: . ...- , . . . • - -- 1'; r ' : *2.` : ! ', l '' - '' t ; ' 1 : :.". ':'': ' '''''''), • :':: 0-- ) ' ''. .: ' ' 'l.- :'' : t . ' ' : :: '. ' :%. 1 i f' 1 1, 1: te . ; 1 ! 4 1 ~.: . 1.1 , .I' ... .. , '- . .1 ... -., . I , ; ':' 14 - , le -1 - . ~,. .- . 1-- - . ,' i 1 r - ` • ' • ' ' .0 • .4 "-_ , -, 4.,..,. ...,, . .g.., ~... ,• , - ' - - i • — a: "i - , .., .: ~ , i': c . 0 1 4 . • . , . •*". , ty'4, ..-, •. -:z . :-. • ..:-- .- '..i •- • ' _ ' ,! .v....t,•••• .. ..,, . . ~ ...„11, • ~, • • - r • • ~,, ~ .- ..-: . 4 , ..f-,. :. N . : . +..','","' '-',' '''' -'-,' : 3 " ' • .''' ~ '1 ' 1' 1 -,...Y)r...!" . ~, , ~,,zll4:sarl , ,-;,7- 1 '-..-.. ' ' ' :".:.- : .- Z': l'.s%- ",:" . E,- - ,, ........ . ~..,,:;:,...:,2,,,,,.._,.....,,,,... ... c :,...... ~...,..„..„. .„,.._. ....., 333 r VV.. 33101 r: VOLUME, XXII JAPON MACHINE SHOP LUMBER' YARD r THE sucaMihers having enlarged their shops and added the latest improved machinery ifor workng. Wood and Iron, are now prepared to do all kinds of Work in their Line and are manufac , inring,the Willonghby's Gam-Spring Grain and Fer talizer Drill, Greatly Improved ;• The Cel ebrated Brinkerhoff Cornshelior ; Gibsoas' Champion Washing Machine; lobn Rid cliesherger's-Patent-Lifting-Jae4 TEII PROPRIETORS OF THE WAYNESI3O - Ro' SASII AND minininrY having furni+hed their shops with the latest iin prove,l NI acnittery for this Branch of Business, they are now prepared to manufacture and furnish nil kinds 4 IBUILDINCr_MAT ouch AR Sash, Doom Frsmes. Shutters, Blinds, Mouldings, some Eighteen Different Styles; Cor nice, squiring,; Porticoes, dm. dco., elooring, Weath erboarding, and ALL KINDS LUMBER; furnished at short hotic We tender our thanks to the community for their liberal patronage beirowed— upon ua and hope by attention to Business to rnyrit a continuance of the same. Also agents for the sale of Dodge dt. Stereno»'s liirbir, Valley Chiaf, and' World Combined Reap, ing and VI , wing Mtichines, and the celebrated Clipper Mower sitay:7, 18691 TER ARM NB 8111" W..kYNESBORO', PA., _DR. J.; BAIRNS ANDERSON PROPRIETOR ; 23 Q N c ata.—Auld Lang Syne. If mvorue love was sick to death, Tra-la, tra-la. tna N, I'd tell her at her latest breath Tra•N,rra-le. tra-la; Her race of life could not be run,: 'l4a:ts, tra-ts, tra-la, d huitsenae Drugs of Ambereon At the Drug Store on the Corner. If f was bald without a hair, Tra la, tra la, tra 10, I'd laugh at that, I would not care, Tra la, tra le, tra la, I'd bring them back, yes, every one, . Tra la. Ira la, tra la, By Drugs I bought of Amberson At the Drug Store on the Corner . If I was tanned to darkest dye, Tra la, tra la, tra In, I would not care, I would not cry, Tra la, tra la tra ta. For soon a bleaching would be done Tra la, tre la, Ira la By Drug.; I'd buy. of A mberson At the Drug Store on the Corner, Then threeltimes three and tiger to, Tra ta, its la, tra la, For what We know that they can do, 'bra la. tra la, tea la, With chores loud, the vict'ry wont Tra Is, tra la. By Drugs, I bought of Ambersoni At the Drug Store,on the Corner. DRIIGS-T HE BESTjAND PURESZ AL. ways on hand at • , ~A IN TS CHEMICA LI AND MINERAL Plinix White Lead Nal Colors, the beat assort ment in town at * EROSENE OILS. VARNISHES, DYES all kinds•st T)RUSHES,PAINT,VARNISH,SASH, HAIR pond Tooth Unashre at T RUSSES AND.SUPPORTERS:AT 10 - RANDY, WHISKY, WINES AND, RUM for medicinal use ona • 11()ATENT MEDICINES-ALL THE;STAND .1 aid Patent Medicines of the day at • INTRACTt, FOR FLAVORING, PERFU 4inery, and toilet articles generally at lIHYOICIA.NS PRESCRIPTIONS CAR 1 fusty compoteroleil at ••The Corner Drug store. July 16 fleT IA ARRIVAL!" 4gult, received a fall iiaiortmeat of e•u Goods, in•his line of business. Bis oti*k tounial ittlatt, of all the latest ogles of lden'eand 41 )1 6 • • CAPS, lah.TS AND . woo**, Misse's.Doy'le, wad Children's 'BOOTS, SAHIBS, SHOES `acid • SUPP 4 V ., war • •• ;iiiimipticsa; /addles and *Om tiaterlimigy V. 14 659 .11onatiriimeolt4timiniasoySwadownis pad 41 ' *us 011,04 Hal, X*" Ha n 4oo4 . o , Slielii;nda ktIOCOnt ttOol,Blokftetat id*o* inthietypoods. A VAN ofttiiiiii ad be MA ii chermas •tbs.thespest• - '440.. 20 , 4.11. WZIAIII JACO& PRZV D. E. IWEISTILt AND r , =^ LIDY, FRlcg 6 E , Co iscnvisxoAlhaa. ME 1% NO MEATH. There is no death ! The stare go down,. - To rise upon some fairershorm - - ,- And bright in heaven's jeweled crown, They shine for evermore. • There is no death! The dust we tread -, 4 10 kihallchangti 'lrma summer showers, - c 71-doe le, golden grain, or mellow fruit, Ofrainkowtintedflowera. There irt no death ! The leaves may fall; The flowers may fade and pass away ! They ohly Wait, through wintry hours. The coming of the May. There is no death ! An angle form Walks o'er the earth with sileni tread; e.cans our best ioved ones sway, And then we call them "dead." The bird like voice whose joyous toned Make glad this scene of sin andstrife, Sing now in everlasting song • Amid the tree of life. Botn.in that undying lire, Tl•cy, leave us but to conks again; IVith joy we welcome them—the mama Except in sinland And ever',,near us, though unseen, The dear i•untortal spirit tread, For its tho,boundleits universe —ls life—there-is nu-deatb. THE 'NEW. YEAR Joy ! joy ! a year,ie born; • A year.to man is given,' For hone, and peace, and love For faith, and truth, and heaven, Though earth be dark with care, With death and aorrow:rife, Yet toil,,and 'pain, and prayer. • Lead to a higher life. Behold, the .fielde are white! No longer idly atand! Go forth i love and might Mem meda thy helping aand: Thee may each day and year • To . prayer and toil -41i;tert Tilt man to Godidrawa near, And earth becomes hke heaven. IteiLlAlCLlEll.a..4gLi.altor'N6 7 ". ALLEN'S CHRISTMAS GIFT. Johir . ""en sat alone in his study, gazing thoughtiully into the glowing coals before him. Outside the storm was raging fiercely, and the shutters creaked aud groaned be neath the blasts of the hind. 'The wealthy hanker rube flout his chair as the storm grew louder. and, going to the window, rais ed the heavy damask curtain and looked out. All was tiara, and sleet and snow 101 l .beavl ly against the panes. • . 'A dreadful eight,' he muttered, resutn ing his seat. 'A dreadful night. I. pity the poor wretch who is cumpotled to lace this wind and rain. 1 wonder It Agatha--' a half-sigh fluttered irons his lips, and a look of pain lingered in his eyes. Alany people believed Julio Allen to be without a heart, and supposed that whatever affection he was capable at feeling trid bpen given years ago to the shining gold.which lay piled iu girt tering heaps in his cutlers, anti in so believ tog were nearer right than the; banter-eared to have thew. Once—loug ago—a fair-haired daughter bad filed the stately. house with sulushine nod song. A merry voice rang with laugh ter through . the wine parlors, raid the puler of dancing feet re-echoed from stairway and hall. Agatha Allen was the banker's only ehild4his•pride and his treasure. In her he bad centred all his hopes; and, when she married a poor , hook keeper without his sanction, and even against his express nom. manas, LiiB rage knew no bounds, arid ho oast her off. That was long before, and be pever heard front her after; but .often, as the mouths glided by, and were linked in the 'ohm of years, memory reverted to the happier past, and the resolve was half formed to search and discover% her whereabouts, if is were . possible. And now, as he sat alone in his study, there carne a great rerun% to have hilt, daughter again with him. All the night long'John-Alion Sat dream ing wore the tire, and the chitties of the 4 .3nrisicuas bells awoke him trove the doze in to, which he had fallen: Vbtiatmae morning, he maned ea4ly 'Christmas morning. I will begin at once. Ub God! what it 1 am now ton late l' • . tio . upened the door aud stopped out on the piazro. The air was clear auu piercing ly oold while all over t h e earth and the housetops the snow had tallen, wrapping the whole in a garment of the purest white. _The banker buttoned his coat inure close ly around him as the kesu,air:poneitated to his person. *A penny, please,. sir: The voicet.lsim half drowned in ware, and a Hubs, blie„ pidched hand was - held out entriatiNtly;% , • • Sointhint io the tones startled rind bending down hg peered - curiousity ‘into the Argo; lad:eyes, which gavellie-little beggar wierd, itananny l iuuk. , ' *Wbat is your came, 04e;./te, asked, kindly.' - t o . _ „ , • ' 4 Agitthalgatha 'Allot* Stewart,' snide' tremulous' reply.' • WAYNEBORO',. FIiANKIO 00.10. Y.; tONNBII,I 4 Y ANA FR1.04 - 11' . .MORNII,I, G, iiNVARY.:."4:I-B:lo±H'7'l-T='t- Aim -triclie.oo 3 idterwt 0ni3343,3r Newaroe4,ol% God rotgio . o me I' 'ft d,'tiatoliini; llie 'Child into his orals. he hurried- into the study. 'Acid your mininia, how It she?' queried he, as he seated the wee mite before' 'the afiirordered a generous metti.iti be pre pared: ' The brown eyes were filled'With tears to overflowing, and, between the choking sobs, John Allen gleaned the facts' that his once beautiful daughter- was starring by inches in a hired tenement, while hill hoarded gold lay unused in its hiding places. When the child was warmed and fed. be ordered the dainty littlewleig,h and ski& po•' Wes, packed a basket with good, substantial boti_and-rivitteoM4-drove-iti-tii-13-diretitiort-o his daughter's residence of squalor awl pov. erty hardly to be conceived. Up, up the creaking stairs, 'through a narrow, dark passage way, and then pointing to a door, the child said simply: 'lt's in there, sir. We live hers' He at once pushed open thi3 door, and went in. Upon la bed in one corner of the room lay n-attenuated-figure. The-everwere-closed as if iu bleep, and one thin, transparent hand clasped tightly the worn trouuterpane. 'Wake, mamma, wake! Sea, the gentle man has fetched us bread, a basketfull,' and the girl.laid her own small palm upon the thinner ono of her mother. But no. sound came from the pale lips,' no returning glance brightened the glazed eyes. They .were, indeed, too late, for alone in the old garret she had died, and the spirit bad gone to God The beaker reeled and would have fallen had he not. caught .at the chair standing near bins. .Too late !' he groaned 'too late ! 0 Agatha! my daughter, my daughter 1' And—fur-the-first-time—in—years _the_old man knelt in prayer. How long he remain ed in that position he knew . not, but when he arose, there reigned in his heart holy calm With clearer eyes, he read life's du ty, and made resolves to amend his deeds. Ihe_wealth_and power he once coveted was to him now only to be used to do good, and to alleviate, as far as possible, the sufferings of others He situ the world now with dif ferent eyes, and was surprised to find how selfish and bigoted he had been through all his life. And, beside the poor couch of his dead, as the clear chimes of the Christmas belle sounded in his ears, he east "away the old, morose, narrow-minded self, and deter mined for his own -sake- and that of the one etill.liviotr, to be a bettet man. And. with the resolve he telt an inner conviction that, in the future, which should be higher; holi er, and therefore happier, the Great—Master would aid him,. And John Allen's 'Cliristmak •G+ft' was a gift direct from Go& of a warmer heart and higher purpose. LIFE ; DEATH. Death, plunge opaque beyond conjecture —Young's Night Thoughts. Oh, this restless life; how many fears, hopes, cares, anxieties it brings to •us tit ho that lives to maturity eau be exempt from them Oh, thou • unknown ending to this life! • What art thou that I must so MOOO experience I' Death, what art thou, (head sibilant, that .1 must SO 6900 take by the hand and walk with intimately ? How uusaswersbla questions arise ! Why do L live ? Whither um I tending As tiny nutmeat I may wake that 'plunge opaque;' then, where, how, what, shall be this restless, rest•seeking, unhappy, happi ness pursuing being known to we as my. sell? Here I nut confined to a circumscribed sphere of kuawledge and of action. Here I grope like a worm in darkness. I easnot dive beneath the surface of the earth to pierce its mysteries; I cannot soar upward to those myriad worlds that mockingly smile •dowti upon me from the sky But there is an active ptinciple within me constituting a part of myself, that can dive into those ()cl unk depths, picturing their unspeakable wonders; that can. soar ou tireless 'wings above, visiting those unknown worlds, giving to them form and color, peopling them with mystic intentgencles ; that, passing beyond these worlds us by the first few milestones upon a far-extending road, can roam on and on through the magnitudes of space to the utmost verge of the universe. Yet here I am, caged in flesh; here I remain, not hav ing even moved front my seat in the corner of my room I This active power belonging to, coustuatiag a part of myself; this adventurous something that inquisitively searches out things hidden from fleshly eyes; this somethittel call imagination.' Now I turn back to the past of my life, to events of yesterday, of last year, of years ago. picture the scenes I saw agitated. ' I say to myself, 'Are these picture; more distinct, wore real, than those you beheld in the bosom of the earth, or in the, immensity of space Y' This other property .of myself, this power that brings to life the dead past, this I name Memory. And Isbell die. Amon , . all the torturing uncertainties of life, this a lone is sure. It may bo weight, tomorrow, it will be soon, It ever so many months or years' ahead ; it may,-perhaps, brr thr hence, even if etrer ••so :near iu point of time, 'for the soul, I filiuk, •whearopon the verge of death. often an a =meat, lives over a lengthened lifetime,• passes through almost'tin infinitude of poteep tion.and.sensation: Wbewi,die will Metonry and. Imagination' die'swieli - Withott . tbe'jtil should I be tnyaelt If,l,lopigetniiry Y In!olden tity, I no longer tom., tuyaitlf.,,, .1, Meta in' tonaposies,.no lunge, am•eniseit I. atn,;,liiiiend,'a new being ; made; - potful ps, o,tik of;ite disurietu).ke . fed former', eumpoietftbn uld unn E bttt . ,,noae; tho -wise' new creation, foe I knots ; nothing, of trly former self, so that, a ‘ a tar as:iny win. con 813i011811088 is concerned, am 'Sbotber. But,if• Memory remain to me after deatb, I am .ptill mysetf, I shall remember the scenes of my earthly life, I shall recognize my old friends, if I meet, them. Yee, that one aniious query of the human heart is aitsweee'd ;if ietaiWseifkiioidedge, I shall know my earthly friends in that unseen world to which We all hasten: -- - This mist be so if,l and identity. But suppose t lose both ? suppose I cease to remember my former self, what then has the present myieif tci do 'With the future one ? The one bears as Close a rela- • o the other, as ttre - prienvt — lwmg gen. eration of mankind to the antediluvians.— The farmer descended frig' the latter; hence must be 'bone of their bone and flesh of their flesh; bat what avails it, since they have never seen, never known, never regarded each other Oh, my soul, wilt thou thus bowfin a stranger to thine own self 1 1 No. Thou wilt know thyself,,thou wilt recognize thy friends, thou-wilt-rememberthe—mingled guil innocence of thine earthly life, thy women tary relishes of the bitter-sweet morals, sin, thy tears and agonies of repenteoce and self 13a thing, thy cries to the Infinite for help, for pardon. Ah, yes, thou wilt remember all these, else how shottldst thou know thy Saviour? how shouldest be grateful to Him ? how shouldest thou perceive from what hor rible depths of corrnpiion He bath snatch ed thee? how shouldest thou imagine from what severity -of suffering He bath saved thee ? And if, alter death, memory and imagine• tion continue to be parts of my being, will not my other powers of mind continue to be mine also ? Shall I not be capable of ac. knowledge, of applying that know'. edge, also, in some way,e — promotion of God's glory and perfection of my own be ing _ _ _ And, the more knowledge, the more pur ity I attain to here, will not so much the more_be_my progress there ? Lost Women. With all their vagaries and absurdities it must be admitted that the "strong-minded" women sometimes say things well worthy to be read and pondered. Read this from a speech of Mrs; Burleigh at the Woman's Suffrage Convention in New- Jersey : 'My friends, has it over occurred to you what a commeritary upon our civilization are' these lost women and the attitude of society to ward them ? A little child strays from the house enclosure and a Whole community is on the alert to find the wanderer and restore it to its mother's' arms. What rejoicing hen it is found, what tearful sympathy, what heartiness of congratulation ? .There are no harsh comments upon the poor, tired feet, be they ever so miry, no reprimand for the soiled and torn garments, no lack of kisses for the tear stained face. Bat let the child be grown to womanhood, let her be led from the enclosure of morality by the voice of affection, or driven from it by the strong scourge of want—what happens then ? Do Christian men and women go iq quest of her? Do they provide all possible help for her re turn, or, if she returns of her own motion, do they receive her with such kindness and delicacy as co secure her against wandering again Far from it. At the first false step she iA denounced as lost—lost, echo friends autibrelatives—we disown you, don't ever come near us to disgrace us. • Lost, says so ciety indifierootly. How bad these girls are! And lost—irretrievably:ost—is the prompt verdict of Conventional Morality, while _ono and all unite in bolting every door between her and respectability. Ah I will not these lost ones be required at our bands in __ the great Hereafter ?' THAT OM FASHIONED MOTHER.. One in all the world, the law of whose law is love; one who is the divinity of our infan cy, and the sacred presence in .the shrine of our first earthly idolatry; one whose heart is far below the frosts that gather so thickly on her brow; one to whom we never grow, old, but, in the plumed troupe, or in the grave council are , Children still; one who welcomed us going, and never,. forgets us— never. And when in some cloaca, some drawer, some corner, she finds a garment or a toy that once was ours, how does she weep as she thinks we may be suffering or sad ? Does the battle of, id() drive the wanderer to the old homestead at last? fier hand is up on his shoulder, het' ditn.and fading eyes aro kindled with something of the "light of other daye," as she gazes upon his worn and troubled face., "Be of stout heart, my son I No• harm can• reach you here s• But some time that arm-chair is set back Against the wall, the corner is vaetnt, and they seek the dear old occupant in the graveyard. =an . Patfirsaws.-i-A woman's work is never at tin ends A man's best fortune— or bin worst—is * wife.. • Ail . are good hisses, but where come the i!l•wives from ? • , You may know a foolish woman by • her finery. Fair fotohed, and dear bought,•is•good for the ladies. Three women and a goose make a market. The rich widow ories 'wit:ll'one y e and re joices with the other, , • • , Lleithat,telle.his wife news is but newly married. • • She that, has an, ill-husband shpws it in bor dress ,:,„ . ••• . . She who is bbrn,handsome is ,hotn mar ried:. • • • . : - • • . The YOEttliM4l3 OA parts bis Bair ;in the middle is alma ',to, , t4arry : the: young lady with the. Greefini flonnd, and obey will be inatobtid. BE KIND TO LITTLE ONE*. On a bright itnd lovely Aay in .the month , of Nay, a band Of gayly dressed and blotto ing girls issued from the house of one of the party, and proceeding *little fur th er down the lane, stopped ay the house ,of another companiou, where they were joined by her; aid they entered the neighboring' weed to enjoy themselves in gathering wild fibers . . 'Scarcely bad they gone when a little pratt ler of three years) oldAcatie from• the last mentioned (Welling and following the retreat lag party, with . a sweet childish voice cried 'Sister Katie, let . tue go ton.' But sister Katie was too ankh occur to bear the little ' 40 bear the little darling, and agniatheilead... voiee . iras heard •Please; sister, iskeirie; I'll be ailed: This time she Willi heatd, dtid tritnieg from the rest of the party, Katie went book and commanded Grace to go home. Onward they went, joyous and happy, gathering their flowers and sending. fortb merry bursts of laughter.; none wore than Kate, who, forgetting the tearful face of lit le--firace, tram the brig,-Irtest—ancF-gaye. among the party - They sontillued their sport until the dirk clouds and rolling thunder warned them to hasten home. They returned with safety, but • oh, the anguish which was awaiting Katie upon her arrival S Grace was nowhere to be band.— Search bad been made in many •directions; but in vain. Oh, the belt reproach, the agony under which she labored when-she re membered that through her Unkindoess Grace had been lost-I At last the searchers returned, bearing the child in•tbeir arms. After tieing left alone, she, 'net itnawitii what to do, fheught she would follow her sister, but getting into the wrong path, had - wandered - far - away-until she-eame-to_a,bab• bling brook, which pleased her childish fancy very much. There she remained a !beg iiu e unconscious of the sorrow het absence misfit cause, until, frightened by the roar of tinted. -or s -she-tried—to—find—her—way- back. But that was now impossible, and iitting desire upon a rook near a stream, the little one wept as if her heart would break. But .the rain coaling with great . violence, and the wind blowing very Grace *ander• ed back to the brook, where; after a long search, she was found by the neighbors.— She was borne to her home, where for many weeks she was each hour exp'euted iedie.=- But,God, in his tnercif;al providence, raised the deduct child'from the bad'cif sknesa to cheer the hearts of all around her, U sisters, learii from this simple story to be kind to'the little ones. You , know not how soon your Heavenly Vatber town fit to cause-you to suffer, in one way or another, through your unkinduess. Tat USES OP ADVERSITY.—Yos wear omit your clothes. - You are pot troubled with visitors. Yon are exouerated from making calls. Bores do not bore you. Tax-gatherers hurry past your door. Itinerant bands do not play opposite your windows. You avoid the °ileum of serving on jurieS. No one thinks of presenting 'you with a testimonial. No tradesman irritates, by asking : 'ls there any other little article you wish to-day, sir ?' Impostors,know it is no use to bleed you. You practice temperance. You swallow infinitely less poison than Other. 4. Flatterers do not shoot their rubbish into your ears. You are saved many a debt, many a deoep lion, many a headache. _ And, lastly, if you have a true friend in the world., you are sure, in a very short space of time, to know it —Puhela. LAWYER TAPPIN'S Doo. A certain butch er of iSteubenvilie (call him Mr. B.) had been much annoyed by a lam) do.; which bad several times stolen meat fromhis stall. Going to lawyer Tappao, be presented his ease thus : 'Mr. Tappan, I have lied my beef stolen at various times by. a dug in the town. What shall I do ?' 'Sue the owner ofothe dog and recover the price of the beef,' was the answer. 'Mr. 'Tappan, it was your dog,' said Mr. exultingly.', • . • 'Ali I it was --well, what is the value of the beef ?' 'Three dollars,' replied the butcher, 'Very well,' said ,Mr. • Tappet', • and paid the looney. With u swilling countenance the butcher was closing the office door, when 'be was startled by : • • 6 i iold on, Mr. 11.; ll:barge you are dollars for Consuls:mom , funeral speech' which' 'e Paris paeern.snres us• was actually pronounced at Nontruatre the other day by a father, at the grave of his sou "ti - entiunieu," said the tither, iu a voice tub ut *mnion, "the:body before we wan that ut ruy son. : Be sums a youug' wan iu the priwu of, lite, with •tt sound coestitutiou whiehoingittlu have in 'cured him a futodied - years, But raiseon :duet, druokeeness And • debauchery . of, the ,tuottt-diagragetuk kind . brotuilat, the flower el •oge, tothe ditch ,which you:, see' before You: J. this belin eximttle to - you: and your, childred. Let us go heuoe. .‘ , 'Seep. your crying I' sai4 , a,Fieprage4 fqthir' ea' tile goo, lie Sit up - aq iatulacable 'yell tot the. last'aiertoianted :" *Stott 44; ii k Oiteu tear r!.% , stgaiib Lieo4!:edJ- the ,44t.luie tevt r coja4te,et;ithe ; OY fitAA cp. Irp'll:4tim P t 89 prise I oeck 4,. Va . yqu , -i -:,1:,. : SAL*? OiA 3 ,4** *ear . "r• .', r flr 4 3 :,..1 , - ,-'. Foi;tlie` Village IR+ By 4Rural Behoolle;10 — ir:' Heil !elan ! thou sacred moiei W. greet tby kind approach pith giaddeireihisarts And time, apse thatioiwwilich it inttiai* TO,alt who welcome thy smarm. , _ Thy - te6olfeitions dear ; , LI 4:— Vireke s Tan7 a holy.thops4 deep; .difii) ix; arisfibile bygone, iNfien fiveri The; world's enniiinied Oificir here. We celebrate thy days For thou didet bring the bo To him we bring, not gilts of spice and gotii 4 , But living worship, love and praise. Ohristines day I The birthday of Christ, the Redeemer of the world! illemorable day. Far and side, and, everywhere, is this day celebrated as - the annitereary birth day of the Holy Child Jeer's, who -left his blitisful glory in the Celestittl'Uourte.of.Dei• ty; aid butebled himself to assumeU human body, "Wit He might redeem us from eft id - Tilify unto Himself 'a peoaliiii people, zealous of good works.-' . . How eventful, then, is this day I , It dates baekwird through the Jim vista of bygifee eenturies to a day when the "Word tlieoathe fleah,.and dwelled among ns." Methiokti , it rapt have been an interesting and jo)ful time for all those who anticipated-and waited • for "the consolation of Israel." The prom ise of a 3lessiah to redeem "a world lytig in wickedness" was then fulfilled. Christ came. Long, long, he did tarry. Four thousand years had elapsed before the pro mise of the Savior was realized ; and :Dow nearly two- thownuel more have passed:llkm His incarnation. And to day we oelebraqs His birth. Many; many have anticipated EMS festal day. Not a few longed for the jeys - ancl - assoeiations-of—this-Chriattaaa-dai,-- Its pleasant day-break wae weleomedin mho.' Moe and cottage, by :M L itt.' hyrpour. To day friende have met who have bean separ. ated for the space of a long year or more._ I.lrethrerrand sisters, antrpareats, have sur rounded the bow° table ouoe wore to weak() the Christmas festival, and- hold .familiar converse, - Many a hati.lehold was , gladden. ed tO-day hi the unbroken circle of, home, -while wady more were made to feel salezen by the recollection of the departure of those who have down the valley of Detith'e dark, quiet shadow. .Parents „hate to day mourned the death, of ,an ; egeetieeete. chits. 'Bretheis andeistent hasie Wept , the eying: - 10cue tear of love forleiring ogee who, a year ago, participated with them in Christ. was *Herta: The , vacant seat in the howes. circle is - still recognized. One, or more, 'is missing. And though the graves of the departed are to-day covered with the pale sheet of frozen snow, they still live in our memories, and are dearly remembered ,with , iu 'the walls of home'' The scythe of Tithe out them down "in the midst of life," and on this day, their oumbruus olod of clay mingles with the orioles] duet. Do we think of thed4is we should ? Can we fcir get them 7 1 think I hear the universal re. spouse, Ray. And we shou/of not forg et them. If their lives, were models of char actor, they, being death speak to us. 4 The day is gone. The shades of - night shut out the light of day. Darkness bonds over all surrounding nature. The festiii ties and colloquies of Christmas are over. 'Tis past, and we must look forward througu the misty future for another. Near Waynesboro', December 25,1869. 4- - A Cumous Taas.—ltt the Island of Goa, near Bombay, there is a singular vegetable called the sorrowful tree, because it only flourishes in the night. At sunset no flow. era are seen, and yet after half an hour,tho tree is full of them. They yield a sweet smell. bat the sun no sooner begins to shine upon them, than some fall off and others close up, The tree continues •t 0 tinvier in the night during the whole year. Mortot Etna• is on record as an active and' awe inspiring volcano one theneitUd Oars' *boforo Christ. Conipared 'with ireauvius, more seen of tourists, is only a Eton rises to the bight of eleven thousand feet, and its base is. ninety . miles in oireumfergnee. Its lava streams, five miles wide, and fifty to one hundred feet deep, et tend to a length of eighteen wiles. 'Flans, where was you born?' Vo der Halc'erOarrack.' 'Vo oat, always ?' .Yah, and peters too.' llow ell are you thou.?' 'Vi, yea the old school house is pile I was two weeks more nor a year, what is painted red as" you go page wit your back pebind you, on der rite aide der blacksmith shop what stands where it was, punt down neat year will be two weeks.' Nature toachos us that we are all dept . : eat; that we are like oog•wheols, *pus lig each . ottter along by filling up.mutual voids. =IMMO A conscript being told th.tt it was sweet to die for his inniaLry, ;eietaiied himself oa ebo groundo that be never did • like sweat things.. ,Laulcrs must sleep juore eumlertadd x ly :than peuple is ::uerai—it iminuieriafee which Sideithey he; ' appropriate hotel for old maids to stop (man :r aker:) House.' :.:Steep is life'synuo, soot from bo2tren to * mt.*" us onew r pty by thy. . Motto foesio old bachelor—Be just and teat Eliot .• Ito lova to live should live to love ;•, , a'~'~u;; NtIIIBE,R 20. ol_GoiLforetak