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I '', • : .t , ' ..)%4.X , V.,- , •. . , , , "I.s '13,... , ');:0' i. , 4 , ?i ; . 11 r - ' .., l i r4 i' :- ~. : -.7..ita-"i::' ...,:):j1. , ) .f...114 .- } (felt - ftcrl !voocrst , )ild) crt en; - -ItZ: ail S:4 91i i:10601.! .41pAi p try Al• t'• "5 tlePt!,)i,io:slLl:o j el i ti a • . 5: :I rio`m ,ki..,1, 'VOLUME xtv l, G - L • AN 11 S.UNNaI BODDY, GEORGE STOVER HO RETURNED FROM PATLADEL PIIIA WI II A SUPPLY_ OF Hy GOODS, NOTIONS, QUEENSIITIIR GROCERIES, Ittir To whieh lie invites the 'attention of of his patrons an the ptiblie generally. March SO, 1566. AMERICAN LIFE INSURANCE AND TRUST CO, Corner Fourth and Walnut Streets, Philadelphia Incorporated 1850. Charter Perpetual. Author ized Capital, $500,000. Paid Up Capital, $250,000 Philadelphia, Feb. 4, 1864. The Trustees have this day declared a Dividend of FIFTY PER CENT, on all premiums received upon Wryer. Foments during the year ending De cember 31st, 1863, 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 issued during that' year to be paid, as the annual premiums on said Policies are received. - OFFICERS. President—Alexander Whilldin. &cram' and Treasurer—John S. Sir align.. Achstrry—Jahri C. Sites. , BOARD OF TRUSTooS.—Alexander *hill. di nt , J. Edgai Thomson, Gyorge Nugent, Hon. Jas. Pollock. Albert C. Roberts, P. B. Mingle, Samuel • Work. Willirim J. lioiVard, Hon. Joseph.Mlison, 'Simnel T. Bodine, John Aiknoni•Charles F. Heaz- Mt, Isaac Hazlehurst. • 0.• Wm. 0. Rate. Chambersburg • Pa., is the general Agent of the American Life Insurance__ and Trust Company fur Franklin Co'. Joe. Pot.risuas, Agent for Waynesboro' and vicin ity. RCr'ERI NOES.---Joao PITIL/PS and Viritusu n • Buo7nicar.m. Call and get a pamphlet. JCS. 1)017G1..A5, Agent. - - Oct. 18, 1865, ly EAGLE HOTEL. Central Square, 33Iageratcnin, Md T"'above well•known ,and established Hotel bus been re-opened, and entirely renovated,..ll the undersigned, and now offers to,the public:every comfort and attraction found in the st•hotele.— I'llE T-AB.LE is bountifully supplied, with every delleaci-thi'Maiket will afford, 111 E SALOON captains the choicest liquors, and is constantly and '5 kilt uI ly aitended. THE STA BLE is' thoroughly ,ropairod,' and oieful.*Ostlers always icidy to .ae ^comintidiste customeni:', ' '.. • , ".; ' s" ' •JOileN lfotristorra, June 2' 7 it. ."•• * " ID MILLERS ANDMIU. - . C I'llE, ittulerignetl ,(Miller at .1, Carliiip s Miigte, il — e - PF W. o .YlRFatioz...il%) - '..has the right- for.-F:lanlitia • 'citainiyi-atat tti p . itipased inetil#tarta; put 7n!on1"*", Annular GA:01- 7 - auri: Droie draft, without quarta ',TO/ Dia4Caitaellisrriild - „giiiiil 'nine thipy„*'::one: half loafer with the aame.Raiii'Uf 'wafer; eipa4. , ial and '66le freer. Make belie! cur and , mazy rot' paiticularavall - on7the aubmaiihaf: 4uni W. J. GA TAF,IrtAlt 41. • I 4 1 ,';'.1 ~, 111= !MICM • .• ,;„ ,Ir „ t - " • /147, 4 ,,,,_ - : - IM= ,-. There'll not,utcheaper,thing isia : Aart L 1 t • Nor ,yet one half so 't. • - J • • 'Tis worth Marrs than distinguishis birth,:• . ' • Or thousands gainefl'a • • . • it lends the 'day delighti)• 'Tis Virtue's firmest snield; •' - And - adds niorellnauty to the night Than itirthe Atilt can yield.' • kmaketh poverty content, —-• • 17 ;r, To sorrow, whispers pence; • • It is a gift from heaven. sent . For mortals to increase. It meets you with mit:tile at mini - • - - It tells you to repose; A flower for peer and peasant-born An everlasting rose: =MEI A. THRILLING ADVENTURE - We question whether-hi the history. of ,bair-breath escapes . a par:Mato the can be found. The story was told ,to. u;byan old and valued friend, now residing in the country, but whose early days, were spent near the scene of the tragic a dventure recorded here. , We "give the story as it was to us in the words of the hero. . It was about the year . 1805, that I Fettledte in Yirgiuis, near thisP4ls of Kanawha' „ Tho country at, that time, pas au unbroken wiltint• !less. ,Bgt few tiettlernents had been,..puide by the whites, and they , were so far tiktrt as to render vain all of assistanceiia ease of an attack from the ,hostile ,Ind4os, numbers of whom still infested the . immedi ate neighborhood. -. . I lived there alone with my wife for'sever al months unmolested, and by dint of per severance, then young and hardy, had „suc ceeded in makivg quite a clearing. itf: the forest,. which I planted. in :pont, - and prOm ised anabundant yield._ . . . . Ono morning after lid lad dispatched,our humble meal .. sea had just' prepared . to„veli:- Lure forth upon ; nty,,accusiotned routine,- my . aitection was arrested kiy:tlitioiti i k,.)lag :4-, T4 oess•bell 'in t1ie.:enf0i3,h1„,',, , „:..:', - -. ~;„--- ,' . t‘T - b*c 4 ), l' — irdu:;-M o r- ;Ville, ''! - the field. ) ; ' , ...,' • • , . Bat the oar of al;acliuroodsmun becomes very acute, especially - .so frotu,:the 'feet that his safety Often4epeOds upon tho nice cul tivation of that sense.. I was not so easily decciied. 'I • listened. The sotiiid` - was a gain repeated,' ., .-- "That noise," ti.:id I ic "reply to riiy wife's' Irejnark, *.wits not the tiuklingof a boll up-, AD -09'Retik of, a cow , but a decoy from - some li.oiii!inAikif . o wisheS to, draw we•iato atn-. , •,.;: 13elievingth4 to be't - ho - case, I tools "Mie',: f iildnausket,;tnad sening_that_it --wee lisiit.- Oily)tiadeid;T. iii?le,` cautiously around . _ the field tewaide..oo-spot horn which. the- Boned ,. _ • -Stoceded. : - '.r , ",-,—,-.--...-.., - • --Aitimapected ) there; in:a clitbpfylntsfacs crouished An'iodtan; *ailing Itik;nitti . .. hi, raft pear in. ausiro lo‘ his deteoy44l - ;f": l 43itt: ,lie" ,aught - eod,thie.fatarliiillet to i heart': "I' • - . ; • „ • . elcierW*Pa!bizt* u :.,5111:\ 41: 41;14/ rre., - , - 1 V-• 3, • c'11 , 41...1L ' 1 0, -17.i . rtsiVi44.1_111 4 8:11nRip Lir e ltlin • . • . HOMING - - ' - , . L • :4444 - :-" r , :: ":. --_r . 4_ . " 2." t i O l ON f trrt : -'l"i ls 7; LiA ti PRMAY ;'.loo6iikeixigtet.idoeir:,.sJ „; ..; • • i-vy;• •••=. (I tiz GOOD 71111PEL A charm to banish grief away, ". ,; • To snatch from brow the care; • ...• Turns tears to smiles, makes dullness, gay, Spreads glatlncss.everyvvhere; And yet 'tls cheap es•itimmer den , 7' That gems the lily's breast; A talisman for love, as true As ever man possessed. As smiles the rain bow thro' the cloud., When threaening storm begins— Ass music 'mid the tempest loud, That still its sweet way wins- 7 As spans. an arch across the tide • Where waves, conflicting, form, So comes this seraph to our side, This angel to our Immo.. What may this vvondr t nii spirit be, With power unheard before— , This charm. this bi;ght divinity Good Temper—nothing more. Good Temper--'tis the choicest gift That woman homeward brings, And can the poorest peasant lift , To bliss Unknown to kings. THE SONO OF TIIE SORROWFUL. 1:1=M!I BY ANDREW DOWNINO I em aall:and I OM lonely, O'er.the long lone path I tread Made and datknesti hover 'on . lY--- Oh; Twould that I were dead ! For the clouds will ne'r be riven, Nor the darkness disappear. Nor the calm blue fields of Heaven Brightly bend over'nte here. All the world is dark and dreary, • Life a toilsome march at best, ' And my sad heart, worn and Weary, • Sighs f.r peace and longs foir "rest ! Hope and joy hove fled forever-- ' Love lies low; With bleeding wing, By my pathway never, never, Pleasure's wild flawers tsril upspring Oh ! the past was and pleasant, But the future cannot be, And the waters of the present Lave the vale of misery-I All around is darkness only-- Ail around the path I tread; I ain sad, and I am lonely, Oh, I would that I were dead IVE X IS C2MMaiaILZIT trig' t.O if , tilt" :dead; ey but inight ,ba imy cabin, and having..firuilibarikaifilg,.f.he door`'" l'arittah ajr ffebi theftrik Of the Indian - 'I lied` klliiid.' 2 • "Toliiid 'tll4'• • eifaiaii 'bialpleistielii ictii, Situation; I hid but tilde ttift." : ' If atificteil 'bi:1110.11i• ben, r 0 - oWer.' Dateiiiined to ao the' best with vliat~ 'had, pnitied out the' lalit'..tinrei iitiyow 'au& out ii into the' iiiiislint;" and then , irnitia l .for `the apPrOttiiii atikcile';',", " ILL ' :ii4ll`t night : fairoka. ;greatly, *bald' tholiebi •niefeinents the - OnemY;iii they b • - . -It' 'iiras some" two hoar/ 'aftei Mi d yret:J•had iicithet beard nor scan sign of the Indians;' whin suktpilyl - Was Startjet by the baying of ink 'dog at, ,the stable , knew that Abi s indiatil;wiire ,confing, ; . The stabte stood cab id; star. bsi•Wen - e lice,el4i; 'a patchit clean ed •grOund'Ufoti Inn moon fell unobStriiellit:' JudAingliiiiii • the 'noise at the stable tbat , ..they would alliance from that direction I posted mylisilf-nt ' , the port-hole on that.side of tlits cabia. 3 l- 1 I had•previonsly , placed my. wife cbli the 'crass pole in the!chitnney inthaviik °sae our enemies effected titi entrance into our' cabin, she might climb out through the low ebiin ney, and effect her escape: , For myself, I entertained no hope, but determined not to he'takin•alive, and to sellikylife as dearly as possible. . With breathless anxiety I watched at-the tort-hole, - At - length .I saw. men •eitierge from the shadow of the; eta:tile,. and adOtince .across the open ground 'toward my cabin:l-- One—two,threegreat heavens! . six %stal wart Indians armed:to the teeth, and Urged on by the hope of revenge; and I alone to oppose them with one charge of 'powder.-L-- My ease was desperate indeed.—W ith /nick and steady step in close single file, they' ap. .proached and were already *ithin a kW . - It - the how-- of - the house, when a slight movement 'Of -the .forward Indian change- the position of the . six,:so that a portion of the lelt side of each ;uncovered. They were in range,• and my aim would cover alt. • Quick as thought:l aimed and fired. As the smoke cleared a• •way, I could hardly credit what my:owti-sent .sex showed me as the result • of my- shot.- The fifteen slugs which I had loaded ' the .musket had done their work well; five of the Six Indians lay dead upon the grotind, and the sixth had disappeared. Although no enemy was now in sight. I did novventure.forthuntil morning. There lay the bodies of the five Indians; undisturb ed, together with the rifle of "the- , ether— Securin.,the arms and•uminunftien of: the ialtea Indians; I followed up the trail of-the missing one, until-it reached the river,' bh. lend which peitit-I could discover ho trail yi poi" whatever. From the arhount of blood-which marked his trial s :together with"' the unmis takable evidence that he bad picked his Way with diffieulty,.l -was ledlo believe' that :he waslaortally wounded-. and in order to pile ven t his body fulling 'into the , hands of his white foes, he had groped his-way to the:riv er and thrown himself into the eurrent'which had borne it away. • rr_ • The Indians had killed my cow, and that you may ho assured was no trifling loss, yet in my gratitude Tor my escape from the mer ciless savages, I would have 'been entirely willing to have' made greater saetitices. I was provided thus with arms and aremuni: tion 'taken. from the six Indittni,. in ease of a second attack; . but .this, fortunately ; proved to be my laSt adventure with. the savages; ' • Not one of the band' hall escaped . 'tell the talc and incite' his brethern to:revenge the death v.( his comrades. ' •dAhr:exelainted_the old mufti while the tears stood in his eyes,- at ";the memory of that eventful night, "that was glorious' shot—the ,best shot i ever made" The hero of this {adventure lived to see thornde where Ate bad pitched his 'lonely•cabin, transfer-ted into smiling Gelds, cud peopled with hfirdy and onterpri ,sing;.pide-faces, among whom hie last days were.pissed in peace and plentyyundisturb ed by his old foes, but, he don't tell tE wheth. er his wife ever came from-out 'the' chimney, or how he disposed of-tho five Indians. • - He had 14m„4'here• A traveler onecrarrtted:at a villuge inn af ter a hard day's navel, and being very. tired, requested a room to sleep in, but the land- lord said alley were entirely lull, and' that it was utteily impossible to accommodate him; that his wife had to sleep on the sofa and himself tt . ,the floors but he'wOuld see what bis wife could , it - • for — hint' . The poi wo• ':', 9 13 hpisap4cilies s , room' which lip might: occupy, pro v ided ho ivotild lli agree toe conditions, viz :.to enter Iliti'rciom late . in'thOlarleand kayo it early so itiwmorilitig, to `prev ent scandal, as the i.e . oitiNiiis'occupiaby.a lady. 'This' he 'a greed tO`do: About', o;4i:o'clock in'the' morn-, ing nn awful noise was heard in the [rouse, and'our thc - traveler was heard'lnni . - Wing heels over head downstairs. • The land= lord, oii arriving at the:sPot,' itirynieel what thp•niatter,witt; the teaveler • tkru!aic.4. as soon as he wasahle. to spei k.,„ ."oh, Lord ! that , , • „ 1 , 4 1 know that,!! r4lied the, faudierd;' , "bUt bow . „ . . . _ t)g ' 'Nevei'iiiist a niciti ffni -iltfq6liinien'oci of bilin * *4ols , 6l,l notcii6ioi;Annvir silo tiuhro• aireatioi-tO .8 than 7)f aftinfidA:it. conOtan t aceupit on pre%'O'nt's • ' -•:,--..•-•-..- -, I'v:''.- ... , 4, :, "f ':,...---,--• •., 4-c: ' .. :f-, '''. 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' - -..- ~ '' '.. hi l l. , ifiyt I.li Avlk i s at . .0 11 " 17 rhilir' ,:,.),)Pl iatS '. It c i,V t"l O l O 6 " 1-"1 6 11..9t i g 1 g :A-;rtn.o -4T3 e"; , t i l 'ThompAr. Cf . 4,04.,s ie4.l73Outtuitia lipi• point:4lo invA l figefb:. -4, ?.bfilitSifreolii4etted tWinli to. -,meimmict,ipki tiid ,masa4eren, writ m l / 4 ,made tol.the Hells - ok.tlip' tltlilitt..' It itt 'Signal:ll:o%les' "livisl i Vishbliiiilol4lll.•• ilioiii;nndltinoilit f Penus.yfirithift , .. , trhip. eother•instabeivißoOesentatiltg shask!in, ,pf Kentnelr„y;;Flifiseving. , Tkey,osty„ - ithit. out. break of the.disturbanee 'resulted fililit olillit3i :140;43atirdiOnine policemen aod,discharged FRl l3 t94A o hli! i lk-r a I w PA. #q i k' il- -40 as i 4 3 T0ort ter au organized htiittbidiYdy Ma.. in ' ore' et thicitiolefild-'-_foiloArfildelophis, ' re ' &Miss". eV age): - tex.oi cohditilin; %sped by Alte teachings of the 'press, And led on by siidiii iffrieere of the .lacy Composing . the. city govirninentAlki others: , Thct l , whole r je . yi. lienoe' disolcies i lhe i 4gling,pr f ul9ti„. women autt childrentbc,innopent,unarinedand do. 1 leneeleSii;ipleaditnelofitheii-llireil-aidhiying -for mercy; the wounding, beating antrmal= ,treating of still greater ~numbers; burning, , Pillaging ina . robbingithe consuming et dead 'toddies m 'di flames;• tile tburbing of liwell ingstandLettenips ~to burn, up ,wbole. fau* Attism , thelk,h6l3)*,,,andAp brulal and re:- vetting , ra,tisitlnis Of ,defencelese OW terror' :stricken Wi#Y1 0 .4.7; . fn`;'; ,:,,...:' ;Ll: ' t. l'ho;teport`gives...a oiroureetantiar, tio l bunt -of . the . •aoixtiken'e'eilieki Ca' dill 'diffienitiei, .the feu &al 'or ail - distaff:6llo6S; Shooting idgriici, ibitital intardek-whit. , the.riotwil4 the ~cowa rdice of Ah o tienbi linrning„ of ~thet,.Pueoln , chapel; aikd Idler, reptgyes pf , ilia mob. and; recapit ulitivi 'the iiiiixtb4 cif . 61'Siiit'fieritt?tit3 killed and- Wkitef ti*Wititteded. 75; men rt .. colored. - Wiiilleti, 5t Maltreated. IO; . robberies, 100; hoiises - and • cabiilifllittrned, 911 'ettintiSlicil; 4;'-sch - oel . hansee, 12;,lialue' of property destroyed ; 8,L30,000. . 2 1. ; ' 'The-cummittee say, in, their getieral.onw• cluSioad. tkat frorO-the testimony - tilkoitttlite personal ebSerVitieif-ratid from What 'they could learn io rogardlck the, state of feeling in Memphis, and indeed through that ebtire Section of the.courlfry. they are of Opinion that there is buts little loyalty to the,Govertr. Meat and flag. The,fitate of things, in the city of Memphis* very tripoli now as it was before the. bruakini; out of the re1.411160.' . , A - Thirty - Years' Mystery'.4neared Over ,thirty years ago thpre was consider= able excitement iu Cecil. eoup , ry,,'6l.aryt4ra on account of - the su *widow lady; named Patty, Petit ? who.reiri. ,derl atio.at.keur from Filkton. 'S,.lre was last seen'goirig into a thicket' neat. hirlOirse, *bee fwo Men hadjust . Passed.:Aill , search for. hot was •fruitless.:::After, a !.reasonahle. !time had:elapsed let ters of, admiaist ration ; ea her ofteets, were issued, Onditi settling up the estate the adrainiatratiar *at; 'unable to find' a 'note draWn 14 one of the men who had heti seen•tO 0 into the :thicket. The note, wai;, known-to haae been in . her, pussessioq short tirqrbefore her disappearaee. , This arous ed the suspicions otsomethe people, rind the : tion men were; errested:„ . but nothing epuld 'be , proved against them ,tha they were dis charged. ..Znutuber 6f years ago one of the snippet: ed parties died, and last week it is.reportecl that the other, being very,ill,,sent fora nilu. ister, to whole lie made. a free cOnfessiod— Accordii*te. popular rumor, the confessi6n was to the effect that he, with the other par th'sen t 'to. Mrs. Polk' to,meet ; amp , ina cer tain plaint, where they would, poy the money .on the notes, and they thin failed to meet her, that they saw her on her Way home, and ,ktroirihg that she would pass. throtigh•tho thieket, they went into it andlaid in ambush, nbd as Soon as -she -appeared- one_ knocked her:. On thoberid . .with ii stiekof her.- 'Piet they r tlien placed her belyta the midst of a: wood i tit)e,";where , , they ratonded to let-it i ,Temain t : but it. heeepai,ng, np.Taus, they went to the pile with a,,ftex,J6,rcuAte the body, and :feund that tfiat,thodcfg i of,tlys deceased had„thken his r. la cie ,to e ' 'Ore the corpse, and they were, eempOle'fl 'to kill him before they could get the bedy,otid chat,' , after succeedirtg*,, t.l !ck y carried it in.the he,x to where the Philadelphia, WilniingtOriiind Baltimore Railroad was being built, tied ptn ced•3it in the embankment, liiii`also stated that as soon as. the man had mado,this disclosure he commeneed to improio and that4e,is now in ufair t way of recovery. , ••• A drunitcn, - .Dutehman, Was„ recently at. restmLby a saloon keeper and suml,for,.‘un- Paid driukel Ile scorned the ti4vied of counsel, or assistance-of attortnays,, r nna livered himself for the ,edification' Of '. - the Court of the following ingenious plea:, , , . "iiay it.please you 'honor! , borrow is the first principle of nature. ~.Dees' not the river borrow from the brook, and the ocean from the river? Does not the cloud borrow from the air, and the earth fr om the clouds? , Does not the moon borrow her- light , feral f :nd ; the moon?' Was not: wad • taken from :the earth. and his Thai' borrowed4rom hitraide? Since, then, all eature 'his established- this grand system of-Universal credit, why should not man, made in • the intagS 'of crai have a 'natural claim bn . the credit system? r; And Abaco the mighty ocean is not ashamed to liti:row . of the puny river, why, then, sbetald note lean.`biitunter' •hrorrotv from 'a' fat bar. keeper? Now, you honor knows the , ,feeble• lighted mostaPrittver returns the , bairowed light to the attar; ' wirjo hould..l4oer beerdrinker pay -6 - :riah:-beerseilil?, ,-, 112:.13 . mintrary to natural law,lirtia , zin•tibsurdity,i , -.. Dut - what :loot the - river do when - it - has bor. rowpil-toe witeli from the baoluvandltreiiins? It' 'runs`. wiy:' 'Nature, then r hatise o iiiihtuple. • _LaitilE follcior - a talon kawaylf d bake' sheriff C,ouki (retell *M. aqd:rwaioist eit'roliot;)Yl'tid likat wuy.-Fto,'lgot atiaktiltpsut:Ol3 - ' - • - - 'on to r.q:4)13 ; , .."1.6).PyT1:1 , I k AM.V9. I -4'llt a r.; its 11 , I.lk 1.1 , 4' - ;:-: 06.5 li oil A Iheisivi, RRTouT.—Thercista. magis trate,in a town in Tatliana named Hester.— A clergyman in the same place was. called upon by a young couple , not lung since, who of matrimony. asked ;the bridegroom, (it soldior:by the. way) for his marriage liouose The man in blue responded by sayiog ti.at be had been cagligeti • ta ttio 'tor four years, nod thouglitrthat, would do. ' The eler gyma n thought.out, and remarked as the speediest way to obtain a license.— "You had better take your girl and go to • . . . eon go Jo, . youreclir, ret orted •; .yeteroo, I Apii. he bride ,by eke' ,'he iilggeft ' her from ; tile" ho trio:. • • sion'de iihat , outliner .of; a profane mioistet,he bad • A . :beautiful: i t houqb t . -suggested in 'tile, ..KorAd—WAngets, •in the .grayeiy %nes bast bee be h ead t he ew:m, uf „wealth !ti,nu . bast' bitt, ;;;liii, wiUkt: lig 4' thee to ti , 4litianioniltlitoblest:P ' • • - . , - 4 61'4 Yitf 3;,, Skettill , i 01Si 1.1:a , a-templameatfed tortbahanda,oftiien,: OFidihgt•Tu.ith t4cl.4i*,klP?itCPCl 42 :itSf teat pain. T 'h e streams 14pon it ; toe' tid`ofnittifil W 6161 - fill fititadirrboils'agkiifs nitro inCiiit IF 40611 ' I returned, and lo S the temple was. - oao j 1, ..1tp - high walls lay in seAttered ruins; tSEl r ittitt f iVird ilitir . 4 7 -and : 1 !Eli 'Midnight:how.; the .oxirsiong 'cry -added:, to , the deep 501it . 40, 7 -4bek., young .and gay f j „Fla .reveled t . ll2fe n had tiaaa . ed.awey. , , sa w ifi te i 'ciP4 i:ejpre,7 ;$9,001-4ple . J491.„ .. p r it j 6,ther, 64 - sitik pride `.0f,1&3" haepliidlEd . tieliii.hil, Trembling, %Oh_ . 1 itgind - ,:lbe lait lii l getiOralion, a . stranger.' raids theci%eiMl4letur - .76 a'optro.t.o,, - '" not) • . P 4 1 0104 :WIR1 1 ; e ' • 4,- Jef 4 ! filen 'tno s 'iniorp- Aniptarn ORmn,kon.ina'hin an 4 -,l4,fillatt . llaVe dOated . hll,-t1404 I . ..of(pi(rtib .. pui.Tecd the sua ' .v,10164. - :,the :ninon !!..i • 1?lolid. 7 .: 3••7lin,,ii4ien he 'i3V4ll Win rbllOd heavens nod ektika,*ty 'as a idiot]; - du* an`"tiOger 'fl l 4ai the •tiitutia,B4 . I,ol' 014, ai2a with foot ! Ben 4 liiti'olliim'isioolll,7lili liis L :.1.„ (.• - •st it 'hind • owar eVen,.aug,,slyear s ntor- I . ifik), Time 1,1 1 , Tin - 1 43,03'5, b4t no liknetr, ' ' ' iktkie slAiiiiic'ilififf,i4444 R 4, laying bold 1 ;et bftii . as_ paclsiii • ly l„i tie 14‘4 . 46 . 041 1 1 31130 .0Li1iqi and sp . tt(4li! 4 4.,flittt plss - bcecie4s„4 bar yen woerough t0d09,0 1• 4 14 . 9fe . rolls on Tepidly, itiki#4„,„ifiu for your coratiof toiclirdi If ybu_Wduld ta.happy,loun.tpust e'st-"T Nfn more varliel li ticrgold si ver. Ot!asto "each I'ntoiee'E as it flies, §fdlidiVlizi doing I good." • _ • • • trleasant.Homes. The ; homes of America. will not:' become. .what they should benntil a,true l 'idea' .of life shall be:iome wife; Widely, iisplatitdd.. the, woithir6f 'didlar does more degfade 'Aiiterietut lrometi , than all. else: ,- the Chief' lififiaTttiWher 4ottntitir 4dst Itvhich flange typiCtrire upon- the. putethasertowers - for :the yard,„ hodit for ~ t hc, , eager !hand of.' Thildlitiftp •Is this thd whololof human life? th'ett Itlen* mean; 'meagre; 'lliad' mast node-. eirablelfictig l ' 'A go 'forth . from it' g litt to find free 'sir! and twider - pasture.s. The infittenbe cif tirtebia.-home nport•ititn: after life, will be nothing good. .Thousands arc rushing from finites like theSe eiterjtjear. .They crowd into cities,' they crowd intoivil• [ loges. They swarm into all places where life. Is clothed with a higlrer , Significance, and the old shell or' home is deeetted' bq every 'bird its soon as it can fly: Aneeitral homeetedds. and patrimonial acres have. no Aaeredness; and when the father. and mother die, the stranger's money .and. the. stranger's presence ohliteratirassosiutions.that should, be among the wort sacred , of all things. , , , . . I would have yon•build up . for 3roprseives and for your children, a home that will never be lightly parted with—a home which will be 'to all, whose lives have been ..aspociated with it the. moss interesting,. precious, , spot. on earth.. ,11; would have Aim boron the. *;:te of d ign ity,•b illy, : grace Joys; .ge tp feilo *ship, and happy associations, _Out from •buck a home 1 would have good influence:, flow into 'neighborhoods. In such a home I Would see ambition, taking root, and receiving gono!ous culture And then I woulksee you. 49,nng husbands 'and you' young. Wives liviCliapp l it,! Do not defiriVe yourselves of such infltionces is. Will coma through an institution like this. -No money can pay you i for , such, a depriSe tion.:. No circumstances but those of, utter' _poverty can' justify you in 'denying these influences to your chiltlken.-17laosib. • A young man in England having enter tained a tender passion.for. a young woman felt Stub insurmountable diffidence as to pro-, Vent his ever disclosing the same to the fair empress , tif his hoort,,and:resolved on an ex •pedient which would bring the business, to an issue. lie went to the clergyman and_re quested 'that the bans of marriage migh t he published according to law. When the pub lication,lvas brought:to . her ears, sto was,till ed with Ustonishment, and went'tO giro to, vent lief retiontmedt. Ho'hoto the sally with , tortitnde,.observing that if she did not think proper, to . have him, - she could gu to the clergyman : end forbitl,,,tbo bans. .After a niument'os pause, she took 'wit in her anger, and,' Said, "As it has been *klone, it is a Pity, that the shilling should bo thrown away. • • ..i. Oldl Boge•was a wi'vorly old fallow,llulho Mid agaurnulo,ted; i r e,a't woilth ,tiyltte: t iiiti : i ptititilgistawito-itiie.eo4:# i i,oo. l : ; bave t.O, A . .,.404.fialat6sw.1 Old loge ivasqineikilt .ca __ ___ phy-tta.t...dattt.whia,h , .:4ol...rraust .P n il i n . Vhi° ll fsP'li4, ll 4 eas.kby.l4,o, t inan *Hid - hitsth 2 gOt 4 tit ' as by tlii3 - 604t4A0r of i nim od id: tn.,- I i 1,;. :, , , Ii• ',.:, ,;,lil , ,;••,•• ON Bago:taa'aiekr'nutovileath,,dadirtg: , a .pa,r4.ll,frscot . ipotnit in. A4s ,s,uffe ri age from Oil' o refloption tiiat as ha,,eiialilutteat ..anythinc; liotnek t file t isiiiiliCin'g s thirBd:'hysician tolilifitif Alit hlittind Wariti r pilly a ppproach ing,.and as, he felt - •withia, r hima c if that ho 'MIS i'apldlY iliiiiblahing iiihTml,' it whi t evi dent-to, :ald , llll,go ',that, fla ihttisr afoot hie end .very PQ00,,:•,.; :.• .••..).....•_••• ;:: • .., ,I', .. :i • . . 'Llow,,hm, f have :1 ; ;.to. ; live asked , 041 Bro,ie in a faint voice. `Only half an hour,' said the phY . niPiiin, takinkuutlis watch in a husiness and afided,, is there. any one:You . would ; rike tp 'sendfor- 7 4 clergyman, for instance P. • d ilt;ge inutied iu a lethargic way for a incintent; theirStilited up 10 with a sudden 'thought; raised his feeble-hand and • feli ;of his emaciated chin,,upoir ,whieli two weeks of grey and stubbed heard had Drown, then Ihispered -a barber me— bring nier—a barber r 1 1.'ho 'barber 'kit, and Old , Bdg , ,e) Bed itr:a Volt° that stili rapidlf gr 66- ing weakeri+ , • • 'lroti—elia;le—fen cents to shave men ?!. replied the -• • ! '1% 7 110i-id°. you chitrge,4tb shate4eaci men?' . do)lar,' said the barber, wondering "Witar,h'e . " ineunt. • ''''Thea-4hdre-m6-Anick,'''sahl Old Boge mervonsti eydiug the watch 'Which - the doe toritedil in his hand. Ile was bib •weak to .speak, further, but the doctor interpreted a right the question that was in . his eyes. 'Fifteen ixiinnteS; said the doctor. Old liog, , e 'Made 11 feeble motion as with a lather brush, and the barber;was at his work iu a jiffy, Ile performed his task with neat ness and dispatch, and ....atthough the sick man had set'eral,sinkitig spells of ad alarm inn nature, yet Ire bore ap to the ehd.— ' , When the last stroke of the razor was giv 7 _, - 04110 - ge whispered intones:of — Effiitite-_ tie" _ -• • • INZINM!II , lhaeldaci, ninety aeatq saved,' and, imme• diateky espire4•., • • , •• • ,say, d' •umoo, I th o t 1 beard you 'spress „yeilset de. Odder, abetting to do effect. dat your Madder was a White v . vutuan an,d your fadder • ' rVtrell,"ditt am it ,rac• what 'olp it 4' '''Ni6lll37l tick it mightfourous bow diit wbortoFon your I*.l. 4 Arliy, EA, I git dat by,acciiium on, my Mmidet's, FOCI sbe git chased by a bla64 man anti git seated.' . Ist . eti;loek.a hen, umbo, I doesn't want to l3a; papsonal, but front •de nature ob dat woolotloar held, dtir . am no doubt dat time your. tiludder was chased by the black Man, sife Was ober touked,' LitmoitAb litlie.--ritiok out for your boys, 'fa Wore w n• night cones op. 'TherelSrnothing more rtiinous'te their Inv-. thin;iihning'alioi.it at that - time.' Under darer of derkneSS 'they aeciuife their eation4. 'ttsul in &joie, ietirn to' be rolydyishlf not•alisolately'viOiotte; - :,Oey `'eaten talk, tlidy • hear 'wiekiid •et presSionit;, they See - obseene ' thiogs-4h'ey become reakiiiiis: and ' s visaiouS. If you mould 1,;41... garity, save thenvtreni vice ,- save them irdta 'prison, So& to ity.that night finds theta at hone. are aceountabto 'fol. their bad wends. • • " RiTINO journal of Rea!dr says: 'Never etit i6o credal filmed!. ately itfter deal* ameal. destroYS' tiffthe Boat of . the body, Which' iS needed to digeit the food:' bombs have frequently been caui ed by this cotnnion practice, - and dise'aSe is often bred by it. 'No one should cat ice cream before' two hours aftbr , it meal. Two sibqoKs lato!y., to - et, in- Baltyporo.-actor fortp.•4;ql;4 'nars talked thirty stBliours,s'irncl wcre still doing . Eio tart adcounti. — •' : . • A I:)riepl in New York kap ~been preachy ing a g aingg 116 pinfessen 'his igti6rante 'of ither rdrotatietie' made the -fashione•at Nieeae, awl theatres, - 49 he never went there, but added-, "1 eannat Shut' my eyes,tn the abomination when it is in. front of the ou" the street:"— . • • • A,ring says that one() on ijourbey,he waS .put in with a dozen , or moro passen gars, not ouo,ot: whom he. knew, but on tura. ing short eni•rior the slaigh upset, and thou:, said he , "lTAnd thorn ail out. ohl r teget.te hi,co,nleacle the , oth -0 L y;__ , Jf_...ano_sy; 4 l//) ?1 stomicit • • be; 'old tellatr!" , . ~ S!'ati:duee:pills would offoot.u4llyoure,m4py df th'edisiiiiseti with which idankitid• are .6f iiietadili every individual would {make his own saw-dugt. - Biu eties.gepirelij ,die ,phi. maids. They `set _ a , mien value themselves th.ti `they 1480_ c autit the' marks t" is -closed.(xi ,- ; 3c . 44:S iicAtti ; now tiny* • atill-Ca3sar r 3, Ikon 4.1P10:43 'i - 114:11pvionorit lite:ober, sTid - mfittitioliiiit , ;Klep - `9%=-4,rec4 1 .0- it riterrrodlixiicii: 14- • •1 • - . ass .01P-,Xife.Xtr . "41 4. ..:1 • 1 4 • - ' • .. _ li f - . :lt ~ .4-...f! .r._l ' •• - - iii -, 3 , i'l 1. ::'•H-lof - to 1:: n . - n ~ ..-7,,...:: , - .- I , ifEr!'*"..:. Jill , Yrt ti 41 . :jal flit);111J =EN MEM 'tr i, ;sw,
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