Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 21, Number 33, Jasper, Dubois County, 15 August 1879 — Page 7

-WEEKLY COURIER

0, MAXI, rsMlsher. JASPER, INDIANA. ITEMS OFJNEKmT. rnHl a4 Literary. The Etblos of George Eliot's Works " is a new book just out in London. John Orombie Brown is the author. Mrs. Mary Howitt has received frem the Knglish Government a pension of in consideration of her literary erviees. The rumor goes that the " Imprests of Theophraatua Such" will be George Eliot's final work. It is already ia its third edition la England. Victor Hugo says it is far better to be 50 years old tkan 40. Fifty," says he, is the youth of old age, while 40 a the old age of youth." Mr. Shillaber, known to fame as "Mrs. Partington," suffers severely from gout at his home in Chelsea, Bos toa. lie " sow oo years oi age. An unpublished MS. opera, in three acti, by Haydn, has been discovered among a lot of old music scores belonging to the late Theater Italians, In Paris. The title of the opera ia Vera CoeJanza, aad it was originally compoeed by Haydn for the Vienna Opera Howe, and subsequently brought to Piria. It i related of Longfellow and Mr. ridds. the publisher, that some years jgo they were walking together along a M&ntrv road when confronted by an angry bull. I think," said Mr. Fields, "that it will be prudent to give this re viewer a wide margin." "Yos," replied the poet, " it appears to be a dis puted passage Of Payne, the author of "Home, Sweet Home." it is said that he was mall man and had rather a sad face, bat a quick manner. He was noticeable (or wearinsr a very full, short cloth cloak, and always carrying a gold-head' ed cane. He talked much and with ani nation, and was gallant in his manner to ladies. Longfellow, Whittier, Holmes and Dr. Holland are among the subscribers to a testimonial for celebrating the comtttetion of Paul II. Hayne's fiftieth birth dav next New Year's. The testimonial U to take the shape of an elegantly illus trated edition of Havne'a poetical works, the profits of which are to go to this chief poet of tae bouta. A journalistic feat which is prob ably unique is recorded of Mr. Joseph Sailer, financial editor of the rnilaaei phia Ledijtr. Mr. Sailer published hk first financial article ia the Ledger on the 1st of July, 1840, and bow writes: "The individual who pens this parapranh nrenared that first article, nubfished on the 1st of July, 1840, and has contributed to every number of the paper published from that day to this." Madame Alice Dnrand, the French authoress, who, under the nom dt plume of Henry Greville, has made for herself a Bigh place among female authors, re tides on a charming estate oa the hill swe ot Moatmartre, whence there is a fine view of Paris. She was born in that city in 1843. She is short in stature and rather stout, bavins: a mobile face, soft brown eves, an intellectua and spiritual expression, and genial, frank and unaffected manners. As a conversationalist she is easy and witty. but a good listener also. She dislikes goseip, g intensely sympathetic, and in politics is a Moderate Republican. Her writinjra are wonderfully pure in tone aad devoid of sensationalism. M. Durand, her husband, is a pupil of the great painter, Heaaer, aad is regarded m a ruing axuet, BeVAdMMi saiil af M-a4jry Bwwsw ww lamRwii Florida ships 6,000 head of cattle to tuna monthly. The Atlanta (Ga.) ice factory, own any benator Joaes of Nevada, pro duces Wi.&ou pounds of ice daily. The value of the granite taken from toe quarrise at Dix Island, Me., by the U. S. Government for the erection of public buildings, within a few years, is naiea oy tae superintendent to be f o, Road loeomotives are said to be coming generally into use ia France lately a 12-ton locomotive (portable engine) was harnessed to a niece of ar tillery weighing 43 tons, which it brought from Vinceane to the Point d'Austerlitz. has lately built a lot of cars for a prairie road, with aa arrangement for dteoon meeting the gearing and running by mu wnen it is favorable. Alter a tria of several weeks the cars have been pro nouncea perfectly satisfactory, in an ordinary, nlmcst every day breeze they " run id miles an nour under sail. Vanilla is a plant indigenous to Florida. The " crackers" gather it in great quantities and sell it to merchants who send it North to mix with tobacco in the manufacture of cigars and to be ground up for smoking with stems and other refuse. It to worth now 21 cents pound. Before the reduction of the tobacco tax it sold for 4 cents. The St. Louis Cotton Exchange Will offer K.'t.m in nratntumji far r. hibits of the staple at the St. Louis Fair nt October. Of this amount, $676 is given in five premium? to each of the three States of Missouri, Arkansas, and Texae. Three hundred dollars each is pvea in three premiums to Mississippi, lenneesee, and the Indian Territory. A sweep-stake, open to any State or Terntory, of foOO & added.

The last Rotable applioailoa of papier mckt was in the Manufacture of a revolving dome for the astronomical observatory of the Polytechnic Institute, Troy. It only weigh a ton and threequarters, and oau oe revolved without

the assistance of any apparatus, The paper is on a llzhtframimr of wood, and is fully as hard and rigid. The dome haa an Internal dfamatiM-of 29 fat and bhn au internal umtiHKw ui iwn, nu, if constructed in the usual manner, would have weighed five or six tons, and required powerful machinery to move it. geheel aa Ufearafc. The Bishop of London has $50,000 a year aad the use of two houses. The eighteenth annual session of the National Educational Association has lust been held at Philadelphia. The opening addreee was delivered by Pres ident jonn llancocK ot liay ton, unio. The exercises were of great interest. President McCoeh has fears of a decline of the ministerial supply of the 'resbytarian Church, lie says the three younger classes in rnnceton college contain an unusually amau numoer of student who intend to enter the minis try. He thinks it time that the church should be aroused. The United States statistics of in ternal revenue show a groat increase in the contminption of lager beer, which Is becoming the beverage ot tne maeeee. The consumption is now nearly 1,000,000 barrels a montn, or somemingover ll,000,000 barrels annually, or about eight gallons to every individual in the United States. The consumption of whisky does not appear to have diminished in quantity. Lucy Stone has been paying a visit to Welleeiey College for women in Mas sacbusetts. Sheeivos a little account of what 8 ho saw there in the Woman's Journal. At this college "the coeks are men, the professors are women." The visitors were invited to look at the microscope work of the school. The rirls havo more than 50 microscopes constantly in use, niiu kuto hu uauiuiu . ! i , i. : u !. of animal, mineral and vogetable sped mens which was much to their credit. They also have row-boats, each with its own colors, captain anu crew. ine . i ml I inns are accusiomea to exercise tuemselves lit. muir uais, uu mo xaac, oiv evening, and are said to look very rosy and healthy. According to a recent and eminent Roman Catholic authority, that church ia now the richest religious body in this country. The ratio of increase in its oecuniarv resources irom leou to ibiu was via per cent, uraciai siaitsuc?, published in 1875, give the number of ita priests as 5,074, the number of students preparing for the priesthood 1,273. and the number of churches and chapels, 6,528. i. 6.528. There were at that time. 33 theological seminaries, 63 college, Catholic population in this country 6,375,690. The Washington School Trustees have received from their Special Com mittee on the Course of Study several excellent recommendations. Condensed, these are: No new text booka, fewer studies, more oral instruction by teach ers, lesa show-work, more of the practitical, lees of the theoretical. " Tne odiect." savs the committee very wisely, should ever be not to see how much can be taught, but how well the inetruc tion can be eiven." Amonz me suerations is one that natural science and nhvaioloirv be tauarht orally ia each school, ana another, mat lessons in goou morals and oolite manners be given t . . each week by each teacher, enforced by anecdote and illustration. President Eliot's views on educa tion, ae expreeeed in his recent address at the Smith Female I'diece in Massa chusetts, are the cause of considerable comment. "I may as well abruptly avow," he said, "aa the result of my reading and observation in the matter of education, that I recogniae but one mental acnuieitioa ae aa essential part of the education of a lady or gentleman namely : an accurate aad refined, aee oi the mother tongue, (ireek, juaun. French, German, mathematics, natural and nhvstcal science, metaphysios, his torv. and esthetics are all profitable and Ofusauni, own ?"? v . . - . lions W mm who siuu.es incni wiw mtelUgeace and love; but not one of them has the least claim to be called aa acquisition essential to a liberal education or an eeeential of a sound training." This, coming from the Preeideotof Harvara College, sounds rainer raatoai. Hihs aad BChvhaHM. Wm. HUrhfill, a well known farmer living two miles from Elisabeth, Ind., was fatally bitten by a copperhead snake. -Dr. il. It. Town, an old and highly respected physician of Frankfort, lnd., died from the effects of morphine taken instead of quinine. Frank McDonald, 10 years old, son of Michael McDonald of Flint, Mich., accidentally shot himself in the abdo men with a pistol, inflicting a fatal wound. Katie Moore of Newark. N. J., died from eating poisonous pickles. Other members of tae family who partook of the pickles were more or lees violently affected. Near Charlotte Center. N. X., a farmer. Gorham Hunt, went into a field to pick berries, and was attacked by a bull and torn to pieces! Mrs. Winters, livlne near Gayvllle, Iowa, was terribly mangled by falling in front of a knife while drivinza mow ing-machine. Her Injuries were thought to be mortal.

-Cantaia Daniel Dodaoa of Patan.

burg, Va., was fatally poisoaed by eat ing ice-eream into watoh soaae deleteri ous sabetaaee had been mixed. The other members of hie family were all affected. -Mrs. John Taylor of Harrison t Township, Carroll County, O., fell from a bay-loft, a distance of about . 7f, V r , " gO feet. Striking her head oa a wagon I tongue killiniAier almoat inataatlv Ura MMriloaamrth. bHiIaw llviav near ballon, U., was dreadfully man- . .. . B I gled by an infuriated sow whioh attack- j el her while a he was feeding the anl-

mal in the yard. She was rescued just propriate iiwiy carried the ria-nt t desiicin time to save her life, but it was found ,Hr ,PriMMw it aheuid orhoid a i & ... , i. i i not IX! UMeu. Th lfouu had clear riaht to

Lust Jtuimuauun m iMtr arm wotuu uv xieceseary. -Miss Nettie Haines, aged 19, a pop ular young lady of West Liberty, 0., was out driving with a gentleman, when their hone became frightened, broke its bit and ran off, throwing both out. Miss Haines's head struck a stone, crushing the skull and causing her death in a snort time. A German by the name of Borlholmerz, living near Austin, Minn., was hauling hav. and. on trvinir to rat no on the load, a hoard broke and he fell I r j m "j w. i on the tines of a pitchfork, one of which entered the left breast, piercing tne heart. He pulled it out, walked a short distance and died, living only about five minutes after the accident. Miss Lavinia Fry, aged 20, of Ephrata, Pa., was passing along a pub lic road when aa infuriated bull attacked her. Catching her on .bis horns, he tossed her 20 feet acroee a creek. When on the opposite bank lie again caught her on his noma, ana threw her over a five-railed fence. One horn penetrated ber abdomen, her right hip-bone was broken, and she was ao badly wounded that she died shortly afterward. .FercljCB Xetea. -It has been decided to remove the ruins of the Tuileriee in Paris and to transform the sight into a garden. The Paris Municipal Council has rebaptizeda large number of streets, in

QiwiClUUine me uouievara nausemajiu,

cluding the Boulevard Haussmann, r ' -w named miring me reign oi uonapane. une vui oe naraeu m memory- ui cx-i riwueuv iiiauuiu. Official returns show that 20 officers and 4W men aiea or caoiera and other diseases on their return march from the Afghan campaign, while only m ln . I 'II. .1 .I ! iuu men were auieu iu iu cuuu. i The famine in Jerusalem is so trreat that the chief Rabbis and the PresidenU of the two principal Congrega?nn him iaaaMi an animal for Minn M lions nave lseuea an appeal lor rappuw , of wheat, barley aad other food. Rather a novel wav of summonme , people to church is that adopted by a ti!iJ.i ,r? i a i . t- L, ZTTirtE rSSf k. arCh l red cross, ia the other a bell, which he rings as he walks, lie is accompanied by a boy witn a lantern, ana continually cries " Come to church." The contrast between English and American society is curiously illustrated by the fact that the marriage rubric of the Church of England requires wed dings to be celebrated before noon a requirement which orowds wedding festivitiM into unseasonable nours Of the dav. necessitates all-nieht preparation, .nku bo mkarftiatlfinallon than aireiwmuwmw "y& it comes down from anti-Reformation ima If ia nnv nrniviun aitBAr to . ... ... .....a i . . um. " r-r" abolish this prohibition, or at iea to

allow Noncomformiet ministers to per- ald, in your city, 'Let it wave over eltizeae, fnrm tliA wiarriajra oeramoBV at anv "t over subjects. With a true republican -form the marriage oeremoBy at anj ima true democratic repubHcanlsm-we

time between 8 a. a. and o p. m. Sarah Bernhardt took into every fine house ia London where she was entertained a bright boy who called her "Mademoiselle, my mamma." ar. Conway, aa entirely trustworthy correspondent, tells this story, and adds positively mat Mtee Beranaruisaa taree other children. He remarks on her very cordial reception by English sooietv. not as beine wron of itself, but as

showing the holTownesJof a good deal oagn ffiu all reof so-called English morality. Mr. ltkm, T?' Coaway believesthat it is act through I fPf H? k" ' uKhS the overlooking of her sins or the Tlor- j J" TOt othoi! getting of them, but to some extent be- promote it. S8See If them, hat she has enjoyed so fiJ 'flJL

i nanaa ra t hmui. i hkl mil brilliant an apotheosis. They ha've ad . . anH fuvfr to War ranuta. tion. V , L 7. . u, The original backbiter was no doubt biro umt The worklmrmen demand cheaper whisky or glasses with thinner bottoms Younr ladies wearinsr fashionable dresses now may be said to be ia clothes confinement. 1 (tnt. ,l,f MpfatWaraa oafaaxl with remittent fever," sighed a young spend - thrift at college. mt t T,,Vv im t am wot nrnnii If I am stuck up, 1 am not prouu, M the butterfly said when pinned to the .ide of the showcase. An aminent snirit-naerchaat in Dublin announced, in one of the Irish newspapers, that he had still a small quantity of the whisky on sale which was drunk by his late Majesty while ia Dublin. The SDortine season has arrived when the amateur hunter goes into the forest and shoots the farmer's $10 oow I under the impression that it is a deer, m. - a9 iaaAr a. and alter ward pays tne farmer zo w settle tne matter ana seep ib quhh.. -The peculiar characteristic of the Irish flea is that you put your finger on him and he isn't there, l ae peculiar characteristic of the Kusetaa Nihilist is j that you put yoar finger oa him aad I yon are mot there. Fuck,

JLLK.YAXDBK U. ftTmFilKXS.

HytHlm tt HI Keecnt &) at AtUiiJ tu, (. Th Jlittaat Ihhm Huvr Hefur the CHMalrjr. I Atlanta, Ga., July W. Then, wan a great 1 ovmtos to Alexander Htfiawx mt t-Ur. ulTuSt e aMiirtMNHM ute tMMiaMre at iff tM l liHNi ot i)m Ohv. lroUably r nnvw wwi ucM aarowU iu tne C'uptuA l((,r. .No riw.wmtuve Kovernieetit, tie wUU, wn safe when the people did not adrta4 IM principle. JHroii sxpreMd th whole . . . i (ovarameiit, be tM.(U, u trutu in thr word when he Mid that tin, aatetyot tbeKepubiiewaainthainteiitaeuee, vlrtua. un.l nuK-ts.liifia &f tlu. tUAlilA llu .Mkeof th,. iA.Bad Z waa in favor of matin the appropriation. r.rAV. ,:;:"".,..'T i..i.i.... v,..i . I troop at the noiu. Th irwdant vetoed IlmiM) at lRt seeurtMl liU MwitatwrM toaUw' Houm at lat muml hlti iitKiurtt to a law uuUtantiiilly tilt, tMins. " We raatta an appropriation for the Marfilial," h aid t lie ttpeaktir, "kIvIhk tliem tue maana to earo' on their utHetH) an th law dl TttvUi, but declarinK that neither thy nor their I)putlM should use oe eent of it at elections. Tiie 1'retddeat vetoed that, and on tliU ltiue we etand before the country today. I will take thl lsue and go before the people iii any part oi this country to Justly oumelve. Ybera are two (treat questtona before this people, namely, flnanee and tax ation. As to taxation, l must nay we are poorer than we have been for seyeain, and t . . . . llZJJ,2Hl. JZIVZ? I wfut caused that enwh? The i deuwiietiwi-, tlon of silver. Germany did it flmt, then the Latin States and then other countries of turone. we fell Into the error, too: nobody eeemt to know how. At the same time the ejo.eio: of thic. st.MW.ooii ware nil-1 vr. Gold ana silver JiHd borne etiice civilization beean, but here, at one blow, their relation was changed and over one-half the world's wealth put under the bllKht. A careful calculator told tne the oth er day that brinkage of values In thin couii try, alter that fatal act, was more than the , whole expense of our war. That latin ty was wore than war. There I no remedy for us 1 nUWMbLr i II IC"maouniHllft mno . "vr. aad iw tree coinage. We ja-ant jm, OOO.09U in circulation. at leant, we have now . A am In Ma.nuliiltlluMn rltQ O 1 1 1 AA rf only 111 per capita, including all the hoarded Hold and silver. We want at least S per capita, or aamuch aa wehadbeiote tnecraau ot 1878. l'eople fear the silver flood. I would let It come from all the mines of all the world until we Have a thousand millions in circulation. We did much at the extra sesvlon to relieve the prewure. The Warner Silver bill waanaaeed. It was almost exactly the bill which I offered the cession before, and could i . . .1. an,... u .kl Kill imuiujl I the Prussian Government, ordered its Treas- j ury to sell no more silver. This great quei-1 tion win agnate tnepuouc BMuuun w n tion will HKltam the public mind aurinx tne vaovt a-ra radM as a irt mioailAn tVr si ill taiiifw j rh' ie. "iee that Mr st!7 s'l"1? recent new iiwtue. He hrv-i there is another freces aton brewlne. StranftH that he should have

aald thie witti Ohio before his eye Ohio, , fi arrn nrHinarilT" or. alnw that ha. where the italtant Kwliig, our standaid-bear m Iarm oraiaaniy SO 9IOW UK Deer, and his compeer, Rice, did all they con id fore a borrowed capital can be paid of.

to crtiHh the other ecesion. tae otuer secession, iwre no Kiirh I am n n mt Mr. Sherman avs. Mr. Sher . Mr- snr. man speaks of revival of prosperity, but I have beard of no Mich thing from tne masses. and cruel taxation worse than war, "On the subtet of taxation he aald that the ouroena were ni uy inc inwr-iuo inn , ci-oges. Many a poor man who lives from hand to mouth pays more tax than many a bondholder who is worth half a mtlhon. ThuvevMi tar the fanner's corn: he can not h (wnimt sit down at nUcht to smoke mate it into meatcine xor n iamuy uuui a. . m . ti lit 4 hone of aafetv was in neneot itunonetizatton ' of silver and increased currency. " I am not In favor of carrying money around in carta. I want a paper currency, based, dollar for i dollar, on gold and silver, and it will be good " wherever the nag wavea. tihs peopte are op "i?" GaaUBts tllAk a naaa Mima v ; . of the people. But there is hope that within a TJrZXZ euh eminent ever devised. Brouarnam eaw was the greatest that ever existed, and it has been the wonattr ana aamirauoa m inaaaiau. ., 1 utattilaMl. bearer the man who will always stand ' arm on the principles of the Jeifersoniaa nomocracy. There is ao secuonausm now. i wo int.. Rnvurntnoiit. and under It we haii yet prosper more than ever i tenant. That glorious flag of our fathers shall wave , ...... a:i c..a i ' mil .1. mi m.'im a . k .n .717 . ,Mlfirti Hnhiic. as President uuv uvw a xi k nd, Hav aye j can maintain this as the most gionoas government ever known to whh." Two t)Kuand people heard the speeeh. Mr. Stevens was frequently chrered. After the speech crowds of ladles preened around to speak toblaa. Care ef the Hair. Prof. Wilsoa,of England, is the highest authority oa the hair. He condemns washing It, aad advises, instead, thorand are seldom or never permanently aooceaaful. Some of them eive rise to ooneeetion of the soalp. When astimnI It is safe. For falling out of the hair, , T1r Wnon tMaoribes a lotion composed i . . . -1 I !1 of water of ammonia, almond oil ana eoloroform, one part of each, dilated with fire Darts alcohol, or spirits of rosemary, the whole made fragrant with a dram of oil of lemon. Dab it oa the skin, alter thorough friction with the hair-brush. It may be usea sparingly or 1 abundantly, daily or otherwise, lor a i cooling biicn, one made of two drams of borax and glycerine to eight ounces ,,:Q:n -rr ? ffMi5. allannr dryness, subduing irritability, aad removing scurf. Both baldness and grayness depend on defective powers of the scalp skins, and are to be treated alike. What is needed is moderate stimulation, without any irritation. The following Jl vi svaaicrva j o is good : Rub into the bare places daily, or even twice a day, a liniment of camphor.ammoaia, chloroform, aad aconite, equal parts each. The friction should be very gent.e. Outwitting Ants: It may not be generally kaown that dishes placed on ania.nlant leaf are protected from ants. - '. I . , , !1T it is a nice, oiean, easy way v0"!""" il there are children to rather trnj, and the leaves impart a fresh ooolasee to the pantry. They should be replaced every moraiag.

Cah vs. Cre4iU

Eraatu a home fr&M wk(h to nta So says the poet, awl the experieaea of many a baeiaeis mn, aeweUa many a farmer has indorsed tale state meat. But it is more especially appHoeble to farmers. Merchants, from the very nature of their basiaesi, mtHttnwt M1 h trusted ia return. To theea a oredit system is indispensable. Wheat a aaa lor & eomtt ante u era on short notice, the tradesmaa mast be able to supply his customers, aad to e so it often becomes necessary lor htsa to go ia debt for the goods; bat if he "" "jtv, m nas foresight, bays with judgment aa understands his busine, he will ia a ... .. . . . j i j . Bi! m a prunt auu u reaaj to pay oa aw debt. Not so in the ease of the farmer. In his business there are no sodden hita to be made. For him to go ia debt, ia 99 oase-i ia 100 hampers hu prosperity instead of promoting it. Ilie iaeome constats in what he derives from the sale of his products, his grain, 'fruit, hay, potatoes, stock aad dairy prodeee. These are slowly produced. Maay uanuuui n uniiniu ma mm ucwtt ui. -" wi 1 1 mrwm awaetrs beyond nis ooatrol, are naMe to intrfVith hi nlan-. whik tt present eonditkm of affairs iaaglaad present eoadiltoa of affairs ia aglaael furnishes a striking example, aad wheat quiok and sore returns oaa not be had j it is, to say the least, a hazardous poliey to go ia debt. What we desire toimsrees upon ocr all rash acts, we believe that to borrow money evea for a permanent laterevemeet. unless each improvemeat is am absolute necessity, H most likely to be lirLantLri j i ' i . DvJ repMJ ui. a new ooeee may "wi Mwa vva rtum waav.f mrmmv bought with borrowed money ia borrow , . . . . , . . . muun oseneeeu ooibkmt. ma, wmmm whjioti, anu must in the end, be dearly paid for. It is not enough that a certain improvement will pay the interest on the money invested- If it pays only the interest, what will become of the principal? The tendency of things is to wear out and diminish ia -in ''u' ihe drains put into a field, or a new Darn, oaa BOt last forever, aad if improvements that return only the iataramt guili ou borrowed capital. tm condition &t v condition stated at the outset will erentiislly eaeae: the owner wftl be farced to leave his home in the hand s of i ,ha interaet udob it mtv often anoaat I in rknrta nr . n tarwA tluk nriMuntl. uJ . j-- ; - --- the improvement becomes a costly undertaking. We do not mean to say that no improvements should be made oa the farm; without improvements agriculture would degenerate. What we mean is that they should not be made with capital borrowed oa looee aad sei perfioial caiculatteas. Bat few vestments, aad without suea foresight it becomes but little better thaa a gaaae of chance in which no man ahoald stake his independence. There is another elaes of debts ia which some families though tleeely ia 1 items from the rrocerv. the hardware I . , w a" i i store, the lumber yard, the shoemaker, j et., which, though seemingly iaaoeeat mki iiuiiiutomk " j'i , sweU iB the s aggregate into roapeeUMe bills that will be doubly hard to pay after the goods have all been coaaamed. No one should bay oa credit if he has the cash wherewith to pay, though it ; be necessary to disturb a bank account, and if the moaer h not at inn command, it hi better to contrive to da without a thing ia some way, thaa te bay itoa credit. To lire withia one's means is aa important lesson to hmra. No man is rich whose expenditures exceed his income, though he dabbles ia milliow, white the oae who oaa save tea cents a day is oa the road to fortune. Young mea who are fettered by poverty and who wish for the use of a few hundred dollars wherewith to start ia business, to Inieh a course of study, te bav a aieoe of lead, or for any aarpese. should hesKate twice before giving a their iadepeadeeee, aad TowBtaray iiag themselves iato a creditor's arms. Wait, work aad pay a you go. Yea may attain your object mora stewly, but it will be reached jast as sorely aad with infinitely greater aatisfaotiea. If yoar good name is all yea eaa offer aa security, a rate of interest will be required which, under other otreaaautaees, would with propriety be termed exorbitant aad usurious. Hope springs eternal ia tae heme breast," aad to the young mea wae views life through rosy glasses, it seems aa easy matter to repay a few hundred dollars: but whea the money is s peart, aaa tae pnmnp m awwiu accumulating interest, the maetake is too hue diworered. ihrai N Ferier. Look at de pieaaaa, fofltsaa," said old Sam Johnson, the other night. J to a roomful of bi sable friends ; "look at de pieaaaa! Dar is whar you see aa illegory, showing de proper spear oh de hradk man. Doaa voa see de eomaaoa nntM. dm white traah. dowa ia deiewer row, all run togeder like a whitewashed boa'd fence Aa ap ia ae m yoas see de braek aotes, de nolor. arraae-ed ia seleot bliss of twos aad frees." gto Trmn9onplm ErrcRvaecixa Lsmokadk. lat iato each bottle 2 drachms ef sugar, 2 drops of essence of lemon, i drachm btcarbonate of potash, aad water te ill b. WiU- ttuut droit ia 96 sraias of n vw"aw - j- d ntf t.rtrla ui is erveteis. aad oitmoriarae oork te alaeing the boWks ia a eeei ptate Wivtra va - - - or ha )ieed water.