133 r j3l.etir. VOLUME XVIII - 71m - c:mwx - cy Z2 *-••• • ; • • . • • ON GUARD. It is the eventide of life: Death's turbid waves before me roll; And in this narrow pass of life I stand to guard my deathless soul. Through storm and calm, through dolt: and light, Weary, but resoluta, It cling • To my good sword, my breastplate bight, The armor of my heavenly king. On guard, on guard !• the trumpet voice Ring in my ear with watchful eye I gaze, and feel my heartnjoice: My deadliest foes are dr.wing nigh. Ye pass not Item, hate, enly, pride, With all the embattled hosts of hell: My Captain standetb at my side; I fear you not; 1 know you well. Fast conies the night; my Watch is done This hour I've longed for many years• 1 shall r,ot see another sun; Ended is sorrow, toil and tears. Death's waves are fising; sweet release! Nearer 1 vie4v the heavenly shore; I lay my armor don n, and cease To' be 'on gnarl" for evermore. THE SLANDERER. '•I hate the slanderer I I hate him for his poisonous breath, More deadly than the dews of deathi. I hate him for his hooded lies, His peace . -destroying calumnies; llis words I bate —so arch, so sly, tip void of generosity, So deep, so empty, yet so full Of what will social joy annul.: His heart is gall, his tongue is fire, his soul too base for manly ire, His steel too keen for noble use, His sword and buckler are abuse; 1 hate the sladtierer 1" I'OI~g~C~'Y,Y_a~.IIT3~. DAVID IVIATSON BY JOHN-0. WHITTIER Who of my young friends have read the sorrowful story of "Enoch Areen," so sweet ly told by the great English poet? It is the story of a man who went to sea, leaving be hind a sweet young wife and Hale daughter. lie was cast away on a desert island, where he remained several years, when he was dis covered and taken oft' by a passing vessel.— Corning back to his native town, he found his wife mauled to an old playmate—a good man rich and honored, with whom she was living happily. The poor man, unwilling to cause er pain ancrn: etc-1r to make himself known to her, and lived and died alone The poem has reminded me of a very similar story of my own New England neighborhood, which I have often heard, and which I will try to tell, not in• pactiy, like Alfred Tennyson's but in my own poor prose. I can assure my readers that in its main par ticulars it is a true tale. One bright summer morning, more than three-score years ago, David Matson, with his young wife and his two healthy, hare- , footed boys stood on the bank of the river near their dWelling. They .were awaiting there for Pelatiah Curtis to come round the Point with his whery, and take the husband and lather to•the port, a few wiles below.— The Lively Turtle was about to sail on a voy age in Spain, and David-was to go iii her as mate. They stood there in the lovely morn ing sunshine, talking cheerfully; but, had you been near enough you could have seen tears in Anna Matson'S blue eyes, for she loved her husband, and knew there Was al ways danger on the sea. And David's bluff, cheery voice trembled a little now and then, fur the honest sailor loved his snug home on the Merrimack, with the dear wife and her pretty boys. But presently the wherry came alongside, and David was just stopping into it, when he turned back to kiss hia wife and -children -- once more. cIo with you, ruurt,'? saki P , ., , latish Curtis. "There's no time for kissing, and such fool eries when the tide serves. And so they parted. Anna and the boys went back to their home. and David to the port, whence he sailed off in the.l.iively Tur tle. And months passed, autumn followed the summer, and winter the autumn, and then s.rin7 came and anon it was summer on the river -side, and ho did not wine back. And another year passed, and then the old and fish - amen shook their heads sol emnly, and said the Lively Turtle was a lose ship, and would never come back to port. And Poor Anna had her bombazine gown dyed black, and her straw bonnet- trimmed iu morning ribbons, and thenceforth she was known only as the,Widow.Matson. And how .was it. all this time with David 'himself? Now you must know that the Mohamme dan people of Algiers and Tripoli ) and Ma .gudore and Sallee on the Barbary coast, had for a long time been in the habit of fitting . out galleys and armed boats to seize upon merchant vessels of Christian nations, and snake slaves of their crews and, passengers, rii. just as . men calling themselves Christians in America were sending vessels to Africa to; ,c etch-black-slaves-for-the i r-plantatious7-t Liiely Turtle fell into the hands of ono •of these roving sea-robbers, and the crew were taken to Algiers, and sold in the market place s, Poor David Matson among the rest. . • Wheti a boy he had learned the trade of ship carTonter with his father on the Mer rimack, and now he. was set to woik in the dock-yards. His master who was natural ly a kind man, did not overwork hiw. He had daily his three loaves of bread, and whin his clothing was worn out its place was sup plied by the coarse cloth of wool and cam el's hair woven by the Berber women.—. Three hours before sunset he was released from work, and Friday, which was the Mo hammadan Sabbath, was a day of entire rest. Once a year, at the season called Ramadan, be was left at leisure for a whole Week.. So time went on—days, weeks, months and years. 'His dark hair became gray. He still dreamed of his old home on the Merri mack, and of his good Anna and the boys. He Wondered - if they yet lived, what they thought of him, and what they were doing. The hope of ever seeing . them again gr ew fainter and fainter, and at last nearly died out; and he resigned himself to' his fate 'as I a slave for life. But one day a handsome,• raiddie , aged gentleman in the dress of one of his own countrymen, attended by a great officer of th - e — Dey - entered - the- shipyard,- and called up before him are Ainerican captives. The stranger was none other than Joel , Barlow, Commissioner. of the Edited States to pro cure the liberation of slaves belonging to that Government. He took the men by the hand as they came up, and told them they were free. , As . you might expect, the poor fellows .were very grateful ; some laughed, some wept for joy, some shouted and sung, ad threw up their caps, while others with David Matson among them, knelt down on the chips, and thanked God for the great de liverance. - _ "This is a very affecting scene," said the Commissioner, wiping his eyes. "I must keep the impression of it for my 'Columbi an ;' " and, drawing out his tablet, be firc(: - ceeded to write'on the spot an apostrophe to Freedom, which.afterwards found a place in his ()Teat epic. David Matson had thecla little money dam- - ringhis captivity, by odd jobs and work on holidays. Ire got a passage to Malaga, where be bought a nice shawl for• his wife and a watch for each of his boys. . He then went to the quay, where an American ship wits lying just ready to sail for Boston. Almost the, first man be saw on board was Pelatiah Curtis, who had rowed him dowa to the port seven years before. He found that his old neighbor (lid not know him, so chang-. ed was he with his long beard and Moorish dress, whereupon without telling his name, he began to put questions about his old home, and finally asked him if lie knew a Mrs. Mat son, "I rather think I do," said Pelatiah;" "she's my wife." "Your• wife !" cried the other. "She is mine before God and Man. I am. David Mat= son, and she is the mother of my children." "And mine, too 1" said Pelatiah. "I left her with a baby in her arms. If you are Da vid Matson, your right to her is outlawed ; at any rate she is mine, and lam not the . "God is great !" said poor David Matson unconsciously repeating -the familiar words of Moslem' submission. "Ilis will be done, I loved her, but I shall never see her again. Give these, with my blessings, to the good woman and the boys," and he handed over, with a,sigh, the little bundle containing the gifts for his wife and children. Re shook hands with his rival. "Pelati all,' he said, back as he left the ship s be kind to Anntiand my boys." "Ay, ay, sir :" responded the sailor, in a careless tone. lle watched the poor man passing slowly up the narrow street until out of sight. "It's a hard case for old Dav?d," he said, helping himself to a fresh end of tobacco; "but Prn glad I've seen the last of him." When Pelatiall Curtis reached home, he told Anna the story of her husband, and laid his gifts in her lap. She did not shriek nor faint, for she was it healthy woman, with strong nerves ; but she stole away and wept 'bitterly, She lived many years after, but could never be persuaded to wear the pret ty shawl which the husband ofitei . ' had, sent as his farewell gilt. There is, how ever, a tradition, that in accordance with her dying wish it was wrapped about her in , the coffin acrd buried with her. The little old bull's eye watch, which is still in the possession of one of her grand children•, is now all thTit remains to - tell — of David Matson—the lost man.— Our Young Folks. TUE HEROIC SWITOSI TENDER.-.—The fol lowing incident is related in a European pa per as having lately occurred in Prussia. A switch tender had just taken his place to change the track, in order to turn a train :7 so as to irevent a collis- ion with another train from an opposite di rection. At this critical moment, on turn ing his head, he discovered his little boy paying on the track of the advancing en gine. He might spring to his rescue and re move him safely, but then ho would have no dine -to turn- the switch, and hundreds of lives might be lost by his neglect. In an in stant his resolution was taken. "Lie down!" he shouted to his boy, and the child happily, acustomed to obedience, promptly threw him ' self on the ground, and the whole train thundered over him, the •pasbengers little dreaming how mucp there s afety had cost ;- that father. The trembling man rushed ward., fearinglo fin& only a mangled corpse, but no words can express his joy at seeing 1 1 his Child alive and Unharmed, Tho next , il, day, the king having Beard of the eircutu stance, bent for the ma and presented him ' t o els of Honor forltis heroism.. A thoughtless word way excite a world of thought, AL Fia,mll.3r IVemcres3Peiraetb a Wavttral:ll3. 3F , o 9q.itlA;:r9ai 1 Wte1i.42.621. WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH - 31, 1865. SPICY INTERVIEW QEN. SHERMAN AND' THE BRITISH CIONERH. AT BArANNA /I A correspondent of the New York Herald says: The extraordinary success with which Geri Sherman has onnducted his campaign during the last nine 'months has secured for him the affections of the American people beyond that of any otller military officer. He has become as popular as a military officer as Vice Admiral Farragut has as a naval com mander. Anything relating to him is there fore interesting. It is through an officer in his command, recently arrivedj have ob tained the circumstances of an amusing scene said to have taken place betwee,n- Gen, Sher man and the British Consul at Savannah, which to say the least, is characteriitie of that officer, as well as the elf-sufficient style of her Majesty's officials in the South. • On the arrival of General Sherman at Sa vannah lie saw a large number of British flags displayed from buildings, and had a cu riosity to know bow many British Consuls were there. He sou ascertained that these fag were on buildings where cotton was sto red away, and at once ordered it to be seiz ed. Soon after that, while the General was busily engaged aThis headquarters, a pom pous gentlenian walked in, apparently in great haste; and inquired if he was General Sherman. Having received an affirmative reply, the pompous gentleman remarked, "that when he left his residence States troops were engaged in removing, his cotton from it; when it was protected by the Brit ish flag." "Stop,. sir," said General Sherman, "pot your cotton, sir, but my cotton;. any cotton in the name of the United States Govern ment, sir. I have noticed," continued the General; "a great many British , flags here, all protecting cotton; I have seized it all in the name of my , Government." "But sit," said the Consul, indignantly, "there is scarcely any cotton in Savannah that does not belong to me." "There is not a pound of cotton here, sir, that does not belong to me, for the United States, responded Sherman. "Well, sir," said the Consul, swelling him self up with the. dignity of his office, and reddening iu his face, "my Government shall hear of this. I shall report your,conduct to my Government, sir." "Ah.! pray, who are you,. sir?" said the general. "Consul to her British Majesty; sir." "Oh, indeed!" responded the General, "I hope you will report rue to your Government. You will please say to your Government, for me, that I have been fighting the English Government all the way from the Ohio river to Vicksburg, and thence to this peint At every step I have encountered British arms,, British munitions of war, and British goods of every description at every step, sir. 1 have met them, sir, in all shapes). and now, sir, I find you claiming all the cotton, sir.— I intend to call upon my Government to or der mo to Nassau at once." '.llThat do you propose to do there ?" ask ed the Consul,. somewhat taken aback." "I would," replied the General, "take with me a Juan ty o an 'row that cursed sand bill into the sea, sir. You may tell your Government that, sir. I would shovel it into the sea, sir; and then I would pay for it, sir, if necessary. , Good day, sir," It is needless to add that Gen. Sherman was not again troubled with the ofraciouS rep. reseutative of her Majesty's Government. "Little Darn Brook." A clergyman, Fee ng a little boy playing in a small stream by the roadside, inquired for his father. "Ile's over to the little dam'brook," ex claimed the lad. "What I" said the reverend gentleman; shocked at the boy's ,profanity. "Can't you speak without swearing ?" "Well, he 2.4 over to the little dam brook, anyhow," persisted the boy, as he went spat tering through the water and mud after a butterfly. "Ile's been over to the little dam brook all.day, and it you don't believe it, you pan go up to that house and . ask moth er."- . The dlergytnan sought an interview with the mother immediately, apd complained of the profanity of her child. After telling her, however, what the lad had said, she laugh inzly informed him the "little dani brook," was 'a title by which the strewn was called to distinguish it from a "big dam brook," sit uated a few miles further to. the eastward. lle now felt that be had wronged the boy, and therefore owed him an apology. Hur rying back to the spot, be esclahned: "Boy, I wronged you in aocusitr , you of swearing; but you should have told that "little (Im-brook" was only the name of a stream, and 'I then would not have scolded you." Veil, 'ta-itilt--no-matter r --.. It 1111' youngster, as he held aloft a struggling frog that he had speared with his mother's clothes stick. "There's a big dam one big dam brook, and a little dam on little dant brook, and we would have had a little dam en this brook, only I'spcet it's too small; it ain't ?cora a dam." TIIE MAUCU Or EVENTS.—Time is pretty certain to bring its compensations at last.— A gentleman recently from the valley of the Mississippi, says.that at St..Lou,is, in formerly occupied as a slave pen. ]b saw large numbers of rebel prisoners over whom. colored soldiers were standingpard. They went to war to rivet eloSer the chains of the mans to-day the black man is.naaster of the position. Says a eorrespondent:—.7l,'Llanip bell's slave pen,is now a rebel prison. "Get in Qui . yerse , stu. aco OTC woman, 1)8 al e saw the rebel, pxisoners filling, into the old pen. Use to put us dar. 130, d:ir yerself now. lie Lord's cumin sure, , SMITH CAROiIII. Behold her now, with restless flashing eyes, Crouching, a thing forlorn, beside the way ! Behold her ruined alters heaped today With ashes of her costly sacrifice ! How changed the once proud State That lod the 'strife, And flung the war-cry first throughout the land ! See helpless now the garicidal hand Which aimed the first blow at tilenliTon's life ! The grass is growing in the city's street, Where stand the shattered spires. the broken walls; And through the solemn noonday silence falls The sentry's footstep as he treads his beat. Behold once more the old flag proudly. wavo Above the ruined fortress by the sea! No longer shall that glorious banner be The ensign of a land *here doiells the slave. Hark ! on the air what l stvelling anthems iise-- A ransomed people, by the sword, set free, Ate chanting now a song of liberty; Hear how their voices echo to the skies ! 0 righte - o - torretribution, great and just ! Behold the palm-tree fallen to the eirth, "Where Freedom,.rising from a second birth, No more shall trail her garments in the duet! Steve Conant's Courtship. I once called on my friend Steve Conant and while there the conversation turned on courtship and at my request the old gentle man told me an incident in Ms own hive of 2 fairs whiCh I give in his own words: " "Wall, seeing it's you, I don't mind tell ing about a scrape that happened to me when I was courting Nancy here. That is some• thing I never tell any body. But you shall hear it. '°No, don't Steve," broke in the old wo man, ".1 should think you would - be lishamed of yourself, telling love scrapes to everybo dy.' ,• "If you can't bear to hear it' you• may go out doors—BO here goes. "When 1 was nigh about twenty-one I came here all alone and built me a cabin. I hadn't neber nearer than five miles so ye see I didn't quarrel much but as it grew to be winter 1 got kinder lonesome and began to• think that I ought to have a woman to keep me company, so one morning 1 started down to Leeway to take a look at the girls to see if 1 could find one to suit we. When I got down the settlement I asked a young • chap if he knew of a girl that wanted to get mar ried and he told me he guessed that Nancy Knox did, and if I wanted a wife I had bet ter try and hitch 8n with her and he said if it was agreeable he would go to Deacon Knox's and make me acquainted with Nan cy, and he was good as his word and twasn't an hour before Nancy and I was on the best of tenni. Mere night • l hired out with the Deacon for ten dollors a months half of the pay to be taken in produce and the rest in clear cash and I was to work all winter. "Wall for about two months I felt as'a mouse I Nancy every-Sun day night and I was determined before an other week to pop the question and I hadn't a bit of doubt but what Nancy would be o verjoyed at becoming my bosom companion. Wall about this time there come a fellow from one of the lower towns to keep school and he hadn't, been there more than a week afore I found he had a natural hankering af ter Nancy; and worst of all the old Deacon who seemed pleased at the thoughts of me courting his gal begun to kinder cool off as if he would like the schoolmaster better for a son a son-in-law, and it made me feel kin der doWn in tip, I can tell you. "Wall on one Sundady night Bill Smith for that was the pesky critter's name came in just at dusk rind when the clock struck nine he didn't seem to go. Old Mrs Knox end the young uns all went to bed and there were none left but the old Deacon, Bill Nan cy and I. and I kept specting evry minute that he would show Bill to. bed, but ho did no such a thing, but just as the clock struck ten he ris up and says he: "Steve, let's go to bed for we must be up bright and airly to have them are logs to the river." "Wasn't that a hint 'eh, I looked at Nan cy but she turned away her head and at this I up the ladder to bad. • I was boiling over mad with all creation— Bill Nancy and the old .Deacon in particular. rotinto bed and kivered myself up but I felt so and I couldn't go to sleep. Like as not the sehoohnaster was hugging and kiss ing Nancy down in the kitchen, and I couldn't shut my eyes for the life of me.— Wall-, all at once it oceured to me that there wore some big cracks in the' floor over the kitchen and I could watch and sea all that was going on below so out of bed I got and crawled along on'all fours and finding a big crac oo -e own . roag r. .1 triA - ) an ey were sitting about two feet apart, though every now and then Bill would hitch his chair little nearer to hor. How I could have choked that Nan, I watched them for a bout a quarter of an hour and by that time I was near about froze as it was an awful cold night and I hadn't a rag on except my two shirts: By and by Bill hitched his chair a little closer and L could see that he had made up his mind and was just going to kiss her. . How it tiled I But I. was bound-to see it through sd•l moved a little nearer to:l'ga - a better view and at, that moment the plank tipped 'up, und-down I went kerehunk ,and land inkbotween Bill and Nancy. Bill thei4l)& for once that old Nick had / co:no arid.st*ak-' ed it out of doors; and as for Nancy she gave, ine:look-end-thea covered-up-her lhce -with her apron. • ' . siartetl.our of • - flio 'kitchen as quick as you c ?..3 . A:kw( awl as I was going- up the ladder I heard old Mrs. Knox hollow: "Nancy scoot the eat down or she'll break every dish on tho• dresser. i The next morning, when she went out to I milk I, popped the question to Nancy and she said she would.. have me.for she diJn't care a cent for Bill Smith and we have• been married forty years cub next June." ._.~,~-- •Idle ,Treasue: Au old. nobleman who lived alone in his lordly residence, with but . few domestics to wait upon. him, died at last, and the house passed into• other hands. When its contents were examined, drawers and presses full of linen were found, all mouldering to:dust;. hun dreds of valuable garment§ felled the Ward robes, all alike mouldering and moth-eaten. Hero and there, in the dusky recesses, little bags of silver and gold were found, evident ly hidden there, and _then forgotten. The hoard of coin was also discovered where it had long lain untouched, doing good to no person in the World., How much good these idle garments might have done among the poor and suffering!— How much better they should wear out in clothing the needy, than moulder out in use lessness. So, too, of the idle treasure which might have brought in large revenus of spir itual good, if only judiciously expended.— Of such possession it might well be written, "Your silver and your goldorre cankerect, and the rust thereof shall be a swift witness a gainst you." No one has a moral right to thus suffer any of God's gifts to be wasted Fri idleness. God will bring all such stew ards intojudgement in that day when. he shall say, "Thou shall be no , longer my stew nrd," "Do all the good you can, with all the means you have," is tire only limit of. our obligation. A little experimenting will show us how much we can do,. and we shall doubt less be surprised to find how much it exceeds what you had supposed. No one has a right to lay aside garments to be moth-eaten, when so many suffering ones are around us every day, whom we could relieve. "It is not what we get, but what we give that makes us rich." You would think a man much richer who had his money in a safe and richly paying in vestment, than he who had it buried s the earth. So he that invests his money in the Bank-uf Heaven will have a good possession to enter into when he is called away from this earth, from which le cannJt take the smallest portion. o!if we would be rich indeed, let ns lay up for ourselves treasures in heaven, by good works and alms-deeds, which neither moth nor rust cab destroy. Presb y t ericzn. Living in Hearts It is better to live in hearts than houses. A change of circumstances, or a disobliging landlord, may turn one out of a house to Which he has formed many attachments.--L Removing from place to place is with many au unavoidable incident of life. But one eannot be expelled from a true and loving heart, save by his own fault, nor yet always by that, for affections clings tenaciously to its object in spite of ill-desert; but go where he will his home remains in hearts which have learned to love him; the roots of affec ion_are_uot_torn_out_and_destroyed—b_. removals, but they remain fixed . deep :in the heart, clinging still to the image, the object which they are more eager again to clasp. When one revisits the home of his childhood, or.the place of his happy abode, in his life's spring -time, pleasast as it is to sttrycy each familiar spot, the house, the gar den, the trees planted by himself, or by kind red now sleeping in the dust, there is in the warm grasp of the hand, in the melting of the eye, in the kind salutation, in the tender solicitude for the comfort and pleagure of his visit, a delight that no mere local object nature or art, no beautiful cottage, or shady rill, or quiet grove can bestow. To be re membered, to be loved, to live in hearts, that is one's solace amid earthly changes—this is a joy above all the pleasures of scene and plebe. We love this apirithal home feeling, the union of hearts which death cannot de stroy; for it augers, if there be heart purity as. well as heart affection, an unchanging and imperishable abode in hearts now dear. MAKING Flirt or His NosE.—Col. Crock ett, late- Copperhead 'candidate for Congress in the First (California) District, has an im mense nasal appendage, and the Mariposa Gazette thus makes fun of it: "We are told that at the District Court at Snelling this week, a lawyer from Ba 6 Fran else.° was present, whose nasal ormu_is_ the most prominent of his features. r lt is huge and 'terrible to behold.' Matt,Strong, who has a keen eye to fun, was seen following the lawyer around, keeping constantly near him: On being asked his object, Ile said, pointing to the lawyer's nose. I just want to sea him blow that thing onee—and I'll be satis fied ! KISSING EXTRAOILDINARIe.—A bounty oral McClellan. Getting on in his eloquence, • • • putty Pfwaped from Gollop's Is- he s 'road himself, and said: "1 would that land, Boston harbor, after having, unaecoun- on the St ay o uex ovem a a ht— . tably unfastened his irons It was subse- haVe the wings of a bird, and I would fly to quakily discovered that a lady who had been every city and every village, to every town permitted to come and see him,- had a key in and every hamlet, to every mansion and oc her mouth fitting the lock of his fetters.— cry hut, and proclaim to every man, woman, Ou parting she kissed him, and during the and child George B. M'Clellan is Ppsident Operation transferred the key to his mouth, of, these United States!" At this point ti thus laciliating his escape. The girl and the youngster in the crowd sang out:.. "Dry'up, man who made the iey were arrested. you tool! You'd be shot for & goose • before. you flew a mile I" FIRST OIL DIS6OVIRY,—.It is related or Jonah when he took up his qua#ters in tho whate's belly, he wrote to his fiaser to conic, down immediately, as he had 411tbovered. splendid opening for the old gentleman as, follows: • "Father, 4on't come. I'm badly, sucked. in. Maury of oil, , ,but no marker!' .. This is the first of Ash al amount: tluit.pro ' &Is..histOrians give us of the oil-business., • Al .man's money seldoin. grows half as fast as his love for it. , , 92.00 ileri'M'esix• A Clever . Cam; of Out Out. • It is many years since I fell in hive with J.Mut Jerusha klkeggs, the handsomest coun try girl by far that over went on legs. By meadow, creek, and wood, and-dell, so often •we did walk,. and the moonlight smiled on her welting lips, and. the night winds learned our talk. Jane Jerusha was ,all to me,, for my. heart was- young and true, and I loved with a double and twisted loVe i and a love thitt was honest, too I roamed all over the neighbor's farms, and I robbed the wildwood bOW43lll,•and tore my trousers and scratched my hands, in search of choieeat flowers,. In . my joyous love I brought all these to my Jerasha Jane ; but I wouldn't be so foolish , now, if'l were• a boy again. A city chap then came along, alb dressed up in store clothes, with a spiny, hat and shiny vest, and, a moustache under his nose, lie talked to her of singing schools (for her father owned a farm)—and she' left me, the country love, and took the new chap's arm. And all that night I never slept, nor could I eat next day, for I loved that girl with a fervent love that naught could drive away. Istrove, to win her back to me, but it was all in vain; the city chap with the hairy lip, married Jeru sha Jane. And my poor heart was sick and - sore until the th - ought — struek - me; that-just— as good fish remained as ever was caught in the sea. So I went to the Methodist Church one 'night, and saw a dark brown curl peep ing from ander a gypsy hat, and I married that very girl. • And many years have passed and gone, and I thisk_my_loss tny_gain; and__ I often bless that ,hairy chap that stole Jo. rustle Jane. A Dream of Oil The history of the location of the famous Comatte Oil Well is a bit of romance, and borders closely on the marvelous. The pros. eat energetic manager of the well Mr. Geo. M.. Kepler, prior to his visit to the oil terri tory, had a remarkable dream, which I will' relate here ion rts , l had it from his own lips. Ile thought he was prospecting for oil, when, at the close of a weary day's walking over the hills which bound the valley of Oil Greek, he espied, at a short distance before him a stalwart Indian seated on the ground with his back against a rock, pumping vig orously at a rude pump, from. which Mr. Kepler beheld a steady.stream of oil pouring. Almost at the same instant the red man per ceived Kepler, glancing over his, shoulder, and through a crevice in the•rock. Drawing_ an arrow from his quiver, he was preparing to draw his bow upon the intruder, wheri the latter was relieved from his dilemma in a manner as unbolted for as it was novel. A fair damsel, an esteemed acquaintance of . the dreamer, who had earned. the reputation of a coquette, approached hi,m, suddenly an d stealthily, with a warning gesture, bearing in her hands the dreamer's highly prized ri fle. In a moment the gun was leveled and discharged at the Indian. With the dis charge the dreamerpeered over the rock and beheld, as he expresses, "nothing but oil— oil !" Upon his arrival at the 'farm subse quently ho jestingly related his dream to his cousin, Mr. A. C. Kepler, who in. the same sportive mood requested him to mark the . Fire-d-rill-wth;-started r atittat_theudepthl of five hundred and nineteen feet, struck the largest well now flawing on Oil Crock. Not withstanding the difficulty of obtaining tanks to reeeiVe the vast amount of oil which has flowed from this wonder among large wells; not a single barrel of the oil has been lost. A Solemn Scene One day last week, says the Eastern State (Mass.) Journal, the School Street Church was the scene of a sad funeral, that .of Jos. S. Defrees and wife of Ballardsville. who were found dead in their bed, in chat town, two or three mornings since, in each other's arms. They had been suffocated by coal gas, having had a coal fire in the stove the pre vious evening, and the damper being discov ered shut squarely off after the room door was forced. They were married seemly a year since. The deceased lay in the posi-. Lion in which they were . found, .nearly on their backs, his arm extending under her neck, and his hand under her shoulder, their• faces slightly inclining 'towards each other.. Her cheeks wore a slight tinge, almost like life, for she was naturally of good color, and their.dark hair seemed to rest but in sleep on the silken pillow. It was a picture of conjugal affection, saddeaed by the presence of death. The lady was clad in green silk, and her husband in a dark dress suit. The silver plate bore an inscription . showing Wel Mr. Defrees was aged 27 years and 3 months, and his wife, Mrs. Augusta Defrees, 2U years and 3 months. Over in Jersey, during the last Presiden,. tial canvass, a young lawyer, noted for the length of his neck, his tongue and his bill was on the stump blowing his horn tor Gen- ' A. man' of the- world. may have enough of the world-to• sink him ; bat he eau never have .enough to satisfy hint. Sunset clouds are the visible tong of tliti day that is dead Trio railing of a cross woman, like the'rail log of a garden. ; kocps people at ,a dist4thee. ' Moore "shpuld. am], loye our goolmiith r Earth., for she kindly hides their tbeirevil iwoi L NUMBER 42 d