Village record. (Waynesboro', Pa.) 1863-1871, April 14, 1865, Image 1

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1130 W.
VOLUME XVIII
~V~ZVil.ii~t
Had I met thee in life's morning,
When my heart wee fresh and gap,
Hre_sorrow's_clo_ull_garewarning,_
Of my future darkened way.
While the flush of hope *as brightest,
Tinging all youth's rosy sea—
then, deafest one ! then mightest
Have bteathed thy love for me!
Thy wordsom full of mdarring,
Thrill wildly through my soul:
They St °use me from my dreaming,
And all ray thoughts control;
But as the blighted floWer
Feels_irotthe sum nor-rain,
My heart resists thy poWet-. 7 .
It ne'er can love agairr.
I (eel thy spititineseile4
When thou art far away;
Its bright, ethereal essence
'Humes my lonely way,
And oft, methinks, 'tis breathing
Of joys that ne'er depart.
While smiles of love are wrenthingp
Once more around my heart.
— Once mord Oh shall I waken
The memory of the pattr
And tell of vows forsaken
-01 Love's bright sky o'ercast
Griefs night without a morrow,
-00-dark-and-deep-for-tears
Of Unavailing sorrow,
Through long and weary years?:
Away with vain regretting
Ms useless to - Merle ! -
I would, the past forgetting,
Again seek pleasure's shrine.
My heart's fond dream of madness
The worldwill never know;
For o'er the deep of sadness,
Bright rainbow smiles shall gloW:
Italia's flowers are growing•
Upon the mountain side;
,While deep within is flowing
The burning lava-tide.
And though this heart is breaking,
I'll sing of joy atone,
And Love's fond strain ;awaking,
bhtlll mingle in each tone.
THERE HEVER WAS.
There neter was unearthly dream
Of beauty and delight,
'That mingled not too soon with clouds,
As sun-tays With the night;
'That faded not from that fond heart,
Where once it loved to stay—
And left that heart more desolate,
For having felt its swap
over-vas-rtrg
But it was dimmed with tears,
Caused by each griefs us ever dull
The sunshine of our years;
We look upon the sweetest flower—.
'Tie withered soon, and gone;
We gaze upon a star, to find
But darkness where it shone.
There never was a noble heart,
A mind of worth •and power,
That bad not, in this changing woad,
Pain, misery, for its dower;
The laurel on the brow bath hid
• . From many a careless eye ;
The secret of the soul within,
Its blight and agony.
There never was—there cannot be—
On earth a precious spring,
Whew w!ters'to the. fevered lip,
Unfailing,'We may bring;
All changeth on this troubled shore,
Or passeth from the sight—
Oh ! for that world wheie joy and peace
Reign as etethal light. LUELLA;
01.11-= - 114
THE BROTHER'S SACRIFICE
"Hero is a permit from the General."—
"Ail 'right; I'm glad the poor fellow las
some comfort before he diei.
"Dies ?"
"Yes, he iN sentenced, and will be shot tq
morrow, but don't tell him; it's against the
rules; It brings down a feilow's , courage.".
"Sentenced to death ?"
"Yes, for desertion; there's no mercy."
"Oh I John my brother, what have ;
—done-r—au-saying; - Charterfollow - Cdr ar d
and passed into the cell in the guard.housn,
where his brother Charles was lying under
sentence of death. •
His crime was qualified as desertion; when
his brother had heard of it he had hurried
from his home, to learn the:truth, for John
was o devoted, innocent, •
and enthusiastic
soldier. Ile 'had left a young wife and an
infant at the first eall lot' .troops, and had
been in the aerviae ever since. That John
'should , desert was 'impossible. 'There 'had
been• some terrible 'mistake. Bat Charles
tevor thought that the ohmic. - against his
brother could not be disproved, neverl,honght
that. the 'proceedings of ,the coalltimOrtial
Would come 'to so speedy-a termittatipit.:
:Condemned ito , dial 'Charles, as '4444=
od.the soldier an . tuard,%wesit
ination to. the.qmet .hbtoe,:Wharci
prayed-for•them'both, welching' bandit* ,
bed of poet, gentle Ellen,'-who'now mast die
withoutevcr again seeing her husband, 'the-
A. .Vgiei=My• .Itrerret*ei•-ir
WAYNESBORO', FRAMMIN COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY HORNING,
only. love of her life, who had hike her hish
hand, but for a year: And he, Charles, must
return to hir home with this news-..-must
del — ip - mthere• there was already
iorroyi; Oh! John Johns,. whet have
me ?" *So saying Charles Morris , 'en , .
;he cell,- and pausing an instant, blind
the darkness, he at last perceived ,hia
and rushing forward, threw hie aims
around him. "
"Oh! Joha, . John, eau this be true ? youy
you a deserter ?"
"No and yes, Charley. But 'tell me, does
"Yes, she still lives." •
"Bat I shall never see• het again. Oh t
John, John, I could die with' resignation if
Leonid but see her once again, -if once- I
could teH her how I loved her, how I had
enshrined het pure image in my heart, how
she was all to me on earth, and how she would
be all to the in heaves ; where we must meet
again !"
"Oht John ; with these thoughts in your
heart, how could you do what you have
done ?" -
"I will tell you,
Charley. I asked- for a
furlough. had been a faithful' servant of
my country, coming at her first call; never
in three years had I been home, and you
wrote me that my .Ellen was siek—is she
sick ?"
"Yes." -
"Not better r'
"No—"•
"Dying ?"
"Go on with your story, my dearest inoth
en!'
"Well, when this news came on my o- heart
yearned for home, pained to see those dear
faces once again. I thought on them by
day, dreamed by them at night, until it be
came madness; and unable to resist the over
whelming feelings of my heart, I.asked for a
I 1; - Aotitled to_it, but I
furlough; . was en. ied to it, but 1 was re
fused; and then, then Chatley, maddened at
the injustice, yearning for my Ellen, - I one
night loft the camp and went on my way,
heedless of all consequences."
"And then you were' arrested ; •and then
you was brought here, and---- -1 '
"And then I was brought before a court
martial, Charley, found guilty, judged with
out mercy, and soon, no ,doubt 1 shall be'sen
tenced to the extreme penalty of my crime.
I can meet death without fear. Great Ileav
enl- have I not brayed it a thousand times
for the very countrythat now condemns me?
If only for an instant Peould see my Ellen,
my'boy and my poor old mother, bat to die
thus—"
:John," said Charley,. "I have no ties on
earth compared to those which., bind you.—
Let me take your place. We are not un
like, and I can contrive to conceal my iden
tity from those around us, who after all, do
not take especial interest in us."
"Take my place, Charley ? What is it you
offer me—happiness? come what may—and
death by my comrades' hands will be my
doom—butqf I see once more my gllen, I
am resigned to all."
"You shall see her, for I tell you I will
take your place!'' •
"If there were any dangei:, dearest broth
er, I would not accept this proof ofyonr de
sertion; but there is none,for it may be weeks
- ""77 . 7 1 r77 - 71 ,an . — 3 - rAllat, tune
shall return; for you trust me, you do not
think that I would leave you here to die in
my place?".
"Not for an instant, • brother, do I doubt
yoUr love, your truth, or your devotion, I
trust you;. go--it is easy—Ois heavy; shawl
I had around me concealed my features as I
came. We are the same hight! we will ex
change our dress, and all will be well."
"Quick, Quick, then!"
Here the brothers began to make the ex
change of the uniform for the plain clotheS,
and when all was accomplished, it was
most impossible to tell one brother from the
other.
"Now, Charley, this cell is solitary, but
that takes away all danger of recognition; no
One will speak to you, your food will be reg
ularly brought. There is nothing to fear.—
I shall certainly not be sentenced before two
weeks, and in five days I shall he back.—
Good.liye, Charley, good-bye; if I had a long
life before me, what devotion could repay
this sacrifice; but as my days are numbered,
remember, through all your future life, which
may God make a long one, that my last pray
er was for you; •my last thought on earth of
the love you have shown me. Good-bye, and
rest in peace, for you must be sure that if
there were danger, I should not leave you
here." '
"Give me your band again," said Charley,
striving to suppress all emotion in his voice.
GoodbyeGoodibye s John, kiss mother for me, and may
Ellen dive to—well, no matter, God bless you,
dear good John, my boyish companion, the
friend of my life."
"God bless and reward you, Charley, for
the happiness you are bringing to those who
soon will have but you on earth to console
them."
And so John, utterly unconscious of the
doom to which he was .leaving his brother,
drew the shawl pp about his face, and air.
ing the sin. t the door of the cell, follow
eu the g ar o t.
Great as was harley's devotion, when he
lost sight of Jolla, he could not overcome
the natural &oliog of awe at his own posi•
tion, and he sunk .down on his mattress alp
met insensible.
. ,
Meantime, happily and safely, John pur
sued his way; all . day . on foot be travelled,
then at night he seaches a railway station.;
ho is speeding like-lightning along on the
train, and, as the bright dawn' breaks forth,
he , is, kneeling beside th . e bed *bore his El
Ibn lies ; sleeping ' , ,his mother 'leaning ,over
him, his bpy clasped in , his.artus. 'Tis, big
-voice wakes her, and as she dings to him,
and buries her head in his bosom, John mur
inuied,'"for all this bappiness, God bless -pp,
Charley l" .
At thatsame moment the drums were
1
bating fat iwtty r where Charley wsiand the
henvy tramp of soldiers tehods wi th regular
tread along. Npw'ho is brought forth, the
hoer of fib sacrifice - is cone, and , with one
deep , sigh, one sudden- pang, for he Was young
and life looked tar before him, Charley Mor
rii takes his plate in the solemn procession.
Now they come•to a- plain, and all halt.
: *s_hands-are- bound , —before- b efore
twenty-four men with muskets all prepared
--behind hiid hibentfin. He thinks-of John's
happiness, closes his eyes, and rememhets
the prayer his mother taught him
The-first-command — is - given,, hut - the See.
and does not come, and he opens his eyes—
the serg eant is advancing towards him. .
" - Wit is your name r" said he.
"Morris." • ,
'Toil are, thew, John Morris r
• "My name is Morrison."
The sergeant returned to the captain.
"There's no mistake, captain," said he,
"it is John Morris-, he acknowledged it him•
self; the men were mistaken."
"Fire I" said the captain, and without
struggle,Charley Morris fell to the ground
dead.
"Execution of a deserter 1" These were
the words that wet the eyes of John on the
next morning of his return home. , A vague
auxiety took possession of him, and with eyes
that seemed to bnittils he proceeded, he read
on. Then when he understood all, what a
shriek of agony echoed through that home!
John understood all—his brother had died
for hiaidied a willing .victim, or thinking
that he, John bad like a coward given him
over to such a fate•
Charley's sacrifice did not, give happiness,
for John is in the county asylum, hearing
ever the fatal volley that killed his brother;
and Ellen is dead. The mother lives, mourn
fully weeping for all.
CHRONICLE'S 157 i ": ' ,
1. Now it came to pass that there hose in
the southwest, a man mighty in valor and on
whom the Lord had called to memo ven
gence: upon the hosts of Jeff, that all might
be fulfilled which the prophets of the Lord
had promised to Abraham. 'The name of
this mighty man was William Tecumseh,
whose surname was Sherman.
2. And Ulysses, the Chief, said unto Sher
man "Rise, go up against the rebellious hosts,
smite them with the cannon and the sword,
and with all the weapons of war,"
3. And Sherman came upon the hosts of
Jeff in a high mountain called "Look Out,"
-and-his-soldiers-pros d them even above the
clouds of the earth, and smote them hip and
thigh with great slaughter.
1 1 4. And the hosts of rebellion fled from
the mountains even to the valleys and to the
great rivers, and to the land of Georgia,
and
cast trenches round about a city called At
lanta, where was rebels in great number, with
guns of brass and iron, and horses and• char
iots, and places for making great guns and
much ammunition, and was ootton and tur
pentine in great abundance.
5. And the hosts of Sherman followed the
army of Jeff and smote them with great
slaughter, capturing horses,
mules, and char
iots in great numbers, and prisoners not a
few.
1 G. And SI
-. Ant, .nerman came up to the great ci
ty where the rebels were entrenched, and lo!
the hosts of Jeff had departed, and the sol
diers of Sherman entered the city and re
joiced, and gave thinks unto the Lord who
had delivered the city into their hands,
7. And after the army of Sherman had
rested from its labors for a few short days
Ulysses said unto Sherman, "Arise, and pur
sue the rebels unto all their cities, and smite
them until they shall reach 'the last ditch,'"
S. And Sherman obeyed and marched his
army against Savannah, a eity'of Jeff, where
there was much spoil.
.9, When the army of Sherman came down
before Savannah, lo! the Rebel host had fled
thence through a swamp, over against the
river, after the manner of a skedaddle.
10. Then the army of Sherman pursued
the running hosts of the Rebels to the
gates of Charleston, the birth-place of rebell
jar', the home of the great traitor John,
whose surname was Calhoun, a traitor,, and
father of traitors, the same where the ruffian
hosts fired on Fort Sumpter, the strong tow•
or held by Robert, whose surname was An
derson,
.11. Theo the hosts of Sherman prepared
their guns and their engines of war, to at
. tack the hosts of treason, and when all was
ready, the soldiers of Sherwin went forward,
and lo! the hosts of Beelzebub•had fled, and
kindled a great fire which destroyed much
cotton and remains of the doomed city. And
the fort of Robert, and all , the strongholds
of the city were taken, and the people of A
braham came in great ships, and they alb re
joiced and gave thanks unto the Lord for de
livering the city out of the hands of traitors.
12. Now it was in the eighteenth day of
the second _Month of the year one thousand
-i,gli-t-liundred — artd — siziplour,, that — the so -
diers of Sherman entered the mat city.
13, And Jeff the traitor had reigned just
forty and eight months on that day, and
when his counsellors were gathered togeth
er they saw the handwriting 'on the wall :
Alene, mane, telele upharsin. And Jeff's
knees smote together, and he eried•in.a loud'
voice, father, Beelzebub, help us, and
'deliver us out of the hands of the Yankee !"
14. Thed Beelzebub fled and left his faith
ful fbllowers to their own destruction' •
1k And again .Ulysses, the Chief, said
unto 'General John, whose surname is 'Scho
field, "Arise, go up against the rebel hosts,
encamped in and around the city of Wit
mingt7n, in •the land of pitch, tar, and ros
in, and smite• them with the cannon and the
sword, both• by-land and by water." "
16... And Schofield, by land, David
(whose surname is Porter), by water, in ships
of war, came upon the hosts ofJeff at the
mouth of the great :harbor, and. pressed them
sorely by land and by sea, po that they "get
up andzot," leaving the strong forts in the
hands of the valliant warrior of Abraham.
Ilten the lathy of 'Sehaeld divided,
add a valiant GlatiMal; Whose surname is• Te
rry, with 'Many • dothpanies, marched,' on 'a
strong fort held by , the host of Jeff, called
Fisher. And Porter, with ships of Iron,
sailed'itp the river, add the rebel hostairc
t - )
-- itgb - i --- the• mighty army of
Abraham, and•they "got up and got." .
18. And on the twenty-second day of ,the
second month, the army of Abraham entered ,
the rebellious city of Wilmington singing,
even as Marian of Old sang-before the army
of the as,
The Soldiers of Abraham cap
cured much merchandise, and cotton and
guns, and powder, and the hats of Jeff she.
daddled.
19. And the army of Sherman, a mighty ,
host s numbering three score and ten thnii
sand men; is marching on to encompass the
ehief city of the rebels, the last that remains
of all their F oseessieoe, and' supposed to 'be
"the last ditch."
20. Thus was fulfilled all that has been
spoken by the prophets, and that the Lord
promised unto his servant Abraham to this
day. Selah
Attorneys' Oath of Allegiance.
The following oath, as .ordered by the re
cent act of Assembly, is required to be ta
n on or before' the Ist Of April (to -day)
all attorneys practicing in the several
State,courts of Maryland: a
q do solemnly swear (or affirm, as the
case may be) that I will at all - times demean
myself fairly' and honorable as an attorney
and practitioner of laws; that I will b'ear true
allegience to the State of Maryland, and sup
port the Constitution and laws thereof; and
that I will bear true allegiance to the Uni
ted States, and support, protect and defend
1 , • stk.-mien-hi-Rs-and • ••• en iere
of,,as the supreme law of the land, any law
or ordinance of this or any other State to the
contrary notwithstanding; and I do further
swear or affirm that I will, to the best of my
abilities, protect and defend the Union of the
United States, and not allow the same to be
broke up and dissolved, or the government
thereof to be destroyed under any circum
stances, if in my power to prevent it; and
that I will at all times discountenance and
oppose all political combinations having for
their object such dissolution or destruction;
and I make this oath or affirmation without
any reservation or purpose of evasion—so
help me God.' No person shall be admitted
to • ractice as : r-Kilieite • •
of said courts, shall be allowed to continue
so to do,'until he shall . have taken and sub
scribed said oath or affirmation in open Court;
provided however, that any person 'who, un
der this section and the laws of this State,
shall become entitled to practice law in the
Court of Appeals of this State shall be enti
tled to practice law in any and all of the sub.
ordinate courts. - •
Sec. 2. And be it enacted, That this act
shall take effect from and alter the first day
of April, eighteen hundred and sixty-five.
Meeting at the Tap.
A hundred years and more ago, a numer
ous body of Presbyterians who had seceded
from the Established
was split in two on a quarrel about.a clause
in the oath required of the freemen of cer
tain- Scottish boroughs, which expressed
"their hearty allowance of the true religion
at present professed within -the realms, and
authorized by the laws thereof." The par
enwho held that the oath might be consci
tiously taken by the seceders' were called
"Burghers," and their opponents "Anti bur
ghers." Johnny Morton, a keen Burgher,
and Andrew Gobble, a decided Anti biargh
er, both lived in the same house, but at op
posite ends, and it was the bargain that each
should keep his own side of the houde well
thatched., When the dispute about the prin
ciples..of their kirks, and especially the offen
sive &use in the oath, grew hot, the two
neighbors ceased to speak to each other.
But one day they happened to be on the
roof at the same time, 'each -repairing the
thatch in the slope of the roof'on , his own
side, and when they had worked up to , the
toy, there they were face to face. They
could not flee, so at last Andrew took off his
cap and scratching his head said, "Johnnie,
you antilime, I think, hae been , !very foolish
to dispute, as we hae done,concerning Christ's
will about our kirks,.until we hae clean for
got His will about ourselves; and •we had
fought sae bitterly for what ea' the truth,
that it has ended in spite, • Whatever's wrang
it's perfectly certain that it never can be fight
to be uncivil, unneighborly, unkind, in fact
tae hate one another.' Na, na , that's 'the
deevel's work, and not God's. Nbo, it strikes
me that may be it's wi' the kirk• as vi! this'
house; pe've working
. 011 ae side ,and me on
the either, but if we only do out warn weel,
we will meet at the, tap at last. Gie's your
ban's amid neighbor!" And so they shook
hen', and were thu_liest_ettreens—liver-after.,
A BUCKEYE ' STORY.--T h e Columbus,
(Ohio) Journal tells a queer story about a
married couple of that place.
The husband is a tyrant. One. evening
during a severe snow storm, his wife was vis
iting a-neighbor: and when she applied for
admission on her return, her husband pre
tended not to-know her. She threatened .to
jump into the well•if he did not open- the
door. Hairing no idea she would• do• so, he
obstinately refused to recognize her;' so she
took a 116g..plutiged' it into the well, and aim-
utaneously with the splash-it made,itruplaced
herselny the side of the door; and as 'soon
as he darted out in his niglit clothes, she
- darted in, locked the door. add deelarad she
did not know him! She froze him until be
was-penitent, and then lei'him in.
Old gentleman (affectionately). gfilfy
why do yoti chew that filthy tobaccor• •
Precocious. youth (stiffly) !To grind the
juice out, old codger.
APItiL 14 7 L 054
I,lootrichtainitiy
Ycitecticidiy livitantatiori
pril 1-113651' ‘,
• WSZEtEttep, In the comae dfinh intim Yen
'KS events the ' capital ofr: the • Coll-14040e
States of Atneriea no longsr affords ,
ble and beak* ittaidenbe:*fei the
- 4-thscrer *Ltithinet
..swvnt - Mlsinet ) not ie 'Speak the
Chief Magistrate ,hiniself, 'the+ Vice ?resi
dent and the menbers of the two,congressiod
al bodies, I do, therefore,. by virtue of the
power vested in my two heels, proclaim { my
intention to 'travel instanter, in company with
all the officers of the Confederate State's Gov
ernment, and, to take up such agreeable quar
ters as may yet be Grarae4 unto toe ,
To such perions as are in arnis against the
confederate States of America,
,I dq hereby
tender abiolute amnesty on condition that
they forthwith desist from annoying our pa
triotic population. •
tinder the circums tepees; Bravery: ~bga bet
ter beabolitibeded:'
The capital of the Confederacy tgill he nee
forward
. be fouutt "up a stump" on the
picturesque banks of tit. celebrated ','Last
Ditch."
To the foieign subscribers .to the, Confect
erase loan I return sineere thanks.
Major, General Grant, United States army,
will pleas e
. see thldthey get their cotton.
All persons having claims against thi
Government will'please present them to A.
iiineoln, - Riehtiren•i, by Whom all sueh
colitite will be most cheerfully audited. .
It is not altogether improbable that the
glOtious experiment of a slave-holders' Con
federacy may yet prove a delUsion and a'
snare. I have often thought so.. S o
.has
Genewal . Lee, who has lately been fighting
tnostly for his last year's salary. The Con
federate Treasury being-light; -- 1
talse it in my-valise—Gon. L - e - e - thmi s t hat
we have`a good opening before us, and that
we have seen the last of this fratricidal war.
I hope so. Stephens thinks peace more im
minent than ever. •
If the United States persists in refusing
to recognize- the Confederacy, on my return
I shall again urge the arming of the negroes.
Office-seekers are respectfully solicited to
cease their importunatings. Genius is the
beau ideal, but hope is the reality. Fellow.
ci farewell. J. DAVIS,
President of the Confederate Sates of A
merica.
Done at Richmond, April 1,1865. .
Shinin
'lt was Sabbath eve. I sat alone by my
window watching the ebanging hue cif, the
sunset clouds. My spirit was'stired within
me, for I had beard two , faithful, heart
searching sermons.
Tenderly but faithfully had our . pastors
pointed out the failings of professing Chris
tians in his flock, and urged us to greater
diligence in life's great work. Earnestly did
he ask us to plead with And for dying sin
ners.
Though it might be a cross to us, was it
not one we should take up?
What would be our feelings if, nt the judg
ment bar we should meet some lost sopl that
might have been saved had we but dealt
ki ndi • apd_trul• t-h .0
'ere , on these things, gazing into the deep
ening darkening, a faint glimer of a star
caught my. eye. I watched it as it' grew
brighter and brighter. Soon star after star
appeared till the heavens were studed with
bright gems. Something whispered to me,
"And they that be wise shall shine, as the
bright of the Alinement and they. that 'turn
May. to righteousness as the stars forever and
ever." Is not here a motive for activity in
doing. good. Do we realize the greatness of
the reward of those who are "wise ?" With
such a . prospect let us take up the cross, re
membenng "that he which converts a sinner
from the error of his way shall save a' soul
from death and shall hide a multitude of
sins." "He that winneth souls is wise."—
S. S. Times.
CONSOLINCL—In a village hard by, where
ministers, are not so plenty as in larger pla
ces, Squire a justice of the peace,
a man of good common sense and sterling
integrity, remarkable for bluntness rather
than blandness of manner, and whose liter
ary attainments extended to the writing, of
his name, was called on by a colored family
to make a few remarks at the funeral of their
son,ln.the absence of the clergyman of the
place. The weeping friend's were seated a
bout the room, when he arose and said—'lt's
pretty bad ; but if I was you I wouldn't take
on so. It's all for the best. Ssose he'd
lived and grown to be a fat, healthy boy—
why,.he'd never 'been nothing but a nigger,
anyhow.'
I.I 4 IWENABIA RIGHTS.--EiM7 Woman
has'a right to be of any age she pleases, for
if she were to state her real age no One would
belieie her. Every one has tcright_to_weaV
,a mustache if he ,can. Every woman who
makes puddings has a right to believe .she
r oan make better pUddings than any other wo
man in the world. Every man who earns
has a decided right to think of himself, , by
putting a few of the best bits aside. Every
'woman has a right to thifilr her child" the
"prettiest little,baby in the world," and' it
would be the greatest fully to deny her 'this
'right for she would be sure to take it. Ev
ery young lady, has a right to faint wbcn she
,pleaseq, it her lover is by her side to , catch
her.
'Paddy,' said a joker,. 'you ought, t.o, get
your eara cropped—OG.ore entirely too long
for a man.? 'And yours,' replied Payetight
to be lengthened they 'are too. short for a
ass."
A etter.frorn; Charleston
,spys ,',wherever
our army goes five institutions are tHITO to,
'folksy it—L-tho Post Offienytht Sanitirj Col*
mission, Express Companies;AJle Chris* ,
Commission, and the diar,rhore' ,
,"'", , t i "
i.. ~ktiQt~ ~~if i.. Y:,
If I' -1 1.
, When General Sherman wits in mi
n:land at Benton barracks, St_Lonis,—he—was—
in the habit of visiting every part of that in
stitution, and making: himself familiar with
way
ins t e' 0
IstiLoo { rer:"Ka'ar
NUMBER 41
• •.• Golden Thoughts.
4 , •
Aunt not la,fuirmine ior your, No SO hot, that
it ' do singesinge jrOu'rself.-8114,sienr.
Sin a i' . ears are not 'regarded when% t
l ie, but great men 1/enable when the lion.
.6 . 444.8 cir. . _
eoiare, n ways do bled
it grid with ti
threiid-bate coat. No. one stops to Oostiou
the coin or thi3 'Huh ban; but a pOof deii4
oaurt pose 5 either a juke or u guinea with
out' ite'beinie'ittithined 6/1 both
. '
The wettest ofnstions lags that
ahluals is seldom
,keovfu until they get into
iroUbic
—Learn to hold thy tongue. Five I , "Orlis
coat Zacharias , 'forty weeks' silence !.—Ful
ler. '
The. reason
.Why ab , few Marriages tire"luip
py,,is because yonog ladies spend their, time.
to i
Makiig nets notead,Of ,
!Life ior tt • ,eous tao
vie - tisilt hotly/ lettrestebatict TheY,'esiiiu 'giv
en to us ass Surety gives al plaything' td 'a
child, to misuse it, till it falls asleep,
God will uecept your first attempts to serve
Mm, sot ara periert work; 'but' as a • be,giti-
Ding, The first little, blades of wheat are as
"plumard_toll4_kmeLacys_li m_the—whold
field waving with - grain.
Truth is a sure pledge not impaired, a
shield never piereed . , • a flower that never•
dieth, a state that never feareth fortune, and
a port that yields no danger.
Anecdote of Gen. Sherman
irowhcoat and a 'stove-pipe hat,' and
was not generally recognized by the minor
officials or the soldiers. One day, while
walking through the grounds, be met with
a siddier who Was unmercifully beating a
mule.
"Stop pounding that mule," said the Gen
eral.
"Git out 1" said the soldier, in blissful ig
norance of the person to whom he was speak
ing.
"I tell you to stopr reiterated the Goner-
"You mind your business, and Twill mind
mine," replied the soldiers-continuing ,his
flank m went upon the mule.
telf-y - - sin the step!" said General
S. "Do you know who I au,?• lam Gener-
al Sherman." • •
"That's played out!" said 1F soldier.—
"Every man comes along here with an old
brown coat and a stove-pipe hat on claims to
be Gem Sherman.".
It is presumed that for once Gen. Sher
man considered himself outflanked.
Posm irreg.- 7 Milk nod water people,..
content themselves with simply doing no
harm, at the same time never doing any good,
are mere negatives. Your man of three, whd
does not wait for a stone to get out of his
Heaven aßpointed way, but manfully ,rolls
it over, may unintentionally hurt somebody's.
toes=ia thousands who will walk
that future path will thank him for clearing
it. The man who has no enemy is generally
a sleek, creeping, cautious, whitewashed erea ,
ture, walking the world with velvet shoes„
who smirks and glides his unchallenged way
to the obscurity ho Merits.
THE FOLLY OF MANKIND.-A company
opened an officein Chegan alley, during the
South Sea mania to receive. subscriptions for •
raising a million for a purpose to be known
after the million was raised! The people
flocked in and paid five shillings on every,
fifty pounds they subscribed. A large sum
was thus collected, when an advertisement'
was published, announcing that the subscri
bers might have their deposits without any,
deduction i , as the project of the directors was
merely a trial to see how many fools they
could make in one day.
A cheerful life must be a busy one. And
a busy life can never be well otherwise.—
Frogs do not croak in running water.• Ac
tive minds are seldom troubled 'with gloomy
forebodings. They come up only from the
stagnant depths of a spirit unstirred by
geherous impulses or the necessities of .hon
est toil.
`Cream may be frozen . simply putting
it into a glass vessel, and then' placing the
whole in an old bachelor's bosom. .
A Boston,storekeeper the , other day stuck
upon his door the laconic advertisement: "A
Boy Wanted." The next morning, on open:
ing the store, he found a little urchin in a
basket, labelled, "Here be
Black, (who is reliable), says he knows a
Dutch farmer in PeUnsylvanis who is so all
flied economical se' everlastingly parsi
monious, that, he refuses to clean' his finger
nails when away from home. His owe barn
yard is where he pqrforms that duty.
• 13r. irooklia said, "A qooi.' kick out doors
is- bettor than -ail this itch Ilia* , is the
wor:d." ; •
YelA the are.
* - :--never op,tc.92t.
I •pt fo
iz _
Yf pot' t to, live
acd , :the'nezt
Pciotors Bbiiuld'd ' eadylote our good moth.:
er•]artbi for obe • kindly hidis their evil
veotk•,
' How long did eain hate his brother ?— .
As long as he was Abet.
..L....,. J...
~ .1 ~._~ ~ J ....~
MilliNE
'ke turnpike. gates
easeful in this life
the printer.