Village record. (Waynesboro', Pa.) 1863-1871, April 20, 1866, Image 1

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OLUME XIX
PO~TX A.L.
MOS OF OM
The Songs of old. How deep a spell
Lies in the old, fainiliar words
Once sang by tubes we lolled so well,
In other days, in happier years;
Visions of hope long passed away,
Come o'er the heart so lone and cold,
And memory asks oh, where are they
Who sweetly sung the songs of old?
*hero ate they 1 some in silence steep
Beneath the mournful yew tree's gloom;
Others within the boundless deep
Have early found an ocean tomb;
Dim are the eyes that gently shone,
The once warm heart lies still and cold,
And hushed fur aye, forever gone,
The' voice that sung the songs of old•
Where are they I On some foreign strand
For many a weary day they roam;
Cheerless they trend the stranger's •lantl,, '
From friends afar, afar from home,
Do they not long to join once more
The joyous dance, the social throng,
And mingle, ris in days of yore.
Their voice; in the olden song,
Fondly the heart still loves to linger
Amid the ruins of the past,
Tracing', with fancy's fairy finger,
Visions too beautiful to last;
Bringing to memory's eye again
The long lost friend, the cherished one,
Waking the past with some sad strain,
Dome well-remembered olden song.' ,
OBLIVION.
'Tis well that hearts at last forget,
'Tis well that broken ties
In after years can only wet
With thoughtful tears our eyes.
'Tis well the sun that rose in tears,
In glorious light will set;
That bitter grief will pass with years—
Those hearts at last forget. .
Yes, we forget—the weary breast,
The burning, aching brain;
Wiil luso, in calm and peaceful rest,
The anguish and the pain;"
And earthly memories, o'er whose biers
We wept with sad regret,
Grow dim before the lapse of years—
For we, at last, forget.
Not all ! not all! a careless word,
A well remembered tone,
A look, a ocene, a thought hath stirred •
The anguish past and gone;
And long-hush'd hearts have throhb'd again,
And long dried tears are wet;
Ah! memory brings the old, old pain!
We cannot QUITS forget !
IMEI. CIM I IJ IA .8. I'Y'".
Published by Reyuesi.
'SHE CHOLERA
BY DR. BABLIN, CONSTANTINOPLE.
The cholera which has. just left us after
committing fearful ravages , is making its way
into Europe, and will probably cross the
Atlantic before another . aumwer has pass
ed.
'laving been providentially compelled to '
have a good degree of practical acquaintance
with it, and to see it in all its forms and sta
ges during each of its invasions of Constanti
nople, I wish to make to my friends in Maine
&tine suggestions which way relieve anxiety,
or be of practical use. •
Ist. On •the approach of the cholera, ev
ery family should be prepared to treat it
without waiting for a physician It does its
work so expeditiously, that while you are
waiting for the doctor it is done.
2d. If you prepare for it, it will notcome -
I
think there is' no disease which may be a
voided with so much certainty as the cholera.
But providential circumstances, or though:-
less indiscretions of some member of a house
hold may invite the attack, and the Challenge
will never be refused, It will probably be
-made in the night., your physician has been
called in another direction, and you must
treat the cause yourself or it will be fatal.
3d. GauAes of attack. I have personally
investigated at lease a hundred cases, and not
less than three-fourths could be traced di•
rectly to improper diet, or to intoxicating
.drinks, or to both united Of the remain
der; suppressed perspiration Would compiise•
.a large number. A. strong, healthy, temper
ate, laboring, man had a severe attack of chol
era, and after the danger had passed I was
.curious to ascertain the cause. Ile had been
cautious and prudent in his diet. used
nothing intoxicating. Ills residence was in
a good locality. But after some hours .of
hard labor and very profuse perspiration, he
had lain down to take his customary nap
right against an oped window, through which
a very !et'? cshing breeze teas bloiciv. -An
other cause is dritkinglargrly of cold water
when ,bot And thirsty, Great.latigue, great
enxie.ty, fright, fear, all figure among inci
ting causes. one , eau avoid ail these-be is
xis safe from the cholera'as from being gwept
away by a cornet. ' '
4th Simptoms of an attack. - While chol
era isyrevalent in a' place, almost every one
experiences more or less disturbance 'of. di
gestion, It is docibtleas in part imaginary.
Every one notice's the 'slightest variation of
teeling,..an&this_gives atk importance to Mere
trifles. There is often -a.aliglit nausea,r or
transient - pains , - or rutn'ilitig sounds when , no
attack follows. No one is entirely free from
°Nina:A in the Christian Mirror, Novernlier
14th and 21st, 1801,
WAYNESEORO',. PRANKLIN COUNTT,,PEVNS
_these. But he n diarrhoea eornmenees,,
though painless hod slight; t-is-in-reality-the
skirmishing party ofithe advancing column.
It will have at first no single Characteristic
of Asiatic Cholera. But do not be deceived.
It is the cholera nevertheless. Wait a little,
give it time to get hold, say to yourself, "I
feel perfectly well, it will soon pass off," and.
iu a short time you will repent of your folly.'
in vain. I have seen many a one commit su
icide in this way.
Sometimes, though rarely, the attack com
mences with vomiting. But in whatever way
it commences, it is sure to hold on. In a
very few' bouts the patient may sink into the
collapse, .The hands and feet become cold
and purplish, the countenance at first ner
vous and anxious, becomes gloomy and apa
thetic, although a mental restlessness and
raging thifst torment the sufferer while the
powers of life are ebbing. The intellect re•
mains clear, but all the social and moral feel
ings seem wonderfully to collapse with the
physical powers. The patient knows he is
to die; but cares not a snap about it. •
In sonic cases, though rarely, the diar
rhara continues for a day or two, and the fool
ish person keeps about, then suddenly sinks,
sends for a physician, and before he arrives
"dies as the fool dieth."
COURSE OF TREATMENT.
Ist. For stopping "the iiicipient diarrhoea:
The mixture which I used in 1848 with
treat success, and again in 1855,.has during
phis epidprnic been used by thousands, and
although the attacks have been more sudden
and violent, it has fully established its repu
tation for efficiency and perfect safety. It
consists of equal parts by measure of 1 Lau
danum and Spirits of Camphor. 2 Tincture
of lthubarb.t In an adult, 30 drops on a
lump of sugar, will often check the diarrhoea.
But to prevent its return, care should always
be taken to continue the medicine every 4
hours in . diminishing doses 25, 20. 15, 10, 9,
when careful diet is all that will be need
ed.
In case the first does not stay the diar
rhoea, continue to give in increasing doses
35, 49, 45, 60, at every movement of the
bowels. Large doses will produce no injury
while the diarrhoea lasts. When this is check
ed. then is the time for caution. I have nev
er seen a case of diarrhoea taken in" season
which was not thus controlled, but some ca
ses of advanced diarrhoea, and especially of
relapse pail no heed to it whatever. As soon
as this becomes apparent, I have always re
sorted to this course : Prepare a teacup of
st:ireh belled as for use in starching linen,
and stir into it a full teaspoonful of lauda
num for an injection. Give one third at
each movement of the bowels. In one des
perate case abandoned as hopeless by a phy
sician, I could not stop the diarrhoea until
the 7th injection, which contained nearly a
teaspoonful of laudanum. The patient re•
covered and is in perfect health. At the
same time I use prepared chalk in 10 grain
doses with a few drops of laudanum and cam
phor to each, But whatever course is pur
sued it must be followed up, and the diar
rhoea controlled or the patient is lost.
• 2d. Mustard Poultices. These should be
applied to the pit of the stomach,: and kept
on till the burface is welt reddened.
3d, The patient, however well be may
feel, should rigidly observe perfect rest. To
lie quietly on the back is one halt the battle.
in that position the enemy fires over you,
but the moment you rise you are hit.
When the attack comes in the form of di
arrhoea these directions will enable every
one ,to meet it Successfully
4th But when the attack is more violent,
and there is vomiting, or vomiting and purg,-
ing, perhaps also cramps and colic pains, the
following mixture is far more effective and
should always be resorted to. The mission
aries, Messrs Long, Trowbridge and Wash
burn have used it in very many cases and
with wonderful success. It consists of equal
parts of Laudanum, Tincture of Cau ! tieutu,
Tincture of Ginger and Tincture of Varda
mon ~eeds, Dose, 30 to 40 drops, or half a
teaspoonful in a little water, and to be in
creased aceorditn , '' to -the urgency of the ease
In case the first dose should be ejected, the.
_second, which should stand ready, should be
given immediately after the sptogn of vcmit
ing has ceased. During this late cholera
siege no one of us failed of controhng the
vomiting and also the purgin'g, by, at most,
the third dose. We have, however, invari
ably made use of large mustard poultices of
strong pure mustard, applied to the stom
ach, bowels, calves of the legs, feet, etc , as,
the case seemed to require.
Collapse. This is simply - a more advanced
stage of the disease. It indicates the grad
ual failing of all the powers of life, It is
difficult to say when a case has become hope
less. At a certain point the body of the
patient begins to emit a peculiar odor which
I call the death odor, for when that has be
come decided and unmistakable, I have nev
er known the patient to recover. I have re
peatedly worked upon such cases for hours
with no permanent result. But the blue
color, the cold extremities, the deeply sunken
eye, the vanishing pulse are no signs that
the case is hopeless. Scores of such cases
in the • recent epidemic have, recovered, lu'
addition to the second mixture, brandy, (a
table spoonful every half hour), .bottles of
hot water surrounding the patient, especially
the extremities; iinapistas • and - friction --will
often in an hour or two work wonders.
titirvt. In these and in all advanced eases
thirst cteates intense suffering. The suffer
'et' craves water,:and-as - sure as he gratifies
the.cravirig the wrirst symptoms return, and
he falls a -main) to the transient gratificar
Lion, Thiaouly safe'way is to have a faith
ful
,friond or attendant, who will not leed his
entreaties. The suffering may be, However,
safely alleviated and rendered endurable.—
Frequent gurgling the :throat and washing
out the mouth, will bring somO .relief. A
spoonful of Oujn Ariibio water, or Of eatno
tOpii Tincture, I Jr.. Cani,horte'TAnct.,
lota dr., Misve. •
A 3Petaattityr , rew pa oni
mile tea May.frequeritly be given to Wet tbe.
throat— "Sydebbam's White Decoction" may
also be' given, both as a beverage andjimm
ishment in slhall•quantities • frequently.
a day or two the suffering limn thirst- will.
cease. In a large majority it has. not• been,
intense for more than 24 hours. • . • ' „
Diet. Rice water, arrowroot, Sydenham's
White Decoction, crust water, camomile tea,
are the best articles for a day - or two after
the attack is colatroled. Camomile is very
valuable in restoring the tone of the stomach.
The Typhoid Feder. A typhoidrstate fora
few days will follow all severe ease's. There
is nothing a:arming .in this. It has very
rarely proved . fatal. Patience and careful
nursing will bring it-all right. The greatest
danger is from• drinking too freely. When
the patient seined to be sinking, a little
brandy and water or arrowroot. and brandy
have revived him, • In this terrible visita
tion of the cholera, we have considered our
selves perfectly armed and equipped, with a
hand bug containing mixture No. 1, mixture
No. 2, (for vomiting, etc ,) a few pounds of
powdered mustard, a bottle of brandy and a
paper of Camomile flowers, and a paper of
Gum Arabic.'
.1 lay no claim _ to originality in recomtnen
ding this course of treatment, and have a
dopted it from suggestions of able aed expe
rienced physicians. Having been the only
Doctor of many poor families living near ins,
I have tried various remedies recommended
by physicians, but I have found none to be
at all compared with the above. During the,
recent cholera I cannot find that any treat
ment has been so successful as this.
Contagion. The idea of contagion should
be abandoned. All the missionaries who
have been most with the most malignant ea
ses day after day, are fully convinced of the
non conta g iousness of the cholera. The incipi
ent attacks which all have suffered from are
to be attributed to great fatigue, making the
constitution liable to an attack.
In another letter I will give you a descrip•
ion of the cholera as we saw it, and of some
ndividual cases.
The actual question now before Congress
and the country is, whether the government
of the eleven States lately in rebellion is to
be given to the enemies of-the nation, whose
hands are just unclutehed from her throat,
or to her friends. If the people think that
rebels, who do not pretend to be penitent e
ven if they confess themselves conquered,
should be invested with absolute power over
all the inhabitants of their States or sojourn
ers within them, including the negroes whom
the people themselves have just set free, and
that, besides this, they should be allowed
their full weight in the government of the
nation which, a little year ago, they were do
ing their utmost to destroy, the people •can
BO decide, and from their decision there is no
appeal, excepting to themselves in a soberer
hour. But let them have this issue always
kept unmistakably before them. Let „them
not think that they are deciding against Ex.
ecutive unsurpation, or against taxation with
out representation, or against Federal inter
ference with the reserved rights of the States,
or in favor of the effectual restoration of all
the States to the Union. The question is,
Shall one half the country be absolutely goy
erned, and the whole be in danger of being
controlled, by its enemies rather than its
friends ? If this point can be kept clearly
before the public mind, separate from all en
tangling alliances, we have no fear- as to the
result, And it is important that this should
be done quite as much for .the interests of
the rebels as of the loyal States. There COD
be no substantial 'peace until this question is
put at rest, and peace is more essential to
them than to us.
A Word to Boys
A writer in an educational journal, the ti
tle of which we have unfortunately lost, has
the following pertinent and truthful remarks:
Boys, listen ! The fist thing you want to
learn, to develip what force there is in you.
is self•reliat3ce; that is, as icgArds your rela
tions to man. If I were 'going to give a for
mula for developing the most Ahcible set of
men, I should say. Turn them upon their
own resources, with their minds well stored
with moral and religious truth when are
boys, and teach them to depend on F elf and
not on father. It a boy is thrown upon his
own resources at fifteen with the world all
before him where to choose, and he fights
the battle of life single-handed up to nun-
hood, and dont develop more than au aver•
ago share of executive ability, there is no
stuff in him worth talking about He may
learn +to plough, and sow, and reap, and
mow, but this can all be done with machine's
and horses, and man wants to be something
better than either of these.. Wipe Out of
your voctablary every such word as fait, give
up wishing for improbable results, put your
hand to the plough, or whatever tool you
take to, and drive ou and never .look back.—
Don't even sight your person to see if it is
straight; 'don't be cousistent; but be simply
true' If you go out 'to see a reed shaken
by the wind,' it is pretty likely you will nev
er see any thing of more consequence.
Boustowma Tnount.E.- 4 The worst evils
aro those that never arrive.' By way of
practical counsel, to all the borrowers of trou
ble, I would say, Lee the rcal.diffrculties and
troublesJ'f life,_und,you won't have time for
practicing the art of sell-tormenting. - The
most contended profile in the world are 111060
who are must occupied in alleviating with
Christian heart and hand, the, sorrows that
flesh is heir to. Visit the heines ignor
ance and poverty, and Vice, and in' the hied of
the terrible realities you will there witness,
younown pretty cares will seetn as nothing.
The anxiettes of the Lindy will vanish alto.
gether while you, will
.be far wore - able io
bear those burdens which though real, . will.
seem light by comp,arisOn.
How beautiful 'can * titno _goodness,
make au old luau look - .
LYANIA, FRIDAY MORNING,,AFRIL 20;1866.
[Correspondence 1%414 eterling:Bentlnel]
A QUEEI;BTORY•
" BRACKEN COUNTY, KY., Feb: 17.,-LThe
people of this neighborhood' are in the great
est state of excitement,-',in "eonseltienceofit
remarkable visitation; OraPparition,'"of soups
denomiacal personage in our midst.
On Monday night last, after myself •and
family had retired to rest, we were 'suddenly'
aroused by a great, thitors , frOrrt . the negro'
quarters—which were. imMediittely ;in the
rear of the house =in which . prayers vied
for supremacy with . blasphemies; men, wom
en, and children sereaminr"fire" and mur
der at the top of theievinceri, all conspiring
to create a scene worthy of a pademonititn:
Terribly startled, my' wife and I sprang from
our bed. The room was illuminated a
brightly as by a flood of , sunlight, though
the light was a bluish cast.
,Our 'first and
most reasonable concligion *est that the ne•
gro cabins were being consumed by , fire.—
We rushed ' to the ; windows • andbeheld a
sight thatlairly.curdled the blood in our
veins with.hotror, and filled our hearts with
the utmost terror. My , daughtersi shrieking
loudly, came flying into the room, hysterical
with fear. This is what we beheld. •.
Standing to the right of , the upper cabin,'
near the fenee that separates the negroes'
gardeufrom the house yard, was, a creature
of gigantic stature, and the most horrifying
appearance. It was nearly as. high as the
comb of the cabin, and had umonstreus head
not dissimilar in shape . to that of an ape; two
short.very white horns appeared above each
eye; its arms were long and covered with
shaggy hair of an ashen hue, and terminated
with huge paivs, not unlike those of a cat,
*armed with ' long and hooked claws. Its
breast was "as large as that of a large sized
ox. Its legs resembled the front legs of a
horse; only the boors were cloven. It had
a long tail, armed with a dart shaped .horn
which it was continually switching about.—
Its eyes glowed like two living coals of fire,
while its nostrils and mouth were emitting
sheets of bluish colored - flames, With a hiss
ing sound like the his Sing of a serpent, only
a thousand fold louder. Its general color,
save its artns ) was of a dingy brown. The
air was powerfully impegnated with the Smell
of burning sulpher The poor negroes Were
evidently laboring under the extremeet ter
rorouid two of them, an old woman and lad,
were actually driven to insanity their
fears, and have not recovered their reason
up to this writing. Ido not know bow long
this monster or devil was visible after•we
reached the witriows. When it vanished it
was enveloped in a spiral column of flame
that reached nearly to the top of the locust
trees, and which hid its horrid form from
view. The extinction of the flame was in.
stantaneous, and with its disappearance we
were relieved of the presence of this remark
able visitor,
If ours bad been the only family, visited
by this unearthly, creature, I should have
kept silent, and, perhaps, tortured my mind
into• the belief that it was a hallucination.—
But precisely the same apparition appeared
at my neighbor's Mrs William Dole, appear
ing there in precisely the' same• shape in
which it presented itself to us, save the head,
which appeared to those that witnessed it at
Mrs. D.' to resemble that of a horse. At
Mr. Adam Fuqua's, another neighbor, its
head was that of a vulture. On Tuesday
night it appeared at the house of Mr Jesse
Bond's, there wearing the head of an ele
phant. AB these places it made the same
appearance as at my house—excepting only
the very singular changing of the head—
and disappeared in the same manner. These
parties are all reliable ladies and gentlemen,
and at my - request have made oath to what
they all witnessed.
What it is, what its object, what its mis
sion, is something th'it passes my poor com-•
prehension. What I have above written is
simple, unadorned truth. You arc at liber
ty to use this in any manner you may ea
teem. Respectfully, your friend,
NATIIANIuL U. SQUIERS,
STATt OF KEtusucKY, BancKEN
This day personally appealed before me
the undersigned, J(.,hu G. Finley, Justice of
the Peace within the county and for the State
aforesaid, Nathaniel G. -S,quiers, Minerva,
Sarah D. and Lucy Squiers, Martha W. Dole,
Adam Fuqua, and Jesse Bone, who being
sworn according to law,deetare that the state
ments in the foregoing letter are true as far
as refers to each of them. And I certify that
affiauts are creditable and reliable :persons,
and their statements entitled to full credit.
JOIIN.a. FINLEY, J. 1,'., B.
I=l
DISTNTEUESTED BENEVOLENCE.-II o
beautiful are those little offices of love, per,
formed without any ostentation; but promp
ted by the outpouring of a true and gener
ous soul. How soothing to the weary and
careworn hearts, are those sweet and quiet
acts cf kindness, which spring up spontane
ously like the flowers of : Spring by the way
side. How little do we know the power for
good of a kindly spoken word, for many a
heart, that has ceased to pulsate with human
affection, and learned the sad lesson of dis
trust, has become warmed gradually. by the
genial and sunny benevolence of another,
was unconscious of the influeoce of the un
pretending disinterested kindness bestowed
He who speaks kindly, and takes an erring
broiler by the hand; exerts more-power-for
good, and does more for reformation than. all
the power, of the press and oratory. combin
ed.
llestE.—After all, downright, plain uom
ioit; is what 'we are all after.' ' There is a
household corner in every heart, where lath.
ci• and mother, brother and sister, rob:4—
'llore is eur only borne, much as we' may
roam. There is beauty in ruystery-gratifi
cation in novelty—but the mind will leave
all, and back to. the old- humble Werth
etune and there'rest
Conftship in Greenland•
There is something .exceedingly , melsn,
(*. the accounts which are giyen.pflhc.
custom of courtship ,in Green an.. ener
ally, women Miter Upon thei blessed 43.91ifitY.
with more . Williegoess Uld less solicitude
than men.' ' The Women cifGreenlitriti Uri an '
exception to this rule. A Greenlander, hav
ing fixed hia affections uPori soule - fereale,'ael
quaints his -parents with the state of.. his ,
heart. They apply to the parents of the
girl, and ii the parties thus far are agrOed,
the next proceeding is to appoint two,kmaie
negotiators, whose duty it .is to broaehrhe
subject to the young lady,, This is a matter
of great tact and delicacy:' The lady anibisz'
sadors do not shuck the young lady te Sitom •
they are sent by any sudden or abrupt avow
al of the strut subject of their mission. In ,
stead of doing this, they'launeh ont in piai;
sea of the gentleman who seeks her hand.
They speak of the splendor.of his, house., the
sumptuousness of his furniture, of hie cour
age and skill in catching seals,nad:.Uthef fie
comnlish meats.
The lady, pretending to tie' affronted even
at tlise remote hints, rues away, tearing the
ringlets of her hair as she retires, while, the
ambassadresses, having got the consent of
her parents, pursue her, drag her from Ler
concealment, take her by force to the house
of her destined husband, and there leave her.
Compelled to remain there, she sits for days
with dishevelled hair, silent and dejected,
refusing every' . kind of •sustenance, till at
last, if kind entreaties do.not prevail, she is
compelled by force, and even by blows, to
submit to the detested union. In seine ca
ses, Greenland women faint at the prcipcii34,
of marriage—in others, they fry to the moun
tains, and only return when compelled to do
so by hunger and cold. If one cuts off her
hair, it is a sign that she is determined to re
sist to the death.
All this appears so unnatural to US, that
we seek for the reason of suelt an apparent
violation of the first principles of human na
ture: The Greenland mire is 'the' sLive of
her husband, doomed to a Head toil, drudge,
ry and privation; and if he die, she and her
children have no resource against starvation.
The married state is a miserable condition,
while widowhood is a still more appalling
fate,
Wealth and - Happiness
The , insufficiency of Inere wealth alone to
confer happiness is strikingly illustrated iu
the life of Nathan Myers Rothschild, the
Jew, who died in London some forty years
ago, one of the most devoted worshippers
that ever laid a withered soul on the altar of
Mammon. For years he wielded the purse
of the world, opening and closing it to kings
and emperors as he listed; and upon certain
occasions, was supposed to have more influ
ence in *root Britain than the proudest and
wealthiest of its tiobles—perhaps more influ
ence than both !louses of Parliament taken
together.' He once:purchased bills• of the.
Government, in a single.day, to the, amount
of $20,000,000, and with the profits of a sin
gle loan, purchaspd'an estate at the cost of
8750,000. Yet with all his colossal wealth
ho was.a miserable' train; and with sorrowful
earnestness, once exclaimed to a gentleman
who was congratulating him on the gorgeous
magnificence of his palatial mansion, and
thence inferring that he, was happy : 'Hap-
PY I me 4tiPPY
The late Stephen Girard, when surroun
ded by immense wealth, and supposed to be
taking supreme delight in its acentnulation, I
wrote thus to a friend : "As to myself,
live like a galley slave, constantly, occupied,
and often passing the night without sleeping.
I am wrapped in a labyrinth of affairs, an e d
worn out with care. Ido not value fortune
The love of labor is my highest etriotion
When I rise in the morning ' my only effort
is to labor so hard during the day that when
night comes I May be enabled to sleep sound
Take care of your health and take plenty
of sleep. Let no one work in pain or weari
ness. When a man is tired ho should lie
down until he is fully rested, when with
renovated strength the work will be better
done, sooner, and with self-sustained alacri
ty. The time taken from seven to eight
hours' sleep out of, each.twenty-four is time
nut gained, but much more than lost; we can
cheat ourselves, but we cannot cheat nature.
A certain amount of food is necessary for a
healthy body, but if less than the amount be
Furnished decay-commences the very hour.
It is the.satue with sleep; any one ; who per
sists in allowing himself less than nature re
quires will only hasten his arrival to the mad
house or the grave.'
Stephen Girard—Than whom no shrewd
er business man ever lived used •to say: "1
have alWays considered 'advertising liberally
and long to be the.great medium of success
in business and the prelude to wealth. And
I have made it an invariable rule, too, to ad
vertise in the dullest times as well as the bu
siest, low , expetience having taught me that
money thus spent is well laid out; as by keep
ing my business continually before the peo
ple, it has securedine runny sales that I would
.otherwise have lust. .
ADVICE GRATIS —,—lf a man cheats thee
once, shame on him; if he cheats thee' twice,
e o
shatnn thee. :
. If a man deceives thee, trust him not a
gain; if he insults thee, go away from 'him;
if he'strikei thee, theb thrash him like - all
smoke. ,
If you have lost your credit, be industri-
OU3 and you will regain 'it.
,If_you take a newspaper, printed in your
own county, and 'pay for it, test assured that
.
you are prospering.
• Fishermen use cotton los catch a
some
bind of fish.. Ana that's the way seine I of.
the young ladies"fiAt for a husband:
; P:,;r.):
1913.:00 fp , : Wear
. T!
I• , ;
: r . •
• Priffidtitlitiopt:of DeatlC- , : ,
4,remarkable,,inshitiCO l orliretuonition of
Aeath,,recured a,t . .gewton,iiiitser Co m
Jersert-the-1-51-11-tittime—and-is—narratek : _
by tho•RegiSter of that :Owe, as follows:
,A Mr:1361 1 662mi D. Detparest, whose health •
his been lad f'or' years;' but who on that
day' was bent for
the Rev.: Ltaii - Motile in . the afternoon, and
.toldltina he would din that.night, and asked
if' he would rant he saved pfovidid the record
*Of his' deeds In the , 'flesh sfietrld shoW
propendejanee ,of good ~ o.ver evil works. 7.—
The miniser pointed out the true Way of
tialVittiOnAky'rpenitence and faith.. and Mr.
Dertaprest,then,,requested,,ML. Morse to call
upOn him again in the evening, repeating_
the assertion that - he'Would die..that night,
,with,the further, statement that the night
previOus, his father,' who had been dead ma
ny yiari, came toEhirn und.7 kissed him, and ~
drew his cold hand over.his breast. dare
Mr. Dernarest shied with his own the di
rection his father's handl - tad taken, "That,'
srid.he, "watts death, it is cold , there alrea
lie then said that he wanted hisbody
conveyed• tota , certain -place for interment—
that he wished Mr 11, to preach the funeral.
discourse, and besought him to see to it that
'he wa¢ not buried alive,
,remarking that he
had obtained a promise Friuli Dr. Roe to look
to that 'matter. ' ills conversation denoted
considerable delirium, and after it had been
continued for some time, Mr. Morse stated
that he could not mill again in the evening.
but would come to see him on the following
morning, at which tims the minister- visited
the bouse and found that Mr Demarestliad
died at 11 o'clock on the night previous, •
havity , become very delirious prior to being
seized' with the fatal spaqn. For several
hours after his death'the body retained Con
siderable warmth—a circumstance that 'gave
some impressiveness to.his request not to he
interred until life was ascertained
,to be ab
solutely extinct.
BEER NU'llKlNii.—ln'the course of a let
ter highly eulogistic of a patent beer pump,
a brewer writes the following, which may be
very good for the pump; but is. not so good
for the beer:
' "What we regard, howe'v'er, as the most
extraordinary featurd, is the impunity with
which sediment, such as coarse meal, bag
strings and rats come through the pipe, in
quantities sufficient to totally obstruct any
'other pump that we ever• saw. This Jest.
quality perfectly astonishes all who .witness
the operation. We therefore cheerfully re
commend your puinp to all distillers."—
Beer-drinkers, as we:l as pump•makers, are
interested in this. recommendation.
,DISACIREEABLE TurNas.--,—.To see a man
reeling home. drunk, and _then whip I)is wife.
'fo see a man out in company F Et ee z og a
sore nose, mi aonman picking .her chapped
I.ps.
To bear a man bllpbeinin 0 0 , or a woman
grumbling and seolAing,
.
.11',or a man to Make love .to two women,
and to be found out b r y both.
To be a candidate to dice, and to be the
last in the race:
For an old , man to have a young wife, and
find she loves somebody else.
The little dust is trod upon, yet it rises
from under the foot and sails above it. It
supports the world; gives life to the very foot
that oppressed it, and is part of tho muitiitz
dinons number that makes up the globe, It
cheats you in the scale; it radiates the dia
mond. It is unnoticed; yet it does its work
in the world , It was you once—you will be
it again. ' '
A new. material for soling: shoes bas made
its appearance. it is . a . substance of which
India rubber is the basis, bui-it is heavier,
and whilst as solid as Iron, is.flexible- and
elastic. - It is sairl that one pair of shoes sol
ed' with - this article . will out wear four pairs
soleci With the best English leather'.
1 4 1 . •
TRTJTU.-, lir-ay:et fetter that ever
weighed donee the limbB of a captive, it as
the webs of the gOSamer, compared with the
pledge of a wan of honor. The wall of stone
and the bar of iron.may be broken but the
plighted word never. '
rirt"eßoston ll ,h)arnatsay.:."A gentleman
traveing along the coast of. Florida and
Georgia founds woman nil° did not know
what a newspaper .ts'aFi-: She had seven
children' and a pipe in her mouth'
Rather a large mouth, that,
There are all sorts' of chelera now a•days ;
the Asiatic•cholera, the hog cholera, the hen
cholera, and at , ' Syracuse, • New York they
have the horse cholera. Besides,• there is
cholera morbus, cholera infantamt, and the
paper collary.
, In the Capitol afWashington'are ten and
a half acres of halls, galleries,. rotundas, an.
terooms, libraries and corridors. - The man
who walks through each one from end to end
will have tral;cled 'several miles. •
A clergyman lately addressee his female
audience as follows : "Be not proud that
our, blessed Lord paid your sex the distin.
guished honer of appearing first to the fe.
male after'the 'resurrection, for it was only
done that the glad tidings might be , spread
the sooner.
/They had a baby convention over in Dins.
catine, Iowa; the other day.. • Fifteen moth
ers, with their little ones, were present, and
they voted on-the question of ,the prettiest.
Each baby got one vote and no more. Eve
ry-rnother voted, for her own 'offspring.
A maiden's learti is 'a prisoki. - When "o
pened by her lover, 'out poplhe Trisoners—
kisses and sighs. „ •
What dr&3,..Eve\made !,<Ad ju v a
:EFpresa Compel.."
L~r .
'7..7 . ,5; 1 M.: , ,
nraER 44
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