Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 9, Number 7, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 August 1878 — Page 1
Vbl. g.—No' 7.
THE MAIL
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A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
SECOND EDITION.
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Town-Talk.
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TWOTYPM. TWOTTPM
T. T. has observed that there are two
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that
he has whatever he wants he Is satisfied. The war timee were prolific in the production of this type of men and they continued to thrive until the panto of 1873. Slnoe thai time they have been principally engaged in the evolution of grand theorlee for restoring the national prosperity and have been subsisting on their expectations of the future.
The other type of men T. T. has heard denominated "small economists." The email economist can not be expected and does not pretend, to have any great plans. His method is to qusllfy himself for some useful occupation in lite and to apply himself Industriously to it. He may till the ground or engage in merchandising, or run a newspaper, pr hang out a lawyer's sign, make shoes, coats or
out a lawyer's sign, make snoee, coais or
and not likely to be carried away by novel theories In aodal, moral or political ethics. Be ia the kind of man that doea not require much governing and community composed of such people would require few laws and fewer appliances to enforce them.
Of the two types T. T. is of the opinion that the small economists are the more desirable. Their influence tenda to make society settled, secure, and comfortable that of the great schemers is to tender it unsettled and turbulent. The latter create panics the "former cute them. And yet there are people who are dazzled and captivated by the great schemers and have but a moderate opinion of the small economists. T. T. stands by the latter and maintains that if all the great achemers could be converted into small economists there would not be so many non-producers in this country subsisting on the earnings of honest industry.
Topics of the Times,
UTOPIA COMB AGAIN.
In every age there have lived men who have. promulgated, in one form or an-
other, the theory of a society wherein
the material
distinctly marked types of men in the ^qq]^ ^1. By the great mass of irld and they may be classed ss men intelligent people all thele various theio save and men who make. The latter have been pronounced Utopian and are rather speculators than laborers proper. They are fond of planning grand schemes to reaoh fortune at a leap. Their lofty minds address themselves instinct* ively to great enterprises, such as bonanza mining^chemes, railroads around the world, and the building of great cities in the wilderness. They hare a supreme contempt for "plodding" and "peddling" and sre always fall of "great expectations." This type of man is what might be termed a free liver. He Uvea in a big house elegantly tarnished and his family want for nothing. It very frequently happena that his expenditures largely exceed his Income but he is not apparently concerned about that. When heperoelves that this state of affaire exists he does not tell his wife that the family expenses must be brought down to the level of his Income but he informs himself that* his Income must be raised to the level of his expenditure. He does not suggest the cutting off of any favorite luxury. He would not have bis family starve In order that he may put by something for a rainy day. Hie plan of II'h uiHktm no account of rainy days. He would rather feast In the present and run the risk of fasting in the future, than to fast in the present in order that he might feast in the future. It is not to be denied that his conduct at tiroes strongly resembles that of a rogue. But be ia not called a rogue. He livea in grand style, goes in the best soeiety and is eminently respectable. He ia alwaya ao full of great projects and ean expatiate so glowingly upon his prospects that the butcher and green-grboer dislike to trouble him with their bills. And in* deed they are poorly paid for doing so. T. T. does not mean to inalnuate that the great schemer Is dishonest. He would really like to pay hia debts if he had the money but he hasn't It. When he has money be does not haggle about prloee it Is all the same to him whether he pays one or two prloes for an article.
comfort of all its members
the advocatea of them have been called impracticable dreamers. They meant well but they formulated imposdbllltiea. Such a condition of society Is impossible simply because men and women are not all equal in any other respect and therefore cannot be made equal in material things. Yet we see this old notion ooming to the surface constantly In these labor reform agitations. Citizen Schwab wants all the land, factories, railroads, telegraphs, banks, snd everything else, "to be made the common property of the whole people through the government. To abolish the wages system, and substitute in its stead cooperative prOduotion" etc. The State should build houses suitable for every man's wanta and provide everybody with work adapted to him. Another socialist would have no accumulations of capital In private hands, bnt all under the control of the government for the benefit of the people. In such a state of society, he thinks (snd very justly) that there would be no desire among work* men to accumulate, as they would be sure of constant employ ment. Similar notions are advanced by other labor reformers. It does not take much penetration to see the absurdity of suoh theories. To carry them out would be to relapse into barbarism. If ibere was no inducement for men to labor, no higher place in the social body to which ambition and effort might raise them, then the wheels of progress would soon cease to turn, or would begin to turn back* wards. The desire for distinction Of one kind or another (and most usually It oomes In the sbspe of material prosperity,) Is the malnapring of dvllisstlon. Snap that and aoeiety will stagnate—discovery and invention oease. The desire to better his oondltion and the condition of his femlly makes the laborer industrious, thrifty and sober. It Is the little homo of his own, with Its garden and fruit trees and flowers, to which be looks forward with weary but hopeful eyes and which inspires him toil on faith* fully, when, but for Ita Influence he would tell into habits of dissipation and recklessness snd ultimately bring rain upon his family. Do we want to take such a stimulus from men and set them to working like lifeless machines which have no possible Interest In the outcome So long ss God creates men unequal, in mind, in heart, In bodily health and strength, so long it is no hardahip that they be unequal in material prosperity. MiYou canuot And a forest where the trees are all of one site. Some get more rain and sunshine than others but I think they ere equally happy. And we
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carpet-bags no matter what. But what- always the most happy, for that is very far from being the case. Society is like a forest it takes some big and many little men to make it and it is not worth while for the little ones to try to stop the others from growing any bigger than themselves for they
ever his business is, he follows it. He makes as much as he can legitimately out of it and endeavors to make the wisest use of his earnings. In order to do this he establishes the rule, which Is never to be deviated from unless in great emergency, that hia expenditures shall be within his Income. He believes that he has no right lo spend more 'ban he makes that If he doea so he spends somebody else's earnings to the extent of the excess. That his family baa a right to the best living be can earn for the same denomination preached a ser but to no better, whether that be mon in Indianapolis, lsst Sunday, on the bountiful or meagre. He is honest and subject, "The Resaons Why I am Not a uniformly pays his debts. But be has a horror of Cebt and gets Into It as Utile as possible. It frequently happena that not proper for a preacher to enter the there tea good deal of self-denial in his politics. The argument waa life. His rule of living compels him to about as follows: the pulpit la a mush forego many things that he would like pieseanter place than the stump, hence to have. But he Is repaid for the sacrl- I will not exchange the former for the flee by the sense of honesty and inde- latter, I might get beaten, and, having a pendence which he Is thus enabled to sure thing of what I am now in, I will retain. It cannot be denied that the let well enough alone I am unwilling to small economist Is agpoddtiseu. That suitor the ridicule, abuse and de&mahe gives tone and strength to the body tlon that would be heaped upon me by politic. That he is never numbered with my political enemies there Is no money the dangerous elements of society. That in politics there is no glory in it—no he Is rather conservative in his views more honor in being a member of Gon-
to suppose that the most pros-
aan't do it.,
PREACHERS IN ^OUTlCS. A Methodist minister having accepted a nomination for Oongreas from a district in this State, another minister of
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strong church loan do more good in tbs ministry and Onght not to abandon it for any other calling. It seems to us the position of the reverend gentleman is stlesst open to criticism. All the reasons given, with the single exception of the lsst one, ought, not to have any weight at all either with clergyman or any one else, and if the speaker really thlnka that the aalvatlon of Souls is of greater importance than anything alas it is dlffloult to understand why. he should be devoting the Lord's day to giving reasons why be ia not a politician. Preaching of (hat sort may be In the direct line of soul saving, but a layman may perhaps be excusable for not being able to see just how it is so. Doubtless ministers of the gospel may be lured into politics fay unworthy considerations, such ss a dedretor power, fame or mon* ey, but we spprebend that it may be possible for them, also, to go into politics from conscientious motives. It is highly important that we ahould have an honest and efficient administration of the government, or else, some of these days, we may find the whole thing turn* bling about our ears, Now, believing tbat good government is about as important to mankind as anything can be, we oonoeive that a minister of thegoepd might esteem it his duty to aooept a nomination for Oongreas. He might indeed regard the voice of the people as the voice of God In this respect and that he was for a time called from the pulpit to the stump. If he ahould accept a nomination from auch motlvee we think hia action would not be subject to con* demnatlon.
Shows and Show Folks.
With over one hundred comblhationa on the road and our city on the direct line of travel we are not likely to languish for the lack of amusements the ooming sesson. Ths bookings at the Opera Hotiee thus far ahow variety, minstrelsy and burlesque to be In the ascendancy, but the dramatic element is well represented by such artists as John T. Raymond, Joe Murphy, Louise Pomeroy, McKee Rankin, Mrs. Chanfrau, and others. The ooming dramatic season promisee to ecllpee all previous ones, in Terre Haute, as well ss elsewhere* "V *v "Kerry Gow" Joe Murphy, according to a San Francisco journalist, used to fish for a living In the Sacramento river. He is now worth nearly $100,000.
A Gotham musician writee that as Marie Rose bad the lsst accident, It is only Mr that Kellogg ahould have the next sensational newspapsr paragraphs.
Bertha Von Hillern has cleared 97,000 by her pedestrianism. Pedeetrianlsm moat be a goed business. Bertha Is said to be exceedingly cloee, and to salt down her money as testes she geta her hands on it.
Manager J. H. MeVicker, of Chicago, bscame a voluntary bankrupt on July 20th. His liability in 9f00,0«) as one of the bondsmen of Gage, the defaulting treasurer of Chiasgo, msds this step necessary. He will ooutinue to msnags his theatre during the coining season.
Mr. W. J. Florenee, who Is now in Paris, was invited to the Fourth of July banquet at Geneva. Haeouldiwteoae, so be sent a telegram: -I'm mlthpm lads, In heart andnirlt, toe. If 1 eeuld fljr be there P. IX QS By the time the memage reached Geneva, however, the employee of the Swiss telegraphic burasu had played sad havoc. (He Boll proposes again cotww tiring In this country during the fell and winter.
TERRE HAUTE, IND., SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 10,'1878.
than in being a pastor of sons
KEARNEYISM.-r'':
That many of the theorlee advanced by the worklngmen for righting the wrongs under which they are suffering, kre absurd and impossible every intelligent person must see. The government csnnot be made a paternal arrangement so ss to provides home and employment and food for everyone, be* cause, in the very nature of things, it is not the province of government to do any such thing. Government must be ss simple, not as oomplex, as possible. It must protect the citizen from the wrongdoer, but when it has done that, the citizen must attend to making his living himself. And yet, out of sll this agitation and propounding of wild and impracticable theorlee we believe good will come. It la folly to deny that the Interests of cspltsl have been tco much seen and the Internets of labor too much overlooked by our legislators for some time pest. This Uprlalng of the laboring classes will have the effect of calling: public attention to their grievanoea And of suggsating rational methods for the amelioration of their oondltion. If It does thle it will not have been In vain and more than thiait will not do. It cannot Kearneyize the oountry, so to speak, and overturn all its Institutions of system and order because the great mass of the worklngmen are too intelligent to take any atock In communlam or any similar social heresiee. They will never be persuaded that the honest worker onght not to possess and enjoy the frulta of bis own labor.
People and Things,
Tramps are the result of freedom gone to seed. Graphic. The only people who really enjoy bad heelkhomtbe doctora.:
An ordinary gas llama requires as nradi air ee nine pdroone. Prescription far a pugilistic low— "take one of your own sighs."
I've just dropped in," ss the fly said to the coffee.—Courier-Journal. DhM-raaly, now, la the acquisition of Cyprus eueh a verybig thing?—Saturday Night.
Indians neverlt&B each other, and having seen a few Indian*, we cant blame them. *V man stepped on a banana peel and promptly sat down on a pint bottle of yeast in his pocket. He rose immediately. "a- r.-T"
One ot ihe severest punls&menis inflicted upon criminals In Holland, up to a few years since, waa to deprive them of salt. frfAi
If Old Sol wants to make eight hours a day's work for the remainder of the summer, we aw agreed.—Saturday Night.
Westmoreland is the smallest county in Virginia, but It waa the birthplaoeof three Preddents—Washington, Madison and Monroe., ,, J'
We have just been thinking how language came into the world. It Wis during A.dam and Eve's first qusrrel, when one word brought* on another.-r Saturday Night.
An enthusiastic Ohio editor wrote "The battle ia now opeU." But, the intelligent compositor spelled battle with an o, and hia readers ssy they have suspected it all along, I "Ah," said the fly, as it crawled
around the bottle. "I bsve passsd through the hatching age, the creeping age, snd now I am in the mucilage, and—" there it atuck.—Keokuk Constitution.
Editor New York Sun—Sir: At 2 o'clock Dr. Carver stepped into the fleld. It wes raining bard. He began firing at the dropet and in five mlnutee had shot adry space of hslf an acre around him —Eli Perkins.
Judge Davis, who ia something like eighty inehea around the waist, generally glvee hie tailor three montba' notice when about to order a new pair of breeches, and fay this means prevente a famine in the doth market.
Some whisky in the bottom of a barrel recently exploded at Steubenville, Ohio, and killed a small bey. The lesson of thle occurrence |s that it is not wiss to leave any whisky in the bottom of the barrel—New Haven Register.
It would make a stone linage turn green with envy to obeerve the expression of profound abstraction that ssttles down on the fsce of a worshipper when the contribution basket gete within three pews of hltn.—Hawkeye.
There was mailed in a email paper box at Lewiaton for Bethlehem, Ps., a live rattlesnake, about one foot In length. When the pouch reaehed the Harrieburg office the box bad been broken open, and when the mail matter waa dumped out upon thejtable the enake wriggled out with it. A. lawyer kept an offlee boy one This bey much fine)' than hia Much line* than his boss! Blaine,Gonkling, nothing else but Vox
Cox.
Beside this boy waa •ad—blaUieiskite I hand
And (oottie-taH In t'other, is would stud And talk as many hours as
Bui never eouM be got to KOXAI*. Oh! men of Blathsrskite! Whom all admire For gifts of spesfh—When will you learn to
Ueht ths Are -oeorte SennoU in Boston Herald. "Who," aeks a gloomy, doubting editor, "can restore peace and pnspsrity to our once happy cbnntryf" Well, if no one else will accept thejob, and it le Imperative that the work of restoring Should be done at one* we dont mind abandoidngouriiibpoaed tHp to Furls and peifbrming the taek. But we.Shall expeet prattygood pay for our work. It ia worth at leeat ten drilaifc per day to restore peace and proeperity to our once happy oountry, and we doot suppoes the labor oould bet&orooghly aeoom* pUahedlnaide of two monthe.i~Norri»town Herald.
Scene, a Chicago courts District At* torney—You have testified, Mr. Lawrence, that you oonaider the defendant a law-abiding dtiasn? Mr. Lswrsnee-I bars, and I do ao consider him. District Attorney—You know that he has been a gambler? Mr. Lanraace I know fee has. District Attorn^D* you consider it sxactly proper to call« pioUgsslonal gambler a law-abiding dti* sent Mr. Lawience So long as the District Attorney allows gsmbHngtobe carried on In the clty witbout restraint of or punishment by law, I madder it perfectly proper to deecribe a psofss* atonal gambler
SB
a law-abiding dtisen.
Oollina, of Rhea Springs, Tsonsssse, was a heavy drinker. The Mdhodid Church Converted everybody In the neighborhood except him but beheld
out for along time. At last he waa concerted, and the church let him In on condition that be. judged hlmaelf to quit dfinking. Thle he did but he developed violent soit of rSliigion. On a late Sunday morning, he went into the church and ton up all the booka.he oould get hold of to get the devil out of them. He then imagined (that the evil one had gone into his clothes, eo he took them off for asnotifisstion, and ran toward the church, toUowedbjamultl* tude. He knocked down two or three men who Inteqwetd Ms progress up ths aide, but woe fluBBy put in jaU. Then he beet the jailer nSarly to death—for the devil—and he gave the jailer'a wjfo a terrible thumping, talcing heritor Eye, the mother of mankind, through whom ail foil from grace.
Feminitemss
"If a body kiss body," where is the bodily barm? boa»l JW
Why ia a lady'a bonnet like a oopbla^ Because it ooveia the bdle. Deal gently with the moeqUlto bar it makee an exoellent currant jelly atralner.—St. Louie Journal.
A lady in Huntiugtotn has discovered that aqua-ammonia ia almost an instan taneone cure for acelda. /,
If, Edieon would bade In wbmian*i amilea let him Invent a dgar that will oonsume its own saaoke.
When Csasabianoa "stewed on the burning deck," we suppose be wss putting up cherriee.—Hawkeye. "I find your ^eoommendatlona very good, Bridget." "Yea ma'am, and now I'Ueeeyoure, ma'am, if you plaae."
The moot signal triumph of a boy's lifo is not realised Until be sucoeeds ln stealing into abase ball ground.—Puck. "Ioe cream, |L25 pergaL," aayathe advertisement: Girls, girls, is it posdble that thlscan be true?—C-J Smsll Tslk.
A lsdy up town, joking about her noee add: "I had npttiing to do in shsping it. It wss a birthday preeent."—Hawk
Don't turn Into the yard when you ,think you see A'woman dgndlng to you with a napkin. She is driving fliee out door^r-Sy1*001* Sunday TLpee.
When lovely woman stoops—'what folly !^snd1fMHs too late her ekjrits give way,she yanka that pull-back up, doea Molly,^ snd disSppeara from light of day, -Pack*
Remark by WttideU Phillips: 'If we gdn fn the oCrnlUg fifteen yesia half as ^iueh ss we hsve ln the lset
Miss P.
With shovel in one
W.
A
woman will hold qpear and ahield lnher own hands." To the women of Angriest—if you mail your lstters yourselvesi Indeed of entrusting them to your good'for-noth-ing husbttds^they may day.—Agnes/enks» 'V •t
Sudlon, Ibrmetly supcHnx
tendeat of Qiti Davenport publfeadiools has bsen appointed Profssaorof English Literature 11^ the Iowa State Univeraity, at a aalary of f£*td&v
If than kN one pemoni wiio is mora Moo ohd hoUow than she who ssyss "You ibtut1 dooie and iter m« fliliiiif" ia ebe who repUee» "Thank ye^IwUi,he plesssd W—Dinbury NeWa*
Gussl»-"Ll«le,darlliig,wliydoyou wear another WMMDHI
hairt** IJriie
"Guasle^d«4r, whydoyou Wear snother ca-, 11 d^y^ wMr.eairs akin on yo^
DuMiitbfast ahlre womanliascktand pUed twenty three, eotds of wood. WeU« thatle doing preay tebv Every man ehould encoor* age his wlfc to bestlt, iltou^-pui»lM villeSenHnel
4""„
W ttie'announeementthata Baltimore woiUan hadgiven birth to fivVjfhifiUen, tbe Albaoy Joomd resaarka hy the cards "W* thought that nothing would beat 'fo^o#^ weremteftfr»ii.K,V:."'
The sweet gld girsdaaie has been heard^ fetal. Having ^lald to MM bel bouqaetaand bolted uplMr gradaating rlbbooi staenow weate the loyut purple andtndeetboowseteofllft b*ipoti ting up blackberry jam.
Adreamywritersaysit wortd hues' rioos to follow a pound of sOk from its spinning until it bcoooM a lady'Sdesss, Nodoubt but most msn would peefls tofoQow it after It becomes sdrees^Ssn Frandsco Chronicle.
A cheerful wile makee a happy home, because the emotion le contagious, snd almoat nnoooedoudy the houeehold is
SrofthTXnJUy to dimftil by gsntol infloence of the Will and aaotiMc. It wae Jnd pouring down when she him and dalmed hlmasbsr rainbow, bocansssbe had taken him in out of the wet. He reflected that a rainbow wss a sign of pceadss and was very ebcumapact in
"Ophelia" writee to aak if ascrsd history mentions card playing. Oeitsinly, tnydear girl. Mooes •Ted" the children of Israel and when the latter got to Jot
war
tPricc Five Cents
dan they "pessed." Solomon "ordered up" the temple, Bsalam
Mhdd
a jack"
and the eeven prieets before Jeridao, took the dty by
Mpleylng
trumps."—Whitehall Timee. Whenever you aend a .paper to young lady, out a email item out almoat anywhere. Thle insursa the office the sale of another paper. Shehaegottoaeo what it wae her friend cut out. Thus ia the printer'e budness increased.—Cats* kill Recorder.
A young lady at a ball in Dublin Cas^ tie displayed her eharma ao fredy that a looker on turned to Chief Justice Doherty with, "Did you ever see the like of that dnoe you were born?" "Well," said the Judge "certainly) not since I
Another advantage In moonlight nighta for IOVMS la that the brilliant radiance enablee the young men to pored ve the dgn of the dangernua ice cream edoon from a remote distance, and con* aequently, by turning down aome other, etreet, eave himaelf.
Ben Butler woke up the oth«r night oovered with a cold aweat, and after glaring gloomily around, aank back on hie pillow, muttering feebly, "Thank heaven, ifa only that atrawberry Shortcake. I thought it was Mrs. Jenks."— Bridgeport Standard.
A lover who bee "gone Weet"tomake a home for hia "Birdie," wrote to hen "I've got the fined quarter section of land (100 acree) I ever put my foot doWn on.". Birdie wrote back: "Suppoeeyou buy another quarter eection, John, ao we can have a lawn around your foot!" John "made a home," but Birdie never waa the mistress of It.
HOHKNLQNDON.
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And now the gorgsoes orb of day, [Pioossd.]~aaHiiua3r Might.
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their eeven
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JIB
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In Lonten when ths sun was hot, -j They mingled in a pewter pot A Yankseooektall with a lot
Of Ice-sir, meltiug rapidly^ ,k a rt: But London saw another sight IQo on, brethren^—Gra{thio.Wen, we dont
Bind stinging In averse or two: But London saw another sight iS When ths sweat poorsd tiUosad of night, Commanding Tophefs fires to light
The darkness ot 6idh groggery.
jfk,
thsn rushsd the boys te sea-side hurried, Then sank the nose in tnmblsr burled. And sweeter than the eobblet sherrled,
Deep sank the bright mlnt-|alepry .• With fan and nightshirt thin arrayed, Bash would-be swepsr tossed his hsad, And ftuloos the mosquito played it nfisres and dreadfm revelry... Tls Uiorn. but yst ybn lurid snn, [ilnt.l'-niiladdpbia Bulletin. All right yottr
1 morn, but yet yon lurid eun trip has scares begoo, It nudes each dry son-of-a-gtin
1
h!| morning snifter, hnrrlediy.
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'BUtiBAY &KADINQ.
Nobe are too wise to be mistaken. Whoever conquers Indolence csn oon* quer moot things.
The great man ie he who doee not loee hia ehlld'S heart. j1Oj^uUre'ia the tax a man pays to the public for being eminent. .. v/.
Many ate willing enough to wound who an yet afraid to rtiike. Never trouble yourself with trifles and aoonall trouble will appear a trifle..
A bigot dellghte lo public rtdleulei for beb^lievee tothinklMlaamartyr. rif you listen patiently to calumny* you are ouly a trifle ten guilty than the actualcdumnletor. "'f
1'
Men usually follow thdr wiahee till euflMring oompels them to follow their fudginont.
Grapple with opportunity, and as you cant know when opportunity will oome, keep your grappling-iron alwaya ready.
We paint our Uvea in freeco. The soft and tosll plaster ot the monument hardens under every stroke of the brush Into eternal nek.
Every yeer of our llvee we grow iflSfdil eonvlnoed that It ia the wised and best to flx our attention on the beautiful and good,anddwell so little sspcadbleon DsteHlandfUaa.
Ht that never changee any of Tils ^iniona nevw corrected any of his mis* takes and he who wae never win enough to find outanymidakee in himSdf, will not he charitable enough to excase what be reckonamistakee in others.
We an ^t to mldake our voedionin tooUngoutoftbe way for oocsslonsto «xsedssgnat and ran virtuee, and in eteppingover ordinary onee which lie dmoMyinthe road befom ua. When wu read, we ftncgr we would be martym and when we come to act, weean* not hsarapsouoking word.
How m«ny take a wrong view of lift, and waste thdr energies and destroy thdr nervouesysteme in endeavoring to accumulate wealth, without thinking of the piWMd happiness they an throwing rosy. It is not wealth or high stdion that make a man happy. Many of the Moot wretched human beings on eartli have both hut It ie a radiant, aunny aplrtt, that knows bowto beer little trials andenfoy comiorta, and thus extract eomfui £RMUevery incident.
AT Buffalo lad Saturday the hone Rarus dotted a mile in toU'A, the luted time ever made In the world*
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