The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, February 17, 1866, Image 1

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    By FRED'K L. BAKER.
JACOB LIBHART, JR.,
CABINET MAKER
10 UNDERTAKER, MARIP.TTA, PA
117 OULD most respectfully take this meth
od of informing the citizens of Marietta
and the public in general, that, having laid in
a lot of seasoned Lumber, is now prepared to
manufacture all kinds of
CABINET FURNITURE,
i n e very style and variety, sat short notice
De has on baud a
ch lot
for fine of Furniture of his own
manufacture,h i
workmanship, will rival any City make.
13- Especial attention paid to repairing. •
Be is also now prepared to attend,. in all its
Winches, the UNDERTAKING business,
Idsmall
supplied with an excellent Horse, large
IA small Biers, Cooling Fox, &c.
ri-COFFINS Anished iu any style—plain
or only.
Ware Room and Manufactory, near. Mr.
OulTy's new building, near the " Upper-Ste-
Sri," Marietta, Pa. [Oct. 22.
Strishict altb Coubtmanitt.
'ono most respectfully take this means of
informing los friends and the public generally
that he has commenced the drawing ,of
DEEDS,
MORTGAGES,
JUDGMENTS,
and in fact everything in the CONVEYANCING
li ne , 'laving gratuitous intercourse with a
member of the Lancaster Bar, he will be ena
lltd Ca execute legal instruments of writing
frith uccuracy,
Be can be found at the office of " THE
MARIETT lAN ,"—“Lindsay's Building," (sec
ond floor) near the Post Office corner, or at
fir ruridence on Market street, half a square
out of the tt Donegal House," Marietta.
,7tllank Deeds, Mortgages, Judgments and
Leans always on hand and for sale.
1866, IltileEbe LADY'S
OA . F Al R o l o l tgi D e devo
ttd to LITERAI URE and FASHION. $2.-
,!s a year. We give WHEELER & IL-
W 6 Celebrated $55 Sewing Machines on
toe following terms:—
Tunly copies mid the Sewing Machine, $7O.
Thirty copies and the Sewing Machine, $B5,
Forty eopies and the sewing Machine, $lOO.
Send 15 cents for a sample copy to DE4.-
CoX & PETERSON, 3111 Walnut street,
P:11;0 Mph's.
First National Bank of Marietta
puts BANKING ASSOCIATION
HAVING CO)tPLETED ITS ORGANIZATION
in now prepared to transact all kinds of
BANKING Lit ISINESS.
The Board of Directors meet weekly, oat
Wednesday, for discount and other business
relitink flours : From 9A.Xto3 P. M.
JOHN BOLLINGER, PRESIDENT.
DIOS HO iVillA N, Cashier.
ROW A 11D ASCI T
PHILADELPHIA, I
laseases of the Urinary and Sexual Systems
-al new and reliable treatment. Also, the
BRIDAL CHAMBER, an Essay of warning and
last:action, seat in sealed envelopes, free of
forge. Address, Da...T. Sit z L LIN HORGHTOM,
Banta Association, No. 2 South Ninth-at.,
Pailuietuttia, Pa. [ Jan. 1015-Iy.
- ------- -
DR. J. Z. 171 OFFER,
DENTIST,
I ,L=. OF TIIE BALTIMORE COLLEGE
glum OF DENTAC SURGERY,
I,ATE OF HARRISBURG. •
OFF I CE:— Front street, next door to R:
Williams' Drug , Store, between Locust
and Walnut streets, Columbia.
DANIEL G. BAKER,
ATTOILNKY AT LAW,
LANCASTER. PA.
OFFICE :—No. 24 Noaxsi DUKE STREET
°PPIIite the Court House, where he will &t
-hid to the practice of his profession in all its
1 11110113 branches.
DR. WM. B. FAIINESTOCK,
OFFICE NEARLY :OPP:MITE
Spangler & Pattereon's Store.
FROM 7 To 8 A. Dr.
OFFICE HOURS. ), ITO 2.
, I 6TO7r. x.
•
ril: MASON & HAMLIN
Cabinet Organs,
different styles, adapted to sacred and
Etfl4 Ott music, for $BO to $6OO each. FIFTY
°NE Gold or &lvor itledods t or other first pre
.l.lolli awarded them. Illustrated Catalogues
live. Address, MASON & HAMLIN, BOS
ton., or MASON BROTHERS, New-York.
zuldern)er 9, 1863-IY.]
1 1 .1 A TTENTION ! SPORTSMEN
Eler's Gun Caps, Eley'a Gun Watitles
r i ,P,9 4 t's Spotting and Glared Duck Powder,
do lij ".n at "e Sit ° 1 Shot Pouches, Vowder Flasks,
JOHN SPANGL.ER'a
CIOLGATE'S TOILET SOAPS.
Ho )
nry, glycerine, palm, Almond s Sathand
Slaving SOAPS. Equal to any imported.—
hat received and for - sale, very cheap at
THE GOLDEN MORTAR.
AcHOIA
CE Lot of BoOks for children called
„ indistructable Pleasure Books ; School and
&rNt,Books, Stationary, Pens, Pen holders
LA N DIS & TROUT.
T. CRIX AND NZ ENGLAND BUS
(Or culinary purposes, W
warranted gen uiA
H. D. Benjamin.
t}..(nlllte P AINTING of every description es
o th d With
M n a eatness n and dispatch at the
‘ e °I The riettia.
•
C R°lo t HAVANA SEG AILS, end the
'best Chewing and Smoking Taboo* at
ALARGE LOT OF KW WINDOW
0009 e, gat DER at remarkably low prices
elm
JOHN SkilifOLEl.
1t ° 2 .13, 1 Celeoratco Pearl C l ement and
Paste Blacking at
"THE GOLDEN MORT4R.
ANEIV Toy. _,4,g5 a ll' Ber
-
pect(freeh v.,..
11 1.81. Quality of Wines and Liquor* for
di put Po see, at Zonal 4 Trout'
y..t -37,)c.(t .- V'al&/i.r.t.t:.-__ : . ll+
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
AT ONE DOLLAR AND A HALF A YEAR
PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
Ojice LINDSAY'S BUILDING' second
floor, on Elbow Lane, between the Post
. oifice Corner and Front-St., Marietta,
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
ADVERTISING RATES: One Squire (10
lines, or leas) - 7b cents for the first insertion and
One Dollar and-a-half for 3 insertions. Pro
fessions) and Business cards, of six - lines orless
at tp . Qer annum. Notices iu the reading col
umns, ten cents a-line. Marriages and Deaths,
the simple announcement, FREE; but bur any
additional lines, ten cents a line.
A liberal deduction made to yearly a nd half
yearly advertisers.
Having just added a" Nnwau MOUN
TAIN JOBBER PRESS," together with a large
assortment of new Job and Card type, Cuts,
Borders, &c., to th% Job Office of " TUE
MARIETTIAN,," which will insure the f ne and
speedy execution of all kinds of JOB & CARD
Parirran, from the smallest Card to , the
LA RGEST POSTER, at reasonable prices. •
' SMILE AND BE CONTENTED.
The world grows old, and men grow cad,
'l'o each while seeking treasure ;
And what with want, and care and toil,
We scarce have time for pleasure.
But never mind—that is a loss
Not much to be lamented ;.
Life rolls on gaily if we will
But smile and be contented.
If we are poor, and would be rich,
It will not be by pining;
No I steady heart hod hopeful minds
Are life's bright silver lining.
There's tnier a man that dared to hve
Bath of his choice repented:
The happiest souls on earth are those
Who scone and are contented.
When grief doth come to rack the heart
And fortune bids us sorrow,
From hope we may a blessing - reap
And ciamolation borrow.
If thorns will rise where roses bloom,
It cannot be prevented ;
So make the best of life you can,
And smile and be contented.
Do everything in its proper time.
Keep everything in its place.
Always mend clothes before washing.
Alum or vinegar is good to set colors
of red, green or yellow.
Sal soda will bleach very white ; one
spoOnful is enough fora kettle of clothes.
Save your suds for garden plants, or
to harden yards when sandy.
Stir. Poland starch with a common
candle, and it will not stick to the iron,
and will be much nicer.
Count your clothes-pins, knives and
forks, towels, handkerchiefs, &c., at least
once a week.
Wash your tea-trays with cold suds,
polish with a little flour, and rub with a
dry clpth.
Frozen potatoes make more starch
than fresh ones; . they also make nice•
cake.
Save all your pieces of bread for pud
dings dry, or they will mould.
Examine your pickles, sweetmeats,
and everything put away.
Buy small quantities of cheese, at a
time.
A.hot shovel held over varnished fur
niture, will take out white spots.
A bit of glue dissolved in - skim milk t
and water, will restore old crape.
Ribbons of any kind should be washed
in cold soap-suds, and sot rinsed.
If your flat-irons are rough, rub' them
well with fine salt, and it will make
them smooth.
Oat straw is the best for filling beds ;
it should be changed once a year.
If yon are buying a'carpet for durabil
ity, chose small figures.
A hit of emit) rubbed on the hinges of
doors will prevent their creaking.
Scotch snuff put on holes where crick
ets come out will destroy them:
Wood ashes and common salt, wet
with water, will stop the' cracks of a
stove, and prevent the smoke 'from es-
A gallon of strong lye put is a barrel
of bard water, will make it as soft as
rain water.
Half a cranberry bound on a corn will
soon kill it.
In winter set the handle of your pump
as high as possible at nigh - t, or throw a
blanket over it, or straw it up.
WOLFE'S
" I don't miss my church so much
as you suppose,'' said a lady to bar min
ister, who had called upon her during
her illness, "for I make Betsy sit at the
window as soon as the bell begins to
chime, and tell`me who are going to
Church, and whether they - have got :any=
thing new."
alOrpMat pratqlbania Pune for IV Nome -Cult
MARIETTA, SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 17, 1866.
Excellent Hinter
The `Runaway's Return
Well, here am I, after my night's walk
once more in the village where I was
born. The sun is up now, - and - shining
brightly. Things appear the same, and
yet different. 'How is it? There was a
big tree used to stand at the 'corner;
and where is-Craver's cottage I
Three days ago I landed at Ports
mouth. It was on my birthday. For
ten long years have I been sailing about
on the sea, and wandering about on the
land. How thing's come over me 1 lam
a man now; but : for all that could sit
down and cry like a child.
It seems but as yesterday since I ran
away from:home. It was the worst day's
work that,' ever did. I got up in the
morning at sunrise, while my'father and
mothei were asleep. Many 'and many a
time I had been unkind to my dear
mother, and undutiful to my father, and
the day before he had told -me how
wrong it was. He spoke kindly, and in
sorrow, but my pride would not - bear it.
I thought I would leave home. What
is it that makes me tremble to now
My father coughed as I crept along
by his door ;. and I thought I heard my
mother speak to him _ ; so I stood 'a mo
ment with my bundle in my hand, - hold
ing mf breath. He coughed again:' A
bove seemed to hear that cough in every
quarter of the world.-
When I had unlocked the door, my
heart failed me ; for my sister had kiss
ed me over night, and told me she had
something to tell me in the morning. I
knew what it was ; she had been- knit
ting me a pair of garters, to give me on
my birthday. I turned back, opened
the door of her little room, and looked
at her; but my -tears fell on the bed
clothes,and I was afraid it would wake
her. Half blinded, I groped downstairs.
Just as 'I had gently closed the door,
the casement rattled above my head. I
looked up and there was my -mother.
She spoke to me, and when I did not,
answer, die cried out loud to me. That
cry has rung in . my ears ever silica; ay,
in myivery dreams I
As I hurried away I felt, I suppose, as
Cain felt when he had murdered his
brother. My father, my motheiand my
sister had been kind to me ; but I had
been unkind to• them, and in leaving
them thus, I felt as if I were murdering
them all. .
Had I been a robber, could not
have felt more guilty. But what do I
say that for? I was robbing 'them of
their peace. I was stealing that from
them that the whole world could not
make.up to"them, hint on I went. Oh,
that I could bring back that hour !
The hills look as' purple as they did
when I used to climb them. The.crows
are cawing among the high elm trees by
the church. I wonder whether they are
the.same rocks 1 There's a shiver-comes
over me as I:get nearer home. Horne
I feel there is no home for me.
Here is the corner of the hedge, and
the old seat ; but father is not sitting
there. There is a patch of ground that
my sister called her garden, but .she is
not walking in it. And yonder is the
bedroom window, my mother is not look•
ing out of it now. "That cry ! that cry!
I see how it is. . There are none of
them here, or . things,would not . , look as
they do: Father would not let the
weeds grow in this fashion, nor the.thateh
fall io, and my mother and my. Meter
never stuffed that straw through , the
broken panes.
I'll rap at the door, anyhow. How
hollow it sounds I Nobody stirs. All
is as silent as the grave. I'll peep in •at
the window. It's an empty house, that's
clear. Ten long years I How could I
expect it to be otherwise ? I can bear
hard work, and hunger and thirst ! but I
can't bear this !
The elderberry is in blossom, as it
was when I ran, away, and the woodbine
is as fresh as ever, running up to the
window that my mother opened to-call
after me. I could call after her now,
loud enough to be beard a mile, if I
thought she would hear me.
It's no use st )pping here ! I will
cross the church yard, and see if, the
clerk lives where he did ; but he
not know nit. My cheek was like the
rose when I went away; but the sun,
has made it of.another color. -How-nar
row the path is between the grass ! it
I used to be wirer—at least I thought sol;
no matter. The old gun dial, I gee, is
standing there yet.
The last time I was that :Chtirbk,
my father was-with ; and the..-taxt
was '` )14 sou, hear, 'the instruction: of
thy fetid, and (make not .ttio- faw,,of
thyincitttei.' - Oh; what a curse da' we
bring upon us when we despise God's
Holy Word !
My uncle lies under the yew-tree
there, and he had a grave stone. Here
it is. It is written all over now, quite
to the bottom": In itemory of Humphrey
Haycroft. But w. s the name under?
Walter Haycroft u y father! my fath
er ! And Mary, his wife. Oh ! my
mother! an 3 are you both gone ? God's
hand is heavy on ma I I do feel it in
my heart and soul 1
And there*another name yet, and
it is freshly cut : _ Esther Haycroft, their
daughter ; aged 24. My father ! my
mother and my. sister! Why did not
the sea swallow me np when." was wreck
ed ? I deserved it I What is the world
to me now? I feel, bitterly feel, the sin
of disobedisnce ; the words come home
to me now : The eye that mocketh at
his father, and despiseth to obey his
mother, the ravens of the valley shall
pick it out, and the young eagles shall
eat it.--Prov. xxx. 17.
But-yet I`recollect how my dear fath
er and mother used to point
. us to the
Limb of God which taketh away the sin
of the world. There is no refuge beside,
said my mother ; Christ is able and
willing to save. I paid but little at
tention to these words once ; oh, may I
never forget thdm now I
PATERNAL Dovv.—The father who
plunges into business so deeply that he
has no leisure for domestic duties and
pleasures, and whose intercourse with
his children consists in a brief word of
authority, or a surly lamentation over
their intolerable expensiveness, is equal
ly to be pitied and,to be blamed. W hat
right has he to devote
. to other pursuits
the time which God has allotted to his
children Nor is it any excuse to say
that he canna support his family in
their-present style of living, without this
effort. I ask by what right can his fam
ily demand to live in a manner which
requires him to neglect his most solemn
and important duties ? it an ex
c.-Ilse to say that he wishes to leave them
a competence. Is he under. obligation
to leave them that competence which he
desires ? Is it an advantage to them to
be relieved from the necessity of labor?
Besides, is money the only desirable be•
quest which tt father can leave to his
children.? Surely, well cultivated intel
lects ; hearts sensible to dornestic affec
tion ; the love of.parents, and brethren,
and sisters ; a taste for home pleasures ;
habits of order and regularity, and in
dustry ; hatred of vice and vicious men ;
and a lively sensibility to the excellence
of virtue—are as valuable a.legicy as an
inheritance of property—simple proper
ty purchased by the loss of every habit
which could render that property a
blessing,
STRANGE BRIDAL Brorry-.—A strange
story as told of -two sisters at Berlin.
About three years ago one of these
yonng,ladies was engaged to be married,
but on the bridal morning became so ill
that she could not possibly go to the
church. The bridegroom was a desir-_
able one, and was a' fish who, it seems,
had not been easily hboked. There was,
therfore, great dfteger in' delay, so in
stead of postponing the marriage the
second , sister, covering_ herself with. a
long yap, personated the first, and:clnly
Went through the ceremony. The mo
ment it was over she transferred the
bridal dress and ornaments to her sister
who, in her innocence, was thus consid-,
ered to have all proper claim to this
husband she had married by proxy. It
is only recently that - a discovery has
been made of the -real facts, and pro
ceedings are to be taken rioConly in the
civil, but in the criminal courts - of Ber
lin.
A GOOD RULE.-At Sydney, in Aus
tralia, among otter advertisements on
the first floor of• the printing office, is a
tablet informing visitors that the editor
cannot be seen unless paid for his Valu
able time. Accordingly everybody with
out exception is advised to buy a ticket
of-admission-at the door of the waiting
room—one hour costs 10s., half an hour
65., fifteen, minutes as. .
iir.A married lady who was in the
habit of spending most of her time in
the society °Cher neighbors, happened
one day to,be ,suddenly taken. ill, and ;
sent her. husband in great haste for a
physician. The husband ran a short die-,
tanoe, bat soon returned, a,u4ipeekly ,ea-;
claiming My dear, where ,shall 'I find
you when return ?" ' '
er A dog lying on the heirth-rng
with. his nose tO his tell is the emblem
of Economy. He makes both ends meet.
Farmer's Sons
When a farmer s eon leaves home to
become a clerk in some Village or city
store, orto engage in some other busi
ness, in three cases in four he takes the
first step towards his pecuniary ruin.
Occasionally, a young man thus gets in
to- a business irf - athich lie becomes a
partner or owner, and makes mile ; but
such cases are rare.
Let ns sup4ose a case. A young man
hears`of the high salaries clerks get in
New York, fiftein hundred dollars a
year in some cases, and he gets the NeW
York fever, and taking fifty 'dollars in
hie pocket, he bide his parents farewell,
and leaves home in high spirits.
When - he gets to the city, he inquires
for a boarding house ; he applies to'''sev=
oral, and finds the price of board from
six to ten dollars a weeit—the cheapest
with fare he would not be satisfied with
at home, being about six dollars. "•He'
takes board at this rate, and begins to
look for wsituation—sees advertisements
in the papers for clerks, but 'a hundred
get the start of him, some of whom - write
splendid hands=and, of course, - they get
the situations.
In a few weeks his money is all gene,
and he writes home for more ; and the
result generally is, that after spending
from one hundaed to two hundred dol
lars, and "seeing the elephant, he
comes home disgusted with city life, and
is willing to stick to the farm, or awaits
a new outfit for a second trial for sue-
MD
Bush an aspirant for money-making
has his ardor somewhat cooled when he
learns of city merchants that they pay
green hands' only about enough to board
them ; say from three hundred to five
hundred dollars for smart, active clerks;
from eighteen to twenty-five years old.
The rule is to increase salaries - from fifty
to one, hundrad dollars aryear; : till clerks
become fully acquainted with the busi
ness, when some few—the most efficient
-perhaps one in a hundred—get a sal
ary that enables theirao up.a little . ;
money if they are economical.
If however, we should turn to the
histories of most young men who' leave
good homes to obtain Situations in cities
we should find that:ninety-nine in a
hunered failed to realize their anticipa
tions, and have died poor, or are Soar
living on less.meaus yearly than a good
farm affords, while their livei are a con
tinued current of cares that render life .
anything but happy.
-In our yoinger days we had practical
experience in this matter, and hilt New
York with a shattered - consiitution,
brought-oh by'close application tobusi
ness, without. a Compensatory reward
for the lose of health ; and to' escape ' a
premature grave we fled to the country
;hereto' get a new lease of life - by tilling
:he soil. •
Here are a few femarks on the' fore
going subject, which we 'clip from- the
Rural World : •
The eons of farmers commonly think
their lot is a hard. one. Unlike most
city youths, they • are compelled to per
form daily toil. Their life is not one of
constant amusement. They cannot see
and bear a'imuch 'as Mei . r city cousins.
They do not dress in as fine clothes—
cannot treat and be treated at the pop
ular saloons, or visit the costly gambling
resorts which abbund in every city.
They feel that their lot is indeed a hard
one,`nd the , highest ambition of many
•of them is, to arrive at that age When
they can go to the city and' 'see all the
sights.'
But let us talk to our farmer boys.
Yon are in the right place. You are
learning habits of industry and frugality.
By your daily toil you are acquiring a
gonad constitution—n . most' important
matter. And this is one ,or the reasons
that our great men hive all come from
farmers sons. They have grolin up :id
bust, with constitutions that could 'en
dure • a great nmdunt of mental labor,
which youths from the city, with weak
and feeble frames, could not stand.
Ifyoui cannot see as much as city
youths, neither are you expoSed to the
vices and temptations of the city, life,
which prove the destrnetion of nearly'all
raised in the city. You rite then on the
right track=go ahead. itesolve to form
no bad habiti. in no intoxica
ting &Hoke; If yon form a love ter them
it:18'41111mA impossible to subdue it ; Do
net'ectittiie'tlie habit cheWinif oininp
tkidg ifibribbiii,
pita books ' -let no . oPpiiitiiniti for im
provement pass um—and lon' will
,grow up useful, intelligent men.—Rural
Adtericitn.
ar When ,ip,atixed manlike a thin
When he tee 4 arresting.
VOL. XII.--NO. 28.
.%tuit for Zmaris
A judge, trying a case out in the
Vest, had proceeded about two hours
when he observed, '• Here are only elev
en jurymen present; where is the
twelfth ?" "Please yor honor," said
'one of the eleven, " he has gone away
about some other business, but he has
left his verdict with me 1"
A gentleman who was about complet
ing the sale of a horse, which he was
very anxious to dispose of, when a little
urchin appeared and innocently inquired,
`Grandpa, which horse you goin' to sell
—that one you built the fire under yes-
terday to make him draw ?' The bar
gain was at an end,
An edito - r reading in another paper
that there is tobacco, which, if a man
smokes or chews, will make him forget
that he owes a shilling in the world, in
nocently concludes that many of his sib
scribers have been furnished with the
same article.
' You like plenty of nice things, don't
yon Johnny ? Bow many cakes did you
have at the pastry-cooks yesterday 1'
'Five ; first a sponge-cake, then an alm
ond-cake, then -a currant-cake, then a
sweet-cake, and then a stoma cake l'
A minister who bad received a num
ber of calls, and could hardly decide
which was the best, asked the advice of
his faithful African servant, who thus
.replied: "Massa, go where de most deb-
'MY dear; said a gentleman to a
young lady whom he hoped to marry,
'do - you intend to make a fool of me ?'
• No,' replied the lady, ' Nature has
saved me the trouble.'
Different sounds travel with different
degrees of velocity. A call to dinner
will run over a' ten acre Held in a min
ute and a half, while a pummons to work
will take from five to ten minutes.
. "Well, Mr. Tree, if you are about to
leave I shall detain your trunk," exclaim
ed an incensed landlady to her lodger
who was slightly in arrears.
" Where shall I get a panel?" said
the sheriff to the judge. " Why, I sup
pose, sir, that you can get enough panels
out of doors."
The reason why the gamecock keeps
his feathers so smooth is that he never
goes an where without taking his comb
wit. lim.
An editor tells of an acquaintance of
his, 'Who, when he laughs, "shakes the
room so that even the spiders peep out
of their cracks to see what is going
Why are , naughty children at school
like postage , stamps ? Because . you
must lick their backs to make them stick
to their letters.
A. lady told her haiband she road the
"Art of Love," on purpose to be agree
able to him. " I would rather have love
without art," replied he.
Red noses are light -houses to warn
vongers on the sea of life off the coast
of-Malaga, Jamaica, Santa Crnz, and
Holland.
Why ahould we never sleep in a rail.
way carriage ? Because the train paee.
ea over sleepers.
Why is a crazy oil speculator like th 4
Secretary of the Navy ? IE6 is Giddy
on Wells.
Teamsters may dog a brisk business,
but wheelbarrow men carry all before
them.
A bachelor's face is often the worse
or wear—a married man's for wear and
En
WV do white sheep eat more than
black ones ? Because there are more of
them.
Why is the jams river like a keg of
ager-beer ? Because they both flow ia
o the Patch Gap.
A blind man went out to sea, when
there how did he contrive to see ? He
took a cup and saw, sir, ( saucer).
The brewers and beer-sellers of Now
York are at lager-heads.
The lady who fell back on her dignity
came near breaking it.
What is the best thing to prevent a
maid from despairing ?
A tea never indulged in by gossip
2,Ciharity.
In what cords; should a secret be kept ?
_
In violet.
Many wear dignity se they de clothes
.=alb outside.
All lawyers may be said to belong to
the 'Fie-nian brotherhood.
why is ice in a thaw like philanthro•
phi '7
---Because it gives in all directions.
A moded ti —the eeal►ic Wax.