tASKA ADVERTISER jUJSEM ETEET THCKSDAT IT HER & COLIIAPF, r Block, liala S't Between 1st & 2d TERMS: eyear. In advance, , to one adUrc.s, ,,ald in Adrance, but paid wUbin Ibe rear, ,11 be added to the above wrmi. oe rer, ore 25 r cent will bf TTork, end Plata ana" Taney Job Wrk, M atyle, and on fbort notice. , : , - .,, -.t . " - ; ' 7T , ,, I,, I,,, - mm Tiii-Miimi iimn a mil - ii - n nana i m ii mi m i m iwin nm--i - - - j , -, - - iiinir -ii iMiiimii.il n i i i riiMiiiinMinMiiMiniiiimw . ... ..,'., r- : ... . .:!.. .; xSiSt "'.' J , : .,). - UtDIUtai1.il i.-i.'-iili i Hi ' . ;,-Cs Hi Hi .:' -W-H lr H r i I : ' ; MJrUvr'-.-''-? : ..1,-11 i A). ZD. ,! UL : VWJ JLt J AriKs a li UZUj aV J U j .&sxssxss;.-.-.; K V V7 ' S V V fTV V' .V-'J : K i-V -V V l'.-V-vr. . V.V V " V "V . Ob tgatkcolira ene year - i. f N N- -. ' r .-7.-' ; X t.T V - . " -' .. j . : . f . .. ,. t - , , " - " o&eoolaraa fix lacttu . 2C V '; . ' ! J ; V '' " ""J ' ' :': . : -.1 ' . :, . . One halt colnma t'a monti SI i 6 03 V - - ' : 4 ,,,.; .X-' . - . . , ...... ocsfourtlj eclsm snUi - IS C S on : ..;..; : . u ., ; t - ! M . , OneeUitlcr it.lsMt'.i nwV.U - tiff 15 co . ' ' ... . ,"''---.: " . . .. ." - oae cclTitan three moctii - ! " T TTtPRTY a VT4 TTVTOM ONE,'A'KD' INSEPARABLE,' NOW AND FOUEVER." " OnrartrlusaYb9e"mo - ii a ' ' ' iXi-atiI AXiL. UMU.N, wt, , ., OnaeUtta colomo tare iMBthf t r VOL. VIII. ' 11 .BROWN YaLE; NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JULY, 21," 1864. : A; : ; - : " : yNO. 46.. rSiyr.'.. , . - 1 ' 'MJllM-MWMMaMMBBBBBaBBTwl"aiBl t"a"f' ' " I NESS CARDS., isiiAirriKAVis,' 1RNEY AT LAW, LS CITY. JCEBRABJtA. aictice in all He Court ol clraa. jeTw. THOMAS, 0RHEYd AT LAV,. .TOR Ii" CHANCERY. corner of X5xin ii! Fir!t Street. '. tVKVILLE. NEBRASKA. STEWART, IvLDT, CIRT1 & SURGEON! corner of M.iin ail First Streets i . s 7 to 9 a. M. and I to 2 and C to 7 ' P M . Voscrii i.uov, R AND HAIR-DRESSER vle V. O.I!u.!JitgUt.l-t anJ 2d. .r.kstf. l.i? iat.-r.LS for former liberal !,d is rti.l vu f.ti.d ready to slave, i dreyfcnir in tliC-feett stjie ,Airil21,T-4. r33-81y. THOMAS DAVIS, , ZTICPHYSICIAN ; ROCK, NEBRASKA ?nce, Dr. D. Oirin, DrownvMle. I. mo-iy rc-ii zv. rxisssAVES :;hif."' OILS U'Al.DTEn, ..-t yi-i. r-Jy to perforin all work, par ,t r.itHii' ; f in imintirs, gl.mnjr, and paper liarg-i-liort iiolKv, and the most aj proved .g cash. Give him a call. xin t?trett, cast of Atkinson 'i Cloth- Ayril 7. lr. II. C. KAHE, AMBROTYPIST, Ifi.rcra-ed to tke MBIiOTVPES nV MfLlXe OTVl'HS iu the best S;-t of tlio urtjaud at Lower Trices tlian Ever IJeforc OlTercd in IlroivnviSIe. " ... lie etill oecnpics the Sky-Liht Gallery on Main Street, opposite th City Drn Store, wbcio Lo may be found daring business hoars. , ricturcs AVarrrnted to CJive Satisfaction The j ulllc arc invited to call and -examine speci mens. . ' . Hours of operation, from 3 A. M. to 4 P. M. ErtwnTille.Fi-b. 4, 1&64. r.23-tf BEKKLEY& KEELY. Wagcn LlakciG. nWIXns PXCEXTI.V 1 FITTED CP TIir.IR hboptvitb now uuh;nry jitv:h n aturniR'-'.atbe, tdrcfo-eaw. t., w?v? V1 u".put o.I Rrticlo vt Vakoss," V,rAo.v llfBSS. A30S Kows, Vtw and Iiiri:jVEi Ccltiyatoh?, and everjtbin in tbiir line that may be called f r from a complete waoo down te the malh-f r. rf j airs rcdrd at .wer rats titan they c:n lo Lai at any pJint t-a-t or Wettof this i-!aJ Q . ' T - - . .mi . MILLINERY- GOODS I ' "ains. marv iiEivrTT, Annoantea to U-'. ladies f Brownrillo and tU ;"ic3 cini'y. tbat Lb jot leccivea from tLe Eat s magaincctit .tock ot-. CPSca SVHH2Ii lilLLIIIEP.Y COCDS, - C iislsties ot Lmlies' and ?Iiisf- IJourtcts and Hats, Kibbons. riou'tre, tc., which eh invite-' the attention of the ladies, feel li. ' as.-rcdthcy cannot Le tetter euitcU In style, jua- ity or price. n4l-iy Warranted Garden Seeds Xo. 3KSMI7H SHOP, sst corner Main and Socotid Strett, ov::;vrLLE. nesha-ska. . s Is prepared to do all kind of work in ip fi eafh. Horse Shod. Flows Sharp ns Irone4 off, in Tact anytbtrg in the ng4Jne done in tbo test etylcoa short BLFNDEN. K0EN10 & CO., (l..t.'"BMGAlStTTlCO.J jG yoilh Second Street, a&ave Tine, .T i .OTTTK. I'd. ... CTer f nr aale at very low tignrea. a. lame nd welj assort eJ jtixli of Auricnitural an.l rTirtir.ultnrMl Imple ments. d-'Uipri.-in every lUu nc:oss?r lo the f aiuer, together with a larpeaiiJ trvbti mi .y oi .!- fti.ii e mi .ii ; i l.'clotocd Garcen Sec;!-, From the Saturday Evening Post. SHIPWRECKED. - Look where the flips go down j ' : Bonie silently and slow, ' -Upon the e of life, , ' Full freighted with their woe i 1.1 Other?, wi;h tattered Fail, . . From lattlinwiib rough wind, , . Sink down with mournful wail, " Kor k-:iTC a traco bebind. -- " ''! .. . : . i . . ' l Look whero tha t hips ;o dowo, , 1 All rcntd bb on ot;r way ; ' " ' -' 8&mo striko on sadden rock,. .'. ' With warning clear a day ,: t; And Eorue, with calmejit tido, . VThose jcurse ere now was bright, Beneatb th dark waTes bide- ' Their last uncertain light. . ' : " ' ' r'-" " "' -"Look where the slips go down, The barber full in view, With warning on the "rocks r To guide the trarcller throngh. Look w here the .wrecks go down, Or wonder tempest tossed,' . ' With ligh t and anchor gene ; , Forever, ererkstl ; r "7 ' ,-.'-Oh, aoul of mine, keep calm! Sail firinly on thy way, J - : To- acet the great I Am" ' . At Ileaven's all-crowning day; -Thy fears will all be o'erj ' Thy anchor then at rest, Anl thou for evermore ; ' Safe baTcned with the Mestl-t I) THE -OLD MAN'S -STORXs A" THRILLlStf SKETCH. i e: ,0 1 ui. .n --- t . i . - ;r..:i s'll CO I.. i'r-.B li. evbrv jt.5,i.ii.:e. aim. ii. t-t-e 1 1st, f A. dSO-vS 2ra FAIR BANK ' EIASDASD SCALES OT ALL KIKUf. Alio, "Warehouie Trucki, Lettei Presses, Ac. AKKSf GREENLEAF & CO! i LAKiE .ST., CHICAGO, arefnl. r hit only the Pennine. JX t .,-vc-t i.iariet rate; Ctnacie sfu u ..;t- T' '?-.ioll6. &c..&f. '-.,,. Af.vil t:or't.V AND TOBAtM O ? t.l D. Dtver in seeds would co well toCLd tLem then Send for Almanac and Illustrated Cata! .t-ne rst! s. , BLUNDEX, KOENKi & CO. . Feb. 26, 1862n34-ly ' . BACK TO THE OLD STANDI II 11 UK CLOCKS, t V I S E fl I w ii i u in it .THEYR. & EOBISON, MAKCTACTVHERS OF 'OTS AND SHOES J FETwrrw riRiT akd sr.ccco sts., -ratly pvrcbasei". tbe Shoe Shop foT.ierlT m.T. Pel, we noT offer our work at jneit "irP8. We manufacture all that we oner J"A11 work warranted. FSprOS7, 1S62. ' : nll-t LINE PLOYS, ., . .500 ,.,'.,-. i ..a On hand and to arrire at . CONSTABLE'S md Steel Warehouse., 10 anl 22 Thira Street, ' " JOSEPH, MO. S-tf. rew Remedies for . RMATORRHCA. RD ASSOCIATION TTTTLA.Dn-LPHTA. Inttt'vt n estr.bhi.fiFi1 t v : '.ma r. 'f t f Ret rf o nrf iJArrMJ! the Curt of DUtiutt Sxtrtl A1)VTCS riTen gratis, by the Acting .rt (vn.per.iorrha nd other 1i) ial Or,., and nn the K EW HEM K in tn. Ii-.rpnry, aent in sealed lettei 4f cl.ar . T c or three Siamp. accept- J.SKll.I.TX none TITOX, now ard At I, S 'tiUi .Ninth t. reei, Philadelphia. Pa. , ISCt. r.?3-1y r' I . 'AND' " ' r- S'BWBIiB.'Y!! JOSEPH S II U T Z Vonld respectfull inform bis old customers that be b-s apajn vpened hia Jewelrj Sh p in bis old stand on Main i-treet, tcuih side, two doors eat of tbeBrown ville Hote. lie keeis o" banti a spleudi l ai.?ortiiieut of ever yti.ln(f ia bis line of buiuess, which lie will tell on the Awpst terras ferCat-h Of Clo Vs; Watches and Jewelry dune on the short est Notice. WORK WARRANTED. Erownville, Xeb.: May 19th, 15C1. n37-v8-Iy CHAS. G. DORSEY. III IVtm&I il.fi.! 'liJiiL H BP.OWSVILLE, XEEP.ASKA. April 14 U, loCI. L3i;3j ly NATIONAL: CLAIM AGENCY!!! , ' O Xi -A. I 2VS a . AGAINST GOVERNMENT aCOLLi:CTED.5, IT ATtVET i COLLIN'S, Wa binctou, D. C. UKAV13 &. TOVVLK, Ki'.U Ci':; Ke raria. . The above mentioned flrras h ive rve-et lo'o a cc- panticr-bip n-r tt-e p.irrHH.e ot!v;'jTi i. vun io.-., bai k. Pty, p.-ici u'u.s l'et si m-;; v''T f-'1' i'irs' m ! Other r lit while in trvi ; m4 11 ini-oo.liao'.us cUitn vr.vefiit..d. At: y.i'.t!io:- or S.nl'-r'? tieirs 'who liavelaiin aciiB-t tVe G'-'ii Ment wiU1 wc!i to pive ' a cjit a. PiuUCitT. Xe:.mka. PrtKnlir at iei'i.n p 't l to 1iutiiiz taa ! 1 Mi.Muri Knrl!e1 XilitiaCl AJiu ree. Ltr misweres ;nmpt ly. N'otuiuiJjiiiel. 4'tiiia;C'ui ce't- . 1-tK A V13 TOWLF4. Mar ist. 1304. ' 'n.-35-v8-!tt . AC0B.MAU0I1N, CHANT TAILOR, .LE, NLCKASKA tention ef fieutlemen deslrlcg new, cent J fashionable 1 Vearing Apparel, to mi 7 STOCK OF GOODS. JUST RECEIVED. "US, CASSIMERS, VESTIXGS, Ae..& VCIIY LATEST STYLES, -1 aell tr make up, to order, at unprece cea. Earinx on band one of S SEWING MACHINES, Co&totn work at rates that defy couipe I warrant tny work, well as Machine TTork. tanythinjf in hia line will do well to nt bis tux before inTeatine. as be 1 to bold out peculiarly favorible In- y & Dress-making SS E. Ia. HARRIS,, .7 ' nformthe ladies of Browori'le and foe ha; juft cctnmenced a rsl class :RY k DRESS MAKING swill Udone with peat care an arter the latest Eastern etjles. ind repairing done 1n the Terr bet ihort noUee. Please call f the resi J oecnpied bt J. W. Colemaa . ,Maj it ' . - ' McLAliJiiLTX t 5WAV ire constantly re.'eivinft a'U.iU in. ti their ato -lc of iJnceviej ani Haril ware. Their G i -d aud Pricca wiltuii terybou aty other m:iu." choice iiauoss. Wliolesalo and Retail. 1 Evan Worthing, OF THE Saloon BROWN VILLE, . . Haa Jtut lfcf.iTH the lf,rFf,t trii (,f m .T."'i"7'1 v'Z"Tr i'f.ei in thla market . and " 1 lLmM 1jw as any fljuse in tae Territory. TI'UITXET'S BLOCK,a Hia Street, Brownville. .reb.4,C4 jlr. '" PICtELS tr the d.wr v barrel, ,f . ,Uperior qual itj, crusiantly on hnni h s At aicl.angtilin & Swan's. PITROK, xnace, epice, per-rcr. KiUCr nuTmer"cia - iiauion, etc., etc: 1 1 beM: ja.4ijty ' At Xlcliuughiin &. Sivan's. CrLTIVATOP.S, ScyJnes, CrI'es, lUkeT noes Bi ada a, Shovels, etc,' e.c, ' ' At McLaughlin & Swan'g. CRACKERS of all kind. S--l.Eu ter, Bston. Socar, Wirieand Pkk-Jo'ic Crackers, Cream Biscuit aud Ginger Snappa, . . At JJcLaiithlin A Swan's. NEW Orlean, Clarif.ed. Crutfced and Powdered S ara, Golden Syrup .5n;ar House and Sorghum Molas&ea At KcLanghlin 4: Bvran's. TOE best Flctir from thcL. S. V. G. Mills In quarter ball and whole sacks trept At rsicLaughlia & Swan'-. SAtrg, rarfmerg, 'natclete ' Files, Or Chains and At HcIiaugUin & Swan's. rjHE bifibest market pn-e l aid for Country Prodnc I hever shall forget the commencement f the lemporance reform. lAvas a child t thtt time of i-'cme ten yfnrs of aa. Our home Iia J every comfort : aud my f -.rents idolized me, their. child.,;. Wine -xa.s often on the table, and both my fath er and mother frequently gave it to me in the "bottom .'of the glass. ;. ! , ; ..'...'., j One Sunday, t Church, a startling an coupcement was made to our people.. I knew "nothing of its' putport,' but there was much whispering among the men. The pattor said that on the next evening there 'would le a meeting'and an address upon the evils of inlebpefance in the use ot alcoholic drinks. . He expressed himself ignorant' of the object of the meeting, and cculd'not say what course it ivould be best to pursue in the matter.. . The Vut ject of the meeting came up to our table after the service, I question ed my. father about it with all the curious eagerness of a child. The whispers, and words which had been dropped in my hcarins-, clothed the whole alTiir with a great mystery to me, and I wasalleager ne?s to loam the strange thing.' 1 ' ' My father merely said it was "some scheme to unite Church and State. ' ; ' The night came, and groups of people gathered on the tavern steps, and I heard the jest and the laugh, and.sav,drunken raea reeling out of the bar-room. I urgrd my father to Jet me go; tut, he at first refused. Finally, thinking it would be aa lonccent gratification of my curi osity, he put: on Li&hat and we1 passed across .the green to. the Church. I re member well . how the people appeared ts they came in seeming, to wonder what kind of an exhibition was to cbme off. In the corner was the - tavern-keeper, aud around him a number of 'his friends. For an hour the people I of the place continued to come in, until there was a fair house full; All were curiously watch ing at the door wolidermg what would ap pear next. - Tlie pastor stole and took a seat behind a pillar under the gallery, as if doubitul of the ' propriety of being in Church at all. ... Two men fiually came in and went to 'the altar and took'lheir seats Alieyes were fixed upon them; rind a general stillness pervaded the house.. . ,. ' The men were unlike in appearance, onf b.;sng short and thick-set, the other w.s tall aud well-formed. The younger had the manner and dress of a clergy men, a full round face, and a quiet good natured look, as he leisurely looked a round the audience.' ;' . '. I3ut my childish interest was all in this old man. His broad, deep chest, and un usual height, looked' giant-like as he strode up the aisle. His hair was white, his brow deeply .canned with furrows, and around his handsome mouth, lines cf calm, touching madness. His eyes .vere black and restless.)' and kindled, as the tavern-keeper uttered a low jest aloud. His lips were compressed aud a crim son .flush yent and come ..over his pale cheek. One arm was off above the el bow, and there.jvai ,'a wida'scar over jhe right eye j -j , ;,r ( .The younger finally arose and stated the object of of the meeting, and asked if there was a clergyman present to open whh a prayer.,.. . , . -'. , ' ', . .: i . ., .Our pastor kept his seat, and the speak er himself made a short prayer, and then made a short address,, at the conclusion calling upon anyone present lomake re marks' ' '" : "; '" ; -' :The pastor rose under the gallery, and attacked tHs' positions or '.the. t speaker, using the arguments which I have often heard since,r and concluded by-denouncing those engaged in the new movement as meddlesome fanatics, who wished to break up the time honored' usages of good society, and injure the"' business of respectable men. At the conclusion of his remarks, the tavern-keeper and his friends got up a. cheeri and the current of feeling was evident against the. strangers and their plan, i : r- v.: " . While ; the pastor Iwas-. speaking, ihe old man had fixed his dark eye upon him, and leaned foiwaid, as if i'to catch eVery. word. v. ..r;! u .As the pastor took his seat,4tha :old man arose, his tall form towerihgdn its ?5mmetry, and his chest swelling-its he inhaled his breath through liis thin dilated nostrils. To me, at that lime, there was! something awe-inspiring, and grand in the appearance of the - old man as he stood with' his full eye upon the audience, his teeth shut hard, and a'silenca like that of death' throughout the Church. He bent his gaze 'open the tavern keeper, and that peculiar eye lingered and kindled for half a momenta ' . The scar grew red upon his forehead, and beneath the heavy eye-brows his eyes glittered and glowed like those of a serpent. The tavern-keeper quailed be fore that searching glance; and I felt a relief when the old man. withdrew his crate. For a moment he seemed lost in thought, and' then commenced. There was a. depth in that voice a thrilling pathos andvveetuesi, vhich riveted every heart in the house, before the first period had been rounded.' My.Vfather's attention had become' fixed on the speaker witbxan interest which-1 had neire. before, seen him exhibit. -;I canibut briefiy remember the 'substance" of what' the old 'man said, though the'scene . is as vivid b'efoteVme as any that I have ever witnessed. "My frientis.'- I arnastranger in your village, and I trust I may call you friends a new "star ha3 arisen, and there is hope in the dark night which hangs like a pall of gloom over our country," .With a thrilling depih of voice, Ahe, speaker continued: '-0 God, thou who lookest with compassion upon the most erring of earth's children, I thank thee that a bra zen serpent has been lifted, upon which the drunkard can look and be helped that a beacon has burst out upon the darkness that surrounds him, which shall rruide back to honor and heaven, the bruised and weary wanderer." , Jt js strange. what power there is, in spine' voices. The speakerwas slow and measured, but a. tear" trembled in every tone; and' before I knew" whyi a. tear dropped upon my hand, followed by others like raindrops. -The old man brushed one from his own eye, ah'd 'continued':.. ; "Men and .Christians!. You have just heard that am.a vagrant and fanatic. I am rot. As God knows my own iad heart -I came here to do good and be just. "I am an old man, standing atone, ht the cud of life's journey.; There js deep sorrow in my heart, and tears in my eyes. I have journeyed over a dark and beacon less oceanj and all life's hope's have been wrecked. I am without friends, heme or kindred ' upon earth, and lock with longing to the rest of the night of earth. Without friends, kindred or home ! It was not so oncef " ','(, j ; No one could .withstand The touching paihcs of .the old raan,iT. noticed a tear tremble' on my father's eye,' and h no more felt Ashamed of toy own. 'i - "No my fnends, it was not so once. Away over. the darkr waves which' have wrecked myi hopes there - is a: blessed light of' happiness and home. I reach again conclusively for the shrines ot the household idols that once were, now mine no more." : - ; ! .:. . The old "man seemed ' looking away through fancy upon'scme bright vision, his lips apart, finger extended. I unvot untarily turned in the direction it was pointed, dreading to see ome" shadow invoked by its magic movements. VI once had a, ' mother, ,"Vith her old heart crushea with sorrow she went down to the grave. ; 1 once had a wife a fair, angel-heart ed creature as ever Smiled in an earthly home;; ' Her . eyes as mild as a summer sky, and ; heart as . faithful and true ; as ever j guarded , and cherished a husband bve. ' Her fcJueves prewdifri as tne nooG-f.ot rorrow1 ;foshed away us brirhtneflld V,llnrr htr1 T irni until every, fil re wa3 broken.. I once had a nolle, brve and beautiful boy, but he was driven out from the ruins of his home and my cldj heart yearns to' -'know if he yet lives. I ence had a tabea. sweet, tender Ifosichi but my hand destroyed it, and it liveth with one who-.Ioves chil dren. :.. .-- e' , "Do not be startled friends; I am not a murderer in the comtr on acceptation of the. term..1 Yet, there. ia a Jight in my evening' sky. -A spirit mother- rejoices over the return of herprodigalscn.The wife 'smiles upon him who. again ! turns back to; virtue' and honor. ' The child angel visits me at nightfall, and I feel the hallowing touch of a tiny palm ' upon ray feverish cheek... My brave boyif he yet lives, wouhl forgive the sorrowicg old man for the .treatment which drove him inter ..the world; and the blow that maimed him ; for life. God .forgive, me for the. ruin, I have brought on me and mine.';; "He again 5wiped a. tear from" hia'eye My father watch.pd ihim, ttjib. a,; strange interest, continuing - unusually, pale-,! and excited; by some-strange-ernotion. : ; ! .''I was once ;a, fanatic, jand;raadly fol-l lowed.the malign , light .which led -me. to ruin. .Irwas a fanatic wert I sacrificed my wife, children, .h,Appiness..and home, to the-, accursed, demon of .the :bowL 'il once adored the gentle being whpra I in jured so deeply. , . f . . ' ' "I was a drunkard.. From respecta bility and affluence, I plungad into deg radation , and poverty. I dragged'rny family down with me. For years I saw her cheek pale and her step, weary. I left her alone amid .. the wreck of her home idols," and rioted at the tavern. She never complained, - yet she and the chil dren went hungry for bread. ."One New Year's night,-1, returned late to the hist , where charity had given us roof. . She was yet up, and shivering with the cold. I demanded foodj but .he burst into tears and . told m. . there yas none. I fiercely ordertd he to get seme. She turned her eyes sadly upon me, the tears falling fast over her pale cheek. At this moment the child in the cradle awoke and sent up a famishing ; wail, . starting the despairing mother, like. a. serpent's sting. it; it' "We, have no food. James r-have had none for several days;, d have .nothing for the babe. My once Jiind. husband, must we starve?" " .' . "That sad, pleading face,, and those streaming eyes, and; the feeble wail of the child maddened me,, and I yes, ,1 struck her a fierce blow in the face, and she fell forward upon ,the hearth. The furies of hell boiled, in my bosom, and with deeper intensity as I felt I had corn mitted a wrong. I had never struck Mary before, but now, some terrible im pulse bore mo on, and I stooped as well as I could in my drunken state, and clenched both hands in her hair. , ,4(4 'God of mercy,. James!' exclaimed my wife, as she looked, up to my fiendish countenance, "you will not kill us you will not harm Willie;'' and she. sprang to the cradle, -and grasped;him in her embrace. - I caught her. again ;by the hair and dragged . her. to the. door, and, p.s I lifted the latch, the wind burst in with a cloud, of snow.r . .With the yell of a fiend, I still dragged,.her. en, andt. hurled her oat iq the darkness and storm. r.,Wiih a wild ha! ha !I. closed the door and turn ed the button, herpleading moansmingled with Uie wail of tho blastj and the sharp cry of her babe. Bui my work was not complete. . .. : .. , "I turned to the little bed where lay my elder son, and snatched. him from his slumbers ; and agaicsthalf-awaked strug gles, opened the door and thrust him out. In the agony of fear, he called to me by a name I was n longer fit to bear, and locked his fingers into my side pocket. I could not wrench that . frenzied j grasp awajT and with the coolness of a: devil as I was, shut the door opoa his arm, and with a knife severed it away at the wrist." . The. speaker ceased a r moment and buried his face ir his hands,. as if to shut out, some fearful dream, and his deep chest heaved like. a storm-swept.sea, My father had risen from his. seat, and was leaning:forward, countenance lloodle&s, and the large dropsstanding out upon his brow. Chills crept back to my heart, and I wished I was. at home. .The old man looked up, and I nerer have since beheld such mortal agony pictured upon a human face as there was on his. . ... - - - "It was morning when I awoke, and the storm had ceased, tut the cold was intense, I first secured a drink cf water, and then looked in the accustomed place for Mary. As I missed her, for . the first time, a shadowy sense of some hor rible nightmare began to dawn upon my wandering mind. . j thought I had had a fearful dream, but I involun'.arity opened the outside doer with a shudderin? dread. O . ; As the door oponed, the scow burst ia, followed by the tali of something, across the threshold, seatttnng the snow' and rible! it was my own injured Mary and her bibe frozen to ice ! . The ever true mother had bowed herself ever the child to shield it, her own person stark and bare to th. storm. She had. placed her hair over th face of lEs .child, and, the sleet had frozen it to the white cheek. The frost was white in its half-opened eyi3 and upjn its tiny ringers. I knew not what became of my brave boy." i And again the old man bowed his head and wept, and all that were in the house wept with him. My father sobbed like a child.' In tones cf low and heart-broken pathos, the old man concluded: "J was arrested, and for long months raved in delirium." I awoke, was sen tenced to prison'for ten year's, but no tortures could have been like those I en dured within my own bosom. O Uod. no i am. not a ianauc. a nu iv iujuru uj one: ''But 'while ii live, let me strive to warn others" hot to enter the" path which has been so dark ami fearful a'ona 'lo li fc: t J. :n t: cli it me. The old nian'sat down, but a fpell as deep and as strong ai that wrought by some wizard's breath, rested upon the audience. Hearts could have beenheard in their beatihgahd tears to' fall. The old man then asked the people to sign the pledge. MyJather leaped frcm his seat, and snatched at it'eargerly. I Lad followed him, and as he.hesitated a mo ment with the pen in the iuka tear fell from the old man's eye on the paper. "Sign it, sign it, young man. Angels would sign it. ,1 would " write my name there ten' thousand time3 in blood if.it would bring back my loved and lost ones." My father wrote "Mortimer Hudson." The old man looked,, wiped his tearful eyes, and looked again, h'u countenance alternately flahed with a red nd death like paleness.' "It1 is no? it cannot be yet, how strange," muttered, the, old man. "Par don me, : sir, but . that wai the caine : of my own'" brave boy. My father trembled, and held up the left arm, from which the hand had been severed. They looked a moment in each other! eyes, both reeled and gasped' U "My own injured son!" 1 " ' "My father !" ' ' ' ' They fell npon each- other's neck and wept; until it" seemed that their souls would grow and mingle into one. There was weeping in the church, and .ad faces around me. ' "Let me thank God for his great bless ing which has gladdened my guilt-burdened soul !" exclaimed the eld man, and kneeling down, he poured out his heart in one of the 'most melting : prayers I ever heard. The spell was then broYen, and all eagerly signed the pledge, slowly going- to their -homes "loth to , leave the spot. ...'...; The old man is dead; but the lessen he taught hi. grand-child on the knee, as his evening sun went 'down without a . We know a lady who i3 csrtitely ta ht pitied, if to be "fretted to tLiiV 1 7 s'a pid serrants is. aajthiag . to es-us zzti . commiseration. A few cp cur friend wa3 much alarmed at ' ment an a'tteihpt had leen 1 her dwelling by burglars. ; L gel that heJ "must et a' v rogues." Bridget, not. being long, country, and not understand' icg of the order, replied l : it tho.li be done. The next day cur lady mend, mi;:.:r.f her fine gold lever from it3 accu3torrsd place, inquired of Bridget ccncercing 1:1 whereabouts. ;Shure," she replied, "andidat 7?.. .. ladyship tell me last aTenicg' tn sst a ; watch frcm ihe thafe, an sure I did. ma'am, an didn't he corns and t&ka it a way wii him, shure, widout raakia ai much asa joyrno'9 rnouse." At a political meeting ia oae, of thi ' western towns, a'speaker named Lcn: . responded to a'bud call, and-took tha stand. " ' ' But a big strapping fellow persisted ia crying out, ia a stentonoriaa voice: Long! Long !" . t ' This caus?d a little corifusion.bat aftet Rcme difficulty in making himself heard the president succeeded iri stating that Mr Long, ' the gentleman honored by the call, was how addressing them. . "Oh, he le. damned !"'. repLied tha fellow; "he's! the little skeczricks that told me to call for Long!" 1 ' This remark broesghdown the hous? A religious lady chanced 10 go into the country on a viiit to her brothsr, who' was a deacon. On the first Sunday cf her visit a lit'le soa of her brother's came running into the house with a coup : le of egg, which ha had just found ia ' the hen's nest. "See aunt!" he exclaimed, "what cur hens have laid to day !" , "What exclaimed the lady, IiMnj.n ,l her eyes in hcrror, "is it possible that . your father, a pious man and a dea:c2, allows his hea3 toby' oa Sunday-?" Two gentlemen recently rcifried, ca a -beautiful, the ' other an extremely frightful, woman. They were discussing ' the merits of their wives. Slid th3 cs3 who had espoused the b.aaty. "Your wife is so very ugly !" ' 4Ah, yes,' replied the other, 'if not externally beautiful, sho is beautiful within." : ' " ' ;i 1 , "Then," answered the first, ,4wh7. don't you turn her inside out V An Irishmen, who had grown a crop of cotton near Memphis, was asked if cot ton was the most profitable crnp h? could raise. To which, with the Irish instinct for bulbous food, he replied, '"No h:did but sweet paratie3 ; and thim I al-.v3jj r?.iipd till ; the ' bloody soldiers came cloud, will never be forgotten. . His fan- about; but have to grow soraethbg aticismhas .lost none of its fire, ia my row that they can ; ate. ' - a - manhood's heart.- ! A gentleman who had the misfortune to be allied to a long tongued and domin eering wife, attended a social party at the housQ'of a fripnd, accompanied by his better half." The wife, to show- her authority, would check her husband every two or three minutes after this fashion: "Now William, my dear, don't talk so loud." Come, don't lean back in the chair." 'Now, William, don't get noisy over there.".. .. ,' ; Say, William, let the girls alone and sit by me !" ' - ' , At last forbearance ceased to be a virtue, and the husband who wa3 really pitied by all in the room arose . and said- ' . "I beg pardon of the company, but as my wife insists on being boss all the time. it is light se should have these !" And he deliberately took. eff his pants handed theni 'to her, and sal down in his bootsVl wolen drawers ! .The tvpany v.-as astonished the woman burst into.tears the happy coup le soon went home but neither, of them wore pants. A laborer's wife recently resorted to a most extraoidinary method of curing a pain in her stomach. . She had been com plaining to a neighbor cf her ailment, and was advised to procure a few leaves cf the hemlock plantr.boiLthern in some water, and then drink the beverage. It so hap pened that the tufferer mistook the word hemlork for almanac, and when she gut home tore out the leaves of her favorite Chery Pectoral Alrainac." boiled ih?m striking the floor wi:h a sharp bad sound. a3 directed, and drack the decoction,-and My. blood .hot like red-hot .arrows thro' my ve'ins, and I rubbed my eyes to.Ehut It was O God, how hor- out ihe sight. so great wnj the faith the ; had 'in' her friend's prescription, that; strange to ray; s ie was cured. - ' Some one, the other day, asked Gen eral Butler why . he employed a certain' person, said to be disloyal, and of gener al bad character, to penetrate ths rebel lines. "If you wanted infcrmiticn front hell, replied General Butler, ''wcull ycu send a saint or a sistsr of charity ti fetch it?"' ' :' "Aant,? inquired a medical pfogidy, fresh from a lecture oa surgery, "what do you think is the cast difficult opera tion in surgery ?" "Don't know, Charleywhat?" ' " Taking a jaw off a woman,": answer ed the hopeful young student. ' A little bey of five years old asked his mother" i? God ' realiy heard hii Yes, my son," the replied," a!way3 hears our prayers."- prayr. "God "Well," said the "mischievous urchin, "I think he must, be disgusted with mine, for he hasheared tho sains cli prayer ever since I conU talk." A lank-note detector, describing "a new counterfeit, says the vignett9 is "a female seated on each side of a shield !" Her position mast be very uncomforta ble and embarrassing, and and likely to causa a breach cf honor. "Yea, did you. let off that "gun I" ex claimed an enraged schoolmaster, . -"Yes, sir.". - ... : - Well, ; what do vcu think I will do wita ycu "Why. let rr.e cff. The f.est fcffr;cr.d. a;o na excention. Adam caused cur e. Adam mended ihzzu II ways, but