V’/-'' '^’v| m m mi •■■-' -I ' I It Mi ’ : ’-L [ '''i ' -I ■ f r ^ . t-f ’■ i ii i i S!' t' i'!I' •'f* ■ -V ? i \'i I \ i-’- i-i| i. if ' -f ■ i. j'i ■■ f. ■ '' ■; • • ■ ! r . .1 ■•.' ';^1. .'I •#! i' ■■ • ‘ '• -' T4 ' ' .' mmi r;. '' i' ir 1 THE MASONIC JOtJENAL [From the Hebrew Leader. The Fall of an Acorn—a type of the Ressurrection. I5Y MBS HAKKIET WARD IIODSOJT. Pensive, alone, I wandered forth amid i' e antnninal wood. Where eddying lea\ es of brightest tint fell round me as L stood, And I had paused beside a brook, close by a mossy dell, "When suddenly upon my path a tiny acorn fell. And as I mused upon the scene in melancholy mood, The falling leaf, the dying j^ear, the mournful solitude, I queried if ambition lured the acorn fi-mn tTie bough. To perish with the mouldering leaves or rot ’neath winter’s snow. Or had the wandering, sighing breeze or bird on soaring wing. Or breath oftlowers borne aloft in solomn whispering. Or nickering sunbeams’ rosy light orsparkling waters free, In all their varying, tempting charms beguiled it from the tree? Or was it natures' inward voice, the wondrous law of God, That taught it ere it rose above’t must mingle with the sod, Assimmilate with crawling worms, albeit of lofty birth, ,i?ileiit but not lorgotteii lie, while smouldeiing back to earth. Fears passed away ; sorrow' and change the incident effaced. For grief within m3' achsing heart liad all but pain erased; Yet memory drifting back in dreams I longed once more to see The d(*ar familliar face of friends, the homo that sheltered me. Again I stood within the wood, but, ah, how changed the scene! A sapling oak of perfect form and leaves of living green. Was growing on the very spot beneath the for est tall, Wiieii very many years before I saw the acorn fall. And as I gazed in awe and thought on the Al mighty power United with a father’s love, restoring tree and flower, I wonder‘d why ^VG mourn our dead that rest beneath the sod, Almost foi’getting that they live above in Heaven with God. Putnam’s Rescue. Gen. Israel Putnam, subsequently much distinguished i,i the Revolution, commanded, during the old French and English War, a corps of pa.tisans on the northern frontier. In a skirmi.sh with the Indian allies of the French he was taken captive. The bravery and enter prise ol Putnam made him no ordinary prize, and as a usual expression of their high respect for his character as a soF dier, it was determined by his savage oaptois that the utmost ingenuity of tor ture should be exercised in putting him to death Putnam was therefore bound to the stake, and the faggots piled around him ready for ignition. In this extremi ty he was about consigning himself to uttei despair, when he beheld a French officer approaching. Putnam w'as a Ma son, and with the precarious, but only re raaining hope that the Frenchman might be a member of the Fraternity, bespoke to him in the mysterious but universal language of the Craft, and made that ap» peal which is .so sure to reach the Ma son’s heart. It was seen and felt, and quickly responded to. For notwithstand ing the danger of disappointing a crowd of Indians preparing to feast upon the agonies of a tortured,enemy, the French man rushed through the.bandof savages, and severing the^ cords that bound his brother to the stake, he rescued the life of Putnam at the imminent peril of his OW.11. Putnam, through all his subse quent idveutures, never failed to admit that he -oweii his life to Masonry, and acknowledged that nothing but the force of the Ma.spnic appeal would have- in duced the French officer to risk the dan ger of displeasing or exciting his Indian allies, by thus rescuing their conquered and already condemned enemy from the staif^,—Kentucky Freematon. Chicken Cholera. The Georgia State Agricultural Socle ty, at its recent meeting, offered a re ward off250,for an infallible remedy for chicken cholera. Whereupon an enter- pn.sing German youth named Max Weir, of Greenville, Ky., recommends a deooo- tion of “smart weed’’ {Polygnuium Ily- dropepper), as follows: “The w'riter, a boy of thirteen years, has been in the chicken business for the last two years. This year, 1876, my hens hatched over eight hundred chickens, which I watched over in sunshine and storm for months. All seemed to be do ing well until the cholera appeared am ong them. My financial prospects dark ened, and my heart grew sad as I saw my favorite hens departing this life. “Calomel, sulphur, coal oil, assafeetida, salt, etc., were tried faithfully, and no good result obtained. “I then tried a new remedy which was recommended, and the mortality ceased at once. Previous to this I had lost three or four hundred chickens, and nearly all were drooping. My chickens have im proved, and I have lost but one in three weeks, and hope the cholera is banished from my poultry yard. “The weed I used is called 'smart weed’ in Kentucky, I gathered about one bushel of the weed, and put it into a large iron kettle ; added about ten gal- ions of water, and boiled down until a bout two or three gallons of dark liquor remained. This liquor I mixed with meal, about three pints to two or three gallons of meal, and fed the same to two bundled olvokens twice a day for three days (preparing the decoction anew from time to time as needed); then every other day for a week. My chickens, it appears have been saved by this remedy.—■South ern Farmer. . Had Ifo Fun in Him. One of the members of the Methodist Conference recently held here, was out for a walk at an eany hour one morning, and while on Howard street he encoun.- tered a strapping fellow, who was draw ing a wagon to a black smith shop. "Catch hold here and help me down to the shop with this wagon and I’ll buy the whisky !’’ called the big fellow. “I never drink,” solemnly replied the good man. “Well, you can take a cigar.” “I never smoke,” The man dropped the wagon tongue, looked hard at the member, and asked : “Don’t you chew ?” “No, sir.” was the decided reply. “You mu.st get mighty lonesome,” mused the teamster. “I guess I’m all right—I feel first rate.” “I’ll bet you even that I can lay you on your back,” remarked the teamster. “Come, now, let’s warm up a little.” “I never bet.” “Well, let’s take each, other down fqr fun, then. You are as bigas I am, and I’ll give you the under hold.” “I never have fun,” solemnly answered the member. “Well, I'm going to tackle you any way. Here we go.” Tlie teamster slid up and endeavored to get a neck hold, but he had only just commenced to fool about when he was lifted clear off the grass and slammed against a tree box with such force'that he gasped half a dozen limes before he could get his breath. “Now, you must keep away from me!” exclaimed the minister, picking up his Cane. “Bust me if I don’t!” replied the teamster as he edged off. “What’s the use in lying and saying that you don’t have any fun in you when you’re chuck full of it! Slame it. You wanted to break my back, didn’t you ?”•—Detroit Free Press. Natural Photograpliy. Some curious stones have been dis covered in Tula de Hidalgo, Mexico, of which a nativo correspondent writes ;— There is a stratum not very thick com- po.sed oi scales of rock of the same kiml, placed horizontally, upon which stratum there is a whitish green earth, all expos ed to view by the rains The exterior coatings have been broken off by the action of time, forming a small promon tory of fragments, which, as can readik’ be seen, present a great variety of ap pearance, and each face has received and is constantly receiving the landscape in front of it, by means of a color so perfect that I believe that art it.self cannot pio- duce such relative exactness, as you will see by the samples. The faces that re ceive said images are only tho.se on the sides, where the scales of the rocks have been beer, broken, and never those on the flat surface, which indicates that the grain or pores of the rook are horizontal, and that they oontributa, by absorbtion, to produce the phenomenon. It is ob served that some of 'ohe faces of the rock, the newes', ones, receive two images at the same time, inverce or opposite, that is to say, one whose base rests -FOR THE- lASOFIO FEATEEHITY IN N. C. and the South. -:0:- 2here are in the South 200,000 Freemaw^- aml recognizing the imperative need fo,-ar» ular and i.ermauent Organ peculiarly snigi to the demands ot this vast number “who a Imxcd tcgcther by an iudissolute chain of a ," cpiaffectiJn, we are now publishing a fim “EKZ-HONTHLY Hlasonic Newspaper, Such .'.S the dignity and advancement of the Fraternity will approve, whicli is tlie CUE A FES T P UBLICA TION IN THE UNI EH STATES devoted strictly to MASONIC INTERESTS. ■ :Oi- IVifh a joumalistio experience of several years and a determination to give all our time, talent and energy to the promotion of this im portant entorprise we hope to receive from our Masonic broilireu that liberal contideiieeand support, wliich. by an entire devotion toitssuc- cess no hope to merit. Terms 11,50 per Year, and all money should be sent by Check, i’ost-Uflice order or IlegistcredLetter Addrcs.s E. A. WILSON, Geeensboko, N. C. 955 to $20 E per (lay at lionic. Samples worth $1 ’ree. Stinson k Co.,Portland, Mamt, the upper angle of the ground and the vortex above, and the other inverse, whose base rests al.so on the upper angle, the same as those produced by an optical apparatus of only one lens. The faces which begin to receive the first impres sions only present the images of the near est trees with wonderful perfection and beauty ; those which have been in one position for a long time without varia- tiqn, present the complete landscape witnin the whole visible horizon, and even the most distant mou-itain.s by which it it is limited. In these the in- verse images appear to have been lost, the vertic.al image corresponding to thU natura. position of objects, remaining. It appears, also, that the ink with which the images are painted is indelible, but I know not to what degree of resistance. Q E N T E N N I -V L YEA R. To bring the Danville N.ew3 witliin the reach of all, we have brought the .subscription price down to nice figures. SOlhSCKU’TTON TO DAII,Y, 1 Year $5.00 " •• “ “ 1 MoiiUi .50 u 1. Weekly 1 Tear $1.00 “ a “ “ G Mos. .'5 The da'ly increase of civcnlalion makes the News one of the best mediums for advertising of an\” paper on the border. MANNING BliOTIIEKS, Editors and Proprietors, Danville, Va* Cun't be made by every agontovery \ m.tilth in the. business we furnish. ^ ' To the !/ orkinz We rro now furnish all classes witli constant employinont at • the whole of the time, or for their spare riom • • Business new, lijTht ami profltahle. Persons ol e but those wi'lh'Ti'rr"fMU*’ V'"' • so.N can easily earn from 50 cents to per evening, earn aXn".S'a”fla • ri -M ““ Xh I ? ^ nn.drais A j 111 uKu I busmees. Boys and "iris earn noariy a> iniu-u ‘« , Thiit uU who see this notice may send their ‘‘dercs , te.it the business we make this unparalleled one . such as are not well satisfied we will send one doi. pay for the trouble of writing. Full particulars sampKs worth several didlars to commence work on. ^ ..A. owu localities. Hano no room to explain hen^ Busi Mss,,l.-aaaut ,y.a honorablo. Wonu-n, and boys and Z,m - ’5'c will , ou a Mm,,Into Outfit ice. Ttio buamcs.s puysbetter tlimi iiiiytlunKelse We ivill bcai- expenne ot starting y,i„. Partiefilars^ free ’ \V life and see. bai-mers and mechanics, their sons -uid danghters, and all classes in need of pa-iing ,™rk ft home, should write to us and learn aU abo'ut zhewo4 at once Now 18 the tima. Don’t del y. Address ^ TBUE & CO.,* Augusta, Maine. Ol Home and Fireside, oue of the largest ana op -j. tralfHl Ihiblieations, ;01 sent free by mail. Keaau, you waut periuaueut, nroiUdblo work. iiFh’css, GEO STINSON, & CO.,. Portland, Marne. i-42- iio v->vuitciiijiai miiH ii'iaive moil• j^eiiucuiaii uisi.) luiiim ins imar i->uiiVTTie, '