•iiwnii«wi3|i i i imiii
f» v, n 1 I'-
Nin
WELL* 8PIOER, PROPRIETOR.
VOL. 2.
BUSINESS CARDS
O N U E
ATTORNEYIowa.his
W.
AND COUNSELLOR AT
LAW Vffice al residence near Tipton
C*dar Countp,
BIMELL A. HPICER,
ATTORN IES AT LAW »r«l Solicitors in
IX Chancery. Tipton, Cedar county Iowa
H. €J. PIATT.
1 TTORNK. V a: Law and Notary i'nMic, Tipton,
,fl Iowa. SJ#*0fflc« in tlie gourt house, With
|M Recorder. n37
«EO.
CLAAB.| MIHI CUU
CLAItt BROTHRIl,
lAttonuys and Counselors at Low, Mttd
Solicitors in Chancery.
IOWA CITT, IOWA.
Will practies in 'he different courts at tins
latt. nl»
JOSEPH jLIXDSEV,
OTARY Public, Rochester, low*. OSce
the Post Office. v2nl-ljr
ITOBT. !H. L»«,
JUSTICE
OF THE PEACE Mid Votary Pub
lic. Tipton, Iowa. nl
WILIJIM «. WOODWARD
AUorttfy and Counselor at L»w and
Soiicilor in Chancery,
HSCATINF., IOWA.
WW prsetire i the District and SuprtIM
eourts *f this State _____
~H. THAYER
ITTWJIBV 1310 nitMELOR AT LAW,
MUSCATINE, 10W.1.
ILL practice in the «lh Judicial District
alto buy and s«dl Ketl Instate. Tnl43m
w
1). L. McGOWAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Da xx nport,
Iowa.
tFVirE
I
KI.I.IS 1-t.wn,
W I I A A O K
ATTORSEY AT LAW.
ANAMOSA, JONES COUNT*, IOWA.
ttTffA. practice in the different courts
of Iowa,
\v and attend to conveyancing, and the col
lection of notes and accounts.
"4. W. BAGLEY,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
nod lust ice of the Peace
Tiptou, Iowa.
JfcST Office with Sptcer in Virgin
Block. t23
A A O N I E
fW DEALER IS ItRUSS MEPlCt\Et?,
Zft Iye HtiifTt, Paint*, Oil*, ila*». 5r ceriea,
i'andics. Tov», Hariw ire sod K»n\' Notions.—
flptol. low*.
nl
C. CHAlfBEIWt
PHYSICIAN
AND sl'KOKDN, 0«ce
UM Dr ig Store of 'liainhers Jk Son, 1
J. SMITH,
PHYSICIAN
RW
PHYRUM AN \M "l Hi.EON.
(Hie* at the Iowa Hou'e, Rochester, Cedar
coanty, lows.
ftn. N* liREENy
AND 6UKGEUI toewwtof
Oder county. Iowa.
J. McCLLHE, M. D.
Re#pectful'v tenders hi? professional services
to the crtuens ot Tip'on and vicinity.
nome attention
to
the
•f teeth will he paid
Office «ne
DOOR
REPARATION
"*a»t ol the I ipton House.
REFERENCES.
Med Col, Philadelphia,
Faculty Jefferso
B. K indeiih'ir^, M.
tieo H. K indei.b ir^, M. Senierwl, Pa.
lluttehen, l), Wheeling Virginia.
Met. «. fiwan, Armsjh. Pa
total Surgery.
DRS. HARDMAN & HURO
tlioistup
UA
VINCi .'"riinit .1 pvtl.eiiTnp
Profession, do proll i 'heir services to the
riti».ei, r.f Mu-catine and vicinity. I *oul.l
call ivtnat attention to the »»Collii«
Mounting— a new improvement or
treat superwnty. Bv long e*pe iet.ee and
sidiuHH attention they feel fully prepared to
warrant »*ftre satUfiulion. All sre sidicited to
Ml I and examine .peciniens.
Dental advice given cherrfvily \rtlha*t sharpf.
Office on '2nd St over Prstl fc Oo. s Leather
^tore. Muscatine, Iowa.
Jace 27th, "5. r»27-«f-
f!»ll'nrME
CHAMBERS W
VRP(»i«!STS, and Healers in Groceries Uiis
Pain'i. Dve St iff", Confectinnaries
are, St-. Tipt-ui, I"
VLIAS
O N I K I N
fl ^'ral^nS^t k- p't cuiinunlly on
Tipfi l'»a.
iUnv Dry GouJs, Groceries, k.c. RoeM.w
..^^fiar county, Iowa.
8 A U E E W E I
CUBttTT
'ItmvEiroR or
^ib sJ
Tipton, Ioxm.
—:.L
O E
Office in
.1 s-mael liinc's. '2
(llnnWH
Miidence at beinuel King
®ckory Grove. GE«».
al Tipton
II*AR,
MOSCOW, MUSCATINE CO., K) A
JifOiiFUS 31. tiiUiiiflM,
Proprietor
BAOLtB HOTBIi.
J. V. BUTTS, PHOPIUF.TOIfe*
TITTON. IOWA.
E E K A N K U s
PATTERSON FEENMINVT
TIPTO!*, IOWA.
"'PARK HOUSER
BY R. S. TUCKER.
Corier of Dubu^u? t»l Jrfferioi Strets.
lorna City, Imri.
»S13f 2t!f
UPTON, IOWA.
Thl* Hotel
IS
NPW Hounc which was just
orene for the reception of %a- ita on the lnt of
May, IMS. It i* lnt?e mil corauiodtons, Mid is
provided with entire new furniture. Ka expenttt
iaa been «|ared which will add to the comfort
or convenience of the traveling public.
JOHN II. RlltELEY,
Proprietor.
O O V E O U S i
W. CLOVER, Proprietor*
lornrr of Wnluiii anl Smuni Stmt*.
MUSCATINE, IOWA.
Office of the Tiptofi, Marion, Washington
ami tlskalooea Stage Lines.
f--9~ Haxg.tge taken to and from the Boats free
of charge.
WILLIAM LEE.
BOOK HIISTDER,
lutva it
One door east of the Post Office.
Bly
OVKI THE POST OFTLCE.
atrtsatNCts
Wo*, run M. Ilw.i.nt. Ho*. K. A. Dnrotas,
KICII'I U*O»I»HIC u«, I HtnTia,
amis Ohipek,
lank Rooks, of all kind«kept constant
'n hand.
Counties supplied with all kinds of Blanks
Record* and oinerbuoks tor County office*, at
short nitice.
T. N. CASE. IF. K.
srtui.r.,
JB.
CASE A STRONG, Agenta.
WHOLESALE DEALERS II* I
BOOTS AND SHOISS,
Lrathrr. Shot Fimiinct, if.
We solicit the attention of Mercliants and
Shoe Dealer-, t.. our Slock and Prices.
N. B.—Cash paid for Wool and Dry Hides.
Rock Island, Fit., June 27, '5'».
I S & W I E
HtNt'l'^CTURa- AVI) WHOLE* I. P. DI.M.KRS ill
w ooDEW inij otr a elur
Ware, Croom*,
Mat'", Cords, C!IUIIKS, Buckets,
Boxes, Measurers, Refrigerators, Wash Board*, K
Also—French and (Jerraan Fancy Bankets, of all
kinds.
238 & S4G South Water 8L, fhicajr^
I. w,
nmosa, n51
'|'ton
JAWEU. TI'RSEB,
Y S I I A N A N I K O N
WHl wractii-e Tipton and »Icinitjr. Dfflce, Mo
7, la quality row, South of the Court Home.
nl
i-
*.
ja. V. wnTTK, J. T. W UTTI', W. WHIfW.
8 W I E & O E
Mttmnf*- a Ih-al*
OIJOTIIINO,
4 V
I
t." "MV
FURS'lH HOODS, RUBBER JtND
OH Otmdi, Triads. Yaiitrt, 'tc.
SO. 133 HOL'TII WATER STUKKT. (t Stairn,
nSl-ly Chicago lllinMts.
SEW WHOLES. ILK DRUG HOUSE
O I V I E O U S E
BY
H.SijEtl k
Corter of Watrr Slrrrt and Iowa rtmhn,
Near tlic Steamboat landing,
M„-
lo
RAMI'EL. P. DANIELS,
OF"AT.EIt IN STOVES, TIN W ARE,
I»I t\VS HI uf Kurdware.
o
'Hard-
nl
John LK.4P & CO.— Wholesale snd retai
& dealers in Dry Goods, Grocenes. Hardware
Queensware, Hoots atul Shoe*. Ch thin?, HaU
Caps, Nails, k.c. Second st. Muscatine, Iowa
SHAWBER
MERCH
Cedar Blutft, Ce
nt
VM--Dealer in Dry (.
ceries. Croi.Wery, kc.
ounty, Iowa.
BARCIsAY & BROTHEKi,
Wli»ltiU Drug8*"i*»
No. 213 South Water, and a Frnnkiin ft»«
CIIICAOO.
One I* Tliin Land of Otfl.
Cone rich and poor to this Weater ywrt.
Come to this truitlul la:id
Ea|oy this comfort in the heart,
^Th«t Uod has giten to man.
Onr country calls en all to ei«k.
lfcith Ingli and low renown
jtoithat i4h to have a home,
Oil this productive ground.
We have honey hero and lanaes,
Aud every thing that's nweet
The liuh abound in manses
Anil every kind of meat.
Carpenters, all come to the CfMtjt 8«st.
And come it with a tilt
wages here are hardt# heiA,
And all waut houses built.
Sbirksmiths here would be well paid,
|\»r they are very scarce
In cattU hog*, *"d ben of trade
Aad ofieu out the purae.
Come all to Fremont County,
For that's goodly land,
Then1 atl receive bounty,
Ves every liouest man.
odi, Gro-
)|(re land lay high and roliinng,
And is extremely good,
Hare wives are never scolding,
En ept when out out of WO»d.
timber is all that's lacking,
And that is s I wc nrnd
fhe tree" are rmhea scattlin*.
And s^m^t'ini's hard to nnd.
We need not live expensivt,
And who woubl better that
Oui pastures arc ext4'nsivi^
And cuttle al» ays fat.
Our meadows are unbounded.
The lad is rich aand
The soil can not tw soundea
ho evenly and deep.
IOWA,
alt those who
TEOA*
He is prepar
I ask you all to cme and know,
It Is no more nor isss.
Your dimes to dollar* soon Will grow.
And plenty in the '"st
MAKE
i
vv'e8t 1
Cmtif»*
fr'''!
water,
WHISLKR,
residence
V S V
^"(jRPEN & M'NAUGHTON
Rocbeatev,
founts
Madam Pfaiffor, tha Traveler.
Who is Maiiame Pteitfer, and wliat is
•he gJid£ round the woild again forf
t^he is a Cennan lady, about fifty
seven years old, said to be iateligent,
wealthy, and accinplished, and to all
tpperance perfectly sane on every subject
except it be that of traveling, which she
does entirely alone, aad on tb« lar
gest scale.
Her husband and two sons, one a gov
ernment official and the other an artist,
liv# in Germany. In 1816 she set out
on a journey round the world. She went
first to Brazil, attracted by its magnifi
cient forests and flowers.
Here she came very near being mur
dered by a black ruffian, who undertook
to rob her. She still showes the scars
she received, but states with evident
satisfaction that she cut off three of his
fingers in self-defenca, when fortunately
he'p came to her relief. She then em
barked at Rio, doubled the Horn, visited
Valparaiso, took passage in another
vessel to Tahiti, and among other mem
entoes of her sojourn there, Srought away
Queen Tomare's autograph.
From Tahiti she went to China, then
to Calcutta, then ovt rland across Bridish
India to Bombay, from there by steam
to Uussorali and Bagdad, then with a
caravan to Mosul and the ruins of Nine
veh, whence she brought several pieces
of sculpture, and thence lo Croomia, o!
course with varied aJveutures. At nu
merous places she was hospitably recei
ved and entertained by the Protestant
missionaries. She is herself a Catf.olic.
From Oroomia she proceded to 'la
brees, the it to I'iflis, and across the Cau
casus, through European Russia to Qie
nua,aud reach home after# tour of a little
more than two years.
As her stock of language is limited
she is obligeJ much ol the time to depe
nd upon sigus. One of her cardinal
i rules is never lo betray fear, in whatever
danger she may be, and another is to
dress and live cheaply and economically,
two precautions that have doubtless con
duced largely to her safety.
Madam Pfe lfer, in her land jourwys,
took but a single horse her small trunk
beiug hung on one side of him, her bed
on the other, and she riding between.
Her voyage round the world cost her
somewhat less than $2,000.
In IS")I she set out again, aad •pent
two years in Australia and the East
Indies. She then visited California and
Oregon, thence through Ivuador she
went to Panama and took steaine for
New Oilcans, then up the .Mississippi to
St. Pauls, and down the lake to Montreal,
from whence she came to New Yoik^
She is now on her way through the
Atlantic States, after which she will
agatn turn homeward, thus completing
her second journey round the earth.
A description of her strange and multi
farious adventures could not but enter
taining. She fakes copious notes and
observations, and will probbly, 'f she
lives, embedy them in an elaborate work.
A subordinate object of her travels is
to gather flowers and insects, of whiih
she has no.v an immense collection.
She is already kno^n as the authoress
of a work on Iceland and Palestine, 0»e
fruit of her early journeying.
"You FOUCOT ME."—A good joke
The feeling of the parents can be more
easily imagined than described.— Lafay
ette Jour.
Bishop Doane of New Jersey has con-
1
This is vaiuble receipt
for^jusk.epers, .'alone wh.cb m, b.
easily tested.
The cure of all the ills and wrongs
and sorrow, and the crimes of
the cares
humauiiy lie in
that one little woaf.
firmed more itan ,ix hundred person, du-
of-It thrown into Ui«' ring tlic last ecclesiastical ye.r-.n m
wilfsoften iro.it three to four pails
cfeasc of
forty
per
SMsaipmroznirF zxo* MJUUTJbtAXi 1ST NOTHING
TIPTON, IOWA-WEDNESDAY. AUG. 2n, 1855.
A BLACK IICAKTED VILLI*.— The
Masous ot Chester, Illinois, have expell
ed from their lodge one Dr Gordon, for
infatrous conduct. The St Louis Herald
gives the following particulars ol the oc
curence. This Gordon graduated in one
of the medical schools of this city, and
removed to Chester with Dr. Ferris. He
i has an amiable wife and several children,
From some cause the son of Dr Ferris
disliked Gordon and they remained ene
mies until the death of Dr. Ferris. Gor
don then made friends with young Fer
ris, and became intimate with a beautiful
young lady to whom he was ^engaged to
be married.
Ferris removed to Cincinnati,and during
his absence, Gordon used every art in his
power to seduce the young girl but fail*,
u
ftaSThe following paragraph relative
to the Davenport and Missouri Railroad
we find "lying around loose,'' in our Chi
cago exchanges, without rny credit, and
therefore adopt it as our own and intro
duce it among eur local items. We pre
sume the road is finished ere this lime to
Walcott, of which fact we contemplata to
soon satisfy ourselves ocularly.
"Messrs. Farnam and Durant, con
tractors for the road from Davenport, lo*
wa, to Council IMufls, are pushing on the
work with great vigor. Iron sufficient
to complete the road trom Davenport to
Iowa city, about sixty miles, has already
been sent forward, and the grading ol
that portion as will as of much that is
beyond Iowa City, »8 nearly ready for
the superstructure. The road will, it is
believed, lie in operation to Iowa City in
December next. Contracts have been
made for thirteen first class locomo'ive*,
of which twelve are being built by-
Messrs. Breeze & Kneeland of Jersey
City. Dav. Gaz.
Bill Larkms, who is what may be de
nominated a srpeeinp sort of character,
once shook hands with General Jackson.
And,"said Bill, "I guv him a ol
advise at the time, an' sez I, Gin'ral,
we've elected ye, ai.d 1 hope you'll take
care of the constitution.'1 Guess I'll try
to,'' says he, "and I hope you'll take
care of yours."
IS
told at the expense of one of our church
going citizens who is the father of an in
ter*, sting tiunily of children, and among
them a bright-eyed boy numbering four
or five summers, th« pet of the house
hold, and unanimously voted the drollest
little mischief alive. Ou Saturday night
he had been bribed to keep pence, and
retire to bed an hour earlier than usual,
with the promise that on the morrow he
might go with the family to church. On
the morning it was found inconvenient to
put the youngster through the regular
course of washing and dressing necessa
ry for his proper appears r.ce at the sanc
tuary and the frmtly slipped off without
him. They had not, however, more than
got comfortably seated in their pew when
in walked the youngster with nothing on
but a niirht-wrapper and a cloth cap.
•Yon forgot me," he said in a tone loud
enough to be heard all over the chur-h.~
cent, over any previ-
Blghop
Whittingham, of Ma
ryland, confirmed nine hundred aud filty
the last year—more than twice the aver
age number of previous years. The
membership of the Episcopal church in
Maryland has doubled in fifteen years.
CSS* The problem of acquiring heat
Without fuel appears to have been solved
by the invention of the machine of M.
Beaumont and Mayor, with which, by
means of friction alone, they can make
water boil. The machine, which may be
seen at work at their establishment on
the C|uai Valmy, contains 100 litres of
water which is made to boil in two hours.
A cone of wood, which turns in a cylin
der, so as to produce the necessary fric
tion, is covered with tow and the tow in
order that it may not take fire is kept
constantly moistened by a stream of oil
winch runs on it. The heat gradually
inc ejses until at last steam is genera
ted.— Galigna i.
r*l! rise. PRESSES, PutriTS
TICOATS.—These
are the great levers
lhat govern the world. Without them
the bottom would fall out and society
would become chaos again. The press
make people patriotic, the pulpit reli
gious, but woman sway all things. There
would be no going to church if there
were no girls there, neither would there
be any going to war were the soldiers to
meet with n applause but from the mas
calines. Without the sunshine shed by
woman, the rosebud of affection would
never grow, noT the flowers of eloquence
germinate. In short, she is the steam en
gine of life, the great motive p-wer of
love, valor and civilization. In proof ol
this truth all history apeaka trumpet
tongued.
A quiet exposition of truth has a better
effet than a violent attack on error. Truth
Ileligio^ at Home.
"Let them learn first,, says Paul, to
show piety at home." Religion begins
in the family. That sort only shining a
broad is a very suspicious son. One of
the holiest sanctuaries on earth, is home.
The family alatr is more venerable than
any altej in the cathedral. The educa
tion or the soul for eternity begins by the
fireside- The principle of love which is
to be carried through the universe is first
unfolded in the family.
A
ing in his hellish desifti, he administered
certain drugs, and then triumphed over
her virtue. By threats of exposure he for
ced her to continue the criminal connec
tion, anl received frvn her, letters ack
nowledging her guilt.
A short time ago Ferris returned to
Chester, and, thinking his betrothed still
innocent, married her Gordon,who had
never really forgiven Ferris the injuries
of the past, placed a package of his wife's
letters in his way, which told the whole
story of her crime. His first thought was
to take the life of the destroyer of his
peace, but not meeting him, and reflect
ing that his wife might be equally guilty
he left the village, and has never returned.
The excitement growing out of the affair
was intense, and the masons piomptly
expelled Gordon from the lodge.
SfcUTA supposed diamond of an extra
ordinary size has been recently found in
Lancaster connty, Peun., and is now de
posited in prof. Phillips* office, Philadel
phia. It is colorless, perfectly crysta
line,resembling a drop of clear spring wa
ter, in the middle of which is observable
a strong light playing with a great deal
of spirit. I his specimen has rather a
rough coat, but it is clear of Haws or
veins, and no blemish can be seen in the
body of the stone. The geological local
ity where this beautiful specimen waa
found is diluvial gravel, fragments of
quartz or rolled pebbles of quartz, mixed
with furriginous sands. Its accompany
ing minerals are inicacious iron ore and
slaty jaspt rs, and found to be a little be
low the earth. This valley will undergo
a thon-ugli senrch for more of its hidden
treasures. The geologist does not pro
nounce it to be of the first water althougl
there is not the least doubt of its being
of considerable value. Offers of import
ance, it is said, have been declined for it.
Nothing like it, U is supposed, was ever
before discovered in the United Slates.
MR. DODGE LODUCD
A
Mr. Dunn
PALACE.—
A Paris letter, under the date of 18ult,
says that Mr. Dodye continues to be well
received by people in Madrid, and they
say he is about to toH'nv the Queen to
Kscurial, lo reside during the stay ol the
Court at that place. The Escu ial, it
will be remembered, was the monastic
retreat of the renowned Charles V. after
he had renounced all his glories and hon
ors. Now it is be ccupied ty an A
inerican soveieign with even a higher
name A ugujtus Cirsnr! Chicago t'ress.
WOMARS SIMIEE*.—Charles Dickens
never wrote auything more beautiful
and true than the following.
'The true woman, for whote ambition
a husband's love and her children s ado
ration are sufficient, who applies her mil
itary institute to the dicipline or her
household, and whose legislates exercise
themselves in making laws for her nurse,
whose iutellcct has field enough for her
in coiumiini n with her husband, and
whose heart askes no other honor ihan
his love and admiration: a waman that
does not think it a weakness to attend to
her toilet, and does not disdain to be
beautiful: who believes in the virtue of
g'ossy hair and well- fitting gowns, an
eschews rents and ravelled edges, slip
slop seoes and audacious make-ups a
woman who speaks low and dose not
speak much who is patient and gentle,
and intellectual and industrious who
loves more than she reasons, and rarely
argues, but adjusts with a smile such a
woman is the wife we have all dreamed
of once in our lives, and who is the moth
er we still worship in the backward dis
tance of the past, such a woman as this
does tn- re for wou.aa's cause than al! the
sea captain?, 1 nrristers, judges and mem
bers of Parlimeut put together.-God
given and God bletsed as she ii.
Brown
remarked the other
18 not
their of jt
extiipartes errors as grass
weeds
by working its way into
place, and leaving them no room to grow.
WELL DIITED TOST.—The following
toast was given at Bidgeford, July 4th:
"The Clergy All honor to the clcr
mau who tollowa inatead ol
i his Paymaster.
dren—the world will beat them."* It was
beautiful thought tohug no» elegantly
expressed. Yes, there is not one chi'd in
the circle around the halthlul ane happy
as they look now, on wlios head, if long
spared, the storm tfill not beat. Adver
sity inay wither them sickness may fade,
a cold world inay frown on them but amid
all let memory carry them back to a
home where the law of kindness reigned,
where'the mother's and reproving eye
moistened with a tear, and the fathei
frowned "more in sorrow them anger.
Ex.
Baokbons Planted.
the St. Louis Democrat says, tbat"the
North has not only maintained the per.
dendicularity of its spinal column, but
run it into the ground," Well' then we
have some hope of seeing a crop of "back
bones" as the lesult, that will be strong
enough to stand against a Sougthem
preeie.—Ex.
THEFT or TIME.—The man who is
diligent in his master's work no longor
than when his eye is upon him—who
only waits for his absence to slacken his
industry, de erves not the character of
an honest man. He certainly robs his
master of his lime, and if he continues to
indulge that idle disposition, will too
probably be induced, when opportunity
offers, to rob him of his prdperty.
F. T. Travell.
day that it is all very well to say, "never ping,-I shall waut a little change.
1
go to law," but what was a fellow to do
when law rasne to him! Mi Browns
observation was called forth by a oblong
piece of paper, with which an officer had
(axored him. There is a great deal ol
force in Mr Brown's way of putting the
question.
There is a machine in tbe Paria exhi
bition that makes two thousand cupa of
coffee per. hour.
More hearts pine away in seciet
anguish, "for the want ol kindness ot
those who sheuld be then coiulort, than
for any other calamity in tile.
The following is veu as a remedy for
that horrible malady, hydrophobia. As
everthiue should be tried that c»n any
manner mitigate or arrest thi* terrible in
fliction, »l
wth ut interest.
"Wash the wound immed etely with
warm vinegar and tepid water, dry it,
and then apply a few drops muriatic
acid, which will duetroy the po,#on of
the saliva, or neutralize it, and the cure
be effected.
"Skeesix, is not Miss Flmpinginny a
particular friend of youTS?"
"Yes, too paiticular. She has got to
be so particular, that she won't speak to
me."
Be wise—for in gaining wisdom,
extirDateslalso gain em nence, from which no
of jealousy and malice can hurl you.
When a man passes a day without re
flection, ho may well exclaim at night,
"1 icar that I have done something wrong.
The ladies of Virginia ar«5 trying to
raise S2Q0.000, by subs, nption. to pur
chase the Mt Vernon estate.
A Paris correspondent has examined
a machine in operataon there, owncn by
a Belman, which sets 1
•30,000 to 190,005
types each day, or as much copy as twen
ty compositors could set in that time.
HOME.—A happy home ia a glorious
and instructive sight, and which doea the
heart good to see.
"My dear," said a smiling spouse to
her other half, "I intend lo go a shop-
'••ii--" Pooh!'' responded he, "that would be
no change at all—you go shopping every
day."
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
dans are fast becoming Europcani
They are becoming eareless of the mar
beat the.e
rage, vow'get drun', oeai
Christians.
3
TERMS, $1 50 In ADTANCE.
How to Treat Ohildrn. Trouble, Trouble.
Be ever gentle with the chihlr.a God Baby's got the measels, second boy is
has given you: watch over them constant- drooping, third one down on trundle bed
lv: reprove them earnestly bu. not in an- with dreadful cough is "whooping.
ger. In the forcible language of the Mercury down to rero, wood pile some
Scripture, "Be not bitter against them." t*low
-Rev.
Under the new lienor law of Massa
chusetts there have been in all fourteen,
cases given to the juries and in every
case but one there was an acquittal.
A Main Law Physician's prescription
on the city agency—"West India rum,
one pint, aqua (water. )five drops."
«.I say Bill, Jiin,s caged for stealing a
horsa.*,
"Served him right. Why didn't he
buy him and not pay for it, like any oth
er gentleman?"
A RrnAif.—Ia military phiaae a B«
dan is a triangular work, generally con
structed in front of a more extensive for
tification, which it partially protects, and
renders an attack on it more difficult.
Nat, what are fil* leaning
empty cask for?"
"I am mourning over departed ape-
rits?"
We are too apt to hate bad men, when
we should pity then and we
ourselves that wo are hating the vice,
when we are only hating the man.
often flatter I by
NO.
il-
raan lncs lo a
Yes. they say g.Kxl boys," I once heard he cannot "go it." Wife is busy wash
a kind father say, "I talk to them very i"g a host dirty -duds,whilst ever a-i
mutch, but do uot like to beat my chil-
hero'
ccrlam IS
IN
RHOAO
ISLAND.—There are twenty-three regular
ly organized parishes in the dioc.se, and
twenty-five clergy
mm on the present list.
During the past Conventional year more
than ten thousand dollars haw been
raised for missunary and other religious
purposes. The cese it two thousand six
hundred and fourteen.
py~A king in Spain is said to have
roasted to death, while his attendants
iv*»re deba'iug whose, duty it was to diaw
him from the fire, l'he Westminster takes
this for a picture of the British ministry
sa. rifi' ing a brave army, while Pailia
rnent sits atill, groaning wer nouty
enerals.
v
bruis their children, ussociale with mn was suspended a plain but
dels, and in fact are gettm to be like the
A lady came to Buffalo from Foft Erie. VYilliam Bcrthers.'-Cm. Enq.
.ide in hand
a day or two since, with a cow
intent upon' chastising the steward ol the
stea-nboat Troy, tor having induced a ser
vaut'gitl to adopt her name while an ex
cursion. The ceremony was preformed
on board the Troy, in the presence of a
large aad deltg4tt#d assembly. Ex.
but leU
anon a tear falls silent in the suds.
Husbaud rocks the cradle, "secon^on
his lap, sooths the "third"one with a kiss
and hits the lourth a slap. So from me!
ancholly moans and starting, trouble drea
ming, the tune is changed to groans, sti*
fled sobs and screaming. Patience all
exatisUed, he roughly speeds the rocking,
and jolts the little sufferer will a rudeueas
that is shocking. Confusion worse con
lounded? A neighbor ope's the door,and
with voice and lace astounded says,
"Have you heard the price of flour?"
No! "husband loudly lallooes "what's
the latest news'" "Flower's thirteen dol
lars twelve has been refused.**
A scream! 'tis "sissy's voice," some
thing's com* arthwart her. In she comes
all covered o'er with blood and dirty wa
ter. "Old Brindles gored the heifer, the
yearling's thigh knocked sissy down and
cut her, and scared a passerby." Wile
sits ffown despairing weary of her life,
husband nothing caring, lor the quadru
pedal strife—wonders whether Job, the
man of many sores, when his wife bade
him give up, led such a life indoors.
Meantime the wealthy mother siti id
her easy chair on its rich embroidered
cover, mind comfort everywhere, and
wonders what they fnean— those people
that are poor—parting of their troubles,
which they think they endure. "If they
only had her trials—knew what she un
derwent they'd think that all the vials of
wrath were on them spent, which sets us
thinking, reader, lhat its rightly estimated
one-half of our sorrows, are sadly over
rated. And the moral of our rhypie,
though prosily it runs never borrow
trouble, but take it as comes.
AaT ITEM,—A few months sipce A
lady in this city, on her wpdding day,
relieved from a friend in New York, a
very shabby looking picture, with tha
wish it might adorn 1 er parlor.
It was so obscure that oi.e could scarce
ly detect the outlines ol the figu.ea
which it represented, but on account of
the giver it was sent to be r« stored.—-—
While there, an Englishmen saw it
ami offered nfiy dollnistor it, which offer
wns re 1 used by the lady on account ot its
being a gilt. The Englishman urged
his offer, and calling upon the lady said,
he should regard it as a favor if slpl
would allow iiun to present her with on»
hundred dollars and take the painti g.
Of course she refused, when be incie.
ased his bids (iradualy from If 100 ta
$1000, and finaly asked her lo set hf*
own price, as it was one of six pa in lugJK
by Murillo. two of which were desti oy*
firK-
often Hatter
aud tl,ree vvhu
?re
EuruP£siamfci
l,ecl
of this, that he
in readiness to pay as high as S104"fW
for the painting- quite a pretty sum for,
a younit bride. An original Murillo,at
the sale of the late Marshal Sunk s
gallery, brought upward of 118,000,
Boston Gaztlt.
PlIILA
WTIIROPHT ANC
TOUCHIXO IPH
ITS RawAND
IDEPIT.—About
four wee.,
ksngo an el leily and respectably dre.-aed
gentleman was observed lying upon ilia,
sidewalk on fourth street, nearly oppoMt»
the office of the Ohio and Mississippi
Railroad. A crowd gathered around,
and some ot whom pro wmveed him in
a fit, while others attributed his malady
to another suse. Among them was a
little girl about twelve years of age,
who, kneeling down, gently lilted his
head upon her lap, while she w.ped away
the clammy perspration Irom his lore
head with her shawl. In a short time
the object of her solicitude revived suffi
ciently to ask for water, and it being
administered, h« asked for a coach,whwfe,
being brought up, he was lifted I'ltO,
when he nio'.ioutd lor the little girl to
accompany h'm. It was a case of parra
lysis the gentleman's nam« was Bertnera
he is a retired merchant from NewOr.e
ans. but lately arrived in this city.
His ?hce of renounce is on routrfc,,
near Park street. The little girl who
acted the part of the good Samniitao iu
her sympathy with and administering to
the n fficted, is I he daughter of a peer
widow woman named Pet Litis, who
resides
nf-at the Ohio and Mississippi
Railroad
Depot, and .very morning
daring bis sickness she might have been
seen at the residence ot tlis afflicted gen
tleman, timidly inquiring after his heauh.
i The most grateful phase uf the incidei
that the invalid,who i so far ^covered
Win. C. Bryan", the poet, writing
from the East, sad that the Mohammc- '^at* hV-'an ride out, drove on monday to
the
residence
I)er
(T
of the mother of the child,
and presenting her with a che- k for JW
wives i hung a handsome gfh1
cf hls
NOT
lli®'
hti'e ministering ange
watc[i,Upon
the face ol «l.v:h was \p
oil"win" inscription-— Prese^teiJ
e
(0
het
Mavy Cordelia P«rkms, by het friftxKj
2(3
A PABTOA,-~T?H«»
corder, in an excellent article on "A
Settled Ministry," m^ues the reionrk
that "Au evctlasv.ng candidate, with one
foot on the ground of his labors, am! the
other in the atirrup for a new journey
to a more inviting field, is not a pastor'