The Newberry herald. (Newberry, S.C.) 1865-1884, December 01, 1869, Image 1
nmV 1 .91 8 al r k...
I . I
V.Cihttt tDOit)ARs A YEAR,) 'FOR TIE DISSEMINATioN 4NSEI$L iTEL1IfNa LINVAMIABLr IN ADVAOI AN
WEDNESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 1io. 4
T ML ERLfAfL 0
E,VEtRY WED'NESDAY MOiINING,
At Newberry 0. He',
BY TROS. F. & R. H. GRENEXER,
Editors and Proprietors.
TERM8, 8 PElt ANNUM, IN CURRENCY
OIl PROVISIONS.
? t'ontrequitred invariably in advance.
iartlag otlcs, Funeral Invitations, Obit
itarips, and somputuieations subsorving private
joterpSIa,arO charged as advertisementi.
J,QHT.F.RS.OF TQIL.
n Y1iANOELINKE b. JOHNSON.
0- pale with want and still despair,
- Aod faint with hastening others' gain,
h'4se finely fibrIed natures bear
The double curse'of work and pain;
rWlidse days are long with toil unpaid,
* And short to meet the orowding wlnt;
Vhose nights are short for rest delayed,
And long for stealthy fears to haunt
To whom my lady, iitringfaint
The distance-muflied cry of need,
Grants, through sine nlns-dispensing saint,
The cup of water, cold indeed,
The, hile my lord, 'ursuing gains
'Amid'the nmakiet's sordid strife,
With trageless labor fron your veins
Wrilgs out the warm, red wine of life
iat ope for you that better days
.Shall climb the yet .nreddored east?
Won fanmine in the morning slays,
Why look for joy at midday-feast?
Var shines the Good, and faintly throws
Adoubtful glean through mist anl rain;
but evil darkness presses close
SfaVceagalnst the window-pane.
Yhat hope for you that mansions free
- Await in some diviner sphere.
Whose snpphire walls can never he
Dvoured, like widows' houses here ?
'oq close these narrow walls incline, .
This"slender daylighieams too pale,
Vor Heaven's all-loving warnith to shine,
Or God's true tendernesi avail.
o brolhersl sisleral who wouldilain
Hojjeb4im.of healing help apply
Chiegbii one agony or pain.p
-nqhoieof.sunme. despairing cry
Wihose good designs onertainwait,
- fy tanglod sociil band. perplexed,
0, read tlie saardlentence straight;
Do jus, iee lirst-love merey'nexf!
:Lioppinceott's augazine.
THE LOVER'S TALE.
BY WILL RUTLEIE.
bown on Esplanado street
tandB an anclat specimen of'
hrehitecturc, a rickety, tumble
down structure, the roof of which
Is covered with green moss, and
the front has fallen in, exposing a
long, wide hall, where Psyche has
often hold sway. It is enclosed
by a high fence which, for Want
of care has become dark and dirty,
eerving to advertise the frivolous
entertainments to occur and va
fious patent medicines. The gate
stands opon, hanging on on rusty
hinge, and the building is surrotin
(led by a garden which, for beauty
wat oneo unsurpassed in the city.
'The ruins of the fountains still re.
main, and many rare flowers even
yet fill the air with a sweet per..
Strange stories are told of the
smansion and those who have boen
its inhabitants. It was built tun
dler the direction of Alphonse do
Cadderona, wvho wass its first an(l
only3 occupant. iIe was a gentle
man of' birth andl education, stand
ing high in the estimation of tile
Govei-nor, anti in his younger
days had been one of society's
brightest ornaments. With advan
ehvg years he became st6rn and
poetttdant, but wa,s regarded with
general admiration and respet.
'llis wife had died and left a daugh
telr for' hinm to cherish and lead
through life, At a proier age she
was piated in' a convent, andI, fully
ed ucate(l, she returnred to assn me
chlauge of' her father's household.
Alphonse do CJalderona had( ma
ny friends wvho revelled in his
mansion. Among these was a
young man of French descent
named0( Edgar Dupr'ena, wvho wras
weal thy and hianidsome. When
be behold the lovely form of. Isa.
beiha, lie thought lie had never
seen one ao perfect. At his comn
ing her heart palpitated quicker,
and4the rirh blood of her RC(
wvould suffuse her check. Friend
*slipr.ripene(d into -love, and all thai
*was'wautlng to make their happi
ness eomplhto wan h.or stern fa.
ghcr's consent to Alyoir union.
k. Hopefully the y'ung man ap
-proached the parent and asked of
him his daughter, Alphonso lis
toned attentively to the petition,
and, at its-conclusion, said:
'Young man, I sincerely regrot
to disappoint you, bu6I. have so
lected and promised my daughter
to Christopher Grandblo.'
Silently Edgar'received the in
formation; in all its aspirations,
all ambition died, and life itself
was a torture. He told Isabella
of the refusal, and pressing his
lips to hers, bado farewell,. and
was gone.
She endeavored to- persuade her
father to conse'nt., but her suppli
cations were in vain ; I& remained
firm, and commanded that : she
should make instalt preparations
for the celebration of her nuptials.
Turning, she confronted her pa
rent, her eves flashed, and the
blood of resentment crimsoned
her chok, but. she could not ut:
ter a syllable. At last h&r spoech
returned, and, with.a fearful vow,
sho left his presene.
. Preparations f *r the wedding
progressed, and the day had come.
Isabella sat in her -oom enga
god in melancholy thought, her
servan t entered and infornied her
that Edgar Duprosa,had killed
.h.inqlf. Galm .and possessed
sho received the announqpment.
Ordering her carriage sho changed
her rbbo, .and Ont to take a last
lingering look on the remains of
him shp loved. The carriage rolled
rapidly over the stony street and
soon stood before the door; nQt
until then .did she even sigh.' She
valkced up the. steps and entered
the patrlor gi din nup tb the coffin
she gazed on the immovable fea
oures of ber departed lovell, then
pressiIg her warm lips to his
clammy brow she turned and left
the house.
Evening had come, Edgar Di
presa's still heart lay beneath the
sod, and she whom he loved was
to be joined for life to Christopher
Gralidelo.
The mansion -was ablaze with
light, and from its richly decora
ted parlors sweet music fGoated
softly on the still breeze. Isabel
la, in her bridal garments, looked
scraphic, but despite the artificial
color on her chek, she was pale.
Rapidly the party were driven
toward the church ; it was almost
in sight when Isabella drew from
her bosom a phial and swallowed
its contents, then throw the emp
ty vesscl in the street.
Proudly up the aisle she walked,
leaning on her parent's arm. P'o.
sitions were assumed arou'nd the
altar, and the service began.
Ch ristopheri Grandolo had prom
ised to Iove and to cherish. Then
the priest tuirnedI to the bride
elect, and said:
'Wilt thou take this man to be.'
Isabella had fallen back-dead.
None but the afflicted parent
knew the cause of his daughter's
untimely death ; he prayedl fer
vently to heaven to restore his
child, but his prayers were of no
avail, lHe renounced society and
lived alone in his solitary mansion
till (loath released him. Ever'
since, at midlnight, a spectre, .said
to be the unhappy spirit of his
(laughter, revisits the scene of her
earthly joys and sorrows.
(Ncm Orleans Sunday Times.
THlE GRILE.s' BL,EssING.-TheOre
is no greater blessing for a man than
toi have acquired th'at healthy and hap
py instinct which leads himt to take de
light in his wvork for his work's sake,
not slurring it over, not think-ing htow
soon it will be done and got rid of,
not troubling himself greatly about
wvhat men May of it when it is done,
but putting his wvhole heart and mind
intb it, feeling.that- he is master of it,
feeling the thing that he has turned
out, be it a legal argument, or a book,
or a picture,a 6r anthiug else, is con
scien tiously and houoestly 'perfected Ie
the best of his power.
iBabies are described as coupons attaebedc
. or the hnne of mnaririany.
A New York Gambling Hoiue.
How Country Merchants are Ta
ken. in.
The Twenty-sixth street gam
bling house has organized a cam
paign for the winter on an origi
nal -and comprehensive system,
after the Iladen Baden school.
The house is but a few doors west.
of Broadway, and not far from
the aristocratic St. James Hotel.
It is a five-story brown stone
rront, and is occupied by it score
of the card fraternity. Women,
Dlegantly dressed flutter in and
out its doovs; During the early
Dvening the flutter of silks and
lacos'and the shimmer of jewels
grow most brilliant. Theee wo
men are what are termed by gai
blers ologant cappers. They in
veigle many wealthy victims into
this gambling den.
One-half the number of men at
this house aro young and handsomo,
and , dressed- in the richest of
Olothes. They pretend to repro
sent scions of Fifth Avenue and
other aristocratic neighborhoods.
These young mon have engaged
day board for the winter in up
town fashionable boarding houses
-one in each. The oldest -6f the
orew are men who have travelled
extensively. yivo of them. 1 *
been runners for-Ne\v York, Phil
adelphia Bioston and -Cincinnati
wholesale hoissos. They have a
more extended circle of acquaint.
ances than any other class of men
on the continent. They know
thousands of country orchants
Who visit .lqe York to purchaso
goods, and the piles of each.
Those have day board at the ho
tels, and, like their companions,
are agents of this gambling house.
A square gamo ot faro, keio,
roulette, monte, or rouge et noir
is not played at thishouso. Gai
blers not interested .in the gamo,
are not allowed thero. The asso
ciation is a combination ganibling
ring. Their runners obtain. ac
cess to all circles of society. How
they effect this it is not necessary
to explain; but they manage it to
perfection. They are at all the
grand recoptions, and their lady
companions aro from among the
families of the millionares. If the
young lady has a brother who
comnands ready money, she is a
favorite with one of these young
men, Their system for making
acquaintand4s is so perfeet that
they become the best known mon
in the city. Some of them fre
quent the Manhattan Club.
They lounge in the parlors of
their respective boarding houses
after dinner, and mingle with the
boar-der-s. They are asked out
with rich men, and ask rich gen
tlemen out with them. Then as
if by accident, as they con verse
on New York life, gambling hulls
are spoken of. Just a look into
some of the most elogant ones
some night is suggested and
agreedl upon. They go to the
Twenty-.sixth street house of
eciurso. Thle stranger is not asked
to play. He scos half a dozen
fine a1ppearing men at the tale
toying with ivory chips. Others
occupy magnificent sottoos and
chairs. Luxury snrrounds the
apartments, andl instead of a 'hell,
as the new visitor has imagined
lhe finds an ,abode of eleganc.
He is offered a seat near the ta
b)1o. He looks on and sees meti
accumulating stack after stack e
white, blue, red and black chips
and changing them in for money
He is irresistibly drawn to th<
table. If he plays, he loses at
long as lie lays his money down
Those wvhom he sees playing and
winning are membei-s of the fi-a
tornity. The money they win ii
passed in again, and so the gami
runs.
Those who operate with coun
try merchants -accompany then
when they piirchase goods, wit
f-heir favne. and are taken wit]
thein to their brilliant gambling
holls,' Not ah, hontot card is
turned. A number.o,01. the asso
ciates of this houso may be seen J
on the corners of' Twenty-sixth I
street and Broadway dring any I
aftoriioon. They ar'oftfi dealers i
and oldor' cappor.. ,Thcso wear <
diamonds and a profusion of jow- i
elry. Th.oy occupy soats near the
windows at the lojfman and St. i
James, and crowd respectable peo- I
pl off the wilks. The young
men who.intrudo sna.ko-like into i
higher society are hover soon I
there or in compatny- with gain
blors ; but at Central, Park, the I
theatres, atid first-class balls, they
may always be foun'd.
(New York Sun,
Overtaxing Chidri'en at
School.+
S.h.Ol!A
At the recent meeting o'f the Wiscon
-Bin State Medical Society a -Iaper was
iad by Dr. Waterhouse,ofPortage city,
on the subject of Debility in Children,
especially with reference:to the evils
of overtaxing children ,in our school,
the facta and suggestions--of which
were deemed so valuable that a reso
lution was adopted, requ6sting it: gen
oral publication by the priess, for which
purpose it has been revised by thle
author. . We copy a few passages
. "In oir common schools of the pre
sent.-day--overywhore, but more es
poeitl.ly in cities, and,. tle- larger vil
lages, whero the best teachers are
sought and generally obtairred-overy
inducement, every incentive ti,at can
be devisad and brought t bear to
stIInIlAt6'nnc ougbnindy le faith
fully and persistently applied. The
consequence is that many of the
brightest and best children, of from
six-to ten year* of age, are .crforming
more study, more mental labdr; than
most of the business mou, or more
than their teachers. lam aware that
inany childi'eh are sluggis in tem'
peraient, and iill bear ana scm to
require urging to get them to learn ;
yet, with niany of-this elass, it is
their rapid growth that tikes away
their energy, and even ability to study ;
t1"(d, consequently, you mist fail to
get thm to leaii mu h intil,they.
cease to grow rapidly; or, i1you suc
eced in getting study out of ihem you
induce anmimia. What else can you
expect ? You cainnot get nre from
the blood than there is in it; and
since the blood must supply*noiirfsh
meiit to the brain and the bdy and
all its organs, for their exotions,, it
follows that, whenever you lax that
fluid beyond its ineoimo, disoa is the
result."
The Instaibillty (of Ftlitical
Glory4 .
The last time I 'w the Duke of
Wellington was on lhe day of the
dissolutioni of P~arliaum it by William
IV: I was at a windt on the route
of tho procession, t d a gorgeous
show it was. The DX e was not i nit, I
but made his appear'ai e on hiorsjeback
soon after it Md psse, thireaidinig his
way with great diflieu!' through the
densely crowded str ts. Ilis pop..
ularity at that time as at its nadir,
and the noises with which lie was
saluted were not as i tering as those
which greeted him on iis return from
Waterloo. Just opp1) te nmy window
hie was brought tn a op by a coal
cart, in which the was a sooty
wreh, who hegan al <ing a hag at
him with stentorian onits and coy-t
oring him with dust. 'everal minutes
must have elapsed wh:t lie was thius
ignominiously enthri ad. What he
said I could not hear, it I could see
the'expression of his cc, and it was
certainly not the sanm it was when
he cried, 'Up, Guamrd and at them ' I
The spectace was se ainful that Ia
heartily wialged somel ly would heave t
the heaver from his rty eminence.t
The sympathmy, howe -, of the many
headed, to my amnaz 'it, was ivith
exponent of the the popular voice.
Had I bedn older, I muld have been a
less estonished.2 It i uite en regte
.that th'o pat ogior- hould lead to
sip, in the Septemg umnbcr of Lip
Immigration.
We concur heartily in a paragraph
Aublished by us a few days sinca, from
he 13altinore Statesman, depreciting
he rapid snrowding of our territory
vith foreign imiugrants forced in by
,xtraordinary agencies. MNt of these
geicies are not en'geidered by public
;pirit--not prompted by any public
xcessity. In the main they are mere
3' intended to benefit individual ad
'entures and fill the treasuries of steam
)oat and railroad companics. We
rust it will be a long time before this
-ountry feels the curse of excessive
opulation. The mation, in justice,
night to go on in the natural way to
,row and inorease. Lot pcoplo come
indor the desire to better their condi
,ion in the ordinary way. Those who
ivould thus conic would be valuable
"itizens. But what sort of peoplo do
Jho- steamboat and railroad sharks
;eizo up out of thc great sea of Euro
1pvan pauperimiii ? We are given to de
ploring the fact that we do not herd
it the South get ia large share of the
importation. But our grief is mis
placed, We should rather rejoice that
we have nothing to do with the great
bulk of theni.
Is it a great obligation, imposed by
sullpernatural authority, that this coun
try must be filled upi in a few years.
Arc we required to see during our
generation that there shall be no new
fields left for exploration and develop
ment by posterity ? We hope not.
Rather let us hope that new and fer
tile fields will be left for our posterity
for ages yet to come. Ratdic a thou
Hand-fold liat, that shoulId hi hen se
than that our land should be prema
turely ernmied with ineompatible and
incongruous masse.s of population,
filled not only with the vices and cor
rutptions of our own country, but witli
Ill the worst theories and depravities
of European origin, or the yet worse
peculiarities, im1oral and religious, of
the other parts of the globe.
Thero is a great mistake in this idea
of rushing in the currents of popul:
tion. In part, it. is a mania, and in
part. a swindle. The honest people are
enthusias(s, the dishon1est people are
rogues ; they open a Pandora's box of
uvils upon the nation, and swindle both
parties, inunigranit and employer, with
whoi they have dealinurs.
We do not oppose i healthy imini
ration of good prople who are able to
nomo. That sort of' inanigration would
proteet the iation and pronote its
prosperity, and that, is the kind all
4hould desire.
What is all the cry for laborers ? Is
hore not enough labor here to support.
thosc who are here ? and in the natu
ral way will there not 1)0 ani increase of
labor equal to the incerease of p)opuIla
ion ? G o to. If' you want bread, go
11d( make it. You will enjoy it better
than if somiebody made it for you while
you idly looked on.
Let those who live in the land do
Lho best with their means-work and
~conomizei/-an id th ings will go on very
~vell, wh'i le the gradual developmient
>f the resources of the State is pro
ressinag ini a healthy anid safe manner.
~bove all, in t he maniia for inmmigra
on01 let us no(t ei nrage thle in troduc
ion of any more of the in ferior races.
L he great nursery frmoim which all pro
essions are releiIshed, from which
ho rulers of the lanad must come-thie
lcpartment of /ri>or-eannot 1)0 safely
mtruistedl to inferior types8 of men.
"or the greatness and endurance of
lhe nation, labor muist be in the hands
of the very best race of mnkind.
( Richmond D)ispatch.
Mr. Chase consulted, aniong others,
lie President of a P'hiladelpihia bank
s to placing some motto upon01 the
illls, as olui God we trusf,"' has been
tamped upon some of the coins). AC
or mentioning several scriptural texts
hat had occured to him, the Secretary
sked the banker's opinion. "Perhaps,"
vas the reply "the miost appropriate
v'ould be, "Silver and gold have 1
Lone ; but such as I have I give thpoe.'?~
dfie project wvas not .carrietfdurther.
Truie greatness is simp)le, self-obli
rious, prone to unambitious, unselfish
The Byron Story-Finis I
Mra. Stowo may as well, we should
say, go to Florida, and thoro lin some
sequestered vale abide, The frequent
showing in detail of the inconsisten
cies of her story about Lord Bypon
aind his sister is now surpassed by the
exhibition of its "colored, amplified
inncehracy," as a whole, which is
mado by a writer in the last London
Quarterly Review. The extracts from1
this writer's able summary are conclu
sive. They deal with the merits and
the demerits not only of Mrs. Stowe's
article, but of the entire controversy
to which it gave rise, and contain soe
hitherto unpublislied letters from La
dy Byron to Mrs. Leigh-letters full
of'expressions of alTectionl and coni
denee, writte'n at the Very period when
Mrs. Stowe would have the world he
lieve that Lady Byron had already been
cognizant of an incestuous intercourse
between her husband and his sister !
Tho ovidenee introduced, aside front
those letters, is suflicient for the vindi
cation of the poet and that "Augusta"
to whom he addressed some of
the tenderest, )urest passages of his
verse ; but, even if we could go so far
u. to admit that Lndy Byron ever did,
after writing those letters, tell Mrs.
Stowe the tale which the latter claitms
to have received from her, what kind
of a woman must Lady Byron herself'
iavo been ? T)ic writer of this arti
che in the London Quarterly does not
confine himself to proving the specific
charge falso; lie adlduces additfioal
proof to refute the incidental charges
(if Byrott's unfeeling or ungenerous
conduct towards his Wife, and event
carries the war into Africa where i
Itay have naturally enough sul)pOsed
that Mrs. Stowe might be driven by
humiliation to Onigrate, for the Ir
10se of dr, Awing at contrast between
Lady Byron as she was and the Lady
Byron portrayed by Mrs. 8towv. Thus
the unseemly ind regrettable scandal
started through the world by an Ameri
ean W0it1a1t has recoiled not only upon
ler own head, but. on the head of the
Wife for the ostensible sake of whose
mCmory, assailed by a mistress, sie
engaged in what we trust will be then
last literary venture of its kind for the
Present century.
[ACw York W1orld.
Hazu:-Etn Git.s.--Major. No
ahI1 said t.iht a ihazIe eye inspires
at first a 1.latonie sent imentl 1. ,w hich
gradnally bit surely expands into
love as seculrely Ftmnded as the
Rock ofGibrat ar. A woman with
a hazle cyc never slopes from her
hasband, never chats Feandal,
never sacrifices her h usbmandc's comn
fort to her' ownm, never' fids fault,
neveir talks too mnch i'r too little,1
alway's is an enitertaining, inutel
lectual, agreeable, and lovely
creatnire." 'W o never kne w,' says
a brot her editor, 'btI one tin in ter-<
osting andI un1am iablo w'omant with
a hazice ye, and shte had a nose 1
which looked, as the Yankee says,
like theli 0I tle ond of' nothbiing,
whlittl1d dow~'n to a p)oin,t.' The I
gray eye is the sign of'sbro'wdness
andu' talent,; great t hinkers and i
grecat catinsl have it. Ini women I
it, indientes a better' head thanr
heart. Thle darLik hiazle is noble1 in1
its sighti licaniee, as wvell as in its
beauty. T1ho lutt eye is aminble,
buit may bo feeble ; thle black-<
tako care It
A Scotchnnj went to a lawyer once I
for advice, atnd dletailed te cireum
stances of the case.
"'hlav'e you told hme the facts pr'e
cisely as they occurr'ed ?" said the 1
lawyer'.
"Oh, ay,sir,'" replied he. I thought r
It best to tell you the plain truth ; ye '
can put the lies in yourself."
A story is told of a soldier in the I
army wvhoso only fault, was that of a
dIruinkoness.-I is colonel remonstrated
with him. "Tom you arc a bold follow
and t good soldier, but you get t
dirunk." "Colonel, ' replied 'Tom,
"how can you expect all the virtuesr
of the human char'acter combined for
Mrxf on dh. a ti-iih "
[From the Now York World.1
Among the Mormons.
IARIitAGE LITTLE HETTE1t THAN A
MOOKERY.
The mairiagev as iow existingli tI
lluivh of tho Latter-Day Saints are a
-ile mockery. loor instance, an eldor
it the clurch, ot one of the apostles,
le8ires to Marry, and one of his niigh
iors has a daughter, he informs the
eighbor that God has directed him
o take her for a wife, and,Palthough
Io may at the same time be engaged
o a man of her own ohoice, she is
onimpelled to submit. This is not
ftenl the ease, but thcre are six in
tances now ini my mind where olders
n the Mormon church have married
oung girls under these cireunistaices,
lie marklage ceremonies being per
ormned byli the elders themselves. In
ther'aases the mtiarriago coremonies are
>ed'ot-med by ani elder or. bishop in
iatever parislh the party may live.
Often the marriages are performed
)y means of at spiritual letter from
Brigham Young, said by him to be
pecially endowed with power from
.o(l. This, very naturally seems im
)ossible; but when ono has ocular
kvidenlee of the truth, he is compelled
4) believe. A young man-a Mormon
-was to be married last spring, but
rihen the (lily came Briglhan was
Lvay ini the lower part of the Territory,
attending to matters pertaining tohis
nlills. Notwishing to wait until his
eturnt mny frieid wrote to one of Brig
1amll 's counsellors requesting pormis
niou to marry and also to be married.
Brigham replied, through the nedium
>f tho Secretary, that it was not no
3cssary for hin (Brigham) to be pro
wint., but that, as the Prophet of Jesus
Jhrist of Latter-day SaiNts, he pro
oniOtitced thet nmin and wife. My
'riend-poor ignorant fellow that lie
,vas-so firmly believed in his religion
hat he imagined what Brigham said
6vas the word of God, and went to
house-k cepinJig.
So implicitly (10 the people of Utah
1'erritory believe in their religion and
lie doctrine of marriageand polygamy,
is preaelhed by Brigham Young and his
wlf-appointed appostles, elders and
)ishiops4, (hat in many cases men take
mives merely as ai matter of form,
mid a young girl over seventeen years
)f age who is uniarried is not con
,idered a good member of the church,
mld is looked upon with horror by her
,ompanions. Whien a man marries
me or a family where thlere are young
-r sisters, Ie et nters into an agreement
0 marry eIel one of them as they
)ecome of age, and, with the full con
ment of the parents iad all relatives
,oncerned, somietimtes takes her into
is own hmouse to instruct her in the
lnt ies of married life. T1his is of daily
>ceurrTen ce. In nearly all the poorer
amuilies of Mormons, if they have
mnly a roof over their heads, and the
vife has many sisters, the husband
almost imnmed inately endeavors to make
icoommtaodations for (tem. 1By dint 'of
)e'severtance andi frngal ity he inana g
o accumaulate a suflicioncy to be mar
ied anid sup jport the next sister arriv
ng at maturity. Thus it continues,
roam oneo to aniotherT, until all are mar.
iedl, wheni they separate to different
iouses, and with jealousy and en -
'y watchI eachl other's advancement.
Th'le only love which exists in the
haurchi of " Moroni"' inl miarried life is
he love of a mnother to her offspring,
r the love of thme first wife to her
tusband.
When in A berdeen, Dr. Johnsonx
ined with a clergyman, the soun
ecing 'hotch-potch.' T1hie lady of thb
ouse, after having served him once,
sked if lie would take some more.
he gruff and stern moralist and out
p)okea social hear replied, 'It is a
isha fit for hogs, madam.' 'Take a
ittle more, then,' was the iammediato
nd appropriate reply.
A shrewd old gentleman once sak)
o his dlaughiter. ',Bo sure, my (loar,
rou never marry a poor man; but re
nember that the poorest man in the
vorld is one that has money and go,.
hing c.'