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' . 7, 1 • .' • ' -' . • ...": Jr._ Jo..v.:.tr. — :Lif; ;•- --- —r• •,f: ::: . : .: Li - :_ . :L , . • . - ~ . --.--. _ .__ ._.. .. _ .... ~..- .. _—... , ' • ,• , , .. :..-, ,: -,5 . .., ..;4.7.,4 •,-- - !:2'. ''(•"...-:! ,1; ~, . I ' ...'.:3 j. k ,'/ _ . ~ , ' 11itill'oa 'leiii . .-.. . / . . . . - ; . ' ..- ' '‘ .l ' ALM! X.113.C.1.01040330:51.023:t ..it' h i!;t74ii r :Y,P:P:VF . 0rE1er,,, , F . p.,!. J : -'1 0 • i..,1-,, 4 ,fr ---- ~ -, - -!i`i ~,. _ 3337* W. 33 ................. 1 1. 1 1.110.1111.11...1.11.011 . .-- - ~...,„ , . - LUllli - Xil. - - -c - - r WAYNE-SP' _ ___-_-7---7-- smaismissammilmimmuuniv. _ _ BEECHER ON - - . (, , .: • .. - Rev. Henry W ~... • • ' livered a eer - text the ~„ -_, ..-.... the- .. . _ . The loves and j o ys of earth arc !lief • The fairest dowers the first doe -7n Pleasure's footy:teps follow - Too soon we mourn the ' And lief's departe , ' We yearn perple Our long-for iv liar' T- VOLUME XXI. : 4 g. • - ---, - mfrf:••r. 0.6' %;?"9 The loves and joys of earth arc !lief; The fairest fbwers the first decay Pleasure's foot taps follows Too soon we mourn the fallen lest , And lief's departed May. We yearn perplexed., and stung with :pain, Our long-lost Aidenn to regain = Oh, is it far away Mark ! from the caverns of the hesitt -Faint-echoesrphantom-voicOsoitart-; “Far; fai - awa y !'' And, sounding froth beyond - the sky, Melodious, solemn strains reply : , "Far, far away The soul 13 pained with vain regret' We pine for what no years restore; Ara sorrows we woaM fain forget, With clagped hands snd.oyelitis wet, haunt us forever more Grows their no halm in grove or field No plant that may deepen the "A h is there no reprieve,?' List ! from the grove no murmurs flow, Ai though sad spirits bewailed their wee And, from the field, with mournful sigh, The withering flowers and grass ri ply : '•No, no reprieve !" A vildering maze is life, in social; our lusting vouch. And with, their - clamor hide the truth Until our hairs arc whits. 0 World 0 Time can 3e not give Elm:mewl:lot to male it ',met to live Must joys, loves, all depart The world responds with scornful laugh, Pointing to make an epitaph, "All, all depart?" Arad as she sweeps retnoractess by, The knell-like tones of Time reply, "All, all depart I" Come, boys, I have something to tell you, --- Come near, I would whisper it You are thinking o I leaning the homestead, Don't be in a hurry to The city hai many attsae;tions. But think of the vices and sins When once in the vortex of fashion, Bow soon the comes doWnweed begins You talk of the mines of Aus.tralia They're wealthy—irrgold without doubt, Bnt ah ! there is gold on the finin..boys, If only you'll shovel it out. The Mercantile trade is a hazard, The goods arc first high and then low; BMW risk the old farm a while longer. Don't be in a hurry to go, The great btt•=y West has inducameni, And so has the busiest mart, But wealth is not made in a day, boys, Don t be in a burry to start ! The bankers and brokers are wealthy, They take in their thousands orsr— Ah ! think of the frauds and deception's, Don't be in a l.urry to go! The farm is the safest and_ surest, The orchards are hamlet] tmday, You're us free as the air of the mountain, And monarch of all you survey. Butter stay on the farm a while longer, Though profits coff - ffi - ea , tticT - slotiv, - Ft:member. you've nothing to 'risk, boys, Don't be in a hurry to go!. 3,43E5S THE BALLOT, VIRTUE, POWEIL —The fel lowing are the "Verde' iffßishep Simpson : •Vire.believe that the great vices in our large cities will never be - conquered until the ballot input into the hands of women. "If the question of the banger of their Sons lie ins drawn away into drinking saloons' was brought 'up, it' the mothers had ahe:ipcitver, and they saw their brothers gaily , away "to haunts of infamy; .they ,would..otos©, those places. Yon may get men to trifle with rity,. wi cc irtue, - with - righ teciusness, ;. but thank God, the hearts of the women of onr .land-.--the mothers, wives'. arid daughters— are too pure to make a compromise either with intemperauce or lic,entioutsuyss. Thus' tO6,lthall *'e. purge` Our constitu tions and statute - laws from all - indiViditus. distinct ions 'aniiing - th e' tize cif:i he . Btaite, and secure the same civil and morarcodefor mon and witorneo; - -IrVe flaunt'•shim:tate' 'hun dred. thOliscii,id :lei** teachers, and 'the mill ions of luboiink" women, that_tbeir complaints, p'etitiOne;:pi•tifeetite unio7s7 and striker are of no avail until thil`hkila the DaVE in their orp.han.dei for if - fir Th's first,step towards . sa... r'Oligions 4341#intil . t: , o peutentint, with IYUTingth %int a. vin'g ' ' .ivijratx„,nevi .alOulder 80.0. colt, his seat with.rot her, a ; plainly cliisseit gdy -in :nue our railway trains. The followiug..eoovorett tion took plaeo.hurtweenltheiu•-4ho shoulder strap 15113:_iii1.. ‘ 3 llradaiii, have you zany:relatives io.Jhe war •liusbarid•hoa -soldier in thepartry.' decd!' rtil'an4offiner in' the army, Madam; niut your hiatitind , it I.ahoiildrltte•it 444; Nriiiii-Wl?Ts , . nfi "PC't- -: ~6 1 Tlysses.B. 'Grant i sir/ 'The young. Vieni i sti• lnii-vtiniuosed-at the next stopping pidee,..too wode3t Oven to Trait to be thotilitect. X" (:)111PRICI.Ekra: ECHOES OF OFUNCIIOLT. DON'T LEATE Tll FABN. r - WAYNE - SS.BCOi FRANICLIN Cil*l. l .l) 4 *of t•VANIA:PitIDAY: - :III94.NIN,''APRIt'Ik 1808'. BEECHER ON LONGEVITY• Rev. Henry Ward Bee Cher recently :de., livered a eermen, on longevity, taking ati2hia test. the chapter of Genesis, contains, the genealogies . of the. antediluvian pat* . wells. Among other things he said; • • ,'ln the beginning the • human race seems to have-been created aniMals; not without the great elementary forces which,oenstituto the mind, but these forces Were • undevelop ed; and held in-abeyance: It wan the physi-, 'Cal that' ivatilitigety developed at ECM. W - e see this front the Statementa of the text.'—;- They-attained what would now be consider ed an extraordinary old age berore they reached the 'age orpuberty. Their 'first children were begotten when they were one hundrad,er one hundredandlorty_yeare_ol4 we thing that to be old age. Then came four or five hundred years, afterward, of life, indicating slow maturation. What coarse, slow growing, inefficient ereatures - they were I Ido not think that Adam was any different from them. There is an impress ion that the human race began at the top, and slipped from the top down to the hot. tom; I - do not believe it. I think that Ad am was a child; that he never had a thought, and with the exception of eating the forbid den fruit, scarcely pariorwed an act that was thought worthy of memory; and that name which liss_fided al history nud—the wrrld, is purely and merely a name. There seems to have been in his life, ant in _the whole - of • !it, oot tag wurthy to be remem bered. My impression is very strong that the whole human family began at the bottom and has worked its way up to the present tune; and that it is destined to work its, way up to an inconeeivaldy higher level than hug manitv 13()W starv?s_upatt—at_is_probabli- eight or ten handrail years, these creatures did not live as much as we do in eighty. klife of eighty years, which doei in that time the work sr - tread' oat ' their ease over eight hundred years, is a vast step in the progress of man. Consid. eriog the present nature of man, longevity, such as theirs, would be a great misfortenb. While yet human itfe was inert; whole Ca pacity was undeveloped; while the acconn relishing power wars very small, it would seem to be in accordance with divine wisdom to lengthen out the scope of life, that man might have time to be and to do something. But as. they learned, there were many rens one Why human life should be diminished in its scope. We are accustomed speak, of death as a misfortune; we almost never reflect that dy ing is a great benefit.. The most of men get through when they are sixty or seventy years old. They get through; there is nothing left for them to be or to do. And although they do not want to die, there is no conceiva ble --rCason, in most instances, why they should live. They cumber the ground.— flere and there is an exceptionable case.— The beauty of a ripe old age is the very thing that puts to shame an ordinary old age —useless, cumbrous. - For many other reasons it also would . be unfortunate if men lived, in the full posses 'ion of their powers, to au exceeding great age. Suppose that some men in New York, whose names are familiar, who have the pow er of making and amassing money and prop erty, and who wield the greill administrative influence which accompanies great wealth ; suppose that they, instead of passing :iiv - ay in a few years and making room for others, should live five hundred years, already hay • ing scores of toil ions in their- hands, and salreedy wielding r, mightyinfluence, through their wealth 'and experiencs, nothing - on 'earth could prevent their being-deasotie in the connuermel world. What a disparity would there be! lf, with the tone and tem per of modern. mulhood, turn lived five hundred years, , what colance s triould there - - be for a. Ingo at_ airy tose,epo s witliai tuansof-four litindred years. -How won 1•1 one end of society, the upper cad, by its position, by its experience, by its knoveledN, by its wealth—if these were held selfishly or _des potically—weigh down. and oppress the other side? =There Was a divine mercy wanlfested , in She niemiaromeet e of she s iAaratiou of human Hs in this sespOetsseo[2iitsnAntinTires rang enough to develop his forces and to accom plish a certain atuutisit; but not.-long enough to use that accomiliiihnient as a means of despotism When men, therefore. are wick ed, and Are holding high away, we comfort ourselves by saying: Well, they can't live forever!' And they are not. The shorten ing of human, life, teed the dying of men id This °sonority of life,iSN-Sry often - the beet event of their lives. Even of men Una are . quite useful, iris tit - elf - duty to die; and when theyslietheyfrequeotly, as Sampson . . did, .aceoui}lte i a,great worles;if 41tiretatiee. le life they have dune, it may he, leery , xnupli good or-evil; now let theta take themselves out of-this way; and they will. do-slotuethitg., More. When,a,great-tree ,is cut downin. . Jae orest, you willsee that arourni are :.twenty trees thatlnffas° had 'lrian eversha.d , - -.Owed and hod no' °flak: r e - io 'girt the silU;' ) all now beg in telift their tops uris and .6 drink at the fountain of life; and - start up.' Now 'Ant the ell, umbrageous monarch is ;these s• a -chance, for man 3 , 1 cinore. ,See that-a l -are many cousolationsiin"the deaths ofesnea I the.ri4ht -ones worillistinly die.' e ses-1 "" al • While ten omit witted' for' Chains's,' tine man'rusikesobanees ;; while. ten men,-watt for' something: to, tumuli, ono turns • BOUM:U.)I4)g' up; so whilelten .faii, one -succeeds .and ie culled a man of luck, the favorite .of fortune": ',...Tliere . lsficitlack ', adli; nod 'fortune' .tuctit toiors,Allosti F . ,46 . 'arp s stolortune, ; - , La 't a vamp ,Wet capagti (ii3tar 7 .act in her ,oye, a; ,waterfrll , on Dior he'ad; z croolcia her back, forty trprinp-itt bar Skirts Ugh tied shoes, acid a notice, is 11'01.144d , ' , UNKNOWN'' OPtiONELSITS. TOU CC4WIII . AND Mk§ rIIA.FINONV Qprwin'a , po uent in: tip` gi,ibero.sl,toirka Aappooen. race was-thtliben inculie'at, 'o,oVerner 'All. Soo shannon. During one of hi'ttips from , :one appointinimp, to another, Corwin and, the ivitc,of wore "fellow .iat'ssengers,. in the suirie stage: coach. They' bad - never met biifore,,,aud,tiere:unknown to eaeh Sirs. Phannon had do escort, but carkiii4:66- 1Y her infant boy in her, nuns. : Thederof the passengers were Corwin's friends, who made the rounds of the State with and who were alio ignorant of the ,rival can didate's 'better half. They Were not, loin left in this blissful ignorance, for the lady, vouSed by the hard' - eider sentimetite, soon gave them to.tindersiand, in v_itry_p_L. -glishTttat - the was a 'goctd — tioecifeco, and, moreover, the .*ife of GoVernor 'Shannon, to boot' This announcement rather startled the gentlemen. Corwin was the first to "reeover hia composure and take advantage of the sit uation. ; Expressing himself. delighted at having met her, "he placed himself beside 'Mrs. Shannon, and at once became very at , ientive to her. He told of his acquaintance with her husband, spoke in high complimen tary terms of his character and public oareer, and expressed hie unbounded adruiratibn of the man. The lady was charmed, • • .try - p - ra, tmes to :now the name of her new foUnd Mond. Corwin found means to overlooked this evasion, and told Corwin in _special confidence, (loud enough, of course, _to be beard by the hard cider wen) that her husband was certain of re-election; . that he was net to be beaten by that 'fellow. Toro Corwin ; ~• , 7. - 4 bTx 'And who now goes about the country,' suggested Corwin, making himself ridiculotis by drivin g a six horse team, with a l log cab. iu - mountell ou a counry wagon.' 'And who they say is as black as the ace of spades,' chimed in the lady. ',Mut, madam!' eXclaimed Corwin, 'Mack! yes black as the—l beg yoUr pardon—as black as I am.' Continuing the deception in a manner which kept his friends convulsed with smoth ered laughter, Corwin took the lady's baby in his arms, fondled and dandled it, calling it the 'Young Governor,' and carrying the heart of the lady by storm. At length the lady reached her destination, and told Cor. win so Witla a sigh of regret. The gallant but unknown candidate assisted the Govern- or's lady to alight, took the child in hia_arms and carried it to the house. He saw the la dy in her parlor and laid the infant fiat OD its back in her lap. Holding it there for a moment or two he said : (M-y-dear Mrs-Shannon, I have laid the young Governa - r - Lit on his back, anti I'm going to serve the old Governor the' same way at the coming election. Good-by 1 I ought to have told you that my name is Toni Corwin, who was nothing but a wagon boy. and is pretty black, I must admit. Good. bye !' And before Mrs Shannon could re cover from her istonishinent, he was gone. Ile did lay' the old Governor flat on his back ; but the latter returned the compliment two ,years later. Signs and Omens Stifles is not superstitious, but he hoard story litely which greately shook his 'skep• tieDlitarianiem.' It was of an old gentleman in Berks County, whose style Was ae ter ruauized as Tom Gailyle's, and who had been asked what he thought of signs and o mens, , TO, T dinks mooch of dem dings, nod I don't pclieve a'crydings; `out I dells you somedimes dire is soniCilings in sooch dings asli dose dings. Now de oder night I sits und reads Mine newspaper, und mine frau- she shpeak - und bay - : • 'Fritz, de dor* * ish Nowlin;' 'Veil don'tdinks mooch of Aim dings,' upd I goes on und reads mine paper,. ;Jail wine frau she say: 'Fritz, dere is somediags pad is happen—: do dug i.,11 hossl . o.' 'And den I ,guts oop wit mineself und looks out troo de vines on de porch, utid d : moon was Wain, and mine leedle. dog he shoomp right up and down like aferydings, und he pr.rk at de moon, dat vas shine so prite ash never vas. Und as .1 hatilid wing hat in do winder de old vonian she says,:.. • 'Mind, Fritz, [ 'dells you dare is some pat fib happen. ; . be troy Zak ho table . • •- ‘ goes-to pet and I shleep's` ' und.-:all van I 'yokes up dere vas dat (dog howl outside,rUlad yen I dream, ;I 'hearr.,dat, ;bowfin vorsel ash Lelol%. U , 141 in de.auorain bop and kits minefreetttick.(tireaktubt>, and mine frau she-looks at me und ray ferry solemn:: •'. •• ' ••• • sornedings pad is haiipto: .De dog_ vas - howl all night ' • • • ••• • fUnd *bong den de' newspaper 'noire' •in, and I - opens by. things Atot you .dift 1 , dere 'vas-a. via* died-A.l- Itlalcatllsk fa. IIOSV•TO .I . 7O:E6IINi a 7,5 ALT :F:tsu.---Many pe . isens w'utrsire te'Abe'litthit'oj 'lresening Inseire ciithat fisb';_never dream that there 'is a right and Wiiin , "wir., to 'tie it. Any one • who'hus split!? theKpeesi of eTnpotution go‘ iti4'oit'ai the Butt WoricEi r knOws that salt lath to the bottom. Just so it is in the pin where ;X9nr.,4 6 cke.rolariC (Lill, lies , soaking; nail US it Het; trial dm skin ,eife dewu,tha fa pal ;%vip 11, to 'the skin;* and „resole there, jita ce4 ,vritit:t he ft si dh, Ow o, t t. h salt:calls o to ; the,hottoni (4 the pan,, aefi r ,he. gbh' °eines o,ut Irish e ti,ed 'au ,it o 1 ; ,in othei'euse it nearly us salty as when-,put in. If you 'do not beiicvs 044, test the taut tca% l'or,.yeurselveed, • . • • • • Soy notirjog,,do• tmaing, which• a good wooll not aprirove, abd yt)(1 are on the ea te 11 zl r 11.000.4, • • , The lady question The Working Gentleman._ • , The etildren 0f,,104 - ury and pride r Aire ;• : not the only ones whoused to be taught the digeity of Lahai. ; 'fir- foil their. serioal Oa' aiiritys 'itp'preciate :their %ifirlt aturlattitien duty We'seo this in- various ways; sometimes in a jealous and, envious aspect toward the rich,, sometimes , in a cringing and sometimes in a difiantrittti tilde teiwitrd empleyers,lind often 'in "a 'sen '-aitivetieSs'with'riatard to their sdeial,ptisiticitt qUite opposite to conscious dignity and genuine self-respect._ False pride per hapsfinds its,deepest disguise often in the best working then . , in a repugnaec to the c'tiltivatioirottatite and eourtetry, as' so,tha thing out of caste and character Jar them.' In•such - sense its" pr : ide.,is : permissible a man_shotticLueliffetetily—prond—ol li ftis industry, hie iistiftildeia Sod' his - -self-denial, and plicidly &rapist, the gilded _ opposites ,of these, which men are prone to worship .or to envy. Ho should realize that these qualities are so much more honorable thin all others, that it makes do practical' differ. ;nee, in the comparison between menls, sta tions, what their work is, so long as it ie nobly done. Truly 'said. the poet— Honor and shame from no condition rise; Ad well your part: there, All the honor lies. It is not, therefore, especially for the dis cipline of dainty coxcombs, who seldom :1 hin-nur—reach,-thirt---we—reprcrtittc the hearty lashing which the , Charlottsville Chronicle administers to the youn7 men of .t•e It is good for, false 'pride and -effeminacy in all latitudes, whether swell.; ing in broadcloths or fretting under denials. "'There is a vast deal of idleness in! the South. There are young men pretending to practice law or physic; _young men. in. selling a few yards of ribbon per day, young then who have no business there, at dui lege; young wen - if - arming,' all of- Whom ought tb be differently occupied. There are . young men c;erking i n a n d banking companies where. there is not full emplOymeat for them. 'J'heie are , young : ladies by - scores engaged in reading •novels, orentertaining beaux. There are all sorts of agencies, tea thousand shifts to hve, no matter how, so that it is not by manual labor. Ina word, the' market of head-work is glutted in the South, While the hammer the plane, the trowel, the hoe, the axe, are crying for staliart arms to grasp them. 'The idea is that a trade is not just' the _thing for a-young-man who - eoritillers him self as good as anybody. It is thought a better thing to be a jack log lawyer, or to murder people with a jack,- diploma, or weigh butter, khan to build a house, or Make a aewitig matiline or construct a steam en gine. The agent of somebody's vegetable pills is thought a more eligible match for your daughter than the man who. prints newspaper or a - book. So it is a foolish, - and often fatal pride which makes• thousands shrink from the mechanic arts; and. those very men who, by a lift. of honest industry, have secureda high position in the com munity, and a respectable competence for their families, turn their backs upon their occupations, and trim their sons out for something that • will not soil their wthte .bands. We shall not prosper in the South until all these folks go to work, nor until la bor with the hands is properly estimated.* Beginning to Believe Babbles,' of the California' Gulden Era, sets off the following: I • begin to believe .now-e days, that money makes the man, and drdss tho gentle man. I begin to believe that the purse is 'mere potent than the sword and pen together. I begin fo believe that tboie whe.sin the most during the week are the Most devout upon sunday. , ',begin to believe that honesty is the bast policy —tO speculate - With -- until — pia - Icarve gained,everybodesoonflenee then lino your ,pockets. , I begin. to believe in humbugging p,eOple ,out of their dollars. It is neither stealing or begging; and, those who aro humbugged have themselves to blame. :..I—begin to. beliotie * that a man was not ati4e ty eajay tile, buftnkeep . k)itusell tn.iser able :la . thesnyau4;aF,d ,o 1 • I. begin lo'oolieye that tho, sorest, remedy for hard titueslaud a tight money zn.tr,lc9i' is tt„ aestravagapt. expeuditure, 'int _the - part 9f the ,iudividUal—to; lee.p in'utiej mov ing,. • , .I. begirt to believe fOoe,,litit - knaves arc pizil,fied ,tO bold olViiiiiit'pdei:ilie:o.9Vevu inent'T-with the c'XPepti9o,uf a r(4 born fools upd' I begin to believe' thitt piano - forte' is, Viore . .4 r t.cessary fit 1.1. away thpu and wear.. - • •, Lbegip a`bny, vi,V,Octo7pn't swear,*tooke ,and tohteco, , ajer,Y.good natural)] begin, to I.),elje,vo. one bolt of .the svoutid, be throwia, but 'of, employment, Setr;e, titee'.!'go 'the flevl"'lnr: l •Spurkeoa, preaotietr4ermeir oo t4io text—x:Atbd:"'N.lary Wept.' Ili the midst of ti stream 'of earnest clqqueuee that drew, tears 'tram' rilatiir of those present; in 7 defidlbiog- the• ehttraiter of, the: teirs Shed by: Ikrary'Over the feit'df;;Te sus;le bruke'stiAdetly, Off, no'] tifrufing , his 'iongiekiiion, i 'The .•tear'.4' 01tieli, Mary shi4 are ti'dt . @uch' feats la's nittaf oriou'iour 'otitLitticoloti . Oofeelo TheyVama"fierin her heart=4-11uliwertv- , iiars. of lito . od-j;not t ihe poor stitif tottfuretioati tits effEdde:d'Udt.''' Then;jkaiiitig, fiber" 'the. lookite,daiticitiy frac We . sea' of - upturredlaei.:olte heXel &ied v 'JTherti are, some ofjdtt . for'wheie leafir , 1;' :would . not Oye a larthtrig 'a quart.' :1 We are all Adam's e,hildroo bilt s ilts wakes the clifTcrenee. i __MORAL , , Vrirmi or ShNiF Otkitte N Thir.tilty! min ute i in ybie time many n noble notion has been - F;eiforineii. " A thinnte - *hen tei r oiw tione have been made. thati 'have changed the after current °Hilo. ,A,tuippte ! in that space of which u tear reached theeye of, the ropontant prodigit: ' DISCONTINT. - or discontented wind and ungov ernable pasSibps . cati • scarcely find a ea un lion *here he will be 'hupily. - -; ve: Min libnor, ease / and all he • own. ..:fert *high earth, cap ikffor . d, still hie, 6 wri„ • ritaikle spiiicsuparindnor,d by his own lack or iftoral and uiontal • ar! T4.13T ,The beaviest fetier . hai ever weighed! 'ddilir't)i 'titbit of areap4e, - the web. of gosamiier, compared:with the :pledge of a matt of honor.' •T:he ma!l.of ;stone ' . ..Ind; b the bar of on may be broke; but hi., plight ed wttid taiier-:‘ ' SO4I2iDIA, • • . • • Those who , possess . the least inherent purity Arp,the moat apt to others. Ihe'slaliderer judges tifreFtlie '-itlitt tates of his own unilinious heart,- and.' thin impnogns the actions, motives,. and feelings . , • . . KINDNESS., 5 Flail °Merit and you 'relieve yourself friend's brow, and you will return with a lighter heart., A' word may }light , the brightest hope, a revive the dying. A frown way Brush: a gentle heart. , The smile of love, or tergivenossalay telieve4rout GRATITUDB, Bo careful to teach your children grati tude:, Lead them to acknowledge 433 , 64 fa. vor that they receive; to speak often of their benefactors, and:to ask blessings,tor,thetn.— AeCustarn then!' to inter With`tuarked atten tion their instructora, and those Who have aided' them in the attainmenVof knowledge or piety. Gratitude in one of our first du ties to God,, and should not be forgotten when due to men. ' TIM PELL No trait of character is more valuahle than the possession of a good:temper. Routs can • never be made happy without it. It is Like flowers that 'spring up-in--our- Pathway, - re - • - viting'and cheering us; Kind words and looks are the •outward demonstrations; pa tience and forbearance are the sentinels with in. Study to acquire and retain a sweet tem _pm' I Lis mor s-val nab le-than - gold==it - tip= tivates more than beauty, and to the 'lose of life retains its freshness and power. StiILDNEBS 'Be tilways ai mild ms you can; honey at trouts more flies than vinegar. .I.l' you err, let it bo . on the side , of gentleness. The hu man mind is constituted that it resists se verity and yields to softness. SPARE MINUTES Spare minutes are the gold dust of—titne. Of all the portions of our life, spare moments are or may be the most fruitful of - Ovil.:— •They are gaps through which temptations Bud the easiest access to our hearts, Let them ail bo improved with care; 'Seeds make the mountains as monmati make hews. Labor and Luok. Among, the wise sayings of new.. H. W. Beecher, are the full.ming: The were .: -feet -that you are obliged tv labor' is not ,a Luis. 'fortune. The mare fact that your labor pro duces sloOr resul's.iinot a misfortune.. , The thing that yOu'closireta an 7 alleviation would be the greatest curse , to you, Do not, be ashamed bl that 'loco where God has shot you up. God has put your tasks Upon 'you and remember thitt -your enjoyment is to consist io the essential, rosoltuess of your nature. It is to eousist in - the activeuso of those foreca,,which Goa Las endowed you with, - wheiever his providence has put you. And if ho has withheld from" You.- sornci''uf ,thuse enjoyments ivbich he has, granted to others, be assured - , irYoU 'are faithful,„the . t. in some way' they will be' macre to ly'ou. Do nt.it be arihnied of hardness.; Stand to it and fight out your.betas: • See ,t07a.,, thutfl hatgver you lose— Ith op: er it t tlbauooey,, ort or -what boi—you di) . not I , se man-, how'd, or dun`rifgeior honsty, of eittif,l,6*lty or'iruti: fulness.. 'Stick- to -them -They , '-are half your lite. ' i' think if you were. to from :man tdi man, in ad.:the oriiingry chow:tots Lfei: youoyou ; 111ik you took, them a$ their hour * t hen they Wide their se -creegonipfaltitti,' w r ite 'did auf'librcirEurieif Ihelitnpresilictrtha4 7 though they.. 'should be., reeigried to. ibein its was :A. gm:oi Lion of toistofkuncs.that !hey ; wcre.pliliged to , . .The o yuung, • rnio,, basin niog gays, to It "obliged. "it, rise' ciiity; end Sit :lap' waif cessau'ly, but I hopo, rtir ,, a titue.'„ the, rook's, ptir scilse of' 'lli is . di liiirto 4veas acik libt lie riiikij (VI vitird"to' the tilde: hot.tbe: trn der: tlioTyieneseity cofi points to theJavored. : , ,soos, , ..lol l 4 1 JP4Pr. 9I ri°IIRF.P ?bp 7er 3 r 1 ??" ttq 'F °r4 ) I auil,frgio are useless,,ang worse ikon u . selcisi'l 44i - hacks hay. .good ifintbiin i he ildiuried to'nsli teli , you, what yoU'call . ,has been :11 - keir ruin, , labucit bc , out• your , 3 tiasioade you, Oai 'you teen' and I 'yo , u'irefM.M. ;t `lisp lfeeri it'Ytok9a 4.lo4kstinVt.l': to • y.ou. Austiniteati.of. , kiemoikuitz. • pur . cuuditiqb, thank G9,44pr it/. „3 f ,. „ ..;i;r, A martieretirecieutlyezeatited.io Idaho is sakt.to,baye..tiareadaa 416 apaffold . with a arailpori.iiis face. —330, then it should, be underatVad, tr i etipy tharried a wiLiew .eight el.iNica. • ' ' !:StM - Tsi • ^ kn e r rl • • ;1' .1: ..iniMBER r4v :~- ;r° An aged gentleanwealled- at our office -a few days ago, tiod'intiodue . ed thi; Subjecit of tetußcianvo. After convesiog a shprr t tim e he made the follow : - I,ngstateFeckt ,tyhieb may be a wiroing to 'othersl' - • - • 'rain a nitrye of waa strictly terperate• until . ii r ttias'ittliout eighteen years of lage;'vrhen F threw ofF all pans - eta! restrtlint'atid'sititigled"'witli . 8%4' as sooliterr _ MEM then,pitought_ ;that. it -was markly, to drink, smoke, and swear, and soon beeatne an adept in all these. practices. I was then (lathe broad road to ruin, and bid - fair to ,aoon liG,duwni in a.druakardsgrave. „J knew "ndt tliat , l was forgipg ..ehttina that could itiot 0011i:be' .1 ti iii& ch - itird - bitie'eut iny life short, but I loved and married alputt,t Jad:v .who a'strons infttic i obt? Over me. I - re• Would' df my- ;self, but I decasionatiy look-sr , dram, •and sometimes becatue intoxicated, leoc• tinned until my eldest son• was,about Stiteen • • years of age, „ i 'Pue'd,tY sat4lA) at,„ one of these two ihoutand ,drißking,tiins which polittie_ottr_ t 9 0 seal A egan converstw . c number olybuth r s entered= and called fordieverarges: 1' looked up, and there was myrion; whom 1 k vet_Laq • " ~liftrov'sang his father's footstep's. I pallesthipf aside, and spoke toihica words of reproof. Ho referred tow . is aged wan bore bewail h is head in lenee, it's'a"fldod Gf t)ainfilfreetillections ovitr his mititi.'i.Sfier — a ievr• inowetitif ho continued in a sad tone : , 'That was my last beverage. _ that I would:never toueb.tbe aecurti , God b Lei , /di Jot. .ae - Yelped me to witbetaud every temptation. I could not, eoptrol thy oldest See; ha had formed a taste' for ft !quoit:' He-tecatne a drulikird, nod ndw .sleeps in it drunkard's• grave. , Again he was OVeroolllo by. painful . tamp ticine, but after a short paw • continued : raised fiVe . more sons, They, all 'are living and doing well. I 'taught them to•be temperate. They are all tetotalers. I am now old and full of yearp.' I have pot long to remain otpearth, but while I live. I 'will warn every-father to avoid setting a bad ex ample before their children.'— Oliva 23ranch. Ttie OLD SOT FLANKED --And eome-totrief:AsM6l,s, the fa • loons pardon-brokers - tie — at the White House. laid when the vote was taken :'go the poor old man is gone.at last We hope-.that's true We pope the attention of 35 OOO,M. of-people-will scum - b - oAlfeitid — from so un worthy an object as Andrew Johnson: lie's entirely Coothin to spread over so much ground. He's too light to engsgel'sci murk attention. lle's too poor a Copperhead even to attract the hatred of the Nation, Oblivi on, total expurgation from the minds and thoughts of the people be his betrayed aid cursed, is the only fitting punishment-' for 60 bad a man. Consigned to the solitude, and shades of Greenville, Tennessee, he ought not 60 much as be thought of again, and 'an wept, unhonored, and Unsung,' ho should creep quietly into a dishonored grave ; where a single slab, bearing the significant' Wallet 'impoaehed,' will be all the epitaph ho wtti 'deserve or need. A .gapcl juke is toll.of a young swirl w,h9 attended a social circle a few eveliingfi s ince. The conversation turned on 'Citifornil, and getting rich. Totn that if ha , was in , 43alifortlia, instead , of reorking.ia the , rdiaes Araylay e t nme .60 mi ner. who bad *bag fah of gel.r t etic,Lout his hraius, gather up the gold arto Ours of Ott young ladies quietly rc'plied,fbat he had better gather up the hrains,aajlitev identlystood in tunic naed of that article that) orgold. Tom' itttidued fordho , of_the .„• i • - Suitt BtAcur s r.--.Ei . ub, up fi'ao in . dsto :l, tura "Wire of sifted CI - Vrti'a'ideap of flutter orlard the eize'of it - lartie egg if lard 'add 'nilre 'kilt. Before thefloor IS Si tied, giirlig Otte Iol 6 lriti_itt • fal soda ; azd voo t' or , eaui tar tar, ,th,lroug lily mired add' erou 41 awoot milk- or to • 1 , ~ „w ater , make it knodd ottiety, 'thau 4:the? trizlkeittr) eak de with thelieu r et; oi' r'oll 'Otis' alict Out 'tip to .suit the fatierdritl. take, in . acilitherLquic.tl "Ctiffee,:ivhat du ynu do' alotre, er.sa furoli'lo'il4npts'Lde'kua'or da:da,Odut' I titdc de tarooo ortei q's,ket do -tug•ratk - ia dat a ilaTe "AV, tip you c.biok,soi.euffce ?;) '•Well,"1 411 you ; kaso ;she shioea by .11.1 , 141‘evilea'we wzollight; anil i deladishines bY447lwhell c. I ? , LIP! t" . • - VYank 'with 'a . iurcTiirh sn brat ho.'coulti et.,11/Tl6 , *••hiiii.: The Dut6h . roaa Jay "down orr,a.tablo;•,,iii'd ..7toniciic„tzatiing ; Kis - I )4{. t a o - i i 4 1 . 11 9 A i/ PP•vq;,q l .9 . • q r )h,'yoiz uro.,bitip& tac t yuaregAlie .1)4110,- man.• • ft,`Yiitf-t2ith`;' ii - Yatikde; yoct Atioto Arad goitils.! tors - Walk:4 you 0 Isciett c.;• 1- • ' 44P L The pels:plm Bfitcap4c. ii Franco !)e- Hove th4t theitelsr grepoleoa Is. still alive Stint I P+lANDA , PorliocTpeals& :k9 :,Fl ll -91 ? , 9t -au -- ~4.1,8 y 7,4 a utcso.9, hi/ Le. 310ekoci up twroasysr:witireleves:Protts`4irla azi4ry b05 , ... 040n5! wAo !NW og F L:,fidd ,a vcolies. , 1—• • - ; The yo'ting /aly dead--ja.l loves with a young gotitteman,.itninediatol,r, Jevt via on treini4 itik6cl-tollattleltto dayi• Ec* Kwoo to., le cliVe ip t 1,!0 p 4,01, say 01)00 ,eighteen. • , 2 ~ ,,--7.04!•!;:- . . tagy crag „ sour kJ u or .1) Influence of ,Example. I I .~ v ~~~ f ~'~~ =MEI i_reselved a_ setoff is like- I ~, _ .
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