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March. :30, 1866 • AMERICAN LIFE INSURANCE AND - TRUST CD,, Corner Fourth and Walnut Streets, Philadelphia Ineorporatvd 1859. Charter Perpetual • Author ized Catdtal, $500,C00. Pahl Up Capital, $250,000 Philadelphia, Felt. 4. 1861. The Trustees have this day declared a Dividt nd of FIFTY PER CE),l`, on all premiums received upon Altrrom. PuLten.s daring the year ending De cember 31st, 186:3, and in force at that date, the a bove amount to be credited to said Policies, and have also ordered the Dividend of 1860 on Policies is-ued.during that year to be paid, as the annual premiums on said Policies are received. OFFICERS. President—Alexander Whilldin. Secretary and Treasurer—John S. Wilson Actuary—John C Sims. BOA RD OF TR lISTEES.—A 1 exander Whil I - din, J. Edgar Thomson, George Nugent, Hon. Jas. Pollock, Albert C. Roberts. P. B. Mingle, Samuel Work, William J. Howard, Hon. Joseph Allison, Samuel 'l' Bodine, John Aiknian, Charles F. Hea.z. lilt, Isaac Hazlehurst. Wm. G. 17tED, Chamhersburg Pe., is the general Agent of the American Life Insurance and Trust Company fur Pranklin• Co. Jos. Dotiotas, Agent for Waynesboro' and vicin ity. RE FERENCES.—Jeum NuttPa and WILLI/at H• B ROT HERVON. Call and get a pamphlet. JOS. DOUGLAS, Agent. Oct. 1 3, 1865, ly EAGLE HOTEL. Central Square, Hagertitown, Md Frill: above well-known and established Hotel j .. has been re-opened and entirely renovated, by the undersigned, and now offers to the public every comfort and attraction found in the best hotels.— THE TAl3Lb' is bountifully supplied with every th.lics7 the, market will oft rd, THE SALOON contains tbe choicest liquors. and is constantly and skilfully attended. THE STA BLE is thoroughly repaired, find car• ful Ostlers always ready to acr cotntuodate customers. JOHN FISHER, Proprietor. Hagerstown, June 2 - tf. "illeutzer's Horse & tattle Powder. M . I ST:NE R ,haring .purchased Mr. zor, the recipe for Malg the above far-lamed Horse and Cattle Powder for Pennsylva nia and Maryland, takes this method of informing tko farmers t drovers, &c., that he has on hand and intends keeping a good supply always on hand::— Country merchants and others keeping such articles for sale, would do well to supply themselves with a pantity. He will sell it on commission or fur i 4 w . h pherp. Orders will be punctually attended to January PI, WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 1,1866. 3PC)MTIC).A.Za. - • ""n •- • 1%-• N.` .. *.1 . e 51; t•--‘' • r 41= I.; IN MEMORIAM. When withering on its drooping stern, Too soon the tender rose bud dies, The gentle sirs of summer blow The sweeter for its fragrant sighs. —n flower so beautiful— orever rom - t e - wor -is gone;.--- But all her be'auty is not dead, Her spirit not withdrawn. The love that lit her childish face Still makes the darkened world more bright; The star is very far away, Yet pierces through the night. For those who loved her oFt shall hear The music of her voice in dreams, For many a vision of the lost Is than it seems. • Be happier, then, because she lived, Though sadder that so young she died, And know that spirits joined in love The gloomy grave cannot divide. For unto love the power to cross That dark and drear abyss is given, And tears. and srailes,"and prayers, and hopes, Bring earth more near to heaven. S T Y Oh, would our hearts were fingers fair Thnt o'er the chords of passion play, To teach our lips alone the air Awakened when those fingers stray. No chill deceit would ever doom The rose of love; that bloomed so fair, " To wither in an early tomb, And breathe no more life's perfumed air. Nor would the vine affection weaves, In tendrils fond, around can form I3y factious phrase, where malice breathes, Be ruthless wrecked 'mid passion's storm. Or want or woe, when seeking cheer From friendship, in her deep distress, Be fated at to shed a tear O'er balmy words that feigned to bless Truth has her seat in heaven alone-- lhis world is but contested ground, Where falsehood oil usurps her thrdne, Arid in her glistening robes sits crowned ~- ~ - - ", GETTING RID OF SPIRITS When spiritualism first made its •appear ance in the villatre d N—, old Deacon Isaacs, a wealthy man who had stood by the church for nearly three score years, was ex ceedtrily bitter against all believers in the "devil's work" as he called it, and denounced spiritualists and spiritualism in n) very gen tle language. Imagine the deacon's anger, then, when, six months afterwards it had worked its way into his own fatitily, and not only were his wife and daughters believers in it, but one of them was a medium, and• possessed lull powers to converse with the spirits of those who had departed to that "bourne whence no traveler returns" _Deacon Isaacs was mad—dreadfully mad —but he had wit enough not to show it, and he bore the taunts of the ungodly with a Meek spirit. lie knew that it would be u-e -lesh to declare open war, for 3.lrs. Isaacs a lone had always proved more . than a match for him, and he was sure to be defeated.— lie uni,t "circumvent the critter," as he ex• pressed it, and to this end he set himself to work. Ile was of sound judgment, and his worldly experience of titty years was not thrown away. From the day it first came to his knowl edge that his wife and daughters were spir itualists, he never spoke a word against, nor did he ever allude to it except in general terms in his morning papers, but any one could see that it .trouliled him, for he was ab sent minded, his eyes wandered restlessly, and his countenance looked careworn. • The deacon witnessed one or two sittings at his house, and was satisfied that if he pos sessed a little more knowledge he could get rid of them. So one morning he want to the city, determined to thoroughly investi gate the subject before he returned. After visiting two of the most popular mediums, and paying his money, he returned home sat isfied that he could see through it. There• was a "bitting" at the deacon's bonze on the night that be returned, and his daugh ter Mary 7 --the medium—invited the deacon to take a seat at the table, which to her gra tification was accepted. •Tbe spirits were in good tune and so exceedingly communica tive that the deacon was induced to ask a few questions which were readily answered, and wife and daughters were in ecstasies at the thought that father would yet be a believer, and urged the deacon on in his in quiries. "Has my wife always been true t 3 ber marriage vows ?" asked the deacon. To this question there were no raps in re turn, while firs. Isaacs stood transfixed with holy horror that such a thought should en ter her husband's mind. . . "How• many years bus it been since she was.untrue ?" Answer by single raps.. They came slow ly and solemnly, one, two, three, four, and so on until they reached twenty. "[low many who claim to be, are not my children ?" Again - the spirit rapped—one, two. Mrs. Isaacs looked dutabfounded. "-Mercy 1" said Mary. "Whioh axe they ?'' asked the deacon:who .10"&m.1171Vizriour.sX'satie3r. a 'l l \l"crutx•ril,3l.33. Polltioa naact Religion. now seemed• so intent on the subject that be id no attention to his - companions. ' "Mary—Sarah," rapped the spirits, the names of the two daughters,' the older of whom was under twenty. ' Mrs. Isaacs could stand it no longer. "It's it lie ! I didn't I they are your chil dren, Deacon Isaaes, and God knows it I" she shrieke d, raising from the table, "Itat.the spirits affirm differently," said the deacon in a solemn voice. "Then they lie P'• said the wife. "But if you believe them in .everything else, 'why not in this ?" "But I don't believe theni at all. it is tool , -- "Nor-IT-shouted—Mary "Nor I," added Sarah. Then," said the deacon, with a slide, "we will bid them good bye, and , leave those things which God has wisely hid from ns, to be revealed in His own good time." The deacon's evening devotions were char acterized with more earnestness than usual, and the family retired to bed fully 'satisfied that the spirits did not always reveal the truth, Mrs. Isaacs was glad that none of the neighbors were present; but somehow the story got out, arid -so fearful were the spirit dames of N—, that they might be caught in the same trap which the deacon had set that spiritualism and its concomitant evils were driven entirely from the village. Forty Years Old. The ladywho has been described as the most graceful and charming woman in Eu rope was forty years old on the fifth of this month. She is not only distinguished for her personal attractions, but she sits- on the loftiest throne in the world, and is the reign ing queen of another world whose limit is as boundless as civilization. This lady, of course, is-the Empress Eugenie of France. With all her power she is powerless in the grasp of Time, Years accumulate, leaving on her handsome countenance theit ineffacable marks and queen as she is, she cannot wipe one from the score. By a caprice of taste she can set the female world in a flutter, but she cannot possess of the youth or the humblest of her worshipers. Poor • Empress ! Less fortunate than her obscure sisters, she can not even practice a little harmless deception in the matter of age. The world knew when she was born and, having been kind enough to remember the event, is now too cruel to forget. It is a question whether it is worth while to be a queen at such a penalty. In point of fact, terry years is not a great age 4 maiden of forty might properly be called an ancient maiden, but a monarch -at forty is young. Daniel Webster was forty when he made his celebrated speech in reply to 'Jayne, yet nearly all the greatness of his iife came after. We question, however, if the Empress will find consolation in•the stu dy of history. Hers was the reign of beau ty, the most imperious but evanescent Leign that mortal can aspire to- gain. The real life of beauty is generally compressed into ten fleeting years. After that, the Deluge. Impure Water. An exchange furnishes us with the fol lowing facts, which are of interest and im portance to every one:— , Set a pitcher of iced water in a room in habited, and in a few hours it will have absorbed from the room nearly all the res pired and perspired gases of the -room, the air of which will become purer, but the water of which is utterly filthy. This de pends on the fact that water has the faculty of condensing, and thereby absorbing all the gases, which it does without increasing its own bulk. The colder the water is, the greater is its capacity to contain a pint of )carbonic acid gas, and several pints of am mlnia. The capacity is nearly doubled by reducing, the temperature to that of ice Hence water kept in a room awhile, is al ways unfit for use, and should be always re newed, whether it becomes warm or not.— And for the same Teason, the water iu a pump-stock Erho ud all be pumped out iri the morning,'before any is used. That which has stood in the pitcher over night is net fit for coffee water in the morning Impure wa ter is more injurious to the health than im pure air, and every person should provide the means of obtaining fresh pure water for domestic use. GOD WILL NOT BE MOCKED —We have numerous instances on record, of the judg ment of the Almighty suddenly overtaking the wicked, giving practical illustration of the truth of His wind, which declares that "The wicked shall not live out half his days." An instance ethis kind occurred near our neighboring town of Catasaqua, last week.— A man named Miller, about three weeks ago, made an agreement - With some of his companions in vice to meet him at a certain place every Sunday, when he would admin ister to them the holy ordinance of Commu nion, giving them whiskey and crackers.-- This mock ceremony was perfumed every Sundiiy, but the hands which administered the mock emblems in derision, were ro, man gled by the premature discharge of a blast, last week, as to require amputation, He was also severely burned about the head— After two days of extreme suffering he went, to meet his insulted Creator.—Allentown R.T.ister. In passing down one of our back streets, a few .days ago, ye overheard a Colloquy be twoon a couple of , darkies, arid just iu time to hear'the following 'Now, look'er yer' Charlie, ilitn moot be an honest nigger, and then agin - he inoutent, but of I was a chicken, and knoWed dat he was about de yard, I tell you wot, nigger,. I'd roost high, I Woti!d. We were p , atisfied on tho point of Jim's honesty, and, therefore, pursued our .onward cuurbe DRRSSINO FOR CHURCH. Has anybody heard the belt! You have!—dear me, I know full well I'll never dress in time— For mercy's sake, come help me, Luce, I'll make my toilet very spruce, This silk is quite sublime! Here lace this gaiter for me—do; "A hole !" you say! pleague take the shoe, Please, Lucie, try and hide it-L. Just think, its Sunday, and, my soul, I cannot wear it with a hole! The - men - Will surely spy it. hey-'re-always4 • s' I 1 at our fi et, (Tho c ,l.6behtyneed'nt - peepi--- The "itay we hold our dresses!) I'll disappoint them though, to•aay, ."And cross myself," pray, did you say? • Don't laugh at my distresses! Now Lucie, pray Se el my waterfall, Do you think it largel ain't it too small? What bother these things give. My Rats and Mice, do set them straight? Please, hurry, Lucie, 1 know I'm late-, "There's Moses!" as I live, How splendidly the silk will rustle! (Please hand my "self-adjusting bustle," My eorset and my hoop.) There now, I'll take five skirts or six— Do hurry, Lucie, and help me fir, You know Lcannot stoop. "How shall 1 soy my prayers?" you say, As - if - girls - went to church to pray! How can you be so foolish? Here, dump this ribbon in cologne; "What for?" to paint you silly one! Now Lucie, don't be mulish. Now then, my hat—how he allors This thing—its big as all out doors— The frightful sugar scoup? Thank Heaven, my cloak is handsome, too, It cost enough to be, I know— (Straighten this horrid hoop.) My handkerchief and gloves you'll find Just in that drawer. Luce, are you blind? (Does my-dress trail?) It's all the fashion. now, you know, (Prey does the paint and powder show - Through my loose vain) Thank you my dear, I believe I'm dressed .The saints be praised! the day of rest Comes only once in seven. For, if on all the etlic•r six, • This trouble I should have to fix I'd never get to tienwtlr. A WORD FOIL WIVES -"Lit tie Ivives' if ever a half suppressed sigh finds place with you, or a half.unloving word escapes you to the husband whom you- love, let your heart go back to some tender words in those first love-days; remember how you luvcd him then, how tenderly he wooed you, how timidly you responded; and if you can feel that you have not grown unworthy, trust him for the same fond love now. It you do feel that through many cares and trials of life you have become less loveable and attractive than you then were, turn—by all that you love on earth, or hope for in heaven—turn back, and be the pattern of loveliness that 'won him; be the 'dear one' your attractions.made you then. Be the gentle, loving, winning maiden still; and doubt not, the lover you ad mired will live. forever in your husband.— Nestle by'his side, cling to his love, and let his confidence in you never fail; and my word for it, the husband will be dearer than the lover ever was. Above all things, do not forget the love he gave you first. Do not seek to 'emancipate' yourself—do not strive to unsex yourself, and become a Lucy Stone, or a Rev. 3Tiss Brown; bat love the higher honor ordained by our Saviour of old—that' . of a loving wire. A happy wife, a' blessed mother, can have no higher station, needs no greater honor." Jewels and precious stones are so closely imitated by the skill of the artist, that good judges are often unable to distinguish the one from the other; and the enviedpussessor of numerous , sparkling treasures may live and enjoy the honor bestowed upon her on account of them, and die in happy ignorance of the fact that all these were but counter feits of the real articles. But.it is scarce ev er the case that virtue can thus be imitated, and pass for any lengthy period in any other character than its true one, There are tan many who can judge correctly of the fruits that spring from the blossoms of a truly vir tuous life, to allow a long lease to a base rep. resen tation. LipE.—What is it? For durability it is like the morning cloud, the withering rose, the unsubstantial. shadow. It is like the grass " ‘ybielvto-day is, and to-morrow is cast into the oven." How frail and uncertain is human life! Its feeble light is quenched at all seasons and hours of the day: Bat frail and fleeting is it is, its results no mortal can estimate. It is the forming period of the soul's existence. We are being educated for eternity, forming characters which will be as imperishable as the throne of God itself. An invalid once sent for a physician, and after •detaining him for some tined with a de scription of his pains, aches, etc., -he thus summed up. "Now doctor, you have hum bu.red we too long with your good•for-noth• ing pills and worthless syrups; they don't touch the real difficulty. I wish you now to strike at the cause of my ailments, if it is in your power to reach it." "It shall bo done," said the' doctor at the same time lift ing his cane and demolishing a decanter of 'gin that stood on the side-board. --Why is a bald head like beay . en? . Be e:awe there is no parting there. Literary Varieties If you have much; give of your *goods. ' If you have:little, give.of your' heart. Our virtue is, resignation. Our fortune, the contempt of riches. Our happiness, the hope of another life. !distrust your wife when you want to keep a secret. Miiirust a rascally' beggav when you' have money. The greatest king has never carried any thing but d winding sheet out of the World Put not our trust in fortune, nor in wo- meorput-your-trust-in-fllln-who. ,One rarely repents of having kept silence, one often repents of having spoken. To pardon insult is to march along the high road to contempt. I believe the best things are not equal to their fame. Wanted, the reuiPt which is given when a gentleman 'pays his respects. .When may two people be said to be half witted? When they have an understanding between them. We once knew a young fellow who fanci ed he was a jackass. The beauts ofit was; he-wasn't-mistaken— Heaven drops little fragments of itself hore and there along our way, by way of assurance that heaven and love are one. Men are like money and are made, some of gold, others of silver; the great majority of popper. Accept none . of them for mote than they are really worth. The first institution vouchsafed to our race was the sabiatb; the next, marriage. So give your first thought to heaven, the next to your wife. Explanations are bad . things, You best preserve your dignity by avoiding them,— The character which cannot defend is not worth defending. The Rebels' Tactics ,The Madle (Al.) Register: has placed at the head of its columns the name of GOD.. oral Robert E. Lee as the State Rights candidate for the Presidency in ISGS.— The Memphis Argus thinks the time has not yet come to propose the name of Gen, Lee for this high office. It says: "Surely they are 'no good or true friends of this grand old man, who, in the present posture of affairs, would drag his great rnme into the filthy arena of party strife. Not till a new anti better spirit shall prevail in the politics of this country, and the country shall call for its best men to stand and serve in hi g h places, will it no possible or appropri ate to dignify the Presidential chair with a second, and 'greater than Washington.' If, in the approaching political struggles it be comes necessary or advisable, or proper, to designate some Conservative candidate for the Presidency in ISGS, in our opinion he— our present leader, the great statesman of Tennessee—is the man." That is, "great and good" men not being wanted the Argil)? nominates Johnson. What a compliment! They want Lee, but think Johnson is."next best " How TO DETERMINE WHERE WATER IS; —At a recent meeting of the American In stitute Farmer's club, a member related his experience in this matter as follows: An Irishman in his employment, in order to ascertain where he ought to dig to obtain water. soonest, got a stone and buried it over night in the ground, next to the hard pan In the morning he found it quite moist, but not "sufficiently to suit his fancy. Next night he tried it in another spot and it was found very wet on the following morning— 'There,' said Patrick, 'you will find water not many feet deep, and plchty of it' Sire e nough, in a few days digging, Patrick con firmed his prediction, notwithstanding the jeers of the workmen, finding a vein which filled the well to overflowing, and rendered it exceedingly difficult to bail out the water so as to put stone in it. The philosophy of the operation seems to 'be that, as great e vaporation takes place from the surface of the earth during the night, the water rises up from the depths below to supply the loss, and accumulates in the vicinity of the stone, often quite a puddle. CERTAIN CURE.—TiIe juice of the sheep sorrel presied, and exposed on a pewter plate, in the sun, until somewhat jellied.— Apply it on the skin over and around the cancer, the application to be continued until the cancer and its roots loosen atut drop out, which will be is the course of three or four days. .The ingredients of which the pewter is composed, combinino• r' with the acid of the plant, arc believed to be important in the compound." The leaves of the sheep sorrel are what botanists call sagittare, which is resembling in shape the head ofan arrow.— The writer also states that he cured his corns, by an application of the leaves of the sheep sorrel to them, which, in a few hours soften them so much that they could be pealed off, and a cure-effected. A Proiost Marshal writes: The following inciient happened in our office the other day. One of the provost guard brought a oolored man into the office charged 41 stealing wa ter-melons. The charge was proved, and I sentenced him for ten days in the provost guard-house. 7 As he was be ng led away, I said to him: "I hope, Tom, that I may never see' you here again." . Ire turned to me with a peculiarly shrewd expression and, said: "YoW'would'ut he seed me dis time, Cap'o; if de sogeri haan't.a fetch me.". ''''ittth.cito spar 'Veatat• . Hots" To KM* . A filciotii;:---"Mother, mother I" cried a young rook, returning.bur riedly from its first flight, "I'm so frighten ? ed ! I've seen sach'a sight!" "What sight, my son ?" asked the old rook. ' • "0 ! white crestures, screaming and tun ing', rind- straltiiiielteir - mid holding their heads ever so high. See, mother, there they go l" , •.; "Geese, my son—merely geese," calmly replied the, parent bird, looking over the ecinmOL '"Through life,"child; observe that when you'meet Anyone who makes a great fuss about himself, and tries to lift his- head higher than the rest of the world, you may set him down at - once as a goose." les_trat PROMPT AND PUNOENT.—A. benevo era lady.was once threading her way at oitAt through a back street of Philadeil,bia on an errand of charity. A rude fellow accosted her with the' im - pertinent question "Where, are you going?. Her ready reply was "'lb ETE . IIIIITY, sir; just where you, are Awing," Ho got more truth than ho bargained for, and, caried away a heavy shot in his consci ence. A white man in St. Louis became enraged at a negro, the other day, and was aboitt to strike him with a brickbat, when the colored man fell back on reserved rights. "Look dolt — yon me with dat ar' rock =don't you do it, sar. I'd have you know dat when you strike me you strikes a Bureau!" A lady, a regular shopper who had made an unfortunate clerk tumble over all the stockings in the store, objected that none were long enough. "I want," she said, "the longest hose that are made." • "Then madame ) " was the reply, "you had better apply to the , neat eoginehoupe, One of our city urchins, hearing his father read an article in the paper 'in relation. to a new invention of brioks made of glass, said: "Glass bricks! I know what them is." "What are they?" enquired one of the • family. "Tumblers 'of lignor," shouted the 'ju venile. ' • A Pnor.Lum.—Mr. Johnson in his 'recent speech to a bevy of department clerks c ing them "soldiers and sailors" ascii th,: pronoun my 15 times;' we 38 times times, and he, referring to A. Johnson, 11 times. If our worthy Piesident.refers to himself one hundred and sixty-two time r s in speak ing twenty minutes, may it not be said that Mr. Johnson's eloquence and worth ' are all in his I ?-ISuncluslcy . A GOOD IDEA.—The ,following notier is posted conspicuously in a publicati,,n lii down East : "Shut'this dont; MAWS 90011 VI.II done talking on business, serve your r' ii' the same way." Bores would not ao a slow thing to cu this out and paste it inside of their 1.11.0 Ra. Skedaddlers, who ignominiously left their country in her hour of need and went sinto the British Provinces to escape duty, arm now'called upon to pay a tax of Aire.) hun dred dollars to the crown and bccomt , liabie to military duty if they do u. , t is Lye LIR!' cuu. try. WEy does • water boil s ,, rmer in on saucepan than a new one? Pan,2ll upon himself to answer this tion by saying, it's bee/u.e to it. One•of the lady teachers in the Industriai School at Petersburg, Va., was recently tioning, her pupils from 'Scripture„ and ask ed: 'Who died for you?"' • To which a little fellow shouted in reply, "Abraham Lincoln." "isn't it pleasant to be surrounded by such a crowd of ladies r.' said a pretty wo man to a popular lecturer. "Yes," said he, "but it would be pleasanter to be surroun ded by one." G. Hosaphat bas a plan for raying "IT clic National debt. Ills plan is to convert the entire indebtedness into greenbacks, a n d keep thorn in circulation , till they naturally wear out: A poet, speaking of the moon, said . : She laid her cheek upon a cloud•, like a beauty on a young man's bosom. Oh! We must pass•thrOugh this worlci to un lock• the mysteries of the next, and it is only in the next that we can find a key to untock the mysteries of life. GOOD REASON.—We do not hesitate to say that the reason Andrew J, does not meet the . expeetktion of the party that elected him is that he is not .. 1 11;e L, A widow out West married a man to whom she refuged her daughter, because, she said. her first husband was an tlgly 'critter, and she had learned . to manage such cattle.— Kind considerate mother. "General" Hays, n rreoastrueted and spe cially•pardoned rebel, halheen elected sherif of New-• Orleans on the State 'tights tick et, , - • The fellow *lie not intoseiated with de tight, has been turned out or the , temperance ,society. ' The woman who was 'buried iti grief' 4 now alive and doiug It , was a ease of pretnaeure iu'erar_mt. 111UMBE1t 60
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers