Village record. (Waynesboro', Pa.) 1863-1871, August 24, 1866, Image 1

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13* W. 33 lair.
VOLtME XX'
NEW SPRING
lON
AdVID
4'9 - N - NinMBBID.SI
GEORGE STOVER
HAS Ft E-T I U-RN-E - D - PRIYM-Pll - 117A -1 3 -
PflIA WITH . A SUPPLY OP
DRY GOOK,
NOTIONS, QUEENSWHE
GROCERIES,
Mir To which he invites the attention of
of his patrons and the pOblie generapy.
Merck : ) ,O, 1866.
AlrittCAN LIFE INSURANCE Mg
TRUST CO„, •
Corer Fourth and Walnut Streets, Philadelphia
Incor arated 1850. Charter Perpetual: Author
ized Capital, $500,000. Paid UpCnpitid, $250,000
Philadelphia, Feb. 4, 1864.
The Trustees - hnye this day declared' a Dividend
of FIFTY -PER CENT, on all premiums received
upon MUTUAL PbLICIES 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 oleo ordered the Dividend' Of:1860 on Policies
issued.during that year to be paid, •as the atutu.t I
premium's on said Policies are received.
OFFICE:HSI -
President- 7 A lexand or Whi Odin.
Secretary and Treasurer—John S. IA
_Actuary--John C Sims.
HOARD-OF TRUSTEES.—Alexander
.1. Adger Thomson, George Nugent, Hon. Jas.
Pollock: Albert C. Roberts, P. B. Mingle. Samuel
Work, William J. Howard, -Hon. Joseph Allison,
Samuel 'l' Bodine, John Aik map, Charles F. Ileaz
lht, Isaac Hazlehurst.
Wm: G. INEnt ,Ohanibersburg Po., is the.general
Agent ,of the
. A nierican ° We 1 nsurn nee and Trust
Company for Franklin Co. .
Jos. Doran 8, Agent for Waynesboro' and vide
.
tty.
REfEREN CES.H-JouN PHILIPS' and WILLIAM
lT BnoinsaTom ' ,
Call and.get, a ppplphlet., .
JOS. DOUGLAS, Agent.
Oct. 1;1; '186;15,:1y.
EAGLE HOTEL.
Central :Square, Hagerstown, MI
IIE above well-known and.ostablishod Rita'
rp
_Ultarnbeen re.oponed and entirelyirenovatod,‘•by :
Vie utidersigned, and , nowolfers, , toithe public every.
comfort 'and , attraction . founil in .the .hotels.—
THE TABLE. is bountifu lly supplied with every
delicacy the market will afford, THE. SALOON
contains the choicest liquors, and is constantly and
.THE STA 111.1 g ie,ttiorooghly
repaired, and eriirfel alivays ready to
ae
comnlodate eusforncra. r, , ,
404111',, ProPrielor.
liageistown, Tune 2 : -.-tf.. • ,'• .
TOMILLEK AND' MILLIIVINERS;, -
~::=
T rlt Eitilidelii g n4 •hil." Cot bn u
:guittioirdyptieliaro7 tai , theiiiht Vuiiikliti
c
iniitty; and L , re , "pi tou,teikt to"git~e , tr~nliilC (iii r,, di
-
put 'oP ) : l ;WW: ll ,lo.rupsion'd MN; in4e-LaßiWr
./Iffni-4ilhiirtfun c ed mithout .quarters.
•to
bre . 43Frill cause - Burro
Ii 441
undilbettlfruur4midto lietterecsarluin Wee of
Botparticulatsittaiwtho4ubseriber..:
'Jurso '154-42uV
1.• •
~ • •
!4.
.
• • •:-.:100
'
• .-trguSr. 4
iNG Au-- - •
FRIDAY
- • v. - ,
COUNT,E
.
ip FRANKLIN
T wAtNESB.
R •
-
QO~~=~~L~a~ j
TOUCH NOT in iriiirati CUP:,
Touch not the tempting cup, my boy,
Touch not the. sparkling - Wine;
Praise not the Pleasure's oft he bowl.
The glories of the vine.
The bloated face, the blood.shot eye
Shall let you - know the reason why.
Touch pot the tempting cup, my boy,
.13cer, brandy, %flutter gin;
Let topers. praise their•foolishwitya
Who make a meek at. sin. ,
The di unkard's wild, delirious cry
Shall let you know the reason why.
Touch riot the tempting cup, my boy,
Though urged by friend or foe;
Dare when.tempter urges most,
Dare nobly—say No, No.
The joyous angers from on high,
,Will glory. in your brave reply.
Touch not• the tempting cup, my boy,
In righteou sncss be brave;
Take not the r•tasr, a single at r•p--
Toward the drunkard's grave.
The widow's teats, the orphan's sigh
Bhall let you know the reason why.
LIFE'S BETTER MOMENTS.
Life has its: momenta
Of beauty and bloom; ,
But they hang like sweet roses,
On the edge of the tomb.
Blessings they bring us,
As lovely as brief,
They meet us when happy.
And leave us in grief..
• ues of the morning,
Tinging the' sky,
Como on the sunhearns,
ArUTiith them fly.
Shadows of evening,
Hang soft on the shore,
Darkness enrips them,
We see them nomore
So life's better moments,
In brilliance app •ar,
1) a vvnirg in beauty,
Our journey to cheer..
Round us they linger,
Like shadows of even,
Would that we, like thein,.
Would melt into heaven
THE PROMISE REDEEMEI
My friend, Mrs. -11. recounted to me the
following remarkable incident iu her life:
She Was married at a . sometvliat early age,
and, shortly thereafter, accompanied her hus
band to India, where she remained until del
imrte'health compelled her, after the birth of
the second child, to return to England.
A deep despondency seized her at the 1.
dead the approaching painful separation .
from.her husband; but there was no alterna
tive, and, at the appointed time, the latter
aecowpanied her to the ship, • doing his ut
moat to: cheer 'and reassure her with the
. .
hope of a hapry reunion.
"It is vain • William," was her persistent
rijoinder. feel convinced that in this
•
world . 1 shall 'never see you again."
"You's/tall sec me, love," replied. H. "I
feel that I can make you that
. prornise.—
Nothing—no, not death it7elf—shall pre
vent your seeing me again. Be comforted
with that assurance."
On her arrival in England, Mrs. U. join
ed her father and sisters at Brighton, where
the salubrious air restored her hetilth . and
strength. A twelve month elaped,. during
which period the A ccounts from India were
'regular and satisfactory, and Mr. H. in his
later letters; expressed 'his joy at her mew
ery, and his hope that she would return to
hirn the fast moment 'her health pertait
ted. i '
• .Her•father• was an early •riser,„ and some
what imperatiiie on that subject with his
household. His daughters, consequently;
were • sotnetiwes compelled to dolor the more
elaborate -touches of , their -4toilet until 'sifter
the . matuttual aieal;•and it,was • upon one of
these eueiSions that all threo . i . 'had• returned
to' their diessing•rooniti—Mis:ll.:atti - One of
her sisters in a large apartment 'looking to,
the front, the other lady in a room adjoin
ing. •
Mrs,. 11., in her dressing robe, was walk
ing.abOui;:brushing her hair, when she op;
proaChed the winfinw.„ The house was situ. :
atedi in. the, ereseen t Kern p town,. , and, fa
cing the sea, ecurmandedboth approaches—
rights and left. • Her-eye fell. upon a mail
pltaatcia,iartidly aPproaciiing, that seemed
to .rivet .her, attention ; , contained. ae,,one,
but the Alriaer , -,a. gentleulaa. As 'he.; awe
nearer; she uttered. a cry of delight that
hrought 'her ;sisters to .her Bide. • •
"It is William! It, is William!". was all
.
she .
7fler„si#ters Tocognized the familiar face
as welt.iikliars4f.L naiiiage
drew, near, looked ty'at - the window, inch.
'Emir It'is head, t-Igneh exCii.oci , tit
s de.u.:ar.riitil, his -* , o.''hit,erieillly,„'ecia;',
PictellAutr finessing, and : ina , dociutfisirt fits.
the drawing-room. Her fatherwas,,there a
' • ,
NY 11 .9-7where is he? here is Willither
she nastilp.attice44 , ,i '
kipeaied lei father. "Why,.
India; my dear. '
,_•. here -Ahnuld4. htkzher
' "NW; no; he's come! „Us here.l,4fVo
lia.re,seen-hhek, gene' '
MEM
' • „ . , , ,;* , • • - ,• ,
& Faintly Tllll2treisiotaizier I Itiailopekiji.ete*Lt upo n . 49 - 1 - txbriiacresci i ;-1 • •••
: •. :
• •
to the stables.' He Sjiokei
toe first," sobbed the disappointed wile. '
".After reniaiiio,g :silent; iti .piclue,. for
,riiinute twa,"Shil'eoUld brook. the,delay, no'
bell; Aesirid VI, ser
vant to run found to thi '
stables
word who was there:
The messenger returned.,. Nobody had
been seen. On ftirthei iaciuiry, ti e p.
man and road-sweeper in the crescent both
denied that any private carriage had passed
through that morning.
A note was made. .of, the exact time .the
three sisters had seen Mr. H. and the.news
which sluirtlY after reached them of .his.
death proved 4bat he had expired at the
same thne 7 —his latest words expressing an
intense desire to see once more the face of
the wife be loved so well.
iierainiseenoes of a U. S. Senator. .
Some thirty years ago,- I was in trade with
Judgo pleasant villiago of
Vermont, in the town of There
are two villages in the town that are denom
inated "Upper and lower Hollow. •
A short distance above the. Lower. Hol
low lived a man by the name of Orlando
Bundy, a blacksmith by. trade. He *as in
the habit of using liquor pretty freely, espe
cially about election time. About that time
there was an exciting election for represent.
atives.to The Legislature, that had just come
off,•liind all were tirriious to' hear the result.
Mr. Bundy happened to be in the store as
Judge H— wa, reading the returns, from
the different"towns. Among the rest was
that of a town on the west side of the Green
Mountains, that had elected a Mr, S. Foot
for rep'resentative.
"Is it possible that they have elected him
a representative?" said Mr. Bundy. I knew
him like a book. He was a poor boy and
used to live - at my father's. His father.
died when he was yoang, and his mother be
ing poor, he was put out to live with differ
ent farmers to earn a living. When he liv
ed with my farthet he was so poor that • he
was not able to_i_u_y_a—pair—of shoes. -Ai
farther -II
Lang a well-to-do-farmer, was able
to keep me in shoes, It irritated the boy to
think he had no shoes. One 'day my father
sent us to cut Canada thistles in the field.—
I had shoes to protect my feet, but poor F.
was bare-foot, and the thistles pricked his
feet, aid I bothered hint and laughed at him
for not having shoes: He got excited at
my jeers and the ;sting of the thistles, shook
his little fist at me, and said: 'Orlando Bun
dy, I shall see the day that shall be able
to wear shoes!
And so it proved: Ile did wear shoes.-
He acquired an.education—a profession.—
end his shoes trod the legislative balls of
Vermont. IDS shoes pressed the -fleet. of
Congress - and the Senate Chamber, and many
a time have b`een • in the place designated for
the Vice Pyesident. They were the shoes
of Hon. Solomon Foot,United States Sena
tor from Vermont. •
General •Diolc Taylor
The, following, reference to this dlstin
guialed delegate to the Fourteenth-of-Au-,
gust Convention, is from the Washington,
Chronicle of Saturday,
The rebel organ of the. President rushes
to the defence of that' eniaculate Unionist
and partriot DICK TAYLOR, late ngeneral
in the rebel army. This is quite natural.—
In the meantime a colonel who belongs to
the South, but who sefved in the Union ar
my during' the war, scum us the follow
ing.
To the Editor of the Chronicle:
The name of the man who heads this ar
ticle is, as above stated, the murderer of Un
ion men iu cold blood.
There were seven Union men of. ouisiana
who escaped through DICK TAYLOR'S
lines and enlisted in the Bth Vermont regi
ment -as Federal soldiers, after which they
were captured in battle by DICK- TAY
LOR'S command, tried by his court•martial,
and sentenced to be shot' le death. '• DICK
TAYLOR, having the execution of the se&
tense, ordered them first to dig their own
graves, one sufficient to contain four men,
the other to contain three. In ghese two
holes they stood up and were shot by DICK
TAYLOR'S rebels. In regard •to the' facts
in detail I refer to Col. TLIOMAS; command
ing the Bth' Vermont volunteer regiment,
General- WENJAMIN F. Rurr t iti, ' Command
log the department; and Bajor GREEN, of
Now Ciampi, now in 'this city.
WEAR A § . 3IILE —Which Will you do . ,
smile and make 'others bappy,.br -be crabbed,
and make everybody,,pround you miserable ?
You can live among" beautiful 'flewcrs and
singing birds, or in' the'mfra surrounded by,
fogs and.frog,s.' The amount of happinesS
which - Yon can produce is incalculable r if you
will show a smiling face, a kind heart, and
speak pleasant words.• • Oa the: other hand,
by sour looks,. cross words, and a fretful' dis.
positienoou,•eaU make. hundreds unhappy
almost beyond endurance; Which:will you
do Y • Wear a pleasant ebuntenanetc- let J joy
beam in your eye, and. love . glow on yOur
forehead., There is no icy so great as.„that
which springSfrom a kind -act or pleaannt
deed, and you way feel it at night whorl yen
rest, and at 'Morning when you rise. , ,an,l
through the day when abottt.yreurdaily•busi
ne,ss. • , • . ;
A plain-spoken western preacher deli Fe- th'O keeping':kis,
ed the following jrtini his: desk : wouldhat'on',ll`ke'ek - ter, 'nettemg if, .mottet94,
announce tothe centreOtion,,ihat'„iirfib'abli
,him to tiikO it 41 . ,;:41i.ii !4(11 1 6t,,p9t..,g0ing
by mistake, theta( yraa.;lar 4 ',..at2„kkia, •meeting Ooiiplied - witk'he "Spolfe;',CoAo fena;:fnatt r a t ,
this .210yDing,ra.smait.,0ptten umbrella, iiec oa d. time , and
much damaged by tiine and tea,r, and .0f....nn elder 'gent ly lilted t4e, elf, • when v t e l.. kis
exaeacliaAli l itile , a al es Ole
PlFee ; sYllara9f out, . is .
"Avali.tokenA vary large ;ttlack`i mere noise
iita-cif great ibeuetill - "-Blua.daraeaPtllia 'Eark w denoriffo: , it*,? ,
ttiao 'to"seo wbut.you hayeAtoopYr.; t t :41 , f l .l
bra , :
• i.77 1 .. 7 • .2' -.Vv.)
Wll6-to must . dis'e'or4z
Psaiae
, 4 YEthir ttife: t "
.k.riiiiie';eMr'iiife; Mad; pity's satiegiia.
her'ioiite little encouragement; it •itern't'hint
her, She bill /bade your' home . comfortable,
your heir th 'brighi, and 'Shining; Year-Toed
agreeable;:flar pity'S sake tell her you thank ,
her, if nothing 131(1113. She 'don't expect— it;
it will make her eyes open wider • than they
-htye-these4en years, but it will'do her gdod,
for all, And yon,-too.
There are many women to-day , thirsting
for the worth' of praise, the language' of en
ouragernent. Throrigh 'summer's heat ;
through 'winter's toil, they.have driadged un
complainingly; end so accustomed Gave their
fathers, brothers and husbands income to
their monotonous labors that they look for
and•ota them as tbeY • do on the daily rising
of the sun, - and its daily going down. B ome,
every day, may be made, beautiful by an ap
preeiation of ite 7 very helines& --
Yod know that, if the floor is clean; man
ual
labor has been performed to make it so.,
You know, if you can take from your
drawer a clean shirt Whenever- you want it
that somebody's fingers have .the , .tOil, o 1
making it so fresh and agreeable, so smooth
and lustrous. Everything that pleases the
eye and the sense has been produced biccin
stant 'work, much thought, great care, and
untiring efforts, bodily and mentally.
It is not that Many seen not appreciate
these things and feel a glow , of gratitude •for
the numberless •attentionsl , bestowed upon
them in sickness and health; but they don't
come out with a hearty 'Why how pleasant
you make things look; wife!' or, 'I tail much
obliged to you for taking' so much
Th e y thank the tailor for giving them 'fits;'
they thank the man in a, full omnibus who
gives them a sear; they taok the young .la
dy who moves along in the' Condert tooth;
in short they thank 'everything but of doors
because it is the mistein, and conic home,
tip their chair back, and their heels up, pull
out the newspaper-, grumble if wifeaska them
to take the baby, soon if the fire ia . gone
down, or if everything, is just rig At. P
— fen. mout. s wit i a sweet: o
but never say ; thank you!,
I tell you what, men, young and old, if
you did but show an ordinary civility toward
the common articles of housekeeping, your
wives—if you gave them the hundre and
sixteenth part of the -compliments you 'al
ways choked them with before you were mar
riedfewer woven would seek for other .
sources of affection. Praise your wife, thee,
for all good qualities she has, and you may
rest assured that her - deficiencies are fully
counterbalanced.
A Paradise in Pennsylvania•
Mrs. Eloise Limit ; of Heiner's Run, Clin
ton county, Pa., writes thus:
"My home has been for six years in a lit
tle rocky basin, shut ID on every s ide by the'
Alleghainies without a neighbor, a church
or, settee!, seeing , no human face for weeks
—aye, even for months sometimes—except
those of my.. husband and child. Living
thus I have come to love in a strange, all
obsorbing way, all that nature has thrown a
round me. Earthy with its varied growth
of trees and shrubs, plants and mosses, rocks
and water, the clouds, blue sky and stars,,
everything is hen atiful to me, even the dead
lenies, the old decayed. trees and bare rocks
arejtelovetl; • Think, then, ho* inexpress'
ibly dear the living trees and flowers and
moving waters.
"I' have tametront, siir. 'yards fretn the
door which 164 above the water '0 . daieb
bits of meat from my , fingers. The pima
sant.make their , nest in sight of the house,,
and sometimes the male bird is seen drum
ming On an old, 100 only a few rd s. up the
mountain aide: . I planted Wild flowers
behind my doors, and in slimmer t the hum.
minghirde go through the open house , on
their visits to the flowers. Strangers from
the world have said:
. "How can you 'exist in this dreary
plaCe?", 11:
"Their eyes cannot see as mine; nor hoar
the pleasant voices I hear, and so, I simply
tell them whet they, comprehend: 'lt is my
necessity.' My place; Whieh is sd lonely to .
others, is, so pleasant to me that 1 have nam
ed it Paradise, and here I will teach my
son a. love"of truth, purity and beauty."
"AN AMU S . NG. Padtjf Erf.;--S 0621 very
tereating incidents Cecuired among the 'edit;
trabanded.nritig the War; of which the - dele
gates of the Christian CommiSsion were wit
nesses, The .following I have never seen,
published :
At a Meeting of rho colored 'hiedtfren' for
prayer;- one Of their' number offered - the fol
lowing,petition ‘Lerd , bresa dese poor mit
tern and 4ese ,yer . sinners, Day's ,surroun
ded by great many blessings. .Dqy r don't
know how good you is. Deb' s - litre the, hijg
under - de 'simmon tree,- eatin' de simmon.: , ,
hod don't knowlwhar.dey come". from._ I flab;
mercy on all_ de sini;i,ers,i and cno-tny,J,ini,
'cause he's a bad soy, Lord—baddcr. than
yon knows for *l' Ile ppi a r's *;' wa d
1%4 _Lyd, when
. .york dcin't - Ho
swars mo e,ln detent,t t liiiiirl4 dri-oni j dogrq I
NC* iiresitisiel),' .and:ittind bY a l e and ..1.;11.
stand_by yigur-surtain
otEcre aninattinail priiibf, n a'iai a ,.,a a r a :p an , and
sold the:royy,ptiiijd n ufr,'" ,C:erfaiii
jiTe# frpn lAji i O4po,
nit;ile Cidd, g, re!1?1„ontqr(s,(1
. .„ .
c3a n y,9 - ,to op wkAtopi
- }i.ovir'foiii; ) 4nllit'taiccif them to oat .t 4som ,erF
A ew..wee a stow a ta aw war op
leg.f i 4" 1 . 1
ohatsinsj; from the tnetintaiO4,,,q
moat came on. board, - one ,of the r ,North 131i
er beats at Alhany. :The utujoliti,waS
singly, excited . at onne,,.and. fte„,eertntitorly,ld,
peejd og," as. h e ;cal led it „ eye okf
and corner of the .hoat r ,....,Ther„onp,tafke„47
dee, the engine romn, the;, Watii7.44oBllt, ; 1 1 - !:,s;
bet ber shop, ,O; underwent an, - ,inspeetiOrri
and,then he , went on deck, mid standiii,,a 7
maretneut at the the, e]iitpaeys,
and.,various "fizinsi! till, at last be:giii eight
of, the. this waii„the . ere,w lag, Wend.°
and he viewed it from eiery. Poisitten;i4alkr
ed around it, got down eia!,bisicuebs ,
ed qp,'.ittio it, and exelaimed:.;
raly, this beits.theVelien,a,dt
in' ; house a darned sight"
By ,this time the attention ,Of
and soy - oral of the passongeri attraeted,
to this genius... ,
,"fiow mueli..would you, ask,,tofOt a.'146,*
ring this, bell?" , • • 7 „ ,
II
"You may ring l i f o r. a o sa
r the Captain.,
"Wall, it's a bargain, 41,:fair aad ,agreed;,
and no.backing out ,
"WS' dbargain, Sir," said . tfie .
Onr,berß, ont deliberately,., and; brotigh t
a seat, ai'd,took ~
the belt 'reve t , end
having arranged ererything,,.t.o. his
~satisfaee
oranieneed ringing slowly it . fist;
gradually faster anefaster,, till everit,bOdi On
board thqught : the boat .fire,, and rushed
on deck. BOrettiuog,
there stood:the Captain, and r there stood.
the "monster;" ringing . away,ifirst . slOW and
• fast andthen two or three taps . at p , iime.
; .
-The passengers figgin --7,-
ekpostulate.,
;'the Captain,saicl.icryasahirgam,.. : .t uf
passengers beetang, yrgenf,,that e i ern fq,
clangor should be. Oppped r ..
All the while there set our herb, Midis.
turbed, ringjag away tgare ways thana,poelc.
ney chitneringer t dVerlteamt ; •
At last the umatitin 'began to think it time
I p-ilia-siinpleten-Osut--kie-answof • .:.-
"A fair bargain, and no backinvoitt.", .
And he rang away for dear life. —'
"Well," says the Captain, "what; will you
take titstop?"
"Well, Cap'o, I guess I' Shan't lose moth:
log if I. take five dollars and n free passage
'to New York, but cOtla' daroed-tent
."Well, walk 'down- to , =the office -and get
your money and' passage ticket,"' said the
Captain.
satisNottou,
This is the first advice that a female whale'
gities to her young, and it is just the adView
that' every American mother should give'her
boys. In no country in the world is there
such a field for off liand'speakets - 'o'nrierate'
asin the United States. man 'Capable of
stirring up . tt . multitude at ar mass meeting
can reach any Oleo in the gift of the leo- .
ple, beginning with tbe'rresideney.. In the
present Congress there are fifty-sis Senators'
forty 7 thrce are ochatre been •lawyers, leav
ing' only thirteen for , all ''the ether profes , ;'
sions. why'' is this 'l ,, , Why , eho'ttld
twenty thousand lawyert(!bare eight tithes
as limy - representatives 'Senate at - the
whole two n ty-fivnmilli O n ai . ro f Other •
,p4opleFf
For no °thin. reason id •the , World" thaw thee
laWyernarit god& ape/Ikon% But why elionld
genii spetiker's''be limited/ to one profeSEien?
We kndw not era 'single 'good teasen.
-rEyery itchoA should have tt , deoltitnation
ehtb dontwictod-with it. fogs of all classes
,•
should be initiated into thwart led 'mystery
orpersiiseslow , IViths'ehrly training theme=
Chanicandlartne would become ne tireeese;
'ful "on the stump," as gentlemen - whe::eitn= .
some their oil' ittporing over the; old fogyigm
oft - intro and Littleton. To be,a'godd'epeaki
et; all that is required is a first etas tnthpry
and Et• lil tie manly •Oonficlenom ry The former
can be obtained' by practibent‘anjt , tinan;;lhe
latter, however can only -be obtaihodll.
"breaking the ice," during our , nohnolibey
days. Again we say "learn to spout."
•
• A Romance in Real 'Life.
About four years ago, ' young married
man, residing in the: vicinity. of• llempstcad,
and about fifteen miles from this piace; en
listed in the union arniy and left'bis
and home to tty the hardships of' War.' The
division to.whieh belonged—became 'en
gaged, in; the. severely, contested .bottle of. An-,
tinter°. Among the reports al; having ; been
killed, his *Wife- found 'the er11614
band. True to her plighted love, she repdir
ed to the battle-ground, 'and, as she thoo,2M,
found the caipse.of her'litisbeii.E.:- She had
hisVtitnains brought homes and,
'rolling on, ~she.laidt aside , the-,widow's Itteeds;
and 'contracted, inethet pat,r,itnpuiel nilianee;
laboring titider / ibeirepression that she hid
rosily hariedlicrirtit. "Unshod, glY,t4ige to
say, a fea r ) weeke'tigo'hnicturtieil, 'hale . 10;1.
hearty. What was , now te: be ~ .done-.7 t tra
husbands to whom she , was) legally married
sten& before . hers' Who t'courd or should e
do.? l i gto a true add I'iNVOttSSI: .W901411;f4 site
clung t 47 her. fi rstleve•!Led • resolved ~tql
with hqr filet iiiisbapd. 'AI& war has really
bilinght
occurrence of the same.characltViitiair• platV
Como time linecia - Ohlar,whe.re. the womAck
iriudcii'stiiitlac'd'deffdoir, but net"linfrirci 'the
tore hughatitklied-tiqv4ryi severe
:Monona,- (Pa.); ji ;
:7:: •
jOhil ntioipif itf, iiOn t one °Coon:
inn, to have'liiiiitaUti siénr this'
City,gfYanr-York: - .A:11A5h.19015 fog Strang
or offorid'ln'hhe'liirri S Gve hal:tilted dollniA,
on , tifit' I t 64 lii t. ottlitOrradei:(ana,. inttod ueia g.
eons poniors;•• stsiVA , Al4:l' Soo dolfar,-) sty
friend Isere; Stinire-Tomians- will hold stakes.
513 tit sietnneakedilie .iiratnif:.6f.:4l436liVe,
`••• rat &at illviittle•Sititirtlll'otirk:insuifiiirlitgitrok
Alija IIfIPUIOOOItr7 71vt•41(
L'lJ 1 ' Zrrel 1,1 o n : 812
lifOt'YOsinglitaids trite di"
*ides all tliingi into
;dud the qnlensini. -•- • •
r•
Learn to "Spout4'
aS:OOPO*` YOa"
=EI
The
.Wne annual gUtlie - rin'gortbat sect
Palled the Dunkers or "Tankers," Was held
near Waynesboro' ; Franklin-county; Penn-
Yeceritly. . • .
originated at &Award-,
zerilirGelintihj;id 1708. -1 1`1141iii ticiosti
inetrtrwere.Aler tinder' Mack and wilkJohn
gipitr-.aPd , wife* acorge ;Gravy; ; Andreas,
819.09,,, Luaus „Fetter, and J o ann a ,
germ.Tbek bad been bred Presbyie•
rtans except Sipiti, and lielo,;. neighbein Met
together, to, reed, tke discuss
tuner crieStions.';
. belief v e ry . nearly
itecorded lif"tire Dat)tisis; but tticy
werewunitware of the existence - of .ttny: such
denomißation e and An resolved on founding a
seek of their own: They,cast lots to .deter 7,
Wine' Who . of them should baptise the Other,
and'ititiefully iiineeefeethe'fa'et akie"Wbirni
the lot fell , upon.. TherWereallliaptiaect-iti.
.the Bder, and choose Alexander Mack for
titbit; minister; • z = • •
- , :The pew sea iicreased . rapidly, siid, 'they}
established. churches -in other• planc.4,,;,4at
persecution drove, them an d en-.
Oki 'they b'eg'an Go look' Arne - ricP as
the place where' thbY
ouliairireligion most-securely. •'• •
Their. first appearance in ,this country. labs
in 1719, when several families arrived . at
Philadelphia, and scattered thence ‘to -- Gei•-
rnantown, Skippack,.oley and'. Conestoga.--
This ,dispersion prevented meeting ~fori p tAb)j,a
Worship; and they, had nearly given Up their
religion -eltogetlier; whin in th'e'fzill of 1129
it- tvas-reiiiied by the accession rty .morit
families who fled from persgention ion Ger
many- A schism occurred ;Then fts,
f)arty WhO believed in rinlvetital salvatio n
dreoroff:nader the leadership of
Those. in: Kentucky, Southern
spliri, and lowa, are the deseendanteof ! Uturt
and his adherents, and still mate tale his doe.
Trines. ' •
"There' are some Tankers in North 'enroll;
no, but the most of themrAlli:tri.--P ,-
sylvanin. They 1111113 C altr
ler altogether abotit
ten thousand souls, and are a peaceahle, in-
offensive people. The most curious feature
of their Ceremonies is in the Wend compli
ance. with the Savior's command to l‘wasb
one, another's feet "—Exchanye Paper:
A. farmer recently went to Lowell with a
load of poultry to sell, and had on his wagon
Ek large owl, which one of the boys had killed
a short time before, The vender of poultry
waa hailed by a eon of the Emerald Isle,who
askeid him "what he axed for the bald faced
Markey:7' 'That is not a turkey/' said the
countryman, "it is an owl" "I.don't:care.a
ss e xpenee how ould he is, I want to buy,
WM.!' .
GANITINE .I.lArytsT.—A. poasant, being
alconfession, accused himself of hav,ing stor,
len some bay. The father confessor asko4 :
,
him how many bundles .ho had takenirdut
the stank.. "That is °Eno consequence,' rig- 1
plied the peasant; "you may set it down tt
wagon load, fel me and my wife are going
to make it that." • t
'A yOutb who had returned from the city
was asked by his anxious father if be "fad
been 'guarded in-his' oendnet while there.-
I . 4 _oh, , yes; I was guarded' by two policenteM,
part pf,the time," was the reply,
ni Mutt A FELON,—The Journal 'of Afed
clicinerreoommoods asa cure for theSo troud'
blesornu,disorders, that as soon as the parts •
begin to swell, cloth, saturated with the tine-•
ture , of lobelia, _should • be wrapped'.arOund
thous., L'his kills the felon, and is said nay ,
er to fail if applied in season.
!i.lf a man die shall be live again ?" And
Once aYear have the daisies answered it, and
"springs a little infant" givokiti . testimony,
and every day has' the morning testified, and
yet the world is murmuring' still, "If a man
die, shall he• live•again r
Other goods may have declined, but the
rise of hoop skirts on the streets is at 'times
quite startling.
In time of great clangs'', our dependence .
cannot be placed in men; not even in good
men. Thoy• oannot trust themselves.—
Their good resolutions may vanish and their
courage die. There is no
,depotideOce, brit
on God. •
~Jlappiness is less frequently found in eon
ativinons than in humble stations. When.
Vid said, "Oh, thael had wings like a
dove, for then would I fly away and be at
rest,!' ho was king of Israel and Judea—not
.n(shipheid of Bethinherit.
In the exhuborance of his rage at some.
ene.who had offended him, a vengefal
said :
41 13:V Jove, I'll have'revengc ! I'll give hie
little Soy a' tin horn:" • •
other day a member of'Congress wish.
irigg to say, in fine English, that a friend, of
hiiilad r died; told the Rouse of Aepiesenti
'diet* that t'hiS 'gentlemanly spirit witted' its
,way to its Maker." ,'•
. 1 4n Irishman, on being told: brills .ern
-1:49,1i to grease the waion, returned- iti; : an.
hOitir 'afterwards, and silici,.tl',ae gregthd,ove-,
r3PilairOPiliiii machine bit them. oriels the
;wheels hangs on.' ''''•
, .. .t
.0 wave on : vibice many 1 a• paotAlalloar
imen.carried.iway, is , the Wimp; oh iv lace:
1, +,-, • irrz. Frr t,
We blase thb wdrla and curse the werfd,,
according as it stuiles.or.frowas; yet after all.
're !FAA, e f puthera of :the gee*, birds •
"%aop. y t , r
L Bl l l ettrie.ineltiiiik'that'aditfriatiN .
Adolity+tut one , Ova- toisotatil
Lien on their death.>.
//: )
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NUMBER 8