The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, June 03, 1865, Image 1

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    BY FRID'K L. BAKER.
iteeding
TRAINS of We road run by Reading Rail
Road time, which is ten minutes falter
than that of Pennsylvania Railroad.
TRAitti OR 71118 ROAD AIM AO roiLows
LEAVE COLUMBIA AT
A. M.—WAY FREIGHT a n d
4:4straip for Reading and
intermediate stations, lea:mg Landisville at
5 46 a. m., Manheim at 6 20 ; lAtiz at 6 62;
El mo, at 8 12 ; Reinholdsville at 14 55; and
reaching :linking Springs at 945 A. M. Hem
pawnor" holding through tickets for New
York only are nsfered to the Fast Line,
reaching New York at 2 o'clock, P. M.; other
passeagera remain in the train and reach Rea
disg at 10 30 A. M., in time to connect with
trams for Philadelphia, Pottsville, New York
and the Lebanon Valley.
2:25 P. M.--MA I L PASSENGER
Train for Reading and intermedi
ee stations, connecting at Landisville at 3 00
p, M., with train of Penn's. R. R., for the
ICest, leaving Manbeim at 3.21'; Litiz at 3 20
Ephrata at 4 04, Reinholdavill at :4 36, Sink
ing Springs at 5 03 and arriving at-Reading at
20 p. m.
LEAVE READING AT
6.oofo A r . Cll7mbia ifiliVirrin N eVat ß e t e s t i s n
hone, leaving Sinking Springs` at 6 16 Rein
hotdaville at 6 44, Ephrata at 7 11, Litiz at
Manheim at 7 58, making close connec
tion at Landisville at 8 20 a. m., with train
of Penn'a R. R., for Lancaster, and also with
Mali for the west. At Columbia, connecting
with train of Penn's. R. R., for Upper Ma
rietta, Middletown, and Harrisburg, also by
the Ferry for Wrightsville with trains of
Northern Central A. R., for Baltimore and
IVaihingtin, arriving at Columbia at 8 55 a.
re.
2 () A P. AL—WAY pit EIGHT
.00 and Passanger Train for COMM
ini an d inter mediate stations with passengers
frnn New York, Philadelphia and Pottsville
same day, leaving Sinking Springs at 2 33,
Reinholdsville at 3 30, Ephrata at 4 38, Liliz
it 5 40, Manheim at 6 13, Landisville, at 6 62,
sod arriving at Columbia at 7 50 p. m.
Further information with regard to Freight
or Passengers, may be obtained from the
Agents of the Company,
MENDES COHEN, Superintendent.
W. 3. PURCELL, General Ticket Agent.
E. F. KEEVER, General Freight Agent.
The Drug Store
,opposite the
POST .OFFICE,
Where Gold, Silver and Greenbacks
AIM TAM IN =CLINGS
FOR
ON4l,,jtecticines,Otedlcnaia..,
&c., &c., &c.,
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
—ALSO—
TOILET ARTICLES,
Such as Perfumed Soaps, Hair Oils. Hair
Dyes, Pomades, Tooth Soaps, Tooth
'Washes ' Hair, Nail, Clothe and
Tooth Brushes, of all desciip
tions, Extracts for the
Handkerchief, Colo.
gnes, Ambrosia
for the Hair,
and many other ailicles too tedious to mention
Ladies and Gent: Port Marmots,
of every description.
—A I, S 0—
All the most popular Patent Medicines
row lh VSZ, SUCH As
Ape's Sarsaparilla, Jayne's Alterative, Ex
pectorant, and Vermifuge, Jayne's Pills and
Corr:Unitive Balsam, &c., Hostetter's Bitters,
Hofflaud's German Bitters, Swaim's Panacea,
Worm Confections, Mrs. Winslots 'a Soothing
Syrup, and in fact all the moat reliable Patent
medicinal now in use.
Fresh Coal Oil constantly on hand. A fine
assortment of Coal Oil Lamps, Shades Chins
neYst&c. Also, articles of nourishment for
the sick, such as Corn Starch, Farina Arrow
Root, Tapioca, &c.
Spices of all kinds, Cloves, Cinnemon, All
spice, Mace, Black Pepper, African Cayenne
Puppet, French Mustard, &c.
Chemical Food, Citrate of Magnesia, Feed
ing. Cups for the Sick, Breast Pumps, Nipple
Shields, Nursing Bottles, Sell-injecting Sy
ringes, Flavoring Extracts for cooking, &c.
Golden carp, or Gold Fish with Founts,
also
Aquariums. Arrangements have also been
made with one of the best Aviarys in the
State,to furnish Canary and Mocking Ifirds,fic.
A lot of Family Dye colors, of every shade.
Fresh and reliable Garden Seeds.
A large assortment of Books and •
Stationary,
Everything on the Stationary way, such as
Pena. inks, Note, Tissue., Blotting and other
kinds of Paper, Envelopes, Clarified and other
Quills Scented Gloves for the wardrobe, and
as endless variety of fancy and useful articles,
usually found at such establishments, but any
article not on hand, will be ordered at once.
A new kind of playing cards, called "Union
Cards," having Stara, Flags and Crests instead
of Clubs, Diamonds, Hear* &c. The Face
cards are Goddesses, Colonels, instead of, the
Queens Kings and Jacks. This.,is a beauti
ful and ' patriotic substitute for the foreign em
blems and should be universally.preferred.
School Books, Copy Books, Slates and the
School Stationary B
enerally, and Bibles, &c.
always on hand.
lir S ubriptions for all the Magazines. Il
lustrated sod Mammoth weeklies received.
Sheet Music of
with promptness arm all kinds will be ordered
dispatch.
Having secured the services of Mr. CsiAs.
H. Bairrow, an expenenced and competent
Pharmeceutiet who will attend to carefully
compounding with 'accuracy and dispatch, at
/gall hours. The Doctor himself can be consul
at the store, unless elsewhere professionally
.agaged.
hang very thankful to the public for the
past patronage bestowed upon him, will try
and endeavor to please all who may give him
I CM]. F.
Marietta, February 9,1865 HINKLE, M. D.
DR. J. Z. HO.FFER,
DENTIST,
THE BALTIMORE COLLEG
'-'lll%. OF
OF DENTAL SURGERY,E
LATE OF .ETARRISBURG.
OFF 10 E:—Front treet next door to R.
cod Wsl
Willia
aut ms'
Urea% DrugCoSltou between Locust
mb re,
ia.
DA. WM. H. PAHNESTOCK,
NEAiLIf OPPOSITZ
SPlialast & rattionon's Mom '
POOR / TO B.A. Y.
orncE notal to 1.
rr 6T 0 7 s. 11.
(li4t c'ttl.aTit.i.,n.
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING,
AT ONE DOLLAR ANO A HALF A. YEAR,
PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
Office in " LINDSAY'S BUILDING," second
floor, on Elbow Lane, between the Post
Office corner and Front Street,
Marietta, Lancaster County, Penn Ya.
Single Copies, wit., or without W,appers,
FOUR. CENTS.
ADVERTISING- RATES . : One squtare (10
lines, or lees) 75 cents for the first insertion and
One Dollar and-a-half folk insertions. Pro
fessional and Business Cal ds, of six lines or less
at $5 per aunum. Notices the reading col
umns, ten cents a-line. Marriages and Deaths,
the simple announcement, FREE ; but tor any
additional lines, tea cents a line.
A liberal deduction made to yearly end half
yearly advertisers.
Having just added a " NEwnuay Mona-
TAM JOBBER PRESS," together with a large
assortment of new Job and Card type, Cuts,
Borders, &c., &c., to the Job Office of " THE
MARIETTIAN," which will insure the fns ` and
speedy execution of all kinds of Jon & CA RD
PRINTING, from the smallest Cant to the
LARGEST POSTER, at reasonable prices.
WHAT IA A WOMAN ?—Victor Hugo,
who has been at an expense to popular
ize himself as a poet with the female sex
goes much further because he goes much
deeper, titan the most malignant saint
in the calende.r in his physiology of wo
man. "A woman," observes the amia
ble heir to the Provencial bards, "is
simply a highly improved style of de
mon." Alexander Dumas, the younger
with whom pulmobary consumption is
the only female religion, has uttered a
great many ialpertinences concerning.
women. "Heaven," he exclaims, "in its
merciful providence, gave no beard to
'women, because it knew that they could
not hold their tongues long enough to
be shaved. "For the sake of women,"
observed the, same individual, "men dis
honor themselves—kill themselves ; and
in the midst of this universal carnage,
the creature who brings it to pass has
only one thought in her mind, which is
to decide whether she shall dress herself
so as to look like an umbrella or like a
dinner-bell.
CORNS CURED.—Hall's Journal of
Health—good authority—gives UB this
mode : The safest, the most accessible,
and the most efficient cure of a corn on
the toe, is to double a piece of thick,
soft buckskin, cut a hole in it large
enough to receive the corn, and bind it
around the toe. If, in addition to this,
the foot is soaked in warm water foi five
or 'more minutes every morning and
night, and a few drops of sweet oil or
otheroily substance are patiently rubbed
in on the end after the socking, the cora
will almost infallibly become loose
enough in a few days to be easily prick
ed out with a finger nail ; this saves the
necessity of paring the corn, which ope
ration has sometimes been followed with
painful and dangerous symptoms. If
the corn becomes inconvenient again,
repeat the process at once.
or Keeping tools from rusting.—A
mixture of three parts of lard and one
of rosin, melted together, is one of the
beet coatings for all steel or iron imple
ments. The lard makes the rosin soft,
while the latter is a sure preventative
against resting. The mixture is good
for plows, hoes, axes, indeed for all tools
acd implements, as well as knives and
forks packed away.
I "So you are going to teach
schoolrsaid a young,lady to her maid
en , aunt. "For rni4Art, sooner than do
that, I would roio_fa widower with nine
children."
"I should prefer that life myself,"
was the quiet reply, "bat—where's the
widower ?"
slaf"Jake," said an old farmer one
day to his mower, "do yon kilow how
many horns there are in a dilemma ?'
"Well, no t - don't 'zactly," replied Jake.
"but I know' 'zactly how many there are
sn ss quart of good old Nionotigahelit.",
lir A little girl in school being asked
what. a• Cataract or INaterfall - was, re•
plied, that it was hair flowing over
something, she didn't know what.
lir In the committee on the factory
bill, a witness from Dundee was asked,
"When do your girls marry '?" "When
ever they can meet with a husband."
is Money, like dung, does no good
until it is spread. There is no.real use
of riches, except it be in the distribution
—the rest is but conceit.
Q" The vinegar of lite—sour bread, a
pour "wife, poor tobacco, and no money.
lir Omsk talken are like orsoked_pit,
there ; everything rune out of them.
gutttgenhot rennoglinntia band for tke game Cirri!.
MARIETTA, SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 3, 1865.
Dan Ellis,
From the advanced Sheets of a new
work entitled "l'he Field, the Dungeon
and the Escaper by Albert D. Richard
son, Correspondent of the N. Y. Trib
une, who was for twenty months coufin
lid in seven different Rebel dungeons,
and who at length escaped, we extract
•the following graphic account of Dan
Ellis, a famous Union Guide :
For many months, even before leaving
prison, we had been familiar with the
name of Dan Ellis—a famous Union
Guide, who since the beginning of the
war, had done nothing but conduct loyal
men to our lines.
Ellis is a hero, and his life a romance.
He had taken through, in all, more than
four thousand persons. He had proba
bly seen more adventure—in fights and
races with the Rebels, in long journeys,
sometimes bare-footed and through the
snow, or swimming rivers full of floating
ice—than any other man living.
He had never lost but one man, who
was swooped up through his own heed
lessness. The party had traveled eight
or ten days, living on nothing but parch
ed corn. Dan insisted that a man could
walk twenty-five miles a day through
snow upon parched corn just as well as
upon any other diet—if he only thought
so. I feel bound to say that• I have
tried it and don't think so. This person
held the same opinion. He revolted
against the perched corn diet, vowing
that he would go to the first house and
get an honest meal, if he was captured
for it. He went to the house, obtained
the meal, and was captured.
After we had traveled fifty miles, ev
erybody said to us, "If you can only
find Dan Ellis, and do just as he tells
you, you will be certain to get through."
We did find Dao Ellis. On Sunday
night, one hundred and thirty.four miles
from our lines, greatly broken down, we
reached a point on the road, waited for
two hours, when along came Dan Ellis,
with a party of seventy men—refugees,
prisoners, rebel deserters, Union sol
diers returning from their homes within
the enemy's lines, and escaping prison
ers. About thirty of them were mount
ed and twenty armed.
Like most men of action, Dan was a
person of few words. When our story
had been told 'him, he said to his com
rades :
"Boys, here are some gentlemen who
have escaped from Salisbury, and who
are most dead from the journey. They
are our people. They have suffered in
our cause. They are going to their
homes in our lines. We can't ride and
let these men walk. Get down off your
horses, and help them up ?"
Down they came, and up we went;
and then we pressed along at a terrible
pace.
* * * * * *
To-day when we came on the hot track
of eight guerillas, the Rebel-hunting in
stinct waxed strong within Dan, arid tak
ing eight of his own men, he started in
fierce pursuit. Seven of the enemy es
caped, but one was captured and brought
to our camp a prisoner.
Then Dan went to the nearest Union
house, - to learn the news.; for every loy
alF family in a range of many hundred
miles knew and loved him. We, very
weary, lay down to sleep in an old or
ohard, with our saddles for pillows.
Our reflections were pleasant. We
were only seventy-nine miles from the
Union lines. We progressed swimming
ly, and'had even begun to regulate the
domestic affairs of the border
Before midnight some one shook my
arm. f rubbed my eyes open and look
ed up. There was Dan Ellis.
"Boys, we must saddle up instantly:—
We have walked right into a nest of reb
els ; several hundred are within a few
miles; eighty are in this immediate vi
cinity. They are lying in ambush for
Colonel Kirk and-his ineu.—lt is doubt.
ful whether we can ever get out of this.
We must divide into two parties. The
footman must take to the mountains;
we who are riding, 'and in much more
dauger—as horses make more noise, and
leave so many traces—must prase on at
once, if weever hope to reach the Union
lines." .
Tha word was passed in low tones.
Flinging our saddles upon our weary
beiges, we were on our way almost in
stantly. My place was near the middle
of the calvacade. The man just before
me was riding a white horse, which en
abled me-to follow him with ease.
We galloped along at Dan's usual
pace, with the most sublime indifference
to roads—up . and down rocky bills,
across et!eaMS, through swamps, over
fences-everywhere but pablii) thoroligh
fares.
] suppose we had traveled three miles
when Mr. Davis fell back from tbe front
and said to me :
"That young lady rides very well does
BhB not r'
"What young lady ?"
"The young lady who is piloting U."
I had thought Dan Ellie waa piloting
in, and rode forward` to see 'about the
young lady.
There she was, surely enough, I
could not scrutinize her face in the dark
ness, but , it was said to be comely. I
could see that her form was graceful,
and the ease and firmness with which
she eat on her horse would have been a
lesson for a riding master.
She resided at the Union house, where
Dan had gone for news. The moment
she learned his need, she volunteered to
pilot him out of the neighborhood, where
she was born and bred, and knew every
acre. The only accessible horse (one
belonging to a Rebel officer, but just
then kept in her father's barn) *as
brought platted saddled. She mounted,
came out to our camp at midnight, and
was now stealthily guiding us, avoiding
farm-houses where the rebels were quar
tered, going round their camps, evading
their pickets.
She led us for seven miles. Then,
while we remained in the wood, she rode
forward over the long bridge which
'spanned the Nolechucky River, to see if
there were any guards upon it; went to
the first Union house beyond to learn
whether the roads were picketed ; came
back and told us the coast was clear.
Then she rode by our long line toward
her home, We should have given her
three rousing cheers, had it been safe to
cheer. I hope the time is not far dis
tant when her name may be made pub
lic. Until the rebel guerrillas are driv
en out from their hiding-places near her
mountain home, it will not be prudent.
Over iu Jersey, during the last
Presidential canvass, a young lawyer,
noted for the length of his neck, his
tongue and his: bill,; was on the stump
biowi g his horn for—Getting on hie
eloquence, he spread himself and said..:
•"I would that on the Bth day of nest
November I might have the wings of a
bird, and I would fly to every city and
every village, to every town and every
hamlet, to every mansion and every hut,
and proclaim to every man, woman and
child, that—is President of these Uni
ted States."
At this point a youngster in the crowd
sang out : "Dry up, you old fool.
You'd be shot for a goose before you
dew a mile."
Clergyman. Really, my good
friends, it iq a pity that you who so late
ly married too, shoUld quarrel as you do.
You ought besides, to recollect, that
you are but properly as one.
Husband. One sir ! I wish, when you
happen to be passing this way, you
would just stop and listen for a moment
under our windows ; you would imagine
we are twenty.
In the hearing of an Irish case for
assault and battery, a counsel, while
cross examining one of the witnesses,
asked him what they had at the first
place they stopped st ? "Pour glasses
of ale." "What next ?"• "Two glasses
of whisky." "What next ?" " "One
glass of brandy." "What next ?" "A
fight."
ea- A negro passing under a scaffold
ing where some repairs were going on,
a brick fell from above on his head, and
was broken in two by the fall. Sambo
very cooly raised his head and exclaim
ed, "liolo, you white man up dar, if you
don't want your liricks broken just keep
'em off my head!"
or An old Dutch tavern keeper bad
his third wife and being asked of his
views of matrimony, replied, "Veil, den,
you see, de first time I marries for love
—dat wash goot ; den I marries for bean.
ty—dat wash goot too ; about as goot
as de first ; but die time I marries for
monish—upd die is potter as both."
ar Dr. Johnson, being once in com
pany with some scandal•mongers, one of
them having accused an absent friend of
resorting to rogue, he observed, "It is
perhaps, after all, much better for a lady
to redden her own. cheek than to blaCk
en other people's characters."
ar A than who avoids matrimony on
account of the cares of wedded life is
compared to one who would araputate a
leg to save 'his toes from corns.
or There is a Quaker at Manchester
who is such an advocate for peace that
he will' not hive a'clook Inti& bottle bar
cause ti strikes,
How they go to . Bed.
The difference between a man and a
woman in dispobition, finds no plainer
illustration than that afforded at the mo
ment when either of them retires to bed.
The young girl tripe to her chamber,
and with the cautious timidity yeculiar
to her, first locks the doors, and arrang
es the window codeine, so that by no
possible chance a passer-by or belated
nocturnal wanderer "from the pavement
can catch a glimpse of her budding beau
ty when en dishabille. This task com
pleted, she turns ou the gas to its full
head, and institutes a general search
throughout the apartment, that she may
be sure that it does not contain a "hor
rible burglar," or "desperate ruffian, in
big whiskers and crisp black hair."
Carefully, with her delicate little fingers,
she lifts the- bed valance, where even
Tom Thumb couldn't squeeze his dimin
utive corporation, and takes a diminu
tive peep into the half emptied trunks,
not forgetting to glance nervously un
der the sofa, the space 'between which
and the floor is not soffieient to contain
the ghost of Calvin Edson ;' mach less
an ordinary robber.
Having ascertained that she is really
alone, she leisurely proceeds to divest
her fair form of "the skill and linen con
ventionalities of society," First, she
relieves her glossy hair from its thral
dom of pins and combs, and "does it up"
more completely. Then off comes the
little collar, and the light vapory cloud
of lace she calls her undersleeves, which
all the day have been clasped around
her white, plump arms by a couple of In
dia robber strips. Next, the "love of a
spring silk" dress is unfastened in front.
Then sundry waist strings and button
straps are loosed, and lo ! what a col
lapse, like that of Lowe's big balloon.
She stands like'Satern in the centre of
rings. There they lie upon the soft car
pet, partly-covered by the linen under
fixings, with no more expression in them
than there is in the bare floor beneath
the carpet. 'Sits she 'now on the edge
of the snowy bed, and begins the unlac
ing of gaiters and the disrobing of those
fair, swelling limbs of her stockings.
The pretty little foot is carefully perch
ed upon the knee—down drops the gait
er, off comeirthe elastic, and her thumb
inserted at the top , of her stockings,
pubes it down—down over the heel,
and the cotton rests besides the pranel
la. So with the'other foot, only involv
ing a slight change of her position.
There is a smile that peeps out from
behind the blushes of her meet face now
as standing before the glass she places
upon her , head the night-cap, and with a
quick twist of her fingers ties the be.
witching bow. Then the night gown is
thrown over the frilled chemise, conceal
ing
the heaving bosom, and the should
ers in the folds. Then the counterpane
and sheets are throWn back, the gas is
turned down—very, very low—and the
little form pressee the yielding conch,
and the angel goes
,off into the world of
dreams.
Now, in the room directly over her is
the great brute - of a brother. He comes
into it, shuts the door with a slam, turns
the key with a snap, growls at a chair
which happens to be in his way, pulls off
his boots and throws them in a corner,
jerks his socks from his feet, drops his
pantaloons on the floor and lets them
lay there ; gets off his coat and vest by
a quick, vindictive sort of twist of his
arms and body, unpins and unbuttons
his collar. throws it carelessly with the
tie at, rather than on the table ; travels
to the window in his shirt extremity, to
let down the curtains, as if he didn't
care a cuss whether the entire popula
tion of the street beheld his anatomy or
not ; then puts out the light and boon-
VOL. XL-NO, 43.
Wit and Humor.
A superintendent of a mission
school, being annoyed by the noise, final
ly, in appealing to the boys, raising his
hand said, "Now let's see if we can't
hear a pin drop." All was silence, when
a little fellow in the back part of the
room, cocking his ear and placing him
self in an attitude of breathless atten
tion, spoke out. "Let her drop 1"
The question is decided. Even an
unmarried woman may "wear breeches"
with impuniti. The police-man who
arrested kiss Harman, in New York,
for sporting "male continuations," has
bein dismissed the force, the Chief de
ciding 'that a woman has as much right
to wear a pair of pants as an overcoat,
which every woman wears.
We read that there is a cockney
youth, who, every time be wishes to get
a glimpse of bisiEweetheart, (tries "Fire,"
directly under her window. In the
alarm of the moment she inquires
•'Where ?" when he poetically 'laps
himself on the; bosom and exclaims,
"'Ere, my Hangelina."
An instance of filial affection
among the Pinto Indians, we find recor
ded in the Nevada papers : Two young
"braves" under the assurance of being
hanged, propose to give five ponies to
the authorities if they will allow their
aged fathers to be hung in their place.
A gentleman at the Astor Honse
table, New York, asited the person sit
ting next to him if he would please to
pass the , mustard. "Sir," said the man,
"do you mistake me for a waiter?"
. "06, no, sir," was the reply, "I mistook
yon for a gentleman."
"Ne one should indulge in such
horrid anticipations," as the hen-pecked
husband said when the parson told him
that he would"be joined to his wife in
another world, never to separate from
her. "Parson," said he, "I beg you
won't mention that circumstance again."
The ladies of Harrisburg propose
to hold a meeting next week, for the
purpose of adopting a change of dress,
on account of the recent disgrace brought
upon the present fashion by the rebel
Jeff. Davie. The ladies will assemble
at the ringing of the court hoiLse bell.
A hard-shell Baptist deacon, in a
quarter of Raynham known as "Tear.
oil," lately refused to assist in adminis
tering the sacrament of the Lord's sup.
per, because the communion table was
covered with a United States flag drap.
ed with black.
"A bachelor of thirty years" writes
to the Country Gentlemen for a recipe
for bean soup. A lady correspondent
replies, "Get a wife that knows how to
make it."
A learned coroner, the other day,
being asked how he accounted for the
great mortality this year, exclaimed, "I
cannot tell ; there are people dying this
year that never died before."
"So Tom, the old liar, Dick Fib
bine, is dead." "Yea, his yarns are
wound up ; he'll lie no more—the old
rascal." "Indeed, it's my opinion, Tom,
that he'll lie still r
O'Larey, gazing with astonishment
at an elephant in a menagerie, asked the
keeper, "What kind of a baste is that
aitin hay with his tail ?"
"I have a fresh.cold," said a gentle.
man to his acquaintance. "Why do you
have a fresh one ; why don't you have it
cured ?"
Every plain girl has one console.
tion. If she is not a pretty young lady,
she will, if she lives, be a pretty old one.
The railing of a cross woman, like
the railing of a garden, keeps people at
a distaiibe.
Jeff. Davis was born in the same
with President Johnson, but will
Viably die some years sooner.
The San Francisco publishers in
to use Chinese paper.
CONSIDERATE BRIDE..-.A marriage
taking place in Paris. The bride•
om, an honest and industrious lock-
It, was uneducated, and when called
co sign the register, marked a cross.
bride, on the contrary, although be
ging.to a poor family, bad received
excellent education.—Nevertheless.
n the pea was passed to her, she also
ed a cross. The bridesmaid, a for
schoolfellow- of the bride, having
mooed her astonishment, the young
replied :—"Would you have me ho-
late, my husband ? To-morrow I will
mmence myself teaching him to read
Write."
lir Be that falla into sin is a man ;
that grieves at it is a eaiat ; he that
its of it is a devil.