133' - linT. Minix*. VOLUME XXIII. 11011 SH FERNITIIRE WHITDIORE Whnlesale and Retail Dealer, and Manufacturer of /LOUSE FURNITURE., AND UPHOLSTERER. Gil E EN OAsTI.E, PA., takes this method of informing his customers and the public that, he has REDUCED Tun PRIOR OF FURNITURE from tenio twenty per cent. ' Owing Italie advan tages re has over other klanufacturers he can and Will self - Furniture at a less price than any other Manufacturer it, the Stag. Having TII 1.11. E sTORP, ROOMS tilled with every variety of Furiduare, from a common srlie:e, to the finebt in use, he le. ranted %IA that he ea pleat-:e all tastes 9 EXAMINE LIST OF PRICES 13 EllsT E k U. 3. UOTTAG E —lin itation of Walnut $5, 6. 7. to 8 Solid Walnut 8,9, to 19 JENNY LINO-3-Arch Top Panel, Walnut " " " 3-Arc! Top Panel, Imitation Round, Corner•foot, 3 Panels Walnut carved " Foot, 'Oval Panel Wal nut, Moulded 30, 35 to 40 ANTIQUE—Diew style ANTIQUE: C - "Mit ,116111107. FuU Mnrble COT. CHAMBER SUITS, MOLID 4-11.11'S 111JitEAU'. Imitation Wal., 4 I/rowers, with glass . wood top $l4, 16 to 16 Imitation WO. 4 drawers,with glass, Kathie top Solid WO. 4 Drawers, with glass wood - top 20, 22, 25 to 32 Marble top 25, 30, 32 to 60 10, 12 to 14 Itnitation . Dining Table, six legs, .$7,50 to $9 Breakfist do , four legs, 5 to 6 Marble tap do. 20 efferent patents, 9, 10, 12 to lb Extension Tables, per font. 2 to 3 CHAIR'S. 'indsor or Wood Seats dnz ) from $5,6,7 to 10 er half doz., 9 L:,) 11, 11.50, 12 50 to 30 Cane bents. (Have over 600 of the above en hand.) Wood Seat Rocking Chairs, from 1.25 to 5 Cane Scot Rocking Chairs, from 2 to 7 Willow Seat Rocking Chairs, from • 2 to 10 Spring Seated Chairs, upholstered is • Hair Cloth, Broratel, Rep 4 'Per ranging in price, per half dez, from 33 to 76 Rocking upholstered u above, 9 to 16 ete.a."Petes, upholstered 98 above, (each) from 20, 22, hO, 26, 10 to 75 Rot or Plain Sofas, from IE, 20 to SG Lou'nges, uphol'tered in Heir Cloth, brocatel, tter.Terry and Daina.k, Spring Seats, (each) from 7,1 , 9, 10, 11, 12, to 30 WARDROBES. Imitation Walnut, for $lO, 12,14, 16 to 30 .ziti(t NV 6.1110., 16, 18, 20, 25 to 60 Also, hide Bonds, Wash Stands, Mattresses, and in fact everything in the Furniture line. The lim its of an advertisement is entirely ton narrow to give a full list of prices, and hinds of furniture manu factured et this establishment. CALI, AND ,SEE FOR YOURSELVES. tar Nemember the place. I. H. WHITMORE, Greencastle,' Pa. ositsovs sTELEAR ou dee 1267] ....-.-.0---. MBE 'storming increase in the number of fright ful'. accidents, resulth,g in terrible deaths and destruction of valuable property, caused by the in- discriminate use of oils, known under the name of Patroleum r prompts us to call your special attention to an article which. will, wherever used, remove the cause of such accidents: We allude to CARSON'S STELLAR OIL for ILLUMINATING PURPOSIFS The proprietor of this oil bas for several years felt the necessity of providing for, and presenting to the public, as a substitute for the dangerous corn- ponsu.s which are sent broadcast over the country, as an oil tilarie safe, hTilliTifit, and entirely tell +tile. Atter a long series of laborious snit c9stly experi ments, he has succeed"d in providing, and now ed. lora to the public, such a substitute, in CARSON'S STELLAR OIL.' It should be used by every family because it is oafs beyond a (astier.. The prim iry purpose in the preparation of STELLAR on, has been to !stake it Perfectly Safe, thus insuring the lives and prop erty of those who use it. Its present stand tad of SAFETYend BRILLIANCY will always be main tallied, for upon this ttp proprietor depends for sus tainnig the high reputiiim the STELLAR OIL now enjoys. To prevent the adulteration •f this oil with the •xidostse compounds now know under the name of kerosene, Arc., dcc.. it is put up for family trr,e in five-gallon cans. each can being sealed and stamped with the trade-mark of the proprietor ; it cannot. theretore, be - tampered with betwetn the mattutac twee and consumer. Sono is genuine without tlas trade-mark. It is the duty and interest of all dealers and cnn• sowers of illuminating oil to use the STELLAR OIL only, because it alone is known to be safe and renable. It is for sale by Amberson, Benedict & Co., Waynesboro'. Heinen & Statler, Marion. E. It,: Winger, Quincy. Gehrricke & Burkhart, Chambersbarg. W. D. Dixon. St. Thome. J. Hostetter & Co., Greencastle. Thomas C. Grove, Mercemburg. Jiro. L. Ritchey, 44 JARDEN & CO., WhoLekatz Marrs, No 138 South Front St., Philadelphia. feb 2-IS7l] FAIRVIEW MILL ! FAMILY FLOUR, ETC. )I[lHE' undersigned having refitted and added ell the latest improvements to his Mill, (formerly r ntea) announces to the public that he is now manufacturing a superior article of PAUILY FLOURwhich will be delivered to persons at marketpricee. He hes ebb on hand a supply of MILL STUFF of ,all kinds, which fie will wholesale or retail at the Mill, or deliver if desired, at the lowest market rates. Having refitted Me Mill with the most Unproved machinery he feels that he is enabled to give general satisfaction. -His Flour in each can' be bid at Heid'a tiroce. Ty, where ordenimay be left. The highest tituket price paid fee WM2 4 T delivered at the )VIII. "COOPZI STUFF wanted. tau 24—tf] • DAVID PATTERS N. 14, 16 to 18 10, 12 to 14 25 to 20 130 to 175 55,38,40,45t060 `077516-85-1 They are not parted, though their feet' ave wandered for in diderent ways ; And though they never more may moot On winter eves or summer days ; It matters not though realms Thu' boundless eeas between them roll, For still, defying . wind and tide, Heart yearns to heart, and.soul to soul• 17, 18'to 30 They are not parted—only those Are parted whom no love unites ; Their absence breaks not our repose; Who have 110 share in our delighta; They may be by our side and still As far frog us as pole from pole, Wholack the sympathetic thrill . Of heart to heart and soul to soul. lig.Xs3lolll/L,1441.N"i% Medical communications should, as a rule, he given to the puha° only through medical imamate, but as the important loots which I am about to publish may ,never_reach those who are interested except through _the col umns of a newspaper, I take this method of imparting them without farther apology, es peoially as the universal popular ignorance on the subject is oftets_perinissive of fatal results. I have seen recently in the public prints notice of several deaths by this most terrible of disease.. iu which the fatal results might have been easily averted had the simple facts which I here publish been' known te the suf ferers or their friends. I have ofteu reproach ed myself for not having sooner made this communication, not that the profession are ignorant of what I publish, but that the pub lie are lamentably so. The virus or poison whist. propagates hy• drophobia exists in the saliva of the rabid animal: It is not injected through the tooth into the wound, as is the venom of the rat ticsnake, or an is the venom of the bee, through the sting. The poison merely .13e. smears the tooth, as the 11:meet is coated with lie virus in vaccinating. There is another very important distinguishing fact in repast to its effect on the wounded part. It pro• duces no irritation, no immediate effect = e-t be-v aeeine-v pox, it has a certain period of incubation, or sp./lode process before the system become. effected 'live period, in the production of cantos madness, is happily lung as compared with the period of incebatiou of other poi. eons. The period vide*, but it is ceininofily about six weeks, and then, before cousiii t s Ilona' disease is developed, a bl:glit irrita lion occurs in the seer, and a red list of in flamed absorbents is seen eateuding up the mem b e r. When these phenomena take place there is no hope: the constitutional 'pup toms follow immediately. Jut if during the tong period which precedes the local symp tom. the proper remedies be employed, and especially soon after the bite, iho prem. lieu of the disease is almost certain. Contrary to the common belief, a deep wound inflicted by the bite is less likely to be followed by hydrophobia than is a slight scratch, abrading the akin, for a reason that ought to be obvious—the copious effusion of blood washes away the poison. Some years age I.treated in Baltimore a case of fatal hydrophobia, which originated thus: A boy was bitten deeply on the cheek by a pet dog, which flew at him without pro- vocation. The master of the dog struck the animal with his hand, cad received a scratch ow his hand. The dog MU off and was nev er seen. The wound in the boy's cheek bled freely, and in consequence was washed tteely. The match on the man's hand was treated by an old lady with salt. The man perished ip six weeks in the agonies of hy drophobia. The boy escaped, though' pos sibly because I opened the scar and canted zed it deeply, for possibly the poison might still be incubating there. When - pitsone are bitten ttefough clothing, perhaps two garments, the poison may be all wiFed from the tooth, and the lite prove in• nocuous, hut not certainly A largewsajeri ty, however, of those bitten through cloth ing scope the disease. These are. the eas• es in which ridiculous nostrums unfortunate ly acquire reputation for preventing the die. ease, it being getter* supposed that the bite-of a rabid dog is neeessarily followed by hydrophobia, unless some protective rem edy be employed.. WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNT 1, PENNSYLVANIA, THURSDAY MORNIK-APRI L-6-1 ST 1="Ci3E1TX4:31%.3L.. ETERNITY. Days come and go • In joy or woe ; Days go and come In endless sum. Onlytha eternal des Shall come but never go Only the ete.rnal.tide Shall never ebb but flow. 0 long eternity, My soul goes forth to thee ! Suns set and rise In these dull skies, Suns rise and bet, Till men forget The day is at the door, hen they shah rise no more. 0 everlasting Sun, Bo Thou my endless light ! • Theu I shall tear no night! N OT PARTED. [Fromihi Baltimore Sun.] HYDRORIZOBJ.A. BY PROF. N. It. SMITH ALri. Xxi.cle•peota cleotat Vl.staxx.ll7 - ItTercv.elpelicaor. A person is one of the Northern States once received a reward of a thousand dollars for revealing the composition of a remedy which was believed to have cured or proven -tad naany oases of - hydr - ipTabiti. — lli hid ad. ministered it to many pergolas who had been bitten through clothing and bad never gone wad. They gave him their honest certificates that they believed themselves to have been cured of hydrophobia. The composition of the nostrum proved to be 'Dine leaves of sage, gathered is the night and the wane of the moon, the sparrow of a dog's jaw, and the false tongue of a foal.' The use of swill a nostrum does net direst harm, but confidence in it does fatal mischief, because it precludes the use of rational pre• ventives. There is eo neighborhood in which there is not some old woman who declares, and, perhaps, honestly believes, that she eon prevent or cure hydrophobia, and, perhaps, by the use of her remedies the precious op. portunity to avert so terrible a disease is lost, us I have myself witnessed. 1 have been a buadred times called upon by persons bitten by dogs known not to be rabid, but yet these persons wore tortured by the apprehension that, should the dog that inflicted the biteever go mad, they would themselves be affected with hyd_ropitobis This would be simply ridiculoua were it not that so many believe it. A person might as well fear havieg pox who had,. five years al i o, shakau baud* with a man tbat now has it It is the practical part of this eornmuni cation which is important. We cannot cure this terrible disease when once developed, It is true that there often occurs in,the pub. lie prints, and sometimes in medic - al journals, notices of cases lured from, atropia, woorara, the cannabis, &c. But when these remedies have been tried in other eases they have at terly Remedies , acquire a reputation for the cure of hydrophobia by being employed in spu• rious eases of that disease. Nervous persons, who have been bitten by healthy animals, fancy that they have, the disease. and they imitate almost every symptom of hydropho• bin. They reoover, whatever mesas may be employed. I keew a person in Vermont to be affeetbd by this false farm of hydrophobia. His sun had recently died of-the disease, re sulting-from the bite of a rabid eat. His fa ther, in aiding to tiatee him received a speck of the boy's saliva upon his lip From that moment he became tortured with the appre• heusion that be had contracted the disease though- assured that it could not be dins communieated. After a short time the syrup. tens which he had_wituessed in the boy be gas to display themselves. He raved in the most—furicem--mannerr-refused—waterand frothed at the mouth. When any one of the physicians present remarked, by way of encouragement, that certain symptoms which marked the former ease were absent, the pa. tient would immediately imitate those gimp terns. The man, however, from extreme ex haustion, fell into a profound slumber and waked well. Now in regard to preventive treatment, which is so efficient, and therefore of vast importance, lot it be rentemhoied that a mere scratch on the hand or face is the most dan gerous—a bite through clothing not without danger. As the poison adheres to the part for some time after the bite before it prod's. cos the effect, Ist the wound be instantly washed, again and again • cap and wa. ter. if a physician w eto vac& ate a child in the arm, and an ho ftcr eh uld wash the part with soap and wet r, DO effect would result. The following ease is in point: A woman the mother of tho boy mentioned above, wee washing clothes in her back yard, when a rabid cat leaped over the fence and attacked the boOlia_in 10 him and nnndinw—ltig - hands and face. The mother ran to the ree. cue, seized the sat, tore it away from the lad, and. thiew it over the fence. She then re turned to her work, and her hands and arms were scummed in, saop and water for two hours Nothing was done for the .boy, it not beiug, known that the cat was rabid.— The mother eszaped the disease, but the boy p o t is heitmismaisly. While the washing is being done, send in stantly to t h nearest druggist for a piece of caustic potash. This comes in smelt cyllud rie.sl pieces. ' If the tooth of the dog has penetrweci, cut the caustic in the shape of a pencil or a dog's tooth, insert it in the wound anci hold it there firmly for a (ratter of a minute without regard to the pain, which will be severe. . • Caustic, potash can be made extempore by pouring boiling water on wood ashes, strain• log out the ley, and boiling' it down to the consistence of molasses. It may be applied with a smooth stick., When the wound is a scratch, and there fore the more dangerous, wipe it over.briAly with the same material. If the caustic .po tash cannot be procured, use nitric acid(aq 'Worth!) Of sulphuric acid, (oil of vitred Milder caustics, which do not destroy the surface of the - wenad is which the poison is lodged, are not worthy of confidence, al. though Mr. Youatt recommends the nitrate of silver, (Lamar caustic) Tee part may be poulticed with bread and milk for two days, and thoo dressed with simple salve. It is toe common a practice to kill instant ly a savage dog w,h'o has bitten a person This is exceedingly wrong, as the person lives for years with the torturing appreheu slob that he has been bitten by a rabid dog. The animal should be shut up and reg ularly fed. if rabid, he will certainly die, but it he lives a week and takes food • there is no danger. 'lt is generally believed that ostiiie madness scours almost exclusively in summer, and especially dtiritig what are termed' the 'dog days.' This is a popular error. According to the best authority, the disease is commit. oieated . only by contagion, and just as likely to be ptepageted In 'winter as in aammor,aad Otani ore city ordinances, which allow dogs e --- _ to be at large at sue season aid not at auotker, aro abenra. • In the coarse of helfa eentury I have had occasion to treat the bites of dogs undoubt edly rabid in many. intitenees, end in not a single inetanee have I known the disease to result when the preventive measures were employed within three days after the bite. I do not mean, however, to lustily a moment's delay in their application. N. It. 15. turn; M. D. AMERICAN EATIUG.—WO all eat too 'much soya Dr. Lewis. Oar American system of diet is had,- There is to groat a variety ; the food is too and ; the cooking is bad; wo eat too often, we eat too at the wrong times. Dr. Lewis gives an account 'of a dinner at the house of a lady who is recognized as standing at the head of the intellectual aris tocracy of a most intellectual and refined city. The plate and crockery were most beantifa'. The dinner consisted of four lit. tie courses: Ist, a small glasi of lemonade; 2nd, a bit of melon; 3d, roast beef and sweet. potatoes, 4th, ice, ilium. Nothing should be sates after dinner, and should be taken early in the day, not later if possible, than two o'clock. Eat nothing hetweeen meals, noie_uman_appleer_a_peach. Avoid cake pies, all sweetmeats, nuts: raisins,• and cast dies. Wine, and liquors Dr. Lewis will not tolerate, and no young woman who p is ambi• tibias of a clear, fine akin will drink tea. 'Tea oesspronsises the complexio n, probably by deranging the livei. The best plan is to drink nothing but cold water, and as little a possible of that,except that_one_or_tsro glasses on lying down at night and on rising in the morning will be found useful. The Bachelors Juror. ' A gentleman who is rather given to story telling relates the following : When I was a young man I spent several years in the South, yesidiog for a while at Port 'Hudson on the Mississippi river. A great deal of litigation was going — on — there - 1 about that time, and it was not always an easy matter to obtain_a_j I < was euromomod to act in that capacity, and repaired to court to get (lamed. On my name being called I informed his honor, the judge, that I was not a free.hold- I er, and therefore not qualified to serve. am stopping for the time being at Port Hudson. 'Yost board at the botel,l - Vesume ?' take my meals, but I have rooms in Wl other part of the tort!, where I lodge.' 'So.you keep bachelor's hall. 'Yes, stir' 'Bow long have you lived in that man— eer 7, 'About six mouths.' 'I think you are qualified,' gravely re• marked the judge; 'for I have never kaown ' a man to keep bachelors hall the length of time you name, who had not dirt enough is his room to make him a free•holier I The court does not excuse you.' Two'in a Bed The 'L not of Life' says: 'More qvir rels arise between brothers, between sisters, between 'hired girls, between schoolgirls, be tween clerks in stores, between apprentices, between hired men, between busbandrand wives, owing to the electrical changes through which their nervous system go by lodging together night after night, under the same bedclothes, than by any other disturbing cause. There is nothing that will so derange the nervous system of a per son who is eliminative in nervous force as to lie all night with another person who is ab serbent in nervous force. The absorben will go to sleep and rest all night, while the eliminator gill be tumbling and tossing, restless and nervous, and will wake up in the morning, fretful, peevish, fault flotilla. and discouraged. ...No two persons, no mat ter who they are, should habitually sleep to- gether. Ono will thrive and the other will lose. This is the law, and :in married life it is defied almost universally. BEDS RADE TOO Eanax.---:The desire of an energetic house keeper to have her work completed at an early boor in the morning, causes her to leave one of the most Import. aut items of work undone, The most affec l tuai purifying of bed and bed clothes cannot take place it no time is allowed for the free circulation of pure air to 'move all human impurities which have collected during the hours of slumber. At least two or three hours should be allotred for the complete re movable of atoms of insensiblef perspiration which are absorbed by the bed. ll o yery day this airing should be done, and occasionally bedding eogstantly used should be carried into the open air, and when practicable left exposed to the son end wind for half a day. TOOK IT Ean.--Yesterday a couple of Mammas wore playing a duet on a card ta ble, with an accompaniment- by Gambrinus, in an up-town saloons when a third Teuton entered excitedly, and, addressing one of the players, said : `Shingledidder, you kos'd Iraggon is run ava.' 'lab der eo? Vby you don't Atop bizu ap a leodle?' 'Sesame be vas more ais bat( a square rams: . 'ls dot so? Veil, you dint you is pooty Au:tart, ain't it? Bus dot is pot my vaggon it is my vifo's hoss'n vaggon. Hurry up shake (to big 'partner), add bin; out dieb game. If dot boss's vaggen git shmasbed up, von I go home ter night my vile give me —Columbus.' ' An ugly old bachelor Biggest! that births should be publiabid under the. hoed of , 'New Music.' A lawsuit over a bog, in . Illinois, lately eost $15,000. Sensible people , will think ikat was two little pork for a shilling. A member of the Indiana Legislature rose to explain lie vote, when hie name was call• ed, and thus spake : Jet r. Speak_er:___The__Ameriosa_people—_ and we aro proud to call ourselves that—are rooked on the bosom of two mighty oceans, whose granite•bound shores are whitened by the floating eanvaa of the commercial world; reaching from the icefettored lakes of the Eastern seas, comprising the vast interim of of five billions of acres, whose alluvial plains and romantic mountains and mystic livers, rival the wildest Utopian. dream Oar ever gathered around the inspired. bard as he walked the amaranthine promenades of Aes. perian gardens; is proud Columbia, the laud of_theArce.-art-d-tha-houte of the bravo. _ Making him smart :As old Shroomps was giving bbl youngest boy,who was inclined to be lazy, a good cow cowhiding, the _boy cri ed out:" "Oh, don't ladder! it makes me shmartl Date's shoost vat I vanti,' said the old man, and he whacked away with renew ed vigor.' Winking at Auctions. Smith, the auctioneer, is a popular man, a wit, and a gentleman. No person is of fended at what hi says, and many a hearty laugh has ho provoked by humorous sayings. Ile was recently engaged in the sale of vac arable household fisraitnre z and fizings,'— Fie had jest got to 'going, a half, a half, going?' when he saw a smiling countenance upon agricultural shoulders, wink at him,— A wink is always as a nod to a blind horse r_a_keels_sigh ted_aactienecri-satith-wi k. - ed, and they kept 'going, going, going l'•• with a lot of glassware, stovepipes. earpsts, pots, and perfumery, and finally this lot was knocked down. 'To whom 7' said Smith, gazing at the smiling stranger. •Who 7 hoigh V said th• stranger.—,l don' know 'who.' '-- 'Why' you, sir,' said Smith. gins? me?' 'Yes, yes.; you bid on the lot,' said e hang no if 1 • did,' insisted the tra n go r. 'Why, did you not wink, and keep wink ing. . 'Winking ! well I did, and mi pa winked at me. 1 thought yen were winking at me as much at to say, 'keep dark; stick somebody into that lot of stuff,' nod I wink ed as much as to say be hanged if you don't mister.' One of the banners carried by the •Frisco Germans in oelol►rating the fall of Paris was insoribed : 'New dish—•➢'togs smothered in sanarkront.' To the watcher at bight, how slowly and solemnly the olook tells the passing hours ! In th• daytime how the •ame sound ie ie swallswed.up in the hurrying tread of myriad feet, in the roll of carriages, in the thunder and shriek of the locomoti've, and in the thousand and ono mingled animate and inanimate voices that swell the chorus of a great city r Yet the moments, flee all the same, and inscribe their indelible reoord for good or evil. There is as mush Merit in eaiering to the hareems side ()lour nature as ta the sober and sedate. Ales and tresses were mmie to laugh and indulge is pleasantries just as much as to pray and fast. Because a face s uncommonly long instead of wide, it doss .not follow that its possessor is a first-class saint. We would as seen trust a eountenanee get up on the broad as the long gauge. There was a deacon is New Hampshire by the name of Day, by trade a cooper. Ohs Sunday, be beard a number of boys playing in front of his house, and went to stop their SAbbath-break.ing. Assuming a gray was tenanee, be said to them: 'Boys, do you kaow what day this is?' 'Yes, sir,' immediately replied one of the boys, 'Dew') Day, the cooperr. A new method of testing a mace's sobriety is sunesta. • if he can distinctly procoance , irotertncry surgeon,' he may consider him self ac sober as a judge. It is said to bo a Bare teat. • There is something inexpressibly sweet is forest worship. The beads of those proud natives secm to bow while eommuoientreg with the great All Father, thee there is a gentle rotting of those green silken robes, and the brows are lifted heavenward, while the pink, the sail, and the maple fill the air with glorious anthems that almost give one as idea of angle muftis in those inr•of regions that mortal eye bath not seen; where 'yip robes of purity wax old- There are no dis cordant notes—no dessestingsvoioes. moray, haresony r in every refrain. AN APT REPLY.- A beautiful Jewess at tended a party lately in New 'York, where she was exceedingly annoyed by a vulgar, impertient fellow. 'And you never eat pork, Blies 31? asked ha tauntingly. !Never, sir,' was the reply. 'Nor use lard lamps,' continued the par• SEC II tor. •No air,' she answered, sour religion teach • es us to avoid everything flattish physical ly and morally; therefore you will excuse me for declining to hare aoy more words with you. Mrs. in Preach, it'hir • Western Pro gress, iu giviog as menet of her visit to St. Paul sod her lecture, says. Several of the first ladies of St. Paul 01st us at the close of the lecture, kissed us. sod bade us 'God speed' in the goad work. We -also received flatteries congratulations from a sousber of gentleness who looked as if they wished to kiss ns, bat we were toe bashful. • • Dying for love—ooloriog your mustache io pledge a"wouraii. eat2i.oo Xevozu "Zero, Deft :n. ag Young Peopl-. Wbeu John Wesley saw a young s.an io danger of fal ing into the soma of evii aseoci. area; ha did notwarah — biaiiitailfdrit a is. thrice, and speak of his short eossings to oth. ers, predicting that be was 'on the high toad to ruin.' lie invited bitn'to his table, and by a gavi al, affable manner, sought - to give hits good subjects for thou?) t, or hints for conduct. Advice thus hovitably enfareid was very impressive. Ile would draw out a young than iu conversation, and learn what studies he was most proficient in, which ware obaou• tin) to his success, and then assist WWI to uequire (Ise mastery of titer*. —Atrother most valuable way of aiding a young man whom 'social danger threstosed, W:l4 to mutts him acquainted with well die. posed, religious young men, who would lead them into good paths Them he watched over their future career with 'a father's in terest nod tenderness. Tito] in a very sim ple, wanner ha secamplished a vast MOW] of good, besides preventing a world of e ill. The Christian deity of hospitality is too Bauch neglected by Christians. They loos by sie4loot, of hospitality stiany preoicoi op portunities of doing good: and of getting goal. There ib !waist, that endears the heart of the yeaagaud s ol the stranger more tkau 4 warm home welcome hese thou on wheel they have uo It opens- the--heart's door wide to receive istpressions of good and fills the memory ari_th grateful miens- brume. orisat women is a ohristian if ever 'there was one,' said's poor punter boy to me _ s heet a kind old lady who had befriended him in his loneliness and poverty. lihe had given him many a meal when hnagery, •r called bim is her pleaeaut doorway to mei!e a pocketful} at oaks., and opals wheel sick, had taken him home and tweed' bins wick a mother's tenderness. The boy is a mall now, hut the nienacry of these little kind• masses will never fade from his hearts, yon wish to be good to ties yeawr, prove yourself, indeed, a generous lorits friend to theist. 'A Shoemaker' vices ua that ue•`.is no; only wiliiae to give woman tier rights br.s. her 'tights sad late.' Tama is its tali j. 144 Witty,ulau! How strangely the woo:l i ghts up the post wit shines tUroxi h the ears that ar gone, eboatio,; us ft off graves by its gi WWI A 3resteg woos's, not store time 'weary years old, starved to death it, Rochester, N. Y., last week. She had always striver' berti to support herself atter - beteg deserted by ,e worthless husband, amd was teriertield to let her poverty be knows.. A whale family mined Welker 'ori fosta4 dead in their house neer Elgin 111., a few days &Dee. The father end mother had giv en laudenum to their obildres and then tak en it thomeelves for the purpese of going to another world together. A young lady being asked by an enthnai• astio politician which party she was most is favor of, replied that she perferred a wedding party. The bill permitting marriage to a deeess• ad wife'. sister has passed the Bugiiik Par. !talent. hew can there be sub a thing as an int. most corner,' as is often heard, when the earth is known 141 be round. Are tot baby clothe:se now oonaidered to be taw - I drones.' The Tag poor; an like earpen—they are held dews' by tar.. Females are usually honest, bttt the best of them do nut scrupla to - jtook cash others' dresses. . _ tWould you be taint to nodertalte the management of my property for your viet stale and clotheer' laid Girarii to s Gentle man who was congratulating hius on his gnat possessions .1.4e,' was the reply. !Well, that's all I get,' said the millionaire. It will ;ford meter happiness is the hoar of death to hove wiped one tear front the cheek et sorrow, titan to bays rale& an empire. If you fall into misfortune, dis.?mgag• your .elf art weans you can. Creep tsirough dot Gunn that Lave the tennaL tortes. It is very dangerous ler aoy sun Is tied any spot on the bread globe that is sweets, to hit► than his home. Seltwill is so ardent nod active, that it will break a weed to to make a stool to. wit Modesty seldom resides in s breast that is net enriched with noble virtues. The good, for virtue's cake, abhor to. sits. Why is am infant like a diamond? Beaaase it is a dear little thing,. • The Boost steadfast followers of -oar for tees—oar creditors. Can a judge whit retires from the beaeb ba said to lag down the law? Man is like .a potato—aavor ma whew 1 will get into hot water. • A rutted onion betted upon the pulse r‘o thew ho, will stop the most iasetetate tactir , ache in a iew minuted. N 13111 ER 42