Village record. (Waynesboro', Pa.) 1863-1871, February 06, 1863, Image 1

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4.440
VOLVO, IVl4'
rig Aillets Gann
BY DOUGLAS A. LEVINE
Theta% it-spot - in dear to airy 'pats'-
~ ot'it breast.. • •
Whin* the lilotion e e sainted Hero, in his glorilisis
• ~ r ,at •
Its the lisping tones of Childhood, ifs fainAlitir name
is:heard, • r-
Anil,the.sterner voice of 'Manhood stews back the
hallowed word.
Round that Spot, a ,People's heartstrings, with. a
love undying, twine,
And a Worldiowe down in homage at Mount Ver
, shrine ! • '
It fireedoina 'sacred and shall The-
son's.,felon .htow •
Due to strike it froin the Union t Let the nation
' , thunder, !o!
There's a quit of quiet beauty in the vale of Ten-
•
nessee,
Where the sons of patriot sires bare the brow and
bend the knee.
la the Nation's honc of petit, when the storm, king
, .
rules 'the sky;
And the angry Waves of faction ehake their foamy
crest on high—
In that dread end gloomy hour, doubly hallowed is
.the We,.
Of the lion-hearted Hero, tolhe land hi 10411 to
save !
And obeli treason tear it from us ? Tho' the Na-
don's blood should flow,
Crimsoning river,-lake and ocean, let her People
. , ..
. •
answer, NO !
HI. 0
.; --------- N n the he, of bold Kentucky—of Kentucky, that
has stood
Rock-like, unshaken by the yr
sion's flood—
Wirbere the willow droops in
to Heaven uproars,
du s grave but newly watered
•lion's tears ! '
.oh.! gentle as the gushing loveahat flows in wont
- Ines breast,
Is the lave ,that warms the Nation's heart for Har
ry of the Week!
And -shall -the Nation yield his dust to any threat
anis% roe!
Let all her Patriot Bons arise and shout her an
swer, DIU !
nr.
Seel! gleaming in the Western sun—see ! Bashing
_ from the North,
A million 'braiding kayouete rise—a million swords
leap forth!
They're borne by yeomen sworn to crush • the , U
nion's hated lees,
The' warmed beneath the Southern sun, or cooled
by Northern snows!
Kentucky shall nut plead in vain—Virginia'shall be
free—
And
once again the starry deg shall wave o'er Ten
„ nessee ! • •
Back, Traitors! from the Hallowed Ground by
Patriots footstep pressed—
Within their well-loved Union, let the Heroes' ash
es rest!
ZEISSIC/MIZala.A.N7r.
A Cheerful Heart.
____Lonne_heard_n_young-lady-say-to-an—intli-,
tvidual, "Your countenance to me is like the
rising sun ; for it always gladdens me with
.a cheerful look." A merry or cheerful coun
tenance was always one of the things which
Jeremy Taylor said.his enemies and persecu
tom could not take away from him. There
re some persons who spend their' lives • in
this world as they would spend their lives if
hut up in a dungeon. Everything is made
Jlootay and forbidding—They go mourning
and complaining from day to day that they
ave so little, and are constantly anxious lest
*hat little they have will escape • out of their
hands. They ' look , alwayis upon the dark
ide, and cannever enjoy the goo,l. that, is
present for the evil that is to come. That,
is no re n. Religion maketh the heart
•heerfsil7Sud, when its large and benevolent
principals, are excercised, men will be happy
in spite of themselves. The industrious bee
, cow
,not complain that there are so' many
oisonous lowers and thorny branches in his
oad, but busses Qu, selecting the honey
where he can find - it, and passes quietly lfy
he places, where it is not. There us enough
this world to comislain about and'fiid fault
• if men have the disposition. Wooften:
ravel on a hard`and uneven road; but with,
cheerful spiiii may'walk therein with'
-omfort, and come to the , end of our journey
n peace.—Dettey.
- A ME,stouterac Tanc.—ln 'Hyde -Park,
here Stilt remains one of two trees planted
' , y Charles 11., from acorns taken from the
I: oscobel'oak in Somersetshire, in which his
other successfully sought refuge; and were
muted here to commemorate the client
'hey have both been dead some years, and
ne, much decayed, was removed in 1854;
be other, beinqullychithed with ivy, which
?Wes it the appearance of life, sill remains.
Daniel Webster penbed the following sett-,
ment:-7-"If we work upon - marble, it will
ertsh; if we ireticlipon'brass time will el
, ace ;if we rear temples they wik crumble
nto chistr; but if we. work upon our inanaor
. minds 7 K wea j u s t
them .with,
- the - just gni. °Mod and'
tne - u- 7 we'engnrteJon these tables =.'svme-
Ling which brighten "
Even in' old age the than of luaus dwells
a t4,F,a4.,,s'he,eanght in .bis. i puth.. front
°Wan a1ee,";.,*41,.•
oinpfti.thneadnttlife...
~\ .
gightja,La plant of, eipw growth:
oubtjustiiit4ll34#
r truth before shewita
Wiliii,icalgaz *in . this& you.
It e rt i afittaii,'lat — d.lVay,,y, thiskyoa
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=MMI
WANNESIIO
The folio ng is part of an 'oration deliv
ered recently in South Carolina, by Thorium!
Grimke. It is a heaugiul i eitract, and we
commend' it, to 'the attention of our . readers:
, i•Oar Cciantiy i '.. Dry; whole country !
Eton affecting are the den Which bind us ic3
thee t ; how venerable is day elaim ta our faith
ful service, team; purest - affletiotia I What
indeed is our eountry, Int' ainiryait, by .obli:
gations the' most sacred and Huhn** by as
sociations the , most delicate and comprehen
-1 sive . ; byprespeets . the meet -kanimating and.
delightful i ' lirour Awaited nread r - athst.
article then is of higher authority,' of deeper
interest, of more enduring value; than the
precept, which commands, us to reverence
and love our country? Are we bound to
father or mother by relations . which God
himself has ordained and enforced '! So are
we to our eon y. `.Are we bound to 'Our
parents by all th notions of-civil society,
coeval with its °rig' i 'pending in its pro
gress, and destined to ' dure while social
life shall last ? So are trirc to our country.—
We are bound. to our father and mother' by
all those natural affections, which makes
them the most venerable! of human beings,
and home, .the happiest spot upon e rth ?
So are we to our country. The parents,
whom nature has given as die, an are laid
in the earth, by the hands of the children;
but our father-land protects us n life and
hallows our graves. Our rent country
still survives her children. he is immor
tal. Shall we not, then, in ti e spirit of grat
itude, reverence and love,. engrove on our
hearts some maxim, not less beautiful in its
a, a ml. if we reuard our dnt • , than eminent
for its wisdom and truth, If we consu t on y
our interest Y And where shall• we find a
principle more venerable for its, antiquity,
more commanding in authority, than the in
scription on the table of stone: •"/lonor thy
father and thy mother that thy days may be
long in the land which the Lord thy God
giveth thee." Our country is indeed a fath
er, to be reverenced in the authority which
commands our obedience; and a mother to
be loved with all tke enthusiasm of gratitude
and affection. No Wee from ,heaven has
indeed proclaimed, amidst the thunders, and
lightnings, and clouds of another Sinia,
"honor thy country, that thy days may . be
long in the land which the Lord thy God
giveth thee." No milaoulons hand writing
has.pronounced against us the , sentence of
destruction for unfaithfulness to her com
mands, for hypocrisy in our affections. No
prophet or apostle has recorded with the pen
of inspired • truth and divine authority "thy
country is thy parent—by all that, is most
solemn and binding in duty, by all that is
most eloquent and holy in love." Rut the
voice of nature and the teFtimony of all e#
perience; the brightest and darkest pages of
history; the wisdom of philosophy, the en
ergy of eloquence, and the enthusiasm '
poetry, all, attest the truth, "thy country is
thy parent."
[From the Louisville Journal.
Refugee Georgians.
Nine gentlemen, all residents of Whitfield
-'coutrtyiorth-Georgiararrived-in—this—city
last evening, having fled from Rebel oppres
sion. They crossed the Tennessee river at
a point arta the mouth of the kliawassee,
and from thence crossed the mountains • into
Kentucky. They gave a fearful account of
the state of affairs in the South. The reign
of terror is complete, and they assure , us that
it is worth as much as a man's life to with
hold his sympathieti from the rebellion.. The
actual necessities of life are beyond thereach
of families in ordinary circumstances, as the
bill of current prices will indicate. These
gentlemen inform us that pork selling it;
Northern Georgia at 3 . 0 cents r lb. , salt at
$1.75 per lb., corn at $2 3 per bushel,
wheat at $6 per bushel, s tsar at 75 cents per
lb., shoes at $lO per pair, and boots at $75,
'eggs at $l. per doses,. chickens 'si each; and
other articles in proportion. The scarcity
of salt is so great that nurrpersons make
use of the dirt in their ke-houses which
has liedirsaturated with salt, extracting. the
saline ma from it, wherewith to cure
their mar' There is also great suffering in
the Rebel army, and the Augusta Chronicle
asserted'recently„that a body of two thousand
six hundred troops marched into• .RichmOnd
; without shoes. Commissions have been tip-,
pointed in sews - districts to take an account
of the amount of corn and other produce in
'the possession of the residents, who are not
permitted in any case to hold more than is
necessary ler
,their, subsistence until the next
crop shall' have matured,- and- id'a family '
should s bellaind ;tinctured with ,
to
the PederalGiivermliefit, alf`their -Means of
subsisteuce.is seized and confiscated. These
refugees, in their flight from :Rebel oppres
sion, travelled in the by-ways night and day,
som eepups payini-guitlos th#ty
dollarefor - teir - setirdes for t.
. ,
Coaz voa NauftaLdtA. IN /nut
A tablespoonful -of eirits of oturpeatitgb ,Piro
tablesPobnififf of'Camphtirlited Oikaid mar
ter of aLpint !of -rum: Shake the mixture
well, and . rnlr the part affected.; while using
this, lei the patient be kept ?term. This le
also:a - garbler ihniimaties; linabago;
SicOgigsnenar.-1 4 1m . teitspoonaral of
finely powdered ObareiiSl; drank in a half
tumbler Of. Often' gwo relief' o the
sick ;headache, when: (*used, nein moSt:Cares
is, by superabundance oencidlo
midi; • • !"tr- , •
Iteptiito4 . 4o!wol „ fioonrareoponelo
for, loptig otial7 with,4,,l!optiplio,
and as oppliWitiobret um, be.iie-r
ficsial to twain:ea woriblid with , the same.
disorder.:. • , • • •
Piide irittidnarr owc!op
*ever
• • toi:.:1 • ". • ••',:, ,
zre=regsgorta,ipors -,in t ;Jr , q 1 11,1.2.1.01014140.4:1. - MVO'
• 1 / 7 11r .0 'Pe: , :'
r.Thierfri.,/e., , ,- ~i'` -
Sit by the •windorf, AUG look ,over themay.
to your neighbor's excellent mansion which'
he has recently; built and paid for, and . sigh
-:—'o, that I was A rich wen 1
•', , • .
Get angry with your neighbor, and , think,
Jon have not a friend,in the 'erg; Shed s
tearer two and take a walk in, the, burial
grout* continually.. ; tet lug. . to. yournell-7- ,
•Wb,ou AIX I ttabetied here .F' / , .. . .
Sip, arsoniffir a Men ~‘,atid new , forget
your kindness, awl Avery hour in -the day
whi‘iiar tgqiiiiraellf -- :' ,l . wonder if ho will ev
ar.;pky,......,
Think everybody means • to cheat you.—
Closely craning every bill you take,, and
doubt its being genuine, until yan ,have :put
tho owner to a good deal Of trouble.- Believe
every einepeues•passed you but as &sixpence '
crossed, and express your doubts about get-
ting rid of it ilyea should venture La take
it.
Put eonfidenoe in nobody, and believe
every man ou trade with to be a rogue.
Never no own° to if you. can possibly
help), Never visit the sick or !Acted, and
never give a !lathing to the poor.
Bay as cheap as you oat,- and screw down
to the lowest min— Grind the faces and
hearts of the unfortunate.
Brood over your misfortnneei k your lack th
talent", end believo that at no distant day,
you.will Cowe to want. Let the workhouse'
be ever in your wipd, with all the horrors of
distress and poverty. - •
Follow these 'recipes - strictly and you will
be miserable to your hearts eoptent—rif we
may so speak—sick at heart land at variance
with all the world. Nothing will cheer or
encourage you—no lug row a &Lim o
sunshine or a ray o light into your heart.
\ Vise Medical . Student.
'You have read sufficientlyelong Charles,'
-aid au elderly physician of my acquaintance
his. student, (a youth who hal been study
ing medicine some two years,) to- commence
visiting the sick! I, will take you along
with me this iborning, and you will have an
opportunity of seeing as well as meading of
the many changet in diseasei, we have to
watch with an eye of much . scrutiny and
discrimination in order. to enable us wore
correctly to juffge the character' and treat
went of various eases than we could possibly
learn from reading all the books ever pub
lishad on the &clown. And sure enough,
off went preceptor , and pupil in the daily
round of professional visits. _
The first hnuse they entered, efils one
where a man was in a convalescent state,
was lounging upon a bed, whilst his nurse
was conefortiibiy seated in a rocking chair,
reading a novel for his amusement. The
doctor a proached the Led, and after feeling
the pulse of the psti3nt , turned to the nurse
and said : , e has been eating oysters !
My did you let him have them ?' •
The nurse declared most positively that
he had not, but being more ,closely interro
gated, said he.only ate two or three.
After leaving the house, the student ask
ed the doctor hew in the world he t oll
that it was oysters he had eaten ?
1712 I Ravi' the shells under the bed !'
was the reply.
The doctor being very busy the next day
sent the student alone to the patient, and
upon his return asked him how he was.
'He is much worse, ' said the young disci
ple: 'I think ho wil die. He has eaten a
horse l'
'A horse l' -vociferated the physician.
'Yes, sir; a horse!'
glow in the world did you find_ out that
he had eaten a horse lu
'Because, air,' said the knowing student
limn a Saddle and bridle under the bed 1'
WINTER Russ.u..—The present win
ter is terribly. Revere in Russia. A letter
from St. Petersburg says : "In the mercury
of man there has not been such a winter as
this at St. Petersburg—twenty degreei of
'cold; the river and the sea locked in,ide for
a loxg time past, and not a flake A' snow
Owing to the Algae, host, horses and pedes
trians cannot keep a footing upon either the
road or the pavements. The air is extremely
dry; we , breathe it with difficulty. Nervo
people are particularly affected by it; emir
dingly, no one stirs out
,except on basiness ;
and of carriages ;and prOutonaders there ' are
literally none, even at the Nevskia perspec
tive, between two and four in
.the afternoon,
where there is ordinarily a great crowd."
AN ICE PALACE.,--A ma A pifictent skating
lake is aboutto be opened.. at_MontreaL—
When lighted up and crowded with skaters
it will be one of, the, most beatitiful sight' in
the city. Edward anesel,',a Berlin architect.
who constructed many of the far-fanied, ice
palaces bf St. Pctersbarg,,proposes construc
ting au ice palace on the river opposite the
city. The 'beilditik' will be forty feet, high,
one hundred and, forty-four feet„leng,, and
filly-sia feet deep, and will be surrounded by
a colonnade and topped with a dome, all,
with the excepting of the windows and dims,
to be built of ice. '
LAZY 1303 F.-4 lasy boy,inakes a lazy rime,
just as save as a croolt.ed,,saiiiing: 'makes;
crooked tree. ' Who ever yet astir a boy gtoq
up in idlenessi that did DOG crake'a shiftless
.sragabond when becieke a matt nal* he
;had a fortune ,left iihe.rakeep. up aPPraTtn-
Ces .lthe great•mussoof. ttueves s . paupers
and'orimititils; have-come to- what- they are
by beinfihroughtiggie4ans#4,: .Thor who
constitute the ; hissiness. part of the:ce,neuir
ty,tbose, who nudiC„,our
meti.tvhare lauglitipsheikt.boylwd to, $0
LaUghteri'atep.ima bops alik 'the thitio.
4 bovAVetthi.irltiote, , Mother ,N.aiore,
tscpponsatimf•4loll6 irbiailatd
few; porlaps,,trojkl4o Wri ha?
d N4.9;0/414' '
N lENNSTVANIA.,-111.1M11.10111i1NO , PJ.
. • ~ •
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10:0fik nib it WIL L
, 10 lIBIT
Ivot stars•of high . t; -
Not to' idothinir'S May' itaht. ; ,' •
'N r and- , sea' '
` Liar bibistowen me, „ .
•
...Would l re,theelield los!,
14 9 11 t; 4 GOI Pi" , I• , •
Not,for beept rhi in) , feeS. • '
' Not id of Manlius 'troth,.
, ;Yorke ijeiltle•took or smile,
Nor the Mosotho! care' mat spoil,
• „Would.i , dire path werihip
,Worship 4ne One t
•
• We arei,bilt," Melia me nea.dl l 4,
• treadiffelife'i actietabs
• Liable to sin an shame; ' • •
All around Cis are- the same, • •
Let thy souls first homcge be
Paid to (dud; and 'not to
~7]3~a~A.T=OZITA.L.
50i10014 GOVERArntErrak.
, ~ $, • , —..--,. , ,
An Essay, read Wore the .Washington 'ilia
, 'trio Institute, Jan. 24th, 180.
The subject of school government, which
was asaifned the by the executive , committee,
is,one of great importance, and a fit theme
for discussion: itr.:a Teacher's Institute —1
While I. approie of the wisdom of.the com
mittee is the selection of the subject, I must '
say that they have not made a judicious • se- I
lection is the choice of a reporter. I would I
rather it had fallen into the hands of one
more experienced in teaahing than I. • Butl
Mace the subj has been assigned me, 1
will endeavor tiluit myself as well as time
and elm iimatmeieswill_p_ere_n_ceesK.
sity of obedience On the part of the pupil, is
a point on which all Teachers agree. "Or- .
der is Heaven's first - law," a it has beep
remarked by a writer of agility, that it is
scarcely more essential to the harmony of
Heaven, than to the happiness and success
of the school. It is the great key 'to. access.
A Teacher may be well qualified in all other
respects ;he may possess a thorough know
ledge of the various branches named 414 fie
law, yet if ho does not possess the allifity to
govern, all his efforts to teach will be fruit
less. Presuming that there is no diversity
of opinion in regard to the necessity of the
pupils obedience, I will briefly state how, in
my humble opinion, order can best be secur
ed. In the first place, the Teacher must be
able to govern himself,, for he who has no
control over himself, cannot command , the
respect of his school. The Teacher should
be a model character.;, he should •• never do
any thing in the presence of his school that
lie would not have• his pupils to imitate.—
Children are imitative beings, and -I think it
is of the utmost importance that the Teacher
should set them a.good example. If helvish
es them to go quietly about their studies, he ,
must show them the way: If the - Teacher
clones the door with a slam, the pupils will
be very likely to do so too. - lie should walk
quietly -over the floor, close the door without
a noise, and also refrain from looking out of
the windows when any thing is passing by.
By so doing he will set the pupils an exam
ple worthy of imitation. I would not have
you to think that this is all I deem necessa
ry to secure the harmony of the school; I
only mention this as au aftilary, and I think
it will prove a good help if properly carried
out. It is • true there aro pupils- in al
most every school, who will not respect the
exemplary character of the Teacher. ' Tnr
buleuce seems to please_them best; their stu
dies are a secondary matter; they appear to
delight only in annoying the, school. It is
this class of pupils that tries the patience ,of
'the Teacher. In the government of refriie 7
tory spirits, the beat advice that I can give,
is .fer. the Teacher to use the means that he
thinks will bring about the most happy re
sults. He is a •bad physician who does, not
prescribe according to the symptoms of the
disease, and he is equally unsuccessful as a
Ascher, who does not adopt that plan which
is most likely to meet the 'demands of the
me. The dispositions of ,the pupils should
be studied,- ;r e, • o attempts to control
unlike disp 'Bilious by the eamelianner, will
meet with .o.hetter success than the doctor
- s o ende , • ors to cure all manner of diseases
.y- .he us .of the awe remedy If the, pu
pil i ~, • .. en irascible temper, do not aggre
vale it; &hie conduct. does not ; meet the ap
probation of the-Teacher, let him be' kindly
admonished. dentle reproof will often do
more to reform a pupil than hard blows.—
As to the use of the rod in school, I presume
the majority of- Teachers present, deem it
indispensable. I have heard Teaehers talk
of governing their schools by„maro/ tuasion
alone; whether there are any present• 'whO
governaby this method, I know not, perhaps
we shall hear by and by. -I once visitad a
school that was governed (or rather misgov
erned,) by what: the Teacher termed moral"
suasion. , I felt curious -to know what kind
of order he , Could keep by this method. The
behavior of the 'pupils was such, that since
then; I have not entertained a very favorable
opiecin' alit, wimp solely . depended'an for
the, government' 'Of school. I
,would use'
the rod whorl other ineans.fail to preserve
order. It should be used judiciously. and
never, when . the Teacher is -in a - pasinon.-,
,Punialiment,:when initiated in a passion, is
'very apt. ici,,be iir ry severe than the offence
merits, and at the AOC time excite , feelings'
of revenge in the
..puitil. _ If„,the pupil ',is
guilty of an offence. endeavor to 'convince'
him of hie error,, get' lila to acknoiviedge
that, be has done wrong,iind Mit he,delierves
to be ; punished ; hailing
,slaceeedeit in "this, •
it is beet to,defer thepteis .6 tient for'' a tine.
If ohildteei skid their tune with; teis,: °. tek
,theun.frem theink, if they:-talic abd neglect
theieltit9dies eepthipts-thein ;' ittheYsiegleOt
•to study the lessoite t aiiiigned theta. diiiiiio,
'the
_evening,.kienfrrm in, er if they foil to.
prepare ar u, eading „ , ieeptheas Ottf the
4044
co
.011 it ientndi ' The WO plea fa keep
phildien out of iiiie -01:; . . Akio, kpeOlietir,Or
.iloyaf . , : -.., ' .. "S.
.
: , ifj m•r . a irew.dr•
.
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I = Z I I r - A 1 W M
NBRUA
1 rir timi 64;9 .- i 4tii;,iiiiiirali 6i4' . ;41;i:)4
'the piti&its in
,the wards pt ittifgelniiiiil flOi 7
otid i amiliadeiblita i itipeatioW NoldialL
.191dIvas Tertsiolc.wkeit;thatTihrogght ' lore ;
butis:now,dOing better. , ~•IIeJ in , Aarsorabbed
,
customer. ...I,tow that he is recovering; -hia .
49 urliuesi begins, to 7stoi iftiel r in, a marmot
that his comrades 'doubt Aiiiii l about putting
up Withi-.-at any' rate' froth, skashi, , •4•-• " ' '-'' I
,: Imtlie 1=34 , 004 'ivith,,lbtur , 18; a - Unioti.
soldier-z-aa, adopted eituten,fropi Alta load et :
l&ant. The other del the,'Uniou Gentian
said annnithing to siosih. '''Sedeiilt'iiiikhia=
' fed only in , reply '; ~f ,-• ''' ,; 1 ',- : 'l:i , '• :.
• "Glixteer-0-*,2„.',..r.,- ....,.., , ".J.::,, , -,,
"Do vat r.. , , .._:, ,1 . „,.,, , ; , , v ,.
' Beeesh repdateil*ia.reneitic., • . , 1
' ..The Gfeiman - Was )N l ;4 tiealt eiaitnera'ied.' .
"Ahl" said lie, "mine frbith% yiltoishuti)
kiikk ivannotgo to dat plaee.q . • •' f
•
"Why not ,fi ,•,. _, ~ ~ ~
"It ish all. ~ ttish,veky crowded a c ,rp.,—
Sigel' he fill it 'lip' . roil 'deed rebels., Even'
der dent inuf to'sliiip dirt 6' &dm. ('‘' „
- The liughieatati: in ~here `..from the ~ b oyst
who were lounging around: , isseesh „ha_ .
nothing more to sa4r. , • I
-11/2at, Et'sryCitur,s,L-m - illajdr Noah ifaid
a, hazel eye inspires•at first sight a platonic
sentiment, as securely youndeck.so , the .rock
of dibralter. A.' woman with . tt hazel
„eye
never elopes from . htirliiiibaiid; never chats
scandal never sadrificeinier husband's. ; com
fort to her awn,' neVer failtS too Aittle--41-,
ways 'is an , ititellectual; agreeable and lorelY l
creature. _• •• • •.• ..' • "
We never knew, sap_ kbrotker.oditor, of
but, one hazel eyed woman who Was uninter-,
-esting-or-una
looked; as we Yankee day, like Mei-IWe end
of nothing whaled down to a points
The gray is a sign of shrewdness and tal.
eat.' Great thinkers and <niptains have it.—
In women if itidietes a better beail than
heart. The hitt. is noble in its significance'
as well as its beauty. The blue is. amiable,
but may be feeble. ; The black—take care.
There's thunder and lightning there., ' •
A LONGAm..-aThe following story
is , told of Revs Walter Jackson, a Scotch
Presbyterian preacher of the last generatiowts.
The prayers of even godly men at that time
were very long and heavy, coniprehending
sometimes a system of divinity., Jackson
was notorious for length. 11,
a funeral: at 'llalltnyre: The
assembled in the 'barn. to- gat
manta, and. having,Par .taknal .J
returwthanks., Bettommenei
earnest with the fall 'of' Adam,
down from one greet Bible dot
er till patience was. ezhaustei
looks passed amon.-the ' mom .
one t ioy left the arn, and the funeral prole
cesSinn started for Newlands churchyard.—
When Walter came to a close, and opened
his ayes he found himself alone, and , on in
quiry discovered that the procession was .
fully asmile away. His conceited soul was
chafed.
PRODtraTiVi SUATEGY.—A feat or arms
is thus reported in the Paris Constitutional :
"A detachment of fourteen French marines
in Senegal,' under the command of a sergeant
named Burg, wb,o were entrenched in the
post of Kaolakh, kept in check for fourteen
hours, and finally repulsed, a body of five
thousand natives, under the orders of two
desperate chiefs, named Maba Macodou:-=
When thd enemy retired before such an he
roic resistance ' , there werelound lying round
the post the bodies of two hundred and fifty
men and ieventy, h,orses— , t
he - remainder - of
the army had fled in diSordei across the Sal
oum."
A child beginning to read hemlines de
lighted with newspapers, • because he reads
of names and things which are very familiar,
and will make progress hedoidiagly. A
newspaper in the family one year is 'worth
half a year's schooling to the children, and
every father must consider that substantial
information breounected with this advance
ment.
Which of the reptiles i 3 a mathematiOiatt
The adder. '
One positively bad woman spoils many
negatively bad ones.
It is better to have your face marked with
disease, than with affectation:
, A public drinkory should •be built ' with
the bar in front, a Jail the-centre, and
the gallows in the- rear.
A man looks mei like God, , yben he is
doing God-like actions..
It is a horrible, tsroplo for a deaeoa to
swearwhen he getiydrunk.
.
The young lady that huv i t
hs srd in
the house of -0,4 . ? gives evidente of
, •
as veil" aabad Manners. .
What 'P did .Wasihington'i apoteou
and Wellington' ocoupj in wir inetes t' l
Fonroand. - .
Reforinatioi s ie ' the grand at.
revolution.
The more' you, affect;' the r,,;
. yexe will
'probehly . .eff4L'i •- 1 • • • ;.•'. '• '''s
By pi ttljit its eye . ou4 leavek*totti
ing bat a dwit t NOse: » "
If a clock could 44:tit 'a: 'phi* . :iltat
would it say r Poll I
•
Wide - h . : twO (mt .
r ito4ftirthelate , ioimi).
41atirays*Azteibre , you loop.'
==l
Spare t o d •al i f t i lit t.,19 14.0 fr,
"` X
"I •
- A woman is reri,lik*itocAoePliNitiOnst.
lover a lung thnp—ituisss hapiwas - b . )
4 - l eintta.,o •t,s=+
The* is dOitlit qiidltitiprijetf iFiid
tuaittirtroubiespnmatiiiithl stilitts
k irs . ) B ben4babY• .;
"The Frit of the lAlidt l 442iia‘cialhlit lad
have to hug tailed - bdfarb eau put a eir.
, • 4 1 4 , 1
• ton' are l Ortei rtifueti,' * `tto' weigh "col'
their; 'Aietitne'likilii'Weieic haiiktrldieuijirk
•••
•
A lover thinks the mly, proper idefioitiou
of a right line is a straight line. sweet.
•
heart. - s'
.
An, 41 tor ,ottt . Xclorn zi pya,, ,theyr
brag of the size of their babies,,ltEkt
a most uncommon sure,crop..
'ti'debating holy
K ' iiis
oussed the - important
'a rooster's knowledge t•falejtibreaLis thelte. ,
suit of.pPservati947. o ..riiPAtiipg-,..,(: •• I,
Garibaldi q Las ~s.7,o.kifeep`
,Oyaicans,T,-In
eieditdd US iemay siesta, ho *Vas alive at file
Jasrdateq, thOl'ag.hi orodursa; itt familial-1i
"danger: . '
A-GooD TnAs7:-•--Wihntin--she ix the 'on4'
ly endurable arikocrat—elects without, Ird
ing,governs_wittecides_w4h
pat'sppeitt That toaster &aortas' a Ntifa.
•
"Papa, please bay me
,a' wluiti you,
go to Boston." 'Sister Minnie, standing bY
says. - "You ttre taolittle to have it tnitif."—•
"Am I too 4ittle to be cold ?" rejoins indig
nantly little Both.
• Some. stnpidn' ban tering a 'fat oomlianioit,
remarked thai; if all-flesh Was grass, he Must
be a load of hay. suspect I am,' said he,
'from-the way you asses nibble at
Why does Stuart's late incursion
Pennsylvania beat King Solomon 11odaii9e
Solomon, in all his g:ury, *ll4 -not
like one of thew.
A ‘Damonamen'New
fil
-York ribune tells a story of a stotteratitieV.
10,Zo ve l who, running away from -the bate ,
tle of rederic
tenant with a raven sword. Said the latter, .
'Stop, sir! back to your regiment you.
1. 1 sal co -ard, you are not wuunded.'P—
rFox.huaven's sake lot me pass,ymPlored the
fugitive, know I'm not wounded; bid. I'm'
fearfu ty Aomoralized'
A Deacon, not remarkahie for good eye
sight, otice , in 'giving out a psalm for the Con
gregation to. sing, -when to cania;ltip (the
lines-- •,
"The eastern sages shalt comoia, ,[ t-,,
With messages of , .•
put the audience iii a oar of r, .by
calling out in a lotii,l,roice--
Somebody has written' a book on„"The
art of making people happy wit6utinbiter."
, Most editors of country. newspapers , areilin ",
exdellent condition, to be experstueuteskrupt:
OD. •
Thufollowing is said to - have ocettrttld' in
oneof the - Collegesitillie Wricir,7ildWitt
ea=
- • •c+
lst Stndent-'flood` "mor nin g ; fither `A
braham.' ' , - , ' ft: • ••• -., .'
Farmer—`l, am not father Abraham:'' ' 2d Student-- , No; it's father IsaP
- Farmer-LL'Noiln I father Isaac.
8d Student=-Well; ',then, you . •
Jacob.' ,
Farmer-;.'Wo, nor fattier Jacob; either.'
Ist Student-,:'Welt, ivhvh melon ; then r
: Farmer—`[.am-, Smil,, , Ow I son,,of ilKishi.
idiom his father sent:to tittat.the,asaca,•:anti.:
li t
1 have f and three or tlieq.'. - -
AN DuSamo. P ,B, AN enirkii... 1 Jostler ,
built m an- office in. the foriunf ; ik
ii li l eps,9l,,,
six square. The novelty . of ~the, structure.
uttracted , sthetteition - et &limes liiihniciii
who. were Fitasiug,liyvtliey made A full atop
and viewed the building very critically ,
thelawyer, somewhat disgusted at their
curiosity,. lifted, up, the ..wfaclow, put,hic head
out and addressed them :. , ,
i'What'do'you stand tfierefor like Irina.'
of bloCkheads, gazititat'my .offioi-416 You' '
LAOS for avethurahr•i •' - ;., , ,.17, : •
"Pais," ansineFed one of ..them,;, tf :
thinkhe till I.Bov-the dial poke his head
out of the rtindy.' i , '"' •
.REBIIpI i TO PC/PA.-9aq , day, as - ,Popor
'was engaged i :in traus t lso : ipg. the Illiad, he
cause to Pitassge.;:whieb rici r ther be Or
'his assistant - coidd inthiptet. A straugsrila
humble garb, who. stood by, very modestl
suggested that, ; as he had some little
quahstance w44..fitek, perhaps he could as
lust them. " •
"Ttir-it , - , -tiir ,
ill' ) said Pope the air
,of boy who is enconragingoinionkey . .to eat
iinl peppe r.
"There is an error halite print," said -the
humble strung r, ,loolting at the,text. "Read
as if there Wereao interrogation point at the
endllitthis 11(1; find you wilt have the mem.
ing at ouce."4': r, , , • - . _
Pope's assistant acted upon this hint, snit
rendered the,,p.lis4m: without difficulty.-- ,
Pipe was chagrined;
,he conic! never endure
lo be stirpaMl4' in anything:. Turning to. '
the atrangekbt ki said in . a stockade - tone—
' "Will i yea! please tell zee whet 4ui interns
gatio*r, ..,;-.,17r, , f - , , \c:i ~ 11. .; ;:r .:-.,. :,, ,1 - n-vgfp
t a
~., ,*;7-laidf ttki4l ll 4 l mwooling,f,
klis "
Fed poet, "it as a. cagoltad, • ..
' • le than"' that asks _l: i '"'. '''
Thd einem stago., Shalt coma' irr "''
With sausages IA ud grease." , ; •
„t, ,;
,; •
:~.
cif