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T-T fta T.- 4ft tI 7tV,l IA. J.r W.1 Aa WO wr& r t'i Ii 4M,. EAU,~ .. . VOllTHlE DISSEMUIA'fON OFUSEFUL INTSLUkIC109 1 ~j%~t.V.. . WEDNESIDAY MOIRM.NG,) JULY,,98, 1869,(. *N 9 T4 E, U#A LD RY WEDNESDAY MORNiNG, At Newberry 0. H., P r ;9I PRO,p8rON 8. iw yntent required invariably inadvance. "*I&vaje*'Ntles, Funeril In1*tatlon; obit 'aries; and CommunlatIons subsorving privdte advertisements. .. 9PRISTIANS RELED. Waril'ng where they can't controi, Ki~ ~voo P ed (lie 'nifalfen soul In-tie godlike wreck of nature vSijn-Ild Intthe sliner lerIve h'at hay still r6gain the stature It hath fallen froun, I believe. I bellevoin ahu4na'n'khnduess, Large amid the tons of men, Nbbli farl'h w illing blitidness Tit an In censure's keenest ken In the gentlenesa that sIoWly SaI) tial n% hitt would othVrs grieve, In th9 tji"Vtla, de4igild holy,: Hhings ,I'believb. * lelfe'vd itt self-denil, And its seerbt throb orjoy theloypnhat lives.throngh trial, .u4WyiHihot, idingh' dath destroy i l.t h o s e f o n d 1.d f u l l b e l i q v i n g s That, though all the world deceive, till.not let Its dark deceivings Wake uspielon I believe. I believe in manti's afetion, And Il won's parity "fi his lofty soul, sustaitning, eTha'tc.i to qne prpsm cleave, - Peace and patience, I believe. 1believe In relf devotion, Tlai9Ipvscrilice of year., ob ft ' of dedpl efotion. SMs eo&..he4diiig, wounan'i tears: the pure previithig psion mli:n in hearts by God conecive, 'Knd, deipi-e the worlil's cold fashlon, Live wud die for I believ.) I believe iN huimn inilness Ty)g tog stiongad triue, On1 n unpaaq ionel inm -knes What it, woUld, bit cold not d1o "Thlih the'6it doth par6elvo, -- Doh the more leave uaivailing All iti effori, I helieve. a ij I belicvqn (iovejenewing All thalt sit th swept awny) I v rv Oiy tite power of its I remoiifling, l in'tie'grace or 4 reprieve, lIt the glory of beholding ' Its perfection, I believe. I b.elieve i.n Love Eternal, Fixed In God's utinchanging wil That beneatth the deep itfe.nal Sa deplik,bat'i deeper stilt tl patleice, (tsendunrance To f9rbear, and to retrieve, In the large and full assuranee A Muifiter'lil-Tghts-Ludicrous Sit 11atIon of a ReVoerend DIvIne-lie Is Mtobbed While lionestly Tolling. A rnQwhat amusing affair, in volving the presonce of a weli knowndivine in a very ludicrous positloh, occurred in Cincinnati, a1 fewst'so. ; 'P'e par ti.u ltes of the sog e g obtain .fromn, tho Cinpinhati- Koening Chronicle, of the 30th insBt., which says: A-fW dyea since a .well-kcnown minig~er 4o owns a house in the West 4whiclh is now vacait , paid the promie a Uvisit, for the purpose &\~aj n't) the 4p di. th'0T'We'gth;d fitnting every thing inl conlTTiOn the reverond gentle nn~toolt'a.look ,into the cistern, ri,ea feoin.d to-be covered' .with *ediment, old tools .tin .pgins, dtofWdept'lfke, ko ten~ je wing the fithys?fp~ so1 time, the frugal- t o'dd hiU 6tietman ome to tW%'tIdis1off 1h, 'in,view of the hard times and highipi'ico' of poen&g 'to clean It IIrndolf; ea pgoIily'ae his sonnon is.W'tion fQJytb~ Wook,. and1 he,. in conse qtence, had plenty of. leisure. g:gonto resolved,. the old Ioa ot no time in exocnt Prodobding to thehhi'sc, he Shijdwof every. atiole.of C Iingesave this drawers, and afniManully to,wor, 4with hindsud ahoyV 1 i U ythe wtrol so ml lted. his taes he wen'ded his way t, dtrg oV hba purpose black,.w~hen, oh,. horror of horrors, noAa gtmeh1nt. was to be seen where ho.frt4left thoem. . All were gqp,gerJ,'Shievos, it, appears, who had not the' featr of' the law, or t rQor6'nd sister'n dioanet' ,bef'oto th ' fM6< dohe thle houee d .ay4o te ttnok~of %fld 1 un daau'UtalbtfMh:JIbfothos. or* was a nico predicament to be ipg to.hido his nakedness, save tho sAd.y,damage.d dra,91s, and no means of procurm. any.save.by all appqarance on t10 . street, in his rather primitivo costume wlich .nod0tf forba1o, but.tbo" oilling tonp,rLturo of .the .ohisS., Orged. Oixerciso was hia only -Iieans of kee rgMr;whle%dinghis i ntidedo pnc a tpetbod, of re f. So"a it ho wevott, and not. withstdA g hi n nt scruIll e'iith' ; ubject fdancing, some of the livol-iest hoe-downs over executed-by a minister at leaqt-in this city, the 8ilent walls of that deserted dwelling then wit: nessed. The noise of the old gon tomanN terpsichorean p or f o r. manco finally attracted the atten tjon and brought to his aid a num ber of the neighbors, whose horror and astonishment can bi imagined at witnessing the performance of breakdown by their respecte&d fel IOg-citipi in a postiuno almost,as gbah ty ai a "Georgia f1ll Areas Thinking, of courso, that the old,gentleman had gono as near stark mad as he was stark naked, the neighbors approached him wilh great caution, and not .for somnc time after his discovery was it dc. cided to furnish - him clothing, in order that he might go at large. One of the boldest of the party, however, finally approached near enough to hear his, explanation of his strange appearance-which th< aippearance of the cistern corrob orated 'When a suit of clothes was procured, the old gentlemian cloth od and-wrmed, aid allowed' to. de parte in-ypceo 'amid* th u11 ppressed titpr.,al giggles of th spectt to's. 1d h1's, 'e beolievo, sincedc citibd to giio up the cistern-elcan ing busmness. .R IN EARNsli-rT.-The grand so eret of success, wheiher. as a pri vate teacher O) a puI)lb speaker i to bk) in oarnest. To an orator a good Voice is a gift to .b)e coi. mended, and:)appropria-te gostures are at all times faithful adjunct. Polished periods and smoo'th graceful manner please the head but to win the heart, be in earn est. As a genoral rule, let on feel what he says, and he will b Very apt to say it, in such aI man nor that those who hear him wil feel it. This is what rehdors hin effective. Ho carries the impres. sion that he is honest ; realizing that perishing gouls are arouni him, he speaks as one who secs as one who knows. a% one whc foels. This renders niy a man el9quent woo never went through college. To ciest anything, re solve to be in earnest. Then may you hope that your labor will be er-wned with success ; 'then may you 11p to see a mighty refurma tion through the land ; then scores of' sinful trembling so.Is, throulg1 the influence of the earnest worker, will be gathered into the kingdom. [S. S. Times. GROwLEuRs -There is a class of men in every community who go aboul with vinegar faces,go wling because thley are not appreciated as they be, and who have a constant auar rel -with their destiny. These men usiually have made a graVh mistake insthere estimate of tl,cir abilities, or groetinmitigated donkeys.'In ei. ther case theyv are unfortunate. Wherever this fault-finding wvith on'o'ju condition -or' position occurs, there is alwvays. a want of self. respet. If' people despise you, de not tell it all over town). If you are.cap)able, show it. .If you are s right. dqwn 'clevcr fellow, wash: the wvoirmwood. oft your face, and ehow. yoni' good.-will by yom) doods. Then, If the people feel above you, go Tight: oft and fee above thorn.' If they swell when they pass yo0u in the street, swel your'self, .and~ ;if . this does noi "fetch thorn," conclude -very good naturedhly that th.cy.are unworthy of' you'r acquaintanco, and pit3 them:for m issing such a capita chaneo to get into good society. "Can't," is spoken ten times whero "can" is once. That is th< pr'oportion and' the direction it whichi the world drifts. 'TIn Charileston, whenever.a mar is prop)osed as a candidate for tw<. or more offices, his supporter sey that they are going to "Cor binh1o"t him. In..tleifti9bution of official fa vorp, ant'.aays managos to "push thinge" right. under the nosed-of his f-elativos. iThis keeops "peace in~ the fanhil. Young .mon' whoQ .hbgavound the: cities for monlths, looking for a clerkcshipg gIll-fiui'f ! sJndid fid 'of onaraban fn !w6nt,r Facts for the People. THE Al'NG THAT RULES -AT WASHINUTON. The following is from'; Fourth of ytily oration at Xeni,.Ohiq, by Brve '1lrigadier' Geral Donn Platt . Lastfid) i distinguish'ed journal !st.son1 me to Washington with instriA6tios to look impartially at the transactions there, and write the truth, regardless of consoquen coB. I did my best to comply with his request. I strove to lift Iy self ubovo partisan considerations and feelings, and give to print a fir statement of all that could be seen. I say it now, as I wrotO it then, with a sickened heart, thilt we have the most corrupt govern ment in the world. It is run by rings. There is no moneyed in torost in the land -that is without i.ts rings in Washington. We have railroad rings, - landjobbing rings, Indian -Buroau rings, whiskey rings, protection rings, that branch off m overy conceivable direction. And they were intriguing, cauOuss Ing, boring,.and, through wine and women, baiting without cessation. I do not wish to be understood as chaging that a majority of our representatives in Congress are dishonoat men. On the contrary, I was surprised to find that, living in this atmosphere and under these influenceos, there. were so many pure and upright men. But I will say, Without fear off successful Con tradiction,"that adding the incapa bles to the rogues they ar made the majority. Not the least disheartening part of a14 this is to be found in the ut ter indifl'rence with which the public at large regard all this. it is no longer a shamie to stcal. It has ceased to be a dishonor to do fraud, I saw soniators who came to Washington with searcely money enough to pay boarding house bills, rolling over the streets in splendid equipages, and enter .aining goviety in palatial residenl ces. They aro now 11mullionaires, and not only. tolerated, but flat tored8, sought and stled by men and women who would be honest were it the fashion to affect that virtuo; and if you turn from men who have made their fortunes out of their places, it is to Rtaru at men who bought their way in. ELEGANCE DoEs No-r MAKE A HoME.-I nOvOr saw a garment too fino for man or maid ; there was never a chair too good for a cobbler, or cooper, or king. to sit in ; never a house too fin to shelter the human head. these olements about us, the gorgeous sky, the imperial sun, are not too good for the human race. EC ganco fits man. But do we not V1alu those tools of house-keeping -a little more than they aire worth, and sometimes mortgago a home. for the mahogany we would bring into it? I had rather oat my din nor off the head of a barrel, or dress after the -fashion of John the Baptist in the wilden ness, or sit on a block all my life, than con sumre myself before I got to a home, and take so much pains with the out side.that the inside was as hollow as an empty nut. Beauty is a groat thing, but beauty of gar' nments, house and furniture is a very-tawdry ornaments compared with dlomestic love. -All the ele gane in the world will not make a home, and I would give more for a spoonful of real hearty love than for whole shiploads of fur niture, and all the gorgeousness that. all the upholsterers in the world could gather together.-- The odore Parker. A Jaady correspondent of the Country Gentteman, gives the follo.. wing recipe for MIAKING SwEE-r PTCKLE.-Cut he tomatoes through, or if largo, slice in three; let them stand in weak brine over night. T1o a quart of vinegar three p)oundls of sugar ; in this vinegar cook the tomatoes until a fork can easily be passed through them. As fast as they are cooked, take them out -with a fork and lay them dlown in a jar-ay7 two or three layers of tomnatoesu, sprinkle pul verized cinnamon and cloves, and a thin layer of sugar; then atl. ternately tomatoes, spices and sut gar, cooking all the tomatoes In the same vinegar; if neccessary, add( more sugar and vinegar. Wheni tho jar is filled, cover the tomatoes iIth good cider vinegar cold1, .thprowing away the vinegar in whio' tpmo'-oss were coo ked. Lay some horse. radish root over the top of' the pickles, and put a iwait on .to keep theom' covered. This receipo Id 'etiualy good for euctumbers, ..I bae'o tpstod it for the p)ast two yokrs, andA foid no trouble in skeepnngoona picklie. The Unsatisfied!WIfes 'emple Bront'%Yis A .good bus band. So peopl'991d,"'nd so. he thought. He saw -.64fully that his house was'kept1*611 repaired, and well furnished. E.verything for his wife's -6'6ilbhoo ' i promptly done, and sb neverthd to terlse for money fbi hything she or the children noded. Tom. pl Brunt was not'tll1,4Aan-to give hia wife,. grIidgiglypfifty cents one day,-and-asc'hovdbr the chan1go the noxt. He did not,l1ke it, (hohrl hear !) if he for,nd fa'. Brent w as hositatipg t0a.k. for money to buy anytbing bo wanted. Take note, her wants .wore always roasonablo ones. Wiih such a husband as this, how'ime it that Mrs. Brent's fice Wds a sad, un satisfied one ? Surely.. she must have had a very unhppy disposi tion. Wait a minute, Mr. Brent was one of' thosedo.1, calm, stern -yes, grim, righteous souls Who regard all affectionatoness of word and act as ibolish'and unbecom ing; except in and toward chil. dren. He would take his babe and hug and kiss it, and talk a few Words of "love nonsenso,"; wich, if sin core, is the dearest, sweetest sense in all the world-to it ; but to its mother, though perhaps he did lovo her, (ho used to look as though he did bulbre he marr.ied her, nid sometimes she would see the same expression in his clear grey .9yes, oven years aftorwards,) never had lie uttered, "I love ypu," in hi8 life. Scar6ely did lie over kiss her, Un less going from or returning home. There was seldom any tenderness in his voice, unless'%h'n flle was sick in bed. Poor soul I shc would have been willing to be 6o all hor days to have him as% he 'was one day when Ie though &she was go ing to die. Onco fr'oiclearstarv atioi Of spirit, aggrakated, too, by having henrd a happy neighbor express her wifely atisfictionl and delight in hor husband's tender ness both of' heart and mannor slo pluced up011 courage and com1 plained to Mr. Brent of what was a heavy sorrow to her, andl bow. ing low besido him, she took his hand and kissod it., and begged of him to love her and to tell her thatl he did so. Astounded Tem plo BrentI for a moment., while he stared in amatinzeent., his power of speech forsook him. Then in tones almost of anger lie said : "Are you crazy ? What (10 you suppose I marriol you for, if I (lid not like you I Let's have no more of such twaddlesome nonsense." Poor little M's. Brent; she blushed painldly and crept nway and cried horself into a headache; then took her biale from its cra d1o and fondled that, and it re turnod all her caresses. 13ut WaR her' heart Satisfied? Well, she has gone now VWhere snch rebuffs are never known. She (lied ?no day, at evening, and over hor still, cold form, Mr. Bronit was board to say -(did she hear hini evon then? per haps so,)-"O Mafy I Mary I true and tender' wife! I love.yOU, love you." Whether she hoard or not, she now looks sad no more, her' soul at last is satisfled.--Augusta Moore. When To Manure Orchards. Inquiry.is often mnade as to the frequency and amott of~ Imnu-. ring or cultivation for fruit trees. The answer must be: Act, ac cording to circumnstances. The question again recurs : 1Iow shall we knowv w~hat our soils ned? The answer is: Observe the re sults of grow th. A n exanilnin a tion or analysis of' the soil will be of little use. But the tr'ees will tell'their' own story. If the soil is so rich that they make annual shoots of' twvo or three feet or ioe in longth w'ithout ainy culti vation or mannring at all (whuiph, however, is rarely the ca'se,) then it will be nceedles.s to give adi. tional care. Th'Ie an nual L'rowth is the best guide to treatment. There are very few" apple or~ other orchards whicb, aflter reachinvg a good bearing state, throwv out annually shoots more than a foot o*r a foot and a half Ygg, and mntny not, half this lengt,1. The owrher may lay it dowvn;as an in. alto'rable rule, that when- his t,rees do not grow one0 foot annually they need more manuring or culti.. vation or both. By observing the growth be can answer' all-questions of' the kind referred to Wvithout dlIffi cnt.Am-irerican F~ruit Cult u. '"A womani in Americus, Geor gia, has married two.broh,hers-and is nove bet,rotheod to- the' third." Grant~ ought to give thatsovioman an Qffico,-as an aippreciation of' her devotion to his polic A Ci'*-y Creed. "WOMsEN's .RIHTS" CARRIED. TO EXTREME8-Riv. URG. DU FFUM'8 - "NEw AMERICAN CHURCH." The vagarios of the- human mind hr.reepuet to roligtond rat t0fis, arm sometimes past ordinary belief', but the strangest combiia tioiof' flly, blasphemy and cred uility whic has omo to light of late is that embo'died in what is called "the,NowA mericanChurch," of which one Mrs. Bufluim, of New York claims to be the "President, and Ihich sh1e SaYS, in a note, "is regularly formed and contains about 300 members." This do luded womau transmits, to the Day's Doings, with a request for pul.lication, the 'ollowing notice: "Rev. Mrs. Buffl'm pi'eaches the gospel of Lord the Mother, God the Father, Christ the Son, and Soul the Daughter, sustaining hov self by the Holy Bible, at the Now A morican Church, every day in the woek, Sunday excepted, at 104 Sonth Clark-st., Room 11." She also sonds her "little book," filled with insuifferablo nonsence on the subject of "the now Church, with women at tho head,' aind the following "pi'ayer," which is i most, too mocking to print: llt us pray to the Divine Family: --Lord the Mother, God the Pa ther, Christ the Son, and Soul the Daughter, h1 a 1 o w e d be your Itmes; may your Queendom and Kingdom como tind ho -with us as it is with you. We render thanks, that the Trinli/ or triangle has been superceded by the sqiaie, upon which the Daighter is rep revented, as well as the Son. '.'ho '/'rinity--ather, Son and I1oly ( host, denies the Pope, Christ's vicegerent, a wife and family. Bit. the Square, Father, Mother, Son and Dianghter, grants himui a coml panion, a1nd lets him stand an honored father in the chitreh. On the Square all livo in the holy (1ua1l marringo relation. On tho Trinity all live inl free list, (soe (Ca1thlolies, Protestants, convents and houlses of il-11am1o). Pope, Bishop and Priest iginore thle im1artiage velation. Is it any wonder t0hei' followers do liCe wise? Then away with the Tiinity and up with the Sqnaro. One man and one woman, overy -where, in the Capitol at Washing tonl, in the Vatican at Rome. Away with the old three.cornerod heavens, and let t he Nort i, Souith, East aid West, he responded to. Lot the Daughter's voice, Christ's sister, come out fr'omn the fourth corner' of heaven, and resonild tihr.gh the eart h, then will the hanin anee be redeeied,.and not till then -lromen [not, A men.]" The doet.ioie of "1w o im a ni 's rights" is set for-th in th is cramy verbiage with taiflleient distinct ness to please the most, ardent "agitator." It is needless to say, however, that "Rev. Mrs. Buffium" is not a flir plresentaLive of the "female siffriag'" causo. Spiritual TostImony. In a case in New York the other dlay, .Judge Edmutnds testi.. fled tunder oath as follows: "I believe those pictures are photographs of spirits; I believe that the camera can take a photo. graph of a spirit., I believe also that spir'its are not immaterial; ini. may opinion overt'Lhing has materiality ; they are sufficiently so to be visible to the human eye; and, theref'ore, I do not see why they cannhot, be taken by a camera. I believe that the c,amera can take photogr'aphas of' spiriits wvhich 1 can sco. The other dlay [ wvas in a court in Brooklyn, wheni an acci dent insur'anco case was on tr'ial. I saw the spirit of t,be man whoIi had been insured ; that spirit told me the (etiremstancefi connected with the death: lie told me that lie had commituted suicide; I driew a .diagr'am of' the place at which his (loath occurred, anid on show ing it, to the coun rsel, was told that it was exact; I had never seen the place nor' the man, and no one in the court-room saw the spirit ox. ce1)t miysel f; t lie appearance of the spiri t was shadowy, transparent. I could4 see mateorial objects Lh roughb it. The first sp)irit that I evet saw wvas that of Judcgo Talm age who was leaning againust a windowi casement, which was plainly to bc soon through his body. I havt seen spir'i'ts clothed in their overV dlay dress as well as in gr'av< elothes, but never saw one with out clothing." Tho'laziest man-theoprinter, h<4 Is always setting. H is caae is hard poor' follow, but, he.makes it a rul< to stick to it till a period closes hii paragraph, when he gives uip thi Chae n.nd yields tn tha det'ii Rachelors and Flirts. BY JO81H 11TLINGS. Some old bachelors git after a t flirt, and don't travel as fast as a she doz, and then concludes ll the for0clo group aro baid to ketch, fid good for nothing when I thoy aro kotched. . A flirt is a rough 6hing to over- i haul unless the right dog gets at'- 1 tor hot, and thon they ire the t easiest. of all to ketch, and often make the very best of wives. f When a flirt Is really in love I sho is as powerless is a mown A dnIy. tie'r impudenceo then changes into modesty, bWr cumling into I fibar., hot' Sp11r's into a balter, and her pruning-hook into-a cradle. t The bost way to Catch ia flirt isli tow travel the other way, f1om which s10 is going. or sit down on the ground and whistlo some lively 0ino till the flirt comes t round. Old bacholors make the flirts, and then the flirts get more 1huant even by tmalcing the old bache- I lors. t A majority of flirts get married finally, for they hev a great qualn tiy of tho most dainty tit-bits of' woial's naturt'e, and alwuiS havo shrewdnoss to backi up their sweet. Fl'lirts don't deal in poetry and water growel ; they iev got to 1 her brains, or elso somebody Would trado them out of' their cup ital at. the first swop. Disappoiited lutV ntu1list liv Course ho all Otl 0110 eide. Thuis ainit any mloI, oxeu5# for beinr ti ol I balihilor than i'( -iz fur a man to quit all kinds of' anuial labor jist Out 11% spito, and jin 11 poor-hol'so belcaso lie enn't lift a ton iat onec pop). Ai old hiaheiclor will bran ! about, hi'z fi-ecdoiml to you, liz relief, firoi anxicty, hiz indipidenco. This iz a dead beat past resurrection, for overybody klows theroS ain't, a mlore anxiouls dupc than hm iz. MaIn llimll-ellm.411110 t11111coitel All hiiz dreams ar'e charcoail skcotch e of' boarding-school misse. Ih) dresses, grases hiZf hair, paints his g'iZzly mu111sta1ch1e, cultivates hunyolls and corns, tow pleaso hiz captaiis (the wimmen,) and only gets laffed at fiur hiz pmins. I tried being an old bachelor till I wuz about, twenlty years old) anld Came very 110111 dicing iat dozen times. I had more shar1t'p pain in on year', tlanl -1 liev had since, ut it. till inl a hcap. I. was inl at lively fieer al the Lilme. Feariul Discovery. Mir. A. 1Iibh, a filrmn0or who r.e Rides abut,01t thriC Miles west of' the city, broiglt a strailgo story in oil Saturday. Mr. Pabb has a son-in-law living onl at fisrml about fi' i miles fi'on .1jafCayete, naimed Milla'. Mr. M1ijller ha11s a i eri'man laborer, who, in plowiig over a corn-field, struck the u1ppor, crust of sonothing very mnteh like the infeirnal regions. A suffocating odor was first emnitted, followed by3 a (denso v~olumie of' simoke. Ac corinifg to the Germanu's state mont, the itenchi was sera'l do grees above thie flavor of' the Il1i niis strecet guitter'. A sheet of'flame soon) burst from this terrible vol cano, and a great conflagration was imminent for a time, but the flames were finally subdued by a f'ew ushovelfulls of' earth tossed ini the mrouth of the crator'. The lava thrown outt looked very mueh like Casttlo soap, only it w~as not so highly peirfumed. On the coni t-ary), it waLs exceedingly ofTen sive. It ignites easily, anid burns as freely as brimstone. The Gbt' man was very badly frighatened, and after viewing the sceno in utt ter' bowvilrment for a tjmne, ejalC ulaItted, "Vell, dat mah h1l1 !"' We utndIeirtand that~ Pruof. (Cox. will e~xaine1 the gtrounid, and( if' it shoutld prove ain enItrance inito thle inif'ernel reCgions, 110 wvill send for' -Pairson Brownlow to Ionic funrther into it. TIhe people1 of' ILafhyeto are greatly alarmed, and alr'eady it is said that a troaing noise cani bo eardli( unidor'n0atht thait dioomedC ments1( with intenso anxiety. Manly pers8ons may think this a hoax, bitt it is not. Mr. Iabb doesn't look like a man who would deceiro a whole commiutnity abont as trifling a thing as the dliscovery of hell ini [ndianja. [Indianapolis kSentinel. Words are little things, butt they somnetimes stike hard. We wield them so easily that we are apt to forget their hidden power. F?itly spoken01, they fall lik (0sun'shino, th d1(1ow, andI the fortilizing rain; bntt-when utnfltty, like the fr'ost, the hail,_and_desolatIng tempdst. People who alway' eep their word-mn (S Repelling Flies froni I&f#i It is an not of humanity to como' o the aid of tho horse, powerfhl. .8 h is, against his nimble assall nti, the fly. Here is a reip6 idolt is said tb be an excellent do.: once agaiinst, it; at all events dt rial of it wll uot, involve Imuohl xponse, nor will it do harni should t prove inavailing as a doffi66 0 he horse i Take two or throo small hand Ils of walnut leaves, upon which lour two or throo quarts of cold vator; lot it influso one 111ght, and >our t he whole next moring into kottlo and lot it boil for a quar. or of' an hour ; whenl cold it will >o fit for use. No more is requifdd han to moisten a sponge, and be.: oro the horso goes out of' the sti - ile, let those panrts which are m,s0 rritablo bo smeared ovor with tho ignor-, namely, botwoon and upon1' ho Cars, tho Ikuck, flank, .tc. Not 11ly the Judy or gentleman who ides out for pleasuire will dorive, he bonefit from walnut leavew uims prepared, but tho coachman, he wagoner and all others who mo1 horses during tihe hot months. Ne fly, insignitinnt a it is in ize, and devoid of the powe.r of loing any great harm, is one of he most, annoying of, the insect ribe. A nuisance to man, tihe fly . at error of the horso whose flesh . made to quiver, whenCCV' the 'ot of on touches him. Cheap Wash for lluIldngs. Titko a clean wator-tight eask ild put into it, one-half bushel of imo. Slack it by pouring water wer it boiling hot, aid in suffl -ont quanti.y to cover it five W-lice (0 ), Ilnid sti' it, briskly, Ill thornlgilly slackonled, dissolve t in witer, anlld add two pounds of mlphato of' zine and oneo of' com non salt. Thjeso will cause the wall to hatdoul tid prevent its 3racking, which gives an unseemly iippearance to the work. A beau tiful cream color 111113 be given to the wasih by adding three pounds Af yellow ochro ; or a good pearl. )r lead color , by the addition of' a lump of' ir-on black. For fawn 'olor add fCou poiunds umber, ono pound of Indian red, and one potn(d ,-ommonl lampnl)tIc. For stone :-olor add two pounds Inampblack. When applied to tite outside of hiouses and fences, it it renderod moro durable by adding about a. pilt of sweet milk to a gallon of A CumE FR pt Tow SPmur.-Ex ereise flor the body, occupation 1,1.r the mind : themo are the grand oistituents of health and happi 1108., tie cardinal point-; upol WHi) overt0ing tii'ins. Motion seeis to be a great preserving principle of' nat.oo, to which even innimatto things ao subjoet ; for the wii(, waves, the earth itself, are restless, and the Waving of trees, 0shrubs, and flowers is knowui to be al oeciltiall part of their, c-onomy. A fixed rule of taking' several hours' exorcise every day, if' possibhle ini the openi airi, if not, under01 cover', will be almiost cor' 11nin to seuriio one exempt)lion fronm dIisease, as well as fronm attacks of' low spirits, ennui-that monster' whio is over way-laying the rich' indolent. A WoA' SurL.-A womah who lived verty unlhapp)ily with' hert husband, came to a great di' vine to ask his counsel. "Alwaya. mt,t y'our hu tsbantd wit.h a smnle,"' said the wise man. She folid*ed' his advice, and1( veriy soon1 retiflned to thank hinm for the blessing of a happy home. Whenever a liomoe landscape 15is C drea'tyand it's' hoi zon clouded, wvo believe t'hat it proceeds not so mu ich ' frain the storms of' matn's potinmeo and un reason abloness, as beuaio wvomian has for'got toni to draitw a sunobeamn frm tho Sun of' Righteoonsness. A certaini qneer genitht,- whose priomfhinnlt specialty was an aver sion to water', happened homo late onte night, with that peculiar, f'urry sonsattion 'abotit his tongue and( tonsils which getntlemnen wvho r'ojoico in Clttbs- will r'teember. as par't of thoh' experience. Ril wif'e had lefil standling upon the bureau a t'tiibior, in wvhich--for some piu'yoso knfownl to house wVives--ho had put at small ball of silken thread to soak. Without observing this fact, Bibulous seizedI the tumbler', and swollowed its contents. Fooling a thread in~ his moiut.h, he began pulilidig utpon it.. To his horr'tor, yard'( aft or yard1 came atinging for't.h, util, in an~ agony of excitement, he cried out: "Lucy, fot' God's sake come hero I I'm unravolin'." The w'heel, of time-those of'a voinnhped.