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VOL. XII. * 7'. -*rS*V ' M • —
,;y; ' t - — •. .• . . ,*jp> "r ' ' ' CAFF, ISLAM); CAPE MAY COJBKTY. NEW JEWKfc WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 17. ISO.;. ! : 1 'v' ■ •' * 1 1' ' ■ r i 1 *~ - — — — -t ( —
NO. 593.
®br Sort's (Cornet. . — - . ■ -- i . .. t OVER THE BIVEIt. "Orlr Urn river," I'M stilus WMrtght, Cs.ln* while tlleallx WM-plOI, Thinking of spirits now nappy Id light, 0 WMte |.oJ,r. am qalstl)' aWeplac. 1 And they MB, aa I think of thrlr happy abode- c Tg aajr '-wO-art waiting lor thee In our home.'. 11 f Ou Tts bordei., "Just over the rl rat." fc '"Just over the !»«"_> f.lhar now deeds, * " A talhsr J io«U«l/ihart:h, t' Whose uap no my ha art U no deep!) angr at itfi , That tta mem org never can perl*).. Aad I often look upward la prayer to the throne Of tha «re»t and bountiful Giver, ' u its maaalDu jaat "om tha tltar." j "Orar tha rivsr," how evany tan lookf t: fondly and ariabfatip sighing, Thinking of moments now lost ui tha past, . Hoping, and mrtnorj italn| ; Thinking la and naaa ut (rttada ihry hat o loat. I: Gone la Uta bUaafal loravar, , ■gMsrrUiincono. THE HEADSMAN 'H HON. ■ In o*a of tba picturesque ullage* of , Switxerfond, a pretty buu*e alood, a ceo* , tar; ago, vaeloaad by a stone wall, abd l strangely aooagh, without any porcaptiblp c aotraece from tba (tool or coda wl tba , bnildiog. Thi* wall extended la r dowu , -Uta road aach l Ida of the huuac ; aou at | each extremity, a tuiO atjla gate areola | to tfca groaada ; bat, oa approacbloir the i bouae, ibara a. a do door Vlfiblt. Babiad, t however, felly concerned by a curtain t)l , acarlel rauaera, haugiug Irou a platform above, waa a deep arched dour. ( Kvary window wax latticed ; and oo , aouad of mirlb or moitc avur issued (torn , ibam. It lacked bat tba troo bar*, to doSOU it aa a priaon or a otad-hoote, alaad- t log a* It did, lar apart from atiy other , . building. , Oocaaioaally, met. ware lean enuring , tba precincts, but an lamala waa avrr . kuottu to make tba attempt, aava tba wife . aid deagh&r. of tba rector wbo officiated . | at the pretty cnurcb ul bt. Agatha. , Una of Itaa latter, tudaed, want dally for years; and a hen tba. ceased, tba falber , aaccaaded bar in tbeaa diornal viaila. It , waa tba hauas of Claude Katie r, tba heeda- , ■tan el tbat caolou ; a man wbo llvsd continually abuuni d and ihuooiog. (it wall , knew tba marctlaaaobloquy which aoctaiy , heap# apou tba bead ol a meu in bis eilu- | elion, notwithstanding tbat, oa in biacatc , it cornel by inbarilanca and compulsion, i and oat by g boice. I His Mtbsr, the former headsman, pleaded with tba aalboriliei, upon hie dying bad, not to parpatoata but disgrace in bit aon; bat the aaeielil outturn inuH be obey- , od, sad, aa Wat aagely remarked, -there it oo difference worth being talked aboni between an aAMOtloner and lbs ton of an oxecaliouar," and poor Claude Betler wa> doomed to bear tba burden of hit falber'a : lite-lung crota, through lo tba bitur tad. . In the tepee hope of bating the ordinance repealed, io bit pereun, or eomeboe invaded, Claude bad uavetad belora bo (alber't death ; and It Waa ool aolil ba wat aommuoed to appear before a coarl, thai he could realise that Looiaa and tba lw» hula girl* would be disgraced, even aa be bad been. Ha remembered well bow lbs hot bload would hub into bit face, w ken bia falber would remind him of what be •u born to ; but ba could act but ballerr tbat tba larviBo aaotcoco woald be averted ; aad ihst ba would yat aland before, men, free from that ghually horror thai bad overshadowed bia young daya. Whan it really came, ha waa beart-bro-kan. Ha wallad ap bia dwelling, block adad tba an trail ct, aad cloeod tha window!, attar lo ba epenstl. Han bad laid bia burdto npon bia naoBsadlnf sbouluer*, aad lo mac ba becama an aocmy ; or it tbar, bakaaw Ibal all man lookad open bia u oaa oat af tba pala of common buaaaaity. It waa, therefore, with aogoith aad pain Abut bo lookad npon tba newborn too, laid in hit arms bnt a Ion daya after bia an at!, noma elBct bad beta forced apoo him.— Ha teas wiebed the child might dia era it could kaow aad ful wkat a fearful daaFor y»ar», ba could ool look open him without a paug ; bat u yaaru upon year* moot ou, u milder feeling or tobmlaaiou ' ctat ovar him. ud ba gn-w calm' anil meek under tha judgment uf Cod. JjMiro it meeb. A paaaiag ahadow had qtoesed bar mind, but tba would not bid/It stay. tba deom bad beccc-e u certainty, lie and alaaa ia bar ekambor, it i caked into Looses'* mind, kew much Iba aenUuer of bia facw aboekad and diafrws vd bar; tbat aumtw would ba iaai dwap. if akarati aaatbw, on i'iamda Um cump.lia.1 i.
"Yet lleattn knnwa, dearetl," he ex''*" claimed, "Ibal it ia not for mytelf alone • tbat 1 feel ; bat for you and theta children. ! ' "I know it, C>ode," the antwerad, h -but do not grieve for ut. 1 am happy . • eiioogh ia your leva, and io knowing how ( a good and wortby yon are ; and at for there (i llttle'ooef. It will be to long before they can feel it, that it ia tearcely worth mat- ' r iog yourtelf rolaerable about ibem. (tod a glten jon a loting wpc. dear Claude, I I sod darliog children ; and we mu«t live ; t for — cb ether, if..lhu wcthi ■de°L Pi.Y!"lI'4_t paaiuoabip wilb otbert." u If Claode ever grieved afterward*, he a -l ot ll wiibiu bia own breast. He kept aloof from olhrit aa far aa potaible ; prof- c ou friendship, but ddinggoud when ; occatiou offered. He loathed tha money y that came by hia bated calling. He never I looked at It nor applied It to any bou»v- « hold p'utpuin. Hit goatt, of which he I owned large Bockt, were tha meant ol b maintaining hia lamily ; and he aroued to 1. incieaaa their comforts or loxories by the ' g wages draws from tha death of others. ' u The Brat lima ho had performed the office, he tu carried home in a dead faint; H and, during hit life, he never attempted t it without chills and sickness. » Meamime, his children were rapidly . Ii growing op. The recior'a dscgbtei bad Dover married, and the bad attended lu - the rodimeota uf learning with tha wi-ole i o of them, for I here bad been five— one ion ' d and foor daogbiert— wbila tba motor him- i self Lad completed their edocutioo. T'bey |.v in auCh. seclusion that Albert Ktaler u had never yet beard of tba fate tbat would t befall bun should ba oatlive hit father ; , though ha waa not ignorant uf the odiuui | t attached to tba cffice. c Claude bad kept it from him — conscious . i that As had ool aalteled less by" having , i always known it, and willing lo throw sou it thine upon bia boy't path as long as pov I tihln. Albert bad even heen pvimiiieo ^ to go and visit noma relations ,io another , canton, when ba arrived at the age 01 ! * iweBty-one. lo one of these vixits he warn upon the lake, wilh a parly ol young peo- ' pie; and here kn 6mt saw Constance Hchaplrr, tba d^ghter of a wealthy laud ( holder. She was to only child— a tweet, happy girl, whose childhood hid |U*.*n. always to luothme and song. How detr ( the was to her father's heart cun enly be ; ^ told by thote who have hut one object on I'grib, on which to bestow love. Little did ba think, a hen. Cuntlai c. was reteoid froiu a sudden sod lealful dattb by drowning, by Albert hatter, thai 1 wat the too of the beadsman. Lillle ' did he dream, when Coostuocv.ln an agony of teirv, coafaated that aho loved her prelervar mora than life itself, that lir -hoald ever blo-h alhit daughter's choice. | His only question to Cootlanca wat I bit : "Ilea be declared his love far you, n.y ^ daughter." And a ben he learned that he had uui, ha felt hart and diauppointvd ; lor Albert had teemed all thai he would have wished lor in bar buahand. Cootlanca hod been tuagbl by one in her own nation ; bnt •he bad twan *•> bitterly opposed to bun. that her falber had utterly r . fated Jo sanction hit uddrvares. Slung by the refusal, be gave way to tlit molt violent passion, and even threatened revenge upon Constance and her lather. This man, l'aul Uaroipr, wan in the b»ut whan Court. nee lo. I her fooling, nod waa precipitated iut« tba lake.. He liau not noticed tba accident uaUbhe saw kitten Killer vwimming towards the boat with Coottaoca on bis arm, and saw olb tra standing ready to receive them. Tba aigbi had filled him wilb anger and jealously i and be immedialsly set -an fool .inquiriet respecting bia rival — hi* birth ud elation, prospects and character. Of the lut'.er be heard nothing that was not pore and upright; bat,' alas! with the praises of hit i worth, came also the knowledge of his parentage. Triumphant at the thought of revtog- , log himself upon the Kcbeplers, be set the . story afloat ; and before the next eveningevery ole was folly aware that tba atrao- t , gar they had entertaioad was unworthy | their notice. In ihort, that lie was the son of the headsman, Claude Easier. Constance beard tba tale without com- , mrol or thought. She did aot koow thai . it meant that Alb-rt Ksnler wat a man banned, proecribed, deemed anv>rthy l« i mingle wilb bit brother men. The word. , poised osar her althont leaving their , piing ; and whan her father anlerad and I proclaimed what to him waa a terrible , Gut, the, poor child, looked up wilb ber f ioneeent face, to ask If there was anything ] wrong in Albert. Tha question penetrated to the bvait of i tba worldly mao. Hod ha foret.cn all the I misery, he would, peifupr, have thrown i hia prejudice lo tha wlqds at that moment. , relkor than have risked tba coming an- . gnisb to bia innocent «li!d. Bnt be lli- ■ Hue look of terror frightened him. r "Cooitance ! dear lord ! would 1 refute n you tkb. if it could' be helped V "Ah, ao.'; aba Murmured • "you have i . bean always an kind to you little Con9
*^Poor Cootlanca ! the cared little for the | worldly part of ibis speech pbhl much for j affactiunnte tone and maoner : and | | heart gave ap it" first .Wcriflce, not j without deep wailing.* of sprrow. but as j j the would hove laid down her life — an ol- j ' lering to filial love. That day, Albert m-t" I'anl tiarnier,— j Some bfitcioos friend had told AJbert all ; j and it may be supposed that he looked on j tiarnidr with oo fiieiidly eye. Still he j would have pasted him with silent con- j tempt, had not Gamier paused in bis walk, j "utlerliig the mWt'hTttrr airJ dull dhig hro-^ •Yon— a Jaw. degrading thing ! Ibe son j . of an executioner, and the heir to hit per- i peluatnd difbooor, to attempt smuggling , yourself upon a family like iheSchepleis ' . By Heaven, had I known it ihe firtl time I met -there, I would have kicked—" | i lie Slopped shot I, for a blow fmui ibe band of Albert destroyed bis rpeecb, and J ■ laid the insolent swaggerer npon the » ' gloom), with tha blood Bowing from t.ir i *-uHiolh tliiTttotluls v Satisfied that ho wan not' dangerousfy j i hurt, ba pushed the body with bis foot, \ the roadside, sod walked on ; every j nerve in his frame putting to the iusolt h* j i bad received. lie made bis way to Canttuncs at once | i —saw the learlrt. ngony that had swept I over ber young face, tad bad left u thudow in its path. He taw Mr.*8ohep!er. j too- -heard his objection. ; objections that I.Wefa so tempered with real genuine kind- ! nets and pity, that the sling was sofiened j before it reached him. j The -parting between, the lovers wu» terrible indeed. There was not a hope to ' cheer them. Fate, tbat had parted would i not reauile them io I e fnlure. This feci j Ihey tried to keop before them. It mutt be— now and forever— eternal. | In a little Alpine collsg", tix month* ! from the time the.e events transpired, n ; j gentleman and bin daughter, young and j beautiful, but pale and worn, were slowly recovering from tbo effects of * mountain j .inrm which opfriook tbem in traveling. ^ The gentleman hail been vsry ill, until the i Inst lew da«i>ut a hope had sprung up j bat hesBh^Qpostibly bn removed before i long. The poor gust-herd and hit wife ^ j bad done every thing for their guests tual ; ' could be done in a place so fir from kelp; j and grateful hearts had appreciated the | Every arrangement was made for their ! removal, while, ia a tingle moment, nil j plant mere frustrated. A second attack I of fever Vet in ; and before morning, the j yoang'glrl wat fatherless. Constance fiohspler, Tor it wa< the, drooperf beneath this blow ; rind for week* 1 her life seemed lo hang npon ibe feeblest I thread. Tbo kindne.s she bad received j before was redoubled now, amisxfter many } redoubled now, ann«iter .
weeks. of illness, in which Mf. Behvpicr ^ had been consigned to the Alpine grave. ^ •he revived lo a tenia of loorliu|ts on- ! ^ equaled before lo the poor girl'e expe- ' j To her lonely heart, how little seenie.: " the dttlinctious of earth now I One true, loving Bat a re, on nhlMt tha might lean j * fur support, in this Hark faunr, would [ hsvc o twrlghed all elta. A law doubts j " and terrors qaiveepd in bur soul, snd then ; ' .11 thooe oat, blight and real. From that 1 deep solitude the wrote thn. : "Come tu me, Albert. If your sonl ha* J1 not ca*t ma out because of the past— ^f ^ you love n>« nt y ou once did— coma to me ^ [ here, and jnt mo hear your friendly voice f once more. Atone and sad I think of yon, , and my heart lellt me that yon will ool L , delay to answer the tummans.'' ^ He came, and bora to other climes the | frail, drooping girl, lo the saany air ol Italy, far from ail who bad known jit. ( , hesdstnan'r son, thry found joy and pesce; ^ , and, bettrr still, tho dark cloud that hang ( over Albert Kstlnr'i life was dispelled for ^ . ever. - Sous snd dahghters grvw up abont him. haunted by on such diamtl shape a< had darkened bis father's life and hit uwa ; ( snd, onder another nam*, be lived end , [ died, beloved ant! respected, beneath the . sonny skies of bit adopted country. The name of Hosier died out with I'lande | , Hia dsngbtrrr, with their mother, mad# a ( , now home far away from the dreury hoose, | , aud tha canton was served by a new heads- ^ • m*°" i r ' Girl* Learning to Krtp House. ' No young Inly can be too aril instruct- 1 ' ed iu anything that esq effect the com- I ' forts af a family, itaiafsver position io ' i society th/oecupia^r»ha needs a practical knowledge of household dalles. She ' may ba placed In such circumstances that ' it will net ba necessary for ber lo perform 1 much domestic labor ; but on this account 1 - aba needs ao Inst"' knowledge than if the i, were to preside penoually over tba cook* " ing -stove aud pan try. Indeed, I hav* 1 - ' olWn thought it more Difficult to diroct others end requires more oapariruce, than to do the same work with gar own bauds. Mothers arc fr»qp*nlly rt olce aoiLpar- • tteuiar tbat they do not like lo give op ■ i say part of ibsir care to their sbtldrun — • This is a groat mistake ic tbeir naaage—nt. tor twy are often bdrdmed Willi laI bor. aad nemf relief. -Children should be I | early taught to make themaelvaa utefal ; ® | IO sal I their 1 areola every way is th«ir
The Lots by Not Taking a C'ojnly Paper. I Generally apt -ekiaft- but KlllW impor. j c tancg is attached to the taking of a conoey ! , newspaper. This segleCl and indllfervncc t had itv practieal reward the other day. i ! Some time *g» a gentleman in this town ( ! was appointed an Aodhor to distribute t . ! tbo fuuds in ihe b»nds of on Adminittra- , , j tor uthoDgal the creditors. Notice of the ' t ' silting of the Auditor was published in r ; two county pnaeit. t I It to huppen-d that a few creditors, re. ; | . i aiding in.n.c'rldti p-rlinn of the roontv, , . : who bad CollfCliyely claitat to theatnouni " ; , | of seven or eight hundred dollar*, from ; . j the neglect of not ^jjidg » cuunty "paper, r , J orver heard cf the audit until after the , j ' report of. the auoiDr bffd born confirmed ' , , | by the couit. They then came to town | ' to inquire about the likelihood of tecur- , . ! iog their claims; called npon sd sHoru-.v, , „ , who exatuineil into Ibe matter) and in-l 'formed them that I by had forever lot? tl.-ir money, and, we -presume, .charged 4 -them five dollars for : he in'ormotion. All r I this resulted front being too penurious or c i loo careless lo subscribe for a county ' ( ' | paper. I ! These gentlemen hive learned a lesson , I that will last Ibrtu ihe balance of tbeir „ , ! lives ; and H is a warning to others, who < t from the same motive*, to take their , county paper. There it scarcely a man in Ihe comma t ! uity that does not take s pujier wbo will J not be caught up tome day on a legal oo- 1 I tlce, unless he clsnde.tinely reads bis I neighbor's u"1) every jfenlfgaiori sbosld bt- . above literary pilfering like this.— Ki ' ' The First Ship Hiiilttitig in tlii* I i < nun try. I- From the "iliatoty of American Man- , ufaclures," "we learn that New Y'oik vra* t the -first locality of ship building in this , i country. Tha account is as follows : J | The first vessel, wilh the exception of a I few open boats built by tbo follower* ol 1 Do Solo, ever constructed by Europeans i 1 I in this country was a Dutch yacht, named * ' | the Unrest or Restless, of lib feel keel, i * I It) feel long, llj feel Wide, and It! tou. ! '' burden. She it "aa uullt tiy Captain Adrian I ' Block. »l Manhattan, ttiow Host) River, . i I [in ll'.U, lo snpply the place oil one de- I ; stroy'ed by fire, which with four other", j arrived there that year from Amsteidam. * j In her Captain llendrickson, in August, j 1616 discovered the .Schuyltkill ltiver. ' I aud explored nearly the whole coast from 1 , J Nova t-cotia to tho Capes of Virginia. t ! after which he returned to Holland; and j having presented n finely executed map i of the coast he asktii a gr*Dl of the couo- ' j try, which was not cone ded however.— * ; During the sumeytsir ;lf.l l)Captein John '! Smith sailed lor the "Noitlv* Virginia, with two ships ntd furjy-Bve men and 5 boys, lo mass expsrnmou upon a gold
i and copper mine They reached the ; Island Monnbigtn, on the coast of Maine, ■ i 43 deg. 30 sec., in Apiil. where they , .nude some attempt st the whaling buatj oe.q'j bnt failing iu 'hat; they built seven j boats, in which lbhrty.eev.-n made a very ^ sacceeafal fishing voyage. Thus the first j ! humble attempt at the fishing busiuei* j mads in. the A met iran. bottoms. J - lu 1CJ4, witblt four ytmy aMer the j ! landing, the Colony ol Plymouth recsived ; au necaiaion of n carpenter and a salt i maker, sent out by the company. Of the j former, Gov. Braorord nays : "He qntckly j bmldwtwo very good at d strong shallop*, | with a great and strong lighter, and had limber fur ketches (a much larger j description of vessel), bnt this spoilt ; lor | id the beat of the season, be falls iuto u ' and diss, to our great loss and surrow." Tha salt maker— for whom the lighter appears to have been built — sc. s .ifo and erected a bailding, and made an attempt tu manofactare salt for j the fishery, first si Cape Ann, and the , next year at L'apu Ccd, both of which ' essays were, through bis Ignorance aim | self-will, aosaccetsfoi. . At Mooamet, now Sandwich, near Cape Cod, whither tba settlers removed about that time, a piooaoce was ouill by the people io 1627, for tho purpose of fishing. But the first vessel ol ksy sise constructed tbers was q bark,' built by subscription in 1641. She was aboal'oti tons burden, and was estimated to' qovt It appears by the records of Plymouth tbsre were thirteen proprietors, of whom William Paddy, William Hanberry and John Bames, ownsd each ona-eighth part, aad William Bradford, John Jenny, John Atwood, Samael Hicks, George , Bower, John Cook, Souiuel Jenny, Thos. Willetts, Stephen Hopkins snd Edward Bangs, vscb one-sixteenth part. The building of tba vessel, though small, it has been truly remarked (■#• Mast. Hiat. Coll.) "was oo ondertakieg at tbat period of exlgeocy and privation, surpassing lbs equipment of a Csoloo or N'orthwasl ship, with oar oscbiis at tb*i present day." Joho Drew, (rem Wales, wbo set. lied at Plymouth aa early as 10pO, is be lieved to hava been a ship carpenter, and ; i a number of bis d«scendonU,4a that aou other times, parroed the business — oaa cf . . tbem at Halifax, on tha Wiaetaxet. a small braoch of Taos toe River. — Yesag ladie* ohoald awvar obj et 1 . to being kissed by a priator; they should , mate every allowance tor the freedom of j -
RosuUncF of ji Needle. I j The Christruo Intelligencer thus di* I eonmc* about the exploits of Jjie needle : ' * What wonderful thing i» tbi-^mui. . of sewing! It began it. Paradise, nn.i I wn* the earliest fruit of the foil. Anii-i « the odor of Bowers, and by the side * ■ meandering stream*, and uuder the shade - j of tho durk, greVo follegr, the cowering | t .form* of the guilty prog, niters of our > look their first lessons in (jo- art which r lias been the mark of servitude or sorrow, t | Aodyet the cur*e ba. not been milboot • liiessing. 1 The needle with the thimble bn« done 1 i.pas*. The needle- work of the Trdsernacle i ' ! is tho mo«t ancient reoord of tha art.— T o»ed to adorn the vrttmqpts of the < priest*, it naa honored by God bimqalf. ■ and became illy pe of beanty and holiness r ' ••Tbo King's daughter n all glorfon* • tthin; nor rlofliing Is of wrought gold, she shall Ire 4»iooght urito the Kitg ti ) cenee of king i-omp. the imjmsiog spec I lacle of religion or wealth. t"e tribal* o; I Society, the refill-d nllractlei.* *»f heauly. ' dep. ndeut f|iun the needle. II oia «o spoil u Girl. i Tell her she la tg little lady, and most , not run, and make- her a .un-bunnet a yard deep, lo keep b»*r from tanning. 1 1 > ' not let her play wilh her boy coosins. "tbey ore to rude. " Tell her out la speak ' load, it i* so masculine ; and fi.rt) luu«t is quite Utlgenleei. 'leach bel mu.*ic. hot never mind ber spelling Giv. - her eaf-nffg* at six year* of uge. Teacl. to set her cap lor the beaux at eleven. 1 not grow up iv simpering, unreflecting no- . without some .mail old nunt to help net for'exomple. in favor ol recovery in * lerfor days or week*, perhaps months* trembling in the balance aud contending for the omelet y. H a then the bean fdeL the condensed rcslecy ol a lifetime cau be reached only through the agnate. He who has never experienced such tluii- | Mlioas knows nothing ut the Oepths aou , powers of his uwn heart.— LohimIIc J«arjewel," Said a sun o! Kriu as a ship was coming on the coa.l iu tnciunienl winter — "No, Ubwvrn'l."— Thin be Juhers.
; replied /fo'. "weaMLhuvu to tales the * weather as it conic*. ^ j ^ Vented tho plough Waa born, or where he ( 1 ! died ; yet be has affected moie for the j bappiueea ol the world tbau the whole * ' race uf heroes and conquerors, who bnv. 1 i drenched It with tvars and manured it i i with blood. ) — T he l'ertiaus, a* undent writers in- j * j form a*, used to teach their tons to rials-, j | to pay tbeir debts end to tell the truth. i 1 — Other nations pray for rain, n* wi .1 do. lo e seasou of great draught in Ft i aia, a schOol-Biavler at the head of hi* | ' pupils, marched out of Schirax in pic* ■ | cession lo pray for rain. A atraugui . ' { nuked whither they were goiug. T ho lu- | ^ i tor told bim and »»td — "He doubted not , | hut God would littcn.lo Ihe prayers of j - these inuocent children." *'My Irienfl.' j said the traveler, "if tbat were the case, i 1 fear there would he no school-master* j left ulife." ! — Ou a roagh old tailor bring asked by ' one of Ibe members of a leuiued socb ly | to irite a concise account of the manners 1 and customs of a somewhat barbarous tie- ' tion, whose territories be had lately been 1 exploring, be put flown tho following ex 1 ceadtngly brief summary o|f thtrpwqdefo 1 question ; "Manner*, none. Cnxtomai ' i ilorasa often show pride, but bow intolerably vain they would be if they , only knew how mocb tbey arb talked about by tbeir lards and master*. Indeed in hia fondness for "horse talk" Ihe man , frequently maksa aa ass of himself— which the horse never does. CoKTXXTwmrv. — The fnuntsin of cooteat most spring np iu the mind ; and be I who has so lillle knowledge of human o*tnra as to sock happiness by changing , anything bnt his own discoatsoted dt»pi- , sition will waste his life in fraitless efforts ; and maltlply the griefe wbioh ba purposes . to remove. — Aa a strambost waa about to atari i from Cinctooati, oaa day lost week, a . . yoang mao came ao board, leading a blushing damaol by thi head, and approaching I J this polite dark, ha said io a suppressed i ' voice— "1 say, me and my wife has just .' r ; got married, end I am looking oat for ac i ' comodation*. "Looking for a birth?" hastily Inquired i : the cleik. pauiog tickets lo anolker pet ; I eeoger. "A biitki thwader and ligfaluiu. i 1 j aa 1" gasped the astonished m.u ; "we ! I j haiat bat jut got married, aud want a ' place to slay all night, yoa Itajw. " '
liuistvi tnut Rrqniaitrain n Wife ! The knowledge of duiqgMic duties is , heynnd all price to a woman. Every one . i of the sex ought to knu* how to sew and . .'knit, and inrr.d, and cook, and superintend ( ( uigh or low. this eort of knowledge is cf I great advantage. There Is do eecrasity 1 that the gaiuiug of such information shonl I inturfere with intellectual nrqiitreinent, or j even elegant accomplishment. A We(l regulated mind cat. find lime to attend lo . them all. When a gnl i* nine or ten year* , old, shu should be accustomed to take . uat regular ohace llL.lh* huu* e Iiolddo aad1 foel rvspuBsible for the maucer ; m which her part i* performed — soeli a* I bar own mending, ws.hiug the cup* and j ; putting tln in in place, cleaning silver, or i ; dusting a ml urrniigino tho parlor. Thi.* 1 alicu.d i.ut be fltiuv nccu-ionully, and uvgleeted whraevei *lie finds it ennveq^ut . she ahuula c. aaltlvr it her floparliiiewT.— - . When older than twelve, girls should be- , gin to lake tuina ui tnyn-rinleading the , hoosehuid, making pudding*, pies, cuke.- J To leatn t ffectually. tbey should achy ins wife being uble to manage welt the ' Uitld.-UE ami M inking at luiBunlb, the auctioneer i* a popular mar. ; wit. wad u grtiliemau. No person** til hearty laugh has be provoked by bis tu. iiiuruut suytiigs. He was tvcently ei;lurnituie auu "fistugs. 1 lie had just got agricultural vdiouldefs wnk at him. A ' uorse ol a keeu sighted suctietieer ; so i going ! with a lot ol gluSBWarc, stoVi ; "To— whom f" said fiinttb, gur.iog at the villi. nig -Hanger. "VV Lu T heigh said the slraiiger. "I "Why. you. sir." aaid rtnnib . -Who! me .' "Yes. >>s; too bid oh the lot." vain i "Me." bang utu if 1 did. insisted Ibe , "W by, did you uut wink and keep wtnk- . iog »" 'Winking!" uell. 1 did. aud so did y u at me. 1 thought you were winking a. . much as to say, keep Ouik. I'll stui. r winked, as much as In say. 'I'll be hangei. 1
» mil ul Decision. tho little courage. Every j a day seuds'tC fLeir groves a nuuiber of oh- a -cure uien, who have only remained n. „ obscurity because tbeir timidity baa pre- 1 ( vented them Item making a lirst effort. I ( j slid who, if tbey had be*u Ittduuud to hi- t gin, would, 10 all probability have gun* | groat Tcogtbs »u the carver ul lame. Th<J , fact is, that iu dung anything in the j t world worth doing, we must not stain | I nhiveriug on the bank, thinking of the I ; cold aud danger, but jump to uud scram j , 'bin through us well as w# can. ll will < , 1 not do lo be perpelqxily calculating risk- | , a in! adjusting nice chances. It did very |j well Mure Ibe tlouil, <*lleu a mau covin ' { I consult bis friebda.npol) au IDtcbded pub j , . Iicatiop for a hundred and buy your., am j , . j live to see its success far »ix or seven cet l , tunes afterward ; but at prevent a man | , , waits and doubls, and consults his bn ! , tbersand uncles, sod bis parlienlar Iriend- ' i . till one day by finds thVt In- is sixty-fire . , t years ol age, and that he hat lust so much 1 | , Gate consulting first couvins and paiticu- : , lat friends that bo bus no mure time In , , follow their advice. Them is so little i lime for over squeamishness at preaenl . f , , that the opportunity slips away. — Sidnty - , - Smith. Borrn. Old geotlcman wbo sit down in an ' 1 editor's nanctsm aud reads exchanges In ' ' him. ' ' Mothers who force disinterested person- ' io notice their children. 1 1 Ladies who crowd you ont of yonr sea1 • .Squalling babies ia railroad cars. A stuttering man drunk. 1 A draakea man that' does not stutter. 1 A yoang gentleman fresh front hi. ■ ' A young gentleman fresh from collegi- ' 1 A man thai reads his poetry to yoa. i Creditors of every description. i A man wbo wants lo borrow mooi-y 1 from yoo. ' A pair of lovers. ' Wites that niake yon go to church | > 1 aitll the tu. ■ ' Mososqaitoes aud newsboys. • Artesian Wells. > Those who slnke tnrm-oil. ' 1 1 The man who ails down at yoor tlavk. I Tba man who reads all the aewspapeis • j but never bays one. s l — Marrying a woman for her beaaty ia i ' tire eating a bird fro tu sieging |
AGRUTI.TtRAL. To rRconnmiVK raauxM. A eorrospoadent of the (aermmaiowa . Ttttyra/di gives the Inllnwing good hint* for Ihe lt> nvfii of progres-ive former* ; > Subsoil plowing fornithet a strong evideuce of The value of deep plowing.— Should corn be planted in a sobsoileil livid, t lie corn will be darker eolor and 1 inciw-sed in weight, and a* a sequence the yield will t<e greater. Ail kinds of herbs should be picked as anon a* they are iu bloom, tba tlnfl rinsed off. tho leaves and (lower* stripped from. ■ Ibe stalk* a»8 dried In the shade, sod than put away to paper bags for use . How absurd lo attempt to calllvaU more food than yon can ntaaaga. It is ■ tote thrown away It Is betler to till twenty actes well than one hundred ia a There t.-jir.ly two thing* worth looking at tu u horse — action and soundness ; for I never saw a "critter" that bad good action that was a bad beaat.. Make formers of your hoys sod yon will havo the sutiafactlOD of seeing them booi est, independent and respectable members of society. v ') For sheep with snotty noses, make a >>ui by takings sain lane's aud wrapping a rag around it— dtp It lu tar and thou toli n around in salt and tbrasi it into tbo sheep's mouth aud libl'd it there till it il . . forced lo swallow it. , * Don't lot yoar tomato fall down on thn .wound, and the tomatoes rot, but make a ueal liattio for them to rest to. II your hug* are sick give them ears of ■ euro fii.t dipped lu tar ami then rolled in slither. In all compusts intended fol light sandy ' soil*, clay is one ul the must valuable in. gradients that cau be possibly Used. l>i»uT let the woodebuoks eat all joor beans, or ttioblo all your pouipkiua ; find their dec. and set a good steel-trap, and yoa will nab the rogues, and if fat yea cau have a line meal ul vention, Very 1 healthy withal. Kiaghird*. that I here is so mocb said ubou'.. unit eat the tlrunes or stingluss ' hoes. Hence I thiuk that instead of au . iujury lo the bee-hive, they are a bless- ' iug. assisting the workers id ridding ibeiusclves ol lualdTs that cut uud labor When grasshoppers are so pltnly as to 1 make the pastures poor, turkeys grow Onions finely chopped and mixed with led lo fowls, prevents the gapes and many other diseases that lowels aru subject ' A larger amount of fodder can be gsl '• li i>iii coiu grown for this purpose tbau la ' any other way whutever.
Tiiosnost commoit curse of all oar apple orcbatds in Pennsylvania, Maryland, llvl. | aware and New Jersey, It Ihe every. day I apple worm—/', /-omunetto, with which ' 1 | every man, women, end child old enough : to eat an apple is familiar, as of lata years i au appfo grown m any -of tbeae | region# without oaring the detestabl* thiol present personally or in the ; he hat left behind, is au cXosplion 10 i Ihe general rulti. During the last week ib luge and on to I about the truth of July the moths deposit i i h.tr ecu* to the cavity a'. Ihe blessom , end ol the young Irate; where in from : seven lo tea day. tbey batch, and the I juvenile j ira'.e.— seldom mure than one 10 each apple, bursa bis way aliaighl to the core,' pu-bnig out behind him hie nasty red exrremrat. Having reached die distinction, the little rosea! makes iiiiusell quite ui bu'niv, revelling around the core uu til laving attained fats auulfi, larva statu, which occurs at about tho ond the third week alter batching, be some, pierce* the fruit through ; litciaily from ceulrn to circumforenceand j ihuii either causing it to loll, or foiliug, ' n Hrat, fall# hiin.ell to the ground, ciunil into ihe first Secure bidiug-place, spina over himself a d. Iiculu white cocoon, within which he lies durmaut through the ' foil and wiuler aud spring, until Ibeyouug apples are to couditioo to call thvin forth >n the perfected moth, parents of aoolher generation of apple-woroil. Now as the worma lay tbvmaalvei by ib heir cocoons thai take tire like tinder, -carrely ever going down an Incb beneath 'be surface, if when the ground is dry taring Ike. months of Slpteoiber sod Onber, the surlsce about the trees are littered ever with dry straw nod match applied, ninety out of every hundred of all the bidden pesls will he licked inevitably "wiped oat" by the Barnes; not thn least tujury will be doue to the and lbs dest year there will ba Infinitely fewer applet bored through and through— made worthless by the worms. It is a far more rffectual practice lhaa • utirmpticg tu single the moths lo sum mar, and involves so Utile trouble and expense that the experiment Which in several instances we hava >.*n satisfactorily surcesaful, i* certainly worth a trial. 9 . I'aav it lUMoirr —Tha bosom ia braved ariJ swayed by a peal-up thought, like u blossom that imprisons a struggling huu.

