Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, June 15, 1853, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    El
. .
A..."
''.57.-:7---.1'.•)17-42.'=%-"--':'-'-.-.-_ ~.. :- . :-. .- ' .. -.-, -.-...",.• "...;:.. "--- f ... '
• r' ... :', .. i . ~..' .. ~...' 1. ,• 1 , ....,...,.., ; ;21 - ,. : .L .- 7 ft...,- , .. -',.. .-"''—'`,.!' '-, =`.".,, ~,.... ;..'. 0 .- . ...,
'',Vi . ..„ . :.....,.,.. - 7 , - i .... ,:, ...' ~'`.- ..: 41, -',..' .-- -...„ .. . :- .....,., '.: V ".,..=;;-'...".- ;' --- I '.' ,7=','" ''..:': ' : "* .-• _;.l ' f ......,'-- :T 4. l'Y''' 4' ''..;:i ''4 ',7. " ~ :
': -
- ~- --i , ...-.. --, ~ v,,, ,, ,,,, ~• .. , -
. 7 =-, -,...--, .... - .., ~...z.:-..,,-..".::, :7, 1... vi —.- • .------------% ',. • -- _--__.--..-7----.- i -;,.. ' •.: „ ; ,,L._. 4 ;:.. 4 -.2i ..., • , i i ..-... 1 , :,-----. - ,
-4-v-- .
~
...f.l __,' 7., __%7. , ,:,, , .:.4.. ; ',. r 414: ;-..v-:::', , ;.., ' 1 5;4..- ''k..... - i.'•-: 0 . . , ' 'r ' j --- '.: ' '''..; -::-..'- - , 'q..71 . 0 . .. , f 1. WA , '," '. '. ,- . P-.'r.
-_-W-- -:t--= . !, ---. -- -:-- -- A-.2 •7: z.T --__ --- -- - 71 -.'' ,r ,' ''. .€7l: '' -- - :-. _-_..4 -. 7.- ..-P. '' .•--• "-,.•,..;`,;,::'-...,-.,..--'.'.-.: Il z-?.C . ; 1'. , .. 1:-. . -7-:\ .4 : if4 4 gi : : -. .'": : :*. r . c.. ''' ,- ,.! . 1 . :1' -.-..".: ,7 - 77 .' '...:.• - M '...
- .- F Q.051214 . ' , ',' ...&fa, ' . ;:i : •:-='a - - ; 1 - • , ---1 , ;--- - kA '',.'. '
17 17' ...."!,,,. R - 1 :-- '----:--- ''-',:. '.._.... ?'-' ..iY }.l' • ' -.:'' ' ' . '* Pi., v el l}. "4 . . . l i ';
r .."
.''''-;.'.i;:':'-':4-,---tl'
$
•14". Y....," 2 n Alu..
._,_'. ;-'l7 ..` .._ IVVg-3..-'.:- ." -, ':' - -I_,;:',c-,.. , . - - -- ,4....-1 ~.: 1 vzi .-- ; i 4,:• ; :=- - -, - -- - .7 .z.,, ~.,'
' ----
' ' '
,
..,..... 4 , :.,,,, ~,...,:.,......., - •mi. e .,- ;..k. '....-..5!...7 _.,..,, - k -- -, ;.... , ..4f- •.-;,:....r....,,.,. - ~.._-----,, .--w- ~,-,
~,,' ;',.. -„,..,-- -,,--- - ':.. -----' cam,' -7 '' . -'`'. '' A - '.;
s'''
' ' . .'
s''.. ' ' 11 " -' -.".. ,','. ' ?.','.':.. * '•,.''-:j...451.-, V '` '?. . ' ls, 4 qt , ? ' ;'''' ''- ';l‘'' 7` ;:g . W . -.' - -' ' ,...r... ' :,,. ... • ~ .1 , . 74 x- - 1- - ___ ~.., i.; -_,: ; ,r , : '.: 7, _M ,'/.' r r .l_ -- - 7 " ------ ' ...F-1,2 .- - i L---11.7.„ .- ~_,__. .. .
_.- --- -- __i.,. -,-- 4 -,-,-,- ---
~-.•- , - 1.,„-.. .- • •,„..-; ...... 7 --. , L:',.. ''C.:2 , .. , s- .?.. -- .`.-.7.' 7*, A*1 . .,, , ..,:::, 'ilt I: '' '-± ". : -. ----:2 '; '''''"* '.-
' S ''
- ----f-T — " '' "'
' -"----I.'-' “.
'`. - '"A " . 'K - ' - -- . .' '''.-
-----. A' ',------:' -7-- - -- "' -; .
- '.• . - -f . - _ ..:-----__ 'i '-'7 .---_. '.
' .
, . , • , , . ,
11/1
11364:TrY,,11!roprietor...
eorbo.
DA; C; tOOXVIIs,
,--y- . W 1 Lb gerform -a
-:88808 S , operations , u pan th e
IR 8
L rain itte eroreitii
t bit their pMsnrvation; stick tkaliag',llling.
Plugliav,S.a- ' or will maintain° lose nl
by L.11,11;114 Attificial Tv:nit, Ilona' a sittgle toinb
to a- .fgrptrice On Pitt. streot, reit
°ars ltaatarid Isiah
ant dm last len.days of °vet°
cti7oxivr.E.ZA3luitiTZ
• to
WILL perforin all
oat
t r ,, r operations upon the
teeth that may be re—
ro juiced fur their presetraiion. Ardlicial :teeth
nsartad; from a single' tOoth,to anentirii set, of
_the in tit scientific principles. Diseases of the
irretiularities carefully treated. Of
filo at the_ residence. of his brotlier , on North
Pitt Street. Carlisle
DR.' S. 23.,,uriarrps.;
4 - 1 7 FR; 2, in Norlh fladoverait t Ct adjoining_
1p W.34Va atom. Office hour's;. more Na
ti fr'ani 7to 9 ,o'clock A.hiaand from
5t07 "' locic. V. M. • - - • fionelB'.sl
Dr. .71 . 0EICN S. SPRIGGS,
OFFS R 3 Ilia professional s'ervieen to the
people ol 'Dickinson' township', and vloinity.- •
Residenbe—on - the %Valnut .113ottoni Road, one
mile east, of Cantreville, feb2 I ypd
G. 33. - COLE,
. . .
. .
A_T_T_O_lt N .E Y .A2.T, L.A w, will' attend.
..
J. pramp.tly lo.iill liusipese entruste d to tom..
°Moe in the 'room formerly occupied by Wi ;
11am 'lrvine, Esq.; Noy . lli Hanover St; Car:islo.
ApriF2o, 1852. ~ . . . .
• • , GEIO.II,OcEI--.1361.23;• • •
JUG VICE OF THE 'PEACE.. Or
ries iiihis residence, cornoi of Ndiiin Street
and tits: Public Squwic, opposite 'Burkholder's
Hotel. In addition to the duties of. Jus,tiee of
Or) Peaco, will attend to all kinds of writing,
such at deeds, bonds, mortgages, indentures,
ditioles of agreement, notes, &e.
. _
ma. 34.umn.
111ESPECTF ULLY offer's his professional
111,- savir.es to the citizens of Carlisle and sur.
youndinecountry.. '
°like:and residence in.Sonth ITanovar stroci,
—directly-oPPertite_to thii_lLVolunteer Office._"_—
' Carlisle; AO 20; 1853
trash Drugs, Itlealeines, &o
. , I have just received from Philadel
-...! pins and" New York very extensive
additions.to any former stock, embra
, • ding nearly every :Illicitly of Medicine
••••' now in. use, toge;aer with Paints . ;
0 its, Vernishes, Turpentine, Perfumery,' Soaps,
Staiionery, *Fine Cutlery; Fishing Tackle,—
Etrithes of. aknoit -every description, with as
ontlelss variety of other articles; which I am de,
terminod to soil at the VERY LOWEST prices.
All Phyleicians, Country Merchants, 'Pedlars
and others, are respectfully requested 'not to pees
the OLD STAND. as they may rest assured
that -every-article will bo sold of a good quality,
and upon reasonable feriae.
. S. ELLIOTT,
Main'street. Carlisle.
May' 30
r._
.
Int 0 CSC, Sign, Fancy and Orname - nta
rt. Painter, Iryin's floimerlyilarpeee)•Row„
next cl.:Jsr to Trent's - licit - Store. He will rit.J
1
tell promptly to all the cPioye doscriPtions
aurnasonahlo prices.' The various
kinJs of graining attended to, such as mahog
uny.'oult, walnut, 4t,c., in the improved styles
Carlisle, July 1852-1 Y•
611111101 . -- LEE AND RIN
ErazaDGLAND
.5.. - -•-
AND
S-TEAM SAW- IVIZL•L
EW CUMM3R.LAND._ PA.
TR.11.1 SPORT STIOA:
TllO undersigned are now prepared to freight
merchanilize from Philadel- .
fga.phi s and Baltimore, at re
i,gnA duecd ratee with rogalarity
and doSpatch„
iDEt'CiTS
• Buzby 315 Market Street, Phila., ..
Gerram Suiall, ••Small's Depot," 7,2 North
street, Baltimore. - •
an2l WOOD WARD & SCIIMIDT:
TitANsPonTATION.
T[IC undersigned are now prepared to freight
moteltalidizo from
1 2 - F. 6 " 44 S Philadelphia hiladelp hie and
Baltitnore ro•
ducod rates, with regulariiy and desp at ch .
Freed, , Ward & Fread; . Market- Street,
Philadelphia • • ,
A. It. Bari - Ott 7G North Street, Baltimore.
Michael Herr, North Street, Baltimore.
sop22(im J, ht. B. ILHOADS.
NEW OLOTHIBIG STORE.
, .
THE. subscriber has just returned . from
h a %ery choice, selection of
CL TB'S, °ASSN ERES VhISTIN GS,
Pearl Urah, Brown'and Marbled cloth- for
COATS. Beside's a splendid IM.ol
rANCY STRIPED' CASSIMHRES, which
Ito willinalto up into coats, Pants and vests of
the latest styles." He will also ktibp. Shirts;
'• DrdvVers, - Under Shiro, Shirt Collars, Gloves,
Cravats, 'Hose, indwal every thing' kept to a
.Gentleman's Furnishing Store ' Having en
gaged the services of W, B. A"..; MONSON, a
well known cutter,. he will be able to make
' elotheso order in a superior manner. He is
determined not •to 'be excelled by any in the
•:citinty, as to, make. material or price. Our
'rn nte is not to be undersold by any. Give, us
II call at our store in Sendai:mover street,
• 'directly loppciSlia Bente's store; end sea lb'
Oitrselves. ,CHARLES .
non: 2t,1852!tti • - ; . ,
1 10,000.P1EC.1451
..12 - HAW: just opened the largest assortment
o f w.A.LL, PAPERS ever opened in Car.'
lisle', consisting of about •10,0ao Frecos of the
latest:French and American •destuns, ranging
In mine front 5 alai° t•I 75, oho Window. Pa T
rvira and Fire: Screens, Plain Green and Blue'
:reratns.wishing to purchase any
-of the above cal_ stare ,at, toast 2,5 per cent 'by
calling at , • • •„•39 11 •Y•P-I.Y.NEI'S'
.-.llardware St tre,,West.sida of North liannVer
• . Street: Guthrie:.
Carlisle Female Seminary'.
liAt ooinmOnoe .
17:1: srIAINIMR'SE3SioN
• ••
on. Llio now rind
"•:eommodious;eillionl . ' loot. io
Ldonfird'o; I.TOrth --;
' Inst rOct ion in' tliniongutidoo airing; no
extrn.ohgrge: •= r :
Hume tnogbi:fiyan expotionoed l .`ionoiter.
fil extro,chnrgo.;..... •
,(spni3!l)
.3' s hio o Drell 4 - Xfaa iOng •
MISS.•USIXGATURBA*i,
mal.F.3i)muTF:uLt;,,y, thii.oitizonq,of
.11M thit alto lii‘,prop*redlll'
wselc' en tr and moot
,Striat;tltirt 4on in '4.l,ozeinden.,e , R;owi
farhp -Ram 1110
Rand oiit.,;-; N, , ;
the doni iittandtid ,-it.".(rnay.25.31.1
111V1,_11...TAA*,a,2035,370-. k
, *NI •
ijarusle:
Rawl rorugglo.' • -•.•'• • •
•'w , • ',•i• „?•
* 6 08
, /art • itd •Triflio
•As rat ' • 40t,ic •• ti
" r *"" n rabit t r•.,
' .
•
"" Si
'Deug6'r tot() P11E490111•91'11
I,olFg't!)k sZo, •.e4, th!°,4l,-016ti nal e#431011.
WA% k, g l itin't 141104' J• •
to s e r v e , ill the DVg
. 441 1 1 0.11% sr. wksl.-"It" traare4 16:1-4
C won' ••
'441400' • 0 • •is
:Antilit
- - - -
. . ,
THERE. ARE TWO THINGS, SAITH LORD BACON, WHICH :HARE • A NATION-VAAT: AND P4.ogPErtbu.SAr .FE"TILE * SOIL - AND BUSY- WORMSHOSS, , —TO LET Mg ADD • KNOWLEDOE AND ',FHEEDOX—B is • h op '
. , „
• • •
Detre by yonder flowing strenmlet,
.ttreenn in cottagenent ;
Where the flowers bloom the torment,
And the woodland branches meet.
-Liglit,-w 'aged- bii•ds i with golden'plumage;
• Greet her with their sweetest song,
Asslissrelis the " deit•elathneatlow,"
• With her .. " pail" at early dawn. •
All things seem to love my "Jenny,"
Fcr.her light eta graceful form ,
Sheds around 'n, beam of pleasfire,
Such tis makes the heart feel warm.
Autirn ringlets fall in . Clusters'
• From her brow of purest white
And - her . eres, beneath their lashes,
Shine like diamonds in the night.
Wealth . with nil its boasted plens - ares,
Cannot charm my !' Jenny's" ear,
Like the marinating of thwstreamlet,
Austies" love so well to hear.
Birds and flowers aro around
And the trees which shade her "cot,"
Stirred hyliglit winds, seem to whisper
Of her peaceful, happy lot.
•
Worldly mires do not attend her,
"Sweet contentment" guards the, door,
"Joy " sits smiling at the entrance,
Making bright the "oaken tloOr.:":
' Jeney's is n hrippy life,
80111110 ns any-mummer-weather,- '..
And she Says if I:prove true. •
Sonic day 1 may share it with her.
Carlisle, Jane, 1353.it*:
...
Ye, who knelt the renson, tell me,
How it is that instinct still
Prompts the heart to like, or like not,
At its own capricious will.!
Tell me o by what hidden magic - •
011fimpressions first are led
Oftibefore a word is solidi__
Why should smiles sometimes repel us?,
L'right eyes join out feelings cold?
What is that which comes to tell us, •
Ali that glitters is not gold T
Oh, no feature, plain or striking,
But a power wecannot shun,
Prompts our ligiag or disliking - •
Ere acquailitance has begun!
Is it 'instinct, or soma spirit, •
'Which protects us, and controls
Every impulse we inherit,
By some sympathy of soul ?
Is it:iastinct? 'is it nature ?••p
Or sonutlreak or - Inult of cheap, •
Which our liking or disliking_
•
Limits to a single glance?
- 'Lilt° prosentiment'of clangor,
• • Though the sky no shadow flings;
, Or thal iitnersongo, still stronger,
• Of unseen,,unuttered things. '
Is it Oh, con no ono tell me—
. fili'one show sufficient calm,
yhy our likings and
-Have their own instinctive laws?
It is a fact that cannot be disputed, that
cant phrases have become the order of the
day. The English language literally groans
beneath these expletives, which have grown
out of the vulglif,,, taste. They. may be called
moral excrescences, whiole;should be exorcised
by tho band of propriety: The mauls ,for cant
terms of .expreesims has spread far and wide,
nod infected old . and young, until .there are
but very few persons who can relate the most
simple event, Ivithout interlarding the narra
tion with phrases that must, shock every' truly
refined mina.
'This evil seems to be steadily 'on the in-.
crease,' and one cannot walk the streets with
out bearing, the most jtivenile portion:of the
comm'unity..employing iermabut ill adapted to
their childish HO. It is the duty of the press,
and' of parents, to endeavor to check this
growing appetite for.. ghat is monstrous and
unbecoming. •Elegance' of language, no well
ns elegance Of manners, is necessary to entitle
any person to the distinction of " ladh" or
gentleman," , •
11Ye admit that many persons of good sense,
and of, very good taste in runny respects, have
been betrayed lido . thO,luthit ; but that fur
nishcs no excuse for the continuance, and does
•not go„to prove-that cant phrases are necessa
ry or proper. •
• So far from assisting to express an idea,
facilitate the.prog;:ess 'of narration, or conver
, nation, they actually have a contrary effect,
and render the progress . more blow and
cult They are like °atm ivelght placed upon
a, horse intended fur speed,.. 'which weighs,
down nud wearies the animal. The human
'speech should be noble and dignified; and wor
thy to expv'ess the thoughts of hnmorist be-.
Ingo..Low ideas are" always attached to cant
pliranea, : Which must inevitably exercise a
.do
grading influence upon the mind. Low con:
• ceptions tiro as detrimental to improvement,
enmet ,and heavy plumage to. a ; bird that
would take a lofty flight.
Those who would he'really refined,.fashion
abiSand'elegaut; Would do 'well to remember
.that in all works of licaoit
,truly; valuable, it
is only the. Coarse and vulgar who_ makes use
`of low,,ohal inelegant phrases: TheVestly geod !! 1
learned. add"
longuage o in order
tbet tobtriow betweeli:thor high and
low` may be ma de 'strikingly apparent. ' IC,ie
,;`intended, by,tho aixtbor Of, 1491i,rioduallOue,,
:...that we elipold Itilltottrtho 'first, awl shun Abi,
!glrirthk'citifecits-sof *I
• ;' . ... ll ' .6 ''iNet . riti 4+ ,.:tlio,Oikiilii•alielOl3! l ,lt- 'The
*day, 'iv¢ will;tbko,,(Go liberty to 4tpid,iicii bur
' r,ioOditt to .ike , atout,
mut.jio;a6yiti4ilif..eii! , ll.l63'.'T
l,
enough to oebit a' *into • , 'ttt eittoti.-arnong
0,04, 1 9 d ` °ls- PF: 10 1 n r 161
Toftjr , ;,'Protifoelphei:::beo!"o grease
tftiit 'ble•betirt,',beote,-toet•at ltpnring dun:
Pco!'i reared
itii:4iiio . Wiko!, '.9alitiiiilo4fica bud. t4eg
tat.9111#114,----.3. l 3ptittfti rittrillittefr•
Viytt
' • For tho'" Ilaraldl." • :
LOVELY JENNY...A,. SONG:.
EIBIEM=
prartirat
CANT P11Rt6131..
DT Dn. J. 11. nonusl
MI
C - A,RLI4iI6, PA.;
had inhaled it until they were fultund <ioPe
tessly, impregnated with the malaria . . .Thelr
courtship, even; was conducted.. on cant fen-,
niples for. when' Mr. Stout astiOd hititride
"elect if she- would "Look oti for life,"" she
priimptly answered thee" she'd be blest If elm
!" Whoa Josephine made her advent to
blesithO connubial statemf tlie couple,. bin,
Timothy - pronounced lltr a "trump," and Mrs, -
Tintothy-declared,-„witit equal enrneStness;.that
she " beat all crention." . ..When Napoleon
made his debut upon the state of life," his
male' progenitor , called him n "'Osier," nbd
his . mtiternel parent averred that he 1911 s a
tearer." , Whe- bdth were Old enough to ploy
about the Lime, boo was up to miff,"
the other. was "a brick." • In their juvenile
disputes, Josephine brailded . Napoleon *with
the infamous epithet of " antral potatoeit ;• • •tltti
father retorted timartlY, and with cqUatsovin
ity, that she "did'nt know beani." When Na
poleon_ Was obstinate and Obstreperous, his
mother warned him that Ito_"tvould catch it •''
-
to which he finally learned to-reply; as-his in
tellect expanded, with a- significant gesture
well understood - by/Oa young'men, "over the
left, oldwommi;" which unparalieled . picco 7
biti Pleased his father to Stich a degree, that,
in the exuberance of admiration, ho was im
pelled to make the impressive remark that
Napoleon•" was hard to beat ;" this encourag
ed the lad so - Much that ho instantly assumed
an attitude a la NapoleOn, and mildly reecorn
mended the senior Stout to "go it, boots!"
_We.feel th - nt we cannot better illtisti.n't . e,the
subject befoto us, than by subjoining the 'fol
lowing conversation which transpired a foty
days since in the Stout
a. I declare to goodness! I really think Mr.
Rustle is making up to our Josephine!". said -
Mrs. Stout, after the gentleman referred to
had passed the previous evening nt their house,
stay'ng to a later hour than usual -
"You'd better believe it," rejoined the young
lady, playfully. - - - .
" You may hot high on tbat!%nilded Napo
leon, rail) vas in the tidt of lighting a real 11a- -
vans. ,
'" low do you Lilco the. " cut or his jib,"
Timothy?" resumed Mrs. StOut, turning alier
husband.
•
" I don . .t . groatly like . but Joseph-
ine thinks he's , s.oste,' "' , ,trns the reply. •
. I ?_Whetlfer you.like'llim or not, it's my opin
ion he'll makii a .‘ tip-tcp husband ? " continued
the mother.
"Put her throuclys mUlher," . sup Josephine
blushing. • ,
•
"Go in lemons !" suggested Naporeon;stnot
king through his nose—n remark, by the way,
-so .ambiguous - that it certainly
_Must, -'have
puzzred other parties to guess at his meaning;
but in the present cape, it seemed to be invest
ed with perfect:lucidity...
. ...Napoleon,' I advise -you . to
. !abut, your
hopper !' " elegantly retorted the young lady.
Mr. Stcnt proceeded to inquire if Mr. Ruts ,
tie was n man of property; and was assured
by his better-half that he had a .• poo)set full
of rocks 7,....-The husband and father then re
marked to the effect that ho had been more
favorably impressed with Mr. 'Goodwin, a
young former in the neighborhood, than with
the gentleman under consideration; Miss Stout
manifested n different opinion on the subject,
emphatically declaring that he "couldn't come
kn." .
.4 I.le's over that way," said his brother,
making a gesture over hie shoulder; with his
We will not extend this "conversation far
ther, for fear that we may weary the reader's'
patience by the ropeption of . phrases so' com
mon. Suffice it to say that such expressions
were dragged into almost every - conversation'
in the Stout farnk Their cant vocabulary
appeared.to !Mg() extensive, that it comprised
all tho f 4.11,7 and stupidity of idle past and
present; and, indeddOliey seemed to enter
tain the idea, that to use such•phrases skilfully
and liberally, was an accomplishment. lint
this bliss of ignorance, or thoughtlesiness,
was finally interrupted by the visit of an old
frienclof . Mr. Stout,:wliont ho Gad not seen
for many years. '
Mr. Thompson was a man. of strong and
good sense, and had the rare' faculty 'of•ex . -
pressing himself in nnoppropriateand elegant
inanne , r. A gentleman so accomplished could
not.remain lung•in the family without' being
shocked; and he was perfectly astounded 'at
hearitig, every hour;• such an avalanche of
coarse and unrefined forms or expression,'
which obviously originated 'among the loWest
Classes of people,
Taking the liberty of an old acquaintance,
he ventured to remonstrate with Mr. and Mrs,
Stout -in regard to the impropriety of such
language. • •
' .!.You wrong both yourselves rind your
children," be remarked ; " the latter •aronl
weedy imbued.witlx ideas, that' associate them
with the profligate end the vile, and which
will. ,forever :prevent them from expressing
themselves correctly."
.Itlercy on too, if I don't believe the gen
tleman is.right!" evelaimed MrtS..Stout, "btu .
Linece thought of the. subject in that light:"
iherifit'b4.has been of 'such long - Standing
that it will h.; a terrible .muse to get'out•of,?
oboerved Mr, Stout, thoughtfully, unconscious
that he'had employed' ii.cant word, even when
.he'meatit.to have spoken sincerely and to the
• But. do.your children use no such tr)rdel''
oelted-Ddre. Stout; earnestly., • ;
kterer," reeuuicd•Mr.
itiebtikn properly toughti he Eugliehlatiguago,
they do net feel the need of euoh plunies
they regnid theni with► as mtiolt .ropeguance
.
'qv-heats tho diekenti!!! .riddaCiho- Indy,
.
seei »strong the ftit•ee or habit .
Q:UklOenld enitilylediejoirliioteli:thinge,_
hitt It ii'reould lie'ditroreitV with' hnsband F U
flit; Cita t`.4retrtie "bl' veV 4don't
thinitythey , eVercoulda fmo 'thett , festinerr
. .I";Ari iyel;
' I r oteiO `u B 9k l C:
anti seld'r
Iola:. 0( btd4 ka
Jostiphtne,l'lteilt7s'ffd)e n teitblitit . 4l7i4l4ditt44'
LtSkutiliiko
mimmw
EZIS
WEDNESDAY; JUNE is,. nsstti,
clay. oh nellibig.'"' . • ••
"That's 'veolfernied ex,-*
nitre ' • "The Maiii - ,yOnWitli"Wa
g 0 rap .you
make jerusaleny..paneakeet your
falutip stA l C9 . 1D01012 aineingse the miobs; hint
' worth i.ccitiPerl" : .
' ine,::tienideon,,how..yein dolt. on.
rteviiiiinritthe.baulypOtt:"...
.L thank !mien'!" inilnitind Mr. Thomp
,
,
son, notthaticaily,-that.-*7 l- :childrert, are not
infected with this Moral leprosy, :which disffg
• area human language; and, Adetracts from the
dignity of tbtrhinnan character. My friend,
I hope you 'make astrongnnd long•coiltiu
ned'eflertla-reprilr... the . *bifida- tviiich your
example Iris wrought.;; 33e never .weary in
work :of reform,'- 'ever tear it con ..
Staidly in mind; tbai ,
'ean tienr
aPpear to'good; ailyantege_in
,elegent and re
' fined soCiety, Until they canape* correctly;
or, at least, in a manner 'Oita offend Ordinary
good taste. :OliCiet to' which the
• slaves to such; habits _ctitmet -by any, means'
',gain admission ;.imeanse their influence would
be deetined; Pernicious/ . rtruit you will not
beeffended piairi•ftleteling, for I speak
from the'mosidisintereated 7 motiVes. Let Jo.
sephine and Napoleon *kit* at thecity, nod
I will - - min 'ld dedicate ideas so do- -
grading; and . ta instil 044 dliecimuch more
value; that ,they. shall neid. mgr)* the :
ci
cbange," .7 -
In justice to thelStouf family, vfo will say
that they did make some faint efforts
— by thie — suggerstiOnSTOr flair
without any fairticidar. *resol . t.i . Mr. ;Stout
resolutely declared; after atow-trials, that he
couldn't come it ;"- Mita r igtoilt endorsed this
opinion, by adding that it:Wiis a " hard case,"
and Miss Josephine. i•enderld . the. ides' still
stronier, by iejOihing that* " .. waSn't nothing
else;' whiltt the :bold NitPuleen conehided,
toyi let her slide rem that no? per.
ceptible change cook place fit the 'Stout
---ily.—'Weasoies-Tietaritg'.D.rattin . p.Roent- Com- '
a. 61 anti 16reotitt.
W_ONDERFOL AGE.
Well, this is a,reararkab e.ag —is wonder
ful ago!" ,Said L aloud: to 41iyeelf, • quite late
one night last winter i :lnAnyroora at
Hotel. -The truth had:jadt been reading
eloiluenteditorials arilbe'ocepsian
of the New .Year, wherein.Lwere enumerated
the Manifold, and striking , evidences . ..of pro
-gress
-with- which we are ,encompaised; the
inventions, the improvements,and the mighty
revolutiame-disiurbirsg, the :fall- .oLeacietY,.
Theselattor, according do - th":,ediqrs, were
'especially to disilugnigh,tl 4 & unpiicedentediy:
momentous year-of 1853 : As I reviewed ned
pondered- upon ,ifiese
_things, I was almost
overwhelmed by the strange importance of oar
particular times, an unlike all previous expe
rience, and began once• more to midi),
This is a remark—" when the door quietly
opening, a figure 'of singular appearance en
tered. -Ills dress, erring probably to the agi
tation of the moment,, I did net distinctly
notice. But his aged beariLlds national cast
Of features, and especially his eyebrows, feint
ing one -continuous line from temple to temple,
with I know not what mysterious influence
about his person, at once made me sensible
thiOnone other stood before me than the ver
•itable Wandering' ew
I had hardly time to recover my amazement
(and terror it may be, for I Ilnow not how else
to account for that prickling sensation at the
roots of my hair;) wheivaith au air the Most
kindly and inspiriting, my tibitor began:
You wore speaking; I thialr, - of this re.
markuble age. .Lans glad to observe that you
appreciate its value; for, let me ,tell-ydo; it is
a rare virtue, avow among 'the most genial
minds.' One portion of them arc always look
ing to the 'glorious foam'. and the remainder
to the '.gldrious past.', But if yeti heartily
enter the,Spirit of the times in which Proii
doled Gas placed you, you then qui!tli ascer
tain your duties, and easily diichergethem."
" But such a w'ontierful nieP Suitt I. "it
confuses oue.!' ; "
A bitter smile 'played uponibis lip as he tid
decl, turning aside, " The 'invariable folly!
hi_resemed, "had you accompanied
D2O in hut a smolt portion of my expiatory
wanderings,yon would have seeil'every rolling
fear stamped as 'remarkable,' and have sym
pathised with me, who am now , forced to look
back upon eighteen, hundred dreary and .ro-
Markable' years. But_ 11102' . 0122.i0110 to know,
since all other, ages, in, pier Opinion, are com
mon-place corapared with this, what partieu!ar
one you-take to be its v4,y oppOstte in epiisit
and results."
" Why, there is the whole period 'of the
Dark Ages," I replied, " which, seems to me
a perfect blank, a , link absolutely. dropped out
of:the world's progress." . •
~ •
You echo-the common but Mshjudgment," -
ho replied. '" But as: this. pOriod
. over a thousand years, we will divide it into
three equal parls, l and merely "glance at them
in Order. In tLo first we lt . ve two unexampled
ornta tbo dying .ont orNiie amient
tion, and, the
• daybreak. or'the now, 00
ruption .er . the Dotbie hordes in Bonthern
torepe,,. And with the mingling of these,
nerer'sholl I :forget the temultious feelings
tbo whola (tenacious rierld.
en awful ego sighed tho Latins, as , they sari
oivet'y vestigO,ofnutiijully, sweitiway,
a ,oloriMti ego!' sitouted the harbarians, - as
,they tuslltt on in, their destroying march:
`What I myself, not then' uoxpitynis!Ain the
viaisgitudos of liutnniinffOirs,, felt to to 'in:
tieed tt'iwonderful ' ; age !'
But of the
park. `./4,66, flit *lint ...do /Si beheld t All
..goveraments I.l , 4eletnily brealtitiglntolloronion
byqactieforo. onboard-or
!;'`pact' advancing to ; absolute + affray ; ;
• ( 4. 11 0 10 : 46 0 1 ! t :P r ??9 1 '
Vi! 1 ?, .tr9Atad° lB
iIA4II9II'IrOm place to.plitnort: 04 111 4. 16. 5 1 horn=
l!lerc t iof adffP44,C4l nod same'
#
~'4olll q oo p g!gisi;t4*„l.ooo f € l o'
b.F i l'°'cip -
•• 1101spcifAi05 , 41414.0#‘i: SfiN
geu rat opointrtero. aVits die tr0t.,14
.lAolt
t‘r:ngt:Onltlo i 4 sue woo imiitiAtthi47;
Aybit4{tta_;ou lived t their ott,
':= trit:;ioinen4 Wan
emittivt .%Iforunitign
Igritulturts, titriineburi ito
there e4er:eitCh'..an'elie,b.efoie
the:third division . ; we.brive 'Velar the
engaging,Europeln mighty crusades
to the and . ritaising ,such) intense
anti Universal enthusiasm, that ninety , thou
sand children, set, out, commanded by a child ;
.the innumerable and romantic battles
,with
the Turks ;" the conquest of .England; the . rbie
of the Italian cities; .the _Zeman church eon
.vulsed with itte_T'opes and all ,F.ttropo filled
witli:the wondrous stozieL of the returning
crusaders. Such, in brief, - were thu:park
Ages, ae relieved by these few brilliant poinm,
to say nothing of
„the countless events wi*
usually escape your historians but which wore
no leis prolific in interest 4 ' s '
,
'may be true," I :reluctantly : added . ;
•"but When once mankind had emerged Mudd,
then all things went forward slowly and 'qui-
"".ludeed....strid he. "Was tho course (if
the net ega so meekly unobtrnsive, when
Vasco:_discovered the unsuspected , extent of
his- earn- continent, ' and
•ColunibUST-the
dreamed-of existence :Of a new one? When
microscopes, first revealed atoms to the human
eye, and telescopes Worlds , ? ; When thoinven-'
tion of painting in ,011, engraving, Paper, and
printing poured their effulgence aril% societyl
when revived - learning enlightened; and the
ReformatiOn redeemed i the hdman 16Ynd 7L—
.Surely you will not differ from your applauded
Writers, all of whom still hong.with delight
_over this iwonderfkage ?
, " :
you speak—of:inventions,"---I—cried;
"What can all thecfortner Centuries produce
to compare with steani-jocomotives - and: the
magnetic telegraph: l ! • -•
!-They Min produce," be.answered, - " - every .
nne'oe them, an invention which contribUtes
at least 'in int equal degree,•to , the direct im
provement and enjoyinent'of 'die race, Le.
.cornatives And telegrapha what are , they but
lifelesSabbreviations of time, bringing neither
anpyr_tho ugh; to'tlio nor_ deepening ti
singleimpulse of the heart ? Their, high ca•
limation springs onljfrOrd . the fact, that their
value can be approximated in the standard
coin. But the real importance of both, when
,contratited, with, that of the first moveable
printing-type;-is.ns trifling as .the'worth of
Newlotel ihaiOne, ouipared with the infant
Newton himself.
Thni, you see,.inlifting the vale of Hie
.past;that every generation, :while contributing
in some shape, He share to the general pre
ems, is
,also puffed up with an idea of HS
owft gimlet impoitarice; ! and you
,may infer
that you, like the previous voyagers on the
bCriks of the:Present, aro. apt to forget, that
thnsame &shines and.eddyinge by which you
are - ,a d ceMnpanied 4ave .once :disturbed . : the
smooth wake latish' stretches, hOind,,,Huti
forgeslitill wejinni°, at any, other.perted
Timis is the sixteenth" Seatury,:ivitli. Henry
VIII, and Charles V, pisobeth and the Spam:
isli Armada i:the sereateer4it; withihe supre
macy of Holland, the English nevOlation; Bo
conned Cromwell,..Descartes . andHkekspeare;
the eighteenth, with Louis - -.X.17, Peter -4 0e
- Great, Charles %11, Frederick the Great, Nit , '
abeau our own Independence; the annihilation
„of_Poland,. the Froneb-Revolation—r---..".
.
Tat was an extraortrmary.age." I-in
terposed.
"It was perhaps,. tsrrenchmen,! ho coldly
added; but the whole civilized world must
be affected in order to characterize the
And this reminds me ofwbot I witnessed in'
one of my journeys through Kamschatka, - It
seems, in the coarse or I single season, no less
than fifty . bears iiedbeen , t aken in that region;
a dog with no perceptable,, tail had come into
existence; - and: a travelled Katntschatkari
genius,' braving the threats of prejudice, had
actually introduced method of-counting
on the
. fingers. These things were too much
for the natural sobriety, and rdy .mirsi were'
dinned 'with' tho upronrons outcry', What a
remarkable, 'What a wonderful age l" '
Indeed !" I gasped'; for I Must say, r be
gin to be exceedingly puzzled with my visitor;
. when;:trith a quick movement, he wiped out
his single eye-brow, tore; offhis beard, threw
open his dresiing gown, lend became Tom
Wil
liams, an old friend, who , occupied th.e,e.oom
next to mine I I tried to tint. on a bland eare•
lessness. .
"'•Yon didn't tbink,,Tom, I was swallowing
alFthis . •
"Ah, - my deer fellow, your innoceneels
cidedly, no - go bolter drop it at aim."
" But .vvhat could have stiggested such a
foolish project to you!" '
"Why," said Tom, "I happened to over
hoar your exclamations, • and as you nro a
professed believer in *ghost's, mesmerism, and
spiritual Tappings,' so, thinks I to myself,
here's room for experiment, and theselableauz
trapping; shall constitute the medium Beside
P wanted to see how much I knew of the
Universal History I haverjust finished."
" But did you really believe I . could be hum
bugged in this *ray ?" • •
111:Ost - certalnlY, for jou are honestin'your i
. • • .
prefussions, and no leis credulous than thou-.
sands of good peeplekriew-n-daye:" ' "
n Then, by Jeri!" 'field 1 . ; . " this is a-Won
derful age, dad the sooner , we get out of it the'
better!" • ,1 " '
'SstrisrAirrony.--,The , Hartford (Ct.) RepU6-,
&Mr ifs:responsible for , the,followimp-- 1 1Ve
heard the other dayla good:and true story of
a •CidinOtiout Orman., rMs country. parish
raised his salary from ~$BOO 'Oer annum? to
S4OD:: The &oil , man objected for .three rea
sons. 4, ''Firlit,"'shid' he, . l , because you can't
atiarj.tosivOMOre three'butidtid.'doilare.'
Second, - bicanse preaching 'l'en`i 'worth
tnoio'itieri: three hundred:; Third,' arid :last,:
heciaMie hail?' to,'Colleet myMilarytihlcii
ticietafore:haa tlik'litirdest 'toy
:CoSeCi
~ • A laer'; - itir , oxerl.:•‘4 Into ;EngtiO.paper gi*es'
the followin g extraordinary ' feat if•Ai old lady,'
at IF4l4ol,4eilhlierhollatirf ehm.444a aect..i:
. bell•sit pita ; on. the A - 44'one ; Diet! ',ololif.i .
,vietit tti•ted t. huh they,traie•gimeie'the , iati4t;
itig;: - „&4alylialta:. 40•••atli;keiwnifigMitte. ,
4
*liq'ii *POPkiiege•ltlr 1 501.5.f?)iTY#0 4 `t :
,igiC 1 1 46 i4ipaiiii)iii , , .40'!i 41 .d41 *e. us:4
iiiii , i . o T oiitoi , v. , :l•l l iicOtyfer
ilkk."fo4ito4:oiitiliteisodiiWiiiaiied,44,
dentoeitpahl;o,:ol(lipliirp*elitmllei),'Me.
i itio,*4oirilietiiitii**#o,:torm i k9lq (6
D:4'1:404W ititllii rat iol.olpg oat* , !.
..
WM
:~~~
'3lll.ertilantoug.
THPI WESTIDiiN r
IRAN.
41n.rolletl,thtt;proiric up,liko cloth;
Drnnk
Put Allegbetjy.to -
A steamboat to bbr,sye -
And for bMlireasfast, buffaloes, .
Solite trieitii.boe'did:fry
. . ..
)He whipped the whole Comanche tribe
One day before,he dined; .• , I
'And teen walking cane ke took ' '
. ' . A:California. pine;' ' ' . .' ' '
-,.And vhen be frowned ho Nee so bleak - ,
•,., The sun it couldn't shine. : . , .;- , 1
.
HO whipped n to n of g r isly bear's'
One morning with' a fah,
And proved bitoseif,. by all then feats,
To be a.)Yeateria tpaa.
. .
A FEW.. WORDS ABUT BATHING.;
thii 2 nonson, fdr;this heolthfupuanry,
'now yr iih' us," wo have thought thO followiuk
tii.tio r lolon the piihjeot, from the'
Bullotin; , :Wouht . prove„iacctitable to many of '
oar-nutiioniuti rtincle're :
,
Even the best things/fi r e oCeitsidnally pro-,
- ductive of injurious eonse
,ntieces,,When
dulgdd in tnexcess, ornied Wiikouttlisoretion.
.
• -Bathing Is one instance ameng ,
niany. • Top
mach' bathing debilitates even the mat robust,
often destroys _ the appetite, or leads to other,
- kurtful - results.:, - Hot bathe; not: terlidnes,•
are particularfy apt to prove deleterious: • Few
persons, indeed, eau employ them h
, at all trit,
adventage.._ Dr.. Tilt; an English physician of
omipence, -who bas written an admirable work,
'on the best nienas of - presetiiiii health,' gives
it as his personal experienc e that hot baths •
produce temporary plethora; bead 'ache, and
a sense_ of weakness_ainonnting.lalmost _to;
fainting. These are, ho thinks, the general .
results also. He'advises, therefore, that hot
.batha should be avoidM,-unless- when,tirphy- -
skin has explicitly. directed their uso; •
Tepid anti cold 'baths; to be employed ac. '
cording to the constitution and habits of !the
particular individual; are the baths to which'
most should _confute theriiselves. Nervoes
persons are espeCially beitefitted by the tepid -
bath, Which seems to have a direct sedative •
intlitenee on the nervous system, probablyby
absorbing; according to - Dr. Tilt; the Morbid
Irritability ariding from nia undue' development,
of the mind:at untrzpense of, the' body. lin. •
poleon; afterexemiSive fatigue, eitherWinatal
orphysical, was'accustomed to take a tepid
bath, and, if pOssilde, indulge awhilein sleep ;
and be was often heard to declare, that,, with
oat Btu& a eedative,.it mania los;ve been
Possible forlaim'to have. preserved his general -
,health"..ftes his ox!ltosting retern. front.
,I.Cussia„sobsequene to the: rrieinorable,Ootilla•
gration of Aloseorr, he iyit itanietliately• into
the bath. before transacting binineSs, and then
(skit," vvithout waking, for eighteen lours;
and when he arose hei - was as fresh as ever.
The celebrated Mann of Poietiers, one of the
most beautiful women France ever gave birth
to; and who maintained her charms lo'ng he.
yond the usual term, owed the preseryation
of her loveliness prineipally to the daily, but
judieiouit use',Of (h a bath. Thus we see that
_ .
ordinary health, the capacity to endure great
fatigues alike 'Or' mind and body, and - the
maintainers of personal beatity' in the fair
sex; depend, More' Or less, on, the discriMina-'
ting, but habital employment of the bath.
The tepid bath is, perhaps; the one Most
generally sultana. The temperature of a.
tepid, bath should range from 68° to 86° Fah
renheit.' While the'temperature is kept below
blood heat, the body slowly inereasies in weight;
• ,
partly owing to the absorption of water, part
,to the diminution of inseasible.perepira
'den. hath,,heatoilfrotri 82? t 01364,
Fahrenheit; it Was, ascertained,' by. Chosiat; •
that the pidse descended from sixty pulsations *,
to thirty-eight and it was clearly,-the sootk r
jog effect thus_produced, which rendered the •
tepid bath so delicious to the irritable' nerves • •
of Napoleon.: , Dr.: Tilt recommends the tepid
bath after long railway journeys, excessive
walking or riding, or at periods of nervouti
irritability, superinduced by any causes.
.Cold, baths are favorites withmariy persons,
especially thosi of robust' frames and high
health. But it is never wise to-remain long in
a . very_cold-both.- - On coming out,- if the etay
has not been too prntracted i the body feels as
if entering into a wormer attn`oaphere, because
the density of the air is less' than that of the,
water, and because also. the sensibility , of 'the
skin is blunted. . Sundaes headache super.
vanes. This is a sign of a partially dieeased
akin, and. a want of reaction, causing the
blood to remain concentrated . on 'the internal
organs; where it was driven , by the shock of
thottold water. • ; •
The beat, perhaps the enly . test, of, the kind
of bath:proper for each partiouhir '
Hu experiment.. : Opinionated pe s reons,lgnarani .
Of 'the !nogus: operpnfli, of tho„ bath, , always ,
maintairrthat the. sort adapted for thernerlves
is the . description suitable for all. We know
some individualsi who swear, as it were by .
cAdbaths, and Others Who are juntas obeli-
011ie, in behalf of tepid , ones. , A , physioinn;
familiar 'With , the habits pad' constitution of.
the "patient, 'cen generally tell what, kild of
bath she* be used, even without enieriment-
A FIGTIT rIN TIIII SEPNICNIIIE.—Lets6 •
tern of. March 24th hring tit:antis' of the affair
that took:piaOp on Palm Sunday; in tho'Cliurcli•":
of, tit* Sepulohro,lin Thee°
lettere say that .the gdglisknahoilanartett:worit'
fumed , out; of, tho church'. licoattee,
bayed; in an Unseemly, manner :when. the pro,
cession of the' fleet 'ypataidittioti' , Unod . .i . gayr,
A. missionary et'atifortli,tiriaoliett
sermon outside 'the 'eynagegtie„ , *llll9' t ;itee*to? . ;.
Inta!gortii4ii.:iiii4fp;*o4iiidiagiii 7, * . t'.anvio..''",
talratitly,',.olto,,.ofT;.tbek ..
tblld:„i
en '6V/10 1 04 11 0 06 00
cat In etti;
too' rescue;
. 9.o;4ft*,i}.fttific"rtl4;tlte;s l ,4( l 44drfittko ll i'?4
rilmk,Plircion,oB2l,qi,i',o#l,o4,46.pmck
€96:111t itconit 041
Igittlati, l oo4fot 0111011 , 4406 “/0: 116 4. 1 4er-lrl,;',,,
pripeolog tdtklattiocion#l*_ , ; ':-9,,":4'14 , "i4. ; '44'1. ,
' ' "
; - -ITOLUM10:11 1... SlAt--4
VA L ilia ALTH.
, . .
An ; earnest student le..proue . to , ruin bill
1116 alth:...ilopo_cheats hist With the belief that
if ho can `Mu ly non; :vittiMet ciessatiori he. can
do sO teottuie, be .dOeS
. not seetke
end of hie..etrongth, -ho foolishly concludes
there is no end: ' .A",Speutithriftl of health is
•one of the , most repielitiiiiiblefof spendthrifts.
• htkpoifOrriedt - whip the
labor, both :hotter ,and:iwith greater. ease to
myself, , hial known as much th i'da ' , of
'health end:life; at tneriti.eno,' , as do; now.
In was taieht, : al!:cibput the motions
of the planets, es. carefully, as4hougl* they
:mould have beetuinldiugor of getting
track if I lied'nOt inotvd,hOWtrabe , , their
orbits, but about. my ;own oriatiisa ' tion,.and
the conditlons indieponsible to, the •heeltliftil
:functions of my'oivrillody,' T.was left
_le pro--
'fOtind'igeorince, Nothing coidd,be more pro
postefous, 1.
'•
Ought, to . haie,hegunat home,
and taken.tho Mars. when ft:should have demo.
,lheirtuo-
itotheirfturn. - re itTroniq — irence - was,
Idown at the lekihnli,i,6l , the .Second' col; ego
year, had . a well day ell be.
Whatever labor lhave beep sinew able to :I',
'd have &melt credit,ipetead oreapit al
-La apoet ipiniids' way, either--in-regard to
health or tho4ast twenty-ilvo
years; se far as it regardsllealth,4 have be n
imit;.frees detto day, on my 'good'bohavlobr,-
and derieg 'the whole of this , yelled, as a Hi
bercian.livoilit.say, if lived .ai-other
.folkeLdo'fona.menth,4l.should-have,diellip a-
. , .
it Healt . h a s a great Ifeal - to de with what
the world ' calls 'pliant.: Take: a laviyer's
throu gh,. and" high, health , is . ..nt least qual: t,o'_
fiftyper cent.. mare Min brain.: 'Endurance,
cheerfulness,--'with eloquence; attain e t force
and splendor •wittchoolth which they never
can approach: without it,' It often happens
tha_ t the credit aWarded to the intellect belongs
to the digestion... Th - ough, I do ,uot,iteliere
'tiMe - genius an 1 . cupeinly are 'convertible terms,
yet the former, , 'pan. no "rise teAts.,leftiest
heights. Unaided hy
",Again: 2 a. wino man, with , n groat enter
yriso before Lim, first leeks round forsuitable
instruments wherewith ttr . meecntelff and ho
thinhs it' oil importantto, command these . in.
struments before be begins. bit labor, -Health
is nu indiapensibie instrument for the best
qualities and the - highest - WA of
, all.'wOrk.
Think of the immense .advardago yon would
have in a suit in court,:if, after It weelee or a
forteight"e ;investigation o“aots, you could
code in - further closing argument on 'the last
day, fresh and elastia,with only so xench.ractro
Of momentum axed feilry for the' velocity and'
the gloir:you had reqUired." . -41brace Mann.
A,
Lord Dam, an ancestor of tho'2arl of
weareinerkabla for ,practising that celebrated
.rule—. 6 Get-all you can, and keep all you can
get." One , day, 'walking 'ticivin the ivenuo
from his house, he saw, a farthing lying , at'hia
feet, evhieh he carefully 'cleaned; A begg a r
passing at the'dashe time, entreated his lord
ship would give him the farthing, saying it
wee not woe* n , noblettiap's attention.
"Fin' a farthing to YoureoP, puir. body,"
replied his lordship, and carefully put the ooin
in his breeches pocket. -
In addition to being his own farthing finder,
his lordship isms his own thotor andrent:col
lector. A tenant who ofillid upon him to pay
his rent, happened.to be deficient a farthing.
This amount could not be excused, and the
farmer had to pay the farthing.
When the busitiess was , adjusted, the coun
tryman said to his lordshiP: : -
"Now, Dorm), I would gie ye a ehillin', for
a right 0 , te the gond and Biller ye Lae."
",Well,- men," replied Barco, , " its no cost
- And, accordingly' for,' and' in consider'ation
ptthe aferesitid: Sam, in hand' first well and
.truly paid, hielordship •exhlbitedeeveral iron
boxes, filled with gold and 'silver oohs.
"Now,"„eays the 'farmer, a. I'm as rich as
yoursei'." -
Ay, MOD," said Ms Lordship, !quoit.can
that bo
" Because rve-scen H.-and you can do no
mair."
POWER OF ASSOCIATION.
Reader, have you ever been annoyed by:the
•." crying of 'children " in Church l':: , 'No'doubt
you have. They are geMiralli 'considered
nuisances in Buell a place; and that is evidence
strong enough from-which to draw an affirms -,
tivo inference.
.I,t would however appear from
the Ladies Repplatory far April, Abet the rule
is not universal: • •
A prother just returned from California
soya he was present in thq congregitlon•bt a
brother . Cieen; when a babelr. the:artes of its
Mothee,began tp cry. 14. : !Wag So, unusual la
California, attracted not , alittlo attendee, and
the 'mother'. rose to retire:: !,..mitet:) otqe."
mad-the preacher,', 4 ,tho'sound;ol7kioi; babe's
voice inferiatinite many tole con
gregation than my own. It is, perhaps, the
fitreotest musici".tharlY 'Man 'has "heard since
long time ego,..hetook , leare . el.hiti : Aistant
home.',;.no steot woe instantaneous and
powerful, and a large portion of the 'oengro•
gaticn melted:tatotears." ,
A.:friend Baia . , ho wo&oueet a piet et three
wagon loads 'of miners, returning from a three
'filoaths' . soloura cf4l(9ol4' . 7Mointeins.
When near 3neraihe tiAo ty; la passing:cheese,
Oey woman :00144.lift9t„n child. 'As
00'04 ;by ;elm pimelta
beauty, rote aid 'gave JhreiChee,rl(.:.
~--,Seriotollook.oOP*tioar:f4 o l °ll 4l ° #l la°-
moot.. , diaa,inulet ;ia On, or, two, genera.
lion.; It crow, would select a ',youth 'sitho is
Moll , mako hid nutAAti 40,0116
11116' ' .‘ l i iri s 7 * .a , dilok tragqn, or
.13 1 14 1 1 , tio'ao.# JP Op Wand,: andrnottlii4elionto
baby :aka is toodliag :china do `e
tho
parlor carpet . Daniel
a o r`o lo -for: l itt l *id out of it it** Irkth ,
aq indinig9t; And' 401 1 ) 0 4004 1 00 01 ° 4
IV'.
00000dhatiltid; Sugar ; t trough. • greatest'
orOl4t4Otofor:9°-06.ti.itil,440o°rA/°°l'ia; era
rfrilirtl , 110P4110,44 1 M'oSiO
• ' - ••`• • - '
111 1 6 krt ili P C 1 ) 4 1 ,,,, ti Or,.-001 t ko ti g il ib e u= iVo o
4 ", ~1 0 ,14 1, 4' 3 2' 4, ii : d !IRO .aa.ai04,401-0.-,,,
=I
LI