Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, March 05, 1851, Image 1

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    I=
E. EJE t UrTy, rroprietor.
ttarb.s.
nn. 11. xxxxxxarsr,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON—Ojicc—
Maio street, neur the l'ust Ojice. bout, 11„
•witl give his Rat- iditlar attention to Stogies!
disettios, find discnaes of wOmeit earl children.
11i will edge, give his attention every Saturday
morning, it) Ins office; gratis, from II to 12 o'-
clock, to surgical eases among 'he poor:
January 22.1851: • • ' •
Da. I: 0. LOOTYZIS,
"'
-- •• T WILL perform all
Weir". i . .- . 4lyeie operant:ma u the
eeth that are pon
requi
red for their Preservation, such as Sealing,Filing,
&o, or will restore the loss ofthem,
by inserting Artificial - Teetli, froth a single tooth
to a. full sett.. 113"_Otlice on Pitt street, ti few
oors south of tIM Railroadllotel. Dr. L. is ab •
eat the last ten days of every ntonth.
• ]9R. I°.
ommoPATitic PLIYSICYAN
TAG EON, A N D, AC CO UCHEUR, haviitg
succeeded Dr. Lip-pe, formerly practising pity-
GleiAll of this place, solicits the patronage of the
friends of lila pre•decestmr, end shall ho hippy
to wait upon all who may favorthint with a call:
itovl3,illl MILLER, M.D. '
A CARD
'FI g
R. J. W. IiEDEL; Stageon Dnnti
RJR infoiMis his former patrons that he hits re
amed to Carlisle, and ' , ill be gled is attend to
all cats in the line or his profession. leet3l
CARSON C. at/zoom:sw
ATTORNEY AT LAW. ._Office Office in
`" the room hitcly occupied by Dr. Foster,
icceasod. ' ' mor3l '47
DIC. PENROSE,
ATT ORNEY AT LAW; gill practice in
the several Cotins of Cumberland county.
019 ICE: in Main -Stroetrin the-room forme r
y occupied byL. G. Brandebury, Esq.
awara 8.. EBIMPET;'
• A TI'OIINEY AT LAW. Tills
-L-iLRE
MOVED his office to Beetom'e Row, two
oors from Burkholder's Howl. ' fapr 1 .
GEO 17.G33. EGE,
JUSTICE OF - THE PEACE.
-FIGS at his residence, corner of Main street
and the Public :Square, opposite Burkholder's
11010._ arldition_to the etuttes._of Justice of _
the.—Pottee,_will - attend tp a@. hinds of .w_ritirt,g,,_.
au :It 'as deeds, bands, niortjages,^ indentures,
articles of agreement, notes, &c.
Carlisle, ett?s.!.49. . - • -
—Plainfield-Classical Jr M4lemy,
'FOUL rtilLES' WEST Or ONSLISEE. •
Tne Ninth Session wills commence on .7110.7 l
DAY, Novcmbor 4th, 1850.
N consequence . of increasing patronage a
IL - large - and- commodious - brick - edifice - has
been erected, rendering this one of the most
desirable institutions in the State. The various
departments are under the care of competent
and faithful instructors; end evciq endeavor will
be made to promote the moral and intellectual
improvement of students: The surrounding
country is beautiful and .healthful r emblie in
stitution sufficientirdietanf troth town or:VTllsge.
to prevent evil associationt±.,
rrrus—sso - per Sesirint (Fair Illowths.)
- Voc-circulars with full information address
R IC BURNS, Principal
'Plainfield I', 0., Cumber/and County, Pa.
oct2'so
Fresh Drugs, Medicines, Etc. &c.
..-74 I have just received from PhiWel.
t.-..phia and New York very extensive
additions twiny former stock, embra
'ss-,' •
..
:. mg, nearly arly every article of Medicine
L ar
now'm
. use, together with Paints,
_'
- Oili, Varnislies,Turpentine, Perfumery, Soups,
Stationery, Fine Cutlery, Fishing, Tackle,—
Bruhes of almost every description, with an
--andliirx-virictroFothut
selld VERY LOWEST prices.
All Physicians, Country Merchants, Pedlars
and others, are respectfully requested not to pass
the OLD STAND., as they may rest assured
that every article will be sold.of a-good quality,
and upon reasonable terms.
May 3G
Extensive Cabinet Ware-Roomi.
gDD B Ejur IL SMILEY, suicessor to Wnr.
re, C. Gibson, CADINET-MAKEIt &
D ERTA KER., North Hanover street, Carlisle,
wouldyespectfully inform the citizens of Carlisle
and the public generally that• he now luis.on
hand &largo assortment of new
,- and elegant FURNITURE,
„ s , consisting in part of 'Sofas,
Wardrobes, Curd and oilier
,
Tattles, Bureaus, Bedsteads, plain and fancy
Sc wing Staltds, &c. manufactured of the best
matertalu-nnd quality warranted. Also n gene.
rcd ttie . orunent of Chairs at the lowest prices.—
Arenitian ltlinda , Made 'to order 'and repairing
prompliy attended to. Kr o FE NS mode to,
order at the shortest notice. and having a splen•
did •Hearsa he will attend funerals in town or
country. f:7 - Dont forget the old stand or• Win.
C• Gibson,. in North !Inlayer street; a few
doors north of Glass's Hotel
• Sept 4-,ty,
C FS'
Corner of Hanover and Loather ats.,!Carliale.
MBE undersigned has always on hand a large
I_ stock of superior Cabinet Ware, in all.the
different style's, which ho is prepared to sell at
the lowest prices._ He invites attention panic—
ularly,to the Patent Spring... Bottom Bedstead, a
moat useful article;
Which. entirely,obviates all
objections. 'rho bottom can'bo attached to old
er
Bedsteads. They have glean entire 7 e>atisfac.•
lion to all who have them in use.
Dz:TCOF,FINS made to order aptlie shortest
notice. .
• 'C
• JAG B Y FETTER.
Carlisle, Se,
MEM
Extenliyo-Furniture Rooths
TAMES It.WEA.VER. would respectfully
tr, call the attention of House Keepers and the '
public to his extensive stock of ELEGANT
FURNITURE.' including Sofus,. Wardrobes,
Centre and other .Tablbs,. Dressing and plain
'Bureaus and every othrtr article hilns brunch of
business; -Also, now-on= hand the largest es
aortment of CH4 IRS' in Carlisle, at the, lowest
prices. 10 - Coffins made at r the shortest notice .
and a... Hearse provided for funerals. - He' solic- •
its - a - call at Ids establishment on North 'Hano
ver street, near Glass's HOTEL.' N.8.-Fur- .
nituro hirod.out.by the, month or year.
Carlisle, March 20. 18.50.-...1y r P
GEORGE Z. BRETX,_
DRGEfON .DfdNTIST-7would respectful:
ly inform the public" that ho is itow prepar
ed to perform:all operations:on the,Teeth that
May be required. ,ArtiEteitl Teeth inserted,
from a single—twat] to-an entire set, upon the
latest nod 'most epproved - Princitile, The .pe
tronage of tho pUttlie' is respectfully ,solicitedt—
msy be found,ut the, residence of his bro
ther on Noith Pitt'street.'' •
Carlialt;._SePt •
'romvazin srwti:).
.
THM stibiciiin.:l•"' wiittld. , respootiolly' inlivm
his friends' and tho public geaerallY that, he has
just .opened, a now J.MI4I.I3pR:ApIIY cpAL
• N'A RD lik West, High stroot, a .'l'eo/ •doora euot
of Messrs J et • 11-Ithonds'a Warehousa, .Whero
first o nownow has, and mill ~ I teop.:conetantly..o
hand o rato assortment of ' alCkindo oh sea'
' • s oned pine boards and.oleek and all (altar kinds
Ilf lt , tl, all of:' which rho *ill 'sell low foT cash
,A. t:ji 1, 18511 •J'OHN N. AlilientaNG
• ' .11TOTXCIL4 • .`
• THE,: OquimiosionOra of Cumbarinnd county n,
doom It propor.,to InforoiAlki'stiblic i l!hat the la
od ncootingo.Of the'tlOEß4,of poniOnatiionikey k illr"
,j ) e,
oaoIt:In on t at Which.llyo ohaying%
basinosatvitftt: t, •Efuargmikl .moef :
noir 'otfioci
AttUSL ' " WM; RILZY;
'4'..:l4l,tiiiii...'*tiq..,i4siltit.i.i, - ;:-. 7 . . -. .HMii*ifi..1(',.,:....'0:,:.Xififii.f.'4i't'•-: . :[t,00.#ti:'*-.:2::
THERE ARL TWO TIIIRC§ ) fiAITH LORD 8 . A.003, A . NATIO - N - 6 - 11EA'i . R - 9 - k.T.LiV6ill§,-LA: - 1 1 .ERT . ILE SOIL . ANDDDEY WORIr.i3IIOPSi...IO WHICH LET 'ME ADD TdOliirLEDOlt AND FREER4I.-...Biahop ' Hall
- . .
,"The printer; in his folio, heraldeth - the
world. --'.Now some tidings of weddings, mask
ings, mummeries, entertninnients, jubilees,
wars, fires, inundations, thefts, murders, mos . -
saeres, nOteors, comets, spectrums, prodigies,
shipwrecks, piracies, sea fights, law suits, pleas;
proclamations, embassies, Trophies; triumphs,
revels, sports, and plays; then again, as in a
new shifted scene, treason, cheating, trioks,
robberies, enormous villonies of all kinds, fu
nerals,- burials, new discoveries; expeditions ;
now 'comical, then tragical matters. - To-day
we hea"'r of new offices created—to-morroir, of
great men deposed—ohd thon.mgain • of fresh
honors conferred; one is let /loose, another
imprisoned; one purehaseth, another break
eth ; ho thrives, his neighbor turnethsbartli
rupt; now plenty, then again dearth and ram
ino one rans, anotlier rides, wrangles, laughs,.
weeps, Sze. Thus do we daily hear puch like,
both public and private news.'
Ile stood, there alone that.shadowy-hoUr,
' By the swinging lamp dimly burning ;
All silent within, save the tiekinr. typo,
'All Vithout save the night-wat ch' turning; '
And heavily echoed the eolemn sound,
As slowly he paced o'er the frozen ground
And dark were, the mansions ao lately that
shone,
With the joy of festivity gleaming,
And hearts that were beating in sympathy then,
Were nowliVing it_o`er_in their dreaming . ;
Yet thd Printer still worked at his lonely
post, -
As slowly he.gathered his mighty host.
And there lay the merchant all pillow,:ed in
down, °
And building bright Lopes for thO miirrow,
Nor dreamed he -that=Fato Was-then wiiving a
„ wand
That would bring to him fear and sorrow;
Yet the Printer was diem in his shadowy
. room, .
And-he- :set•in.--his- frame-work-that-rich
man's doom.
The young wife was Sleeping whom lately had
bound ,
— The ties flat - tieTA honly can sdfer ; -
And dreaming, she started, yet woke with a
smile, . ,
----F0r , ...1ie :thought they were-parted-forever;---,
1 ' But, the Printer was elicking the types that
1 7 -- — *mild tell
On the morrow the truth of that midnight
- spell. .
And there lay the statesman, whose feverish
brow, •
. .
And reltless, the pillow was pressing, - '
F,or he felt through the shadowy Mist of his
. , dream
. . ,--
14is loftiest hopes now possessing: •
Yet the printer worked'on, 'mid silence
and gloom, • - "
And dug for ambition its.lOwliest. tomb.
•
And slowly that workman went gathering up
budget of grief and gladneos;
A wreath for the noble, 11, grave for the low, •
For the happy a full cup of sadness ;
" Strange stories of wonder to enchant the
ear,
._,And dark ones of terror to, curdle with
• fear,
•
I
Full strantm are the tales . whieh that darkTost
shall-bear, •
To palace and Cot on the morrow;
Oh . 11elconie, thrice welcome to many a heart—
To ninny a — haier of sorrow,
It shall go like the wild and wandering air,
For life and its changes arc impressed there.-
S. ELLIOTT,
Plain street; Carlisle.
• Who that Lath set down in measureless eoic .
tent and enjoyed the Time - ire which full gret
ification supplied, has not at times felt rising
in - the mind the painful inquiry, • How long
will this last ? What will occur to disturb the
happiness new vouchsafed?' I never had an
animal to which I was particularly attached—
and never had one from a oat to' a' horse
, to
which I was not strongly attached—UOlid
net occasionally pause in my uses er 2 earesses
of, it, and ash, What will occur dePriveme
of it—accident, escape ortlelithr - •
R. B. S\IILEY
In the midst of socirlfenjoyrnent, when the
duty of suidaining - the amusement-or the con
versation has4bviiiVed upon_nnother, how of
ten will.tri z e : inquiry arise, Illow liang will this
la5L-P lip sign ,of, riiPture is ,Preaented, na
token of dissolution is observable; btit there
must be a rupture, there will boa dissolution.
Row will it come, and when?'
4.confess thik(stich anticipations nro not al 7
ways the evidence of a well balanced mind
too often they come from a morbid state of
feelings, that fregiNently produce the very, evil
they suggest: The ti4ation. of evil is not
so lunch the result of unhappy experience, as
theconseipioneo of want of self-susinining
power:
Years ago it-was iix--chance to be near a
young woman, at the moment on which she
was taking leave 'of a lover.-' She stood.a mo
ment and watched his departure, until by tvrn-
Ml:ricer:per ho was doneoaled from her sight.
Cn it last?' said she to herself. 'And
,Why not if ho fovei the now wheii My-station
and consequently my Mininers,are less desire
hie than his, surely-, he - must love me more
when 1 hMre had the 'advantage of his associ- ,
ILtion;and have constantly improved-by that
interiourso.' ; - She passed onward. I hoitrd
no ether:Words,- but her steps inclicatedn heart
at ease; or if-dhAtiebed, it was:the commotion
of ineipreseibleilleasure. ..;
(jail it, last? and if not,'whert will It fail?
aiiiihutt.ort inanitQl'Wir
wore cineries :which arose as
I thought of the approaching 'nuptials. <And
0 00 , p, few days, nfter,the untrrhigu,,.l. saw her,
1 9 4 u ipg'agRinat the trunk of a tree which, was.
then in p:ilrblossom.. ' She 'wan. evidefitlyZon 7 .
neeting4,her, ownneur:ustate;
hupefalki:esri tfielbranches,ate.hor i iiiit,i s
ohoittlOolher oyes' again,. ''.l , ,inae;eillunt that
•she: :000 .
1•tt;
diant.tiyitli jiopo. "., Tor oho. momenta : clout!
]mot,faoo,
r,
poliq''Af . t3:tirep..:Od'#4l.ixilanfi.
,isfoatf . : **l "Wiit
~~~._
'.y
From the Knickcrhoeker
TlllC,ranzmuxt.
ll I!~rPLLniwnwi.
From Sartain'. Magazine
A WIFE'S FIRST., GRIEF.
BY J4tPll R. cuionurat
°. CARLISLE, rA., wEilloiEsos*; mAittou 5, 1.851.
That ! VASIL spring of ditiappol!itment; ae
remember; it.frost destroye4 the early .vegeta-
ion, an. en ire y runic - e 7- 1: - ofeoms on a,
tree at, which 8110llad been looktog: No fritit
wasborne.
-It - Was,' I apprehend, my. own infirmity,,,that r -.
led me to:think -more of changes' which might •
come, across the path of the newly-married
person, than anything in -her condition; for.
though, I Subsequently saw Where the danger .
lurked, yet then it was with me only the fore-
shadowing of ti somewhat morbid sensibility,
contrived to anticipate enough to make the;
present gloomy with anticipations of the fu-'
ture. So I watched. Blessed be tho race .of
croakers, whose stomachs are constantly, eon
atantly conjuring up a-cloud- to darken their
minds, Sod who are too selfish to let any ono
pass without the benefit of their oversliadow
ing forebodings. I watched this case, for the
first,exclamation which I have recorded of this
young woman had touchedm chard of melan
choly-in my 'own disposition, and se I was
anxious to sec 'how long it would last,;' Low
long-the peace, joy, and domestic felicity would
continue. It did not seem to me that the dis
turbance could originate with her: -
„The husband was fond of amusements; and
he kept - and used a -good' 'gun arid seine-well
trained dogs.. But though these drew hini op 7
easionally from his home,'yet -the fine disposi=
tion of the wife found in the dumb but saga=
cious companionS of her husband, objects of
regard.' She learned - to like them, and as be
came their nature, 'they loved her, joyed in her
caresses, and seemed to have -a sober resolve
to watch over her safety, and to secure it e
ven-at-the-cost of -their lives; - lxieonfess-, that
I was disappointed at this, haiing,,anticipated
that the litter of dogs' would hard disturbed
the equanimity Of the wife, and tbualtave pro , •
Yoked reprisals from the - husband.
It was not long before some event—l think
'it was the ordinary result - Of ' beelirtty,' the
miserable pride of trying to make one's, self
considerable in jeopardising the peace and
comfort of7i, family by going ‘security'--for-a--
man ;'in Coital - lot elirifidence;
or they would not have asked security—that
swept from the husband a considerable portion
of the property which had made his condition
better than the wife's before-marriage
'And here,' said I, 'it gill maid tcs last.'—
f-hope that-my feelings were - of 'the right kind;
I think now-that.-they-were only -these-of
cu
riosity. Some peOple seem to desire an evil
that they have foretold—l think I only de
sired to know bow the loss of property was to
affect the wife.
ct husbanclwas the first to tell hit-of the
misfortune.
.
''l am Awry, my dear,' said the Cpdot wife,
'sorry indeed. It will compel you to do much
of the' work which your hn.;ie hitherto hired oth
er persons to perform. ,Do not the loss of
your property mortify you, nor suffer yotirself
to, dwell on the error, if it was an crior,•of the
act by which the loss occurred.'
'But you-yoy, my dear wife '
'lt will not,' said she, essentially affect mc ;
it will not add to my labors or My anxiety.
I'must look after the household affairs wheth
er we hare one form or two.'
The wife shed no tears. She iVITs sorry that
her husband should lose the social distinction
consequent upon south property more than oth-'
ers possessed ; but it was a pardonable feeling
in her, that the loss of property placed her
more upon his level, and removed something ,
of the appearance of diffetence between them.
This then was not lm ucli of a grief.
'lt lasted-yet.'
'The sudden death of the first-born child, a
beautiful boy, was the next disturbing cause.-
I was fiat in the house dftring the ,short sick
ness of the child, but I attended the funeral,
and followed the body from the auti&M house
of mourning to the churchyard. VIP-Ike
&Otis fell upon, the 'coffin I thought thiNteart
of the mother would have burst. She leaned
over to look down into the resting
. place of
,her child, and the arm of a friend seemed nee- .
"cesary4 prevent her from going unto
And I said, It lasts no longer.'
,The friend and neighbe; led her buck to her
husband. The gentle look of affectionate sym
pitthy which he gave her as ho placed her arm
within his, and drew ker.towardu . him, that
she might lean on his Manly strength, showed
me my mistake.
The mothet.had suffered, but the affection,
nay, the happiness of the wife wus complete.
COUld a mother - be happy returning from the
yet unsolide'd - gralM - of - her' only and: -
• Death had eoftened her licart,•and„ fitted it
for the 'ministrations of new nffection.' The
father had suffered in the death of the boy as
well and ns-much as she, and yet at She me-
ment of deepest anguish La had hushe hie
own grief jliat he might suet:sin her i her
sorrow. The mother mourned but the wife
'rejoiced: Him boautiful\assil'beautifyin ' for
the moment had sorrow beesnse., •It seem to
tine an l it affection had Imn\ before pOsestied
such charms; it needed affliction to.malto it
apparent, as the sunlight poking through the
creviceip!-larkened ellattOer become!, vis
ible o'nly by . duo fionting"partieles that reflect
the' ingushing rays:
.:
The affairs of the couple wore not: soProa
porous as the virtues, the industry,..the econ
omy, and the Womanly %icellence of tho wife
seemed to deserve, yet ,slit novel. repined. 1
think Otteor tilt instances of excess on the
part-of the husband drewhirgely upon the for,
bearaneo,of the wife, but as even the excess
Was acesimpanieil with oxprCSSioas - Of ailoolion
—they, thigh, maudlin, seemed to comport,
Sate. The feeling Mori was rather a slight 0 7 1
prchension fur the future than, grief 'for the
present--sorraw and deep mortitientien might
tar& ifift'ttiese • rear - friatiitedelkj
ed with- sore° uianeeetatabla decay, of`means;
kid not :disturb „ the happiness of, the ‘, wife,
haptiiness ; - : Which . 7lopiped to use ',a: perpetual
joy::
, .
• woman gad alto no
sitiConoss: , 4 slia. to. go putough lifo
withgezi4inugh ; drop' into the
.gra;s+o
with a alaila';;,,,:ilor'.",aagaiali ;•at-tlio .611th, of
her eon, ryoy:ock
,poi!trory.
The Of 'pap'Oit.,l . -`to ;0110' iiliaiicaVb'dett
poor elootnOd ta,rin'aqaoa.i&,goit;` tut'
, et nnwu'
vi : c l erty who'
linve fibaiiovatty
it is 17 tilos° who front Int'ainiy tO the ° disaster
htid abirays been rich; . 4 '
. ,
o , oss. o propiwty*,9oliOed - 16 . - egi.,i.o -
The death . of her ohild , , led to - neri 'nffOotion
for enlarged joy 19 ksr,lasbaud.
yiinnfrequent but al.ll Chylous. departure
'fronk sobriety, long unattended with.rtidenesii
or •negleet, did not offend:the pride of the
wife..
' 'lt will bat alWays,' raid h, ~ . .
f A must mean as annither,' thought she, , 'I
must abate a po'rtion of tt , y•socialstate, and I
may, once in a long tigliv,;_be mortified by somo
lowindulgence in my husband; but fixed, deep
permanent grief as a wife. it is prObablo I tun
to be spared, as a comparison of my own con ,
stitotion with that of mthueband shelve . that
lathe course of nature I • shall be spared' the
misery of mourning for 1113 death, and be saved
from the solitary woes of widoWhodd:'lf 4 ,•, , r,
• The loss of property :rendered necessary
more labor on the part of the . husband, and
that labor kept him more-from-iris home than
formerly; .but the gentle wolconie of the wife
cheered the toilworn - husband, and her delidat‘e
caress changed the glootu settling 'on his brow
into smiles of satisfaction.' There - was per
haps more pleasure in the efforts . which she
was making, to produce the evidence of grati
'fication in her husband, than there was in. the
mere exchange of, smiles. of welcome and
thanks. Tho wife grow proud of hor irduenoe
to bring him back-to enjoyment, She felt-a
new coniequence when . she found . that ,site'
could not only reciprocate , smiles „but_disliel
fr.:nine; not only share in the, pleasures of
home, but dismiss, the pains. • rove holy is. the
office of_ a.good_wife, and hoW - pure must be
her sentiments, to derive the highest gratifica
tion by producing the happiness of another.
It was late in a summer afternoon, 'and by
appointment the husband ought to have'retur
neltwo or three hours before. - The noise of
revelry had for a long time -disturbelthe -out
er edge of thevillage in Which the dwelling
was situateth-some vulgar frolic, hitherto kept
in-a-distant part of the connty,_had been acf,
journed tithat neighborhoutibut-the•WaY of
the husband on his return did not: ie in: that
course. The wife had gone •to the door fre
quently to watch for his apsyrOach, and to meet
- him with • a snitle — Of welcome—that aminewhich makes home delightful; *which attraots
and retains: She - looked - aniieuslito - thelefti
and stretched-her eyes alcirwthe road - in - the
-I
hope that some token -of is 11pproaelt .would
be presented; there was a . it. .Evon the,dogs
that hail followedher out bed to give notice
of his comingr • She len over ••the railing
with - distrustful hope—ho mad - come soon,
and would repay her for al -{to.r.anxiet3 , bY ex
traordin4ry evidence of ft tiok -. She - suin
moned up for consolation t ' thousand kind
nooses of hor husband, his constant change
less love, his resistance of . those' errors that
marred the domestic happiness of so many
families; and like is. true wife, she suffered the
lustre of her own purity, cieellendo and affec
tion; to gild the character and conduct of her
husband. - •
She was startled from her revery of delight
and charity by an unusual outbreak of noisy
debauchery from the wretched drinking house
below. She'kilned forward, and stool a.eit,
• liar husband was unlit of the riot
oils host, in sickening, disguSting familiarity
with an,al:!andoncd ono of her own sex.
Shostepierfaek'Ulatil an angle of liar qwn
housireoncealed from her the piiinful SCUM.—
A, theusand previous matters that had scarce
ly 'excited thought becamd then of importance,
in the explanation which was given in what
she had seen. She raised her apron to her
eyes, but therM were no tears; . her hands
dropped on the fence before her; a feeling
came over her heart such as she had not be
fore experienced.
She felt as a woman regret for the liiss of pro
perty—the mother livid mourned the death or
her child—and anxiety . had been 'felt kor some
slight .errors in her husband; but property
could be regained by labor, or relinquished
without effort—every dream of the mother
gave back to her heart her beloVed child and
refreshed with n' spiritial intercourse ; and
every waking thought that turned toward 'the
dead one, vras lustrous with
n the sense of his
heavenly. intercourse, and consoling in the pro ,
mise of a future union—the errors of a hus
band that do not imply diattenor, n nor 'exhibit
themselves as evidences of wanting affection,
may be mended or endured; but When the
heart is suddenly overwhelmed with the
oil
donee of shim*" insult, dishonor,-wlkon this
purity of womaii"s thonghtwis outrag4: with
theiiroofs of guilt, and all the years of her
charity and enduring love are dishonored by
.the unerring tokens of ingratitude
aud infa
my, and the n confiding, the consoling, the
truthful wife becomeS tho witneSi n of the des
truction of her deemed° penes, despair Swee pE !
over the heart, like the blastings of the ei--
moom;' and thin . , all the unmentioned 'suffer
ings of , the- woman; all the cherished sorrow
of the daughter, all the,poignant anguish ,of
the Mother are lost, in the overwhelming tor
rent, of-' The Wife's First Grief.'
ItS„.Thero is a set pf,People'Whonfl'eannOt
b;',r-7- ‘
tho'lpialcs of fliiliffinable. propriety—
cl
wh o every word is precise, and whose every,
moy eifiS - uneseettionable, but who, though
versed In all the' categories pf polito behavior,
have pot ono particle of soul or cordiality a
bout them.. 'We allow that their manners may
bo abondantly.rcorrect. There may, lio , 00 7
ganco in every gesture, youd '!graiiefolneas 1;11
every, position: nota &olio out of. place, and
not'a stop that would; not bear . thesitteaeure
mont of : the:severest 801.644. ' This is;all vq
ry fine: -but what I want is thdhnort and
,the
..aietieNtelarintorcourse4-tho fraalmoss that
'spreads onse aid annimation 'around it—the
eye that speaks, affability: te..all, , .:thit ';:chOos
timidity, fpm every bosom,
,prid tolls - every
:non - in '' the ...00mpany..io. -ho ":coofidout 'and
luippy, , ...This : is what-I cormaivo kit o'tho_iii
140 9e: gui , text, .f "Ifs 'c:aiirtobtisP:iiiiii not, the
'frdoltenhigXproiality of:those wlth Walk 14trule,.
and vr.Ould,reditOdtthe'.whele Of .htiman : lifn -to
ti,ivirciit;Mtnd SyStont i Of"Oorir r and coiiiiAiiit.
'L
-4).!.41 , 441A:.''' ' '''''''''T,-1.? - ,
r4tbi'gt°nb°4;bili,ol"t“..a,, young
inure ; lids` 14 # 1-):;':for utulieirc"Yoor Joilm4"
tiatik gho; hog Id go Monti, Wog got, up
roi him parfOr'ilie i3tgliod
to b° touug again,
nlZtii it
ME
: ' [. ..ZAti01ft:06.:,... -- jVo . o#'#'.::: - nn lt . ~- -V0i.00.".-:.litiguititiiii.
PATENT, LABOR • SAVING: FLUID.'
dr /tow. i► Yankee got IttoltttgOis,btiritt,
'Don't make yourself ;uneasy 'about tfio
dresses, ladies . ,' exclaimed' ahtberLiaving man.
n, I have a few battles of the patent transpa
_rent in my trunk. that will, in
five minutes time, without the least labor - or
inconvenience in.the . .world, renovate
the dresie's in a manner that is truly astonish
ing, and bring back the colorto•a felt shades
brighter than theoriginal tint.' • •
A raw-bone Vernionter, sitting by out lido,
and who, until this time; kept' as silent as a
pine slab, hero drew up his long neck and ex
,
clahned :
Stranger, you'll oblige me much by discon'.;
'tinning . your 'remarks about - your infernal
trashing fluid; for.l'm in 'rather a good .Int
nior.to-day,:and I. don't wish to be riled. I
once purchased a bottle of that stuff; and it
came nigh rniningnse for life, and, I've taken
an oath.tVick:the first Man lvlio ever offers
me another bottle. I could tell, you 's. yarn on
that subjbot that would bring the tears to your
or* but of course no man wants to hoar a
yarnmow.' - •
This Yankee, however, did tell his yarn:—
I - laving on such an application made a put . -
ohne, he proceeded fa detail his experiment.
My.purchase Was on Saturday afternoon,
''about 3 o'clock,and I took my big.,l3ltiek bot
tle of fluid; put - it in my coat pocket and star
ted far home. Now, thinks 1.-to myself, my
wile always picks up her clothes on . Sunday
night and dOes washing Monday morning, of
tor breakfast; and so it would boa idod jokO.,
for' me not to let her-know anything abinit the
blessed fluld, - blit - get - lip - Monday' morning,
while She is asleep, put the clothes
_in a tub,
-pour on the, fluid, stir 'ens.:up with a stick, and
hang them up to dry . ... Lord !' saTis Ito My
self, right in the street, as loud as I. am talk
ing I'll do it,_by gingeri if. I havo, to,
get up at two o'clock-!' So. when. I gets home
'fju.st takes the bottler of fluid out in the wood
shed,, and , pokes it up on a high shelf among a
ofold_beer,bottlmankblacjcing_boxos, and
went around the house as if nothing had hap-.
.pened.'
'Saturday night I went to market just as u-
Tstialrand - Sulidaywelsoth - woutto - church - nr .
the feronoon, -and staid at home and talked. I:-
.bauteur future _prospects n _i_the :afternoon ;-
:but Lkept a-keeping-still about-the-fluid, and
didn't lot on but what4.expected khe would
;do this : washing the morning just the
saine as ever. But I didn't sleep. much that
night. I kept thinking about stirring up that
• tub of clothes„ and gating 'cm out to dry be
fore..daylight. Onoe,l,got. into
. a little 'short
.dozo:and dreaded. cif _swimming -aord'ss
deep river of gushing fluid, and the rocks at
the bottom andbolli sides were all petilfled
shirt, bosoms and pillar cases,. and . 'th ere. was-
MI old washerwoman on the banks of the-river
who kept a Stirring on us with a long/pole.—
I reckon I woke up about fire -o'clock; for
'twos just about half between daylight and
dark, and I could just see the lenstest stroke
of light in the world among the clouds al:Mlnd
the tops of the Green mountains. I turn's
over and looks at wife and she was sleeping as
sound as a dead salmon; so I carefull • slid out
- cT r bed," hurried on my clothes, and in less than
ten minutes, hdd the old wash tub filled clear
to the Op with all of wife's white clothes, and
all I could find of my own.' I poured-in about
a pail full and a half of clean rain -water; and
then goes in the wood-Ahed, takes_down_.tho
bottle of fluid, walks back to the tub, and
pours her all in! Lord! but %would Lice
done you good to hear it aiz
Well,' says I to myself, _qf that's the dirt
coming out, it makes a good deal of noise a
bout it any way; and I guess its doing up the
thing handsomely.' So after letting it sic for
about 'a minute, I takes up autdd broom hal
die that was standing near and wallops the
things about like a lamb's tail in fly time, for
about three minutes, and then tikes hold 'of
'em with my hands,'to string 'orn out on the
'.fence. But gentlemen you'd better believe
I dropped that ere pile of duds =mighty sud
den bilin water wasn't a cirKstanee to 'em,
and afore I could got my hands into''a' pail _of_
fresh water, I thought' in my soul I - should
lose 'em both.- For about a minute, I was as
mad na a scratched kitten. I finally thought
I would not wake up my wife With my' holler
ing, but hang out the bilin duds with the old
Munn-handle and lot 'em drain" and dry on
the fence; but the plaguy things never cooled
to the last minute, and
.every time a drop of
the pesky fluid splattered on my hands or teem
it burnt worse than a half bushel full of live
red coals. I soon , got tired of that' sport,'
however,,and byfore I got on the fence half of
- what was in the tub I just wOhed my' hands
and face in some cool rain- Water, andltdreakMl
it off to bed. , Buil Mnildn't sleep a 'oink;
my'hands pained me so that I had to hoop a
blowing, on''cm to keep from hollering,. so says.
I' to my wife, says ' _ •
, Suian, hadn't you botter - got up- and put
your clothes to sear?' • '
'lhi, h-n-m,' says she; rubbing her eyes
with her thumb joint and kind o' winking, 'as
if., sho'wns half asleep. 4 Yes,' J hn, ;I guess
I had ; but how long have you l , en awake?!
- 'Oh, sometime,' says I, blowi ig my hands,
and digging my logs with my, toe nails,. all th'
e
thus to keep from'groanitig; 'bEt get up, now,
Susan, do, dear, or you will be late with your
breakfast, and I've got to go out of town' this
morning on important business.'
'lf that'S.the case f, says she, 'l'll Certainly,
hurry.
'You may. depend upon it, gentlemen, I
`was in a mighty uncomfortable fix nhout Atha
tine .I _I wanted•to groan like a dying herse
end have'something Cooling wrapt . 4).ieunit: my
In - ges ;Mid - then again, I didl - want- to shako
a noise, till wife had seen honr nice I had fixed.
her things.' 'Well,'wlfo•sito hurried and dregs-:
ed herself . tirnlvirent out'into the . kitehen to nil
up a tub," and in to feiv ' Minuted- I•;4s;ierhenid•
her: say. to her Self; says she—'•.:. : ; - g.'• -' t ,-.2 . : . v !,'-
' :`4494Heaviiin'Ad;earlifl , Whitt does all
this'ineau l , inever , put tlis9llliiikgtis;:po! .
- JOlii:I:Solml.1 - qp nit: l )l,4,9omb . hefe; '''''' ".'''
• 'trim strmig itapressions, gentlemen,
Vint this §nstomer ,vasn't , verys'elowin 'hie
Movements in" less' than
W'its. there and says I—
#•lyhat's ,thQ matter, Susan? What's the
Mlitter _
Ha, ha, ha!' Bald I; well Sum], ratippoit)
=II
I Utight , as well own up to the jolio at once, for
my hands ache so that 'can't hold in any lon
cleans the clothes W,ithmit any rubbing, and
its well it does, for no pair of hands in this•
world could stand it 't,'o do the rubbing: I got
up this morning .while. you were aslcop,' and
dorie up the Washing, and - Ming Part of 'em
out on the fence to dry.' . •
' While I was saying this; wife she took a
little stick, and in,trying. ,to. lift out of .the'
tub one of ItOr-ur that is—one of ; her, gar
meats—by ginger! •-the tarnal thing burst,
right in two I, Although I was, sufferin' from
my burnt hands, and• was ds mad as 'a Green
Mountain catamount, at what the infernal
fluid had done, I' couldn't a kept froml4laing
at that moment if I'd a died for it.'
'Wife took a poop at ,the clothes on the
fenco=called up the young dootor to dress my
hands, and then sat doWn and had a good cry
ing spell. The Doctor hurried, into the room,
and after seeing wife a sittingla the:rocking
a crying and me a walking the 'room a .
gr'oaning like a fall wind-in a grave-yard, says
In the name of calomel and hot jalop what's
he matter nowt
Nothing particular,' says I, 'only I've burnt
up all . the dlothtls m the house, and both of my
hands, with a bottle,iif thundered washin' fluid
that 1'1 , 9 been oxperimentin' with.
The Doctor looked at my hands, and says
ho-•-•
, Where's the bottle ?'
Out on the door-stop,' says I.
The Doctor went and poked at the bottle,
and went' of in the -wood=shed and took a
peep at the old beer-bottles and blacking box
es,,and after swearing a little to himself, came
back into the kitchen, and sayi he— •
Well, you have immortalized yourself, and
no mistake, and you shall bo known hereafter
:Ile the -AMUSING -FLUID ExPEIIISIENTED.2
What. in Ao thunder are you laughing at?'
says L.
_i_Why,Leay_s , your bottle of washipg flu-
-id.stands.out on the-Shelf -whore-you"putit,--L—
-.suppose.; and you hai•O . used a quaTt, and a '
half of oil of vitriol, that I'vo had on hand
these six months.'
itientlemen,,i'm a manalk—arddirtifter-p-r-e
-lane language only in extreme oases, but if I
didn't make the-atmosphere-in that-room-blue •
for a fewmoments, then t'was because
know how. • I went arid Smashed - up the. un
:•corited bottle of fluid; and swore eternal enmi_
,ty to hverything'oi the kind, and we'v&3alwaYs
washed our clothe's in - the old fashioned' way
over since; and if c, man over offers qbot
tle of the infernal ;duff. again, he has, g6t to
a — siiiirter , iian.lhart - I am or take a, thrash--
ing.'
By the time'otn• loquaeions Vermonter had
,finislieir his. very interesting washing-fluid sto
ry, ourainge.had arrived at Vienna, where as
good luck would have it, part of our passen
gers'left, including all the ahildien, and the
dealer in patent transparent washing fluid, so
that during the remaining part of the trip, we
had a very lively and , pleasant time.
SOLILOQUY.
To-take-n-papev,or-not-th-take-a-papc.
that is the question; whether it is better to'
know no news; to sell my grain for'dutlf its
value for the reason that I never know 'when
markets aro the highest; Or rear my children
up void of knowledge, to bo the laughing_
stoulcorifeigliberShbeaus - el kifow -What
is takinSplffee beyond the..Mcrrow limits of
'MY own acquaintance except_ what
vaguely glean from hearing ethers talk; to sit
long winter nights and gaze most listlessly up
on the gloivingcoals,becanse I have no news
paper toplie.7 the weary",thoraents f as they
slowly cluise caelt other_down the pathway of
Old Time; to house myself on a rainy 'day
without a paper: and as a consequenee.become
most "darkly, . deeply, beautifully blue"—to
suffer all these things, or, to end them now by
sendinggfor a.paper. If I do- this, then do I .
incur the dread resposibility . of having to fork
out one dollar and fifty cents cash! oh money,
money, loth am I to lot my grasp of thee re-
icts7 — Sonzo'havo'called - then "slave," but yet,
methinks thou Bost possess a happy faculty of
; diffusing a spirit of indepondenee into the
spiritual combination of man's nature.- Thou
hest been culled the "root of all evii."-4urely
they did sir who named thee, ~thus, for, the
tree of which thou art the refit,' bears fruit
fair to. the viers and yielding a spicy aroma.—
Oh, money, thou arta friend when all Other
friends forsake; thou proVidest for our' Wants
when charity retires to her. cell, and locks the
doer.' Before thee, nations'bow—prouilknees
grow Supple. Where. thou art, all acknOwl.
edge thy stiliremaoy--let poets revile thee. as'
they may=let philoSoPhers despise thee '(is
they will-yet I love thee still; I cling to thee
with an affection that can know no'abatencent.
And Shall 1 let thee go' toPgladden the Prin
ter's
heart, and to rattle in his . purse ? Alt
there's the rub ? Guess I won't subscribe. '
• 110'" Josh, does tho' sun over rise in tile
Nest?'
< 4 IN ever.'
4 f Never?"
Nevei+!"
any so I—Well f you won't eatelt
me to - ornigrtrto' to the wok, . if it's always night
there. • I've a cousin in 'lowa, who id. alwayi
WritinghoW 'plensant in
, thaf region, hut,
it, tenet be all tuocpuhine,:lyeekort.''
, IVLIAT A km:mi- 7 dt 18.5eatitnated that there
is annually expended in the borough of Potts
ville, one hundred thousand dollars for
•• M • 'spirit
nous liquors. What agnificent ;Sum this'
would ho to appepriate to gni:Taal imPr'9v437
mont of ;the -plane; :And 'what a .wouiderful
ittiluel:l64.the diverting - of - snob a Stun from its
prosent.purpenes,ivekdd aveponth
e morals
nialthappirieps ,pf
nuiniin Lis dying momenta,
°wining 14id ' eye's: belp3l4lhroo 400 tors in eon
,,vororktion•byer..hint; ho,. "Gontjamon, I
Isbyronclq,. if. yon,propost to :firkin
''fipt,v.7cteiiclipg his Ihnbo, I?rontlied
,his.last. •
,
iteru.- 7 .111)por 711 - 61.001 c the
vet. laiig route to 'California, writes baok
he {Yip har4 run itintlaot; that ha hisitii
cotton umbrella foi, fit:Oehir4foi ,
obl'hoot.: 7
There's a bill of.'ffire;:kiitieir,;',.. l ,' '7•
VOLUME 11. .
• • From the Neilabel Intel
_ _
AGRICULTURAL GEOLOGY.Ao: lie
11 Hader is the Greek word for -water.. Gino:
nuti, or gennaet-added; giv_eithe origin of tho
word hydrogen, Metion,. liathod and ardor);
added to liudory give liydroziniter, hydro:4l4y;
and hydratilid. Hydrate of litlid is newly
slaked limo, containing twenty-crib, Vet edit .
of water,
.aint Seventy-nine per eent.' of the
oxyde of calcium. Hydraulic lime is water
cement. It was most fortunately discovered in
large quantities at the very commencement
the Hudson and Erie 'Canal, in the rook
Voted for the work.' Bolero this discovery,
made by an agent who had visited Eirope in
behalf the , work, the daldulatioi rives to kapott
this indispensible article fromEu - rop . e. It had
'Shun; boon foundin very numerous and Larii
deposites, adding iminensely, to the facilities
and the progress of the eta *Sits of inter-,
nal impiovenient already completed turd now
advancing by American. entSrprise. No Oita
work, probably;.inado so .large-' a, demand for
hydraulic limo and water cerathit:nEi 'the.Cro!
ion Aqueduct of Now York. -
The various uses, both in architecture and
agriculture, for this material, are numberleset
and nameless. For most public works WO in:
dispensiblo. For nunlcrousi dttnieStie
it is exceedingly convenient. It VA , *
ful non cement that two Masses of stone co.;
.mented by it will soinotitties break in another -
part of the mass before seperating atthe - peinii_
of junction.
The exile of iron, in connoxionmith a por
tion of alemino, or clay, causes its great ce
menting power._ preparing it for use, it is
burnt like common limestone., Instead of slak
ing it is giand;.whon, with n mixture of sand,
it is formed into a mortar, and ready:for Use,.
Though numerous deposites of this very
uable material llave,,already- been , discovered'
`aierbrilifOit advaneinginunenselt
, •
the improvements and thsvialth of the -Fain
,. try, deposites still word numerous doubtless
,yet_romain•unknown. Once let each of. the'
eighty thousand schools,-and the six Pdiong
of families in - Our country, - badoino . an " _Eft.;
ploring Agencg,'t to discbver _the xe,sonrces_:of_
'science and of wealth under their, feet and
within their reach, and' numberless beds of
hydraulic lime, marl, valuable ores, and, other
minerals, both rich and beautiful, will he,
brought to view and put to their roper:use.
Another discovery, still more, importratt, than
lime; marl, or gold, wilicortainlihe-made in'
the operation. It has already - been made in
verrimmermis cases. This . most 'important
discovery, certain to be thus made, is that bad
boys arc good boys—the worst, the best. Lea
ders of rowdy gatherings will be, they have
been, very ofren leaders in exploring expedi
tions; the more efficient for being juvenile,
voluntary, and gratuitous. "
Ex,veriment.—Lot any teacher or parent re
quest his pupils or children to find what cu
rious and beautiful minerals ho can, and the
result be the commencement of a Geo-
logical Cabinet," for the school or the home of.
the young explorers.
'mama IN THE WORLD.
You . shou4l bear constantly in mind that
-nine-tenths of ip - ave r -from -the I'very nature
and necessities of the world, born to gain our
livolihodd by the sweat of the brow. What
reasons have w6,then, to presume that our
children are not to do the same? If they be,
as new and then, one will be, endowed with
extraordinary powers of mind ; those extra
ordinary powers may have, an opportunity of
developing themselves; and . if they never
havetlit,opPorttmity, the harm is not very
great tows or to them. Nor does - it -hence
follow tiMtAhe descendants of laborers aro. al
ways .to bo laborera.., The path upward is.
steep ,tend long to be 'bure t Industry, care,
skill, exceilethe, in the parent, lay the-foun
dation of a rise, and, by and by, the descend
_tuats_otle_present laborer_beenme gentleirten.. •
Thisis tho natural progress. It is by attempt . 4 /.
- leg to reach the top at a single leap, that go
much misery is produced in theworld. Soci
ety may aid in making the laborers virtuous
and happy, by bringing children up to labor
with steadiness, with' care and with skill; to
show them how to do, as many useful things
as poasible awl do them allin the boat manner;
to sot them-an-example inAndustry r sobriety,
eletmliness and neatness; - to make all these;
habitUal to them, so that they never shall bo
liable to fall into the contrary; to let themil
ways see a good living proccedhT.from labor,
anti thus to remove from them in tempta
tion to get at the goods of others yviolent or ,
fraudulent meansi and, to heap from their .:
minds all indueentents to._hypo riy and ,
INSURANCE ON CUARACTER.;•4IIOO has,
,azt
association been formed in4,ondoil for tile in
suranco of oharaoter. The assureiov4;:i.ivish
publio situations,,ard enabled to.offorseourity
for good conduct - , by the.payment.of.a nidder- ,
ate'promie ea to 'tho company; who, guarantee
Lis fidelity, and -'protect' his , .employers" from.
'loss bi:dofaleation of general rniseenduot..—
,Tbis la certainly something "nen , under,
• - riei,„Professor i :Newman says, that it is 'a
mathematical:cclrtaiaty, that if the . esisting •
populatical of the world ctere• to-inerease• - for
about cloven or twelve centuries; at Same
rate - as' the: British population Mei done- for
Sonic; time', past; no room vomidd . be left, on the.
solid' earth - for' men; women and ohileren. to •
stand up - on, allowing only - a-aquare foot for)
cash."
ruSlan Ohio they hive n literary`; garotte
called • the 4 Ituckeye:Blononi;'! liciitiOky,;
; the "Rosa ctl , in Non: JcrsoP, the.,
I :tliLlekiderc i" in Mitiyinntl; thn "ke!it
.Bii g e".. Ohio;the 44 .rolap *octet and in,
Ikoa,tts l l , l ,l , -
,t.'
POP9 II, VPOt•TIIe PAPPTP !le-1:4867;11,
invention' 13y
toh itinutes. .
howiner, tativiod five.- A)ur. ,, i...L. , ,..guut5!.e.
'used to a 4 it boad4,lo3aut in two -
&inn
11Y JOSIAH HoLmebtiii.