. ~ . . .1-1 , ' . . , . ~. , ' ' . ' ''' . , ' • • ' ..''' '' • ..' ,' .' ' ' ft ' i,,, :'•.-4 --, '' ~, , , '..1 ,..4„:,: .--' . 4 .',.TVlt.r"r;7''. : , ,r.v..1. ,, H.,:*,-.m , 0::..,, „ , , , •rm .2.•• ,„-- ' ;.,,....._;., ~,,,„,„, •. •- ......,..,.*,-,,. , , ~.•' • . :,..--• ; ~..,,,,.:;.-...,_ '• -1. --,.. :i. "',..•:"... - ,:A,"• ,4 ' '''' -• " •_. ~,i „, :•:,•' ,-:, w,.',; •• •', •`, ~ . „ ••.• ~.. ' '.. -, r,, ;' '.* ,; 4 -:,V • .... ~ , 4. I , , ' t ' ~ ' A ',. V P?' ' 4+ '• ' . 'C' ' ' 1' '' I. ': 'kj:;‘:l':'.l%,:,: ';7 o l4l';'''; ' '';;l' . 11'..::" ':. 'iZ ~': ..1• - ' 1 4, -::,,,--,e,-.,,,, ~• • !, .•• • • :'• -• • -• •, , , -..--•:•.,•-- , ..,,i,..--••,, ~ ---7,...,...,..,,,,,t. •., - ~,..t • ~.). , . _ .. -• 4. •''' '' 7 ''' ' '4l' l 'll(. l'' .i.' ' ' '-;. 'ij' 7 ', ..... 1.4, -:;;/ . el. 7 ' '' .: '.l : l-7:1 7 1: ..„,„. % --- 4 s ' ' • ' ~ '''. '''' , 7 :'' :'-',..: --: ‘'A..l';' , "e4:'-' • .....,., ~,,.,,.. , ~,,, ~ .... ..,..„. . ~ ~.,.:: .:„.... ~,,:,,,...,: ~ „., y• .„,:•_ , r ' , '•'.7.73-%` - . 1, -u.,,, F .l46,, ierolit ___, ~ .. ~. " ~..... , . . -.; „ , . , „ .. .•, , .- • . ~ , ... .•.!•:.•-• , -- , ...-;;;:: ; .z. , '„,..1,....--..,.. „. „.,.„,- ; .„ , - : -,„. 7 ,„:„.,.,..,--„, „. •. . ~ , _ . . , . azwitiesul ' • , - . , •• ,•,-,•-•'%'.,...,!;: v1;:,,,r-' , .-- rAr. • '!.• ,:,i , , , -7.. , , •4 , ' . . . ' ..aw VW — W,.331, XT LUIIIII X' 4 1 It O f . rimaradswasir ...,...,,u,.,0~ Theta IIBLL "r• k, • I a.t. mot, , f. --,, , ,5ai .1;„ ''' , `7- 1 •,.C .4Y , ICI, •• _...,.... • ~„ ,• '' ~,,,-: ~ :::;:i there's a - beantzfril land, a lar I ! , .. • • , Which Iles jnat oifei ii • • Where the night r With its gloom Fades ont into r .• tneir shops T machinery fol . ' ire harbor is se ~ And the r .w prepared to do ,te, snit are mannfae. - They Ar A-Spring Grain and Fer- W ' , •Grestly Improved; The Cel- The .rinkerhoff-Cornsheller ; - Gibiims' r aou Washing Machine; John Rid- Ararger's Patent Lifting Jacks. . . WAYNESBORO' a 3 , BrA .. p - illcTif ,- • , . • having furnished their shops r ,proved Machinery for this Brar are now prepared to Inanufac' kinds of _BUILDING - 7 „such as Sash, Doors, Mauldin_ : someight nice, stairingtice „erboarding, and • • t, D R g lA menti ER • all RU II an RU -RA I 111 for • AT ar I: Me 1)"13 121 ' ^ Mled•V's VOLUME XXII,' MACHINE SHOP THE sucscrihers having enlarged tneir shops and gdded , the latest improved machinery fol . working. Wood and Iron. are now prepared to do all kinds of Work in their Line, snit are nianufae. !tiring the Willoughby's Gam-Spring Grain and Far . talizer .Greatly Improved; The Cel- Aimed Brinkerhoff-Oornsheller; Gibsons' Champion Washing Machine; John Rid dleibarger's Patent Lifting Jacks. 'WAYNESBORO' 13BBE atinEY • having furnished their shops with the latest ha. proved Machinery for this Branch of Business, they are now prepared to tnahufactnre and furnish ,kinds of We tender our thanks to the community for their liberal patronage bestowed upon as — and hope by ristct attention to Business to merit a continuance of tile .same. Also agents,foe the sale of Dodge & &overlain's- Kirby Valley Chief, and World Combined Reap, ,ing and' Mqvviag Machines, and the celebrated Clippei Mower may 7, 14369] ORA J. BURNS ANBERSON AYr3ICIANB •PRESCRIPTIONS AR E— fully cquiyouruled st" The Comer Drug Mole." july 16 , IRST "Big ARRIVAL!" V ELBA has just received a fall assortment . of Goods, in his line• of business. His stock masts in,part, of all the latest styles of Men's and oys • ~ • EATS A.ND CAPS, en's; Women's, Igisse's, Boy's and Children's d Slippecri„of every description.' Lidice and Issas,. LIS3 7/Zt 4W MVP Eit3 nnet .F.ranies, Trimmisurs, fiundowns and hats teas Trimmings, floop 'Skirts, Muir Neill, Hair oils, osiery;tilores, Parasols, bun Umberellas. ans, dm. - • School. Blank'and Miscellaneous Books,Station• y efallkinds; Notions and Fancy Goods. ill of wbich sold , as-cheap as the cheapest. Sept .40 • ' • w 41.041 YARD ! THE PROPRIETORS OF THE BASK AND DING A?EB AL Frames, Shutters, _Blinds, .teen-Different—Styles, ear .oes, &c. Ike., Flooring, Weath ALL KINDS LUMBER, furnished et short notice. & CO. IN NM BB MK" WAYNESBORO', PA., PROPRIETOR, .15 II AlR.—Auld Lang Syne. If my true love was sick to death, Tra-la, I'd tell her et her latest breath Tra-la, tra-la, Her race of life could not be run, Tra-la, tra-la, tra-la. I d buy some Drugs of A mbOrson • At' he Drug Store on the Corner. WI was bald without a hair,l Tra la, tra la, tra la, .I'd laugh at that, I would not care, Tra la, tra la, tra I'd bring them back, yes, every one, Tra la. tra la, tra In, By Drugs I bought of Amberson At ttie Drug Store on the,Corner. if I was tanned to darkest dye, Tra la, tra la, trait', • I would not care, I would not cry, Tra la, tra la, tra la, For soon a bleaching would be done To la, tra la, t ra la, By IDrugs I'd buy of A whereon At the Drug Store on the Corner, Then three times three and tiger to, Tra la, tra la, tra la. For what we know that.they can do, • Tea la. tra Is, tra la. • With chorus loud, the vict'ry won • Tra la, tea la. tra la, By Drugs, I bought of Ambergon _At toe Drug Store on the Corner. • .038-:-THE BEST AND PUREST AL. rays on hand at • I .IN TS , CHEMICAL AND MINERAL ant, White Load and Colors, *be best assort in •town at 10SENE, OILS. VARNISHES, DYES 4 kinds at • ISHES,PAINT,VARNISH,SASFI, HAIR td Tooth Brushes at • TSSES AND SUPPORTERS AT • ,NDY, WHISKY, WINES AND RUM medicinal use oaa .'ENT MEDIOINES-ALL THE STAND, d Patent Medicines of the day at 'TRACM, FOR FLAVORING, PERFU arp toilet•articlee generally at BOOTS, GAITERS, SHOES JACOB VRICK, ° D. B. igusArz, The harbor is safe and the anchor sure, • And the gates are broad and free ; They ope to the king • And the peasant's ring, With the same swift certainty. --There are sunny slopes and mountains MO, • And rivulets laughing sweet ; And voices low, That we've longed for'so, ' And. the patter of little feet. • There are loving eyes, which we closed in I —Welve-a — mottreribief, m e Funny lend, Whose blue eyes often peer Through the mists and bare • Of the gleaming stars, . To lijiten o There are none so forsaken, des Look up, then, ye poor and ye suffering, Ye troubled, weary and sad, Let the eye grow bright With the old-time light, And the aching heart be glad. For over the river we've christened death just veiled for a tithe from sight, Is a gleaming strand, And a summer land— The beautiful land of light. rtyr=mailr‘-7-.--4,„ - About 1d33, a family named ,Sickler, or Van Sickler, moved into Towanda, and took up as a residence a place formerly occupied as a hotel. Oa the premises was a deep well, originally dug by or for Mr. Means, the ho• tel keeper. At the time of building or stop• ing up the well, a stone shelf was inserted by order of• the landlord, about ten feet` down, for the purpose of depositing in e' cool 'place batter, beef and such other articles as might be considered necessary to their preserve tor. The new comers—Van Sieklers—soon detected, or thought they did, the presence of decaying wood in the water, and it was decided to'have the well cleaned out. Ac• cordingly two old patriots were detailed for the work. Their combined efforts, after a few hours' labor, resulted in fishing op- a but firkin, tightly sealed, but black with age, and its old staves nearly rotted through.— Mr. Means, the old landlord, long 'since re• tired from business, and then residing a abort distance from the. place, was sent for and came down, white haired and venerable, lean , ing on his cane. After looking at it a mo ment, the old man said he could 'explain the whole matter. The tub had been let down on the stone shelf, long years ago, when he kept - the hotel. As near as be could,remem ber, it was over thirty years previous. The tub had disappeared in the night, and it was supposed that it had been stolen. The well bad never been cleaned out before to his knowledge. The tab was nov r opened in the .presence of the little crowd that bad gath ered, The lid was removed, the' white linen cloth taken'up and there was the batter, yel low as , gold, and, as it .proved on tasting, sweet as if made but yesterday, although thirty-one years 'bad elapsed since it • first went to the .bottom of the well, where it was now found, like truth union:ared by its long residence. The old man claimed the prize,, and carried it off rejoicing. Witnesses are still living,w•ho were present at the time, who will, with our informant, make affidavit to the truth, in every particular, of this true butter story. In those days batter was worth from six to twelve cents per pound; now see the. difference— thiety-five to. fifty cents, and not the best at that,—independent Re pub/jean. . A 'bright, pretty and intelligent girl, thir teen year's of age, a few evenings ago while endeavoring to master a difficult lessen at her home in. Germantown, • was suddenly' struck with brain fever, helplessly, upon' the floor. This young girl died from overtaxed mind, and we hope this case will prove a warning to both . parent's and chil dren. The ,young mind should not be taxed beyond its capacity. , Joe King was idol; in a boarding house and had'got hie mind *I; for some chicken broth.' The orders went down to icitchen and Abe broth came up, weak, flat and insip id. The sieir roan subsequently related his disaptointmeate, to a friend who said, 'They just let a chicken wade, through it.' 4 1f they did,' said Joe, faintly, 'it had on. e d its.'-- He recovered. The fotowing'is said to be .a sure cure for the soarlet fever•; at least it is a simple and not hard tto -try : Rub the body .of the patient an pver plentil ally with a piece of Zs4,pot WAYNESBORO, FRANKLIN COU.NII,'PENNRYLVANIA, TH iRS lAY MORNIP,I6, MARCO 211810. ricoarissic3A.x...• TD6• LAND OF tltigt ere's a - beautiful land, a land of light, Which lies juat oifei the nay, Where the night of light, With its gloom and strife. Fades ont into golden day, Mid sighing and bitter tears ; They are beathing bright '!death brows of light, Untouched by the frosts of years. - ..tumw-blackett • ' , •But some angel eye, Like a star in the Sky, Keeps pitying watclin'er them. Singular, if True. XiactOkiedileteilf. Opk,zn.i.l.trltesweirumpea... True naility.cpmes of nature, and, &tee further back than history. Its diploma does not require the seal and signature of men who claim to have gentle blood in their veins: fie is a gentleman who is gentle in manners and speech. Sift a scoundrel through gen erations of nobles, and he fails to become a •• Arn cnul gentleman. Birth, beauty, fortune, culture, wealth, can net make a man 04 is.menn, magnanimous, large hearted, whole•sonled gentleman. So.. (slaty cannot sculpture an ingrate and selfish Matt into that ayinmetty of seal and • heart which we all admire and honor wherever 'we find• it. proud Patrician once charged Cicero of his plebian origin. The great orator' loOked at him with rebuking eyes, and replied :--- fThe nobility of myfamilrbegine in me, that '_of.youre-will-end with you.' There is an in definable •something in the look, tone, gait, and speech of ,a man, which makes him a • loafer or a gentleman. The former is untrustworthy, uncouth, and apt at any moment to give vent to abrupt ,ug. knees of manners and speech, No child will be tempted to caress him, no virtuous women will dare to trust him. lie is coarse Trough; and seekfirst. and at every cost hie own per scnal gratification. If he becomes rich, be also becomes pompous, consequental, and ty rannical, and represents a class known as the eodfialLaristooracy. . - - Modesty is an attribute of the true gentle- man. Be will not boast of his wealth in the presence of those who are poor. He will not pride himself on his physical strength .and ; wigor r in-the-sociely — of — irWilidl77ll; will not offensively obtrude his pet notions on-any-subjeet-in- - itre - com r--- hied and poor,_ en er am Jorent opinions. A man of hon or you need not fear that he will seek to pry into your private affairs or find out thu con tents of private letters. If they coverethe carpet at his feet, his high sense of h nor .would prevent his attempting to decipher a line of their contents. In the words of an other be 'never tampers with sealed pack ages! As for the secrets imparted to him in confidence, they are kept from view tinder the sacred seal of his honor. There are fewer such men' than there should be, bat we have such in every com munity. They are the salt of the earth.— There are men who have the manners of gen tlemen without their charm:ger, and there are those who have the character of a gentleman without the manners. We find yen de beings, or gentlemen and gentlewomen in all the phases of society. 'We must not judge a Man by the coat he wear's' He may•have a good- heart beating under a ragged vest, a noble head under a slonehed-hat,-feet - that seldom go astray in unfashionable shoes, and yet be in the 'highest, fullest, and noblest sense a gentleman. What do we require of a gentleman? His rule the golden one of doing unto others as be would be done by. He will defend the absent. He will assist the weak. lie will speak for thoseswho can not speak for themselves Your codfish gen tleman may put on airs. He may bow, and nod, and smile a and scrape, and bend, but the fashionable style of su`ch a man is the gay hide that covers a mere animal. Your cod fish woman may 'stoop to conquer,' may pub on the 'Grecian Bend, not where she should bend:at the cradle, and the washtub, and bread trough, but in the street. . My friends, has it never occurred to you what a comentary upon . our civilization are these women and.the attitude of society to wards them ? A little child strays from the home inclosure and the whole community is on the alert to find the wanderer and restore it to the' mother's arms. What rejoicing when it is found, what fearful sympathy, what heartiness of congratulations I There are no harsh comments upon the poor, tired feet, be they ever so miry, no reprimand for the . soiled and torp garment, no lack of kiss es for the tear-atained face. But let the child be grown to womanhood, and let her be led from the inolosure of morality by the voice of affection, or driven fromt.~ it by Cut scourge of want—what liappensThen? Do Christian men and women pain quest oilier? or, if she returns of her own motion, do they receive her with snob kindness and delicacy as to secure her against wandering 'again'? Far from it, At the first false step she is denounced as lost—toot, echo friends • qnd relatives—we disown you; don't ever come near us to disgrace us. Lost, says society indifferently. How bad these girls are and lost=irretrievably lost—is the prompt verdict• of conventional morality. whsle one and all unite in bolting every door between ber and. respectability. Ah, will not these lost ones be required at our hands in the great hereafter ?—[Mrs. Burfeigh in the New Jersey Woman Suffrage Convention: I was in love once with a fat girl: She was very fleshy. She was enormous. But the course of my true love came to grief I was sham with her in the dim twilight :one evening. I was sentimental; I said soft things. I embraced part of her. Site fre quently turned her lovely head from me.— At last I. thought I heard the mnrlvur of voices on the other side. I arose and walk ed around her,and there I found . atiotber fellow courting her on tbe left 'side. . I was indignant, and upbratad her for her treacly eiy in thus concealing from me another love. She laughed at my conceit, as if she were not big enough to have two love's at once.— .Don flute. A little girl .thought the 'minister wanted some office because in praying bekopg say ing, 'grant; we beseech thee. • Tbe ppor are oftener prayed for than .help ed, The reason is w believe that air is cheaper than water.. ‘. Con9h AristOoraoy. BY ago. W. Burrdiv. Lost Women. I-Wctrked, and Earned It. A few weeks : ago; a nentienten - living in an Eastern town was called ant • of,lis bed: one' morning' by several vigetetis raps. ttpne his front door. Hastily &easing hiunee,lf,' he responded to the call, and found stand ing upon the step an uncouth, Totighty clad boy, With an axe on.his 'shoulder, Who, , ---htni-, til thtustin: h _ poo: et, drew out's small roll, and handing it to Judge ti—i- o .said:" 'There's teienty•five dollars, which want'you to put in the savings:bank,' and hastily turned on his . heel • and started, away. . The Judge ) slightly disconcerted at ' the; curious proceeding, iciareely knew ' *hat' to say, till at lengtt,yeeo_vering_his- , -Wits,- . be - Mind - tinflater the boy: '• ' 'Stop! 'eome back here: - Hew did 'you come by thia-moneyl,!:—. 'I WORKED, AND EARNED IT,' EM: .14y time was out last night, and 'I got my money. I've got a job chopping, whith I began , on this morning, and I thought I'd leave the money With you as I went to work, and then it wouldn't'take up ray;iime Oki evening when I want to study. - 'What is your name, my boy ?' asked the-Judge. wrote it on the paper that' I wrapped thUmoney tip in,' shouted the little' wood chopper as be passed on to his work. That boy's — note for a tb _ ousand_dolla _re due-ten-years hence won d be as good as gold. If be has his health, be will b.e worth double that then. He is beginning in the right way. The very day his time nln:o'i_the.__sammer, L ite - Chreirelitiirin another job, and immedi ately placed the money h_e_had—worked—lo ity4 I • tad-work-far - Lim ; and ` witG an economy of time which •is more to be praised than his wise forethought • with re gard to money, he could net endure to have a moment devoted to anything but his books when the long evenings came. Five years from to day with a geed edu cation, with good habits, with a few hun dred dollars, which he has earned by work, his chances for place in the business and political world will be far greater than those of the spendthrift boy who, born with for tune, begins without knowing the worth of money, and instead of going up - , -- geoes down. —.Hearth and Rome. A NOP of WATER.—A small quantity of cold water, apparently_the=most-ennoneut of substances, can be used so as to• produce the most horrible torments. Drops of water falling a height upon the head, feel after a while like molten lead, and if the process be persevered in long enough, cause an egoni• I zing - death, This species of torment was well known to the officers of the Inquisition.— Our readers may not .be so well acquainted with another kind of torture by water which was practiced by the Dutch authorities on the unfortunate English prisoners at Am boyna in 1622. The victim wee fastened np with his arms and legs extended, as if for crucifixion. A cloth was then tied upon the lower part of his face so closely that•searce ly any water cold pass by; that done, they poured the water gently on his head till the cloth was, full up to his mouth and nostrils, so that he could not draw breath without• swallowing some. When he was neatly choked, they took him down to vomit water, and when a little recovered, tied hem up a gain, using him as before- In 'this manner they served him three or four times, till his belly was as big as a tub, and his cheeks like bladders, and his eyes starting out be. yond his forehead. Spurgeon has written a series of discour ses for the common people, which are terse and pungent, The following is a 'sample of his style : • 'Boasters are never worth a button with the shank off. Long tongue, short bead. Great talkers, little doers. Dogs that bark much run away when it is time•to bite, The leanest Rig squeals most. It is cot the hen Which•cackles most that lays most , eggs.-- Saying and doing are two different things. It is the barren cow: that bellows. There may be great noise of threshing where there is no wheat. Great boast. Little roast. Much froth ) little beer. Drums sound loud because there is nothing in. them. Good men know . themselves too well to chant their own praises. Barges without cargoes float high on' the canal, but the fuller they are, the lower they sink. GoOd cheese sells itself without r)tiffelY. Good wine needs no bush, and when men are really excellent people find it out without telling. Bounce is the sign of folly. Loud ,praying reveals an ass. • Ifs num ds.ignorant and , holds his tongue, no one will despise kiln; 'but if he rattles on with an empty pate god a, tongue that brags !ilea forty ; he' will Write _out his own name In capital letters, add' they will be• these FOOL.• A sharp4ongued woman in Texas aggra. vated her husband to each an extent that tie deserted his borne in the city of .11onston and fled to Galveston, where ho wrote, the following affectionate and interesting letter: 'Galveston, January. the '7th IS7O. My Levin Wyfe : lute cockle - owe nes week au bay forgive you for jawin we. life tutu ou the 7 o'clock trams ane shill stay own here atter & tri to be a altered man. I want peace and. so do yevi, vithy shouldn't we love each Whet, as'we used ter sawn we first jiw ed together in the whollehendo of wed lock. , I've jieed a temperance society, but if,yew ever jaw me agiulor commit) owe I'll - walup brow like Gty, tot wo must have pees.), as ,grant see. A gentleman baying oopaaion -to call on .a .solioitor, found pm in his office, ,which 'was very hot. Ho remarked the great beat ;of the apartment; and said 'lt was as hot ei an oven,' So it ought to bdireped oho Zaw , i yer, 4 forAiii bore I niakainY ' rehial Reinearkwi 'The only real iliffiretice botweett,r*l eoc ',poor that loan see ii .,, thi34roilit'licti lit' the , trimming on the ;ails et theirlites. 7 b, , . To the Christina, eaoh sorroischbles a, joy, each eroasiticrotrit, eaeh',lbirs? it 'gaib, each curse a +leasing, eaelf..ditubt ,hope; • mai: fically;' - eachliark — death-shadow ,he ' ' fracrect bangsth before e and glory of anoverending The world, sees ; scandal, sirig~ii -crown mean rascality in some of the menibers of church, and gains one more prejndleEragainat it. • God only. seas thatilis'threshing:iliserhas', got pretty full in that locality,.aad ,bas gone to Work to stir"itp • add' lan 'esitiy the -chaff. -- Men gaffer and boar stain . to become , genteelly dependent, hishienably,e trayagatis, neWortianlfindiftinattirtit '*hen the trans-, formation is complete they OPeti betterlei - of ridicule on. lilting hooPs, butterhowl obigaon,s, fictitioita bust , iMp rn royeents;• aid Grecian bends: . • ' MR. iIIicEBONELESS: Mr. , Backboneless is a-efiartutter that miry of us are acquainted' with:. - * He consults Toro, •Diek and Harry iu matters of business, and theta follows, 'net the best but the last advice given: Be is eternally getting into • hot water . in mese? quence, and each time Ina has to =take a cursing-for-itits-a - matter - of4 - i - c --- unse. • .He has no wind of Ids own ; :no (mitten. anee. He ie unstable and shifting , as the % , snails. on the eea-ebore. 1 ----And-whetradversity some The isn't worth any more than'an old rotten sheet fota._sail_ of mardhing straight on trouble with a firm front, he crouches, and 'lets. it ran over and overwhelm him, Because be is knocked 'down to day, he thinks his , place is on his batik to-morrow . ; and next day, and so on. Because it rains to-day and is dismal, it must needs be rainy and dismal always. He sees no silver lining to any aloald—no rifts to the blue sky and sunshine 14yond— all is dark, lieavy and threatening above and around him. Fire sever purifies such men. They art but dross, and it burns them.. And, all things considered, I don't know but it is well enough, for it leaves the less rubbish for energetio, live_ mes—to — stutiblii over.— Hints to Consunaptives. Cocsumption is not a disease of the lungs, but one of the system,-showing itself in - the lungs. If you fully comprehend this, pit are ready for the' common-sense treatment. Avoiding all local treatment, by inhalation, all the panaceas, including whisky and .cad liver, oil, fashionable to-day, eapleded morrow, employ those natural methods, about which wise doctors never differ. • 1. Walk in all kinds or weather, two 'or three times a day. ate° weak for this, be gin with the saddle. • 2. Banging by the hands, in rings, sus; pondod from the coiling; six feet above the floor, swing backlrard and forward, sidewa,yB and in a circle. The effect upon• the walls of the chest is very remarkable. 1 have known such swinging to reduce the. pulse very 9ensibly in a week. Ia each exorcise eon Hone slightly fatigued. 3. Wash the entire skin in tepid water and good neutral soap every looming, on re turning iron/ the first walk, and rub the skin to redness every night on going. to bed, with sharp hair gloves: Lawrence's English pat• eat gloves are•the best. All druggisie sell them. 4. Sleep much, retiring before nine, ad ding a pep in the middle of the day. Never forget that good ventilation clarion. the hours of seep is vital in every . ease of diseased lunge, 5 Eat for breakfast and dinner oats meal, cracked Wheat, beef, •mutton, plain• bread, potateeli, and other veptables,.except, coma* toes. Use no pastry or other trash. Eat no Supper . 6. Cultivate jovial . peoplo. Langle;er is the most precious of . all possible exeroison for chronic lung affections.--- Dr, Dio Lewis. RELIABLE WEATHER SR:MS.—Josh Bil lings' 'Almanac' says: When roosters are observed before daplite in the morning sorein among the klonds, and utter lameataehuns; then look out for sudden weather, and a se yore pucker in the money market. When you see 13 geese walkin injun 1110 ; ' and toeing in, yu ken deliberately bei yule last surviving dollar on a bard wiater,.ianti•n great fluktuousoess duriar , the next - - anew., io the pries of cowhide If pigs squel•in the tight, and grasihop• pore cum oph ov their roost, mingle: in s free fite, yu may hope for high Winds • In a few weeks, and also the typhus fever in yure naborhood. • • W ben spiders are seen climbing up the wall 'backwards, and frogs kou,siras tho they gad the hicknps, look out for rain,'this iz also a sure sigh that' children wsll have Abe ideuzles light. ' If bees hug atoned their Mires, and moles are seen in a brown study,.a storm Oti BOUM kind iz cookie', and,you will note theinarivet for herring is very cadaverous and shifty. Jiet before a,heavy ago storm, uv ,feet deep chimbly nwaltilive are oneoman skaise, and in the moral world' there is a &Mit lazy nese in the temperance 'pestle°. • When bees 'lay eggs a day,, and, men, cease to brag, and•Wittlia' Cease' to crackle. thi*.injothlumll4 7 ,l4„ and theMillin ituaaitet fur •oph. '. • 'My goOyi, grooloos,', said .. Mrs. Partingtoia, , ivooder what Aboystirmailutooturojal, Out of grain.' Here's an uueonnt of tusking a floarory opoook arid thew, a - whaa'aolUutu bout We ouzo laws. • tesa.oo EM=Mil .41„.,,N - 6318L1R • ifeliGettabv. ,'Yon: enter ; Gonnuir' IcAookinctikninitt r A, dons %thigh- liogs. a 3 And thus, a allogagap .t*i_rwiittsti,egtesq_id ‘ some ono . ' - At 16 foot Of the staiipase yon find n,p•ell4AndiA, oy,tinging.st4 twit ^lon a seriant .itho oondnots , e :awn chior;, Ott 'tin fir 13; kiieiike'ltlitt ihVigg:' lor anti the belt Amnia itrflislotieer-ildilitfed ; with bound' plot/rem off the walliyalidAile:' gent lace. eurtains alt tlo,ltittdoWs,,hat alilY"Willtotit ~The floor; 44. tesselated befititif :varioltkeolersc,and, 111/Midi! Or i ?tit - leaSkrit . : 11,,f$1,ir°4 till is as ~w4iteAstsbq dtiosin inpiv / Tie amour) t; _of han i , i o nr hic ItorMsis c lifitiggkaepii - fiss; t_relnotatit tti tab tifolitt ? ' ' This is ; partly 'a, 'mark of gentililty, r egd paitife inatler ot:niteeisitY, for' ikti Inaba hays itknr three tir 3 . l fAir :stealing fbp. Oda years k ,, And , the: baking- . of • : th e . ' ,black bread .of :theopeaßts is as I.,infrequept. , ai ,the Germans, in „ the , ' limitary, and in" dicta' as' Gottingen, heep . easly ,houys, breakfasting, at, ; elght t ar - esrlier, dieing at one, and Usually going to bed as 'eatly 'as tin. "We attended, a' ocifiiiiit of most daiightfal 'music; bat it began at flie p. and ,closed,at advert in, the evening.-- In short, the childlike virtues of simplicity, candor naturalness-and-heartiness alniost died,.,ont 'ip fashionable American , k - society still exist in ,Germany IQ their pritnitive perfection.: When we parted from, OUT hostess,'ehe etoliiioid. toy, site; and kiss • d-her--repeatedly - , -- arithletilid boea a' r or a daughter i and; did stet even•let her 3 -baud-departlitittrat - beandiiiiiiii:=CProf. 15 • Tiler. • , Y. •! , A Harkey Sermon. An eschange eaya:he, visited's oolored viyil in. N,rerbeketerta r the °that; ersoing, ind t , being aeoolispanied bY a stenographic report er frOin the iIJ biro cnsbled to get, the re marie of , the ten:mote saki occupied the palpit, and we take . pleasure in layiog an ex tract fronythe same before our readers.— The text was as follomf: 'Strate am de road, an' narrow Lai de pall which leads to glory,!' , , , Bracken Blevers am sensible die note „ f , in gamin' to hea de word and 'halt& iplained and monstrated to you 'ilea .ted- r -Liaaoll -1- r - ' - tend_lor-to,splattuttia di light of liben , day • • We sun all wicked sinners hea ,below-At'e faot my bredren, and I toll . yOu how it coati Ytt see— ' Adair! woo de fat man, Ebe Ivo, 4e tudder,: Cane woe do winked man, Cove be kill bitibraddet. Adam and_Bverwar brof brook meth, and So was (Upland Abel.. • New f. spout it seem to strike your uodiretandits'-how de feet white roan onm. Why I let yea know.— 'Den you Ben. When ()anti kill hie britdder do masse oura an May, 'Cane; what' yore broa der Abel 1' Cane say, '1 don't• know resew' But do nigger node all de time., •JNassa nos, git mad and cam agia, speak mity sharp die time. 'Cane, whar yore brudder Abel, yu nigger?' Cane now frig'btened and be turn white; and dis de way fus white mark onin upon dis earth inud if it had not been tronb= lad wid de sassy whites pen de faeo of dis sirctitular globe. De quire will sing de fortp•lebenth him, tickler moeter. Bruddet Jeeps pass resod de sasser. A. glutton of a fellow' was dining at a ha tel, who, in the course of die 'battle oi knives and forks,' accidentally out his month, which was observed by Yankee siting near by, who bawled , ont, 'I say, friend, don't maks that air hole in your countenance any larger, or nea shall all be starved to death.' •• • • . . An exchange says. The coward who , strikes- the mother of his children deserves .to bo shod with lightning , and coudeintiodio wan der eternally, over a desert of gunpowder. .' ''' r.Forty-oevon men who 'who're dlawn na jn• rota for one,conuty,pl Georgiii, we're eacas• od'oerVica on acoount of babies at home, and the Court adjonrned 'until baby season IS over , wing men unions' ew,gll -while sewing their wild oats.' But, , they always shrink last enough when the steps into the field In the autumn to harvest the crop. The band that gives atiai ,. tife bible magi be unspoted .from the tvorg. The eptney that beetle; the missfuusry tb.e' hel,ttit4L4 mast be bouettly earned. - Always befriend ttio§e who are in adver sity. it will give., you ,cOmfOrc and limo° atlz future day s and chder ypur path wheu you come to die. A vender of quack medicines perpetrates the following atrobious conundrum Le what does. Queen Viotoria;tukci het pills ? Ana —lucitier- 7 (in side her.•; 7 Briggs Nag a' faculty of getting; tbiags cheap. The otter day be bad' a beautiful , . set ot . teettt inserted tut uottitug.- Be kick. . ._ , - a dog. • -•••••.---:-..---,-.. • liieind i some. girt is Utica pent ',neony the other day. beenuoe her porno ts ' wouldn't lot her marry e fellow aeveu feet hig and. red hiaded: qtreanititet lon call this the onfl of a fog?' asked Bob, pointing to one of hie,nether '`No,. replied Pat—'l elioniz say it was the log of a oalf:' It is Said that Job WWI worried by a devil --:irciiii`whieh we tufer that , he edited a uews• lay,.. \ ll l ,ditor's eau sympathize with Jcb. When may a moo be said to breakfast be- " fore Ito gem ap,l! 4116.—Whouhe take* a - colt • . is bed; • [' - r:7 -I vl 1;' • • ..pt' 'r•ltta'• •,1, y3 4/0•:". , 4 I t.ypri T.,t61 C;li : ,, `.ti,o , .i. 31.';,!.!.:i;:,7)-; T ! ,-, )ttli,'.)-f-2.5:P. I=2/11 ==fZt===