University of South Carolina Libraries
THEHERALD Is rUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY MOIRNING, t Newberry C. H. By Thos, F, & R, H. Genker, Editors and Proprietors.l)roineiosw be ep in ilfoA rNSMADERTSSN RATES.a-WNT Invariably in Advance.sq - nc-fo ri et , Do?~5 for eachr susqun insertpon DothNpiatono time WEDNESDA whRcG No 42 paid.DVoum IW averts s and Tpenae.O UwSeca neTems ocashl column o sub scperptine. GEORGE JOHNSTONE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, NEWBERRY, S. C. OFFICE ON LAW RANGE. July 19, 29"m. S. FURMAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW AND TRIAL JUSTICE. OFFICE ON LAW RANGE. May 3, 18-1y. GRAESER & HARMON, CHARLESTON, S. C. THE Undersignred have formed a Go partnership for the trainsaction of a COT TON FACTORAGE AND GENERAL COM MISSION BUSINESS. They tender their services to their friends and the public, and shall be pleased to receive a call from them at their office on BROWN & CO.'s WHARF. CLARENCE A. GRAESER. THOMAS F. HARMON. Sept. 6, 36-3m. WM. J LAKE, Insurance Agent, NEWBERRY, S. C. AGENT FOR THE ;Piedmont & Arlington Life Insurance Company. Assets over : : : : $2,000,000 Annual Income : - : 1.300.000 Insures against death fron all causes. W-1. J. LAKE, Newberry, S. C. iFeb. 22, S-tf. 10RMIN& SCRU[IPERT ATTORNEYS IT LAW, NEWBERRY, S. C. --:o: The undersigned. have formed a Co-partnership in the practice of the Law. and can be found at their office in the buildi e of the .-Newberry Bank"' front Am, up stairs. THOMAS S. MOORMAN, OSBORNE L. SGIICMPERT. Feb. 22, S-tf. DR. H. BAER, WIHOLESALE ANI) RETAIL DRUGGIST, NO. 131 MEETING STREET, CHARLESTON, S. C. May 3, 18-tf. R. A. PRINCLE, COTTON SELLER AND PRODUCE BROKER, Central Wharr, Charleston, S. C. REERNCES: Charleston-Hon . .L L.ownde,. Pres't Bank sak of Charleston. Robert Adger. E-.q. It. C. Presley, E. . Newberry-RQbert L.3McCaugh uin. Pres't s at. Bank, Newberry. - Consignments of Cotton respectfully solicited . Prompt attention given to sales. Aug. 30.3 .-3m. C. R. HOLMES, COTTON FACTOR AND) COMMISSION M E R CIAN T,I ACCOMMODATION WIlARtF. CHTA RL i:STO N. S. C. Aug. 23, 34--3m. Kinsman & Howell, Pactors and Commission Merch ants. Liberal Advances made or Uoz'ton and Naval Stores Charleston, S. C. Sept. 6, 36-4mos. C. 0. EBERHARDT, MERCHANT TAJIR, 31AIN STREr, COLUMBIA, S. C. Invites the attentiol of the ei:izens of New berry, and up-country renRerally, to exam ine his stoc.k of Piece Goods for Suits, whieb consists of a handsome and large assort mnent of the finest Cassi:neres, Clo:hs and Testings ever ofl'ered in the city of Columi bia. Suits made on short notice, fits guaran. teed and prices reasonable. Orders solicited. Sep. 27, 39-- m. DR E. C. JONES, SURGEON DENTIST, NEWBERRY, S. C. Rooms over Mr. Mower's store, and in front of Herald ottice. 1 take pleasure in informing my friends and the public generally, that may dental rooms are now open, and that I am pre pared to execute all work in my proIessor. in the most approved manner. I am determined to devote my entire .;e and energy to av rnrofcesio: MRS. A. SILL, Formerly of Columbia, Fashionable Dress Maker, Respectfully informs the ladies of New berry, and the surroinding country, that .he is located in the house immediately op posite the residence of 1r. M Foot, where .he will be happy to receive all orders in her line. Dresses cut and made in latest styles, and any kind of sewing, all promptly atteL,ded to. She hopes by strict attention to business to merit a share of the patronage of the le lies of Newberry. 'Oct. 4, 40-1m. W. GRAHAM. 0. N. BUTLER. GRAHAM & BUTLER, COTTON FACTORS AND CO3D1iISSION JIERCHIANTS, OFFICE No. 6 .l'INTOSlI STREET. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. Will give their strict attention to the Sto age and Sale of Cotton and other produce on ommission. Will furnish Dlanters with Groceries. Bag ting, Ties, &c., at market rates, and will make :be usual advances on Produce consigned. Oct. 4, 40-2m. . R. THOMPSON, D. D. S. Graduate of the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery.) Office over McFall & Pool's Store. My patients receive the benefit of all the atest improvements in the profession. Special attention given to correcti,n of Ir egularities in Chifdren's Teeth. The patronage of the pubhc is respectfally olicited. Terms very moderate. Sep. 27, 39-tf. C. F. JACKSON'S LARGE, BEAUTIFU AND CiEAP ;TOCK ol SPRING and SUMMER DRY GOODS., ALSO, \re now readv FOR SALE. And all CUS 1OMERS will be SURE OF BARGAINS as he Stock will be sold at VERY SMALL PROFITS. O NUMBT'G. C. F JACKSON, Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. Apr. 5, 14-tf. PAT. H. DUCKETT, UL N B LOCKSMIT11, CAN be found at Carolina Manufacturing ompany's Tin and Stove Shop, with a cou pete stock of GUNS, PISTOLS & MATERIAL n his line, and will REPAIR Guns, Pis ols, al! kivds of Locks, Unibrell bs, Para ol, Castors, &c. By doing good work at moderate prices, nd being punctual to my business, I hope o receive a liberal patronage. PAT. 11L DUCKETT. Mar. 1, Q-t f. __ ___ HE[RY FMA[ . P. PIFEE, Mi. A., : : : Principall Iiss FANNIE LEAVELL, : : Assistant. Prof. F. WERBEE, : : usical Dept. This School will resume its exercises on the 1st Septembere next. S. 1P. B' ItZEll, Esq., Sec. B'd. COLA. S. FAIR, P'res't. Aug. 30,^,5-tf. Due West Female College. THIRTEENTII year' will open Oct. 2d, td close mtiddle of next Jely. Past prosperity mnost encouragingz. Lo catiou pleasant and healthy. Faculty full and complete. Eight teachers. Course of instruction thorough. Government, that ofa well ordered famiy. Expenses for the year, (2 sessions, 40 eeks), for board, (including~ fuel and wash ng,) and tuition in all literary studies, in ludig Latin..................814.50 French, Music, Drawing, rainting, &c., st very reasonable rates. For'Catalogue address the President, J. I. BONNE R, Due West, A bbeville Co., S. C. Sep. 6, 36--2mi. PAUL 3. LALANE. B. P. LABOUSSELIEEE. PAUL B. LALANE & CO., AUC TION, G-eneral Commission AND WHOLESALE GROC.ERS, 171 EAST BAY, CIIARLESTON. S. C. C)NSIGN1ENTS SOLICITED. REE:r:3eEs.-3etars. Itart & Co.. 31eLny & Rtice. 1esrs. W'eaguer & 31onsee-. 3Mr. J. ('om'. atioal Btank. 3lay 3,1S-Cmn. NEWBERRY HOTEL T1H1IS eligible con nnodious and w.el' fur. ished HOUSE, recently kept by Mr. Jor an P. P'ool, is now under the management f Mr. 5. B3. Calcutt, who wi'l spare neither ie nor means to make it a tirst class Ho :el. Terms moderate. Free Delivery. All goods SOLD BY US will be delivered ree of~Drayage to any one in Town, or any me in 2 miles of the Court House, and at he Depot. Also to any one at Ilelena ; and we guarantee to sell gos as ceaep as any other house. LOVELACE & WUEELE. STARTLING NARRATIVE'1 ac OF REAL LIFE. hi ch BY ANNIE ROBERTS. w; 1do I was on a visit to Columbus,'.., Mississippi. I had four or five TI friends there, schoolmates of minc; Sb for in those days we Soutborners le, used to form parties, and a num- It ber of us leave our homes. and go bo together to the far North to be educated. A great mistake I have sC since thought ; fur I have had oe rasion often to regret not having he received irstructiou in my own mi State. of A t the time of which I write, I to was at The house of my most inti Inate friend, Sue Long. co Sh was lovely in di:;position, ro not remarkably beautiful: but I T1 never saw any one with so sweet a Lhce. fel 11er skin was purely white. and of ber eyes a dark gray that many so mistook for black, because of ihe eri ong dark lashes veiling them. She had always a beautiful color wi inO looked healthy yet, I don't, :now why, she never seemed wi trong to me. At school, I have seen her treni- an )le and grow pale at little inci- ou ients that scarcely affected me. rhat very nervous weakness, so sai )pposed to my strength of nerve, m1deared her to me, and I came to Le vatch over her as if she were a ounger sister. re I had been spending the winter in. ,vith her, and it had been such a fat Jappy one. IP One evening she came into my up ,om just as I ivas getting ready an or a party ; she held a note in 3er hand, and her face was so hastly that I thought she was ed I1. She seemed perfectly unnerved, T i ind without a word dropped in a an hair, near the bureau, where I vas standing. on "Sue, what is the matter ?" I on aid at last. sh She put her hands to her face, and wept aloud; but calming her- be self, she sobbed: m: "Oh, Lucy, poor Lilly is dead !" Lc I uttered an exclamation of hor-. ror. "It can't be ! It can't be! in, We only saw her this morning, . rnd she was perfectly well." st: "Yes, but a few minutes after fb ve left she was taken ill, and died fri 1bout an hour ago. Read the m< note." I took it and read a short state. Cc menit of what she had told me. is We %Nept together; forLilly was inl ur schoolmate and dear friend. eri She was the only daughter of >ne of the wealthiest men in Co lumbus; her disposition so kind Cl Lnd amiable, that she was petted w ind caressed by all. do I had never lost a friend befure, hai nor had Sue ; and we felt this be- th reavement most terribly. M I put off my party dress withI lef the saddest heart I had ever know n. wC and later in the evening we went ml around to the house of mourning. w~ She had been laid out in the se: parlor, and there we went to look sa at her. mg Two evenings before, we had wi danced on the spot where the still o orm of the dlead now lay. sti "Sweet fiower! cut off while you ot yet budded new !" s She was the m st life-like corpse wv I have ever seen. A smile rested w on her countenance and her skin th still retained a slight roseate hue. wV: We sat up with he'- several se nights. On Friday she was to be of buried ; but her father's grief was n so heart-renmding, and she still re- g. mained so life-like, that at his ci: earnest request she was kept so'me th lays longer. dh. At first we had many friends to be share our nightly vigils; but the thm last nmght all were tired out, and an~ only two others besides Sue and iq1 myself remained, Is ~We were much fatigued and is very sad ; for the next day Lilly ch was to be consigned to the tomb, 1s and we had hoped we hardly knew sel what. ev T wo hours passed slowly. There were two parlors, with folding doors betwveen them. They were w handsomely furnished ; th~e most bu luxurious velvet earpet, chairs, so- sa as, and mirrors of rare value.- be The body was in the front parlor, l) resting on a bier, in the middle of P( the room, lengthwise between one an of the mirrors and the folding- in doors. Gn each side of this mir- th ror wvere candles. We sat in the er,m mdjoining room, and several times nc iuring the night, two of us, to- be wether. went in and snuffed the am landles. to About twelve o'clock this night, p) the other two girls complainedofa headache, and laid down to get a to ittle sleep, so only Sue and I were po left. a Some hours afterward, Sue said . o me, wearily : i "I feel a perfect horror creeping he ver me. The sight of poor Lilly fif spires me with tenror." o '-Yes," I replied, "I feel wretch ~dly, too; but I attribute it to the oss of sleep, and our long and te-t W :jious watch over our friend." be As Sue passed me to go into the ter next room to snuff the candle, she th eompany her. Would that I .d But I was reclining in my air, and, in a half-dreamy state, i.ching her as she unfolded the . ors and entered the next room. m i sat I could see everythin. r ecre were six candles, I think. h c went from one to the other, a tving the two in the mirror vid. at the head of the dead t1 dy. for the last. b Sue trembled so that she could t1 ireely accomplish her task. p I saw her resolutely turn ler e ad away as ihe approached the p 1rr01; but as she stood in front u it, some fleling prompted her glance up. U I was wide awake now; and I a ald see the reflection of her ter- t] r-stricken face, and-great God! te Cor1P.Se Vas m1ovig! First one hand was raised, then I ; theln the other; then one of ti the limbs, and the body became in colivuilsed that the drapery cov- a llg it, Fell to the floor. - 0 Sue had seen it all in the glass 1) thout a word, her face stony. S As the pall fcll she tottered for- c trd and fell over the body. ti [ uttered shriek after shriek, d di soon the room was filled with - r friends and neighbors. k I. did not think of Sue, I only ti J : S; Lilly ! Lilly ! Save her ! Save d r ! She is alive." o t was a long time before the U ;toratives were effectual in arons- tj % her from her trance. IIer v her knelt by her, weeping and a -tying. Just as wo were -iving f: in despair, he suddenly uttered sI exclamation ofjoy. u -Look !" c The eyelids quivered and open- a and the sweet mouth smiled. g ire was nothing to fear now t< dI the room echoed our I'ejoicing. tl 'CIome. Sue. and see her." said tl e of the girls. going to the softa N which they had laid her when t, e was taken up so hastily. b "Sae ! Sue !" she cried, in alarm, o iding over her. ;\hat is the t itter ? Oh. come here and see! t< ok at her !" tl Alas ! our neglect of her faint- tj rfit had proved fatal. P In her weak, nervous state the o Ltlingllr frirht had been too much it - her, and I had regained one t] end but to lose another, the n st beloved I have ever knowli. tl Lilly is a matron now, living in n lumbus still ; and this incident well remembered by the older it mbitants of this Leautiful South- p .i town. CHAITY.-We .re told in the n Lssie history that an old painter n is employed to sketch the Mace nian emperor. The emperor r d received a severe wound upon b e right temple, in one of his fit ms battlns, and a large scar wVas f 't. The artist proceeded to the k rk assigned him, sketched the a mtar'ch leaning upon his elbow, tl th his forefinger cov ering the t( r. His ingenuity was uniiver Ily appliaudled and lie becamte ' re lamed than ever. So it is tl th genuine charity, which "cor'- n athI a multitude of sins.'" In-t< ~ad of exposing the fanlts of'a bers, and holding them up to k >rn and ridictule, it cover's them h th the finger of love, except tI ien truth atnd justice requmre v em to be openly rebuked. Theli si '. of' the world is to expose the ir tirs of character, and set them in more titan their r'eal ughi tl 5s. They are the subject of'h Sip) and~keen satire in the so- bU I circle. antd the sparks of fir'e h I at are struck around often kin- u: Sinto a flame. Ilowv much more I autifuil is that spirit which treats I e failure of' othuer". with for'bear- ti cc, while it does not accuse in' ity in the earniest friend ! Thlat d the secrct foundation of' all that good and tr'ue. Th~lis is the p arity which "suffeireth long mitdb kind," and "doth not behave it-a funseemly," and thin keth no e il. i - --- --- -- h That thiecreanm of'differ'ent cows. s ien mixed, does not p)roduce h ter at the same time, with the t no anmount of churning, hasj e en fatirly illustrated in the famti- i of Mark Hughes, at West Grove, ri unsylvania, recently. They' had~ d Alder'ney heifer in goodI fl"w of' d k, and an old cow. a stripper' ; ft er cream, when worked togeth-'i it was observed that they) (lid g t make butter enough f'or the a: k of the cream. The butter k also looked rich and seemed it collect a cream upon it Theya t the buttermilk in the churn an, after having the butter firsty come, and made about five ti unds. They churned again for Ui few minutes, and found from o to three pounds more butter the churn, showving that the ifer's cream bad made butter h st, anti that the cream of the tU cow needed more ehurning. s At a marriage ceremony in;0 ickfor'd, R. I., lately, the groom I Lame impatient during the ex- jP ided prayer, and interrupted clergyman with--E-lder, ain't Boys to Learn Trades. "If there is a sprightly lad in [onroe who can read and spell eli, and wants a trade that will -nder him, as a man, independent, u can find a permanent situation this office." The above little notice, from ie Monroe Telegrap4, forcibly rings to our mind the antipathy at the generality of Southern 'ople have to teaching their ildrenl useful occupations and rotessions. Whether this feeling rows out of the results of the in itution of slavery or not, we are 1able to se.y, but that it exists, Ad so inherently that it is Cx -emelv dflicult, of eradication, e have no chance to doubt. hysical laoor was wont to be as )ciated so closely with the posi on of the negro, that custom ade 't almost a degradation for white man to be Inecessarily so cupied. A recollhctionl going Ack some fi>urteen years in breveport, assists us to the con usion that during that length of me we know of but few cases in :-ed-uot more than balf a dozen -of her young men acquiring a iowledge of really any good -ade. To become a good black Uith, carpenter, brick-layer, sad er, practical engineer, or any ;hor artizan, was at once to take p the badge of inferiority-to ic middle-class Southerner re Alting if applied to their children. id even to the most impecunious milies the idea would have been. >urned as an insult. When any seflul knowledge outside of agri ilture was to be acquired, young ell were plan ted out as it were to row up lawyers and doctors-at ntion as to their capacity for ese professions never once being Iought of-and the great m-ass ho could not afford this trainino their children allowed them to ,come salesmen, clerks, deputy licialS, etc., or, what was more > be regretted, permitted them > do nothing at all, and live as cir wits best dictated. A good ade would have been scorned by ople claiming to be respectable, desiring to hold their heads up society, and the consequence is at our commnity is not and ver can be, self'sustaing until ere is a chan'e in such seti ent. We do not under-estimate the aportance of a knowledge of the rofessionls, or of any of the light ;cnpations wo have etumerated, it we do reprobate the senti Ct that throws odium upon the echanic or tradesmen. When e say that these occupations ay be well enough for others, it that they will not do for us, e utwittingly brand those who llow the same. and do more to ci) our men imbecile and our omen frivolous than possibly is ought for. When lads are ofraid iswing the hammer or drive the o:k plain, miisses must necessarily rer-ve their (dailty fingrers, for e her-o of thme yard measure will it descend frm his high estate >sdle upon beauty adorned then i og hand gained ini thef ic.The result is that wve we both sexes striving' against e common lot, and society is at riance with the spirit of the in ititions upon w hich our govern cnt was tirst founded. We all prate well enough about ze dignity of iaboir, bunt seeming -admire it only in theory. What tter fortune can a young man .vo than a fair education and a sful trade ? Men should he edu ted and trai ned according~ to cii circumstances in life, and ted to pei-form the part for hich they are best adapted. It >es not certainly followy that a an) must always remain a car nter or a blacksumith becausej e has heen raised one. G-ive him in mtoderate education and a goodI ding and ten to one he gets| xay above it if the stuff is in in. If it is not, then nature de- I gs that hie shiould remain a 2wer of wood and drawer of wat 'r. But the boy who has the >urage, under ex:sting circumi ancs, to learn a "trade that will mder him, as a man, indepenm 2nt," has already achieved a good sal, and ho has nothing to fear om a vain although injurious en. Before we canI achieve -eatness, materially or otherwise, a section, we shall have to dis m~so with certain tests of' gentil y, and learn to hold the honest -tizan in esteem commensurate ith the good ho does in society. 'ill parents think of this in flu ire as they fit their children for me battle of life ? (Shrereport South-WtVc. The man who, whether in his abits or his actions, in great ings or in small, separates him If from his friend, seems to set ery evil and envious feeling of' 2r nature in array against him. istinction is purchased at the ex nse of sympathy. An old-maid's love letter is call I a romance cf the middle-age. Tyranny. We clip from the Southern Iome the following account of bow citi zens of North Carolina are (1rg ged from their homes and carried hundreds of miles to be tried be fore a United States Judge for alleged violations of the infaonus Ku Klux laws: A SHAFFUL SwI.-On the 9th instant, ninety quiet, respec table fatrmers of Rutherftrd, Cleve land and Lincoln Counties were marched throngh our streets by the lowest and vilest of dirty United States marshals, and placed on the Raleigh train to attend the United States Court. Some of the prisoners were carrying their bed clothes strapped en their backs, because too pour to pay hotel bills; some were accompained by their wives ; some had their friends and neighbors, &c. The cntire crowd amounted to 200 persons, all torn from their homes to be dragged 300 miles to attend a court, which, but for malice, might have been held wittin a few miles of tLe homes of the prisoners. Gangs of negroes followed the prisoners to the depot, jeering, taunting and laughingat them. Here the in suits became more provoking, and cries went up from the excited mob, "Damn de Ku Klux," "Hang de ltst one of dem," "IDey gwine to ketch hell now," &c. Insults heaped upon an unhappy people by ignorant savages; men forcibly taken from the farms and tried by negro juries and on negro testiniony convicted of oflences wh;ch they never committed ; the best people of the State sentenced to the penitentiary ; universal terror reigning over the land ; a mockery ofjustice in the Irums of the law. What a foul and blackened picture ! What a com mentary on the slogan, "Let us have peace," these scenes are! ':be Richmond Enquircr, in an able editorial, compares the situa tion to that in England, when the brutal Judge Jeffrevs condemned men to death by the scores. The historian, writing of those days, remarks that Jeftreys -showed the people that the rigors of the law might equal, if not exceed, the ravings of military tyranny." Judg,e Bond seems determined to exeniplify to the people of North Carolina that the remark is fully true, and lead them to think that between military courts martial and United States Courts, there is but little choicc.-Azusta Con stetutionali. Bachelor's Kitchen. This game was probably insti tuted by a person who understood fully just what kind of people bachelors are-and of how much they stand in need of just this kind of help. The id sa of a bach elor' furinishing his kitchen him self! Oh he couldn't do it, anid a good manmy times if he could he wouldn't; so kind pe'ople3 who tun derstand the appreciative hearts of bacheiors must do this for him. and the best way of doing it is illustrated in the followinig little game-which we describe to you as we saw it pla~yed a short time ago: The company all stood in a circle, and one was chosen to put questions. Hie wvent round and asked every one what gift he or shc wvould contribute to funiish a bachelor's kitchen. One said a b)ox, another a chair, anothet a stove, another a tea-kettle, and so on. Hie then wvent round again an d asked several quest ions. Each one was to answer every question by repeating the first word named, and do so withbout laughing. If any one laughed he wvas counted out of the ring. One grave young man, who I ad named a tea-kettle as his gift, it was thought, would maintain his gravity. The fol lowing was the result : "What did you say you would give the bachelor ?" '"A tea.kattle"- W hat do you boil your p)otatoes in ?" 'A tea-kettl"-' Wuat dho you feed your pigs in ?" "A tea-kettle" "W hat do you eat out of?" "A tea kettle"---~What do you catch fish ini ?" "A tea-kettle." "What do you ride to town on ?"- A tea kettle." Of course a general roar of laughter followed here, in which the questioned party joined ar.d was counted out. QUonN BIsCCrr.-A new diet ary article has been introduced by the London bakers, ini the shape of quinine biscuits. They arej small, extremely wvell made, aId? have a pleasant and delicately bit ter flavor. Each biscuit is esti mated to contain one-fourth of a grain of quinine, and for delicate stomachs, or wvhere it is desirable to disguise medicine as much as possible, or to combine f'ood with medicine in a perfetly agreeable form, these biscuits are likely to become very popular. There would be no evil speak ers if there were no evil hearers. It is in scandal as in robbery, the re-cw., as a bad as the thief. Mother's Kiss. George Brown wanted to go somewhere and his mother was not willing. le tried to argue the matter. When that would not do he spoke roughly, and went off, slamming the door behind hiun. Instead of saving, "I should really like to go, but it you cannot give your consent, dear mother, I will try to do my best to be con tenit to stay"-instead ->f* sayillgI and feeling so, he 66hared in the way I have decribed, just as to'' many boys do. George was four teen, and with fourteen years' experience of one of the best of mothers one would have thought better of him. But he was a boy. What can you es peet of boys ? Sc say some peo Pi)e. Stop; hear more. That night Corge found thorns in his pil;ow. Ile could not fix any way to go to sle(tp onl. Ile turned and tossed. and he shook and patted it, but not a wink of sleep for him. The thorns kept prieking. They were the angry words he spoke to his miother, who deserves notling but kindness and love and obedience fironi me." he said to himself. "I can never do enough for her ; yet how have I behaved-her eldesi boy ! How she nursed me through that fever !" IIe ,vould ask her to forgive him in the morning. But suppose something should happen before moi-ing. IIe would ask her row -to-night-this moment. George crept out of his bed and went soft ly to his mother's room. "George," she said, is that you ? Are you sick ?" for mothers, you know, seem to sleep with one ear open, especially when the fathers are away, as George's father was. "Dear mother," he said, kneel ing at the bedside, "I could n<t sleep for thinking of my rude words to you. Forgive me noth Or, and may God help me never to behave so again." She clasped the penitent boy in her arms and kissed his warm cheek. George is a big mai now, but he says that kisi was the swec test nioent of his life. His strong. healthy, imperious nature became tenl)ered by a gen tleness of spirit. It softened his roughness, sweetened his temper, and helped him to a true and Christian man hood. Boys are sometimes ashamed to act out their best feelings. Oh, if they only knew what a loss it is to them not to!-Vother's Jaga An Arab Prince on the Wife Question. A writer in the Cornhill 1aga :jnic has had an interview with an Arab Prince, and gives the follow ing as his views on the woman question: English women think of them selves. al ways think of them selves. think vy* much of themselves, think very little of their husbands; so they are disobedient. self-willed.I 'ho what they like, and will not do what their husbands like.: But Arab women thiink more ofI their husbands thain themselves; they live to please their husbands; they are obedient ; they are much bet ter than English wvomen ; a man may do with them just as he< pleases. Suppose she shouldJ dis-i obey him-what does he ? HeL says to her: "By Allah! I wil leave y-ou." And if she disobey edl him three times, and I.e sas that three times. she is no longer < his wife; she must go back to her father's house. But suppose an: Englishman marry a woman, andfl she proves to have a very bad temper and disobey him always: a very hot tongue, and scold all day and night too ; lead him a devil of a life ; make himn sweati very much with trouble, make I him wish to kill himself-what can he do? Ile can do nothing be imust keep her, and must n t take any other woman to wife to comifort him. Ah! the Arab cus torn is better tha~n the English1 c'ustom ; and the Arab women are hetter for the rian than the Eag lish women. I am sure of that. William~ Cullen Bry-ant has a1 horror of fashionable vulgarismns1e and modernized words, It is saidi that he haM hung up in the offce of the New York Evening -Post, a catalogue of words that no editor ur reporter is allowed to use.-1 Among these interdicted words 1 are bogus, authoress, poetess, col lided, de but, d onate, donation, loaf-4 er, located, ovation, predicate. pro gressing, pants, rowdies. roughs, secesh, osculate (for kiss,) indorse (for approve.) lady (for wife.) ju bilant (for rejoicing,) bagging (for captured,) loaned (for lent,) p)ost"ed (for- informed,) realized (for ob tained.) Nature is 3- book of sweet and glowing purity, and on every il luminated page the excellence and A Singular bTai. Recently a lovesick swain wa )aying court to his dulcinca. She -ad smuagled him into the parlor, ind the darkness only served to ,onceal her blushes while John old the story of his iove. The nuttered words reached the par mtal ear, and coming suddenly nto the room, he demanded to ;now of Mary who it was she had xith her. "It's the cat. Sir," was the mum ding reply. "Drive it out of here," than lcred pater faniihas. "Scat !. screamed Mary, and hen, sotto coce: "John, mew a ittle." John set up a woful yowl. "That cat has got a cold," re narked the parent. John yowled louder than ever. "Confound it, bring a light, nd scare the thing out." This was too much, and John nade a leap from the window, arrying a glass and frame with "Thunder! what a cat!" said ,he parent, contemplating theruin Ifter a light was brought. "1 iever saw anything like it, its tail 's made out of broadcloth," as he -iewed the fluttering garment ianging from the window. W HAT THE MICROSCOPE REVEALS. -Lewenboeck tells us of an in ;ect seen with the microscope, of xhich twen ty-seven millionswould mly equal a mite. Insects of'various kinds may be ;een in the caviti,.s of a grain of ;and. Mold is a forest of beautiful rces, with the branches, leavTe, tnd fruit. Butterlics are fully feathered. Hairs are hollow tubes. The surface of our bodies iscov red with scales like a fish ; a sin ,le grain of sand would cover one iundrmd and fifty of these scales. nd yet a scale covers one bun Ired pores. Through these narrow penings the sweat forces itself ,ie water through a sieve. The mites make five hundred teps a second. Eeach drop of a stagnant water ontainls a worid of aUninated bo ngs, swirming with as much lib r.v as whales in the sea. Each leaf has a colony of insects Crazing on it, like Zows nii a leadow. . Xoral.-Have some car6 is to he air you breathe, the foodyou at, and the water you drink. T.Homte and Health. OLD SILOES.-YoU probably thick hat if you look very sharply at in old shoe, when you throw it tway, that you will know it again fit ever comcs back to you. But hat does not at all follow. One f these days you may button onr dress with an old pair of slip crs, comb your hatir with a boot, ~r gr'asp a cast off gaiter while ~ou eat your dinner. You don't ~ee how this can be ? Well, we'll iou. Old shoes are turned to nc ouint by manufacturers in the fol owing inanner: They are cut in .0 vcry small pieces, and kept for I.coule of days in chloride of sul )hurP. The effect of this is to nake the leather hard and brittle. ~ext, the material is withdrawn conm the action of the chloride of alphur, washed with w~ater- anud Iried. When thoroughly dried, it s ground to powder, and mixed 'th some substance like glue or unm, that causes it to adhere to ~ethier. It is then passed into a miuid and shaped into buttons, ocm s, knuife.-hanudles, &~c. So yon Ce how it mnay come to pass that ~ou will comb your hair with a )oot, and fasten your clothes with slipper. The bed of the river Tiber is to e thoroughly excavated. A n Ital an association has bee'n formed >r this pnrpose, at the Tend of hieh is Signor AlessandroCastel ai., and in co-operation with him vill be many arti<ts, antiquariix, nid other learned mseni of Europe nd A merica. The project delights he Italians, who have an almost )oundless idea of the treasures unried under the yellow mud of he river. For 3,000O years. they ;ay, every revolution has added its ribute to the hidden. mass. Theo ~tatues, diadems and armor of un ~opnlamr Emperors were flung into he Tiber. When the-enemiies of Eome were at its gates, the d" ipairing inhabitants east th.-ir reasures into the stream to baffte he invaders' cupidity. Fires, in ndations, the wrecking of re ious-freigh ted galley s, and the ~poils of ruimed temples and pab ees, have helped to accumulate .his store of wealth. All these elies, buried for ages, will be irought to light by modern ener The Princess Alice is the most ntellectual of all the royal family )f England. The most famous of Spear. Sh akspeare. .