Weekly Gwinnett herald. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1871-1885, December 04, 1872, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

B HERALD. WBDKBSOAV, BY vRBROUGH. Editor. WCRimON. , ....82 00 ...8i <»o ' ft,, Its " 0 are cash-payable ve subscribers, and a copy free, ing iheir papers t-office to another, ot the post-office it changed, as well vi ° hltSent - H" ‘ vv 82 50 Wm sales. P' r ’;; aqnare .. .;> 00 ■*6 F . 4 ... ... 5 00 »- creditors... ft 00 i ft oo land, per -M 4 5() »on t*'r bui 3 0() RH notices liUta of toJ. by administrators, “ or guardian*, arc required by J held on the first Tuesday in he ',! t Veen the hours of ten >n the f* »d three in the afternoon at rt-hoose in the county m which Tis tk*'‘ U sa'es’must he given in 6 gazette 40 days previous to the d-btors and creditors of an u , r aha be puWished 4b days ! e for the sale of personal propgr be gi'vn in like manner, 10 days i to sale day. c that application wdl be made thnirt of Ordinary for leave to he published for four weeks. on , on letters of administration, »hip, *<•. must be published 30 )r dismission from administration, three months; for dismission i.di mship. 40 days, for -he foreclosure of mortgages published monthly, four months ; ilisiiinsr lost papers, for the full •three months; for compelling executors or administrators, ond has been trivon by the de he full space of three months. ■’s sales must be published for notices, two weeks, ations will always be continued t to these, the lesral requirements, ■WO'ESSIONAL CARDS. WIN s. wm. b. summons. Hi \N & SIMMONS. AT LAW, ;xc"vit.i.E .f> eorgia. . a (Iwhmett and adjoining 15-1 y ■ L. HUTCI I 1 NS, BBaTTuLNEY AT i.A W, v Ga. - id !-'• uixr ifi ly 1d..;; M. PEEPLES, EY AT LAW, ■H" ■« 'll- us Gwinnett, rksun and Milton. B ■•’•■•'in- ;,r Miitlv at tended to ■ -N T . <7l, MN N , HlLiiiN'EY AT LAW, P r '>mptly attend to all business BH nl Ji« car-, and also to Land. I’-nd'in claims mar 15-6 m A G. A. MITCHELL, p.a, BB '"' ll, . v 'endcr a eontinuation of -iim,i services to tlie citizens tvi i p constantly on hand a mH:| ‘ and chemicals. jM , r .Pjiooa carefully prepared. IP*SH AFFER, M. IX, r' CIAN and surgeon, GA I I{ ' > b eITFsT - I At ‘ 'Rnkv at Law, f iJ ' :i --TA. (m.ORG IA, I - HllsilvSS entrusted to I . !#• circuit; uls. r ‘‘-“1 Gwiunett or I 11. B. Walker in I, ~ J uid Claim cases :v 1 iM-nt. juU-6m f IH “ L >NE HOUSE, !r ’* t > " ear tl»e Car Sh<xl, ! ATl anta,ga. [ , l lril, ' " Proprietor. L a/ ’ ° r lod, J in 'J> 50 Cent*. os2o A«cnts wanted. either J ’ mm " r ' v,, »o-in«r r in< ‘. v at si rL,’i' V,, " n ' ? . or °* d ’ nmlte N. or „h , lo r UR >n their spare k iC‘i'l" "I ne - »“*" at any i'ort| Ur *j Address G. ■ and, Maine. [sep4-]y Weekly Gwinnett Herald. T. M. PEEPLES, PROPRIETOR ] Yol. 'I. SMALL THINGS. A traveler through a dusty road, Strewed acorns on the le.». And one took root and sprouted up, And grew into a tree. Love sought its shade at evening time. To breathe its early vows; And age was pleasant, in heats of noon. To bask beneath its boughs; The dormouse loved its dangling twig, The birds sweet music bore; It stood a glory of its place, A blessing evermore. A little spring had lost its way Amid the gra c ß and fern, A passing stranger scooped a well, Where weary men might turn; He walled it in and hung with care A ladle at the brink— He thought not of the deed he did, Hut judged that toil m'ght drink. He passed again, and In! the well, By summers never dried, Had cooled teu thousand parching tongues And saved a life beside. A dreamer dropped a random thought, ’Twas old. yet ’twas new— A simple fancy of the brain, But strong, in being true; It shone upon a genial mind, And lo! its bglit became A lamp of li|e. a beacon ray, A monitory flame. The thought was small—its issue groat, A watch-fire on a hill; It sheds its radiance far adown, And cheers the valley still. A nameless man, amid a crowd That thronged the daily mart,, Let fall a word of hope and love, Unstudied from the heart; A whisper on the tumult thrown— A transitory breath—• It raised a brother from the dust, It saved a sou! from death \ O germ! O fount! O word of love; O thought at random east! Ye were i ut little at the first, But mighty at the last. Our Claims against Spain. Tberp are now on file in the otfire of the commissioner to take records of claims of American citizens against the Spanish Govern.ne.it claims to tlie aineuut of $50,00(1,1 00, and this mm is daily being added to. Nearly all these claims are on account ot injuries and damages of recent date, and they me principally such as grow out of arhiirator seizures and arrests in Cuba where American citizens have large interests and are numer ous. Since the beginning of the Gulin rebel i 1 53, our citizens in In.', u, -. • i *i ':*.■• island have h... i a \ i _ ot 1 1. llo* volunteers hat> the . e and Sight, of an Anieiii nu, and the volunteers do nr.-' v nnie t ev Tease in Cuba. The reaty of 1705 lias beet) Mpetilv .L-ti d In these turbulent semi bat banat,s, md all soi ls of outrages and violence have been in Aided upon the persons and properly of our very Ladlv protected country men. These abuses are but poorly represented in l e money price put upon them ; yet otn citizens might as well claim five hundred millions as fifty millions, since nothing is better known than (lie total inability of Spain to pay a single dollar The attempt is being made by the Span ish autuorities to offset these claims with counter-claims founded upon the filibustering expeditions front our shores, and the memorable doctrine of “due diligence” as defined in the Treaty of Washington. Mr. Fish’s zealous interference on all occasions in behalf of stringent neutrality is so well established, however, that these claims will not amount to anything. Meanwhile, a practicable plan has been proposed by which out injured citizens may hope to recover their clairr s. As soon as Congress meets in December a bill will be intro duced, on the recommendation of the President, authorizing our own Gov ernment to settle these claims with our own citizens, and assume their amount. This will give the United Stales a valid claim against Spain ot not less titan $50,0l) ! 1,000. Of course, so large a claim against so poor a country as Spain cannot be permitted to remain long in an unsettled condi tion, and the President will ptopose to Congress to give him the option of buying Cuba at a fixed price, (the $50,000,000 to go in part pay ment.) or else to authorize him to commente negotiations with Spain for mortgaging die revenues of Cuba, and putting our own officers in the custom houses, until the amount due has been paid out of those revenues. It is hardly possible that so proud and sensitive a nation hs Spain will listen patiently to either of these propositions, and we may conse quently look to have our diplomatic relations with that country very much tangled up before many months. — y. Y World. ——— - Ida Greeley' now owns Oliappa qua, it having been bequeathed to her by her mother. Lawrenceville, Ga , Wednesday December 4. 1872. George Gordon Meade. This distinguished so!dier, whose name will he vetm-mtiered as long as the battle of Gettysburg and the turning point it formed in the famous invasion ol Lee, died at his residence in Philadelphia of pneumonia. Gen. Meade was born at Cadiz, in Spain, in 1816, entered the United States Military Academy at West Point from tlie District of Columbia and was graduated there June 30, 1835, and appointed second lieutenant in the lhird Artillery. He resigned liis commission October 20, 1835, hut alter living six years in retirement lie reentered the service, and received the ap; ointment of second lieutenant in the Topographical Engineers, May 19,1842 lie was brevetted first lient. for gallantry at Montery in 1840, became first lieutenant in August, 1851, and was made captain, Mav 19,1856 I On the 31st of August, 18G1, he was commissioned Brigadier General of volunteers, and received the com mission ot Major in the regular army in June, 1802. He commanded a brigade in McCall’s division of l’enn sylvania reserves in the Army of the Potoiuac until September, 1862, when ; he took command of a division in the army corps under General Reynolds. Geiieiril Meade lock part in the bat tles ot Mechanicsville, June 20; of Gaine’s Mill, June 27 (a few days after which he w s wounded, but not seriously); of Antietam, September 10, in which lie was slightly wounded, and had two horses killed under him ; and of Fredericks! >urg in De ceinber, 1862, when the Union forces, under General Burnside, with so much slaughter. Two days after this he supeseded General Butterfield in the command of the Filth Army Corps; was appointed Commander in-Chief of the Army of the Poto mac, June 29Ti. 1863, and fought i the famous battle of Gettysburg. ! After this battle and the retreat of i Lee General Meade continued at the head *>f the Union forces until Gen. Grant took his position as Com mando -in-Chief in April, 1863, Gen. Meade serving under him. He was I soon entrusted with the execution of | one of the earliest of the important operations of the campaign which i resulted in the fall of Richmond— | the passage of the Rapidan, in at i tempting which he was almost ut terlv defeated. In the latter opera linns conducted by General (Bant ; n that memorable campaign General Meade played a prominent part.— Among his soldiers, although he was noted for great severity and strictne-s ! in the execution of every measure of j discipline, lie was very much beloved, ! perhaps more so than most officers of | the war — N. Y World. A Serious Subject. .Never laugh at. relgion. Never make a jest of serious things. Never mock those who are serious and earnest about their souls The time may come when you will count ’hose happy whom you langii at, a time when your laughter will he turned into heaviness. Whatever you p ease ® laugh at don’t laugh at religion. Contempt of holy things is the high road to infidelity. Om e let a man h- gin to make a jest and j->ke of any part of Christianity, and 1 am ne v er surprised to learn that he lias turned .out a downright unbeliever Have you really made up y our mind to this? Have you fairly looked into the gulf which is now before you, if you persist in despising reii gion ? Call to mind the words of David: “The fool hath said in liis heart, there is no God.” lhe fool and none but the fool ! He has said it but lie has never proved it! Re merobei if there ever was a book which lias been proved true from beginning to end, by every kind of evidence that book is the Bible. It has delicti the attack of all enemies and fault finders. “The word of the Loid is indeed tried.” It has been tried in every way, aud the more evidently lias it been shown to be the handiwork of God himself. Matthew Henry tells a story of a great statesman in Queen Elizabeth’s lime, who retired from public lile in his latter <lays and gave himself up to serious theught liis former gay companions came to visit him, and told him he was becoming melan choly, “No,” he replied, “1 am seri ous ; for all are serious around me. God is observing us ; Christ is seii ous in|;ntercediug tor us; the truths of God are serious, our spiritual ene mies are serious in their endeavors to ruiu us, and why, then, should not you and I be serious too ?” Don’t laugh at religion.— Presbyteri'in. Speak nothing but what may benefit others or yotirsclt; avoid trifling conversation. “COMING EVENTS CAST THEIR ’SHADOWS BEFORE!” Bill Arp on the Collapse. j As the poet ->ed “the agony is over.” i hem car«ds in the sleeve would hav been beat any honest hand. Besides, as Thouip. Allan would say, we played badly. Balti more Convention, and O’Conner and Alex Stephens and a limit.;<] supply of votes beat u«. Well, we still live. I’m not going to bed about it. Old | Greeley ain’t no kin to me. Grant ain t neither, and that’s what’s the matter. I talked for Greelev and writ for him, but I never did hanker after him. It made such an ever lasting fuss in my family I had like to run away. You see Mrs. Atp wasent rekonsiled. She were a strait, | and when she aint rekonsiled things aint as placid as a silver lake around my house. I don’t mean that times is hot or desperate, but to say the least of it they are pekuliar. A man | likes to hav his bed and his hoard sereen. Don’t he ? So you see as my wife was a strait it dident become me to he very crooked. And I warnt —at home. She’s a good oman and she’ll endure everything and never grunt nor groan, hut she won’t com premise worth a cent. 1 told her I had no pertikelar use for Greeley and I that, he was a darr.d old infatyated ! humbug, but that aur paper belonged i to tire great un terry tide, unsatisfide, j trnnsinorgrifide Democratic party and must keep into line. She sed sum i remarks about papers lying by the ilav and l>y the week and about self respect and independence and the like, and I grew meek like Moses in a few minutes. I lie fact is I’m a tneek man. I ve laid awake of nights a rumtnatin how meek I was. Mrs. Arp thinks the paper ought to take ‘truth” for its mot.o and work up to it. I told her it would be a dangerous experiment, but she says it lias never been tried yet If 1 wasent afeered the little Arps would perish to d*th dnrin the experiment,. I would try it. Old Shanks says we can’t be worsted for he lias tri ie lyin for 20 years and it won’t pay. He says it would he ati episode in the press, a kuriositv, something like an elephant or an eklipse or Robvson’s circus. He says sometimes a paper sukseeds by lying, like the New York Herald and the Trib ne and Forney’s paper, but it has to he well backed The Herald has got so now it can quit party and set back in a cheer and tell the truth in iis old age; like an old spekulator who has made a ' fortune by cheaiin and Ivin ami then puts his money in stocks and retires. He says that political papers lie from 90 per cent, down to 10 and that Forney is the only editor who ever went full up to a hundred and kept it there. Well, now, that Grant has got in, don’t -ee any necessity of running the Commercial at a high pressure It all the lying issu s aint (led, they are past dodorin. Now is a good time lo go to developin the county. We can raise children atnl chickens by tile l,do'J in 4 years. Some of our folk- is a teilin around how the eonntry could have been saved, and all I hat. Old Shank thinks lie knows, but he don’t. He’s a good fellow, Old Shank is. He don’t gas around, but jes tells me rivately. and asks m« to say nothin about it, which 1 don't But I heard one feller agoin it, and he sed, ‘‘Gentlemen, if the people of tiie South had have taken nay advice this kalamity wouldent j have happened. I talked to em, and j preached to etn, but you might as well have tried to stop a Gawtatnallar hurricane with a thimble full of sul phuret'ed hydrogen gas.” Well, don’t like his soit nor his gas. It don’t do any good. The thing has happened—the dog i* ded. Grant aint agoin to take away our bred, corn nor tabaker. As for a few little postjoffices and tax collektors, I didn’t care anything about ’em Them what’s got ’em needs ’em I reken. and it’s took a power of low i down hard work to get ’em We’ve got the State officers from j Governor Smith down to the bottom, J and I’m satisfied. Hurrah for old Georgy! BIU. Arp. I’. S.—l remarked to-day in a crowd ; “We are a nation of thieves,” and an oflisboldcr slipped up to me ! and whispered, “(Jail no names, Bill, call no names.” Thars something wrong about that man. B. A. A cigar factory, after the Vienna j fashion, has been started iu Baltimore. 11l Lhe manufacture a piece of straw, with a small rush running the entire length of the cigar, is placed in the . centre, and the wrapper placed around it. When teady lor use the straw is withdrawn, and the piece ot rush serves as a mouthpiece. —w»e. m* It is joy to think the best wc can of human kiud. A Lift* of Adventure. In New York, a noh'eman was re cently found earning an houest liveli hood as a ho’Sttcar uductor, while a count was diseov ied making his daily bread hv giving music lessons. : Similar instaiM.es linve occurred in ail I the large eastern cities It is not strange, therefore, that St. Louis should he honored with the presence jof a German count at the piesent time His name is ‘•Count A. Wimp fen.” We made the discovery yes terday, says the Missouri Republican, and to day we propose to entertain i our readers w ith a chapter of his his tory, which is full of interesting and j romantic incidents. In the first place Count von Wimpfen is a voting man, not more than twentv-five years of age, of tall and slender build, dark hair and datk eyes, and pale com ; plexion; and he might by some be called handsome, while by others lie i would be pronounced good looking, liis father is a 1 ierinan nobleman, ai d one of the wealthiest in that country, while liis several brothers are distin guished officers in the German armv The name of Wimpfen figured con spicuously in the late war, as almost any one will recollect. Count Wimp fen, the subject of this sketch was] himself engaged in this war, and w as | wounded in the toot at the battle ot Sedan. lie has a splendid educa tion, having obtained it at the cele brated University of Bonn. He speaks llueiitly, French, Spanish and Italian, understands Greek and Latin, and his English is passable. He is an accomplished sportsman and a talented musician, He came to this country some fourteen months ago, and the cause of his leaving bis home was a rupture with his parents. — After the close of the Franco-Prus sian war be lived a very fast life, passing most of his time at the pub lic gaming tables ot Wiesbaden and Baden Baden, where he squandered away all bis fortune, which was a large one, and ran considerably into debt. This wild and reckless course of life, to use an Americanism, caused a serious row with the old folks at home, and the Count concluded to take the advice of the of Chap paqua, and came West. Ilis father gave him SB,OOO, and letters of intro duction to men of prominence in this country, among whom were Generals Sheridan, Sigel and others. Upot his arrival in New York Count Wimpfen began spending the SB,OOO in his usual spendthrift man ner. He visited Washington for a couple of months, and then took a trip through the Southern Slates His money finally ran out, and the next we hear of him is in Mexico, where, on account of his rank and family papers, letters, etc., he oh tained a captaincy in the Mexican army under Juarez, with whom lie became an intimate friend. At the 1 Wattle of Za- atecas, in Ma ch last, he i *as taken pi is tier by the enemy, ! from whom, at Matsmoras. by extra -1 ordinary tunning, he managed to escape. ii traveled on font Ur Gal veston, lexas, sleeping on the open prairie at night, and getting his food vviien opportunity afforded, from the ranclietos. After siifferinjr inniimeta hie hardships lie ten-lied New Or leans, where he “lamed the wind” by giving a piano concert, at which ovei eight hundred persons were present. ! The noble wandeier tiren visited { Chicago, and then proceeded io the Northern Pacific Railroad, upon I which lie wtm employed* for some j weeks, hut for some unaccountable reason could not get any pay for what he did. He fell sick at Fort McLean, without a cent of money and among strangers. Captain M. John son, of the Steamer Silver-Lake, and who is a whole-souled and liU-ral hearted man, became acquainted with the Count, and becoming deeply interested in his adventurous history, lie assisted him all that he possibly could. When the Silver Lake came j down the river to Sioux City Captain Johnson took the Count with him as a first-cla-s passenger, and never charged him a cent. On the strength of his person and the friendship of i the captain he obtained a free railroad I pass to Omaha, where he arrived two weeks ago, penniless, of course.— Here, by good luck, he found employ ment as a draughtsman in the city : eng neer’s office for two weeks. Not getting more work he came to St Louis. When he wilt, he can draw j on his fattier at any time fur any reasonable amount if he wishes to I go home; but having become at tached to America, and having an j independent spirit, and possessing a love of adventure, he intends to | amuse himself a while longer by . “roughing it” in the new world. A true religious sentiment never deprived man of a single joy. i [|2 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. Garibaldi's Second Wife. Mis Brewster, win>>»» letters t'lom Ita'y to tin* Boston Advertiser me always full of interestii.gr gossip ns well ns valuable information on art, tells the following romantic story : Near Como » a p fiat iit I villa, with toresulike ground*,"'which is one ot the many villas belonging to the lather of Garibaldi's second wile, the Mareliesa. lie lias refused 750,000 francs for tlusvida dell, Or mo, Imt it is said lie will take a million if offer ed. In it and on its vast grounds was he’d the Cotno industrial and agricultural exhibition of this season, which ev nt gave me a (banco to see the building. The villa lias some i suherb halls in it, and the grounds j are very large. A gentleman who sat next me tint other day at a dinner party gave me a hit of romance about the Mareliesa .Gaiihuldi, as the sec ond wife of the famous Italiian gene ral is ca[led. I had heard that she was the wife of Garibaldi’s son. “Not at all,” said my dinner table companion, a Milanese Count, who knew all about the affair; she is the second wife of the guneial liims-If, She left Itim the day alter the wed ding, and they have never n et since ’’ j 1 looked all the quest inna I wa> I dying to ask, upon which he added j witii a laugh and a shrug its if he j knew more than was proper to tell at that moment. “No reasons were ever given on either side.” The subject was dropped, hut it recalled to :ue a strange si'ory I had heard s one years ago of a second marriage of Caribaidi’s, and which served well to join i,n to the unfin ished or bii k ti link that, my dinner acquaintance had given me. I’ll tell ii to you as it was told to me, and you can join the two links or not, just as you idease It was at least a dozen years ago The lady was young, titled, rich, handsome and fast. No name was given'me. She conceived a desperate, passionate ad mit ation for t! • famous “liberator of Italy” She was young enough to he Garibaldi's daughter. The cele bra ted “Anta,” his liist wife, who accompanied him through many of hi* adventures, and vvlio-e sad death has been so often and so touchingly described, is supposed to be the only love of Gaiiba di s life. Neverthe less, the merriage took place between the General and the young horn hardy mareliesa. But, sad to relate, after the ceremony,Garibaldi received information, with undoubted proof, of the immorality of his young btide Why bad lie not been informed sooner? I cannot tell vmi am thing but the simple story as 1 heard it. I never ask questions on such occa sions 1 think it ko *ps the cream of a romance from rising properly.— When tile new'y married pair were left alone, Garibaldi told his voting wife what tic had heard, hut added : “il you will say you are tin honest woman I will take you: word,” “Hut if I cannot; what then?” asked the mareliesa. “We imi't part for ever tit is very moment,” answered Garibaldi. The young woman turned, left lier liuslian.i of an hour, and never saw him again. Jt win said that the stories against her character were false, and the young girl, though gay, was innocent, lint her pride was so wounded at the charge being made by hei husband at that moment, and in such a peremptory manner, that she scorned to justify herself ; his want of faith in her dispelled her illusions and broke the charm of her love. I saw the Marcheta Garibaldi at one of the legettas on Lake Como early in September. She is about thirty five years old, 1 should think— a handsome hut coarse looking wo man, has fierce, defiant blai k eyes, dark skin, heavy black hair, parted on one side: Thrust through the thick braid* at the bac k was an Oiyd ized silver sabre, placed in the same way that the Trassevere tortoise-shell daggers are worn in the hair. She was dressed very simple in a sete eruda or t,aw silk costume and round hat, with cock-wf the-woo3s’ feather. Josh Billings says that humility is a good thing tew hav, provided a man iz sure he haz got the right kind, Thare never iz a kat*s life when she iz so humble az just before she makes up her mind tew pounce unto a chicken, or just after she haz caught and et it. Memory preside* over the past, action over the present. 'ihe first is a rich temple hung with gloiinu* trophies, and liued with tombs; the other has no slirine but duty, and it walks the earth like a spirit A Western settler—Tbo sun at evening. BATES OF ADVERTISING.* stack ft mo's. C mo's. 12 mo’s. .sq t ire .rj -. at j> ii nil f<i no 2 Bq’- I i; on It) oo |., ( pi .{ Sil l s j r- on | t | M , o ( t ' i col. i I - chi ”oooi ”,000 col. , "t no *'m oo j t;o oo one ens. -to or 7•*• | ion on The money lor advertisements is «|iia on the first iiwerTion. A square is the spm-e of one inch in depth of the column. irrcs|Mt live of the number of-fines. Marriages ami deaths, not exeerdiig six linen published free. For a man ad vertising his wife, nnd all otlat personal matt, r. double rates w ill he charged. TTo. 38. Family. Secrets. 1 he meanest of all meannesses is that of going into a family, possesitrg one’s self ol it« secrets, and then tell ing th *lll t i ii| hers, 1 here is no family but has some-* thing belonging .to the present, or past, (hat the\ cannot eon. eal within j their own homes, how'ever much tliev itinv desire t<*do so. They are open to lbe gaze of all who cro«3 th.* threshhold, \et they I*, long especially to the afflicted family. They do not concern the nutter w ot id, and the world has no business with them. et there ate tlnve who enter these homes that are Afflicted with domestic miseries, and although noth ing is snni t“ them upon the subject, lliov see for themselves and bear off tlx* memory to exhibit, to others. Yisitma in sti.-li families should bo blind to all that does not concern lliem ii di\ iiiii illy, and deaf and dumb. i hi* j..y- ..( a household mav be hvi can rtbiond, but its afflictions, its miseiie-, hs -bame and it- sorrows, ,'hnuld lime a sanctity that must not be .list hi I rd. < >ne w bo elite: s a family and b arns i - seeiels, on! \ to di-pn-e of lliem to of bei -.is a giv.ii, r j j| ial , j l( , w | lo c..nie- in the night and steals the si Imu and the jew els. I'or silv.-r and jewels may be re— I’l iced, but tbe reputation of a bouse bold- ii v .* i ! It ye .pie wish to drag forth the secrets, and sins of anybody’* life; why tail expose their own, and nut niedd e wit h an..thd ! Whs speak ol the nfluir- of att ofbft, in Ilia, person's al.-. u. e, dif ferently. ot more fully, than we would speak ..I them it they were present ? It Would In* a good lull* to adopt ill our relations with others, to snv nothing “beh ml a per-on's back that we should be-itate to sa\ to their face.” It is p. iha| is envy that prompts j one to Speak evil of another, esp.* cinlly it any good fortune or good repute* is granted them. We should rather t v to make ourselves pel feel, before We look for pet fee|ton in others. ' o*i allow our lips to speak of a fault oi imperh(ition in the life or character of another, until the pos sibility "f such fault or it; petfe.tlion existing in our own life is forever past. 1 here is a great deal of meaning in that passage of S.-upline refetring • to the mote- and the beam. How often does tin* beam in our own eye magi.it’s flic mote in a brother's eye? I here i« mute r. al snti-f .-|ion in coveting the faults of ollii is with llm generous mantle of eharitv than ip exporing them to tbe world, if anoißer -ins, he must, also gufler! Etjl that satisfy u when’ we would judge him. Should we do better than other* do, were we subject to like tempta tion* ! ! Th ere i» no i uitlily suffering bill is result of Mime law,of nature broken. Hut the one that .made the law is «l-o Ihe judge, and awards tin* pun ishment. * Then speak not of the faults of others, exi ept it be to ihemstdve* you speak, and even then in all kindness Mon, in general, sue great cli l dron. How was Jonah pniiislied'f— Whaled. Forgers to be cncouiagcd— Blacksmiths. Fim maiiiicMs arc the mantle of fail minds Idleness is many gathered mis eries in one min e. No muu is happy who does not think himself so. In all i|uu itvis, leave open the door ol i( Coi.t iliatioin Fortune dots not change men ; it only unmasks them. The rich ei the man makes Mis food, the poorer he makes liis ap petite. The doctor's work fill* six feet of ground, but the dentist's fibs an acher. There is nothing honorable that is not innocent, and uothing mean but what attache* guilt. It may sound like a paradox, but the breaking of both wings of an nrrny is a pretty sure way to make it fly. An honest reputation is within the r>ach of all men; they obtain it by sociul virtu***, and by doing their duty. One of the most important rule* of the bcioi.ee of manners is an I almost absolute silence In regard to yourself.