University of South Carolina Libraries
^? *9 * Dcooleir to Progress, tl)e fciigljfs of tlje Soul!), nntr tljc Diffusion of XXsrful finotolebge among all (Classes of iUorking iXXrn. VOLUME IV, GREENVILLE. SOUTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 18.1858. NUMRF.H .. ? ? .. V-v ; v**.. _. .. " ..... .. ^ T ' ?.?! t ?- - <?Ije fnutjurn d&nhrpriflf IS PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY W. P. PRICE fc^^JPJUNKIN, WILLIAM P. PRICE, BDXTO*. "riiwiT One Dollar a Year, In Advance, $1.60. IF DEL A YED. losm. n..... a...n.w M.i n t- sr it 1 SIM ? *! > 1 **? IWOH, I*, u A. M. Pun**, Fairview P. O., Greenville TW*t William O Bail*t, Pleasant flinrc, Greenvilli-. Cast. R. Q. Amdum iv, Rnoree, Spartanburg. O. W. Kiao. Traveling Agent. " 1 1 11 g ? ? * 8e*tter the Germs of the Beautiful. Scatter the germ* of the beautiful I By the wayside lot them fall, That the rose may spring by the cottage gate, jAnd the vine on the garden wall; Oover tho rough and the rude of earth With a veil of leaves and flowers, And mark with tue opening bud and cup The march of summer hours. li'Mr'fffrn"* >r . :S Scatter the germs of the beautiful s In the holy shrine of home: Let the pure, and the fair, and the graceful I there In ihq loveliest lustre come. Leave not a trace of deformity I In the temple of the heart, But gather about its'earth the gems Of Nature and of art. I Scatter the germ3 of the beautiful In tbe temples of our God? The G<h1 who starred the uplifted sky, And flowered the trampled sod ; When lie built a temple for himself, And a home for hi* priestly race, Ho reared each arch in symmetry, And curved each line in irrace. Scatter the germs of the beautiful In the depths of the human soul: Tbov shell bud nnd blossom,and bear the fruit, While the endless ages roll; riant with the flowers of chaiity, The portMU of the tomb. And the fair nnd the pure about thy path Id Paradise shall bloom. Jttisttllantons Utaiihtg. [rOtt TtlK OtTTRKRM KXVESrRISE.] Lady's Dress for Maroh, 1799. was, during the late sleet storm, Mr. Ed itor, confined to my room with a not onfrequent visitor of mine?rheumatism?and as All agreeable sensations and pfeeummt as-' sociations usually and natumlly inspiie tfk thoughts of the ladies, I bethought mo of some book or periodical which discoursed of them, having no live biped at hnud to help ?. tmf _ ii f _ i s me inereHs. ?ven, wr, i suuaeniy recollected having borrowed, some tight or ten years since, from my friend, 8. G, the very book 1 wanted. I bad kept ibi* book so long, and had so often promised to return it to the owner, Mr. McC., that I am asbatned to say that I fiually attempted the dodge of the kettle-borrower with my fiivnd; but it was no use, he is not a man to be humbugged by M mica o' men." So 1 bad n^yself wheeled into my library?consisting mainly of old Dilwortlis, mutilated JohnWins and Walkers, and a large and valuable collection of public docuim nts, Tost OfPatent Office Reports, and tbe like? and went seriously to work for tbe lost book; and, to make tbe matter short, found it, precisely where all such rubbish does, or should, find its way, at tbe very bottom of tire library, and in the most remote corner, never visited by tbe housemaid or myself and, therefore, the undisputed doinleil of mice, and snch li'.e small deer. Tbe Book lis trie e*act counterpart 01 our uoaeyi, UtWMMi i>s4 mqmk *' *l>? present day, the resemblance being perfect n'nt only in the silly love storiee, doggerel, and desperate villains, but it bM actually colored fathion plate*, and speak# of itself in the same modeet term# that do our QodeyY Ilefe b the tide page: 'The Lady'a Monthly Museum, or Polite Repository of Atoueemeniand Instruction: Being ?0 assemblage of whatever can tend plewe the Fancy, interest the Mind, or /nxnlt tbe^hatxcier^of Abe^Britiah Fair. % And herMSjr, is the description of the /iro#w? accompanying the platea of " Full Drew, for Marob, I?00," and " Morning &Spt for Mereh, "Mokmno Dkess.?First Figure.?Plain j miwlin gown, laced over the breast, and i Inee frill* round the neck; shawl, ciimson I silk. llead dress, rndinled wiih white and ] crimson satin, lilac muslin twisted round i the head and falling with a tassel on the I right shoulder. Cihnson sntin shoes. i Second Figure.?Straw hat, turned up nil round, with white veil, neckcloth.gown but ( toned with tnnmeluke buttons front top to t bottom. Shoes and shawl of scarlet ker t sey more. I * Full Dress.?Gnrbonette habit of white 1 | muslin, with long sleeves, square cape, sash, ( j and turban with knots in front, a part shad < iug the face on one side; the whole trim- I uivd with lace. White leather shoes, and ? white fan with silver spanglee. 1 M Sitting Figure.? Blue satin gown, with i white satin body and sleeves; a Targe ante I tllVSt. in a broad crold snniirM s^tlinrr on ili?. i breast. Muslin neck-handkerchief placed in festoons. IIend dress, white satin and black velvet striped with gold, and wliite satin handkerchief with gold fringe tied under the chin with a gold cord ; gold chain necklace with square plates. Shoes, white satin."?Review. Well, all that reada very well; but the discription absolutely oonveys no adequate idea of the ridiculous reality. The headgear is a tight-lit ting skull cap, from beneath which fall little tags ef curls to the insertion of the nose. The aleevea are no sleeves at all, or, if they be, an eel in his kin, in comparison, has a most redundant supply of the raw material. The waist of the gown is just as high as it can go for the arms ; indeed, it is just under them. The "plain muslin gown, laced over the breast,*' dec., appears to be uothiug but a sort of au Egyptian mummy bandage from lbs arm-, or waist, I suppose we must call it, to the feet, with a train of heaven knows how much surplus cloth, tacked on it to trail on the earth. Upon the whole, Mr. Editor, your correspondent has come to the conclusion that not only our grandmothers, but mothers, daughters, and the M rest of wo mankind " of the present day, have been and are *' wise (!) in their day and generation," but bo cannot help thinkitig the afore said grandmothers would have looked better with more of the aforesaid " train " in | the body and sleeves of their gowns, and | the bodies of to-day much improved by !substituting some of the exuberance of! hooping below for Unit tight hooping Hbove. i T. Tribute to the Memory of Senator Busk. The Hon. Jame* Jackson, of (Jeorgia. in the representative branch of Congie a,o the 10th ultimo, thus feelingly referred to the death of Senator Hu-k. of Texaa : " If it be true that the dead can expert ence the emotion of gratification at what transpires in honor of their memory here, the immortal spirit of the late Senator front Texaa must be gratified to-day. Texaa weeps here over liia remains, because he was eminent among those heroes who achieved her sovereignty by the sword, und Irecauw, afier her incorporation into our Union, he ably and filly represented the sovereignty in the council chamber of sovereigns?the Sen ate f the United States. u South Caroliua bows sorrowing by tbe ..J * i - t t. suit? im nvr vvungtsr nnicr, in*chu?? ue wa* born beneath ber hot ruii ; and thai nun fired bis heart with much of (hat impetuous chivalry which characterizes all ber gallant children. 44 Georgia also approaches his bier as a mourner, because General Rusk lived, for a brief period, among those beautiful mountains that skirt ber northern frontier, and imbibed, perhaps, from their wholesome at m<?phere, something of that hardihood of character which characterized the soldier, and that tobusl judgment and sound prao tical sense which marked the Senator. " The entire South follows this procession to the grave with melancholy, yet proud step, t?ecau*e he was her son?true and loy al to that institution which was fattened up on her unwilling infancy, which has grown with her growth, which was now become in lerwoven with every fibre of her being, and j by which, '-cdu IVcvkissefl, she this day clothe* the nakedness of mankind. " The North, too, and the mighty and atill growing North-west, all pay a willing trib ute of unfeigned sorrow to the memory of thia ureal man ; because, while hia heart was thus true to the instincts of his birth and the fealty of his hot hood, it was big enough to embraoe in its patriotio lore all the States of the Union, and hia eye keen enough to see that the true interests of each ia really the interest of all. Well may we all mourn. A hero has iefl the battle-field forever; a Roman bae departed from the . Senate Chamber, never more to return. M I repeat, if it be possible that the dead can eaperienoe joy over what transpires here, th# the departed Senator must he gratified to-day/" Hut, air,' this cannot be ; for there is no work, nor device, nor know! ] edge, tor wisdom, in the grave whither thoft joest,' and those and ceremonies are only iseful to tbs living. Their office is two* 'old; flint, that of the good Samaritan, to fcj pour oil into the bleediug hearts of the sur* di riving relatives and friends; and secondly, hi ;o draw from the character of the deceased ?t tome moral by which we may all profit. di " I j that district of Georgia which I have .he honor to tepresent here, and among hose mountai is of which I have spoken, d< lh?*re live to day an aged couple : almost | Fourscore winters have furrowed their facee tl with wrinkles, and covered their heads wiih Al Frost. They are. sir. the father and mother ?| >f tho deceased wife of the late Senator {,, From Texas; And however heavily the blow 0| af his death inav have fallen in other places, ? no where has it descended with more crush* |a ing severity than upon the already aching w trosoms of my venerable constituents. In- rl ieed. sir, the young heart, like the flesh of w r rnpiuiv irom wounds intlicl- (| sd upon il; but the affections of old people M become, like their physical organization. rig- j id and fixed ; end time, the great restorer, w ratcly and slowly, if at all, heals up wounds R| inflicted upon them. The young sapling 01 trill bend instantly to the sweep of the tcm 0 [>cst as it parses, but soon as it is gone, srects itself again. The old tree, with trunk l* tlinost decayed, and sap flowing but feebly tr beneath its all-but-withered bark, relies done upon the vine which bas grown around jt it for years as its only prop against the t) utorm. tr * The relations borne by the late Sena- j lor front Texas to iny old constituents, was not unlike that of tbis vine to that tree.? Vhe last prop that held them up has l*en jj tundered ; and soon they, too, must totter |v *nd fall. And, sir. it is simply because I C) bought it might be grateful to their feel- c< tigs, that their immediate representative iere should bear some o^en part in this sol mm drama, that I yielded to the suggestion "l jf my most distinguished colleague. (Mr. 1 Stephens,) and agreed to speak for Georgia " lo the resolutions upon Iter table. ^ "8i?, I well remember the conversation 1 ' bad with my old friend but a few weeks be- 1 lore I left home; tho subject of which was e the dead of his own family, and among ^ litem, the death of his daughter?I believe * ' the la?i surviving child?the wife of the n distinguished son in law. of whom he was justly *o proud. And I see before me now, j" Lite convulsed face and trembling lips of tlie 1 jld man as he expressed lo me the convic- *. lion that the death of his daughter, the wife T i>f the Senator, might possibly have precipi 1 lated his ov n. * Sir, I will not speak of tho manner of 1 hi* death. Let the charity which Impoth ?! all thiugs cast the mantle of love over his dead body, and, pointing to the noble, and beautiful, and self sacrificing virtue which led him to follow the departed spiiit of her | be loved, hide forever the vice lo which un- c happily that love may have led. " but we should be unjust to ourselves. Mr. Speaker, if wo allowed this occasion to ^ Eass without drawing from it some moral . y which we may all profit. The late Sem? ' a?or ftom Texas was possessed of wisdom in j( a high degree?wisdom as distinguished ^ from geniti-; that wisdom which is made s, up of sound judgment, accurate and exten- ,j sive observation of men And of things, and an enhuged experience. lie possessed cour- ^ ag?- in the true sense of that word ? phvsi- , cal and moral counige, displayed upon the ^ b.ctile-field, and exemplified in the Senate Chamber. More than lliese, Mr. 8peaker, and better than these, bis heart was a well spring of deep and pure affection, whose ? current run unceasingly towards the object * 1 ? * * W oi uiit cany atiacurnent, ner wuo Dad been the companion of his manhood, and whom w he hoped to keep by hie aide as the eolace of hie declining \ ears. " Sir, an instinct of our nature, heaven- ' born, a faint trace of that image of purity 14 which Ood stamped upon the heart of Ad " am, leads u? all irresistibly to love tho?e noble qualities wherever we 6ud them. They c are golden qualities ; but, alas ! sir, like ev- v erything else of earth, even gold ia ever h found mixed with baser metal. It requires, * Mr. Speaker, the fire of the Great Keftner. jj the power of the almighty Alchemist, to re- P move all the dross, and leave tbe precious * metal perfectly pure. Sir, without such pu " rification from on higb, wisdom however a. exalted, courage, however true, even love itself, however pure and constant, will lead us H often into error, and sometimes into vice.? u L?i it* uwluU front this z g"o?! oso**!, -nd * let us all try, under Providence, to practice . it. To know tl e will of God, in Christ, 1 concerning us, is the most exalted wisdom ; to do that will in the bee of every obstacle, " tbe loftiest heroism ; to suffer that will un [ der iU most afflicting dwpensiuiona, in unobtrusive privacy, the noblwt inartyidoin." l< Noblr 8?ktjmichts.?Condemn no mnti for pot thinking m you think. Lei every P one enjoy the fail end free liberty of thin!; " ing for himeelf. Let every man nee hi* own ?' judgement, since every men must give en w account of himself to God. Abhor every J1 approach, in any kind of degree, to the spirit ? uf persecution. If you cannot roanon or per 4uode a man into the truth, tftver attempt 10 ( iroe him into it. If love will o<4 c??to- *i pel hits, leave him to God, the Judge of all. e< ? w [Jokn w ttit-y, ti Married Politeness. [There is much of truth, as well as of that ind of philosophy which comes into every | 1 iy requisition, helping to strengthen and 1 ishten the ties of social affection, in the t ibjoined brief article taken from the '* La e?' Enterprise."] | " Will you P acked a pleasant voice. l And the liu-band answered, "Yes, my i ;*r, with pleasure." i It was quietly, but heartily said ; the tone, le manner, the look, were perfectly natural j i id verv ?ff?>linniita YV"z? 11.1 1 _ - v ft V taat'iigui, IllMV ! I leasant I hut courteous reply, liow gratify j I ig il must be to the wife. Many husbands , < ; ten yeara' experience are rearly enough 1 1 lib the courtesies of politeness to the >dung I dies of their acquaintanc, while they speak j i ilh abruptness to the wife, *nd do many i tde little things without considering them 1 orth an apology. The stranger, whom I tey may have seen but yesterday, is listen- I 1 to with deference, and although the subct may not l>e of the most pleasant nature, i ilh a ready smile; while the pi>or wife, if I te relates a domestic grievance, is sntthbe*), | r listened to with ill-concealed impatience. | bl how wrong this is?all wrong. D??ea she urge some request f "O. don't other tnel" cries her gracious lotd and taster. Does she ask for necessary funds ir Susy's shoes or Tommy's hat ? '* S<s*nis > ine you are always wanting money !" is te handsome retort. Is any little extra dotanded by his masculine ap|>etite, it is orered, not requested. 44 Look here, I want yon to do so and so ; ist see thai it's done and off marches Mr. nor, witli a how and a smile of gentleman 1 polish and friendly sweetness for every t?u?l acqtiaintaiice lie may chnr.re to rc gnize. When we meet with such thoughtlessness id coarseness, our thoughts revert to the ind voice and gentle manner of the friend ho said, "Yes, my dear?with pleasuie.'' I beg your pardon," cornet as readily lo| is up* wucti by Hiiy Utile awkwardness he hs disconcerted her, as it would in the presjce of the most fashionable stickler for eti uette. Tlita i> l<ecause he is a thorough muloinan, who thinks his wife in all thing" ititled to precedence. He loves her best ; should he hesitate to sliow it ; not in ckly. maudlin attentions, but iu preferring er pleasure, and honoring her in public as ell as piivate. He knows her worth ; why lould he hesitate to attest it ? " And her usband, he praisetli her," sailh Iloly Writ; ot by fulsome adulation, not by pitching er charms into notice, but by speaking, as [tporlutiity occurs, in a manly way, of Iter irtues. Though words may seem little tings, and slight attentions almost valueless, ft, depend upon it. they keep the flatne right, especially if they are natural. The tiildrcu grow up in a belter inorul atmos here, and lenrn to respect their parents, as ley see thetn respecting each other. Manyboy takes advantage of a mother lie loves ecnuse he sees often the ludeness of his i'hor. Insensibly be gathers to bis bosom I lie same habits, and the thoughts and feelrigs they engender, aud in his turn becomes lie petty tyrant. Only his mother, why iiould he lliank her t fuiher noi-nr ? 'hits the homo becomes the sent of disorder lid uuhappiness. Only for strangers ale ind words expressed, and hypocrites go out i>in the hearth-stone fully piepared to rcn or justice, benevolence, and politeness to ny one and every one hut those who have lie justest laimft. Ah ! give us the kind lance, the htipoy homestead, the smiling rife and courteous children of the friend ho said so pleasantly, "Yes my dear? rilh pleasure 1' Small Talk.? Hut of all tho expedients j make the heaiI lean, the brain gauzy, nd to thin life down into the consUtency of cambric kerchief, the most successful i* lie little talk and tattle, which, in some harmed circles, is courteously styled coiiersution. How huiiiau beings can live on ucb meagre fare?how continue exiswnvc in uch a famine of topic*, and on such a short liowauce of sense?is a great question, if hilooophy could only search it out. AH re know is, thai such men and women ihcie re, who will go on from fifteen to fourscore, nd never a hint on their tombstones, that trey died at last of consumption of the head nd marasmus of the heart! The whole niverse of Hod, spreading out its splendors lid terrors, pleading for (heir attention, and ley wonder " wuere air*. Somebody got lial divine ribbon to her bonnet}" The 'hole world of literature, through its thous nd trumps of fame. adjuiing them lo legard * garnered stores of emotion and thought, ml they think, " it's high time, if John in tiuU (o marry Sarah, for iiiin lo pop the uuelioo !" VV lion, to be ?Ure, (hi* foppery i spiced with a little envy and malice, and repare* it* email dishes of scandal and nice ile of datraetion, il become* endowed with igbl venomous vitality, which doea pietly 'ell, in tbe absence of soul, to carry on the achtaeey of living, if not tbe reality of fe.?JS. P. WhippU. Ladtks are watches pretty enough to look I?tweet faces and delicate hands, but miewhet difficult to rcguhita when once ley get to goii^i trrong. | 0 A LI alii Old V jit era*.?Grant Thorbtirn is a sensible old man. On the 18th ?!t., bo wrote as follows from New Haven, Connecticut : M I have lived nnolher year in this falsely io-called miserable woild. I verily believe it is the best world, terrestrial, that ever fSod Almighty made. 1 hare never felt lead, heart, nor toothache during the year list gone by ; and this day I enter upon T?y eighty-fifth year. 1 walk without a tuff. and eat my f??r>d without b atuly or hitters. I never was drunk in my life, and never had a rheumatic pain. I voted three rears when Washington was President. I iVed twenty-two yeara under George III; taw the whole reign of George IV, William IV, and Victoria thus far. 1 was intimate with Hamilton, Jay, Morris, old Governor Uiinton. and other prominent actors in I...! Relations of the 8abbath. In an admirable discourse by President i Hopkins on "The importance of the Sab >ath to the purity and perpetuity of fiee in- i ititutions," ho says: The Sabbath is not. as mnny seem to sup- t [Vise, an institution slightly connected with i he other arrangements of OoU. It may t icetn so at first, but trace its connections, I tnd you will find it inseparably blending j with the arrangements of God for the elova- t lion and well being of man. Its law of rest is instamped upon the physical organiza I lion of all beings capable of labor, whether t jf body or mind, and in its simplicity and \ raricty of adaptation, like tho air, and the I light, and the water, it hears the evident ' impress of the hand of Ood. How simple. I ind yet while it meets the wants of the ex ' liausted animal, how evidently was it " made < Tor man " in all conditions, and in all uis re i a! ions. Mow perfectly i? it adapted to the labor ing man in his toil, to the young man in ( Itis temptation, to the business mar. in his i perplexities, to the scholar ir. his exhausting ' process of thought, atnl to the statp men a- ? beating the burthens of public life. How ' is it adapted to families consecrating home. 1 and gBing opportunity for family instruc- < t;on ; how to count,unifies, as the individ < uals con,posing them ate related at once to each other and to God, and as needing op portunitv both for private and public deso lion! How does it blend the social ami the religious nature of man. ami fit Itiin f<>> social heaven ! How is it related to the < Bible, as a book of inquiring study, and to time for to study! Iiow docs it connect mutt with the past, by constantly reminding him of that great event which it commeino rates; how with the future, by its glimpses < and foretastes of that heaven which it typi liies. Kept as God's command, it would improve the individual man physically, in telleclually, no-rally. In bis social relation. >t would secure purity and harmony ; in his civil relations security and freedom. It would unite man to man, and all men to God. Surely, whatever he may intend, he \>ho fights against the Sabhath, fights dobest interest of his race, and against God himself. Tiik Fahmkr and this Merchant.? The independence of the fanner is too apparent to require elabotale illustration, and we have hequently commented upon the pursuit of agriculture to the thousands of young men who chrowd our cities, seeking employment in shops, stores, banks, and warehouses, as clerks, salesmen, book keepers. <fcc. We say go till the ground, and if you do not make a hundred thousand dollars a year, yon mav rest assured that a panie or revulsion will not sweep away in a day tke crop* of your farm ; and what is more, your life will be prolonged, and you will be happier, because a belter man. The merchant or luauufae turer may he robl?ed of the reward of Ills labor by change in the foreign >r domestic market, entirely beyond bis control, and may wind up a yenr in which he hits done everything which intelligence and industry : ? ? ? I vuuiu uu kxj iiibuio nur uitiy wuiifHH profit, but with an actual diminution of cap Hal. The slioi.'g arm of mechanical industry inuy bo enfeebled or paralyzed by the prostration of those manufacturing or coin mercial interests to whose existence it so essentially contributes, and in whom it so es sciilially depends, lint what has the intel ligent and industrious fanner to fear? Ilia capital is inve?ted in tho solid ground. He draws on a fund which has never wholly suspended or repudiated; his success de peuds on no earthly guarantee, but on the a-siirnnce of the great beneficent licing. who ha.s declared that while earth enriureth, seed time and harvest shall not cease. \Hunfs Magazine. Scceixo bp Water from Sand.?Livingstone, the African traveller, deseribe* an ingenious method by which tho Africansob tain water in the desert "Tho women tie a bunch of grn?s to one end of a reed about two feet long, and inscil it in a hole dug as deep as the arm will reach, tlien rant down the wet sand firmly around it. Applying the in >uth to the free end of lilt* reed. they form a vacuum in the grass beneath, in which the water collecis, ami in a short rime risen to the month." It will be perceived that this -imple. but truly philosophical and effectual method, might have been applied in many cases, in differ ent countries, where water was greatly needed, to the savin? of life. It seems wonderful that it should have be<-n now first made known to thu world, and that it slmuld have been habitually practiced in Ahicn. probably for centuries. It seems worthy of being par ocularly noticed, that it may no longer lie neglected from ignorance. It may be bigh ly important to travelers on our Wesio'tr deserts and prairies, in some parts of which wAter is known to exi-t below the surface. A is eithei worth a great deal or nothing. If good for nothing, she is not worth getting jealous for; If she lav a true woman she w ill gire no enuo for jealousy. A man Is a brute to be jealous of a good woman?a fool to be jealous of a worthie s one?but is a double tool to Cut hit throat, f ?r either of them. I rvjvuiuuoll. ' Who Wocld dc a Prikckss f?"Mad Cap," of the New York Home Journal, down ibes nt length the pageant of the late royal rnaniage in England. "Mad Cap" <aw much of it with her own eyes and write* admiringly of what she saw. But * Mad Cap " is a sensible Ainerieart girl, nod conclude* her narrative with philosophical deduction : " After seeing this pomp and show, which, utter all, had something sad in it, I bless tn\ stars that I wasn't born a princess royal. The cnrcs of state are not enviable heirlooms. A light heart is beiter than crown jewels." liiave giils ?f the Republic ! treasuro that last sentiment in your inmost hearts. It i? worthy of such a setting. Who w< uldbe a princess, when she ttisv be the feo mother of free Americans !?Edgefield Advertiser. Why not, proud lady, wlien (be intelligent, noble hearted, but humble mechanic? llio Kotil of truth nnd honor?offered you the wealth of his nffeciion ; why not accept him with the same blushing smile you would bestow upon the elegant gentleman of leisure. who twills a fairy-like ratan, pays you excessive compliments, and who would not soil his immaculate kids for a kingdom ??> Think you, because the hands are hardened . with labor, and the brow bronzed by God's own fire in the heavens, the heart is not true and noble, and the arm strong and bravo to shield you from the ills of life 1 " Worth makes the man," and we may often find those with shabby coat atid sun-butned cheek, but, " On whose unciiiLarrass'd brow Nuiuro has wiittcn ' Gentlemen.'" Witt's to Aovkrtisb.?There are, says an exchange, shrewd people in this world. Take, for instance, business men who" can't afford " to advertise during the hard tiiucs. These are the times when our reallv shrewd men make money. They launeh out boldly with their advertisements, nnd secure custom. while others, who " can't afford to throw away money." tta they say, groan through it all, and lay llio lack of custom :o tho hard times, l'eoplo are sensible? tliev know that the man a ho advortiscs liberally is a good fellow to deal with, and they know that merchants that "can't afford" to advertise, " can't afford " to give good haigains. Much cutom makes cheap prices: advertising makes much custom.? The people know this A little five-year old fiiend of ours was .1 .1.? -> ? - miu iniivr u?y puzzieo, as many an older head liaa Won, in Hying to form *n idea of the spirit as distinct fiom the body. \Yo endeavored to explain. ' You said y?>u loved mo, just now !" M Oh, yes?best /'" 44 Wlut do you love with?your forehead r " No." " Your hand ? your foot ? your cheek ! \oin eve. ?" " N<>, no," and the inquiring hand fluttered fiom one member to another as they weie mentioned, pausing at la>l over the heart, with a triumphant * Oh, I know tunc what I love with?it's ?its?its the piece that joggles!" Tiie Necessity ov Ueckbatiov.?Men of the tii-miiest nerves and the most ?stabli*l ej principles have need of occasional repose, in order to recmit their forces, and to recover the due tone of both body and mind. Tho stoniest frame is impaired, find fho hardicr>t virtues grow sickly and languid, by unrcmitiinu exertion?and what Lord Bacon says of silence, tlint it is the rest of the soul, and rcfiedios intention, is bore more generally applicable; and it is in the silence aad calm of retreat that all our nowers. natural nnd nigral, me leftoahed nsid invigorated, mid made prompt for further service, An Iowa paper My* that the people there liftvo add>'il another measure to their arithmetic*. It is called "drunkard* weight or measurer." It is it follows : 2 #!n?*e* m ke 1 dram, 8 diftms imiko 1 drunkard, 3 drunkards uiaku 1 Rrnggery, 4 groggeries mako ] jail, 5 jail- make 1 i.enriontiary, 0 J*M itc Ithtrfp^ mako 1 Tiofl.