r i ON. A . ... ' 1 . ; pi r i r 4 Devoted to the Protection c If owe and the In tcrests of the County. . VOL. II. 'GAST0NIA,.GA8T0N"00TO;0M.SATi7EI)A McOSNINMAYltA, 1881. No. 91, ffpts avr Yovn'sow. One day a lasy farmer boy Wm hoeing put the corn, And moodily had listened long To heir the dinner horn. The wolcon.s blast whs heard at last, And down he dropped hit hoo ; But the good man shouted in hi ear, ''My boy, boa out your row." Although a ' hard one' whs the row, To use a ploughman' phrase, And thslad, as SHilors have it, Beginning well to " haze." " I can.," he said, and manfully He teized again his hoe Ad the good man smiled to see The boy "hoe out his row," The lad tha text remembered long, A nil' uriirt mMOora 1 wbIL, That perseverance to the end At List will nobly tell. Take courage, man 1 reslve you can, And strike a vigorous blow ; In life's great field of varied toil, Always ," hoe out j our row." IkSur Vounir Folks. ffot two year old The darling boy Pet of the household And household joy, Is baby Joe. 'Tis sweet to quote 1 he prattling talk, And nice to note . The toddling walk Uf baby Joe. ?Vbo of his size That can compare fn dazzling eyes "And curly hair ; ! With baby Joe f '' Who can conipeto v In cunning plays Or is more sweet Jn all his ways, Than baby Joe ? With geod night kiss, lie ends each day Young as ho is He kneels to pray, Lrear baby Joe? jUTTLE RUTH. AN OLD MAN'S STORY. 1 Know 1 was a stibh old idiot, now when I look around me and see the met' ciet given mi in my helpless old age, feel ihe warm lore around cie on all sides, and realize the desolation my own hand reached forth to grasp; but I wag blind to the future in those days wheo I so nearly wrecked all its happiness. '.. This was how it happened : A'ter Mar tha died my wife, I mean, with whom forty happy years of my life were spent and all my children were dead or married, excepting Ruth, there fell , upon me the heavy misfolunt that baa chained me t (bis chair, or my bed, for fifteejn weary years. I hud been a hard working man all my life wheelwright by trade wjjli a large family to rear, to clothe, to feed, to educate, and, ah me ! one by one to bury in the old churchyard, till only Mary, Jas. ftixl Rath, our baby, were left to me. Mary married, and went with her husband to the far West. James took his small fortune ol ,a ftw bur J earned dollars, and irft us for the golden laud of promise, California, and only little Ruth was left us. Then the angel of death came for Martha, and only ix months later I was stricken helpless tjrith paralysis I am reconciled now to my hard fate, and can tit here happily, glad that my eyesight is still good, my right hand free, and that I have learned in my old age to love books, to enjoy reading, and even writing, as I never did in the hard work ing days of my youth- put in those first mouths of helolcsj, when eveo to toss and turn in my ntrrous lot lore was denied me, my suffer! gs were simply horrible. No agony of pain, no torture of flesh or bone, could equal the dreadful pressure upoo my Strong limbs, that held them mationiess. dead, io spite of my i Sorts ito 'more them one little ioch. I have fainted with the frightful tflbrtt 1 have made jut to lift once the feet that had carried rpe miles in a day with unwearied ease. But eren io that time of rebellious murmuring, of bitterest repining, there waa tome ennsolation. First, there was the house and five acres of land, my very own, free of debt or mortgage, and a small iom in the bank, the interest of which lifted ut above actual want. Then I bad Ruth. She waa just twenty when her mother died, and others beside In r father thought her face the lairest one f M miles around She had the bluest ayet, -like the little patches ol summer sky, and hair that was the color of corn silk, and nestled in little baby curls all orer hr head rebellious bair, that would never lie straight under any coaxiug, bot kinked up in tangles that were tail of sunlight. Her sk o ws white as milk, wJthBhetke like the heart ol a blush rote, and her smile showed the prettiest rows of pearly teeth I in r saw. She coaxed from me my wicked rr-. pining by nomine; to tae for directions. muking me feel that my bead was still needed to direct the work, though my feel! would never more carry me orer the door sill. Then she fitted up for me a lurW back-room that overlooked most ofthe farm, ond had Silas, our head man, lift me up every morning and put m ) in a deep cushioned chair by the window, where I could see the burn, the poult ry-y ird. the well, uod the fi lJ of waiving corn and wheat. She made me feel myself of im portance by giving me thus themastery orer my own - little domain ; and s!ie brought up herowo meuta to eat with mi in the mora where my infirmity held roe u prisoner. "TTiu mutt understand "fmi R it.h w to me, or you will never understand the simple story I i are set myself to teliing yu. Smc taught me to nee my ligl hand without rfcr left ; andif you want to appreciate the tOiculty, tie your left arm down for one single hour, ai d tiy how of- tin it will uiiCoiiHciouvly Strain at the cords. She biought me bx.ka from the village I brary, and opened to my old eyes an brum a field of Measure uever before ex plored. I had read my Bible and the news paper all my life, but 1 never even knew th imo.es of bokft,now my greatest treus- ures, till R'Uh thought " reading would b company " for me. LUilc ltuth, tven S'ie d'les not know the world she iitopled for me in In r lovini; cini lor my lonel nets. .' '.' Wlieu the wa3 busy about her houdf work, ber baking, her wushing and ironing she left all 'lie doors standing open, that mi It i fcliil hear her cheery voice as she sany or talked to me Tli n when all her work wasdoiie, thu could put a .clean white apron ovor her blacK drtst, asd si clote beside me, Btitcui iif busily on the household linen, while I read aloud what ever pleased me in my morning studies. She devistd little dainty dishes to tempt me to eat : she put suuceM of fl we s on my table, that 1 might cheat tmeelf ini fdocymg I was out doors, at tbiir jn-rfunie crept out on the air i she assured me, pet ted me, lovtd me, till even my misfortunes seemed blessings drawing ut nearer togeth er. And when she was all the world to me, all iliac auved me from misery, J olio Hajes asked me to give bim Ruth for his wife. I could hare struck him dead when be sto.td be ore me, a young giant in strength, with bis handsome sun-burnt face glowing with health, and wanted to take away my one blessing, my ouly borne child. f I will be a true too to yon, Mr. Mar tin, be said, earnestly. " I will never take Ruth from here ; but let me come and share her life, and lift some of the burdens from her shoulders. I laughed bitterly. I knew well what stich sharing would be when Ruth had a husband, and perhaps children, to take her time and h r lore from me. But I waa not harsh. I did not turn tbU suitor from my house, und bid bim never speak to Ruth again, much as I longed to do it I worked cautiously. I let him go from me to Ruth and when he left her and she CHiie to me, all rosy bluHhes, to tell me. with drooping Hps and moist eyes, of her new happiness. Jf worked npou her love and i er sense of du ty till she believed herwlf a mnnstei of fln gruteful wickedness to think of leaving me or taking any divided duty upoo ber hands. I wept, asked her if she could face her dead mother after deserting ber helpless father. I pointed out. to her the unceasing round of wifely duty that would keep, her from my sid', and proved to her that the duties of wife and child must clash, if un dertaken under such circumstances as were proposed. The loving', tender heart yieldedto me and John was tearfully dismissed. Throne b the w; rm autumn months when, ihe corn ipened and garnered when our crops were ble d and the little bank fund was increased by the prire of the farm produce Ruth grew very quiet and subdued. She was not sad, having always a cheery wo'd and a pleasant smile for me ; hut the pret ty rwe tint left htr roun I cheeks, an I I no longer heard her ringing at her work. When I read the best pxget in my books to her, I would see her eyes fixed dreamily on some far-awty thought, her work Iving idle, till the wok with a start at my fret ful questions. For I grew fretful and trying in those TS' I wanted her ( f'T "P woman's rarest hopes and sweetest aff at ions, and be the same sunshiny Ruth she wan before my hand tore away her love dream. I wanted her to put away all ihe loving tender ties of wifehood and motherhood, and past ber life in devotion at the arm chair of a paraljxrd old man. And when the completed, with gemle, touching kuh mUho, then I wanted her to be thelright bsppy girl, aho had resigned nothing and who ciuld unrte tweet girlish farcies, with John for a hero. An unreasonable old tryant, wasn't It The winter curoo in early that year, and before Christmas everything was fren up light, and the caid wus intense. V.'e piled up coal in tie tiovcs. lifted doort and windows that is, Ruth did the work, and I ei j yed the result ; but tin re came one cold day on Friduy when it teemed no coals, no listing, could coi qiw the cold. Children fr z- on the way to school that day, and were found, stifTard stalk, lean ing against the fe. ce.J. , Food froze on the tables. Ask at jbody in Maine if they remember that bluck Friduy, and see if some mothers' eyes wi: not fill as they think of the. little, scarlet-hooded fixures brought .to their, doors, white and 'rigid, that had lifted rosy, round checks for a kiss only a few hours beforp. On this cold Friduy, Ruth hurried through h'T work in the morning, making my room the warmest pUce in the hou-, covering my orm-chair with tuft woolens, and moving it near the stove. I would have It face the window, for my gjimps of outdoor life was too precious to resign but I was not, as U8ul, near it, for Ruth said there ii.ight be a draught. When nil was done indoors, I saw from my chair Roth, with a scarlet el. uk und hood thrown over her, eoing to the well wiih an cnip'y bucket. She stepped along quickly over the hard, fnz n ground, and I w:is admiriitg t he trim little feet and the dainty figure, when I caw her slide to He two steps that were above the well walls and (all. She bad slipped, and she luy doubled up between the two wooden steps and the rouyh sides of the well, as if die couM not rwe. Two or three times her Imiidd clutched the lower ttej?, and she raiwd herself ball' way up, only to full back again, at if ber limbs would not sup port her. not wit till she is well, Mr. Martin. Let me hsvt Ruth for4ray wile now, to-day." "With a brokeo;leg, sick, helpltsa ?" Does ehe not., need me the more ? Give her to me now" Hut he had to wait until the bans were called in church three tiim9, though he came to us that ly, caring for me with the tenderness ol a son, while his mother nursed Ruth. 3'he.y were alone together. 'as we were, and they hud tthut up their liouse at.d come to live wiih us, r.eer to leave agaii. For one morning, propped npwiili pidows, R'lih wusdresjed in white by Mrs ITaeg, Di d we had a wedding in the little room. My chair was moved in, and the neighbors came lr.m far a' id n ar to bear the solemn word-i that "made Jot;n and Ruib man and wife, And happiness has shed is true light upon our hmne ever since "Into tho Jaws of Death." Two Famnun Chargr-The Grand At- sault at Grttynburg. And I eoold only look on, powerless to move to aid her. Oh, the agony of-it! n . , . . . . io Know sne was titirt, unuoie to rise, am I helpless as a og. I screamed and called for help. Silas waa somewbe. e, I .could not tell where, and I called loud'y for him I cojild see, after a time, that Ruth, after her frantic struggled, was growing drowsy ilb tbe death sleep of, cold. The scarlet hood drooped more and more, till it rested against ihe wellside, and t!e blue veined lids closed orer her eyes. The sight called from me such a cry of agony as I thought must be heard for miles. It was heard. A moment Inter John Hayes, panting and eager-eyed, burst open door. ''I heard you She is "What is ii?" he cried calling on tbe road." Ruth! RothI" I screamed freezing to death by the well." He stopped to hear no more. Out up. on the hard, slippery ground, down tbe steps with swift, rapid strides, und theo saw him stoop and lift the little scarlet cjoaked figure in his strong arms and come swiftly back, bending his face down over the senseless one on lug arm, whil hot tears ruined down his brown cheeks. lie put her on a lounge near my chair, and then dashed out for snow. 'Rub her, rub bei!" be said. "I am go- ig for a doctor and for my mother." Before it seemed possible he could bare crossed the lota to his home, his mother ivus with me, and lif'fd Ruth away from the fire to the txd. The doctor came, and the two waked till my lieart sank witb ut ter hopelessness before the blue eves opened aiiiin, or tho breath fluttered through the ale lips. But it dul at last, and John joined me in a fervent "Thank God!" Bui Ruth had br ken her leg. and we knew hhe niusi lie helpless for many weeks liefore she could be our own active, br.ight irl nguin. Jt was an appalling truth for me to face, but she was not dead, not lying fr B.'ii ugainst the rough well curb, and I could not but ftel thankfulness far, far above the pain of knowing her suffering. was trying to settle it all in my mind( in und rtitand the doctor's words, while Mrs. Hayes and the doctor lilted Ruth to her own toora, that opened into mine 1'l.ev were away a long time, and John sat b side me, holding my band ie Ins and comforting me us if I bad not taken tbe very t'ope of his li'e lr"" him. " f)on.'t grieve to," he said, gently. ' She will live." 'Thank to you." I. said, "Oh, John, if she gets well, she is yours. Give her your st n 'He arm for life, John, instead of my hi Iplesanese. I see to-day where my St 1 Gah love bus nearly cost her life." Do you mean that T" John asked, with a little trembling in bis voice ; "do yoa really mean that f" '1 do, Indeed. Let her ttay here, John, I will not be a burden on your purse, f r the hase and farm an I a. 1 1 have tared are Ruth's; bot let ber giro me wrtt lime and love ha can spare from you." midly," be aoawerew ; "-cut we will dipt. II. T. Ow. n In Philadelphia Time.. The c mmuml low came along the line, ' Front, forward !" and the column resumed its direction atraiiiot down upon the centre i f the enemy s petition. I he destruction ol life in that udvancing hret wus frarlul be yond pn cedent, Dicers going down bi d Eo8 and the men by teres Hntl fillies. Kemper, bus gone down terribly mangled, but (iarn. tt suit towend unhurt, and rode up aid down the 'front line, sayiiiir in a Hirong calm voice : " Faster, men! luster! fCl"Ae up and sup ouV luster, but don't double quick !" Toe atone fence was carried without a Struggle, the infantry and iherkirmitih line swept away before the division like trfleb beforn Ihe hronm Two-thirds of the dis a'tee was bt hind and the one hundred can nons iu the rear were dumb nd did not ri plv to the holly worked guns in onr I'ront, We were now lour hundred jard fiom the ftiot ol Ctmeterr Hill, when away iff to (he right, nearly half a mile, there appeared jo the open fi Id a line ol men t righr angles with nur own. p long, daik mass, dnssed in blue, and, coming down at a "diiuble quick'- upon the unprotected r'ght flunk ot Pickett's men, with their .nuskets " upon the right shoulder shilt,'' their bailie flags duncing and fluttering in th"brei created by 'heir own rapid mo tion, and their burnished buyot ets alisten ing in the sun above their head like twigs covered with sheets of sparkling ice when ..el'jjUeii by a blust. Garnell galloped atonic the line saying : 'Faster.-'' men I faster!" and the Irot.t line broke forward in double quick. Save your wind und your umtnuni Mou for the hiial charge J and then went down anionic the dead, and his clarion voice was no more heard above the roar (if bat tle. ''" The enemy were now seen strengthening their lines where the blow was expected to strike by hurrying up reserves Irom the naht arid lelt, the columns Irom opposite directions pa-sing each double along our front like the fineis of a man's two bamls locking together. The distance had again !htirieued, and nffioers in tbe enemy's lines could be distinguished by th ir uniforms from the privates. Then wa9 heaid behind that heavy tnud ol a muffliil tread of arm ed men. that roar and ru-h of tramping leel as Armirlead's column from the rear closed up behind the front line and he (the last Brigadier) took command, stepped out in front with his hat opiilted on the point nl" iiia rwoid ami led tbe division, now our ranks deep, rapidly and grandly across thet valley ol deuih, covered witu ciover as soil as a I'urkish carpet. There it was again, and again ! A sound Giliug the air above, below, around us, lik, the blust ihrougli the top of u dry cedar, or tbe whirring s ut d mud' by the sudden flight of a fl ck of quail, U was grape bud canister, and the coiunin broke forward in to a doub e quicK. and robbed toward tbe sioue wall where forty cannon were belch ing forth grape and Canister twice and thrice a minute. A hundnd yards from the stone wall the flaukiog party ou tbe rk'ht. coming down on a heuvy run hallid within fifty jards and poute l a deadly siorm of musket balls into Pickett's men double quicking ucioss tbeir front, and under this leinble cross fire the men ret led and stui:- eertd betweeu l.dlioir comradis, and the right cume pressing down up .n the centre, crowding Hid compubies into confusion. But u!l knew the purpose to carry tbe heights in trout, and Hit! mingled muss. iTum filteeu to thirty de p, ruslnd touard the Eloue wall, while a lew hundred men, without order, fuctil to the rtjiht and luuybt tbe flunking purtv there, although tiny to one, and for a time held them at buy. Muskets were wen crossed as some nun fired to tbe ribt and others to the trout aud the fighting was t-rrtSc far be yond all oilier experience even ! f ickett s men, whu lor ouce raised no cheer, while ie weikiu rang around -tiitm-.w it Ii the " Union trippie huzza " The old veterans saw the fearful odds against Hum and oilier bostt gathering darker and deep r Still. " - . The time was too piecious, too serious lor a fleer; ihey uck!el down to ihe heavy tak in silence, and fought kiiIi a feeling like despair. The em my were lul ing buck iu front, while Tffi-eia weie teen am ng iheir breoking l ug striving to inan.taiii iht ir ground, l'.ckt it's meu were wi Lio a few let I or the stone wall when the artillery de lived their last fire Imuj gona shotted to the muzzle a bl.-x ' fifty leet long went through the cnarging. urging host with a g -ping rent to the rer, but trie mrvivor mounted ihe wail, then over and onward, rushed up tbe bill close after the gunu rs, who waeu tbeir ramruent in tbe luce or PK-keti's in. n and tent up a clieer at if they left adiu.tioo lor the gal liot charge. On awept tbe odumn over grvuud curercd with i-ead aud dyiu; men. where fhe earth seemed to le on fire, the sm'.ke dense and suffocating, the sun shot out fltmes blitzimr on every side, friends caild hardly be distinguished from foe, but tre division., in the shape of an invented V,with the point .flattened, pushing fcoward, fiiihiing, fulling and m.iing awav, till half way op the hill they werv met by powcrlul Ondy ol fresh troops charging iown upon them, and this remnant of ubout a thousand men was hurled back out into the clover field. Bruvt Armistead was down among (he enemy'.s gut s, m trial ly wounded, bat was lasi seen leaning upon one elbow, slashing at the tunnt rs to prevent them from firing at his.reireaiin mrn. Out iu Iront of trie bieugiwo.ks the men showed a d sposition to reform for auotl er charge, aud an i fficer looking at the frowning t heights, with blood trickling . down the tide of his face, h quired of another, " VVhut shall we do V Tut1 an8er wit."1'!! we yet-reinlorcemeiits s. km we can take that hill yet." But no reiiilorcenietit8 c me, none were insight a d ubout a ibousaoJ men ,13 d to the rear over tieud aul woundtul, mantiled.groaniDg, dying man, sc..tu red thick, .far and wide, wmle snot and shell tore ap the earth, and niiiime balls fit w around them for more ibau a thousand yards. BILL ARP Expreitti Hit View on the Education Question. Atlanta Constitution. Is there any politic going on anything exc pt spoil. ?. 14 there any mnmeutus is sue before the country that we must take sides upon anything higher than Gorham am) Spizeriuklum gilting an office? Is it a sign of brilliant 8tatesman,'hip lor ona party tn outset another party, and was that why the Kngltsli par'ament was once culied the rump pnrlament because it set a long time and dune nothing ? Is our party committed to educating the negro, nr are we just diu'g-inst i' to the rads bt cause they pr. m iseil so much and done so little? I just want to be posted. I'm afraid my own edu cation is a little defective tin this p rint. 1 reckon I'm one of ihe twiVa that was bent and tlietree is now inclined from a propper perpendicular upon the subject of educa tion. Mr. P pe said a little learning is a dangerous thing. I don't know so well bout that, hut I am very certain that a good deal of it is no advantage to the major ity ol people. It spoils loo many hew.fs of wood aud drawers uf water, and don't make anything, eke of em. If everybody wus rich, und could live like a geutlenrin a power of learning would be a good thing, but m ft people have to work fur a living, aud a little is just as good a a good deal to tliem. II a chap has an uncomm'n quantity of bruins in his noggin and wants mine leainin , he will be apt. to get it some way . I( he has just a common supplv, all be nerds is a conmon education, and if ne namt goi tiardiy any. then there s no use in straining his gun. The country needs laborers ; the farms need 'em, and so does the shop ; but the farm nor the shop wou t get em Irom the colleges. Abuut one out of ten who graduates, be comes an ornament '.to. the law or the gospel, or some profession, and the other ninj .expect, some profession to ornament them. When u young nun has studied logic aud rhetoric aud syllogisms and outer conui drums, be thinks it would be a waste of sweetness lor bun to work work with iiis bunds, his pretty white hands, lie jnat couldn't think of such a thing ; the v. ry idea is preposterous. lie must do br.iin work, and so he finds his way into tome lawyer's ofhve or doctor's shop, or tuns c.'un'ry editor aud goes to abusing s m ti.ny. ir rurs tor a little County t Hi. 'e. or Imifs ar. utid t iwn fti'.d gns a iiviny nobody knows h -w ; and his last h pe is to -i. vi.gie s me sol'1-bej.' ted girl w ho has great expectations, and then live i ff of the old man's money. Every body's children ought to be taught to read and o 6g4cr a lime ; and I'm willing to be taxed tor that, but if tney get any more let 'em get it out ot omebody else's pocket thuu mine. I urn oppnSed to spoiling so nan v good snhp'cts tor the plow uxd the plane and the anvil, bill u Burritt was a gnat astronomer and lie was a blacksmith aud studied ut the I rge, uud it may be that it lie had guo.- to c 'ilee he wouldn't have been any ucc unt. There's more in the boy thuii Ttie're is in the college. In ineSc days of cie wp books any boy or girl Can gel mi education if tiiey waul it, but my observation is that n il more than one to ten want an unusual quantity. It the family lakes a good newsj aper and has a Uible and a few story boons iu tbe bou.ee and the ctiilureu do an honest day's work they'll gel along abnul as well as tue collects bos in the long run und do us iu icti good in lite world. It's bad enough to be spoiling so uiuny white boys, but wiien you talk ubout negroes it's still worse. My opioiou is that iheir natural condition and incliuu uou is work lubor saeal -elbow grease; and ihey are IK-Ver so happy und conleuted as when liny are ut n, and every. lime you educate one you spoil him; you make a fool of him, and I've no sympa hy with that hubby that some of -our stutesur n are riding tbe education of the lie ro; an i i: tiiui is to be a jiluuk lu our platform I wn t sialyl un it iu my present iranie ol mji.d. I dou I oppose any ui.m giving Ins own children j.isi as mucn learn. Ing as lie CUU utl 'id, ana I'll do tn sauie tiling ty luiue, but may Ue both ol us will be iliappuiu'td in our IKCialiiu end both will spoil a mo good inec anlcJ, but I'm oppoMrd to a geucrul S)S.em ut educatiu nic luukuts at public U peruse, except SJ lar s tut simple rudiiiienU are concerned. Lay Ibe luUudaliou aud t op. I tell Oti mis r nmt geueiadou are puweilul slnliy. Tney can invent rnoie way to d le work tuau uuy ol tlicir predecessors. A Lice looking mau came iosee me tbe other day wtiile 1 was way u. wu io Ihe held plautu g watermelons ud lie was r.diug a apletdid horse aud had a book full of elegant fijsrert and roses, aud itxa aud gerangers, and 1 lolj hiui uo, I dtdeut waul auy, aud be kept onhowing his pictures andexpa- tmtin' till 'I got tired and told him Wferal times! dident want any and finally be showed me a picture of a new lily they had imported from the island of Madagasker, and you could smell it forty yards off band and said they rial ly ouhteM to sell any or 'em ibis year for fear of diminishing tbeir limited stock, but at it waa me he would let me have ha If ados en at a dollar a bulh. But I told him I sym pathized with his company and thought it would be imprudent for them to dispose of any this year and advised him to wait. When he got ready to depart he asked me jf I bad any objections to his calling on Mrs. Arp and getting an order from her if be could. "Noiie whatever," said I as ha started off, quite jubilant and hilarious. "Maybe she will take a few of those Mada gaskur lilies if you are certain your company could spare them." Mrs. Arp don't play second fiddle to me about such feminjna things as flowers, but I know'.thit) sHf knew tbe state of the exchecker, and .was a considerate woman, and I waichttj the'door to see bow long she entertained, thafyoung man, and it didn't take her half so long at it did me to convince him she wasn't run Ding on blossoms at this time. She told him that those same Madagaskar lilies were growing wild down in our swamp, and she wis glad she had found the true name for them, and she would liare to en gage 500 bulbs to the-coinpany at twenty tivo cents apiece. Well, you see that yonog m:m bad a little too much educa tion. That's what's the matter. The like liest young darkey I had got a little cheap education after tbe surrender and the first use he made of it was to forge an order on his employer and jump into the chain gang. I suppose the people of New Eng land have got more .education' than any body but they are uo better that one can perceive and all the isms came from up ibere and I never think of em but what I remember what Mr. Pope said about Lird Bacon, ' the isest, brightest mean est, of mankind." Congress has got more smart men than any place, I reckon, but if I was bunting for honest men I would cruise roun" outside awhile before I went in, and if I was hunting pa'riots wbo thought it was sweet to die for their couc try I wouldn't go in at all. The best peo ple I know of an i the most reliable in time of trouble are living an humble life and making no noise in the world and they are not surfeited with education either. Maybe I've not got toous'b to understand tbe q iesiion or huvegot too much for my ca pacity, but somehow or other I thiuk peo ple are getting a little too smart, and I reckon we had better not encourage too much book laruin' for Solomon says that much study is a weariuess to ihe flesh " Yours, Bill Arp. THE SLANDERER. Slander should be branded as a crime ; it is more than a fault. It produces some thing worse than disease, for it can be checked by no skill and can be reached by no medicine. Iljppiness flies from thj household before tbe breath of the slan derer, and it is iu bis power to snatch tho very bread out of "the mouths of hungry children, and turn the entire family out of doors. Of all the faults which taint and tarnish human nature, this reveals the very worst phase of spontaneous malice and wickedness. We can look with charity upon the deeds of a m m who h occasion ally svept away by hit pas.-ions. We cn find a kindly spot iu our heart for the killer who, maddened by a protracted prov ocation, strikes the murdrroas blow, we can pity the unhappy drunkard, w can almost excuse the thief who has been driven by the hunger wolf to appropriate the goods uf his neighbor for life is sweet; but ran sack, as we may, our whole mascots of charity, and we cannot Gud a solitary patch or rag wherewith to shade a solitary ' spot of the moral loathsomeness of the slanderer. He has a bad heart. His malig nant spirit rej 'iws iu the misery of others. Sometimes, . however, the habit in the ma iguaut slanderer is so established that it does something to cure it-elf. We once knew a man of this s rt, and we nude up our minds to believe particularly well of all tbe men he particularly slandered. Uf all the malicious backbiters, he is generally the worst who hag once been of respectable position and association, and who, through bis own loss of manhood, has fallen from his high estate. It gives bim pain to see any man 8. ill retaining the respect and houorable position from which he has fall, en ; and so he rents his -p'een upon all wbo are better than himself. But until a slan derer is ranked among thieves and robbers, and shunned by his neighbors, there is, uu happily, no cure for the evil. Some arc born rich, some achieve riches aud sonic have riches thrust upon them. John Buckne, ot Chicago, formerly waiter, but who receully lost his place, ant was reduced to such want that hit wile deserted hiui and entered upon a life ot rhaine, and be bitnself was obliged to beg, yesterday received uews of tbe death of a relative iu Mdwaukee, w lien; by he comes into possession of a fortune ol $.100, 000. He appeal t to have only one regret, tbat bit wife has placed hersell beyond ba possibility of snaring iu his goo i fortune. Dr. McCoah makes the itatement, that of over 1,000 student wbo bare graduated under his care from Princeton college, only four were sceptics, and three of these are now preachers. Dr. McKay, of Canton, Mis?, ships strawberries to Chicago.