Village record. (Waynesboro', Pa.) 1863-1871, March 16, 1866, Image 1

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=EEC
.tt*'NXT.
VOL'UME
NEW STORE.
mosTEtinsit, HEW & CO.,
'Waynesboro' fhb' Efifeenti of
and - waitiity that they have re
ieived a new 'and extensive stock '
G]OE.lihlL
Hrikading ih patt-
SYRUPS,
SUGARS,
MOLASSHS,
HAMS,
TEAS.—ilysoth,- IMperhil -and Oolong, of the
finest flavor. SPICES, ground and unground, — aild
BASING articles, warranted fresh and pure,and of the
lest qualitir
QUEENSWARE AND GLASSWARE,
a very heavy stock, to Which special attention is in-
vited. Fine ware in setts or by the single piece, of
the latest styles; Cut Glass Goblets, Tumblers, &c.
KEROSENE LAMPS
of ,every pattern, a large assortment. Shades, (new
style) wicks, chimneys; spring hinge burners, al
ways on hand. Also No. I Kerosene Oil.
NOTIONS, METES, &C.
A thousand and one fancy, awful and necessary ar.
ticks, used in every family and by everybody.
TOOLO COS MI PS
Willett's Gong, Navy, Nat. Leaf, Mich Fine Cut,
and all the best chewing and smoking tobaccos.=
Havana Cigars, good common do. Banitary and
Neotric Pipes, latest thing out.
SALT AND FISH.
G. A. Belt, ;Liverpool, large eke, sacks. Pickled
Shad, Mackerel, No. 1 and 3, bbl., half bbl., quarter
bbl., saw.
&Walt' la.
Being in connection with Hostetter 41r. Co.,- of
Greencastle, which firm have a Market Car on the
R. R., 'we ere enabled to supply our customers with
the choicest luxuries of the Eastern markets in their
proper season. „
rir By strict attention to hi:einem, furnishing
the best articlfiln the market, and doing all in our
power to accommodate cnstomers, we hope to" te
celtre•a share of public patronage. No trouble to
show goods
farTerms. : Posmveur Casa.. •We buy our goods
for cash and must sell them in the same. way... 7
Country dealers supplied at wholesale prices.
TrEito & CO.‘_
Waynesboro', itug.2s, '65. •
NEW FIRM
NEW GDOODS I
GEISER Wit RINEIIART,
Successors to H. Stondiouse in the hardware and
Cultery Business.
TITeIM subscribers having purchased of H. Stone
henge his thirdwarelStore they • WouldAnform
old customers of the establishment, and others,
that in addition to the large Stock on band;they are
just receiving
,a large and well ,selected stock,:con
• ,
siding in -part of
IRON AND STEEL,
!SHOE FL N DlNtid,
z . , D: , ARRIAGE WARE
CEDAR WARE,
OIL CLOTHS,
HOLLOW WARE,
PAINTS,,-GLASS AND VARNISHES,
.;ioitletrLTußAL imPzci•AIVNTs;
We.invite.the attention of the Farmers to the
•HUNDEI.L'B.P.REMIUM HAY FORK, .
for the sale of which we are the sole igents:'
Cradles, &c., s&o.
All our goods were selected with great care and
we invite en examination of them.
b1ey110,1865. GEISEIt& itiNtaART.
ITENT 'FlABl{B—junt the t hi n g for bow.
I - ins' *we and catsup. at
—lll. • liassaTtsa, Ram dt•Cea.
CA" paid ' ikit Butter ant Eggs.. • z • , „
• iloatinua,itioo•dtVow
ORD,-CORD, a heavy piece of drathoord- at •
PAWS & 11011VP1011%.
CHEESD.
COFFEE,
CHOCOLATE.
DRIED BEEF.
A Temperance Speech by the Ra-
Almost every one has either seen or beard
of Henry Smith, the 'Razor Strop man!—
He is a noble, whole-sonled fellow, always
ready to sells 'razor 'strop, or preach a Tem
perance lecture. The following extract from
one of Smith's .speechea, is a fair sample of
his ready wit and tmique style ,of argu
ment:
ginen,l was a drunkard, not only was my
wife and myself ball starved; but my old 'eat'
was also reduced to a perfect skeleton. And
not only that, but she grew wicked, and be
came an out and out thief.' 'Cause why ?
Why she , couldn't get enough to eat at.home,
so she wont prowling and stealing among the
neighbors. .
'Every once in .a while, I'd hear the neigh
bors cry out, 'Cuss that Smith's she's
stole my meat--=cuss that Smith's' oat, 'she's
stole my fish—and cuss that Smith's cat, she
drank up all my milk.' But why didn't she
stay at home and catch mice and live on
them, sayryort; -reason enough, says-I, for
our mice couldn4..get orumba:,`ortneat and
bread like a sober man's mice' can, so they
had to live* therecollectidas'Of what they
used t fd•.eat"-befote
.intrOr liecame -a
diunkaid; and at last 'they' g'otthin' and
scraggy that WV tifthein" wouldn't fill , the'
old' cat'sliollni' tooth.' '
*but WhenTrefOrined, things . took a xfif
ferent turn.' 'Smith's "'table had, plenty of,
fish and meat on' it, and Smith's mice 'bid
pleoty_of_crumbs e , and grew, nicely,,', and
Smith'sjmt lied plenty of mice, and- didn't
have 'to eieal the neighbors' 'fish - and Meat
any more. No,air, my mice were fat and
plump, and my old eat was spry Nod active,
and didn't take fifty to make a meal anther.
No, sir-ee. ,Tbe Ad eat would catch two
mice, and 'these IWo 'was- as much as she
could.iiat at . one meal, and when she eat them
she would lie down and go to sleep, and af
ter a good. night's rest s shed wake up in the
morning with the pleasing satisfaction of
knowing that the nice c fat, plump mice were
not all gone, bat there wore a few moreleft
he-same-sort'
A DYING BISIIOVB REQUEST.—It was
the request of the late Bishop Fitzpatrick,
justhefore he,died, that when dead, Do flow
ars should be put— around him -`,Devote
flowers,' he said, 'to the sanctuary and to
the young, but do not , wiggle their „purity,
with ,the earth's corruption.
, BlA'UTiPuL,EiTitabt —The. velvet - moos
grove - on sterile . roeii— r the mistletoe lloorr
ishis.on„the naked ,braneheatheivs .olings,
to 'the mouldering' ruins, this pine and. cedar
,remain, fresh - and fadeless ~amid.the , mute
itions of Abe laming, sear, „aid 'Heaven be
praised, something green; something..beanti.
fel to ace l and gruattul to ; the soil in
theAuriirsg hour 4 rate, still . twine lite , ten.
drda.around the cr umbling altars andbroken
arolies,Of, the desolate temples of the- human
heart.
f Azkit
WitTNISIORtr, i 1.014, Tl*Ntt, PEN*YLVANikninAintaNiKlVlAlicll 16, 1806,
•toc , *o_xttlAziN
THE tkIT:
Life's evening Shades rated o'er, the. mind,
A brighter view of by-gone days;
Of friendship's . offeringtrue and kind,
tThiehtbreW upon the heart iti toys.
'Whire'frieraory's vieiba calatly.seerna
To mingle With ;the hilloiwid:
The past comes
i bOk 04111411 dreams;
OfjoYone hap& Which now
And in our souls we feel the past,
To be the type of figure holm
Zve provitsio be a dream at lest;
Tharflits around this world of dors.
Oar 'oft amid the cares of life,
Our hearts grow weary with the tail;
The past comes back with all its strife,
And thus the future seems to foil.
Those dreamy hours 'of childhood's years_
, Were 'loomed too soon to pas 3 iway;-
Wbere a kind mother soothed our fears,
And lite was but a sunny day.
Bet now they only form a prat
Of lite locked up in memory's cell;
And like the past they cheer the heart,
While on the changing earth we dwell.
ECHOES.
Still the angel stars are shining,
Still the rippling waters flow,
But the angel voice is silent
That I heard here long ago,
Hark ! the echoes murmur low
Long ago!
Still the wood ltr'dim and lonely,
Still the plashing fountains play,
But 'the past and all ititbeauty,
Whither has it fled away?
Hark ! the mournful echoes say
Fled away !.
Still the bird of night complaineth—
Now, indeed, her song is pain—
Vipions of my happy hours, '
DO I call and call in vain I .
Hark ! the echoes cry again
All in vain'.
Cease, 0 echoes, mournful echoes !
Once loved your voices well;
Now my heart is sick 'and weary,
Days Of old, a long faieWell !
Harki the echoes sad and weary
Cry farewell, farewell !
r 3 ) I
zor Strop Man
• ": . `1 WAS A HUNGERED."
'itlf MAZY V. inssrietec;
'Miss 'el - diking 'flit. • 'Evening wee falling •
Theiftieeti *ere almost 'deserted.'
Voice at ma not
fit iiimy 'and,heike_eaten'iiething' . i6-dity "
loOliod'it the speaker. * ftn esable-
Bodied - Mink:stint had Ica both maw by' am
putation_ ; wiii'evidiaCtli filietirged
dier.':r .- Hi wee fele' ikon, 'eft' if . froM reeent
'sickities nrtyfram - scanty
.'foe!L 'hid on
an,told':thredd bare Coat. . .
first fMtmleitraii to 'giro hint seine
thing. .But my - 'coat was • buttoned tighti I
could' naf etisily unbitten it aid bontinned to
hold' MY ifiabielli and beck; and te cretin all,
the street cir for ivhich I' bad, been waiting,
at that inoMent eante :op;
'I hain't inything to day,' 1 said titining
from 'the Man . and:bob:tiling to the drWer.
1 heard 'a sigh; is I';turned, and tica on
the IMintOf reconeidering my debietoe, but
'reflected that if I Missed this cart at cad
have to Wait ten minutes in' the rain. 'Be.
said . to naYeelf,. ''someb'ody else will
be 'sure 'to give.bilit something.
Bid my heart 'emote me, when, on look
ing after the man, I saw him go sadly down
The street with bent bead. Once I thought
of stopping the ear, 'getting out, overtaking
the Man, and giting him half a dollar. Bat
while I hesitated, the oar wised the corner,
and ho wee out of sight. It was too late. •
I did not eat my dinner with the liana!
appetite. I could not get that wan 'face out
of my mind. At times the victual's, seemed
to choke me. What if ho really was starv
ing and no one would help him.
All through the evening the man's rook
haunted me. In vain my little daughter,
seeing nit so abstracted, sang her sweetest
ballads. In vain my wife sought to 'cheer
nie up,' as she said, I even dreamed of the
man. If I bad known where tofind him, I
would have gone the nett day to eatiafy'my
self Wit be had received assistance.
But the iinpression gradually wore off.--
There is so much suffering now, in great ci
ties, that almost every one became hardened
to it. I - persuaded =pelf, 'finally that the
man bad been helped by other's. 'There ale,
so' many societies to aid 'soldiers,' I said. 'lt
was uncomfortable to think otherwise.
One mourning, about four days after the
interview, my wife was reading the paper,
when she suddenly laid it down and cried,
'How shocking!'
Ido not know how it was, but I felt a
sudden ohill. I thought instantly of that
man's - Wan face. But I said carelessly, as I
broke my egg. 'What is it, MY dear?
'Oh! such a terrible story. 'A discharged
soldier, his wife and two' children, dying of
starvation. At least the wife is dead; and
one, of the children not expected .to live.—
None have had anything to eat for fop days.
The husband is said to have lost , both arms
at Gettysburg.
My band trembled,so much, that, long be
fore my wife,finished; I was compelled to lay
don my egg unopened. She was looking ,
at hemanna did not see me.
I had no appetite after , that. I rose im
mediately and hastened down town, forl was
sure this was the mai whose petition I had,
rejected. .
I w,etit straight to see him,, , ;L. had, the, pa
peril) ref 'pocket, Aid it directed me to the
miserable out house ; where the sufferers had
been found. - .
Quite a crowd bed been collected outside.
But a policeman,, at the dOor, .pertnittect •no
one to go in. He knew' me, hoiover, and
on my .expressing my wish allowed: me to
miter. „
•siii,et, furnished by .some poor neigh
bor' was spread over a still waxed face in the
corner;, a little girl was sobbing beside it; a
man, bowed with grief at the foot.. At the
sound'iof my,footsteps, he looked up. It was
the same wan face I had repelled at the cor
ner of the street.
Since that day, I have never turned away
from old or young. who has asked alms.—
Better give to a thousand who are unworthy,
than,refuse ;ode who is really in need. -
• Romanoe in a Senator's Life.•
Fraiter's Magnin° tells the -- following sto
ry, but does not mention the name of its he
ro, :who is Senator Lane, of [Conies!
46 A distinguished politician of Indiana, be.
coming interested in .the movement for inv
king Kansas. a free State, left his - wife and
repatretitotitat Territory, intending to re
turn soon. Becoming, believer,. identified
with the struggles of Kansas, the Senator
stayed away very long. Jibs wife waited a
little, and . then wrote declaring that unless •
he returned•by a stated time, she would sue
for a divorce. The Senator made no reply,
but gave . a glowing account of the patriotic
movements in which , bore , an important
part. That the next letter he received was
from . the clerk of a court in Indiana, inform
ing him that his wife had filed a bill, with
another from a lawyer as follows: "Dear Sir:
Yours to band. My wife says she will not
stand my long . absence. If I were she 'I
- would - not - stood it either. I shall offs '
opposition to her suit: 'Yours, ite„
Two years later, when the divorce had long
been grairted, this Senator returned to Wash.
legion as the Senatlsr , of the' free State of
KOMSIB, Visited his told home in Indiana, and
found his wife still blooming and handsome,
and surrounded by admirers. With the rest
be visited her from time to . time, became
presently the apeepted lover, and was :mar
nett to bits!.
.14 i.s DB MiDUCIATION.—The fireside is
seminary, of lofinite 'importance. , it 'is itn-'
portant' because it is Universal, and because
the eduCtation it' bestows, being woven into
the' woof of childbookgives form and color
to the whole texture of life. Thersire few '
who can receive the honors of a College, but
all are the graduates of the hearth.
Be happy, be merry, contented and wise.
• 3ktentcOr_ igthe Dead.
* 'HOW aired the memory
We will not, anitiii forget those Wined atria
dons were early entwined round our hearts
in the biilibande sof - lileirdship. The) may
hive died. on a forelgn shore, far from home
and friends, with no kindred spirit upon
*hold they inigrvt eat a fare Well look; ere
they entered the heavenly world, but they
still live, oe hearts.. When we ;visit. _our
familiar retreats, and dieet'not their smiling
faces we think of them—;we think ,of-them,
too at the calm 606 . 01. hour, and at bright
ailing main, their image is not forgotten.
The stranger may lightly pass over thelitte
sy mound which eavele nokdis
turb their rePOse. Theirit is a sweet, d'holy
sleeptleits is a rest which - none shill did
turb. Calm be their
,sleep—and th o ugh ra
nllectione m ay id them Y. pause the tear drop
to fall, we Will not Milt them back frObi their
noble, pure borne, again mingle With the
vanities of earth, and again meet its trials.
We - will - aitectly - took ripen the that c. -
`ere theta '
—we. will there plant the evergreen,
and thornless rose, as a partial ,tribute to
their memory, and then leave the spot—
perhaps forever, but *while life' and reason
last, we will think of them-L-oherish their
memory as a choice plant. .True, indeed,
they hate mingled their once lovely form
with 'the dust, atriong"the rich and the poor,
the virtuous and the vicious, but the imtnor
tal spark within us is transplanted to a fair
er clime—even Paradise, the home of angels.
They are gone—gone from us, but we cher
ish 'their remembrance, andforget them not
in our daily walks through life. They. are
transplanted to a brighter laud, while love
casts a fadeless garland Upon the green turf
which covers them. •
Poultry.
No one should keep too large a stook of.
poultry. They do not thrive well, kept to
gether, in large numbers. They become sicik•
ly, infested with lice, and ray but few eggs.
They need a good range where they can find
plenty of insects—and if kept in large num
bers, these insects, are distributed among so
many that they do but little good to any.—
Some thiiik that by supplying Meat the loss
of insects can be overcome; but we have nev
er seen•thie effectual. ,It is true, in Win
ter, hens must be supplied with meat if you
expect them to lay.We have kept various
numbers of hens,and W e
come to the con.
elusion that the most profitable number for
eggs is about thirty, We got more eggs
whin we kept thirty hens-than when we
kept.seventy. And we believe that every
one who will try the. experiment will find
'that our experience will be his own.
A warm hen-house is needed in Winter,
if you would-have your hens lay. If allow
ed to roost in trees, and left exposed to
storms of rain and snow, and to the intense
cold that prevails, you need not expect fresh
eggs. Bat with a warm house, plenty of
feed and water, and some meat, your hens
will reward .you with nice fresh eggs, which
are such s great luxury served' up in so many
forms iipon every gentleman's tablo.-L,Amer
ican
GENERAL 11 OWARD.-I ma not drink at
college, I did not drink at iVest'Poitit; bit
when I got into the army I found it was all
the fashion. If you went into an officer's
quartets, the, first thing was to offer you
something to' drink. ' It was'ihOnght you
did not treat them" with prtpiti- hapset, if
you did -not. - I fell int° the habit s ;1 drank
whiskey, and offered it-to others. .Whatt
was stationed at "Florida, I once offered whis
key to an offinr and -he declined. I urged
him to drink,und he drank: ' A short • time
after I attended him in the horrors of deli
rium tremens, and I made up my mind that
it was wicked, and that I would never do it
again, and' I have dot: do riot keep it 'in
my quarters, or- in my tent. Ido not offer
it to any officer or to any man, and I will
not. I know it is a hare stand to take, es
pecially for a young army officer, lint I
can' say from my own experience that it will
PIT
A Widow.
There is not in the vocabulary of the lan
guage a word more deeply impressed of des
olation than this. How 'often we pass ft
carelessly by; how often. do we bear it spa
ken without-even a sigh of sympathy! Alas!
iris not until the bitter cup of bereavetnent,
has been given us to drink the dregs; it is
not until we have aeon the grave close over
the object 'of our affection—our hopes—our
stay—our only guide on earth;not until we
hive /Mod 1 )y the mound Coveringthe feria'
we so prized, the heart in which we were so
sacredly and tenderly enegrined, that we oan
realize the fulEmiserythat one little word
conveys to the sorrow-stricken heart. This
is an• exacting world too—a)id there is often
but little time given the widow 'and mourn
er to indulge the "luxury of woe." Her
cares and responsibilities increase; her chil
dren call for her energy; her self-reliance,
the tears she would fain shod must be forced
back-u. sn bet already .o'erchaeged heart—
she must smi e M, en s e won , glad y weep;
and %a forth alone to the "Battle of Life,"
to strive hopefully and patiently for those
whom death has left fatherless 'No, not aw
lonel: • God is kind—"a very presentlelpin
time of trrnble." Hislove will guide her,
His kindnesismoothe her path onearth and
gently draws her to Himselflu Heaven.
Smozno.—Singing is a great' institution.
It oils the wheels of care, and supplies the
place of sunshine.' A man who slogs has a
good heart. Such a man not •only works
willingly, but be works moreconstantly. A
singing cobbler will earn as much money a
gain as a cordwaiuer who gives way 'to low
spirits, and be who attacks singing thtows a
stone at the head of hilarity, and would, if
he could, rob June of its roses stud, August
of its meadow larks. Such a main timid be
looked to.
VarieUes.
~ God protects ipso. whoa ;they, are in, hie
iviii , tiro not out hie way.
1.
No man evaidid'or evei, will do his duty
'4? and by.'. ' • - -' '
- The tinind weati . theleollife of the mini; as
the valet those of his master: •
• .To be shuffled Out of 14001 is to be shim
ed into hell:! - ,
",.* It is. not the gbld or the diamonds ',bent
a watch' that keeps time.. "
I don't care 1, it a voracious blood-sneker
on the happiness of thousands •
,
,
The value of our blessings is 'sometimes
beat indicated by imagining what Would be'
btit condition with Ont them. "
Chiistianity - eari now point to what it dents,
is well as to What it is in itself, and say; Be.
hold the fruits which I produce in the hearts
and lives ofmankind.
LIVING .WITHOUT, REFLECTION.— W hett
a man passes a a • .. •
may well exclaim at nighf, feat that I
have dime something wrong.'
FOR Tin ArstairrED.---Lutitur Used to
say, 'lf it were not , for tribulation• I should
not understand Scripture;' and every sor
rowing saint responds to this, u having felt
its irath.
Accursed is he wilb sing in ignorance,. i
that ignorance is eaused by sloth.
A house is-no house, .unless it contains
food and fire for the mind, as well as the
body.
In saying, that our days are few, we say
too much. We have but one;--the past are
not owe, and who can promise us the fu
ture?
IPnballowed4lesires often prove to be like
the Grecian fire,, which consumes, but can
not be extinguished.
Human beings are not so constituted.that
they can live without expansion. • If they
cannot get it in one way,•they must in an
other, or:perish.
Write your name by kindness, love and
mercy,- on the hearts of the people you come
in contract with year by year, and you nev
er will be forgotten.
Politeness may prevent the want of .wit
and talents from being observed, but wit and
talents cannot - prevent the discovery of the
want of politeness.
To do much good i and make but little
noise, is a singular thing.. Some say much
but n nothing; bui all Christians should do
much, avd say nothing. ,
Good nature, like a bee, collects its honey
from every herb. 11l mature, like a spider,
sucks poison trom the sweetest flower.
The higher you rise,) the wider is your
horison; so the more you know the more you
will seem to bo known.
Winter in lowa—Great Slifficring
On Thursday evening 'last, John . Pulls a
German resident of Lansing, was &ten to
death Within a mile and a half of home; wa
der circumitances of the moat heart-rending
character. .11e had been vieiting„a brother,
who lives about ten miles from ` town, arid at
two inlock on the fatal day iitafted home on
foot; accompanied by his two faithful doss,
the' only witnesses of ,hie horrible suffer
inga. , ,
As the Weather was extremely cold; • his
friend's here accounted for hie absence fib
til Friday by the supposition that his finsi
nese detained him, but not•hearing horn him
Saturday, his Wife beanie alarmed, and a
messenger wee eent,.Who soon discovered the
sad intelligence of the death of "the ;miseing
man, A party made a careful search for
him,.but not until Monday, morning was his
body found, being in . a slongh in over two
feet of snow, , within a little over,a mile from
home. . ,
, •
His track in the snow,iev.ealeff, the hOrd
ble fact that be had lose tbe, way, it being
dark, and that, long before, 'one foot
,had
been frozen sti ff, and having, lost the 13130 of
it, he bad walked on one knee,dragging him,
self along with one hand a long distance,
until be w,nre dm pants on that knee bare to
the skin, and finally, not giving up, :he
crawled forward with hands and knee, until
one - arm - became - frozen;, - and then, he laid
down to die. Be had, in hia bewildered and
helpless condition, traveled around in a cir
cle far enough' to have reached honie had he
kept the proper direction.
One of the doge remained with him two
days, and the otherpoor, dumb, , affectionate
animal remained with him three days and
nights, lying upon his body,
.as if
,seeking
by its warmth to restore life and animation
to its frozen master, and abandoning hint on
ly when driven away by the keen , pangs - of
hunger.—Lansing (Iowa) Journal, February
28.
TEstm.—The commissioner of the Freed
man's Bureau in Texas closes his report with
the following language:
"I can aleo report that instances of shoot
ing, cruel abuse and violent assaults upon
freedmenare p erceptibly
t on the decrease, al.
though-quite frfquota, especially where there
are no:United States troops. No instance, of
this kind,ihat oomea to the attention of the
bureau is permitted to,pass without trial and
punishment.
. -
"These cases almost defy any attempt to.
record them, and'are reckoned by hundreds,
ranging from downright murder, savage beat
ings,,merciless - tohippings, hunting men with
trained bloodhounds, through all the lesser
dejrees of cruelty and crime!!
A Philosopher on being, asked from whence
he received hid first lesson in Wisdom, repli
ed : "From the blind, whO never take a
step until they have felt the ground before
therm"
The children who despisouge are likelylo
receive the retributive justice of being des
pised by their own descendants.
OSLO° APOMII ME ear
i . .311
=WI
, ROMESTICI FAULTS.- 6 -11010e0.are - 1110re
of
ten darkened.by the continual recurrence of
Magi faults, than by, the i t iiiesence 'Of
itty,decided , These evils hie,litiplireut
ly dissimilar anagnitadei ief - lt eh
ster,:to.grapple withikeroue.thamthe—other.
The eastern traveler can combiup
,his force
atid'hutiti the • tigei 'that' proads Upon
his pati4.but' liatiCtireely ean 'escape the mai
sluitoes-that infest;The'air he bleathes, or the
fleas that swarm the earth he treads. The
drunkard has been *flown. to .renerince his
darling Vice; tlib'idtiloe . to dres s end' mitt:ave.
puce, her, besetting sib,. the
temper,, the ludo; :dogmatic
manuals, the 'handled nameless
.negli
gences that spoil the beairtY of assoelatioo
Mare frOeied linhe
action of dirigust.and , gradual alienation has
turned ; allAPP.Arreats of affeetiorrfrorn their
course, leaving nothing but a barren track,
over which- the.,'mere ; skeleton of the Isom
panionship.stalks along. , .
"Sittroi, Booze."—Th'e Ireiaton Register
says that not many miles .froin that .city,. a
young „lady is. teaohing.school, and. seeds the
editor the following ,rules provided her. by
the ' trustees, for the goveriAnent of the
school :
No Sweatin - • ' ,
"fitin.' • .
"quarellin
"nieknamin '
. ,
"goin tutu the water
"reslin and jumpin . , ..
"goin into any persons Tine patches, or
orchards without the consent of the owner.
No. pinchin
"stickin.of.pins intu each .other
"pulin of hair dur:n books •
"courtin in school
Not more one pupil must go out, at
a time, unless for wood, or water. :
No orackin of walnuts, .unless.dried. .
"whisperin -
Those rules must be observed, for a viola
tion of.thoaie rules, will be punished .with a
lash, aeoordin to the Nirdiet of the trusties—
•
A POWERFUL REFERENCE.—One day
when thi Lord Chancellor—, of . England,
was,bus:ily •engaged; a poor curate applied - to
him for a living that hadjust become vacant,
'Don't troublei, tue,' said the Chancellor,,turn
ing angrily .tirw;•'don't you see I'm busy
and,ean't listen to you?'. What duke or lord
recommended you?' The poor curate replied,
4 1 have no one to recommend me* but the
Lord of hosts!' I believe I have a recom
mendation from most lords, but do not recol
lect one from him before; and so do you hear,
young man, you shall . have.
,the living, and
be careful to coaduot yourself.so as not to dia.
grace your reemumendation! ,
AN INCIMANLE DISEAET.-A contemptu
ous word is like the scratch of an envenom
ed arrow. Th e wouna.may
,be slight,, but
the poison rankles 'rid spreads through the
whole system,. j; Fricndship seldom survives
such wounds; ate form „may remain; but its
vital warmth..and...cordiality are gone. ft
was ,one.of,the sayings, exhumed from the
sepulchre of „Nadir all thy quarrels
leave. open Ihn door of conciliation,, klowsv
er, deep your words. may cut, take heed of
putting. the venota,of, scorn-into the wound.
the men everybodiliiies is generally a
tool. The, man nobody likes is generally a
knave. The man who has friends who would
die for him, abd foes who would love him,
broiled alive, is usually a man of some worth
and forpet..
The water thttt . ,
iiiigino taste is purest; the
rain that has no ji,dor , m freshest; and of all
the modifications of manner, the Most gen
erally,plealing is simplicity.
, GowittruciNpraguo, of Rhode Island, pas
sed thiongft pUmberland, 51d,, on his way
&it, on Sunday night a, week. While on
the train ha met a destitute Judy, who had
lon'everything by the war, and he very gen
arouily galeher a check f0r,a,0.00
"Why do YoU'Arive such Pitiful looking
'carcass as tliat? '
;Why don't you put a hea
vier coat olileah du him, - P4?"
"A heavier coat offleahf ,By the powers,
the poor creature pan heidly carry, what lit
tle there is on him now.".
When a superior rade' like ours,' said one
of the chivalry" to a modest looking Federal
soldier, 'comes in contact with an inferior
race like negroes, what do you think will be
the result ?"Mulattoes,' was the ready an
swer of the Yank.
CRUEL.—A young lady said to her beau
as she held a pot of.hot water in bar band,
'Promise to marry Me or I'll' scald you."—
Throw the water; , hia replied; 'l' had rather
be scalded once thon every day of my life.'
Many poor and vain women carefully stay
their bodies who have scarcely bread to stay
their stomachs. •
Why is it the; the moment of popping the
question ipso, terrible to young fellows, that
they frequenly cannot otter a word? Be , ;
mule, just then, they lovethe fair one W
OO expression;,,
They are tryN'to reduce the talon
whis
key, in Congas, - if they would reduce its
diitisuinptiau Oire they . would benefit the
country.
What length - 1;44,h t a ., jaoy . 'ik :crinoline, to
be ? ' A little abova t*to" feet:
Whit is,everpinef.,,dojitat thoisame time?
Growing .„ • „,,
-Yonng men obonikbiar in — mind *hid li
quot; oigare, troftibity, ald
btubtor, do tiot , moko BIER. ' "
10,
,V - 2%.: '?';
NUMBER 39