Winchester Journal, Volume 1, Number 29, Winchester, Randolph County, 23 January 1863 — Page 1

' Tin-: WINCHESTER, JOURNAL II CtLUJIED KVEIIV r HI day aon.vi.NC IT t'Mrot ao raoruiTo.

TERMS OF UiCIUPTION; One Dollar and fifty C'tt. a Year, ir mid ii advance; TERMS OF ADVKRTISINf;: Ootvpare, one iofrtt.on,. M Kch AiJitionaf insertion, 25 A liberal discount will be mdt to those who adrertise for a longer period. business ginttorn. CjiDeaCarJoriOIIaetrltif5eryear. hSVARlAKLV' IS ADVANCE. SCHOOL- KXAJII-VKn, P. III ATT, ' 'CZClMOl; r.X VIlSrit for itanO do!h cnntv, will at'.foj to the El imination of ArvlHrant on tlie Fourth Saturday in JlacU Jloutb, In th NVir Hrlrk Sehool-IJoiio, Nörth of the tUlfrovl, Vfincheattr, Indiana. BROW.VK Ai nii:xi:V, Attorneys t l.wt Winchester, la K OPice in the .fiil HuiMinjr. Hire pee?.t! attention tj the securing an collation of cUinn. v5nl DU. 1. mnCrsOV, Winchester. Inlhm. OfTice ar. l n -i lnoe on orner of Mtin and S-ath Strtft. where e may at all tira he fouaJ, uulcei roei mally onjraf d. XXT U' 1.Ii:nri: Dru i-t, timl dca- ? V : , ler in Hooks an 1 tiitiiiiiAry. Corner of r ranklin an 1 Meeidiau St. V A. 11 Ik 1 1. . iMouan.ish .-. n,ts (in a 1 Quer n's-warr', N. , hla-t Front of ltiUlic bi.ire, anJ eart of the Court House, dec 12 - J OII.V ItOSS, Crx tr and Jlikt-r, Mtid dftler in Proviiou, .tc. Store en tn uorth-e.iC cruer ut' .Miia and FranKlin Strer!. Ii:N!ii:;:MM)!:ri:i: .v wi:m J I ifctuiiT oi" Furniture and in, of thf Utet und li-t st li-i, L it ifthe l'.it!ic S.'itr-. Wiim li'-t r. f PSHPIAS W.U!, Hr!ire M r.1 r!t in. W.n!;itr.'t!k Street, north of it I'nhiic Squ ire, Wincit -t-r, lud. I ; IOIIN II. f'lt(M !.i:V, M. P.. Thy. iH in,nhnr:'on, H'in iu-ter. Ind. ' tf id. life of l'hü t Mphi i College of med- ' cine, and I'itil id !phi i Lying-in-Charity I Ho-pttit, e:n'r ici-i rrictical Ootetru-s , Mti l Di.'-i.' ..I' IVtni! J .... . . ... . . r ' II i ing See. i Asst. t.iut Demonstrator of : Ani'.i nr, ii 1 h ivisi4 nt tote- v. .rs it. the !I n(ittU 1 1 I Di-p is irie- of I !iil t-' i'f'.t'ii i, n t l.i mi, p'ir I vt!i f.Kv!Ii r.t il I ltrn un til lie is pie:urtd to . p.Tf or t ill o vntioo- in tlie various dp irl ot t'ie pr.i!ei Hi. " jT.' irt i" i4r .4'tentioii t.ii 1 to discaa-' rs of t!e :. OFFICK. Washington ; ftreft, ner the north-est corner of the, Public S j-urc. Winchesttr, Ind. , TAILORING. - - - - - I john Richardson. iu is ii u a i i a i h u n Yt ftt V tW.r Sjuirr, wiMCHUsrr.R. isn. CLOTHS, CSSI!Y!ERES AND YESTUGS, and made to ordtr in! Vlv ay n h Hid a the h -t tvle. TKirKS KKASONAUI.K. TILE AND BRICK. ! 'l'II.K Til I.M 'V I I lllt Drain your II V 5, amis! f JHIK Drin Tile mi.M.tHrtnr.d bytie ua iersyniel li.- e te-n j r wnuiiH eil ' i. 'iv .. v, ... .... I ;r . .... s ....: heewtn" - iti.fied t!i;tt thev are jut ihr ' f'un ; ftr lru'nin ; srt Imaf, xkp will rt" - 1 imid im the mnfv ni, for them. We1 U. kepp on h uiiU Iii ICK, of o'tr own nuniK irtiiri-, wlmli e w.irrint t cive rutire 4tst'4etioji. J-?T"(Vtve u r!l st nr Vud. north ol itie l';-f, Wmchestrr, In Ii f.. niy -Jilyi O. J. k. .MAU I'IN. MEAT MARKET. n. .is. izv.iftoi: kLl.l rvs-U.iüv lulitrm nn the! n r." ot j I .'. j, e'bec. the l 'M,!1P I'M I I i.. ii i T,i,rn. , t I rum 4 to 6 Cents per Pound. M irki t u Tue t iv, Thür l.r ;iud SatS r 1 1 v m rn! i'li; luvit .i! a.iv-. tu Limi. Vir! I " . STATIONERY. BOWEN, STEWART &. Co., BOOKSELLERS Ami sTrno.i:i:(! .Vi. I? iVi 'Sin ;f '., In n iri. , I si- i.ioi. i:i.;jri:i:s and Toachors Class Cooks., iirtn i "r .1. mine luÄi. U4. i D.. N. SIMMONS, Dt'iiTdst ant b lOiter, J T!' riTV, I 1 t I . I.i U" Prttriv-, a r v.H'i.K n: s y ick o;i riii- Miinifivrs. ri r, oir.s m ')Vi:.n iTs, pj::ri:in sii!)ii.oi:ti.hr vci. s r ii i. no i) us. AMI STATIOXIJIIY, ETC., LTC.!iu

f

WINCIISTER

Acw Serie. YlXCIlZS7ER 3ftAB,fc&E 'WORKS Who has not lost a friend?" Tl"fn1r!iviiedhaTe now a largerand btetatfortmt iil oi American and Italian Marble T) btU.rctof-rob-ii ffcrtd n ttiis vicin Itr. Thoe who jnteti-I erecting To iii b s i a Ho it if jji cn t s or G rave St ones 3 L IrTitmory of thlrlorf ! d?artv!, woul J d well to GIVK US A 'CALL. Tcrcn reasonable. C;i'I and examine. si. ati: itoo rix, V sr.? al' fiurafcrf in nmlcit c''J furu Mi itiu Slutf IJinif. sil re.t'onnf.lc ('net's. 'I n I-rinrit f S!le oir üother materiul fo Koortic 'II !'ntahh)h l t recjnir-' an arjuiiMt t in it favor, nl tlie Im inten-J ti'jil.llnir will fln l Slntr Hoof he ihe Best and cheapest Roof now in "se KiiruatL- i'!u Jc or anv iiiformtu! rclntivj tviii-io;iM-) f htfrfullysfivrii bj :tl-ir ttiz , orcaIln;'ii 1). r;. HUFFMAN A: CO., I nor v Winchester, ind lo uonsiunpuves. f pill: Adverti.-ei, hviuzb n restored J t liHulth in a tew vctkr, bv a vcrv implf rerui!y, jfter Uavinir itl'rd sev - r.il ve.ir wit!, a m vtc lur.p 11V ction, and that dread di-ea-e. Consunif'tion 1! :inxiu- to m ike known to hi follow ut l'-i th the im -tn f cure. To all w ho deire it, he will end a

copy of the- prescription tm-d Tiee "f,Vithadout cii trge,; with the directions for pr. parin-.'! T, , ., and u-io;: the s , me. which they iU find

a rRK CrtK for 1'nxn-MPTioN, A th m , Uronc-imt!, etc. The on'r object of the j advertiser in eiviing the Prescription is to j beneht t lie atmete'!, ant sprca-.l tnlorma- j tio which he coneeiTes to be invaluable,) i , i . tr . -n i i atd he ho?ie av rv sufterer will trv his i remedy, as it will coi them nothing,' and j m iv prove a blessing. i Parties w-Uhii.g the prescrij t'xni will! please ;d lr s Kr.v. KDWAI1D A. WILSON, nl3 mo3 Will laniMXiri'ii . ngs co.. III II II J UlUi H. SIEG, hfrPPH T TITIOI! Iletms's Illach, IViurhcstrr I inf. Kcrpconptantlvoxi handafrehh?Ui jdy of CLOTHS, nSSIllERES, YESTIXGS UJ n t artirlos.ii.npertainii.LMo thf Hbov business all of whirh I jl St.v j 'vi :kv cim:ap rose cash CUTTING AND MAKING done to or i r. All work wiirrnnted to cive ?;iti.sfuction and pot up in tho m , rwJ , r r, t Miu mm ft M ft Mm mjÄ4 (Jivt in' a f illI don't intend to bf lrMl KSOI.D. EST mi IV. ire to Borrowers of School Fund?. :UI ef the l.it beil.titre it 1J Ii de the diitv ut tlu Cmmii' v A'ldit- , or to t II, .iiniu.tll v, oil the4tli Mol d i V ut J iiii ir, iii ui rtirii.i pri rui-e!i i!i nicli T II ir;tr 1 !r mist i nit which iucijiiil or Iattret du: fnud iid I Tiurw i l:rLe Mii'Xint of Interest due tht-- Knuds, and it MLT HI". PA IP, or the i r -. 1 1 ni'Tt.ini will be sold. ' 'THAT'S SO." THOS, L. SCOTT, Oct. Hi, 1K6CL td A, II. C JAMES S. COTTOH, ."WINCHESTER, IND., V 0:m:ii in j: i.i: y v aim i ; of .... e, t!,t. tm , ! : I . e . I. r I Wm . 1,. r r.r fi. ' """u ' " itm (II V.Mfl(i. iir rov.i ( ii UT::ii. ii;ri i:, ohioi. v. iku. sii)i, i:ov:.n, imi otl i r t t r t rti. HEATIN3 A'D parlor stoves, V iri. u .in. I kir.l.-, !! 4t fuir r r:c C ill n'i rx inr:ic tin in. tf

THE REBELS

Mo AT

A

l!v XV

;?ro:-i ir.vi. n.-4 atj cor per ukcn.rnnthinds since the beirinninL'

!ür 1V

DEVOTED TO THK

WINCHESTER, INDIANA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 1SGS.

FOR THIS "week: Mr. Editor: I have been quite a poet in my time, but of late have turned my attention to prose. (This ie the last effort of my dervT rf ! mtico Tr nnnf nra Pvpr 1 . .... , appre? iited by nis own nqe, ana I do not expect my case to be an exception. Tho?e who can see: only nonsense in this effusion, will of course esteem it accordingly; and, for those who can see; a' deeper' meaning in it, it will need nointprpretation. I write with full faith in the future. rf Very truly, yours, J. 15. Harrison. I made last week a fine larp kite, With a string uncommonly long; I r.lired with it one moonlight ntrht, When the breeze was Fteady and ptrong. T threw up my kite, and, like a balloon, j It rose through the air on lofty winp; It smiled far away to the clear full moon, And the man up there caught hold of the f-tiing. I beckoned to htm a moment to wait, To hold on with c-ire, and not let po, While I pot a cable whose strength was preat. The man in the moon then drew up the I ptrincr, j f.,? aff0r it went j . . 'r.'t. .u- . e i And he pave me his consent. j We built a suspension hridpe next day. blc railroad track; pre?s now rut9 each way, I And the lightning mail goes there ami back. ynce is keeping the lunar hotel. . " , I 2 , ,rt. At the upner end of the route ; 1 ,hink bu?ines will pay quite well, As there's gold in tlie hills thereabout. j !fyelf, the Msn in the Moon und Co., j As a wholesale firm a fortune have made, j Hy a few dark nights which they had down below While we were engaged in the moonshine 1 we w( trade. tiii: ciii wr nc.vi: VTii Tin: WILT.OW. memory. M. IIatid by the river's winding war, I'ene-ith -in :ied w-pin willow, P- nder.t oYr the f.vimin b'llow, Where the breath of h!nsnrrn bbnded, Arnl the sonjrs of b'rds a&eened; Just, a risinpdiy v. .is (lin r'n?. And thr rist winds f u.ned the mornPeith eime r.ippinpr, Pnftly tirp'n'.', TappT at the ohl;er's doer The wrarr soldier's door. '1'', I ir n il IMTMI Mill Ulf V, i Through the ni.ht-wind, ,!irk and j v iT.. t i i i t i Am like vonr-r'f i aVd'er weirv Of mv rrnrch:rt f n sludter In th' 'Ien viV tri' tfur; Let me p':ir rfiv irv fin'rrc, Vhere thv life f.pirk wurmest lit ? fhn n d.ith-dirt rp." Tonrhed a Irivr hf.'irf, Silent now to more no more Never any morel Now the il'n-, nnd the lilir, And the f pi mt're are vrrtr'n? Weeping o'er the sohlirr ifeejin, j Sleeping win re no catirmis rattle, ".r tlie nnry frm of Itiftjc, Cun awnke him any nvre! N'or doth sjrnin tan in fie door. The ref tirp Iranern,. Frf e 1 fV'im dinirer. Soundly slcps hemath the willow The lio.iry, weeping wil!.w! round the frive lf nenth the willow The irr mid th rotcj Monni; The flowery v:ile i not .ill p'oom; 'or ut rv n lhe;r little !n, Tl i l.:r 'i'hf on ti fr tlpf; A' d i ry o t ."iid u .iridium min Ti-l's tl. .V i l -I. ,11 rf u: iin ; And fh. 'd'ir'. hpia , 1 h:it 'um' r-i im , ; i't; ; r;.r in th o v.'iin f, ,Nof i,-t,t! i.ri-ht. . Tl . . . . '

rnr awiy, imon tno r,ar,kot the .m.s thf'ir equivalent proportions, suf- p'eket Uil led last night, ' savs the! came on at about thirtv-live miles

initrht.diedattl ed nvn ofnorniMT. nnd hnpnt to rover the meat. ! Captain. an hour, as near as 1 can .judge, ! s tmried bfne.-iiii the werxAn? willow, to! TlioSorho syrup is quit ai Lot a home in the dear North- and I was watching him all the ! dTr U Thrv" good as the sii2,,r. and with many ! land tell the loss. Perhaps an; time. He wis within about 'fJlioormr will be much cheiper. "! ad father with silvery locks and 1 three times the length of the

!. I,,f P'nnMnenir or tnrn-''

mm'- and re.m fj; ,.ei n coin-' i i . o por fd n California. ; The fo rmopc are said to ! have turned their attention to the cultivation of cotton. The c;tizen of the Penirsuh. stte th it thev Inve lot 10.000 !of the war.

I NT KUES TS OF RANDOLPH COUNTY.

The following, was put into type for our last issue, but crowded out. It is important to all, and especially to meat curers: sorciio crnrn hams. Suar cured hams! What a macrntficent anrument to a nuni rv - , XT - , BIln ; gry man! Moral suasion is not haif so swect aris everrelish - ed better or taken half so readily Kut suar-cured hams are very pensive in thee times of heavy iai.-roiu)Ts ana inn-pncpu suirar. u,v . n , .;t!ltnP, Uo rn 1 II tili U OUlJVltvlkU A J. I- ! 4 is one fiieap and ready equal,

I if not superior, to the Cooleyi00"511"168 le un?ouwayj; a motner, in an wise,.

UiirrTr suirir. We have tried the Sorgo, for curing hams, and think it excellent, and that all may know how excellent it is, we will give our plan of using it, which is as follow.-:' Take equal quantities, by weight, of the Sorgho syrup and salt; put them into the vessel in which you propose to make your brine. Then add nearly enough of water to dissolve the salt. Pour tins mixture over the ham?, and let them, if hre, soak there for from twelve to eighteen dav, when they will be ready for smokinjr. The length of time for soaking in the brine must, of course, depend upon the degree of saltnrss desired for the meat. Some prefer it much more salt than others. We have cured meat for ourselves in this manner, for the hst three yenr?, nnd can recommend it unhesitatingly. We have also sold the Sorgho syrup

I to packers and curers of mpat in1 , L, ' -. , . i p-round. r tn i s ettv, who pronounce it aniri ,

pronounce it ani", , iX , , m.

excellent substitute for the sucjar fl .. , i . tlp they have been ustn. It ethers , J , , 4. nave had any experience in this a. . . 1 II I I epartment we shall be pleased . ' , r U, Sorgho Journal. coR.ni;i:r nuiNi:. For corning beet.'. we consider! the following jXt excellent ' recipe: Dissolve or mixSlbs. of salt. U s. of siiLrar, or 2 lbs. of Sorgho syrup and 2 ounces Salt

pet re in t gallons of water, orjlossis ivry small only one'switch for him to pis.

s i i i : i v ! i ; v i s . vbil.;, at a ree'tu ey I I I'll'U'i w I i Mjii.fu'-s lutn Kiu-s, aim lauev i. I- j . at tho ' 'riculttirit" ' n . n Mi Voir nr .if.- ! Olli e 111 ie 1 orK Clt. were' tho lrirlW,t .lln, .w

played in any country, nnd made : "'TT1 V r . a matter of reecrd. Wm. ).ifx.otis soln-itude d,d he d.re, :t

I I Hall, of Millingfotd, Conn , pre-1 sente.l three soerimens ut -h7 '

itiLr, respectively, ,'0 221 and'lrv n virtue, tie is pioua oi o f-.,i ' ' ' li'c I nv Il'u Imc i m . i-n..rr,l

is. tie sime. g-ot'o-rmr:' . 1 . - . . , " .kI tf,PJ.r I ou t im a mp;c me, weighing. III Trie nifirrrjMtr. I .li: J k. i tlie :i'r.rr,MrMfe. 1 'Td ' i rn. i 7 ' . . .'i oün it. . i. ... ! . i.i '"rT'i i i lie nr-f-i r-txemiffi v-i"tif(j i .

-o; ii. u iieri li'M ni kpii. u;e; . I . i i i nn.k- uoiifi !: -ini-leitll he l:ret specimens hil ifeI in " no,,"!:- ipni. ' i.. I-? - 1 1 o Ufm rrlinr with tf.. Kin t ,,t Ter-

.1 i j i- , I

Xad n the trnpkin 71, I -n-lntion in h hsijv:w the sw.teh chao.l, Inr A m;,n shnM . ,1 the truth as well a in Almolt evervthi n" i -o...ent.. liven tf- pl.VHeian. : "l u-.arnly there anJ (ree, w. t l,o,,t reserve, but a general ei.e' Mr 'ihll nm ln,.e,l tho ! ;,r? 1 ' n other wmU, and the Irom obtructiotj, an 1 he eould snouldn t tike hu army into, Laiii. .Mr. nan pjoitKtu tnee! i ;..,s;iv hvp in. .hum? 1 e r. r ot4 1 e in tint tviv.

pec-imens by uin fi!i in mure, and the jirounri w:i a woni-nn: p'sture. The largest pumpkin .-trod three feet hiuf!i ami was eiiht feet even inches i n eir umference! This one was allowed to monopolize the whole vine, all the others were picked ol in the blossom. On another vine he permitted tiiree to grow, and lley respectively weighed 1 03, jl7, a"d e:i7 Iiis. On one vine he allowed all to grow, and ot 4'2 pumpkin, uenjhincr, when lir-t gathered, U17 lbs. Thr vine with all iu literals ,ne,.nr. ' ed 1 Cr2 lee! in leu 'th m" riTi rTx) mitii 1, . . , i ! s-oi tint the pr.m-ipnl or. , x? z: " "; - ruiefi Cot;iI at Aev Orlem1 . 1 1 . , 1 the -leimn of "hlrk.-.tms' 1 . T 1 ; " ' ' ,nn".,,,M 1 p,'Pr" i i - i . i : i , 1 '"i ui m ii inn cuv is r.ow ririin-fl n or tito Liui,.L U. ' " : - 'I'. n nir 1 1 ii loci i iir i i- ... f ', IM pll IMS .1UA S.ooti : ii r e l in tho course of ht i.,Vrsti-i. t:on tint we cannot help XVon. deriri what ItiMne he ha? with tlr J in his HHfi e. i

You can not preserve happy that striving nfter some Muhnf ;UMS t rushed, but his head and j "I believe so too," was the redomestic pairs in family jars. 'crace and beauty to deck the i ar.i.s were untouched, and his'p-y-

JO

From the Rural New-Yorker. Tin: i;nwkitti: history or WAR. Not in the rolling drum, the screeching life, the rattle of musketry, the bursting shell, or the deep-toned voice of cannon as they belch forth their missiles of destruction, not in those scenes ! .f whic,h w?"iorf. tel1' and hi?trians chronicle, lie so much the! horrors of war as in its Unwrit ten Ilistorv.

"Still waters flow deepest,'7 and enough to take tliem in and un-: tinct and persevering to le disso with that till and silent grief jderstand and adopt them; a sister lnied as phantasms'. Which

I It !t,iat upon the mind, and j HuiiuHic-.m, a-.v sunken eye and pillul check. There is a charm inidhe excitement of the battle-field .which dispels fear and robs Death of his terrors. But who can tell the an guish of a mother's heart, when her son, perhaps her only, the pride of her heart and the stay of her declining years, is suddenly snatched away. Perhaps, amid the tumult, the excitement, the glare of the battle-field, he died while nobly fighting in his country's caue. Perhaps, a lone picket, he stood in the depth of some Southern forest in the still hour of night. lie is thinking of home of. the dear, anxious ones who wait and watch and hope for his coming; and Fancy, sweet, cruel deceiver, brings him loving words and fond embraces. There is a rustling in the thicket, he stoops to listen. Crack ! A rebel bullet has pierced his heart, the tide of life is streaming, and exclaiming, 44 O God! my mother I he laus to the A moon-beam steals . 3 . n his countenance. A pallor nas , .. , r 1 . overspread it, his hps tremble r -. A I UlU LlUtl l'ilC ll llllll Vll,tW3 i b,. ' - ,' over his eves, a rattle in his throat, and the heart stands still, No pomp or ceremony attend his funeral. A picket is found dead in the morning. His comrades hastilv shovel awav a few feet of earth, all that is granted him of the land lor which he died, and he is laid down to rest. 44 Our I wrinkled hrnw, and whose sten tetter upon the vergp of the grave, rilns men hi- son, like Iienumin, . . . , . . is vntiiiTi-sr n ii mo.-i oe io ri . . . ; . . ... ',;i,t' 'or I'edom and the rights ' 'I 111111. I I ' I in HI t Ui; ni - - it i ii . 1:1 I ju - nten the development ol h: l.JI.I.l. : .. i I K . II. il. ... I ... ,u " . " . ' . m 1 . ' " . " vnuUHUl n.iml to trUuts ot in.JuI It I W"'' r iti rnrn Kir ?mc i.nniitf o Ill 1 1 t I i II IL ii- I IM m t II ' r and with tre nM1 n-g voir e be bid 1 t .i I . . . i " " r, :M il lin-M'f. I.. .r..nt , v cr-M, til I i . . I roil ni le.'ll.v ill fl.M horror of si k. nrc 'n I ....I Ir'url U UC 1 P t . ! nruH tenner (lies ;iioi;r. ! AVlnt misery i? imen n-lnt Uorrowsare uriehronielei!! When ihunnn thoujlits .are visible, wli'n it is Mve:i to one to know

tho secret sorrows o! hi ft llowjdreds to wlioai I He was asuar as bein-'. an 1 to evn'.ore the hidden: to him; h: pot was at the head;1

recedes of another soul, then, t and not until then, can be known j the "Unwritten Uistorv of War." j A Soldi Kit. rilAKLOTTi: Hito.vn;. The world bnid with infinite tenderness over the story of that ! woman who bad no beiuty nnd I ' " "lessin. f1 on in i orKsnire imoors. We pity her forth di!ma! cranny hool o ,"r child-1 , I . .1 X - , , k I ...I, t 1 1 1. i i i - . i . ii ! i- ii-'i iiji ii;- 1 1 n i v i , . ... . , . "vn " w- uv .1 1 111 t tor the lonely drudrv. 0 ban - , , .. . n 1 ,r N 1 ' S I 1 1 j i" ' i"ll 1(1 Iini- t col, ian-,c,o !:,rt;. .u.,.,.;, a we ee ;er it down to it .. l,;i. l.. 1,1. .1 i : .i . - ,,M i-.rc oC Iwr ..on. n.l I . i i - 'Mr. In, lif, dowr.ranl v..t u fin. w rhu, .Vrcr.V nC.ir t' vmp itht:e cI.tT. Our lins tremble n w ?ee

Vol. 1, No. 20. hard gray home, though it embody itself in no better tiling than a bright little frock and a pair of tiny red shoes yet to?e the poor blossem of grace and beauty shrivelling in the fire, put there "and held there by a lather harder than the home itself! Wc watch her, a woman while ;yet a child ä woman because

other little children, still moreii (ounrj myself puddenlv'surpriseil

neipu , arc mumci.c, a., i.icj can find no other nnture larie 1 1 in ail sweet, inenupuf, .simple uniuuif, ...... .

j then, at last, a woman crown, anti outlines of events loni; i walking over qreat stretches ofjj)lg;:e(j awav, came crowdin" (wild country, that she might 1 around me and vanishing aain in

alone with that other father and mother, tho lather and mother of us all, and gather strength 'and courage from the communion, to "0 back and bear her bur den of a stern, half-mad father, and a reckless, lost brother, and a bare, rugged life; and we say, 40h! why was not such a soul clothed in the beaut v of June, and born in tlie vale of Tempe. in the golden days, and the lit born and nurseling of a queen?' JJut we say this no longer when the llower unfolds to the sun when her books and Iit life, in all their variant strength and fullness, reveal the mystery of the homely enfolding, and the rank, sharp contrasts ot the garden-plat and the hot days and dark nights; for we see in the llower brimming with refreshment and blessing to thousands, how not to the beauty of thf goddess, not to the flowery meadows and bosky dells of Arcadia, not to the first born and nursling of a queen, could this power come, but to such a soul set in such a place, to battle through nnd gather all the imlulences of such a life. Rev. Rober Colly cr. a iiitAvi: i:(;il:i:r. George D was running the night express, and was some thirty minutes behind time. Mv ' freight train was waiting on the He ! switch wa Mowing the whis tie when 1 saw and tie saw the .f t. : ! swiu htnan run madly out - 11 1 I müuii . Lrr.iuiir: ?nii .m-i turn : it so that it would run h; . . ., ,. I 1 him di , . i . ... in n ..... ..it inii.ji.i.ivi - iwiiiiiii . !.;u.npi, in-uni ir iiveiv, io Hin n.y I -..... -w- I hain liirntl hiMtle tor i ' ' ' brakes and thoe t, t stood near l " out .o y ir un ... ... ....... i.A. . . ....11. ..,ll'At.'fl i . . : t. 4 u u n ow; tjun-M , wi nr i-., nir In In inU'li "Did 1V re er--i . , ...... r. ,7 . i.. ' r l r i wii iimi i 1 1- i i 'i ' - I ' ! ' u--inu, an 1 knew th'f lie bn . I- ,ip. t ,n of Iii., f t inr i t ;

v . ' n .

.)C.!S.ltkilO khl n.e 11 iVi. ul 1.) e.irs. it Kiio , , , -ii.i.ii.i i.r iirj.L i. iiia iir. il... III I the hf broke i. . ' i . i lro-e lo n lie tr;ilil j . have ill ' Pn(l IfO n Ill ll.ll j lie ii uht ' his rri 'irie' W 1 1 h O I 111 f 1 1 VP sfl i-t v T f t e l! e i - j Ith - tr.iek arvl escane l with slight bruises. But, no! liehind him ;tni. - tin to nun. a:ü rnn in eoinpji iu e M-cumj, bunto the rc;d law of jelf-prrsTva-j trnt:. that most people put first in their cod of practice, bis firm duty required him to forswear ah leiance, and to act on the principle, '-others hrst, myself alter - wardn. Willi a nrivery ol

siuh as ts seldom found mlpr,CJlfin2lv h(lt a .rflt qroau nth" rank, ot m-n, he stuek to d - f hjs iroa chf.

111,1 -1 w "'"pm""! w i41C, ':totlu: white steed of ibith, and V"ul 1,1,1 ',,ries of his life-, I.. . I . r.yi. . t . . . . ..I l . J. . . I thf .f r'nrtli nl ln ut iinK". ...... .... j... , Utrivin - r to mltirnto tl .ii'b.rin r -uia mi.,,- .1,. ein- ; ,l',n - ! PI, .ttt, mnhn.m.c. "" ' .no hul no time for regrcls be hid no time for rrsrt is U i Iririmr lifit rim! Hie Iriends 11 . . , , .... ' hll'l WO I (Mf V. eU M i r..,i i.:... I Ihr. 1 ihrnttK hi-rninn wn.- rrv.-nr.l. , Wilh t!i. hand he .till on to th- handle of the smd Th uIkiIp middle arid lower no tion of hi ho le i

face t-till wore a resolute expression, such as must have lit up the countenance of Arnold Wiakelried, when crying, "Make way for liberty!" he threw himself upon a sheaf ol Austrian ppear, and broke the column of his enemies. Exchange.

Erlt Associations. When I was about fifteen years of age I went, with my father and mother and other friends, on a tour through Somersetshire, and, having arrived at Wellington, where I hid certainly never been before, we tarried an hour or two at the "Squirrel" Inn for refreshments. On entering the room where the j re?. of the t W(rc 355CIIlbei, j and ,ur5ue(j by a pack of Strang, w- Jnf.mf.u J C evpr Wlv j turned inv CVCS. fair faint imperfect pictures of persons once iamuiar to nv cniiunnou. rapid and fitful succession. A wild reverie of early childhood, half illusion, half reality, seized me, for which 1 could not possibly account; and when I attempted to fix and examine any one of tlie images, it lied like a phantom from my grasp, and was immediately suceecdeil hy another equally confused and volatile. I felt assure.! that all this was not a mere trick o the imagination. It seemed lo me rather that enfeebled memory was, by some sudden impulse, set actively at work, endeavoring to recall the forms of past realities, long overlaid and almost lost behind the throng of subsequent events. My uneasiness was noticed by my mother; and when I had described mv sensations, the whole mvfterv was speedily solved by the discovery that the patern ot the wallpaper in the room where we were seated was exactly similar to that of my nursery at Paddington, which I had never seen . since I was between four and five years of age! I did not immediately remember the paper, but I was soon satisfied that it was indeed the medium of association through which all those ill-de-fined, half-faded forms' had traveled up to light; my nur.e and nursery events associated with paper pattern being, after all, but very faintly pictured on the field of my remembraace. Sir lienjara'in Brodle Tin: Bkai'tikl'!.. Beautiful things are suggestive of a purer and a higher life, and till us with a mingled love and fear. They I have a graciousness that wins Us, ana nn exci-i lenre to wLica we i il mum 1 1 II un rf r i r, 11 . j i you are poor, ei ihoupmiv aspi- , . , Til ,iin . .eeti rt vn nl llnirer en ,, t. . .volr l" ' 1 . v ,u 1 " , maint lin your dignity, and ?e.;ure j .oideratiou and dclicafry of behavior. I)ort:T!C SWKKTMKAT5. It i ' a in-ul r faet tint i.nnr UAU - - : who know Irnv to preserve evervI III .1 ' 1 I ill H I 'MTX IT "r1-- ' , i., .i r i; 'r i.il .iiii'ti.!.! ill I . ... .... . It i only to Ucr 'he tnoutli of Hie vessel t'htly t hved." t . . j - - If you can't coix fih to bite, ; u ) our permivc power upoa a cross do: and vou will be sure to succeed, ' A handcutf a box on the ear. A machine has been invented which is to be driven by theforce of circumstances. ) ... . i lTi,- trt. f n h:c f,an,i f. is one ot the thnümi passaen in a modern novellette. . i . . - - The man who made an impresiou on the heirt of a co piette his tiken out ;i patent for ftonecuttin. A voting man advertises his desire for a wif "Prettv, and entirelv ignorant ol the t A minister, putting hi hand upon a voun urchin's choulder, a.v hi ned. "Mv '-n. I l-elieve tbe rlevil has i'ot hold of you.'