Rensselaer Republican, Volume 13, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 November 1880 — A President's Good Advice. [ARTICLE]

A President's Good Advice.

The Indianapolis Journal publishes a letter from President Harrison to hie young grandson, then at school. He says; "Although learning is a great advantage, there la something still better; that is, to be good. I had much rather that you should want learning and be a good man, than to have all the learning in the world and be a bad man. "Yon most therefore, never do a bad act. Never tell a falsehood even if it he to shield yourself. If you do anything that is wrong, do not hesitate to confess it at once. I will cease to love you if I hear that you are in the h*hit of tolling fibe.” ; » • There are thoee who persist in speaking of the Journalists, even in theee days, as a genial, reckless, thoughtless Bohemian, brilliant, but unsteady ; hia conversation a perpetual flow, of good things, and his lire a succession of charming impudence. The typical Journalist of the period is a grave, sedate, self-contained gentleman, who talks little, and Who, for the most part, lives severely by rule; who is much given to the consumption of blue-books, and who is frugal even to austerity in his habits.—London World. * r —Only a woman’s hair, binding the now to the past; only a single thread, too frail to last Only a woman’s hair, threading a