{ title: 'The Malone palladium. (Malone, N.Y.) 1863-1909, October 01, 1863, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1863-10-01/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1863-10-01/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1863-10-01/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1863-10-01/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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™'rtT* : * > *T , ^v ,(ilja l--a I JS->V- sap. Seiftw «• s \ *••!-*#»? CiT; •\ ?! ' tjjiw J.i^i; •••• - ... erf W..\- ~ ••• •\• -.'•- J IWC J3!»Sij tfi f.'Zftl , ti.y,,••<!.> lit •J'rf»v-<<t Igf^'Ui'ft—,.'*. •Hekki \rjJ-^jgJJ^^^^JJTJ^^ i I,..*- ,j«w ».„...,., , u, ... .. ,— ',!'>' <u ii i.i-n.'.ju 'i it—..in, 1 .' 1'iu i.».J iiuni JIc— v.; AJbibrrtvand Vnion-^l¥ow apd ^ForeTer-^Otte j_?r--; •'••'! IU_^I ,1- ; • ,.,..... _^ ,. ..t-.fy..^.^. ff<*f-\ tjj, J aitt AM ^e*ftKW»*L rf W^^E;»UMBEli:::;r:l : 466. •wii m W-UH-J, J-UIltt»ii'1i 1 -* MABOWffif 1 ]^ Y,^aB^RSPM^g gg ^?^ 1 > * 86 ,f TEBIH $1.60 per Annum, Inva*lably In Advance. 1= (H^ Patonc f aUadium, Putaaned every taorsaay Mornings ( J. & JT* Xt. 8 E Aj'vNlS i Office, No. a Union Block, Hsloae; N. ?, jr. Village Bohitrlbera, serradhydarclra:......... mdland*Offle«anhecrUiera..«...«. „....,,......,,. J ^»» The $&iMet* eSbectaSl require til iSbsertpUBas t» *i paid strictly-ln advance. .,-»i»»»-- .?,>-. i - RATI* OF AOVKftTtatKtt. [.Ten Linos orless make a 8qaare.] ltqaace 3 week*. $100. 1 square 3 months 2S5 leqoac** months 4&0 )squire ty.ear... 600 X column Smoimu \'i^ S*» X column XsyAgt^. 1 eoh|njnone jeerj...k60.«0 Basinets Cards, not exceeding siillnea, $».» PK «**••,-. £3.00 for six months. - > All aesoonti for advertising are doe at the Hat of this first Insertion orthe advertisement. Advertisements tkjaM fee marse&thaleagth.ortlme.to.balnssrUd,othar»Usaa<^wiU. ~ b econttan«d»Hi forbid, or at tte option of the pubasoer,, .ad charged aatoerdtagjy; f ' • ~ ' «• ' -»'»•» *•\ gi BUSINESS GEO* W. KINGSLEY. fin LOUDER BACK, GILBERT & CO., 1 • /iKJo.t.rssn.lJosb.r.on'ortlrlsniDom.s*!*' HARftWiftEv CCTLERY AKD CCNS, - *o^Fatk*e»r, oapesHa the Aster House.HewTork. »*TiBtaDB«aai«,- Joas A. Glials?, wn. B. LeroiitAGK rU'W. SMITH »«• BM^ISS DIRECTOR!. TAYLOR & HOBBS, ^ttornega onb <5oansellor9 at Caw, No. 2 Union Bloofc—oyer 9, T. Heath's Brug Wore. . MAtONB, .N. I. s. A. TATtvaa. 10OT A. B. PARM€LeE: Attaints an& CaunscUot at Coro f ' ,.-—* 31A LONE, N. X- ' I*J» OSce No. 1 Union Bl««k. M. M. ROBERTS, Attorney and Counsellor, CHATEAUGAY, N. Y. STILLMAN FOOTE, Attorney and Counsellor, OODENSBDRQH, N. 7 . }i. a—Particular attention strcs to Insurance Clatnu, Con- 1253] veysncing and Collections. [tf> S. P. BATE &.' Physioian and Sturgeon, Besldeaee, first house East of the Methodlrt Church. MA LONE. N. T. LA WRENOE, 6RIG68 & KIN88BURY, ' ilana/aciurars and Wholesale Dealsri in STRAW fiOODS, OATS, CAPS AND FURS, ST Ku»ra & ^|CTMrwSti,. ^ew York. _ MIUM M. oaioas.' 16«» A.«»OSSOBT. BAjnat.*. UA wanes. 8ACKETT, BELCHER A CO., WB04.BSALE (JBOCERS Ancllmportor«, g«'aad »6 *••*• itrMt, 8 Boon 8a«t of'Broadway, A«oaH. i Sici«rr, •• l'-9fe I Jesio»BAi»«8A0HTT, WSIJJAM ,x.<B*umas, f ^ ) w>«. S. lowmiro, ._ . ly }8*3 WH.SWAKSCOaO. BRO WN, PANG BORN & Co. Importers and Jobbers of OB\ Ai asar o TsT o-ooxsax Boslerr, Yankee Notion*, &c'. 8(Leoa*rd8treei a two doors from Broadway .NewTork. ». A.saows, » Combs, BuMons, Threads, < J.o. j.w.rAigioas, f 0utl»ry,Jewdry.PlatedWare, | w.w *e., *e. MOWS. W .DAVIS. HENRY H. HOGAN, Physician and Surgeon, SOUTH BANGOR, N. Y. ISAAC J. MOXLEY, Physjfefaii and Surgeon, SOUTH BASOOR, S. Y. F. T. HEATH, Dealer In ,. Droffs, »edf cf lies, Paints, Oils, Dye-StiA, Perfumery, Stationery And Fancy Goods, 4e. No, 8Cnlon Bloek. Malotte,». Tt JOHN D. FISK, WtTB BALDWIN, FISHER & Co., Wholesale'Deal«ri In Bootfr, $!>hoe!ii, Leather, «fcc, So.SB Park Kow«*opposltethe Astor Home, formertocallon ofthePark Theatre, New-York. •. M. lALDWItf; SATB*L riSBEK. •»»» W*. OREN MOSE,S, JR., * eaiua is HkX»jttt; CLOCKS. Jewelry, Siifer and SUrer PleUe/ware, B«^.3S5FOir Q-003DS, ficO. Watches, Olooks and Jewelry Repaired !• Mo. & Onion Block, »slon8,N. Y. COTTON W. BEAN, Sacoeuor to Bean & Baymond, ixroaTaa orfgt BRANDIES, WI^ES, &.C.'. COMMISSION MERCHANT, 101 Pearl and 64 Stone Sti., New York. NATHAN & J. W. BEMAN, LICElSrSED ATJ.CTI0NEER& FOB T HB *OC N TY«FPaANKLis.> Auetlon Sales attended to and 'BUls garnished when reejnlNd* - ChateamKar, Frsmldtn Co», If. T. J. BRANCH, WATOP MAKER No.8CnionBlockJ||»|i4e|| L.Y. P. W. TULtfY, Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Ale and lager Beer, PotoeSf'and Scotoa'Whaksy'. 1 ' * Vuts, Pralta and ConfeMlpnery Coottiliijf' West en J of the Bridge, JjfalB-St., Jlatone, JJ. V. I LIVERY ATTH^Mitt«»i;aonaE,i . Main Street, H*tt»a<s If* Y* A^O0BURN, Door«, Sash and Blinds tj^»*^ftM*^^»fe#f^fa r «ad «M«ato-«y£*| If if K,jE!JB« SHEET MU3I0 AND MU.tCJiQitt fe- r cxlei«o'*«^^.''-iiiif.WsWt:?^ rottse, aid tha oofl»»Ued N. W. WARNER'S LIYKEY STABLE! Haloue, N. V. Oooal Uoraaa, Caurrlstcea *uid Paahlonable Xoraoata t o lot on eaul. Stable In the rear of the Franklin Hotel. WEBSTER HOUSE, Roosts Point, IV. T. B. C. WEBST^ & SON, - • • Froprietori. the Hoasefi JJewly PamUhed Thraaghoat. onaara OONVJXED TO AND PROM THE BOATS AND CAK8. VRKR OP CHAKQa tap* Horse, and Carriages furnished, on appucatloa at the Office. SEYMOUR HOUSE, • (loavsatiT ii.LAwawoa aotai,,) ••V. 1 f?*X&liU[AN, Proprlrtor, 0&33Mi3SrS3TT3B<>SC, 3ST. Y. T»IsHoaMlseU«lblysHnat»doBthe corner of Ford and SjUtaitreSUj It hu recently Keen refitted arid.reforatahsd, aad In all Its anpelntmente is a first elsss hotel. Charge, rstsoaible. lllff-to •••J. .-:•>.. J FRANiCLtN HOTEL, OHA8.1IASH,T*iroprl«tor, Olreetly oppoelte the Passenger Depot.MaJone. CarriagssalwayBIn readiness to eon»ey persons to thead JftlaliigtowaiandHshlngOreands. O. L. BALLARD, Dealer la and aepalrer of .'-' Fromthel*ndoh k £fetift'J6toilal; THE DE8ERTEB. AH ANBCDO'TE Of NAFOLBOK THE TOlfT. Irt the year 1809, Pierre Pitolswaa sergeant to the 13th regiment of the ljnie, then quartered at Stragbntgr 'He%a8a na«*e ofthat half-tav- age; halfclvilized fiartof Burgundy known'un- der the name of 'Monran, :aud ItiS comrades' ev-' er spoKe 6f him as a ,r tougli:cu¥f^•m^' , Always the first and last to fireVhehad.ttiefBptttatton of likin|» hut two things hxtho world—the smell of powder and t^e whlBtlingof bulleta Now.ohe day our frlerid Pierre took it into his head to address a letter to his colonel, in which he applied for leave of absence to go and see bis aged mother, who was dangerously ill. He added that hit father, being Beyenty-eight years of age,' and suffering under a paralytic affection, could not be of any use in nurse-tending the poor woman, and he pledged himself to return as soon as the health of nis mother should be restored. The colonel's reply to Pierre's application was, \that as the regiment might at any mo- ment be ordered to tale the field, no leave of absence could be granted.\ Pierre Fitoli submitted. A fortnight elapsed, and then a second letter was received by the colonel, in which Pierre informed him that bl3 mother had died without the consolation of giv- ing her lost blessing to her only child, and in which he againjolicited leave of absence. Baying that \he could not state .his reason for this re^ quest—It'was a' family 'secret—but earnestly imploring the colonel not'to 1 denyliim this fa- vor. , Pierre's second letter was as little successful as the first. The poor fellow's captain merely said : \Pierre the colonel has received your letter ; he is sorry for the death of your old mother, but he cannot grant the leave of absence you re- quire, as the regiment leaves Strasburg to- morrow.\ r \Ah! The regiment leaves Strasburg : and for what place, mav I ask you t\ said Pierre. \For Austria,\ replied his officer. \We are to see Vienna, my brave Pitois; we are to fight the Anstrians. Is not that good news for you ? You will he in your|eiement, my fine fellow.\ Pierre Pitois mad& no reply; he seemed lost in deep thought. The captain caught his hand, and, shaking- it heartily; said : \Why dd you not speak, man ? Are you deaf to-day V I am telling that, in less than a week, you are to have the pleasure of a set-to with the Austriaus, and you have not one word of thanks for the good news ; nay, 1 verily believe you have not beard me.\ \Indeed captain, I have heard every word, and I thank you, with all my heart, for your news, which I consider very good.\ \I thought you would,\ said the officer. \But captain, there is no chance of obtaining the leave of absence V \Are you mad ?\ was the reply. \Leave of absence the very day beforetakingthcfield?\ \Inever»thougl)tof that,\ said Pierre, \We are, wen, on the point of taking the field, and at such a time, I suppdse, leave b never given ?\ \It is never even asked.\ \It is quite right—it is never even asked. It would have the appearjanceof cowardice. Well, then, I wjll not press it any more. I wUl try to get on without it.\ \And will do well,\ Replied the captain. The next day the twelfth regiment entered Germany, and the'nex^—Pierre Pitois deserted. Three months after, when the twelfth regi- ment, having reaped fli \the field of .battle an abundant harvest of g^>ry; ,was making its tri- umphal entry into Strasburg, Pierre Pitois was ignominiously dragged|b«ck to his corps by a brigade of gem tfarmttf A court martial is im- mediately called Pierre Pitois is accused of having deserted at thel very moment when his regiment was to meet the- enemy ihcV to face. The court presented a( singular spectacle. On the on* aide stood forth' the accuser who cried: \Pierre PitoiStVpu, one -of'the bravest men in the army; you, : on whose' breast the star of honor yet glitters ; you, who never Incurred either punishment or even censure, from your officers; you could not, have quitted your regi- ment—quitted it almost On the eve of battle—- without some powerful motive to impel yon I, Thhrmotiveitheicourt demands 'of you; tor it woujd gladl^haYe it in its power, if aofc tpjw> PH« Watckes, docks, t : a Jin, . (Jewelry, Attheglgnonhe Mammoth watoh, Wsfei &Jt«**>;',»loeli» BMUOIM, K. V. SURGEON DENTISTS. Dr. O. H»C»uir, *JnoTotfflertyitraeHsisa'i» i»ot*a*gS}»nft ha« sUeeslndledand graduated,in,the PhUadelgWa Collsf« *tWM^*&r*»**P* perma%dntlyJloeauSto Kataw, \\ i«»«nar^«ihipwitB»r._6.8,?AaaA«,woul<i , Inform ihediiseM or Melons and ridnlty.that MhQKiBtkiA&smtom aE.-Dfflt»l3;FWrttii«* to a --6B»«*tDr.OMrfy>oIdstand,OTsrUor«aonsa*Paliasr's MAlWUkimAtiMf UsBBfaettreref kit kl t*9\m , ^ na „ c » u BI illd «J, • --Mfle«»oe4e»»i^rF,|)faI»B»jK,-T.^ ..d»a»it'«nit»ntiy on fetMart all orders jot twthet on siort aouear aodial the »»••» dftiu muHi h m geoeraay. K»» Hoslo replarljr fjegrtaL _ «. ^ , tTtL rarttiakir awsntfee ,-pe« to Call AT .fTMatroad. .M ii •| l ii\... a^d^aady feyiiM, at all «t«waMesj|«weX %<J JbMMg^^KsUi4rittilMlL#'lJaV3Hdi3HH-bi^ IMS * PrtMNKan. C> rf* WwfmKMM^l A. a. \iJliftiWl.\- &HM Prlitiic 'J^T^WL quit'you—twhjch it ought pot fc perhaps, either Jf™ to do or tadeBin^'at least to reccommehd you \»•; _ _., , you to the Emperor's mercy.' 1 Qaibe other side stood the accused, who an- swered: . \I have deserted without any reason, without any motive; I do not repent If it were to do again, I wpuld do it again. I deserve,death— pass sentence;'-'; «?.? f';f,\j *'.' v •• • • And then came some'witnesses who deposed: \Pierre Pitois is a deserter. We know it is fcfectjsbut we do>ndt^liev«Ji6 ,i ••.ul urn.. And others averred:' \Pierre Pitois ^smad; the court cannot con- demn a madman.;' He must lie sentenced, then nottddeaib,bnt^theIu^ufea#lum. < * ' This alternative, had very, nearly been adopt- ed, for there was not one person in the court' whileievcijf one is forced to aiirntt as a'fabt, iio, one can account for or comprehend. The ac- cused, however, iJle*aded guilty mosl posifiirely and was, most pertinacious in bis demand for the just penalty ot the law to be inflicted on him. He so boldly--and fearlesBly avowed his crime, continually repeating that he did riot re- gret it, that at length hiahrmnesa assumed the character of a bravado, and left no room for clemency. Sentence of death waa therefore, prononnced,.,., >,., .„.., •» »„... „i t.s*..ri. • Pierre Pitois heard his sentence read with the most unflinching gaze. They warmly urged him < MJP la ft^iF e ^fC! 3 W r i l *r^b s ?*' '\J»»; every one guessed that *at_ Jhe \bottom of this afiair there was some strange mystery; it was detennm^'that the execuUonbfTierVe should be delayed. ,He was carried/ hack to his militajy prison, arid it was announced to him that, as' a mark of 6peci»Ufavoi-,..he.hsd, three duya. given bimto press for pardon...He shrugged bis shoulders jandMade noJsejiJI$f4 ,^-L.-..-.; i--.; .^•^-\ *»u--. \ In the middlts'of the night on which was to dawnthedayfixedforthe fixecation^ the-A»r of Pierre's dungeon, turned softly, on itahmgot, and a subaltemiofilc'er advsnoed.to the:alde of the eamptbed, • in which the (condemned *»; tranquilly; sleepmg, and. after^go^gtmiiim,. sometimeli^aljenceia^pli^hfe,. * x ,- •<,•. r\;i k P^^ppf^eji^eyei,afdtta^to^ t .. c . ...,„, ,_„,.. ,%offleer^JfeJsept.y# f ter; I know thee well. Isa#the«atAuitarliti,' bravely diditlhoU^ear thyself. Trota that which^ttrlbutes to the first flower that bloWs in ~, grave mould,, such a virtu* .that hfl .who •m&«xmmmmimm.„ warui than sincere, Yeeierday, on my arrival a relation of mine, to allow me to see thee. And tmWli***tm*, I woedd say-to thei, W^i$fcqfmi ( m& IN^te-^|ua»«b4«ifc: •tod)e,.jhath# : pft.jwifc#t m#>#W Mm & : \Jj@iP\«ot^*#gf«w^ ^ tt»f-W«r?; ^^.'fWfwKrl lit sister?' f a*v«f.. |«4: \To thy father f \He is no more. Two mo&0is\ak? hedied in my tamsl* • —. •.•»-f• • • ' ^Thy mother, -then v~\- r i I •' ' \My mother P—said Pierre, iwlloijo vole* sud- denly and totally changed,' repeated-^\ijijf mother! Ah, comrade, do not'utter that nami fbr I have never heard that name! -Tha3re neter said it in my heart—without feeling'tnelted'like a child:and even now methlrik8,lf J«er6to Speak of her——* • •-..->. \What then r* . \ '• • * \The tears wgnld come—and t|srs doea'taot become a man; * * •* Tearsf»|(»ntinued hev \tears tehen Thate But aietffhoulatdlivefr Ah 1 there would hot b^intoh'courage hfthat P ••Thou arttofrsternj'^mradfe -Ttbink I hate* thank God, as much courage as other people, and 1 yet I could not be ashamed of-ireeping, were I to speak of my mother:\ \Are you serious f\ said Pierre, eagerly seia- ing the the officer's hand. \Tou a man and a soldier, and not ashamed to t*eepT\ • \When speaking OFmy mother • Gertatoly not My motherU so good, so kind She loves me much, and I, too, love her dearly.™' • \She loves you'? and yon IoYe her. Oh 1 tbin I may, indeed, tell yon all My heart is faff- 1 - it must havo vent; and, however strange my feelings appear to you, I am sureyou trill not laugh at them. 'Listen, then, for what yon said just nou is quite true. A man is glad, tshen about to die, to.Wve a heart Into which be can pour out his ova. Will yon listen to me, and not laugh at rue r \Surely I will listen, Pierre. A dying man must ever excise compassionate Sympathy.\ • \You must know that since I came jnto this world, I never loved but one belhg-^that being was my mother. But her I loved as none loved —with all that was in me of life and energy.— While yet a babe. I used to read her eyes, as she read mine;Tguessed her thoughts, and she knew mine. She was the heart of my heart and I the heart of hers. I have never bad ei- ther sweetheart Or wife: I never had a friend; my mother was everything to me. Well, I was summoned to take up arms; and when they told me I must leave her, in a paroxysm of despair I declared they might drag tne limb from limb, but never should they take me from her alive. With one word spoken in her holy fortitude and strong courage, she changed my whole purpose. \ 'Pierre,' said ahe, *you must go—it is mj wish.' \I knelt before her, and I said, 1 will go, mother.' \ 'Pierre,'' she added,' thou hast been a good son, and I thank God for it; but the dnties of a son are not the only ones a man has to fulfil.— Every citizen owes himself to his country; It calls thee—obey! Thou art going to be a sol- dier. From this moment thy life is no longer thine own j it is thy country's. If il« interests demand it, lay it down cheerfully. If it be the will of God that thou shouldst die before trie, I should weep for thee my heart's tears; but I would say, \ He gave, and He has taken away, blessed be the name of the Lord!\ Go, now, and if thou love thy mother, do thy duty.* Oh I how precious those holy words! I have never forgotten them. 'Do thy duty,' she said. Now, the duty of a soldier was always and in all things, to obey; and in all things, and always I obeyed. It was to go straight forwaf-d—to face danger without hesitation — withe ut second thought. Those who saw me thus, as it were, seek to meet the bulleta, said, 'There is a brave fellow r They might have better said, 'There is a man who loves his mother P \One day a letter brought mo the tidings that ahe was ill—my own poor mother!—I longed to go to her. I asked for leave of Absence r 1t was not granted. I remembered her Isst'wOrds —'If thou love my mother, do thy duty.' I sub- mitted. A little after, I,hjsird that she waa dead. Oh I then my senses forsook hie;\ at any/lsk I determined td travel to the'country! whence proceed&d so ardent, so impetuous a desire to see oncevmore a place where my mother had *\&&&'• £ '#MJyo»; and »you^havea mother, and as she loves yon, and as you love her, yon will understand me. ,r ' \We peasants of : Morvon are; a simple and confiding race. We have not received the in- struction, nor attained the knowledge that they have In the cities; but we have our beliefs, which the townsfolk call Bopefrtitioht- What matters the name ? Be they superstitions at be- liefs, we have them, and clever would, be the man that .could unroot them. ' Now. one' of those belleis to which we cling the most, If'thki From Arthur's Home Magazine. . THE LITTLE IDIOT. BY ELLBN DEBT. • rcaa, out rauwt;r*..O.o .nate \o ocuev.e a things of tbekchUdretuiEhad nofalth tin should succeed when I began; but Herbert * win. J4*»»o WVSWHb 1ULU a YK.VUV'.UUU. AID gathers it is certain of never forgetting the and Of never being forgotten by them. Bern bow dear, how sweet ? With ft, 'death has- 66' terrors.; for • death, without forgetting, or being forgotten, is bsv.aaweet; sleep, but calm repose after a long toil That flower—I panted tq.aea it bud—I panted to gather it T I abandoned my post and went on my way. 1 After 1 ten' days of long and weary march, 1 reached fiay- moth- er's grave. The earth- seemed yet .firtshrr-no flower appeared. I waited. 8ix weeks elapsed, and then one lovely morning I saw a little, blue flower—forget-me-not^ Asiplucke4lt,llfied nVm^lVa'B^! iwtrj'and^fiaif^ 'she hadglvett herself: tamy^hei^ronwnioreli\ \^hjsreiva* nottdng-nfliii t^^ei|anmfl l 1 |ii.jhft country^for my ikthw lutdsoonjfouowed my mothef to ithfgraveTana T^mcm^mf ptjtfWtiW. e«-; *b»t iiiori dif I waHiif I r& membered-my mother's charge—'Do thy duty f I Bougbkthe geja. d'armea, m&& said,. 'I.am* frietid; I die w^LthoWrt^'roFyofjWaSlo? ine -thb only service;! requlre.'^l'Hie; flower which, at therft* ofmsim>^l i>l5K*«d pom- the grave, ism a little case next to my heart, k Promise mi that'yott wlUta&'lihartfcey^'flo'iiat * take it from me. It is the,lmK which unites WM my mptAerj;and ifI|boijghat ^pjadbp hrX|ken---ohi Jshouw poth^yath^cqtaaga to &o?f* * * Sayllo ybii^rlnletoldo^liM S «IipMrais%V*ia*hffioil^e^ li , I „ __ „. mamyllf** sec^n^;iin^,f-w6uWde>d»^#tb- ' TJw next day had dawne'dl 1 They*arrtvM a? the place of execution, and- already/hadlOso vfis-I «?i ! N^ \ *\\\' \'\'\ ' \ l ; ther*v;iAfter, ahorj^, q^ flag, hAvWr''-- to the ym^M&mwmai „ , «» w . # . and ffisda ati^fJsH. to s»*aavb«t a Badeterr^stur ^'UicXi unuea -tna- J^pscor, .^ametnoer yoor <o — words of last night God girs* the lift a ieoo tiin*Vd«Tot»iliiot to ja*,^» t * > ¥tW9M& l_jujhk. •ssiff ^r^psyvip>*^Bt^ /' • ''. •.'\ -- ' •i'-U« ijiiiu TiiMt • &SfaIetei(t ««liZ2,?it ofa*»Mflff.l BLaJifk*ia« WsM»6i J p-s ;'< Iras* all thoogkUaisi JsMOf fi«( fr«k % Community, and selfishness and teXMOslity 'will sbsorbibe whole man.: Ainwws*. Jta^swCkf a» restraint, Midpaeiaitvaitd •-' inlaoi Mr hoD*. -would trai , \6h away 1 gp away! Take your book anff put T it away biitof my'sight Yott never will learD/to read, and what is the nse of fbss- }n£t.] 5ihe.rBi take sour book and>runaw.ay.\ The speaker, had began in-an angry, impatient tone;' bnt the sorrowful look in me delicate lit- tle face daused her to soften it considerably at the close; aud r as Arrab took the book and ran put ofthe room, she continued: r ' \ She will be glad enough, I fancy, to pnt the bopk autof'herowsaight I always told poor Bella she had not intellect enough 'to learn to read; but mothers .do. bate to believe such • - - - jh that i , ., .„. , r - .. _ . . was so anxious to ha-ve me try. \And hsvoyontriedallyoa are-going to?\ There was a touch of rebuke in the mild tone ofthe queationer Ss and ,Mrs, BentonJ,esitate4 a little, and settled her widow's cap upon her head, arshe replied: * Well, yes^iat. least at.present The house- keeping is really .about as much as I can attend to, and It is aa much as one person's time is ; worth to take careof Arrah^B clothes. She is a yery careless child.\- • -^ That evening Mrs. Benton rather abruptly told her brolher-in-Jaw jibat Arrab could not be taught to read. \It is very eviaent; ,| ' said she, \that she has not intellect enough to learn ; and, in my opin- ion, it .is just worrying her foe nothing. She knew A and O when her mother died, and she knows them now; but as to getting any more pf the letters Into her head, it is just impossible.'' The stern, bustling woman, could not realize how heavily her words fell on the heart of her listener, who quietly replied; \ Well, perhapayou had better let it go.\ Aunt WLUet, {Jcarold lady, understood better the cause of his sudden loss of appetite, and why he gave snch mal appropo* replies to Mrs. Ben- ton s remarks, as she went on complaining of Servants, and discussing various household mat- ters and items of business with at least as much interest as she had shown in speaking of little Arrah. She noticed his taciturnity, and won- dered if She had offended him; but she could not realize how much suffering tier words caus- ed him. \The child IB such a sickly little tbing,\ she often eald to berselF, \and so stupid, it would be a mercy if she did not live to grow up.\ Aunt Willet took occasion, when lira Benton had gone out to attend to some household mat- ter, to suggest to Mr. Herbert that it would do no harm if Arrah did not learn to read right away. Mra, Benton had not time to attend to her properly,' and after two or three years he had better get a governess, who would give up her whole time to her. \The thought is a very good_x>ne,\ said he, and be resolved to act upon it iif the meantime, teaching Arrah a little himself He soon gave up that attempt, however, for he was awkward at it, afrd Arrah appeared extremely dull; and quite against bis will, he found the agonizing conviction forcing itself upon him, that his only child, the namesake and living copy of a most fair and lovely mother, was indeed an imbecile. So, like a silent spirit, Arrab, in simple white, and long gfcaming curls, flitted from room to room, playing With her costly toys, and wor- shiping In a mute way, the bright, sweet flow- ers in the conservatory. Three years passed, and a person recommend- ed as possessing every desirable qualification was engaged, ata high salary, to take charge of Arrab's education. • ? \ She is nine years old,\ said Mr. Herbert, .\ and 4 think you will fie able to teach her to read.* -. \Oh cerfainjy, certainly; I art sure she will learn very'sbOn,\ Said Miss Barber; and she proceeded to fit up the schoolroom with every- thing she thought necessary, frightening Arrah with:a collection of blackboards, maps, globes,' &c.. and atfll more by the solemn air with which she B l'aJd : ijoShiacode i of laws for her future Observance. ^Naturally enough, Arrah preferred the conservatory to the new school room, and finding this^bnt, the governess locked the little She considered for a moment, looking at the plant very attentively, and then she added: \Little zebm,horse has striped skin. Zebra- plant has striped leaves.' I expect little zebra- horse eats zebra-plant\ And she patted the plant with an appearance of great satisfaction. \Ye see, ma'am, she kens,\ said Dennis, turn- ing In triumph to Mrs. Herbert \The bonny- * bairn kens vara Weel; and, to my thinkin', them that ca' bur fou' are mair like to be fous* their ain sels.. She kens as much as ony one.\ \1 see she is quite intelligent about the plants; i suppose because she is interested in them,\' said Mra Herbert, seeing that Arrah was not observing them, being quite taken up with the plants, .rtoiiw-M«C-) (j ( ..,w» •.-'. i j \ Aye, aye,\ said Dennis, \that she is; afid had her ain mither lived to have techt her wi' patience, she wad na ha' been ca'd an idiot then, I'm thinkin'; ond If ony \one wod take a mither's interest in voir bairn now, it wad a' be richt wi* her yet I canna raise choice plants, ma'am, without plenty of eare, to say naethin' o' air and sunshine.\ The broad hint of the shrewd old Scotchman was not lost upon Mrs. Herbert, and she watch- ed prayerfully for opportunities to cultivate the germ of intellect she saw in that clouded mind, when the long silent piano was tuned, and its rich chords echoed through the lofty rooms, Arrah's delight was unbounded. She danced up- and down the parlors, keeping perfect time with the music, laughing and clapping her hands in ecstacy. Mrs. Herbert, fearful ot the effect of so much excitement, would have closed the instrument, but Arrah begged to have it left open, and finally tried the Keys with her own slender fingers. Six months later, Mr. Herbert came home one' evening with a cloud'Upon his brow. A book- seller had pressed upon his notice some delight- fully attractive children's-books, and his heart ached because he could not bey them. He sat reading the newspaper, when she came and leaning oh his shoulder, 1 looked over with him. Presently ahe placed her small forefinger on the pagei, and began to read slowly, hesitatingly, bnt correctly, a little story for children. He lis- tened in delightful surprise until she had finish- ed, and &be,n.,exclaimed; . \ Why my daughter, who -taught you to read V\ .. \Mamma did; and I can play the piano too. I am not an idiot any more.\ \My child, who ever told you that you were an idiot ?\ \Oh I have heard Auut Beuson say so a great many times; but I am not, for I can rfead.\ \No indeed you are not. There is a teal-bell. Mamma, don't you think it is about time for this great girl to have done eating in the nur- sery H Sho is ahnost eleven years old.\ There was an amnsed smile around Mrs. Her- bert's mouth at this evidence of the sudden rise Arrah had made in her father's esteem, as she quietly answered: \ Yes, 1 have been thinking so for some time.\ Osoearly,,provesthat^ „ . . The sun wens down, and rose again in un- clouded splendor, to usher in the first dayof Atv, raKsniejv4ife.;,aJWesiftjyliu;h, aa years jjagseJL, on, Arabella, a most happy wife and mother, showed in her sensitive carej for the minds Of her Childjehf the -only remembrance-p£ Arrah- From the Worcester Palladium. THE BURIED JERUSALEM, door through'which she was. accustomed to go into Jt frofir^Mfhj|d ? tieerr.lie^u>dthe¥a*alttwg- , K*SS8' or coiftcTiearn.— m was locked up and the cqa- dloeftea, and Arrah, returned, to iV m life: while hoi father, hoping c, reasoned (hatlf ArwkUad>emem- %${> fetters\ thrpUgh all' those years, p 4bie to. leatji. 1 .mpMi 1 'BatJ before ' J \ - —*d bo procured, poor httle . and takthg, cold, tvas . 'he, continued so weak, after her recovery, that all thoughts of getting a gOvernesa for her Were abandoned for the- time bebifr, .. .; . m. , Months passed otvand Mr. Herbert brought a new bridet to cheerh the homed w.hichjhe.deathy of stay* her;c| sgaina . -Itsn&tpgj ahe \taiisf mother had left so desolate. He had -hoped tha Arra woul be compan and con salaflbifMNlaa aiTHWgH&w- ojaefcj-fcut EagfrndS Ually, and almost unconsciously, yielded to the opmwmfflkim&emffl$3iliM BcntaKv'th'at Arrah never would know much, and so turned ,|p another wiiwtewxapariyo ti-imtSZ ' \ Arabella is not very forward, said he, hesi- tatingly, aaheinftffloceffher; and, not long af- tcrVMra,'Herbert learned from.Mrs. Benton, that,\ Let them say what they pleased, she was nothing more ndr leas than .an.idiofc\ ' ,«>Pdqrltee. thingjfethought the kind-hearted step-mother. \I will try and make her as happy •8 PPSSiuJfi..^. „,,„„ .«..;ji* , i, ...... • . >ui I Alfah K^^ejuneduW lovatlje av^eei .^mOe Mfy.gsm!i !#»^4)»trj8KiWr1i*na was al- WM«J|»8P^,afeC«isri,#ide, St^pggft .she, rarely ,as she paused In a walkl^ugh. thgjcpnservatOT Ms small one ofJth|ifRp6.k^d^r^. B ,) Accordingly, Arrah was given a seat at tho ta- ble with her parents, and her father watched her movements with leelings quite akin to those he might be supposed to have if she 'had been suddenly restored to him, after having been lost for a long time. After she had gone tombed, Mrs. Herbert told her fatljer all about old Den- nis' opinions, as expressed in Ihe conservatory, Arrah's delight upon hearing the piano, and her attempts to play herself. \I soon discovered,\ said she,\ that she had a good ear for music, and I taught her to play several little tunes, and sing the words. Pres- ently she became very much interested in the sheet music, and I tpld her that would do-her no good until she could read. She ran away, and soon returned with a little book her own mother had used in teaching her. She laid it on my lap and pointed out A and O. I thought if she had remembered these two letters so long, she could learn mora T began with the word method, and it took a whole week to teach her the relation between the two words, dog and cat, and the objects which they represent Af- ter that I had comparatively little trouble. She learns slowly, but she never forgets anything, and in time I think she will make a good schol- ar. She is beginning to write now.\ \Why did you not tell me before ?\ \Oh I thought, yqa.iivouldj find itpqt, just as you have. It would nave tried your patience somewhat to have watched her progress from Mra. Herbert was a handsome as well as m amiable'lady, but had shebeen shretodish as Xantlppe, and ugly as. \Muckle Mou'd Meg,\ her husband would have seen nothing but per- fection in her after this. His song of thanks, giving\ took 1 the shape of choice and costly gifts forb&wife; any quantity of pretty books, for Arrah, and a large new bible tor Dennis, who was as much surprised as pleased at the gift, Be- cause, honest old man, he hardly realized hlm- aelf. much less suspected that. Jus master knew of his instriimeMfy In Bflnging' little Arrah's hidden intellect.to light Nevertheless, from that d&5 he, took great delight in hearing her read the words of inspiration, when his day's work, was ifohe., , Ten, more, years passed away, and the gem/ which it had po3t so much time, and ' labor to polish, shone gloriously in a most lovely setting. No daughter evercorioprehended better any bushiess perpfcxity her father might get Into, %ndJ?bo,\ited more accurate judgment in helping him, tofehteh Ms »ccounJ*\ or wrote better 3iom'eTfp'tter r to sppthe the anxiety of an absent parent. Isfq elder s,lster ever gave more patient and, fender love, or \wiser or more'careihPin- strnctfon, JAM, did. A>rSh,,to.the'littIe ! group ar^uMiter jnotbers knee. No drawing-room ireSe>v:eL entertained hfir,,fiends ,.^ith better g ' WB, a^q more\ sound seris.e than she could.— er^n^ersationwasajwaja pleasant, and, al- though she. never attempted any brilliant flash- es pjrwil,,t3i^ ! waftaiiBet,vein of humor run- ning thrflrigji her.ffipugjMSrt.wh!ch pleased with- out wwmamgja#yjone by any undue sharpness. She had a tfclYaha ^pwerral voice, and great .musical. Meati.^i^ he^pifymg and singing ere ia before 'heard,so longja, sentence from Arrah's, ,.Sjhej Ur^fcb***^ f«(^0rJ4*tfPfi*lfM feaftames of most of :uitc intelligently idntly aha stop- juatbeeiiplacr KnliimentTsh8 : : , and ria down tha c«'Se*teh • gardader iV#S« W i/tom Sfr«-dte^ r l*st-after »|^ooTr>oirhhs hat bnVArrtd, dragged tta C3.,liid3ri^a .o}.; h fcl-ii iyti^% Z\ 'bimtiM>.ipa'Atr«b Hrbrt-fek mm^m^ ... . . . j&mt noon at -he was sure thavlic • h* told bar that it was ciud atbra-pJiat ' .cam* it was strrptd lik* a a*bra. m M AcMbtaJ»ailIit«<)lsdrvKl!'(.-'re-, ->w viu,-,- Urn? Jerusalem, eighteen hundred years ago, stood on three hills—Zion, Moriah, and Acra. The last having been cut down, the two \former ap- pear now as hills. It occupied the whole of Zi- on, the side of Acra, and the whole of Moriah that could be called hill, for Moriah was rather a promontory from the -stable land on the north than an isolated hill. Zion was almost entirely surrounded by deep and precipitate valleys.— Thji vaUexs^»-t.hejipith,fide, and a part of the east side, made the southwest side of the rest of the city—about two-thirdiof the city being on Zion, and otSSSim^0t^^^^e Tyropean valley—both parfl||d^^dlagiO'walras > this val, ley. At the, desflfiMoiSby Nebuchadnezzar, all of the wSHlane||i|oli^feiqstof the houses, were to a greater ps^e^EseJttent thrown down. Nehemiah, when he^^hn^t'tne walls, speaks of the great amount ofs '..rtUiia and rubbish that he had to contend with,\much of which, probably, was left undisturbed.' The houses had, previous to this, been, as many as needed, repaired as well as the means of, the 4 returned captives would al- low. Pbmpey, tlW 'Rbman^enefal, sixty years before the Christian era, threw down the walls again. But the greatest destruction was about one hundred and thirty years afterwards, by Titus, when everything except a few strong places was thrown into one heap of ruins. These places, left<by Titus, Lshall refer to again. Since this time it has gone through several partial overthrows, in everyone of which, more or less of the houses would he buried v» holly or in part. Nehemiah, when he built the walls, built them where they were before. -But since that (if we except, .the building after their destruction by Pompey,) they have been built where the buil- der fancied, and not all on their old site. The result is-that \the ' present city occupies only a part of Mount Zion, and about the same ground on the north side, ot the- Tyropean valley as it occupied in the days of the 'Maccabees. ' Store than half of Zion now lies without the walls on the south side of the city, and, on the noEtlrtide, all that part\ of the ancient city called Bezetba is also without the walls., Tho walls around the courts of thetemple : were ? built of very heavy stone—twelve, eighteen, twenty-four feet long, six feet wide, and four feet Ui'.ck, are the di- mensions of the most of them. One I measuij ed that.was mpre,tban thirty ijjetclonghand the same width and thickness as the others. It was ratherToard\ worHToTumBle these stones down r and, for tbjsr r^a^if, portiop; of tlds.. wal}, all the way round, have remained just the\ same as Solomon or Herod left them. So'much is st 11 in situ that the whole circuit is as readilyjlraced as though all remained. These pieces, and another piece at the Damascus gate on the north side of the city, and the lower part of the old tower of Hippacus at the,, Jaffa gate, built by Herod on the Millo of David's time, isallthat re- main of the old city that was left by Titus. The walls that enclosed Zion, and also the eastern wall of the courts of the temple, and some part of the south and west wall, stood directly on the brink ofthe valley bank, and, whenevt r they were thrown . down, the stones of courts would be Ihrowh'down'\the precipice, and as the bottom of those valleys was very sharp and narrow, they would be filled up very easily. In the Kedron valley ran the brook ijedron, which gave the name to the valley. But there is no brook there now, nor has there been for a long time. Dig down twenty, thirty, forty, or more feet, through the stone? and rubbish, that have been for many centuries rolling down from the city some hundred feet or more above, add yon. will come to the<same old Kedron that ran there in David's day. A brook can't be made to run on a pile of stones. It will go down till it finds an impervious strata. The i'ountain ofthe Vir- gin, as it is called—a well opposite the temple ground—is dug down to this running water.— l'he well of En-Rogel, farther down the valley, Is another well, onerhundredand-fifty-feet-deep,- - that is supplied by this brook. But this well is in loose, porous ground, and not in rubbish from the city. Probably the Tyropean valley has been fljled more than any other part of the city, as it waa very narrow/the sides very steep, and was built on both sides. As no excavations made of late years have reached through the accumulated . fuhjjWe can only conjecture as to its depth here' or any where else. Solomon built a causeway across this valley from his palace on Zion to the temple on Moriah, called, in his interview with the Queen of Sheba, \the ascent by which he went up to the house of God\ He built it up- on arches—just as we run a canal across aval- ley or river. The lowest stone of the arch- that is, the lowest-stone in the carve or spring of the arch—next tfee wall of ,the coprts of the itemple, made also a stone of this \%all and is there still, arid UvjiiSt above the now surface of ground; and is twenty-four feet long. This' makes it certain that, here the detritus is as deep as the height gf the upright part of these' great arches. '*\ - ' At that part of \Mount Moriah 'Sooth Of the courts df the temple—'that is, the south point of this long and narrow hill—bjjing also consider- ably lower than where the temple stood, and is TVhat was called Obhel;drOplas,'an i d was in-\ haTntea by the r 'Wethinims, is ' nbwWthmjt the wall, arid is usually sown to wheat But not a foot of it is there bnt what shows the ruins un- derneath. The valley between this paii of the harahd the Bill orZion is almost obUteiaM; and it must have been here'quite deep. This would be the* place where a largo part-of the stones that formed the cloisters on the south sides of the courts of the temple would most naturally be thrown. The stones that belonged formerrand altogether .fc.ligs.ed jthe best in the crowd qf ainatneAto-.'l^fohqd everywhere-* Her'l^w^hO^CcihBpi^us thing because Jl \pervaded her whole intellectual and moral .being, and was, so essentially a part of hand/, that'n&^lSe ctiiiht separate it from anything ihe-jlid^ V'l\ in, < u y$*i own wrospecie as a consiaerauie ueurao, uue she bad\ EePlmf snarls of affitorsj' *md\fho.eve olIJEier twenty-flrat l^haayaiwto^ifeavqve; of. tex, apBr.j| Vie ttferMat' tie morrow woldl make her whollyhls own,' to say much; -but he tfw»ttej&i*liiHyto^^^ ''^4i»i^J!^^^ i ^a^i i tJtewUia! * lltti* imj^ar>«»t I learned those two J: rj^_ -Jr.JSl-ClCX! Tl«Jk...**3w,i •*.«.» «--.!.« or nn in this vnllp.v—a little above the cansewAir er up in this valley—a little above the causeway huttt by Solomon. Sdm¥ might 'havitieen thrown of from the east side of thewalls of the court into the Kedron valley.'butffliis would re- quire much more labor. There is, however, • that Aunt B«j«lMaiwttOTPP3»« *» !*• «, and aveit otMmmM t^-agrW^Hm her. ,2^ c :^m W 'hpT^iTpilt kinda^ with mamtaa*. «arat^. conjWeratipM wbichMTed me, frooi growing ap aarjcHo^aad, aad*'waiStifor,3fo«,;<S^ n -^ . ,; tt ^-' ; ,f. '.^WmWm: v&maat AM^.f^^^immm^mfL^m »'^been known \b&i' 'an' nndergrdund ;t sewei*sa'- , from the great altar of sacrifice, in front of-the temple, down to- the Kedron, to carry off the =blood and Offal of the victims; but the locality hai-hee'tf ^ost 4 ^tiFTery^recenttyt It tasafowr oeeri 'discovered;'deep *nried .lB*ufa.sr^Tte«. ; 'part qt- ,MonntZion ffl>^ withont the f walls, when seen from the surrouiiding hills, shows no'tiung bul'a'iomtS#hat^'mtdaMingltraAi^ Hop-' : |fg4,8'lie easU' afi» 'ftSKhelse.'With' '\fcera^mf ••• Su»a aeattering olhfe«*Eeetrth©-. most of sife de*: r moriorTe^^file8.#'rndig^ f^P ji$dtordar«ongMes^ 'Oottjaf^ 'torprtient'city, some eton«;just • on top. of -the : ' ' ' ^\•'-'--:^iM'''*t'aqW'diS^ce» • _ theirijlfourtilthirtthey ThaUduz wueasilYaxplaiQeai. - •beinB^lieirdowa.-' Couktt • on afer *ia>^ I *«ddi»w« room* that vwrinwd; tl|te*ieit btin. _ _ g top ofthe aa wiSbfci W»*\fcep lbs -dffp' nvhaett on4h«j ^^•.v^^ouoliWhfetforthewiii* apotil ^artKO»twai better par the search of the* ^qoa^SBain^aJhlfl of Zion. An exeava«c*