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The Marysville Tribune from Marysville, Ohio • 1

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Marysville, Ohio
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Mil If II ilV fir MK www Imilu gnwyjit: to griiUw, paautw, iltf rtA ritf anil tls 'gnlmstj of Vuta Cmmta- Ml I I I'll WW NUMBER 19. MARYSVILLE, UNION COUNTY, OHIO, JANUARY 8, 1868. VOLUME XIX. From the Toledo Blade. IMasby.

Is Beer Victuals? If bo How much? Many persona drink beer under the illusion that they derive strength from its use Tho Irish and German laborer, fit em for the active dooties of citizenship. pretty system to defend," murmured "wich unfits men for beinb' good I went on, not noticin the interrnp-shun. "Tho great difference between the races is phisikle, mental and moral carakteristics will prevent an amalgatna-shen or fusion uv them in one homege-neous mass, and "A minnit," sed "Iz the President strickly rite here 1 Hez the distiiiguishin characteristics nv the races prevented amalgamation in these parts? Deekin Pogram anser. Hez the difference at ween yoo and yoor niggers repelled yoo llav yoo not bin amalgaraa-tin and miscignatin, ontil yoo bed got the two races into one homogenius mass! Deeken don't anser I don't require it. But I can't help remarkin that I kin select a dozen, more or less, vounir niffarcrs in these parts, who re Going Into Business.

Horace ri eely, in his "Recollections," published in the New York Ledger, gives the following in refereuoe to his early business experience, adding somo wholesome advice to young men who have nn itching "to go into business." If it be suggested that my "whole indebtedness was at no time more than 85,000 to 7,000, 1 have only to say that even 1,000 of debt is ruin to him who keenly feels his obligations to fulfill every engagement, yet is utterly without the means of so who finds himself dragged each week a little deeper into hopeless be hungry, ragged and penniless, is not pleasant but this is nothing to the horror of bankruptcy. All the. wealth of the Rothschilds, would be a poor recompense for a five years struggle, with the consciousness that yon had taken the What, the Falling Leaf Says. Every season has its lesson of life The spring for that is the true beginninghas the unfolding the summer one of growth; the autumn, one of age and waiting; Perhaps of these if any one be more suggestie than an other, the lesson of the falling leaf is the deepest The drying up of the vital essence of life the fading, when the little day is Hearing the sunset touohes the heart as nothing else can. But it ought never to make the heart sadder.

It is only prelude or the winter's wait-ing a waiting that will bring a glorious unfolding when the April shower come! In "Nature and Life," a new volume of sermons by Robert Collyer, the falling leaf enforces its own lesson very beautifully. We extract the following from what the leaf says I am a fading leaf, certainly watch ing for the sun and frost to give the signal of my dissolution. I have had to bear heavy rains, to wrestle with great storms, to suffer in electic fires, to fight my way. and hold my own as well as I could in the teeth of foes and Darasitea. ever since I began to spring.

But this can say, as I fall, tbat there has been no day since I first began to grow, when have not tried to be true to the laws of nature, as the mediator, bringing tha gulf between senseless matter and the sentient soul. And now, in my falline. I shall fall for blessing, and cease to be a leaf because as a leaf, I am no longer needed. isnt in ceasing to be wbat I am, I may well remind you of what one has said who loves us, and takes us into hi heart beyond all men living. wWe compare ourselves to leaves the leaves may well scorn the comparison, if we live only for ourselves.

If ever in the autumn a Den- si veness steals over us, as the leaves flutter by in their fading, may we not wisely look up to their mighty monuments and as we see how fair they are, how far prolonged in arch and aisles the avenues ol the valleys, the fringes of the hills, so stately, so eternal the joy of man, the comfort of all living creatures, the glory of the earth remember that these are but the monuments of fading leaves, that faintly flit past us to die! Let them not die before we read and understand their holy revelation so tbat we also, careless of a monument for the grave, may build one in the world, by which men may be taught to remember, not where we died, but where we lived." You can think as you like, therefore about man, as he fades and fails make the end of your life here as mournful as you please dishonor death by evil names and images, as its shadow falls npon your race but I ask von. once for all to leave me out of-your sad analo gies. I protest against being counted as one that shudders at dissolution. I might have done tbat in Jane, when mr life was all to live but in SeDtember. when it hag had it day, as I begin to loosen from the spray where God hat caused me to spring, the loosening seems as good as over did the springing.

Killed by an Elepbant. The people of the litle post ofHartsboro, Montgomery county, PaT turned out yesterday to follow to the grave the remain of one of their residents, who, on the day previous, was killed by an elephant. There is no doubt that the deceased, whose name is W. S. Williams, lost hi life in con sequence of first loosing his temper.

In win ter time, unless they he exhibited in towns, tropical animals must be housed in warm quarters. This menagerie had been taken to Hartsboro for this purpose. The animal ware placed in strong and warm quarter, each oing under the care of those whose pecil rovince it was to guard them. William' entire charge was Borneo, the big elephant in question. He is the largest in this country, and at time bas proved unmanageable.

These animals want exercise, and long con- nement renders them restive and danger- This elephant Borneo behaving fractioualy, Wliliams beat hjm, compelled him to go upoa is knees, and othrewise humiliated the lordly Subsequently he entered the animal' stall to wash bis face and tasks, for a tropical animal require almost a much attention a nursing baby. He led tha beast to the trough nd then the catastrophe occurred. Tha in struments of correction used upon an elephant is a spear, but Williams entered without one. The ek-phaut instantly turned upon him and pinioned him with his trunk, and goared him 8 that bis viscera obtruded from tha wound. Our informant describe the spectacle a most sickening.

One of the tusk of the animal went through hi body. Others ran to hit aid, and the elephant whose vengeance was sated, ARCTIC OUT-DOOR LIFE. How. to Sleep with the mercury 68 Degrees below Xero. The Toledo Commercial publishes a letter written by one of the late tele- graphio expedition to Siberia, the writer says: You say tha: you cannot imagine how we live in such a climate.

I could't until I tried it. I didn't believe that it would be possible for me to lay out on tho snow without shelter in a temperature of even 20 below but I have done it once in 50 below and repeated ly in 45. One of Bush's parties, in I'eb-' ruary ot this year, passed mo nigni on an open, barren steepo with their, spirit thermometer standing 68 below zero, or a 100 degrees below the tree.ing point. Quicksilver they moulded into solid bullets with four minutes exposure to the air. f.

It's true they did'nt dare go to sleep that night, but I believe that; had they been properly fitted out with heavy furs and wolf-skin sleeping bags to tie up tightly over the head, they might have uono it with perfect satety. i afraid you would think that I was availing myself of privilege, and relating a very large "yarn it 1 told you how, comfortably. I have slept on: the snow iu temperatures of 35, 40 and 45 degrees below. We are obliged to sleep in our fur bags, of bourse, with onr fa ces entirely covered, aud to take tho ut most care to have our stockings perfectly dry. but I have slept in thai way through the long Arctiu.nights- as comfortably as ever I did in a bed at home.

From September, 1 8C5, until I came aboard the "Onward" a tew weeks ago, I never slept in a bed or on anything softer than the enow or a board. So you can imagine that the sensation was a curious one. -s Weight of Cattle Eeasurment, E. J. Grafton, Iowa, asks for rule for ascertaining the weight of cattle the calculation being based on the measurement of the animals.

Many experi ments have been made by graziers, and dealers in ealtle to aswrtain the- tret weight of cattle by meas'irment- have been given and tables constructed of the results obtained. At best, these are but approximations, and the measure of correctness will depend much upon a practical acquaintance with the form aud prominent points of the, animals to be measured. Something will depend, too, on the breed, size, mode of fattening, the time the process has been going on and the character of tho feed supplied. The following method comes as near a correct result as any known Measure carefully with a tape line from the top of the shoulder to where the tail is attached to the back this will give tho length. For the, girth measure immediately behind the shoulder and f'ouf legs.

Multiply half the girth by Itself in feet, and the sum the length in feet, and the sum will give the net weight in stones of eight pounds each. For example, with an ox or cow live feet in length and seven' feet in girth, the calculati.ons will be as follows Multiply balf the girth by itself in 3 5 Multiply by length In 5 Weight in stones 61.25 This multiplied by eight, the pounds in a or rather a half stone," and the result will be 400 pounds net. Moore's Rural. The Uachageable Land. In the East things do not change.

As Abraham pitched his tent at Bethel, so does an Arab sheik now set up his camp; as David built his palace on Mount Zion, so would the Turkish pasha now arranga his house. In every street may be seen the hairy children of Esau, squatting on the groud a mess of lentils, like that for which the rough hunter sold his birth right. Along every road plod the son of Ra-chab, whose fathers one thousand years ago, bouud themselves and theirs to drink no wine, plant" no tree enter within- bo dooiyand -their children-iiave kept the oath and at every kahun are young men. around the pan. of parched corn, dipping their morsel into tho dish.

Job's plow is still used, and the seed is trodden into the ground by asses and kine. Oli vee are shaken from the bough as directed by Isaiah, and the grafting of trees is unchanged since the days of SauL' The Syrian house is ai tjpra? erly, only' a stone tent, "as a temple was but a marble tent What is seen now in Bethany may be taken as the exact house of Lazarus where 'Mary listened and Martha toiled, or as the honse of Simon, the lepei, where the; box of precious ointment was broken, and where Judas set out to betray his master. A sDiscoNaotATE Widow, A very worthy fisherman by the' name of jtJYiz-zle was drowned sometime since, and all search for bin body proved unavailing. After, it liad been in the wator some mouths, however, it was discovered floating on the Burface, and taken to the shore, Whereupon fr. Smith Iwa dispatched to convey the intelligence to the much afflicted widow.

"Well, Mra. we have fonnd Mr. Grizzle's body" a "You don't say eo 1" "Yes, the jury has so. on it, and found it full of eels," -V "Yon don.t gay that Mr. Grizzle's body is full of eels "Yes, it is, and we want to know what is to be done with it" "Why, how many eels do you think there is in him "Well tiea I TLlnk' you had better brine the eels up to the house, tad iet him ajsia." TJio rai nier l'ecdcth Them All.

My lord rklos through his pulaee-gute, 11 lady sweep along in state, Tlio sago thinks long on many a thing, And tho maiden mustis on muirying; The minstrel hurpeth merrily, Tho sailor ploughs tho foaming sea, v-Tho huntsman kills tho good rod deer, And soldier wars without e'en four; But fall to euill whate'er befall, The fai mer ho must feed them nil. Smith hnininereth eherry-red tho sword, IVeist preaclmtli pr.ro tho Holy "Word, iimno Aliee wurkutb 'broidery well, -Clerk Richard tales of love can toll, Tl.e tiij" wife sell her foaming leer, in Kislior fisheth in tho more. And cfjiliers. rulile. strut nu snino, Whilti pnse bring tho Gaseon wine; iiuttail li vain wuaie er ui-ijiji, T'ic farmer he feed llieiu ull.

hi i-xoilitt fair end hitch. Wherever uvor rninieia tiy, Cin-at cities rjso in every land, Great churches show the builder' hand, Ureal arches, monument and Fair palace and pleasing bowers; Great work is done, bet hero or there, And well muu worketh every where; work or rest whate'er befall, Thn farmiT feed them all. 'The Angola Horror--Some further Particulars. HOW TH'B ACCIDENT OCOl'RKED. Among tho passengers who' went to Angola yesterday, was Superintendent Reynolds, of tho N.

F. Pulice, who, in company with some railroad at once applied himself to discover the real causa of the accident. It was determined, after a close inspection ot the track, that the disaster was occasioned by one of those uncontrollable mishaps that no human agency could prevent. The cars were going at a pretty rapid rate at the liine being some three hours behind schedule time, but not faster speed than usual on such occasions. On passing the ft little beyond Angola--about fourteen feet from the wan discovered tho first sign of a car off the track About midway between this and the.

bridge, one of the rails was found forced a little out of its position by the pressure of lie car. Not until the bridge was reached was the mark of thfl broken wheel here it could be readily traced wherever it struck the ties. This wheel was Ulti mately touiKi and proved to do tne see bud four wheel of the rear car. on the. south side of the road.

It had a segment of the tread, about a foot and a half in length and one inch and a half in depth, broken out. It is supposed as this broken portion of the tread came dotfu upon the rail, the pressure of the flange forced the car off the north side of tho road This occurred about forty came on the bridge some one inside pulied the check-rope, when the engineer whistled '-down brakes," and looking back, 6aw the car in its descent As the car passed over the shelving covering the timber 'work, 'On the side of the bridge, timbers were broken and shattered. VVhen Hearing the east end of tho bridge, at tlio deepest point tp the creek, the rear car went over the precipice, and from the car in front of it, gave the latter a sudden jerk or spring that caused it to bound off the track and fall over the embankment on the opposite side of the road. THK BURKING CAR. I'he rear car, as seen by a looker-on, pitched end foremost, a depth of about fifty feet, and its descent throwing its passengers in one compressed heap, striking their heads and smashing in their skulls It is thought that the nia-iority were instantly killed, and nevei knew what happened after.

A few of the beams falling crossways, prevented others from falliug to the extreme end. It was these latter whoso shrieks for aid were heard for full fifteen minutes, while the fire communicated by the overturned "stove was consuming their vitals. THE ATTEMPT AT KESCOK. The citizens and passengers, as soon as they could reach the spot attempted to petto thecar to render but the bank being very steep and covered with ice, they woulu saue past. iur.

lietts, of Tonawauda, at last succeeded in reaching the car, and seizing Mr. Patterson by the hands, commenced to pull him out. A chain of locked hands was goon formed with those on the bank, and the injured man was drawn forth. While so engaged, Mr. Betts had a look in the inside of the car.

At the farther end of the car he eould see nothing but a blakened heap of bodies, which was being burned. Above those were some who were yet ailve, among whom he recognized a gentleman he had been introduced to at dinner at JJrocton, aud who implored most piteonsly, with out-strcched arms to be saved. CONDUCTOR SHERMAN'S STATEMENT. Mr Frank Sherman, the conductor of the irain, was in the rear car when he felt the jolt of the truck springing from the track. The Train was then within a few rods of the bridge.

He immediately pulled the check -ropo ad started for the front of tho train. The shock came just as he entered the second car, the uncoupling of the rear coach, when it was precipitated from the bridge, throw-inn-the car in front fit from the track, and hurling it down the embankment on the south side of the road. All passed in a moment, and Mr. Sharnsan'g recollection of the affair of course, not accurate. He was severely wounded himself, as we have noticed all the passengers on the train whom we have seen, bear testimony to his coolness and bravery.

Bujato X. T. Courier. Mr: AW' Deliver tin) 1' resilient i Mcsfuyt his Frkiult from Memory The Impression that the Document Produced on a Kentucky Convocation. 1'OsT OKKIS, CnNPXUttlT KoADSjl Wich is in tho Stait uv Kontueky.

December 17, 18G7 .1 The Corners wuz last nite in a most most dclitefiil fever-uv excitement. 1 hed been over to Secessionville, tho nearest railroad stashen, and hed accid'nitaly prokoored a copy uv a Looisvillo paper. eohtfUfiin the annyooai message uv tne President, and hed heerd uv the failyoor tiv tho joy iiiexpressiDje, i mounted "Ojascoip a mule, wwli 1 hed bon-erert- tor tne trip, and rode back ez fast ez tliat mule cood carry nie. Ez I rodo thro the nigger settlement, near Garrettstown, on my way back, I cood not help, in my exultation, shakin my fist' at the white-washed cottages. "Ha! Ha!" thot "go on in yoor fancied secoority.

Pore over yoor spellin books, stumble 'thro yoor Heeders, ihess lip your wives and chil-di-en while yon kin, M' yoor time is short. The cloud is gatherin over voo it will bust tthortlf. Ha, ha And struck the spurs into the imile and dashed-on the way, the ha! ha! sound-inir demoniacly in the darknis. Hast ily. hmain my Melt on tho animal, I strided into BuscQiii's afore his ulyzin tire, titeywere fin assembled.

Thank Hevini" sed 1, failin on my knees in a tabloo. 1 "What!" sed the assembled congre- "President Johnson hez ishood a mes sage, and he ain't "Thank tho Lord: piously exclaimed Deckiii Pogi-am; and "Tharik the Lin'd," they-all sed, with an intensity uv piousness wich totally oninanned me. "Head us the blessid document," sed the v. I wilt," sod but upon teelm for it 1 found it hed slipped ont uv my pockit on the road. Not hev'm much yoose for pook'fts, I don't keep em very much in "But never mind, 1 kin tell it to voo i "Go with 'intense ea gerness.

"Go sed Joe Jjigier, "let see how tlio message looks "after its run thro a Postmaster. Go on." I commenst by statin that the Presi dent sot out with a fervent lament that the Yoonynn wuz still in state Jjv disor and that the ten scceeded States wuz not agin nnder the flag. "How troo and how lamentable tne trooth sighed Capt. McPelter, late of the (i. Si A.

"I omit all references wich he elokent- ly makes uv the necessity nv yoonyun, et cetra, am? pas's to the only piut wicb is tiv' interest to lis. Firstly, he recommends to Coiigriss that they take the back "Amen shouted Deekin Pogram. "That the work wich they bed been doiii in be to- wtinstj r.jeale((-itiATunst ana prompwy-He dwells at length upon the fact that the Coristito'Oahen to all tne States a Governnvnt Kepubliken in form that it gives to every citizen a habis I don't jest veimimlier the argument that lollows. out may ou in Its us "he't pleadiu tor. for.

us his bowels yearn. kn a State hev a government. form when oue-lialt uv us citizens, which aneigoou uv the tother half require to in" a state uv are a g9-in about free, and a doin ez t'ney choose? From this, by an easy tratisishen, ho dip's into tho grate and to us all important subjeck uv nigger snffragc, and oil this ho 19 tlie movini'st who eer tetched pcii holds that the niggers uv the Southern Slates are so eonstitooted just, now that they kin elect a Pi esidejit, and that there a wrong is committed, ille bleeves they afn't fit to exercise the franchise; thut only the haugltty master race, whose minds is cultivated to the roper wl nosstjs the 4iev th wno at bk-nsid privilege. He holds that the all-irnpoAiint ballot shood only be wuelded by those who are mieu niorauy Baseoiu whky.1 aiiitjtjiiiiri ir'lne-Miu mentally, and who hev lied that erliiKv. shun thet fits-'era that it kin be exercised safely, and hence iu the ten Slates only the white race are justly entitled to it, and "Hold a' mihit sed Joe Bigler.

"A- given) with tlio i residcui in-iv uamn sliocxi only be given 'to "them wich kin read-ajf reeiirtiirthd horrid, danger uv giviu'ii to them who lack this want ail that he sez on that hed to be red iu full for our. cnlilenracnt. I hev a'cjfuy" tifiijbef message in" mypock? et, and here is the passage. Deekin, Will tioo read it to us VScii'se me! sed the Deekin; I dott't read. 1 "I-ssaker, will voo read-it "W-a-t!" sed Issaker, astonisht "Joseph," sed seein to what this wuz ieadinTI kin tell it to em just ez 'i f'UlU Not any.

Parson. It 'must be read. Elder Peinim'acki-rV'w'Tll yo6 read Itf The elder had left his specks to hum, bo spd. a lonn pull at bis hot whisky to hide his -1 "Ha sed Joseph, "il strikes mo that this is jovyel party, to w-hich to en trust rites on akount nv tneir intelligence. Jist one nv 'em kin read plain print, and he's from' Noo bhed go np GaiTettstown and bring down a nigger to read it to sed he, laflm lminod "i here's a iiuuarea uv em up there who km' do it Frownin, I perceeded: Yesterday, the President f'onr inUidn uv niggers wuz slaves, and it aint to bo persoouied that their condishun uv semtood wood especially, could scarcely be persuaded out of this notion.

The New York Nation has the following statement on. the founded on authority that no man ot intelligence womu rasmy ques tion: I'eonle who drink their ale nmlt beer, are fond of telling how niuih nutriment they derive from them Because they are manufactured from grain, mauy have the idea that the concentrated virtues of the grain nro in the drinks. This is an entire fallacy Prof. Liebig, one of the. most eminent chemists in the world, assures us that 1,400 quarts of the Jiavaria beer contains exactly the of a two and a half pound loaf of bread I This beer is very similiar to to tho f'a-inonns English Allsopp's, and our most popular American beer.

The fact is tho most nutritious uortioii of the grain is rotted before beer can bo niado and if the fermentation of the beer is complete. Prof. -Lyoii Playfair declares that no nourishment whatever remains in the fermented liquor; and, as the Emilisji Al liance News sav.i, "No now now disotites these assertions for, ex cept in flavor and amount of alcohol, the chemical pompoFjiuon oi an kiuhs hi ubui is and brewers must laugh to hear doctors advising porter as moro nourishing than beer, when porter is iiothiii! but beer colored with burnt malt, and 'ol'tei) when beer goes wrong in the nia-kiiig, and is "unsaleable as is converted into fine porter, aho iuf re coloriiig covering many defects. Turnpikes in Champaign. "i -Wo notice an item going therounds of 'our exchanges, to the effect that Champaign county lias invested in Turnpikes, under the new If the figures had been placed at 000, it would have been neiffer the truth, as that is about the amount that has been juvestetl in these improvements, iu the rr wxtoen ot tnese itirnpiKcs nave been projected in the county, Jive of which are completed, and most or tne balance are under wav.

these roads ri all directions throusrh the county, and when they arc Completed, will bo of immense value to onr people. I tiougn it will largely increase their, taxes for a few years, in the end it will no doubt prove to be a good investment. Champaign has taken the lead in this matter, and the end is not yet. people iAve voted this tax nljon themseives, aiid nobody has a right to complain, it they aro satisfied. Urbana The Latest Yankee Trick.

The late storm so filled one of our new and smaller streets with snow that it became almost an impossibility to pass through it, but as only two houses were on that street, and only two persoirs had occar sion to pass through it daily; the task of breaking a path became a formidable one, and the expense ol having it broken would by no means be trifling. One of its two inhabitants, however, had an eye of business. In, the Republican he insorted an advertisement offering his house for sale.nt a mere song. The plan worked like a charm. From immediately after breakfast until late at night, and, on the nextday also a stream of hungry speculators of all sexes and on loot and in sleighs and carriages, poured down the blockaded street to secure the great bargain.

Of course they were all just too late, as they were told, but long before the last had departed the last snow-drift had vanished, and the street was smooth and hard as a plank floor and all for a half a dollar. Sjmig- fie'd (Man.) JltfUb'ticiii. 1 1 Ten Follies. To think that the more that a man eats the fatter and stronger he becomes. To believe that the more hours chil- daen study at school the faster they learn.

To conclndethat jfjexerciseis for "the health, the more violent anl exhausting it is7, th Inqre gjood-is jtToitoi To iiiiagine-'that every houi" taken from sleep is an hour gained. To act on the presumption that the smallest i-room in the house is large enough sleep. in jt To argne that whatever remedy caus es one to feel immediately better is "good for" the system, without regard to more, ulterior effects. To commit an. act which is felt in itsel t4 bo prejudicial, hoping that (somehow pi other fib may be doi ii or case with impunity.

i To advise another to take a remedy which you have uot tried yourself, with out making special iuquiry whether all the couditiijnij. are alike. To fiat without an aoDctiteL oi ecrn-. tinUe to eat after it. lias been satisfiedTT merely to gratify the taste.

To eat a hearty stioperforthe treasure experienced during the brief time it is passing down the throat, at the expense of a fr-hole night of distnrped. slueu a neadacna on, waicemrg in une iitpr-ning. aould likelhat'jbdauttCul fcuof ted tiger cat," said a lady while visiting the menaaerie the other day "What iorfJl have it for iQ.fet tlio bat you want to sleep, with such a thing fort" "Why just to see the difference between that and sleeping AvitV a baat-' The, husband1 suddenly a look at the monkey i fclTTlie larcest mill in the Northwest cut a. 15 0,0 01) feet of lumber ju: twelve hours. I semble yoo more than yoor own children do.

Go on I only desire to correct the Presicent wher facts don't bear him OUt." There wiizno yoose in percedm while he wuz, present not the least, aud therefore I waited till he left, wich" he shortly did. Goon: Goon!" sed they "I can't" replied I. "I hev forgot the text 1 he. substance, however, 1 km iv yoo. The fust iz that the nigger haint no more rites now than he bed afore the war that the legislashen taken him out uv our hands is unconstooshnel, and mat jiuusiuiism sence a jonnson soured onto it is condenst wickedness that ef the niggers aint re-enslaved they ought to be, and the sooner we git about it the better.

That wuz impression a keerful reedin uv the docu ment had npon my mind. Bascom and Deeken Pogram remarkt that it seemed proper to em that some ackshen should be.taken on the message. with a view to the upholdiu uv the hands nv the President, who wnz so able a champian uv our cause. We organized ourselves into, a meetin uv wich I wuz compelled to act ez President and Secretary, being the only ono who kin rite, and the ibllerin res-olootions were passed. That we coincide with the President, in his assershen that the bal lot is unsafe in the hands of ignorant ahd that therefore it- shood be withheld from the niggers uv the South ern States, who just releesed Irom a state of brootalizin servitood, are unfit for its proper exercise.

Deekin Pograiu objected to the' use uv the word "brootalizin." He hod allnz fleeted his'niirsers patriarchally. He mite hev knocked em down' with fence stakes occasionally, and mite in his younger days hev been somewhat too free with the never more than he felt was and every man uv em cood read ez much ez he cood. The word wuz stricken out. llemlred, Tbat we "agree with him ez to the propriety nv our unconstooshnel Cougris repeeiing the acts wich they hovdono in opposition to the will uv the President and the disfranchised thousands wich he represents. Reokexl, That the thanks uv the Democracy to the Senators and Representative's who opposed the impeachment, and wo hereby congratulate em upon tlio fact that they hev their reward.

In them iz the Scriptur fulfilled. The seed uv thesip righteous men shell never beg bread, so long as there iz an offis to IltxolccJ, That if President Johnson will accept a noniinashen, there iz no man which the Democracy uv Kentucky wood feel safer iu puttm their interests into the hands uv. These resolooshuns wuzyoonanimons- ly past ihd the meetin resolved itself Hitofits originel elements. ueeKen ro-grain felt that he wuz justified in stand-in tho, drinks for the party; so also wuz Isaker Gavitt and others, and thus the thing commenced. Afore they were carted away the wee small hours hed it wuz a refreshin season, and ono' wich.

I May I see many more sich. V. Nasby, P. I (Wich iz Postmaster.) 7 Winter tlanagement of Hogs. Colmau's Rural World says There i perhaps no season of the year when Western hogs are so badly managed as in the winter.

It is a very common mistake for Western tarmers to suouose that because a hog is a hog, he can stand any kind of treatment, and and vet not yield a large profit to his It is no uncommon thing for tho noor animals to be turned into the street or road for to shift for themselves, without a particle of bedding or shelter exeeut frozen irround in some tence cor- ner, and a very small allowance oi ieea carelessly thrown into the mud, under the impression that it is a pleasure, or at least no displeasure, for a dirty hog to be obliged to root in the cold mud, up to his eyes, for his scanty meal, and shtverinr with tho Is this reason able Think of it, farmers, and if reason does nor, satisfy you, try taking your, breakfast from Bix to eight inches WeTow the surface of the mud some cold morning, and try sleeping on the ground in the fence corner some night, with the thermometer below zero. 1 presume you will not repeat either experiment BAKliO Al'l-LEPtDUING. TwO OUnCS butter. Quarter pound of pulverized white sucar, uuarter pound boiled apples. the yolks of three eggs, the whites of two eggs, the rmd ana juice oi one icmou mix the whole well together, and bake it in.

a puff paste one hour. jfcSTThehightof politeness is passing aroun upon the OppoMtc side of akdy.whca walkin with her, in order not to step on hersbaao I I money or. property of trusting promising to returir or pay ior wiieii required. aiid had betrayed their couh'-dtMice throiigh insolvency. I dwell on this point, fori would deter olheri from entering that place of Half the young men in the country, with many old enough to know better, would "go into business" that is into debt if they could Most poor niwi are so ignorant as to envy the merchant or the manufacturer Wliose life is an incessant struggle with pecuniary difficulties, who, is driven to constant "sinning," and who from month to month, barely evades that insolvency iuh sooner or later overtakes most men in business, so" that it has been computed that but one iu twenty achieve a pecuniary success.

For my own part and I speak from experience I would rather be a convict in a State prison, a slave in a rice swamp1, than to pass through life under the harrow of debt. Let no young mau misjudge himself unfortunate, or truly poor, so long as he has the use of his limbs and is substan-lv free from debt Hunger, cold, rags, hard work, coq-j tempt, suspicion, unjust reproacn, are disagreeable but debt is infinitely worse than them all And, if it had pleased God to spare either or all of my sons, to' be the support and solace of my declining years, the lesuon which I should have' must earnestly sought to impress npon them is, ''Never run iu debt: Avoid pecuniary obligation as yoii would pestilence or famine. If you have but fifty cents and can get no more for a week, buy a peck of corn, parch it and live on it, rather than owe any man a Of course, I know that some men must do business that involves risks, and must often uive notes and oth er oblitiations. and do not consider him real iy in debt who can lay his hands direct on the means of paying, at some little sacrifice, all he owes: I speak of real debt, that which in volves either risk- or sacrifice on the one side, obligation or dependance on the other and I say from all such, let every youth pray God to presesve him ever more!" Counsels for the 'Young. Never be worried by trifles- If a spider breaks his thread twenty times, twenty times will he mend it Make up your mind to do thing, and you will do it Fear not, though troub les come apon yon keep up your; spir its; though the day be a dark one.

never last forever The darkest day will pas away." If the snn is going down, look at the stars i if the earth is dark keep; your eves on tth God 8 promise a man or child may be cheerful. "Never dispair when there's fog in the air, A sunshiny morning will come without Mind what you run after. Never be content with a bubble that will burst, or a firework that will end in smoke and darkness. Get that which you can keep, aud which is worth keeping "Somethinir sterling that will stay, -When Uold and silver fly awao. Fight hard against a hasty temper.

Aurrer will come but resist it stoutly. A spark will 'set a house on fire. A fit of passion may may give you cause to mourn all the days of yonr life. Never revenge an injury. "He that revengeth knows no resU The meek possess a peaceful If you have an enemy, act kindly to him.

and make- him Tour friend. Yon mav not win him over at once, but try again. Let one kindness be followed by another till you have compassed your end. Little by little, great thingsare completed, i i "Water falling day by day, Wears the hardest roci away." And so repeated kindnesi will soften a hard stone. Whatever you do, A it willibgly.

A boy that is whipped at school never learns his lesson well. A man that is compelled to work cares not how badly it is performed. lie that pulls otl his coat cheerfully, strips up his sleeves in earnest, and sings while he works, the man for me. "A cheerful spirit gets on quick; A grumbler in the mud will stick." Evil thoughts are worse enemies than lions and tigers, for we can keep out of the way of wild beasts, but bad thoughts win their way everywhere. The head that is full of good thoughts, bad thoughts hud no room to enter.

"Be on your guard, and trive each day, To drive all evil thought away." Krehan-je Boston Gijgkebkead. One pound of Duuer, one jmjuihi oi six'sr, one pim oi molasses, one pound o.riour, eggs one of col one o- A' 4 Q-a, one quari ot ivuti v. -u man retreated from the place where he had stood. The victim survived scarce an hour afterward: "i Williams lived in London, Canada West, where he has a family. He came from hi home to take charge of of the animal by whom he met hi death.

A fastidious lady at Portland, Me. insisted ou furnishing her bouse with chairs from Philadelphia, rejecting the noine manniaciureu ui ucio as wv com mon and after some extra expense ia procuring them, discovered mat ino Philadelphia chairs were oi rortiana make. SOn the night of the 18th burglar entered the house of Wm. Walker, of Day ton, went into hi bed chamber and took $-10 trom bis pocket. They then went to an up- er room where they stole which tr.

Walker hud drawn from before. the bank tha dy ZSrThree hundred thousand pec are said to be starving in Sweden. jgy-The bill for tb emanciffttioa of tite Jews ha passed the Austrian rafliasBsat..

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About The Marysville Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
14,877
Years Available:
1851-1939