The Exeter Advocate, 1889-1-10, Page 7A Panther Vanquished and Detoured, by
MAnight Belle,
wew Veinal *ye, INS. Warning to ,Xemale•Whietlers.
Wild
The Chicago Tribune Says * view
A letter from Big Cherry Qap, 0,, to to aseertairdeg the physical egeot of persist-
eut whistling upon the formal, isenstitetion,
the Tribune niui pietly instituted 4 iferiee
of enquiriee, and herewith presents the re-
sult.
vertear. ;Abercrombie MoSkaggi, of --.venue,
Stenbeems hme kiwi& the leet &ham of Ortresuct, Dee. 72,—CAilitor of the Tri
its emilee;
Swiftly It* Memel -fraught mentelits are ily- inefemal*3—elnwhiatTee;t4IYIllvuor 411,04"°4:1"1 'T:1)1;)4t1:11
•
log that the practioe -Melee A 41•Yeenee of p
Mir with their hrleles to StereltY's cid energy *axiom force from the oaPillorY
, Hopes, that beat high When the ;99411119g
4, atiOnt twenty miles from here. 1 had
lsso
=to, pus ripiti soma',
the Cincinnati " Enquirer" says "14101g Sweet layout pearrog I
Smith, the old North mountain hunter and Whisper your requiem, oadencee low,
trapper, who lives in a cave of the mountain Tenderly, kindly, your pity zeverdieg,
in Its deepest frietneee, canto here few dAys Breathieg Your peace over mortals, below.
eine°, and still her.. 1 /nem diligently
plietl him with questione and listened tes Surely the Old Year la Wing dyin
stories until I have eneugh to fill an ootavo
volume. One of them, the story of a fight
lietween wild hogs and A panther, will
in his own hinguage as near as poneible
44
'About ten year ago,, nears as „kin
releelleot,IWashuntin'on top of North mount.
orl a bin buck an bed pot finished. skit:t-
in' hire when I heard the equealia oV
drove of wild hogs, YOU kin het I tufa; hong
that book op IA A tree CPI** as I (mold, fur
them oriteere themenest thiege an' the
meaneeb ye ever saw, Why, I hed jeie
gob my deer safe when I lieerd them cum.
a equealin' an a-gra:den% I bed to
/mut a oefe place myself, fur tber wet eo
IIS a-ehootin' one where teeee's maybe
forty. kl/lea oho iteri to hill 'ona,
alt; they'd never !MVO krig ea 090 of 'am
won folive. thrrowed the gun ramp over
DIY shoulder an' took to a good -razed tree Ittlends, ecti whose Iffe and heart -leve we
*boot twenty yarda fitom where I hunt were leeeireer
the deer. Meanwhile, haya left us to fellow *lone,
• 4' The1n. hogs put in an aiopearanoe just as Passing hoYoud the (lark Irei,9 Into -Menlo&
I gee onto, a big limb, abont fifteen feet lekto where Parting and paha are unknown,
above the greatel, They WAS led by two big
beere WU4 twootraine ev him 14, told.
They„emele the blood an' the deer, rooted
up the leavee and groand with. their long
newels, and tore around generally until they
found the tree veltere tee deer tom hung.
JUst abunt Ode tittle I hoard gemething
jampie' gram tree to tree on the lower Side
of the rise, au' perks* aeon eAW the ieugt
fiLm body of the bi, sett panther I ever eaw
jump onto a limb uv se tree abeat eeeen
eight yerfle from the limb the deer Wne bung
941. TITAM lado't yet winded the
peinter, Ate they kept up Pleb A reoltet
eq,ueelle' an' greuthel that they hado't heerd
him. The paiuter didn't see the hoget until
he etre* the lest tree, when he wits almost;
over them. He jest laid himeeif out full
length on the limb ale watched them, all
the time elowly wevie" hie tali baok An forth
aliewleg hie teeth. know'd he had
to gie tbet meat while it wile on the tree or
nev the ileht nv hie life fur it if it got to the
ground.
44 tatter bib the peinter aeountel to make
np Ida rated, ter be got hia feet nada him
*old quatted. I tell yo, etrangert thet wee
o party lamp. net painter rota sidled
through the Air an" lauded plump on the
litab over the deer. Mau the pointer
etraek the limb the hogs quit equeitlin' and
litarbe 'sound And formed thereeelvea in a
ring with the body ire the deer be the acute°
abOve them. They begets to foam at the
MOiltil AU' snap their twine. What A panto
they made I They woo the znaddeab an aw-
feMet lookire atlittAle I ever etiW. All thiei
time the painter wits trylot to haul the deer
up to Ittna with Ma pew, but every time
he'd git the dear swung partly 'reund the
sinew with -which he win faetned to the
limb wed nieho elip back. Party aeon
the peinter ticemed to see tho trouble, fur
he grabbed the buck with cue paw, while
he reached dowo and bit the deer loose.
Therati whore. the peinter mode the biggeee
mistake of hie life, for he couldn't bold the
deer whoa the faetenin'a wuz oat and in
apite Mtn tore looms from Ids demi
an' fell right in the middle of tho drove of
hogs. They jumped ors ib tied tore lb into
pieces quielteral I kin tell ye.
44 Tee paiuter WOE to mad that be lost
hi e judgment, or be woaleltdb hey done eich
a foolish thing au he did, for he gave one
snarl an wee among them hogs in a second,
knocking two uv them over as he /ended. The United Statee snd
Then there wuz a fight The begs quit the
deer an' went fur the painter. Now he wuZ The prompt, if not very formideble, de.
down en' then up. Over went a hog ripped monstration, naade by the United Stator
wide open here, while there another got a against Heyti suggests that It may be lie
wipe with that big paw which made him Nee safer to count an the magnoualmity of great
stare. But the hoge wanes idle by no
maven. They ripped an' tore thet painter
Lore an' aft. There wee a dozen loin cuts
on his eider! AD' legs, an' his body WTIZ cov-
ered with blood, merlin' Amaral&
Trueting the future eser weal and reward
Find their brlehtnese, mesh -Wowed, de.
cliniug
" 47i4 14910, JrVierWOrcV WAS faith the
Lord.
Loves, that wars trite and glere premise of
bleeping, •
Making the Berth a fair Eden. ioYi
Now, in the glestaing, with venom distress,
bfie
Live but to baron* coolizso* *gni E1407.
nrfle SOWZOX ;
ORAan,
For 'tie ended
The 40ErOw.awept peasege la over A
49E0 ;
ud
The ?remit, We loved, with the " IlMene"
blended,
Thefottirs, WO fovea, lute alreedy began.
' ToM Ton %Ictt 011aro
May4h9VAII receive them,
ilentle, peeve -folly, iota iEtis tenet I
Low—ein eirandgment-Waiting-Reem
—leeve them ;
"Aeries to ashes" and "Duet unto kW,"
shwas of tlie And if Persitited 14 will
cause total baldness. Imay say, confidential.
1
new weerbig her berth wigi
Prof, Z. etuleuy Zilpohueeiti, the elm
yi a. eS ago wituotles, She
tient Polish inicroscopuit, Writes as fol•
leere tee-.
Manelation,1 /limn ris Wens; Deo. 11.
Molitor of the letve ,notter
known but one whhtling lady. She had a
mouth of phenomenal ftetibility, but no hair
en her bead, 824e Wel wealthy AtnerklanA
and bought; all her leek, paying the higheet
market priee.
blone, Peters Petersen,. Pamir*
Artiste on, MilwankensiYenne,
Oxite.sPo, Dee, 0,--LVtliter of the •
burie,3 Three young Indy 'patrons of roy
eetabliehment: have Wen practising. At whiat:
ling operatic AIM for gemeteentiA4 and their
heir bee been failing out at .eneli * rate that
nothing ha; Jived thern.fromentire beldneee.
lent the pitroloterat nee Of My oelebrete4
uging fis , on.
The Want of Bight Ailu•
Many earneet perseue fail in the relie
life—pet for Weet of trying, but for wen
the _ 'az t ree oavY pald ae
thto$ to travel at tho rate of rosty mime
hour• When the engine fe on the linee;
when it is off the boot, three Miles an it
ie lerY 408404 and exceeelinglY nue
fortable. Many who are most eonsol
effork And even agony, are yet moat
scion' of Whim_ ; awl how ova it be oth
wise), If God be for elf We eennot fell;
if we move egentat hie will and hi$ way, h
oan we sueoced! Ill fall Amos the meth
ery *Me huge factory it is very likely
rend nte but if, on the other hand, fir
with it, p myself to it, all the greet
f r w ripen me aed, monster on
,4nei la *her; the; any Pelts" 14 0041%
great universe—any 044 defitdbe nim to
WhiDh. everything is adjeated, and up to
which ail things Are working 7 Can And
MA what it is, and can / flt with it ?
Ail thing; work tegether. Here, the
is the fine Part of my question ettewere4
411 thingsr4he materiel world, the pie
eon, the air, the endicee life, the very *hone*
teed deet of earth ; All tithe s—the s
eemmerce, with he. ten themend intareete,
pleaeure, pan; the daily worries, the Peadeg
pleaseire—idl thing* bare one greet purpom
running throtogh thein.
AR things work together fee poet God
hu only get one geed. He keeps; that Wind
for ane Oleg eolY. All Otintine Make
Gled'a geed, Tide alone ivbat be OMAizte
good—thet we mey be conformed to the
Zany Et/leedee at the Altar. Mg, Chlgeefi of Oberweeel."
1044 A writer 'Tomblin' seri
0 the Chimes of Oberweeel
o /earan
Ear fleeting down the enn-lit
They steel ;Tenth° ear;
hnci the reaper from the (mew Sign;
The harge.neria from, the oor.
Ad EatitalatY aba Angelus
Sweeps down the river shore.
Q., the Chimee of Oherweeel,
Tbo' I hear ye AO more,
TO my heart per nattato lingers,
Al solemnly the Angelite
$ weep* mainly down the river ehore.
Por the C`rerrean home's me hones hear
.4.oa feithful every ene_
Prom the peestint by the liroli4on
To tlto Naher 942 thfl throne,
0, the Chimes Of (AvAlMel,
ROW they -steal upon the ear.
The' gorgeone be the Inns that elothe
This Sultry lend of onre,
They're strange withal! their glerionwies;
And dull with ell their glare
t of Deggan Wagt atf•Tedarft) Perialg titg - 13' Y 6144' r
ant 'two, in height and proportipeetely broad.-
, 14 *pooled aa 4 bridegroom; the bride WA4
0440 * charming young girl of tender years
oar went well mall the mm8494444 ter Tire.
ono- ethy end hii. bride to give then. tenth, town
mai in the prescribed manner. •
co',. "Say albe,f Me," eafcl TirOothy, 44 lt
Thnothy—'
but There was no memo°,
ow bliy After roe," repeated the mama, "Ix
in* Timethy—'"
to TirtlobbY Wee Still elle*, a pearled bolt
in creeping over his tztriati face.,
"Say after me; said I for the third time,
with perhaps 4 shade of aimoyance.
5..A1Wr you, iir;' rehkonded Timothy,
with the politest cinch cf his bullet head.
Tint this hodiftererice to the tribrice le so
greet that upon the ininnotien, "I'1•404 tho
ring on the third Ouger," I heve more then
;seen e ttelegroone clap it upon the a ea.
third finer of hie sewn hand with all the ''';" 49'4 437 YeAll melt hoor4 rst4
; comPhieency in the world. Once detected wouSbt'
a bridegroom endeavouring to force the ring To ads far distant Arse. 4,3
en the bridee *emir' hut theitel Vas JIM& a No, Oee4 l'ett 4414k 004 neve- lealrffe
suspicion that he hod hem mehing merry tee mu dear tufbergesa.
before owing to church that morniag TO 0. the Chime* of Oberweriel,
this Me
wing politige, eaviellife ell things— ale 1
Ag114.1,
heir•waeh known ea [expunged fie bele.
properly to the edvertiateg _depertne
Whether the two .feete hove any neceseary
eennee len I am not Able to tiey.
Col. 1.ongettis Wheeltster, thewell•keown
:theatideel ,.....:Lniineger4. informed not AS Utter.
view A tley or two ago that had beep, horn,
pelted to part with, one of 'his lerlabteet
Chorea gitio 94 oteeenne of the elteekbeg
language -She !eta need on diseovering that
her hair wee Out. Pie Old tio Walt
tumefy' sorry to Wm bar, ao oho WsZt an
eXeeptIonally gnifteittland whietier
filit41 .. tbinge that I met ever have to do with
aro _ •04.0 end—to .etelee mt.s IIktI
JOSuft Christ Au.d the greet, et Cod. le the.
provision by which I ere .to be Adjeeted and
held .retlY towerde all thiege, And .32ew
te. God, flee to be teiken co of. tatti
feel and clothed, sill prospered in business,
and Made happy, but to be made ilho jou*
Christ, then I ent on the line; -If I will,
Odra the grace .of 'the Indy Spirit to hold
.myeelf rightly ' „rds all thin e
if, eit 'e beglneieg of the day, I enrreed.et
roar. our SOU TRH staw-hcattr, of operette raelodiee, but strict disielpline And ite
in wed pleeeure, gooil told eat:inlet-
nee by Any materiel, worth, but by their
ottibatioe to the eheratiter, by. conform. -
preservation of (*reset morel seatiment pa
In glad tat:Meth:ma I
4.44 zing back trora hour" ood, ono- in tee chorus, required. her disneneuil•
The follewing letter AXplaine te— 09
op on the Dale. Thee shell Ion And gale
theUL, 00
MO 1
Caneteoe Deo 13.— after of the
thie elm—the senetified hope at tita Nam b f
Ane, answer to your et 9 en. MO
tioneee spiry via areplesteed to say that meet of na
By gruel- le liamortelreby feith Sitall eruttl br
Tau Sum afATZIARS Stetwas, eu
Vie Tratle—loug enchained its the dungeon e WO Mild give rilit)" Attre WW1 4•1.4
at A./7'0N— all havirg the same purport, but the tore- °I -I,
Thith. promises of ianfottered free:40M ing will be suffieient, we tram, to arouse P4
/set ; e young women of America to mem of °111
And .fft—ent of Night's 404 onalavelne danger that lint ahead of them if they 1)
of terror— itt diverting nerve tone and vita!
SAN 1.46cr(y dtte, dieenthralled of the pas gy from the eapillery glatule of their
• • I to the maingee Of their rams -the, Let
Vitith gerlande and aroma for whom Nee. werned In time. le may be theft
dote baptimes ey will not theak ;vs for waning them, „
To eativaer; the eltackleo that bind =OA in lb tnettere not Upheld by the cheerier
Go
onsoleusneee of duty performed we ltbafl
While hfgh, through the rand of the mar-
,
tai, Arises on in the pAth of neefulnese, heed. ra
of the scone end jeere et the erivi- '
The brightneas that herAide Eternity Tar on the one land Aral the cold. I:7
verhion of the burden lugrete on
to aeons Christ. If gent leave me
re eager for the world end mere covetous
en gain 40 AWiAl Iota If tineceln
lag pride end self importance, then li
mein dteedful Wien% If pletteure dire
d deaden by Sense of exed.'s presence, end
tek ray Comumnien with hit; then is my
were, verily an augnittio Tnin le the
y ed, the taw, the proof of our religion;
ace it make ne like Jew* Olirlett
God Imettera Ilia Own Rnvere.
Jury soul has its oppatinulto,itahhhitli'
e, its hour wheat it may ray enyeliing to
d, Wet speak nemethzta of holm of
eat apiritual liberty, so that 'wet who ere
1 of enceeh, poorly gifted in words, cep
whet we pleme, ;tut utter All the deeire
our heart, aud plead right eloquently with
d to fill both our laxide with loleesiege,
it is not In us. The ability of prayer
go by the inspiration of God. When Ile
a question Ile auppiiea the Ammer.
enowere prayer because He prep, He
were himself. It la not vio wile pry;
elemetue we talk we ese
ds, we repreteat Wee meetnres and
nee of tliinge end 004 legemed to ellow
the speech is diseolved high, air ; bet when
d
many protest.. hie 1ClO, from* for a ler
L. A. Idonntsent.
fest, Teere oast bo no fixed prices, says
m Ebner," Torouto. 'Youth's Compardort," wheel thiege
weighed against necessities. The wild
dins ix a perfect child, and whose he wit
arising he wants h with all his heart;
medietely and without raferenoe to
thing else. Ho will give anything he p
sesecerfor the merest beuble toewhicit
tekee A honey. Col. Dodge reletee some 1
__, dents illustalitive of thie trait :
leepubliore than on thet of great montiron• 44 In 1857 a Sioux Indian cattle to Port
les, in their deellega with feeble States. Search* while.' commanded at, havlog in
The aelzure of the American owed by the his posseerion a very doe and elaberateleo
Haytiatt euthoritim who are for the lee- painfed buffalo robe. *any effort* were
merit in the metendentie probably unlawful,' nude hy the ogioere to purchase, that robe;
opaline , rink', an' teethe / ne•ver did at least it has bee* Be 400 Area by the WW1' ZOODey, auger,. coffee, flour to the value of
zee. In leas than I kin tell le eleven nv thorn ingten Government, to whom the IXaytioms $20 was offered end refueed. Some tittle
hogs wuz laid out an' two or three more won trtustrollY referred ft. But leeleg thet. " after a sergeant' peered, who had in his band
hurt, but tile painter .wee pnrty near portion of the life or freedom of Amerman
kno . , , a paper containing two or three pounds of
eked out, boo. Re wee. login' ee hie elusions is involved, such Preellunelei le Iced auger out inte cable Woke, out -loaf,
back an' every time a hog gotin reach of his dealing with a petty sister republic seems, time new to froutier people and to Indiana.
elan% be wild give him 4 rise which wud " "Y the least, ,somewhets unkind. No Efe gave the Indian a few lumps %rapeseed
knock that hog out, at least for awhile. One touch hmty notion, et may be safely averred, on. In li few momenta theIndian came ran -
bog made -A lunge, at the painter's head and would have been decided on, had the of- ning at tor him, took the robe from his shout
caught by. the throat by the painter, but fending State been even a moderately istrong „tees, and °tiered it for the paper et anger,
got
thet Yr= his last aot, fur one of the beers "e• 'whet would our American neigh-
, The exchenge having been made he set
an' I
drove hie long tusks mtei the painterez belly bt'ur°1111" "id had Baed been equally down oo the ground and deliberately ate up
iterally ripped him wide open from one hastY in dernending tho release of the ovary ierap.
end to the other, an' in Imo than three Garai:Ilan Y"."171 unk'agintlY "P.thred IV "Yeats ago, wimn matches were not so
nds thet painter wee tore into pieces. the United States' cruisers in Behring's See t mayaraane. used as new, a Liven halm wto
woo
The hogs took up the pieces, bones an' all, There seem, no reason to doubt thab the ehatieg Feel, Martin Scott in Tame One
and crunched an' ground thhto till mobilize moment a semblance of order was restored day an offioer to Whom he was talking took
could be seen of the animal big enough to in Hayti reparation would have been made. from his pocket a box of what to the bodies/
make a genewae„ meet wee a battle, Bees All the 'awe of chivalry demand extreme were raere little sticks and Betrothed one on
,
There wee about) fifteen dead hoga and six forbearanne from a giant toward a Vienne &atone to light his pipe. The 'epee eager -
1 do
or eight tore and gashed from snout to tail. But chivalry and magnanimity do not seem ty inquired into Vila mystery, and looked
n't believe a single one escaped some to be epynally characteristic of great repub- on with astonisheoent while several matches
y. But the Rein' ono, whether wound- Hos, or indeed of great nations wader an
ineur
Y were lighted to gratify bine Re went to
ed or not, jist kept tearin' round till they culn a guverutuautl, . hie camp and bronght back e dozen beauta
cleaned up all thab wuz left of the deer an' .. . fully dressed wilt:hat sine, which he offer.
painter.
ed for the 'wonderful box. The exchange
" ' I bed set on thet limb an' watched the Christian Truitt and Service. was accepted, and he went oft greatly
fight until at vans finished an' never thouglit °Ivied= reader, try to do good on beg, pleased. Some time after he wag found site
hey
of ray gun an' if I hed I don't believe I wnd of these lines. Fill your own place. Help tiog by a large stone on which he Wm grave -
used it; but now that it wuz over I others. You may have to stand up for ler atriking meta after match, and did nob
knew I'd bey to kill the reefs of the hogs or • ' cease until every match. was burned.'
00 in the tree all night, 40 I commenced
on them an' killed the last one of them.
After the Bret shot the living ones surround-
ed my tree and tried to get at me, an' they
" amid all night till I keeled over the laet
oole. After I lied cleaned them out I start
ed for home, an' for the first time in a lone
while got there without any moat.'"
80, "NAL OUT TUX TAMIL I Go
a e a
•=•••••.........amm•lbro•e•W........, Zs
Tie jebovait'egood pleasure,
Indian Bugging, com
Thy chime elsotild ring greeting, end c ask
for the day Oar childhamiti hero, 0 Robinson Crewe," God
When Zeerer Wee Us Satocer .411 hoVo Unlit. would have given hell hie lolend for the few an
tees meatier°, eeede oE corn whlah he fortuuntely dimeov- -we
And Christ, Ite Completion, be Monerch, teed aed the count do Itionoorf, immured In wor
for aye,. the prison et the banditot (rid, with however ?Al
oak. na ItO to folic, tiling care et stub rude
aro we pray, it is he who prayeth 132 ma Times
In- is no mystery about; the ae smiting of prayer.
nta A man tan answer blown within given
itzo. linaire; God comanewer Memel! wItlesatany
any. Undo or bounderiee. Tho prayer that si
tos- answered iro the prayer thet is givee. In.
be !O.:ad prayer ill the seltatunvereng prayer.
nal- Yet sometimes Goa allow' tto to tem touch
folly ea Him. Even hero proiedence Is
educative, and not judioiel and chiding.
We mutt get rid of many things before we
oan receive the right thing that is to be
pronotuessal in pion* language.
170411111PanwEE, D. 11,
Her iersiesty's Christmas.
The Queen- says :—In epe home in Eng.
land Christmas will this year be celebrated
by a gathering which will draw forth the
warmeee feelings of ihousands of English
people. We allude to that one in which
the first-born daughter of our land comes
bear to the maternal roof to seek. and al-
so assured to find, that warm sympathy
which her sufferinge, her loss, and her de.
voted attention to her duties have so fully
dorsoarved. Into tioe privacy of that reunion
nst, like Ntoodemue before him peers,- or
like Aquila and Pristine to take an Ap011oo
and teach him; or like rani, withatend a
Peter to hits face; or like the little Hebrew
maid, commend the way of life and health
to memo one far above you in many ways; or
like Jesseph to • prpvide for not -very
amiable or appremative brothere.; or like
Abraham preach for communities that
despise you, with einnething of Sodom
and. Gomorrah in them ; en. with the
ileptlet to strive with fickle and double -
minded settle like Herod's—but if the rim,
eve be regard to your Divine Father, this
"love's labor" never will be lost.' He hes
an observant, all-eeeing eye. He has a
book of remembrance. He has it Hymen
into which to bring you; and in hi, high
and perfect kingdom, powers and 'capacities
trained in his service will not fail to find
apptopriate places and etuploy,rnent. fie
maid of his servant, "Trust in the Lord and
do good so shalt thou dwell in the land
of mother and daughter, when the Queen of cdtrvueor.11y thou 'halt be fed." Theis word
England and Emprees of India welcomes to not only of Caiman's, but also of
her old home the daughter who has beeu Emmanners lend."
Emprees of the mosb powerful ,,of the great
Continental States, none would seek to in-
trude; but all true vroraen will unasked
their meet heartfelt, though silent, 'Imps. -
thy. Though fleetly half a century 'dace,
many thousands of her aubjects recollect the
time when the first-born of Alio Queen was
bore t, and kLeigh Hunt, with the prevision
which chareoterizeos all true poetto, wrote in
his ode on this occasion— a letter of recommendatien written in a lan-
guage that every stranger understands. The
Some have wished thee boy; and mune beet of men have often injured themselves by
Gladly wait till boy than come, irritability and consequent mimeos', as the
Counting it a genial sign
When a lady lea& the line. ed by their plaueible manners. Of two men
What imports it girl or boy equal in ale other respects. the courteous one
England's old historic joy has twice the chaste° for fortune that the
Well might be content to see dimourteone one hae.— [New York Led.
Queens alone come after thee t
ger.
REV. JOHN BALL, D. D.
The Value of
Civility is a fortune in iteelf, fora (mirth-
OIIS man usually succeeds in lido, and that
even when persons of ability sometimes fail.
To man civility is, in fact, what beauty is
to woman—it is a general paesport faeour,
greatest ocoundrels have 'frequently enceeed
, The Priceless Been.
Yee, amoldand poor, fail—
hope
child, the
The hope ancf j'ohyada°3'27 of youth have
faded, one and all 1 "
And dreams of love? Thou makest me smile 1
Ah, longue(' 'wig ago,
Thom at whose sight my heart leaped high
were laid the earth below 1
And those who lie? Well, well, 119 more
'Tie best, mayhap, alone. e
Wnat though no spot bx God's fair world I
• ever calledmy own. `
But still unwearied dat by diet meet boo
tent to gain
Suffidient for my lonely needs, by toil of
' hand and brain 2
All, all for which my footle& heart most loud
and sorely oried. '
Gied's bsetnita wisclone (prate, 'Rill mane e for
eye and aye denied 1
Yet ant I blest—thou thinkst it strapge
„ for on my 80allty board '
There glares it draught trod only from the
wane rest of the Lord.
Tears must we yield, anch*Weata and blood,
a" most true, ere it be won
But yet at last it gushes forth, more golden
than-tho pin,
So pulsing fragrant, rieb and sweet, a stngie
drop thereof
Giveti fuller fey than heemineme, more deep
coutent than love 1 ,
•
That oanst not gums thepriceless boon Ob,
child,ahe plume uetold
That paesth understanding, God, gave Inc to
have and hold t
Pare. Gold.
A man may be a heretic in the truth ;
and if he believe things only because his
pastor eve so or the essembly so determin-
es, without; knowing other reason, though
his belief be temp, yet the very truth he
holds becomes his beresy.—ifilton.
We are born in hope; we pass our child-
hood In hope; we are governed by hope
through the whole comae of our lives,- iied
in our hat momenta elope is fiettering to
'net and mot till the beeting, of the heart
shall °ease will its benign influence leave
u.
Learn the Yahoo of a, maree words and ex-
premions, and you know hint. Each Man
has s measure of his own for everything;
this he offers' you inadvertently, in his own
words. He who huts, superlative for every.
thingviants a measure for the great or smelt.
—Leveler.
Errors, to be dangerem, muse have a
great deal of truth naiugled with them. It
is only Irons thin alliance that they can ever
obtain an extenoive circulation. From pure
extravagance and genuine, unraingled fable -
hood the world never has and never can
sustain any mischief.
There are. two hinds of artists this
world; those that wok because the epirie
is in them, and they cannot be anent if
they would, and those that speak from it
conscientious desire to make apparent to
others the beauty that has awakened their
own admiration.—.Anna K. Green.
It is not enough thab we wish well to
others. Our feeling' should clothe them-
selves with correepondirg actions. The
spring which has no outlet becomes it stag-
nant. pool; while that which pours itself off
in the naming stream is pure and living,
and ix the cause of life and ieeanty wherever
Ib flows.
IN Was Blind as a Bat.
0entleman—" Well, Jean, did you ge
the 'marquis my note 1"
Servant—" Yes, sir, I gave it to him;
but there's no use writing him letters ; he
can't oee to read them. He's blind—blind es
what." ,
Gentleman...." Blind ?"
Servant ---44 Yee,, sir,' blind. Twice he
asked me where my halt woe and I had it
on my head all theaime. Blitid as a bat 1"
—tWaep. '
••••••—••••.. •
, A " Filled 7 Oanary. ,
',A. lady in Detroit possesses it 6.ae oznary
that she has had for many years rola of
whieb she is very fond, She was showing
it to a new hired girl the other day and
commenting on its fine qualities. -
"Don't you think it a beauty?" she ended
by asking.
Yes'on," Enda the girl admiringly, "it
esaly ; I spect'f't ud happen to die ye'd
be /MAU it filled."
same arouse could not be oifered for a bride- 34
groom from 'whom / mild get no word of tilI my heart thAU roz'or forget thee,
reepeoge, not item a aniky «1 with' The VQr, Gott soil dealt, that never leave.
eintablen Was becoming Meet embarraraftige ..„Ite we dear lathe Plari.
W1104 ti9f) gaiter/ bridesnmid—hio Siater-- vox' the 0411404 boart'e et.
venally observed, "Veil, little 'arci of 'oaring. Q,_* Ch(,m-es 0herweeeli
for,' The men wee etelle deaf ; yet they hall ,T,Tel,r1P44 may 4,.§er,dellort.
not thought it neilefsarysto tell the parson, 1,4Ke the 000411k In waxen in oceana1tell.,
If the bridegroom underetood not it word ot The' Uro wIthlu the heart,
the eervice, whet did it matter t And I pine for the old Bbine•land elope;
But the marriage service from Arab to bet Men ittse1 eaur them ris,e3
lit full ot 11104114 for the unlearned man. Itt The trelifsea of gnehing grapci,
aotno owes it boonnese painfully elear Wit Tho hetraing Melee -len %dot,
the contracting parties reeogrefra but few of tae eln of AZW9441 -
the words they Are Wilco o eay, and Mere, 4vg4 dwell vdt-1344 titV heart.
t e mond with ?inch aeMereey ai
their imPetfeet kuewitelge will permit. The
words "to have end to hold" ought to. be
eimple enough, but, Sea matter of fact, they
are the eobeee of some aienuein bed
Somesof tle Seap.zgredetti o
ploiveOatmealPow eujdln
,Zr=
Ixenteralw bridrtroom who boil brae lit11 *an rometteeAuteld Dr. CharleeP
a very OhartnIng youpg bride to church, mad tvirtheoPqbxpvraceostearta10141Peoasto 4th' re 44,14 et hwt- tie
ere
perhepe regarded her aa A thing. of 'beauty to toy
aw wa,r1ve 47443ruaectruontry, ozmbouszlti4pzalyboliapit.e.04
Ibl::::214 latoombecatiai:yaafeorteavber4,vrailndaeriebago'144?, no intwa 4004.0 som t4 roxmoit that,
tho
Another, wile powithly had game cause tO clan 0 lill, ,vesome si;Nitaxwa viAlt will
.13034tivolt7114atifitrlift,realia MQ1;:.4C;s14.netalltheiliotruizekimoullitaant 04 oburn will gilt wvyttir Itmtiwo bi4woormric; bnitt
na hsve and be told." "To lave MA to
go out era 00 *way., Tou,
oberIt.b." to another frielethd etutplellng Y
XPU 00I40 bilKik 444 441..te a
xipolat°44;111:47 t'arn7tlonLg°"atrhir'ealetbs:°eLll'oe'llirt7"h:vjul't wmpariatictstue rj147401:41xprt arvgaAhteda Airra„..teT2.Q44 laipatt okr;t7V14.04.1!
g tog to be an explolion Of
The brides wore hippy with the familiar zum or navas,_bArvet, where a limo or tho
rendering "10 love ohertioo A'Ad to bay' 043,7424 liquld is lat. rot. ere Inotty lotto to
" Gocre holy ordinance' tripped up many.
" Uelli. erdere " wee eouveuienr, and per
ti yourself la the next lot. The same rule
Ave the barrel disappear in entail pieces and
cvnlypvtreqe4th Pt: lad 4)fltsgib 1443ultItT,s7m. y‘t*A111144ictebre, eils *irlottitilo.barticyk.fig rdo4ntoot awbofiChiteareeetb,arneux,
wwi &liirnuldrin8mgilmr: 4:rovotilvill'c'Yfluetln"uialgs".ploTaain' ge4131:4111ille4vatt, loetrpogeutolutocedna.rizIatliharQs7AretochiotfAIFtecaoopodipacrifurail
be *Impended ea the atmeephere. Here ix A
ebameing her etetement into "thereto I Sziva 4:cishr, 443.104itot uutleho4trehavaccaubt to
fultlt oorir4olttlroet:
proMitlei
uttecoe nnatcylotubstors,:o.,4eTcybeirrAre Wpspee,dputiptitataps,tba4nt alai, ouch II bugled my 11,44 pe shown the
teat of some characteristic blundero. I never
the ring ere, as everybody know, the tub The wordo agoompanyieg the delive To et aowlacimrz.hulilV:tittrtleinat5gasplaiotpottanrktinievon: einabletwaubcgtnone:Igtbh4latoztai.reinureee:
bemel lame of the more elaborate dietortioem 'n'otiytmea
ThholeolexPhrtiwoobitochChuricost, 1 otbwehig2k,000ett;
credited to eonntrymeta but our people nob. alo
arse thee that Sootland'e gastronomic mein-
liyi vrdifethtteognIt mishyedwntloselyrnegenivoeadieivtotronthaencalnewern
atay has behaved so ladle', . Flour has a
They never blundered eo eptly ao the far. rumotteiltiowkoinkednonerportoeonolrdcto pIteembir it*umagrean it
wittingly sald. "with all my goodly warde
I thee endow ;" they were coubenb to pro.
tamp/motor who, is:meth:ling AU hatreeS4 1113, :vraati‘uelisnet Brooklyn; 11
ihounkatesitti, ammutou
aut tho
dew a Outlier sound with it sublime indif. Jewell's ottoblisbment at rultto Perry in
ferenoe to fume, " I thee and thou." 44 I
thee do bow," " I thee allow," were Sae
remit popular of thou, versions.
Bat nethIng more clearly indicated. the
utter lack of intelligence with which seine of
the poor regard the xervices at the C4areh
than the fact that ono° upon it time I cisme
t at city, owl ir hat ruined 1 don't !wow
how many other places.
"Piour fen't alone," oaatineed De. Perry,
"in this property. Po Wriered Sugar cleaned
out it huge store in Conrileesd street only a
few Pulverieed 0000AMIt abens
tame neer Jennies up it isevettatery building
upon a youthful mnatesolerrinly and devout- in West Broadway 1)rug pridiiig
y marrying the father of it bridegroom to AVA frequently the scenes of such exp oakum,
the mother of his bride in the prettifies:a of Paint Innis, which retitle° hemptleolt end
their two proper partners. The disloovery similar pigments to it dust, ran a esimiliar
was brought about itt thie way. It wee leak. Riker* are over wittla an ace of
Cloristeitur morning, a groat time for wed- being Mewls into eternity' by the duet of
dings, since Boxing -day then remained for starch, flour staidanettr. Ploosetrtiost apt
the honeymoon. Seven or eight4couplea hail to indulge in the seme„pyroteohulo
&on
large
croup
e
sligh
clerk
high
0417:10
.
ziotioo and the 00,2geogeuele was W'ood towers and finishers are always 011
les In
tho
eto tationtrye clraotthe errmegmferriteedroithtehma oothtetounlertinfoornaaocualdwerlotoonoefuthimeinssosrte aBovoottut
u0000don with such expedition as vrhich'fille the Air of every room. in liable to
t stutter would permit. Theitid parish lgoite, and, if the proportion of air to lint is
. with Ida list of tames, called up the rights to axolotl° with mere or leas force.
oontrateing parties Ai the turn ot each Leclet housekeepers, who do not clean their
. I ouperintended the whole proceed. furniture, but alow the duel to accumulate,
iogtho jbein voogisIeneettheeell,17:72yhttonlvIr.oernenotwtneeatectieywgentweitete.guepeolodt ptenale
say, trooalliormatilo:irseiritshatekhnisbl:VitiefOrarieert,519: thawee14:13131autattst..it
honed again, one was it little surprised San.
Vo find the old *lark enquiring among the
congeepetion for a Ida Smith and it lira, or
Miss Janet, 'When I sere looked in his
direction he had brought up to the chaneel
steps * gentleman well stricken in years
and dressed in a sleeved waistcoat. The
bride was & bread,—comely woman, -whose
leerned-up 'sleevea left bare two monetrotts
orbusen arms. Oppressed by an uncom-
fortable snepioion, 1 hurried to the 'vestry,
and there found the young people, Jones
and Smith, east paying the fees.
year rather keret" said I to the bride-
groom.
"Ye., eir."
"1. your mother here ?"—to the bride.
" Yes, aka"
et Now," shid I to Jones the younger,
"look through this door and tell me if that
is your father being married there."
"Well, sir," returned Jones, atter it
leisurely inapeotion, "he's :having it read
over to him."
"Is your mother alive?"
"She's in church."
It was the work of an instant; to rush
around and stop the services. But when
the people were dragged Aounder, Jones
the elder, in reply to an indignant enquiry
as to what he meant by it,. 000lly replied,
"Wellahe" (indicating the penitent clerk
with a jerk of his grimy thumb) '"told us to
emise this way." Mhat couple had been
°barged by mention of "the dreadful day of
judgment, when the secrets of all hearts
shall be tisoloeed," to say whether they
Might not lawfully be joined together in
matrimony; and they heard ib in stlence.
Seelld tkie, wile of one and the husband of
the other. I have often wondered how far
they would have gone without remonstrattoe.
Perhaps the demand for a ring would have
perclpitab d the orisis„ There ia a legend
told In.a great Yorkshite town to the effect
that, afterseverel couples had been similes -
monad,. married at the parish Ohttrah, One
bride tonna her bridegroom walking away
with another lady pu hilt arm. The caret°,
eationotepar tit ler aid, remonstrated with
'the 'el aerator,andnesought him to take his
temper Partner. "Nay," geld he, "9,w was
marriei to this 'tin, and I loike her t' best."
„Aire ifi‘'n0 reason 'why this shotia not be
solier truth.
"Ii
Mani are under the impression that fat
hens lay the most eggs. This is an error.
They should be kept m a good condition and
no more. a If too fat they became lazy and
unprolifio.
Saved by a ElYnin.
The wonderful faith and trust of 'the 1111 -
enamel carried them through wooly perils.
The following atory of early *pioneer life is
only one of many such:
Three years after their arrival in Kingston,
a woman, Catherine Dubois, wife of Louis
Dubois, and three of their children, were
seized by prowling Indiens and carried into
captivity, and all the efforts of the distress-
ed husband and tether to trice them prov-
ed nnayailing. Ai length a driendly Indian
came and told him that; if he would tallow
Boandont Creek and up Wallkill River, to
O certain point in the tweet, he would find
the In.:limo camp where his wife andeohildren
were; but that he must go in haste, for the
savagee would boon pat the captives to tor-
ture and death. The unl3appy man started
immediately, with a ootnuany of friends,
through the wildernees, sod arrived barely
in time to atop the barbarous preparations
before the prisoners' lives were esorificed.
Dubois and his men fen upon the camp, and.
soon rented the Indians; and orhert he saw
his wife and children Safe again, he had
time to contemplate the fate she had jusb
escaped, and to learn 100 astonishing de-
tails. Mrs., Debois told him that the savag-
es had placed her on a pile of dry wood, to
barn her alive ; and just before they appli-
ed the torch, she looked up to heaven and
began to eing it hymn. The sihging seemed
to charm the Indians, and the torturer wait.
ed with the fire brand in his hand. They
listened till she finished the hymn; and
that visibly softened, they bade her "ting
another.' She complied, and again they
eaid "sing another ; and. thus ' she sang
hymn after hymn of hope and holy trust in ,
God; while the savages listened, pleased,
and apparently filled witn it kind of awe,
at the sound of it death musk they had
never heard before, 'until the rescuers got -
prised them, and the precious life was, tweed.
In gratitude, to ,Chd for this remarkable
deliverance, Thuitt Dubois and his compan-
ions, so continuee .the „tradition, determin-
ed to cowman* a se'tilemeuti on the spot
where the `Cerietieix wife and mother so.
nearly met her tleath. ' So the town of New
Peitz waft found, -d, and the Reformed
Church edifiee now stands only about a hun-
dred yards from the place where Catherine
Dubois sang her hymns of Leith on her fun-
eral pile.
Samuel Miller,, aged 98, and Anna Hogan,
aged 71, were married at jefforsonville, Ind.,
on Thursday.