
4130 gist at tope% oal littlegirll".
1 4 014 Wow* we urepooroodrsuotber
is ;slob. find-im.nevicelt here , on, Wag
pretty. No used to I hire .11,, gpmeden osee,
, alml werioued Sowers Autism:h i sad Mks
Inurepee loud, all Odious, and so she
pre us. this." .
"Florence 1" echoed be stranger.,
"Tee, dlder FloreusirKetreage. s Wu-
Sitollyosig 1.4 The; "my she tras Irani
11114111 P party r though ams albs bash&
soy ohm ,ledysudyassusier."
4111 s mho hem sow l• *he In.the city 1"
sold the guatlerees,
' I INo, alum left 1101114 mouths ago," said
theAriderr bututotiohq sheitukteu "Wk.
of diespptiatelestt our* Aso, she aided, •
%at pra isatlid 10.4 sheatikewr by in.
quiriug Ater .astotev , Ciarlisde, Np.
10, -----ukteet."
Au the amok of allAkia, /flevenee re
waved :row the • eine; tit tduanseat email, a
letter, lo a huudritiag hie yodeler treat.
ble. , Diring the bark ran Of ber life
spotlit haw, she hil well learned that
writing; bad loved Asia ;woman like her
lov.ee r but once ; but •kere had been ob
stacles of parents and friends, separation
and long suspense, till it length, for many
bitter,years, she had blieved that the re
leafless sea closed fervor over that hand
and, heart; and it was his belief that had
touched, with such 81104oalm sorrow, every
line in her lovely face. But this letter told
her that he was living,—that he bad traced
her, even as a hidden streamlet may be
traced, by the freshuet, the greenness of
heart, which her deeded kindness had left
wherever she had pnssd.
And thus much saidlo our readers need
any help in finishing sis, story for them
selves ? Of course not. ,
A preacher who had nee been o printer,
observed in one of his eemonsohat "youth
might be compared to ;comma, manhood
to a semicolon, old aaeo a colon. to which
death puts a period."
When a Tennessee girl is kissed, she
exclaims: "Now put tint right back where
you took it from ?"
Marriage is the stritest tie of perpetual
friendship, and there •n be no friendship
without notifidenre, keonfidence without
integrity.—Johnson.
Not far from Breslau, in Silesia, in a
demense called Bomb('ld's meadow, there
are two establishments, in one of which
the leaves of the pine tree are converted
into a species of wool or cotton, and in the
other the waters lelt from the manufacture
of this substance serve to supply medicated
baths for the use of sick persons. These
establishments were both set on foot under
the superintendence of a forest inspector,
M. de Pannewitz, the inventor of a chemi
cal process for extracting from long and
slender pine leaves a very fine fibrous sub
stance, which he calls "wood wool." on
account of its possessing the same felting
and spinning properties a s ordinary
wool.
little more—
-1 ry walked a
'ID tanoue pm
aisted that her
The circular leaves of pines, firs, and
other coniferous trees, are composed of
clusters of extremely delicate, adhesive
fibres, surrounding and holding together a
resinous substance. 'flue resinous sub
stance may bedissulved by boiling, and by
the employment of certain reagents ; it
then becomes easy to separate the fibres
from each other, to clean them, and re.
move any extraneous matter. By this
treatment the wooly material acquires a
greater or less degree of fineness. The
pine may even be stripped when quite
young ; fur if the verticles or whorls at
the end of the branches are left. the tree
will continue to grow. The stripping off
of the leaves takes place every two years.
'rho use to which the wood-wool was
first applied was to substitute it for cotton
or woolen wadding in , quilted blankets.—'
In the year 1842, the hospital at Vienna
pureitiwod. five hundred of these blankets,
and after making a trial of theta fur several
years,sent an order for a further supply.
It has been observed that when the pine
tree wool is employed, the beds are quite
free from any sort of parasitical insects,.
and it diffuses a very agreeable and salu
tary fragrance. Furniture in which this
materials employed is bee (ruin moths.
Its cost is three times less than horee•hair,'
and the most skilful upholsterer could not'
distinguish an article stuffed with this sub.
Stance from one stuffed with horse-hair.— !
Tiois wool may be spun and woven, the
finest quality yielding a thread very simi•
hat to flax, and quite as strong. When
combed, spun, and woven (!) like cloth,
44-stay—be employed for carpets, saddle.
cloths, &c., and combined with a weft of
linen orctlico, it may be made np into coy
erlets.
with jier to
looked there.—
iss Florence to
," said Mary ;
muoh for us, and
A Chapter ors !louse-liceplag.
I could never see the reason why our
mart house-keepers must, of necessity, be
Xantippes. I once had the misfortune to
be domesticated during the summer months
With one of this genus.
,j,should like to have seen the advent
trims spider that would have dared to ply
6iitdntnng trade in Mrs. Carrott's prem
ises. Nobody allowed to sleep altar day
light beneath her roof. Even her old
rooster crowed an hour earlier than the
rest of her neighbors'. ..(lo ahead" was
wiiiten on every broomstick about the es•
She gave her husband his breakfast,
buttoned Mtn up in his overcoat, and put
hint mit of the , frent door with his face to
ward the store, in less than I have taken
to Wit., Theo she snatches up the six
lilthtA.lariotta. scrubs their faces up and
down. 'without regarti w their feelings,
till they shine like a row of milk pans.
00Ieat the track" was her motto on
.vrilhing and ironing days. She never
drew i long breath till tile wash tubs
ware turned bottom upwards again, and
every article of wearing apparel, sprinkled,
folded. ironed, and replaced on the baeks
of their respective owners. It gave me'
a stitch in the side to look at her !
As to her ..cleaning days," I never had
the courage to witness one. I used to lie
under as apple tree in the orchard, till she
was through. A whole phaeton of sot.
diem would not frighten me so much as I
that virago and her mop.
'You 'tumid have seen her in her glory
on "baking days ;" her sleeves rolled up
sober armpits. and a long check apron
swathed around her bolster-like figure, the'
great oven glowing, blazing and sparkling.
in a manner very suggestive to a lazy sin
ner like myself. The interminable row
ef greased pie plates, bread, and pots of
pork and beans in an edifying state of pro
gression; and the immense embryo loaves
of brown and wheat bread. To the inno•
cent inquiry whether she thought the
litter would "rise," she set her shining arms
akimbo, marched up within kissing die.
lance of my lace, cocked her head on one
side and asked 1 thought she looked
like a woman to be trilled with by a loaf
of bread," The way I settled down in
my slippers without a reply, probably con
vinced her that I was no longer skeptical
on that point.
Saturday evening was employed in
winding up every thing that was unwound
in the house, the old entry clock included.
From that time till Monday morning, she
was devoted to her husband and her
Sabbathical exercises. All I have to say
is, it is hoped that she carried some of the
fervor of her peculiar employments into
those halcyon hours.
SUNDAY TIPPLING IN SCOTLAND..--011
the Bth uh., nearly 200 gentlemen in Ed
inburgh agreed to ascertain the actual a
mount of Sunday traffic in the public
homes of that city, and Choir report enter
ing into the statistics of each house, the
character .of the visitors bee just been
published. There are in all 464 licensed
houses in Edinburgh, and 312 of these
were open on the Sunday referred to.—
The visitors were-22,202 melt, 11,931
women, 4631 children under 14 years of
age, and 3032 children under 8 years of
age. Total amount during the day 41,796.
The footprint of the savage traced in
the sand is sufficient to attest the presence
of man to the atheist who will not recog
nize God, whose hand is impressed upon
the entire universe.—J. Perin Saw.
When religion is made a aelenar. there
isoothing more intricate ; when Made a
duty, nothing is more easy.
Wool front W..d
FANNY FERN
AN ANGEL 11T THE 11111rAllr1il
BY FANNY YALU
They tell me unseen spirits
Around about us glide :
Beside she stilly waters
'Our erring tootrirto guide !,
'Tin pleasant thus believing
Their minietry on earth ;
I know sr. angel sitteth
This moment by my hearth.
II false-lights on Ilfe's waters,
To wreck my soul spree ;
With finger upward panting.
Km turns me with a tear :
'Twere haw to slight the warning,
And count it little worth,
Of her, the loving angel.
That sitteth by my hearth.
She wins me with caresses
From missions' dark defiles;
Fbe guides me when I faller,
And strengthens me with smiles;
It may be, unseen eneels
Beside me journey forth,
I krone that one is tatting
This moment by my hearth.
A loving wife! 0 brothers,
An angel here below !
Alas ! your eyes are holden
Too often 'till they go;
Ye upward look while grieving.
When thee have pored from earth
0 cherish welll those sitting
This moment by the heath !
Coming ulonse
Clad word ! The waters dash upon the
prow of the gallant vissel. She stands
on the deck and the winds woo bar Sing
lets as she looks anxiously for her head
lands of home. In thought there ■re
warm kisses on her lips. soft hands on her
temples. Many arms press her to a throb.
bing heart. and one voice sweeter than all
the rest whispers. "my child!" Coming
home ! Full to bursting is her heart, and
she seeks the cabin to give her joy vent
in blessed team
Coining home ! The best room is pet
apart for his chamber. Again and again
have loving hands folded away curtains,
and shook out the snowy drapery. The I
vases are filled every day with fresh flow•
era, and every evening tremulous, loving
voices whisper, "lie will he here to-mor
row, perhaps." At each meal the table is
set with scrupulous care. The newly
' embroidered slippers, the rich dressing
gown, the study cap that lie will like so
well are all paraded to meet his eye.
That student brother ! lie could leap
the waters, and fly like a bird home.—
Though he has seen all the splendor of
olden time, there is but one spot that fills
his heart, and that spot he will soon reach.
“sweet home."
Come home ! What peen the sun•brown
ed
sailor in the darkling waters ! He
smiles I There are pictures thereof a Woo
-1 eyed babe and its mother. lie knows
1 that even now his young wife sings the
sweet Cradle song :
"For I know that the bright Angels will bring
him to me."
He sees her watching from her cottage
door ; he feels the heat of her heart in the
pulse of his own, when a familiar (*of
fal! touches only the threshold of tnem
mory.
That bronzed tailor loves his home, as
an eagle whose wings seek Mintiest the
tracks of the air, loves best his mountain
eyry. Hie treasures are there.
Coining home ! Sadly the worn Cali
fornian folds his arms and sinks bark up
on his fevered pillow. IVltat to hint is
his yellow gold ! Oh for one smile of kin
dred ! But that may not be. Lightly
they tread by his bedside, watch the dint
eye, and moisten the parched lips.
A pleasant face bends over him, a rough
palm gently pushing back the moist
and a familiar voice whispers, "Cheer up,
my friend, we are in port, you ate going'
home."
The film falls from the [tick man's eye.
Home, is it near I Can he be utmost there?'
A thrill sends the blood circulating through
I his limbs—what! Shall he see those clear
eyes before the night of darkness settles
shown forever ! Will his babes fold their
little arms about him and press their cher
ry lips to his ? What wonder if new vigor
I gathers in that manly chest 1 He feels
strength in every nerve, strength to reach
home—strength to hear the overwhelming
toy of ometing those dear ones.
Conning twine. The very words are
rapturous. They bear import of every -
thing sweet and holy in the domestic life
—nay more, they are stamped with the
seal of heaven, for the angels say of the
.lying saint, "He is coining Koine."
•
Crystalography.
A new name this, a long name, a hard
name. It is to describe a process discov
ered by John A. ‘Vbipple, of Boston, by
which pictures are taken on paper through
the agency of light with a facility and
cheapness not before obtained. The im
pression may be taken either directly from
the object, or from eugrmings, daguerreo
types, or oil paintings. No have seen
crystalope copiesof steel engtavings and da
guerreotypes, says the Tribune, which were
very beautiful, having the minute , fidelity
and sharp outlines of the one, and the
other with the softness and delicacy of a'
crayon drawing. In views of scenery to-'
ken directly from nature the process seems
as yet to have the great defect of leaving
out all indications of the sky and atmos
phere from the picture. The inventor
states that after the first crystalope is made,
copies may be provided indefinitely at a
cheaper rate than by either lithography or
wood engraving ; he accordingly anticipates
that for illustrated works erystalopes will
supersede engravings. They can be color
ed as well as ordinary prints.
To Knee
to keep liorseratlish,sratea geatttitY_ I
,111",
the root is in perfeution, pot it he. 1101004
Some years ago several young Scotch-! the
men came iii coinpany to New York.— till the bottles with streing viinalk;
On the following day,which was t h e keep it corked tightly, Yon may .410.
bath, it was propose d togo out and si'e the have a supply at all settininii•
city and its environs. All basenteil
oept one. Ile had btien charged by hie
lather, on leaving home, nut to break the
Sabbath. Ile would not disobey him.—
In a few years he was possessor of a laige
estate, and, hie companions were in the,
drunkards grave. •He was visited by a Mr.
reeked liise.."Hovv , didsua so ,
ouutuleto yustr wealth 1" He ansvnirsiL.
I "By strictly observing ille Nabbuth,
, glAito4l
Ai&
Is4t . Ll .
TWO D9t/Alt. AO'
• • w • t r;"
iStiNgn it, ' • •
. I.i ~ f.
/ 64 61 0 006 A ri oi s *o 6* ~..
llfri are confident oar reaillir; Wilt , ,
Peruy• 'ilk later, toilliohil p,
of th at portion of r.Meagher's el imd
lemurs in which he apastroPhiree illii:
•gurret." It is too noble le be Inet ~' i, II
is not superior to the elevated and '
g'lwilti
tenor of his whole discoirse 2
"
tfold, which has caused Inall a braid
,
to ache, has blistered many a hand , ' . heel
fit en many a noble heart. has Wonuthtail#
ay a soaring soul. and clinging to ii;
brOught it , to the dust; gold. which imit
bought the integrity of the statesman, seal
led Ids wiadom captive : gold, which hitt
I silenced the tongue of the endor, an d
I bought th e flatteries el the past ; geld (of
which, in the gay saloons or fashion, amity
e fair mid noble girl bas, plighted the yew
which has consigned her life to bitteniens,
and locked upon her radiant neck . the
snake that swells her veins with vehoeuf
gold, which has stolen into the mined" id'
the struggling nations—has bred diminish*
among her chiefs--has broken the :weal' eit
her sacred secrete—has forced the pateelf
4 ,
'tier strongest citadels—ha , bough' ih e of .
I idettee which hurried her apostles to the
scaffold—has bought the votes which,
made over her inhabitants in others. Il l t
her glory toe strange people ; gold, ith'
l ied the traitor to the garden. and with a
kisr betrayed the Redeemer of the wadi! $
'gold, which its so many sham bee map ,
ped with a stealthy tread or riaietleniingot
men—which has been the.fevehtho NO
•neop, and the despair—has been in turns
and in quick succession. the swindlers the
assassin—the foe of inuocencn, , the Mt
of beauty, the bane ermine ; gold 40 "
ensue a fountain of life and joy, anil,free*
doin—the serpent has been transformrdin
to a blossomed wand. Lucifer has been"'
the morning star. To von. the,eltplte,
of America, it must be pleasing, indeliii c ht
behold a new republic rising up in c hars s
with you the labors and Floties of a future,
before which the conceit of the old'iailif
shall be humbled, am/ in the light of which
humanity shall grow strong." '
Sucthestrul Tact.
The elevation of Mr. I.abouChere. Mr*
a member of the Briiishthibiket. Iq Matti'
a singular story. In 1622.
houchere, a clerk in the bankinft hdniti
Hope. of Ammer'lam. was sent by Mello, ,
Irons to Mr. Baring the celebrated Lairlduid '
banker, to negotiate a loan. He displayed "
in the affair so much ability no to enthely
win the esteem and confidence of,,lbe
English banker.
"Faith," said he one -day to ONO*
.your daughterie a charming creaser.
w ion I could persuade you, to give me Iter
hand."
"Young man, you are joking ; fog nelti ,
ously, you must allow that-, Mies .limn
could never hemline the wifb.ot>r*On*
clerk."
"Rut," said Labouchere "It 1 were,in
partnership with Mr., linty?"
I .oh ! that would be quite a ;different.
thing ; that would entirely, make up . hir.ell
deficiencies."
Returned to Antstenlam, I.elmucheret
said to his patron, "You mast takeite into
partnership."
"MY yonng friend, how can you think
of such a thing 2 It is impoesittle. ,
are without a fortune,.and"-- , ,
"But if I become the Sion-in.law,rif Mr. .
Bering 1"
"Ito that case the affair would be soon
settled, and so you may have my ineell.".
Fortified with these two' Ninnies*. into
bouchere metalled. to England. anti in *WO
month. after married imentani
Mr. Hope had promised to take himirno
partnership ; and he became allied in the
house of Hope OR ihestrength of thatreakt.'
ire of marriage.
A FAIR CALCULATION.—..A shrea4
friend of aura, who is accustomed toy look
att things in a business poi,n I of tieiry
`thinks that the outcry so often toetlets--
' bout expensive preaching is without fetes. ,
• dation. Ile argues thus;
1..1 have," says, he. “is faroily of six i pe r. .
sons who attend church. I •pay twenty* ,
four dollars a year for pew . rent. 1 i Itell 0
1 t wo sermons on the sabbath,, and one du
! ring the week-making . one hundred and , .
fifty lectures, during the year. 1 obtolo..
therefore, for myself and.family,,nine heir,
fired lectures fur twenty.luur tiollare;, or.
in other words, I pay about two and a
half cents a lecture. People gire.isttin
' twenty-five to flay cents for a lecture on
i Astronomy. and almost every caber outs.:
ject you can name except the, gospel g.
surely, for a "gospel lecture" I ought us
be willing to give at least , two cents aud a
• half."
l'he thought thus expressed is rertaisty .
just, and might with great, .edvantagee
he carried out still further.....WAlehreg
75nies. . . ,
Schism has already began to sunit
-1
_
niong the Mormons. A party ealliht
self thiPtNew Church" has sprat* tits and
separated from the original Alistinni
sty. The "New Church" ham itiptiirtikilt
seven 'rulers. answering to the 41indin
Candlestick, and the authority iteskikei
front one to the other. so that it can never
cease while one is left.—Nettr Fo4'reif7
A man whom Dr. Johnson once rem!.
ved for following a uaelpaa and thillaorth•
zing business. said in excuse „
"You know, doctor, shod 1
The brave old hater of ererr l l4lllfost,
and hateful, coolly replimi that alas dal pelt
see the least necessity for that."
Why is the g•tinea se called t Beortrw
the gold with which it was Ara ettioirt Jo
the r e tie illnerlea Whoa, brogia
Guinea. For this reaerinnalai. ttalpiamat
originally bore lba.iroprimieiourotoarrilio.
DitgonefP IPI3-4400 =lll.
mount" ion of kfe Agrawrklagft
pungency to OwnemoirintO,V,
Ifkt
•tr el' 1141
.`i , "' - ..!! -. .!; 4- rn,Y r i ri.