; v S McwnK'aWtc Qffiuzl 0K8m l tftc 0rei f " Ww Spends"' of cmpermtcc." VOI HLlLEiaEr; 1ST. Cj., WEDNESDAY, DEO. 18 , 1872. ITSTO. 34. 7 yr 0f r I. t. 1. r k d. H. IS. friend of,, a .cmpmiw. puiiusjiicn jiy !. V I I irIA ICS RAIEIG-H, N. 1 V T T'K II M S: ''j! 00 I 2-", i; llirt'' n:' C !,U US:, f 'iVb;r more names will ho rpc , in o Mrs. Ilrwden, or Mrs. Dr. Sp' i r, cr the minister's lady should send in ; and I took the paper up and tilted it ovethe japanned box,' pour ing it in a nitre smooth stream, when who jhonl'd coiilo run nine: into the shop but Milly More. She was not t I M -i l irossoii caremny, ana her eves weie r 1 wit !i crviBEr. .Sho rshed for some tea, and -while fob vras weighing she whispered to me : 1 'Oh'! Aunty Gunter, have you look 1 to-day1 Isn't there a letter from Rejected fotv. stilly Moic-s . liCti oi. ill' :.tAIiV KVLK DALLAS. sail and TI i i i i uic-oggs ivorth girls, pipes Will? Ho imid he couldn't LliJ 1 il . J 111. I die. Mightn't out write nfu-v all? 1), look.' My Pot,' says I, It's a year that the Golden Dove went down, isn't likely. He don't let those I he ago It live I'm Aunty Gunter, . -lob Gunter l.c.l.n-nT Vrri- tTr A tip1 Portpost-pfiice and a store, and sell groceries and garden - msi?, calico, clioos find medicine, like other folks in our line, Avhen -anybody asks for em. .; When a ship comes in, and the ors come lioiua to their wives mothers, trado' grows brisk, house-keepers do their best, ant raisins and dried currants and c.and butter go off finely, and it's f while. to lay in ribbons for -the and smoking tobacco and long for the men.. Jack and his wags make old Auchor Port brisk,, for n while, but at last he sails away, and all the women seem to ask forvill-bo letters letters, ' letters, letters rvhen they have a right to ex pect them, and when they haven't all the same. j- It'sf please Aunty Gunter, look over them, and see if there aren't one for me ;' and it's.' please Undo Gun ter ; it might have got mixed up and overlooked somehow ;' often aud of tenGod help the poor souls ! after Jack lies tit the bottom of the sea, and nothing will ever reach them but the jjlws of his shipwreck. But plenty of letters come, after all, and 'sonretimes wo hive to!read them for the folks. Jub and I, and so ve : get to know: "something" of their lives: ililly More could read and -write -herself, but sti'l I always knew vheli she- had a letter from Will Hasset. I knew it by the hand-writing, and I knew it bv her blushes, and by that happy look in her face. Yhen he came homo, shd bought jibbons and bits of lace by the, apronsfnl ; and I knew where the packages of candy that he bought yvere to go. And I used to keep Job lrom fishing down in Pullman's creek of afternoons, be cause I knew that was where Miily and Will liked to walk. Courting time comes but once in a lifetime, and I always like to see it prosper. At last he sailed away, second mate of tho Golden Dove ; aud . when he came back from that voy aye, ihty were to be married. It was a sad day - when that ship sailed. Mrs. Captain llawdon and her girls were crying on the shore. Twen tywomen from the Port and live, from the mill were there to.. see her set sail. It was a grim, gray day, and the voyage was to be a long one. It was under our old sycamore that Will took Hilly to his' breast. 'Don't fret, darling !' he said. ' I'll come back safe and sound. I couldn't drown novr ; I've too much to live I fa-.' '. - . . Poir boy ! in spite of that, . the Gol- ; den Dove went down in mid-seas, and I onlv three men reached Anchor Port t tell how Captain Rawdou and "the i rest were lost, at dead of night, in a i , j iiiost wohu storm. Captain Kincaid brought the news np to Mrs. llawdon. He stopped at our store to tell about it. A nice old ) man. A bachelor still, at. fifty eight, Had as handsome, with bis white hair I &ud red cheeks, as a picture. ' That was twelve months ago,' the night I went in-to the store to sort out things, as I always did Saturday nights. Through the week Job used to get everything mixed uplettors in the tea boxes, candles in the letter box, eggs where they oughtn't "to be, and all the place askew, it was a warm autumn night, and Captain Kincaid's Vessel was" in port, and wo had plenty of custom. Job nerved the people while I tidied up. I found half the ' last mail in the sugar box.juid clothes pins in the ground coll'ee canister, and I just dumped them out. . ' Gather up your letters Job,' said I. "What possesses you., old man?' And he laughed,, and piled 'em up. And I made a vow to mysolf that I'd keen tho sugar box fall after that, so that he shbaldii t use it tor too mail. T 1 1.1.1 f ,,.-.., v' f n- iv.niii.1 iif sniwi' known as ' coiLe crusted,' bacaiwo it ."as prepared especially to ;v;so in c uf ice. That was the finest sugar Au chor Hill folks. often-bought, though I bad a little cut and powderedb, mo that want to always. It isn't likely, dear, but I'll look.' . I took the letters. in in.-' hand, one by one; Many of them wouldmake he'artf; ;rlad before the shutters were th it njght but none for Miliy !- BistaopPaiue. her finger. And tke day before the ship sailed she was to raarrj Csptain Kmcaid bo that fiho might go to Eu rope with him. A. year and three months since the Golden Dove went down. Well no Anis aisungmsnaa amn is now one can tell what chaiures a little Pding over the N. C. Conferense in while will bring. I used to wish that Fayetteville. On his woy, he spent I hadn't had any hand in it after all a &anday m -Kaleign ' and Ipreached when I thought it over, and remfem- ine coming sermon. Ihe congrega against them families and just God can go unpunish- - i . i' ' ... bered poor Will, and how he took her uon w.as "y large, . ana expectation fellowship and without rebukes, so far great sin against God, selves, agaiist their against society. And never let snch a 'sin ed. And yet to the dishonor of some Baptist churches it must be said, that they hold in fellowship men who make sell and drink excessively, ardent spirits. I know a church, which holds in in his arira nndr .Trt was Dlgn. J-le JlsUop 18 man Ol - . II ' 1 ' J ;, . . . But then you see Mrs. More's sight Iare Irame' DUt not . puient. had failed, so that she couldn't do fine wears a clean face anc3 Btort irn sewing, and Fanny wasn't of much s7 hair- He mUst bave Deen hand" i. 1 '"T r" - m ' . ac.connt we-vA. to InnV .f ti- . some wnen young : now nis lace is w,,w wv Mi-M w lino a It couldn't b expected, of couise. ' I told her so ; but I took her into i:'iv little bn:ck arlor, . and made her sit down there. I talked as good as I could to her but what good does talking do ? ' Oh, Aunty, says she, ' I know it seems as if I was a fool ; but I jvaked un hoping this morning. I don't be lieve ho is gone. I can't.' ' When baby died the only one we ever iiad I tnougnt 1 snould never boliove it; said I. 'But I had Job ; and you Lave 'your mother and sister, Miily.' At that she burst into tears, and put her head down on her knee. ' I must tell yon,' said she. 'They want me to marry Captain Kincaid. lie's courting me. He fell in love with me the night he brought the news to Mrs. Captain Bawdon ; I was there sowing, and heard it all. Oh, how cruel to fall in love with a poor girl at such 'a time! And he asks me to be his wife. And mother and Fanny shall always have a home, ho says ; and youlinoYV how poor we are ; and thcyaro angry at me for saying no. Aud how can I, when my heart is in tho sea with Willie ?' hard life that lay before Milly. It was good for her to maiTy Captain Kin caid, and have rest and comfort; wasn't it ? To morrow is the wedding said I to Job. 'It's going to be in the church Miss Salsbury is finishing my silver gray poplin. It sets splendid. We'll have Ben Barnes in to keep store and go, won't we ? You'll like to see Mil ly off, won't you ? 'I wish it was Will '.'Manet says Job. 'Poor Will says I, and I went on tidying, though it was a Friday. I should be so busy next day. I got out my big paper of sugar, and I got down my japanned sugar box, never empty yet since that day I filled it up. And then Job, sorting the letters, looks up at me. 'Fever begrudged you anything so kind and benevolent a personified benediction. His utterance is delib erate and thoughtful, though his dic tion is not elegant, nor even accurate. Mary Mag-da-le-ne, he pronounced Mary Mag-da-Iene. Sa-lo-me, he pronounced Sa-lome. His mind was more on his theme, than the pron unciation of words. His subject was the resurrection, and it seemed to hang heavy on his heart. - Hundreds of immortal beings were waiting on the word, and the preacher was con cerned, for their souls. He took up Hume's famous fallacy and proved that men were obliged to believe human testimony and their own senses. Then he began with that sad and sorrowful Thursday night, and so with his words he paint ed the successive scenes, describing each particular event (except the cru much as I do that box says he 'Best cinxion) just as H ne nad been present hing I ever put the mail in into This and nad seen " aU- -tiia pictures were yer wooden thing with a slide is a pesky bother.' fLaw me says I, 'if I'd know'n you wanted it, you should have had it; ust stick'em anywhere, I thought you would. I'll empty the box: Iv'e got every aouDC wa3 a611 awav- 116 oTiA iWll do ftnd T'm rUA irrm cr,rVn reached his climax when he showed e J I . , . bpforo T fillfid it nr ' now great ana unreasonable would So with that I spread a big paper naTe been tne foUy of tne disciples, on the counter and out all of the su- 11 tney naa imp"! to impose an un- 1 e l t , popular, a laise, ana consequently a ruinous religion upon themselves, ' Captaiii Kincaid,' ny more I said, and I She took my She was a nice, pretty rich, ele- family he honor for couldn't say breath away girl ; but the Captain was gant and stylish. An old came of too-. It was an Milly More. ; ' Not jusit yet,' said I, after a while ' Perhaps you feel better! He's old I know, but he's a splendid ir 'You too !' said she. 'You tool Nobody understands. It isn't as if I had made up my mind, like all the rest. Will will always' be a ..living man to my mind. 1 don t tmnk any oue ever loved but me. Nobody un derstands nobody.' I kissed her, and coaxed her ; and I said no word about her changing her mind; though for ail that I kept thinking of it in a kind of stupor. ' Captain Kincaid ! such a gentleman as that.! Old as he was, could she fail to see the honor?' But when I told Job, he says : '.Jerusalem! a young, pretty gir like Milly. -. vvhy don't he go after s nncwiude! or an oldish gal? Milly is too young for him!" Poor Will ! What a pity ! They jest suited each other.' gar. It had packed a little, and came out in a sort of cake. There it laid white and shiny and on top of it, whiter and shinier, laid a letter i a ship mark upon it, and this superscription: Miss Milly More, Anchor Port, Maine, United States of America.' Three months ago poor stupid ! I had emptied my best coffee crushed in upon it and there it was. Tree months - ago she had come to me and asked for a letter, and I'd tho't her crazy; and I'd have given more money than was in the till, to I couldn't help it though. drawn from the material which- the Bible supplies, and were very remote from Headleyism. At every step ad ditional proof was accumulated, and long before he reached the ascension, their families and their nation. He then very briefly unfolded the connec tion of the resurrection with the economy of Christianity and conclu ded by warning the ungodly that Jesus had died for their sins,: had been raised for their redemption, and Jill IT mat ne woma come again to save those who believe on his name, and to banish forever from his presence those who reiect his merer and luve. The hour hane of the church clock as I know, a member who made last fall, over one hundred gallons of bran dy. 1 1 know churches also, whci h are allowing some of their members, to.sell liquor in connection with other articles of merchandise. How a church that loves. Jesus and his cause, ever with an ordinary love, can tolerate this sin in any ot her nfem bers, is something hard to be understood May the Lord hasten the time when all Baptist churches may be enable to present to the world, a family, unsus tadned by intemperance. As Christmas holidays are at hand I would beg all Baptist for the sake of the cause of Jesus which you profess to love, not to buy, or drink one drop of liquor during these days of mirth. And let me beg you also not to en gaged in any so-cali : amusement that will injure your piety, or leave you with a guilty conscience, when these scenes of merriment are over. 'Ye are a chosen generation, a royal priest hood, a holy nation, a peculiar people,. that he should show to th the praises of him who hath called you out iof darkness into his marvellous light.' poleon returned from exile, and had by God or devised by roan. The one that second Reign of a Hundred Days, according to the old covenant, Do and ending with his defeat and downfall live, tho other according to the new, at, Waterloo, in June, 1815, which 'Behave on the Lord Jesus Christ, and forms such a remarkable incident in thou shalt be saved.' Whatever ways the history of France. and meRns have been thought of by Restored by foreign bayonets, and people of all religion?, may bo reduced having no hold on the affections of the to two works and grace. These can French people, the Bourbons so en- not be mixed. If any merit be allow- irely misgoverned that were dethron- ed to works, there is an end to grace, ed and exiled ini July, 1830. What and if salvation be of grace, there is was intended to ike a constitutional I no plea for works.; So St. Paul saye, monarchy was established, with the by grace then ltps no more of workF, Dokeof Orleans at its head, and eigh- otherwise grace is no more grace. But teen years of tranquility followed. The if it be of works, then is it no more Revolution of 1848 abruptly ended Srace. otherwise wort is no more work. the reign of Louis Phillip ne, and a A Wholesome Medicine. was on its second circuit since the text have dared to tear that letter open on tad deen takn, yet the word, "lastly 1 tefJ well ea,y-mgr0 di ine spot ana reaa it, tnouga x Knew tne vaLUD " uuui buu oouu. ajibuop hand was Will Masset's. l Paine is a great preacher. Wherein This can't wait says L V lies his strength ? In deep piety, 'No says Job, 'it can't with that good sense, and great familiarity with Are you in trouble? Work it off. .uon t try to quench your sorrow in rum or narcotics. If you begin this, you must keep right on with it, till it leads you to ruin; or, if you try to pause, you must add physical pain ana aegraaauon 10 me sorrow you seek to escape. Of ell wretched men, his condition is the most pitiful who, having sought to drown his grief in drink, awakes from his debauch with shattered nerves, aching head and depressed mind, to face the trouble again. That which was at first pain ful to contemplate, will, after drink, seem unbearable. Ten to one the fa tal drink will be again and again sought, till its victim sinks a hopeless, pitiful wreck. Work is your true remedy. If misfortune hits you hard, you hits something else hard. There's nothing like good solid, absorbingi exhausting work to cure trouble. There are some great troubles - that only time can heal, and perhaps some that can never be healed at all ; but all can be helped by the great panacea. Try it, you who are afflicted. It op- is- agreeable consequences in its train, and large quantities of it may be ta ken with most beneficial effects. Republic succeeded, of which Louis Napoleon, nephew of the dead Empe ror, was elected , President by a large popular vote. On the 2d of Decem ber, 1851, he secured his continuance in power by a bold coup d'etat, which, a year later, enabled the Empire to be re-established, with himself at its head. For several vears the new Em- peror governed with singular sagaci tyt and the internal prosperity of France became greater than ever. In an evil hour, in the summer of 1870, Napoleon 1 HI. commenced a war with Prussia, was resisted by united Germany, and finally, after a disas trous defeat at Sedan, became a pris on or of war, whereupon, as soon as this became knewn in Paris, a mob of politicians, most of whom had advised Napoleon to make war, voted down the Empire and proclaimed a third Republic, still existing such as it is. Here, then, in small compass, is the political history of France for a cen tury, in which time there have been ten, or, if the two invasions of -1814 and 1815 are included, twelve succes sive changes of government. The av erage duration of each has been eight rrt t n ' 1 1 years. That is to say, x ranca nas naa a new government, called into exist ence by force, once in every eight years, after expelling its predecessor by the same means. Within that time, also, there have been from fif- Salvation can not be by works mixed. It must be the other alone. Burdcr. grace aud by one or A W ul Clock. A German of Cincinnati ha;! invent ed a most wonderful clock. We cull the following description from' a Cin cinnati paper. It says : "When it marks the first quarter, the door of the left piece of the sec ond story opens, we see a child issue from the background, comes forward to a little bell, give it one blow and then disappear. At tho second quar ter a youth appears, strikes the bell twice and then disappears ; at the third there comes a tnsn in his prime; at the fourth we have a tottering old men, leaning on a staff, who strikes the bell four times. Each time the door closes of itself. When tho hours are fall, the door of the right piece of the second story opens, and death, as earth over his a skeleton, scythe in hand, appears, and marks the hour by striking a bell. But it is at the twelfth that we Jiave the grand spectacle in the representa tion of the day of judgment. Then, when death has struck three blows on H'.iriM by a Iijar. The folloiiing is from tho Omaha Tribune: '' . '. A gentleman who ; arrived a few davs ago from tho lower country, where grizzly bears help the herders to take care of tho sheep, relates . a curious bear adventure which occur red to an Indian hordman. in his em ploy. He sent tho man to a distant portion 'of a largo ranch to look after a herd of sheep. Tho Indian at nightfall got under a shed with a roof of branches, butopen on all sides, and lay down in his blankets. After a few hours' sleep ho was awakened -by feeling the hot breath of some auiroal on his face., Ho moved his the sit-snuffing him. The man, with great presence of mind, determined to kojp perfectly still, for he knew if he moved or cried out, one blow of those huge paws would break his skull like a walnut. Bruin scratched oil the blankets ; aud seized tho Indian by -tho legs. Though suffering terribly, tho brave fellow did not allow a groan or a cry to escape him. Tksff " bear dragged him from the hut for some distance, and commenced to dig a whole to lap the indian and cover hiuS up from coyotes. After the grave had been dug deep enough, the bear, content ing himself with about a pound of flesh from the victim's thigh, moved the rjody to the hole and covered it up. The Indian managed to keep ktho faco loose enough to arms and at onc understood uatiou a huge bear was allow him to breathe, and when tho bear retired he crawled out towards the musting, which was picketed soma fifty yards outside; the v hut With great difficulty he mounted, and then rode towards the ranch house. A the little bell, the cock on the top of doctor was sent for, and he pronounc the tower suddenly flaps his wings, ed tho wounds, though severe and and crows in a shrill tone ; and, after painful, not likely to prove fatal, death has marked the twelfth hour The next Jay a hunt was organized, with his hammer, he crows again and the grizzly was killed in the neigh twice. Immediately three angels, who borhood of the sport where he had nfivnd as enardians in a central i a i j. -i .a x I . . teen to wemy auumumu attempt to r&ise thejr trnmpets with their lorm new governments oy iorce. Dmce nandg . m left tbey hold swor Js) the present Republic began, there have &nd blow a bkgt towardg each of hAPTi t.hTfifi tlifi mHnrrection of the I . . . .. .. - m nwtnra rT t w e i o rt rt l n i -.m i i . . mui ijuwihs m me "lo the victor belong . tho spoils, last blast the door ol the tower opens, said Gov. Marcv, and the resurrected children of earth when appear, while the destroying angel 0f sinks out of sight. The multitude stand lor a moment full of awe and wonder, when, sudden- Spoils And Offices. 31st of October, 1870, of the 10th of January, 1871, and, most terrible of all, of the Commune on the 18th of March, 1871. During the last 85 years,, Force has been the ruling pow er in France. defending in tho Senate, the propriety tlia oiSoars only to the ui3ii who had woa the political victory. ' 11 Mr. Marcy had not said The Law. that, we believe he would have . been ly, Christ, in all his majesty, descends, President of the. United States. But surrounded by .angels. On . the left he put the sentiment into such, a terse The law is the 'ministration of con-1 there ia an angel who holds the , scales epioxammatic form that it shocked demnation and of death.' I a person of justice, on his right another carries J the public moral sense and Mr. Marcy could keep it perfectly it would enti- the book of life, which opens to show suffered wofully for his frank avowal b Mrs Captain Kincaid would have things that Milly More could never dream of silk dresses and velvet cloaks, jewelry and stuiiea chairs m her best rooms, a silv er ice pitcher if she chose like Mrs. Captain Rawdont She mi nave a carnage too, ana a pair ol po nies '; I liked Miily, and wouldn't have envied her one bit ; and I didn't won der at Mrs. Moro and. Fanny. ; Once having given me her confidence she didn't stop ; and her mother came over to talk about it too, until at last I fairly up and sided with the old la dy.' Milly says I, 'Will is gone, and you aren't his widow, to wear weeds all your life not that many do, if they can help it, seems to me and Captain Kincaid is as good as man can be, and you'll be happy with him. You can't help loving him as much as there's any need to love After that she stopped talking much to me. She used to give me strange looks though. I knew all about it. I wedding coming off to morrow.' Then I stopped and thought. Let it he until it is called for, and .she'll be Mrs. Captian Kincaid. with her silks and her velvets and her fine house and her carriage, all the same. This comes, from a shipwrecked sailer, poorer now than when he last went away. - 'Perhaps I'd better wait until the wedding is over, Job said I. My 'old man came across the room and put his arm about my waist. 'Nancy,' says he, 'you and I was young folks once. I used to think something was better than money and fine doings then. We old folks may get a little hard though to be up in the world seems so much, and all that old sweetness so silly why, it will come back sometimes, xou remem- France For A Century1 tie him to life. It was originally 'or- the alpha and omega the beginning dained to life but 'I found it said St. and the end. Christ waves his hand, Paul, 'to be unto death.' The reason and instantly the good among the res is, because we can not, through the urrected are separated from tho wick- A Rapid Outline of Governmental weakness of our fallen nature, keep it ed, the former going to the right, the Changes iorce the Ruling Power properly. Ji we offend in one point, I latter to the left. The archangel Mi- During Eighty-Jive Years. we are guilty of alL Therefore it is I chael salutes the good, while on the written, 'As many as are of the works other side, stands the devil, radiant The lust eighty-five years of French of the law, that is, who trust to the with fiendish delight he can hardly history may thus be summarized: On law for salvation, 'are under the curse. wait for the final sentence ol those fVi 92d of Fehrnarv. 1787. the French For 'cursed is every one that contin- who fall to him. but, in obedience to Revolution virtually began, with the ueth not in all things written in the meeting ot the Assembly of Notables, book of the law to do them.' Two years later came the opening of Now this is the sad condition of us for right the Bible. Biblical Recorder. From the Biblical Recorder. Baptist and Liquor. The enimica of the Baptist have of ten attempted to stigmatise them with the epithet of '-drunken Bapfists." I am satisfied that facts will show that Missionary Baptist drink as little liquor in proportion to their number as any other denomination of chris- nan. baptists nave among mem as fhfl stfttes General the tiers-etat. con- all till wa believe in Christ I sisting of nobles, clergy, and deputies, eousness. ber how he kissed her there under the jui 00. a j.J in the same I am grieved and ashamed wait until after the coudn't weddind, either of many true and earnest advocates temperance as can be louna among les8 tnan six weeks this mixed body ne to plead, I have not sinned so and any otner peopie. a large proportion caned itself the National Assembly, so. Hast thou sinned at all? Hast strict, if not ArxA verv soon after, on the 14th of Ju- thnn sinned once ? Then thou art euil . j ' - I o ly, 1789, the destruction of the Bas- ty. The law condemns thee to eternal - tile occurred. Precisely one year af- death. The law makes no allowances, ter, x ranee ceased to be an absolute no abatements. It does not say a and was changed into a limited mon- word about sincere obedience, or doing archv. In September, 1792, royalty as well as you can. No. The law was abolished and a Republic estab- says, Do all things that are commanded, ot a doctrine which all politicians lieve and teach. Frederick Douglas has rocontiy writen a letter in which he says it is proper that they who have fought aud won tho battle should -be appointed to places of trust and service, instead of thosj who opposed and 8 3ught tp over throw' the administration. The Douglas idea is substantially tho same, putas the Marcy.. Bat Douglas in its arouudabout, cominoaplac.3 pura.sjol ogy; Marcy laid down tha principle as an axiom in political . science. Doug las writes it out as a politician, Marcy of our churches are as strict, if more strict, in deahngjwith their mem bers for the sin of intemperance, than other bodies of christian. But while I believe this much to be the command of the central figure, he withdraws. The figure of Christ raises his hand again, with a threatening mienj and the accursed sink down to Ti 11. 1 t 1. ! .A.n,'A .. i y i. I it 'is no purpose ior any me reaims ui ma wumu. "ittJr"-' declares it as a statesman. Then Christ blesses the chosen lew, who draw near to him. Finally, .we hear a cheerful chime of bells, during which Christ rises, surrounded by an gels, until he disappears, and the por tal closes." Won't Clasp Hands. us. at the rememberance of the fact, that iished; and on January 21, 1793, Lou- Do them perfectly Continue all thy life While Mr. Greeley was living it was there are not a few, bearing the name ia the Sixteenth, a King who was rath- to do them Then thou mayest bo justified expected that he would have political I put my arms about Job's neck, and I kissed him; and then I got my sun bonnet and ran ov-r to Mrs. Moore's. ,- Captain Kincaid was j there I stood at the door with my letter behind my back. 1 Won't; you walk in? says Mas. Moore. I I haven't time says I, 'It's only There ia a ssnse in which tho senti ment is sound. Wo do not expect to see a President, cailing hU political opponents around him as his advisers. Nor do to snppos-s "tho tim-i will ever come when the opposition will have their choice of offices. No such Utopia will ever be seen in thi world. But Douglas is writing against the idea of competitive1 examination, and civil service reform He sees in Pres ident Grant, determination to securo' it, a prospect that the party men may have to take uacii seats, and that fitter him in the coffin it was a fit time for men will get the olfices for which th.y those enemies to have laid down their have not worked so hard at tue polis. r 1 Wa Hnno 111 A Prfinid pnfc Will Us weapons?. "" ' r ------- "'"-" The following extract, from a Waah- aoijie purpose. Tnere are men iu tae gave it knew that her heart was in the sea but Will was gone, and why should' she 'refuse what Providence had offered? The Car.tain staid at the Port three months, and at last we worried her in to promising to be his wife old Mrs. More, lanny and I. She just up at last. : it don t matter much, after all she said,- ' I must be going out of my inula, ior I never can stop watching o T 1 11 .1 -r . x huiui uia boon, j. sup- I marry or not.' After that, sho never spoke of Will. Mrs. More told me she vvaa engaged ; and she wore a diamond ring upon nt',' and hoping, pose, whoihci My letter 1 my It has come at last 1' TTnw she knew it Heaven knows. perfectly and continue. Md 1. shalt live. Transgress it and of Greeley, being known great suocess. Politician win fight shalt die. The gospel brings re- through the Sun dispatches this morn- it to the bitter end. But the Presi- . . . ..- 1 w w m i -. i Yj 1 ' l- 1 J-.-.ljk. M1 I .... I and errana. xt s a ntue BiuSui. fellow-beings; but he has made it the ith seventy-one of his followers. Af- 0f the law is net Repent and live, or The extract says ly, there s a a duty of every man to do all the e-ood k T?r n na woo rrnrramaA Vtt n I T3 A Put tnn lUn nrlinU 1 Tlio "nfpnf inn nf Senator letter 1' cried Milly. ua ftn as mftnv nf nia fAlw.lW Us.. ,:nu .j offer his resolution ta adjourn over be competent. He has pledged himself I w " mi w n vwg.i m I I THI IJirv. II 1 1 t,lj LUH ULU If 1 ilUVKHl I QW HHF HIM, V H.III1 l"J II I li I 1 1 IIU 1 V - rt 11(1 I . . aa he possible can. , JNOthing, it seems ber, 1799 (the 18th Brumaire,) when thou She hadnl had a glimpse oi u. minds, than that he, who deals out in- Aral Asf-abrisW a militjirv rrv- t he mi.r h.nt. tha law Vnowa it. Tra lironrht to the attention of ident .13 in a position to be stronger It was the old sailor's stpry a ship tojdcatin2 iiquors, to others, as a bev- t of whinh b hpMm hPftd ornv Tf. ia n,t. infrM the'eancus. and at the instance of car- than they. And if he beats the pol 1 i.J .--1 Jt ,t-UA 1 " - ' .. I " niiu.uiuKu'u.vj, . 1 ; . - ... , ... 1,. ,i ,,, lll,l-.rr,!iiinR(..an.,l:aao,,.;iu rm. forthA satA f maVinff mrtisv ai, u ui- . i-- u-i ,1 .J .tain Senators persuiiauy iioowio " r T""0 o J 1 wilu vu.ou.x, ouu, 10 ottb me, uub to ui. uuu ucbuuy 11. nrrr-A rr.f fn o Jot vic.turr. but t) Ucjs ot trust t,i i, .ii.-i-.ee- j xi i i..- ... . . , ... jyir. ureeiev.ii y3 "S" . Dy tne traiui;, uues ujjure uieuimume, ruling with great ability ana a steaa- all hopes of life by obedience, and thus . Ar -Pmton to make his motion, held by tne most competent, for tne in health and in morals. But if the fast will the iron hand in the velvet force the sinner to fly to Christ. Hence it was ascertained that the Vice-Pies- good ui the country, ho will win a bat- injury infiictedt by liqnor-makera and glove re-established peace, order, gt. Paul speaks, 'Now we know, that sellers we're confined to those alone and prosperity. In 1802 he was elect- whatsoever the law saith, it saith to who buy and drink it, the makers and ed Consul for life; in 180 the Repub- them that are under the law,' that ev seller s sin would be very great But He was changed into the Empire, with erv mouth may be Btopped, and all alas, the injury stops not herebut ex- Napoleon Bonaparte at its head. For the world become guilty before God wrpk a deserted island, wretcnea tvi rT tha inpni in hoping Ior succor and a sail at last. A vessel outward bound had picked him up. He would be home in three months. Three months '.' said Milly. 'Ob, how can I wait P And then says I: Milly, forgive a poor stupid gooese. That letter has been lying under my best coffee crushed three months and a day. There's a vessel in the offing now.' So it was Will, after all, and Job and I went to the wedding with hap py hearts." There was no need to pity ident intended to recognize Mr. Fenton as soon as reading of the journal was concluded. To prevent this Mr. Came ron interrupted the reading of the journal, moved that its farther read- . 11 . . 11 -i. ing be suspenoia, ana naving inus ou- tie as giorions una useful an any wth I wnich Lis military lame is linked. tends with a sad and crushing power ten vears his rjower in Continental TV,;a m t.a off nil lmr of salvation bv tained the floor, immediately moved to to the family, the church, if he is a Europe was very great, but his was a Lorks. The Apostle adds, Therefore Mjourn. -Mr. Fenton over and over wouldn't stir her up much, but make mHio- amhition whirh did nWWn u U AAa f tha la ahV flocl, ujf T" "t " uer UIMUI Ol mm Ol nigntS. 0 1. 1 u v .tv. v " ' 1 hia motion, un ne oeremutorii v itius f - MW AM W J t . m Cantain Kincaid either for he married to society, than all drunkards combin Fanny Moore before the year was led; slill, aU those boy buy and drink church member the neighborhood and the country 01 those who buy and itself, and fall on the other side; for, be justified.' drink. i ;i . having so mismanaged that Europe We should be very careful to disin While those who make and sell in- united to oppose him, the Empire col guish between the law and the gospel. toxicating liquors are doing more harm lapsed by his abdication in April 18- Luther says, 'He who can rightly dis 14, when the hereditary monarchy I tinguish between these is a good di over, I liquor as a beverage, are guilty of a ed, and the motion to adjourn was ! carried. It was the purpose of both Mr. Fenton and Mr. Summer to make( sume remarks on the motion intended I to be offered by the former. of Baptist, who are pouring a ceaseless er weafc than wicked, was guillotined bv thv works. But if thou fail in one enemies: but' when death had laid and unmitigated stream of reproach on e piace ae Quinze, in Paris, now instance, thou comest under the curse. . 1 1 1 1 . 1 . 1 on the sacrea name tney Dear, by mak- known as the Place de la Concorde, 'Whosoever shall keep the whole law, ing, selling or drinking, without cause the scaffold standing on the spot now and, yet offend in one point, he is guil- mtoxicaung uquors. it , must be so, occuoied bv the Obelisk of Luxon. tv of all that every man who maes or seUs in- On the last day of May. 1793. the Aterson may say. It is true I have lineton Teleyram of the 3rd inst, refer- uartv caoabie of fiihuir the offices, ai.d 1- . . 11 .1 - - 1 " 1 , . . it., - ... , " . toxicating uquors, ior me purpose ol jegai was replaced by a revolutionary sinned, but I am very sony for toy ring to the action of the U. b. benate the mo3t unfit are the scrambling poi- majfmg money py me operauon. stanas TL.r.nWin ftn tha Tiwn of Terror r,. D,r, nr.ri will amend mv lifo Will on thA mornins ot tbat aay. exnioits iwomus, ougias 13 guilty before the God of heaven and gaij which lasted until the end of Ju- not this relieve me from this curse ? a bitterness toward a dead one whose Pio- e 1 1 1 : -1 1 1 - 1 . . 1 in u vu ta awwm uu t ltd itiita . imiii oi earm, 01 a nerinous sin. ioa nev- iy; 1792, when the arch-tyrant Maxi- No. The law has made no provision whole life had been given to his coun- fcjcal Balvatiull of tiiig r6public & hQ 0 8io - 6w w uijufe uiu I imiian Kobespierre was beheaded, for repentance or pardon. The style try tnas is unwormv ui m uuUJ.- faithluuy carries out tue iaea of corn- peutive examination lor olnce, and Fenton to appoints only those who are found lo A country youth inquired at a city drug store for ten cent3 worth of "love powders"; ''something that Ihe ur bane druggist's clerk put up some magnesia, and cautioned the .purchas er not to give his victim too much of it at a time, bat rather win her affec tion by degrees. , . reinstated. Exactly a year later, Na-1 'There are bat two ways proposed 1 between two ladies. The happy medium a gentleman Subscribe, for the F&isxo. 1 i 1