ijfcctal « ctV, titorrhaa rfc-» rfe. ** t ' wful Jtstrnrt!^ =uch jiuUtnefinh.3 o open a hSZS **W«C inon, (age, L'XUcrnc jwvert. f charge, n ? ind»‘he bc moet •PwSJ ;'fl assn red it,., tlort, haveC* to t he ydyjy. s. with rcni3 sod cjuic ?e. rt •»" fiponn, . Ouaribiia, JiT * «f tlio iwmbo oont’S ia the receipt of kokoeu.ca? No 5 R [Dec. 3.1,. mpecU Th# -9 are so arrant, rf'Ctly and ujj. Move mnit tu d favorite. J capacity—Ua id is a thorough jo recomiuendJJ constantly ok I h bush: | T' U.v,AlUmux.* LIFE OF mb of this**,- , 1 nll ounce to 'the .*] 10 has entered M SHMENT, 1 'iulbtghof, in*, 'llico, whcjcebs i-i jiint received E STINGS, !i>- will nuktig i .an nnt Uilti STYEESof II lONS, inoNt CutulMu j.iaJe nL, in the Lec tote H™™ Prayer Meeting every Wednesday evening in lh A yiiPflTt'iolQ. a H-Vbiid tpitapal, Her. 8. A. Wilsox, Pastor.—Preach ine Sabbath morning at 11. o'clock and in the even ly .Sabbath School-in the hectare Boon at 2 o’clock, P. JT C ueral Prayer Meeting in sanio room every Wednes day evening. Tonng Ben’s Prayer Meeting every Friday ivfiilu* .Srmgrlintt Zattcnm,Bov. Jacob Stick, Pastor.—Prcach ing every Sabbath morning at IQU o’clock, and at 7%o’clock ih tin-,evening. Sabbath School in the hectare Boom at JU'o’clock, P. U. Pray er Meeting in same room every Wednesday evening. _ . VttiLcd Hnlhrcn, Bev. D. Spick, Pastor,—Preaching ev ery Sabbath morning at 10% O’clock and In the evening at 7U o’clock. Sabbath School in tboiltacturo Boom at 9 o’clock, A. M. Prayer Meeting every Wednesday evening in name room. ... I'rUatant Spucopal, Bcv.B. W. Oumre, Pastor.—Divine Service 2d and 4tU Sundays of each month.at 10% o’clock A. H.,and4%P. M.' Sunday School at 9 o’clock A. M. OxDvAic, Bev. dona Twtoos, Pastor.—Preaching at 10% o'clock in the momlng,and at B%in the afternoon. BifM, B. U. Fun r Pastor—Preaching every Sabbath morning at 10%o’d«k, and also In the evening. Sabbath School at 9 A. M. African MtfAodiri,Eev. SxnraaCAn, Pastor .—Preaching every Sabbath morning at 11 o’clock sod in the evening, in the old Union School Boose. p TALBOT. O' OIL. ' V .VUE, far .% In now hr, alera isiimdi. PllEMA lotto, the 30th n KATMBST, >"il Wcaknam. I Ability, Impo ly. by i i Uellidaysburg .isrtern Through Mall Western Trough, (Saturdays,) • T MAILS ARRIVE. isEY, M.D. i.y compUlnti, i .f youth, may i- in thU.smaU i r.i!w and high : .■ Author, fully maided to enra In 0041, thereby P-utern -Throiigfa MaO, v stern Way and HoUfetaysburg, ti. uer “ “ in a scaled tn ■stumps to Dr, City. FASH- Tuiior, lato of n« of Altoona llnfj two door* i touth of Ka» «'receiving bii ODS, uin and Fatter :in Velvet Mar- . iiig*. In abort, , which: he will jnosi tcaaoa* Inks, will-ena* U their order). Mbp of Blair i .ituiningall localities oi . hjjol Homes, s, Ij'arm Uou*- •s, a. Tablc of thO iinnic and ■d on the M*r a- • ns to mate <• oil .red and i ;i*crihcr» at I!, OEIli. KUKKD. CTICAL . render aal l:c hope* to n.ihlo term*, .'•■d to. ki.-d. [I-tf. riniimU* l»i to J throughout nhs Criminal tgetberwiii tjiaulia AO) i/. month*, to r i heir name* scidpplatoly^ a co,: Curette. Turk City. fc Co., ona. emus, liß HUmIP , without I** Ll-tC lidats* Hucling# ll Ml coU*f : I hthto .n** - /UJuvelnffß* 1 fiastf 1 Hilda* 0 - >ll MA rashin*. t onp, ¥&*' at -OUSB’O ,ITY OF nr.Jße^’"" [akbr..; ii Tempt* Altoona Ifilfif HIcCRUM & PERN, VOL. 3. TUB ALTOONA TRIBUNE. * DBBN, PCbU*«« *»d Proprietor, ,- ' fc •«“ 'ST' .* «*»• $ » 1 fb' 4 $ lOO »T , aT is is is three wU« «nd»em than three moniH® ecnto per for each taeertwß. 6mont hs. Irow.- jim 4300 $6OO glxlinreorUa, ? ioo 7 00 OaemiUMfl, Ino 600 10 00 T»« * ] 600 goo 12 00 Three “ cOO WOO 14 00 *«r * io 00 UOO 20 00 tUU a coIOJnD, 1400 26 00 40 00 XSSre «ri Noth**, 176 the yew, three 600 «**ractoor^|Tidnalto continued tfll forbid and charged according t "toii«» T noscS fi" cent* per lino for every insertion. Obituary notices exceeding ten lines, fifty <*nUaaquan>. tribune directory. > VVNWW%V\WN , \%N%N%WV».N m *N>V»VNN%^ CHUpCHES, MINISTERS, AC. ALTOONA MAIL SCHEDULE. MAILS CLOSE. Euteni Tn tad UoUid&yrimrgat Wwtttn “ offleo open (br the tnumctian of btuinces from T A. M vt'P; M-, daring the weak, and from 8 to 9 o’clock, A. 11. mlay. J Jims 4, ’ST-tf] RAILROAD SCHEDULE. .iron Train East arrives 2,43 A. SI, leaves A. M. . “ Vest “ 8,35 “ «* 8,56 “ . : “ Kart “ P.M. “ MSP.M. - > Wert “ KM» “ 10/15 « dl “ Kaal “ IL3OA. M, “ 11,50 A. M. “ Wert « MSP.M, « T.lO P.M. ■ HOhLIDAYBBDRG BRANOII connect* with Express ■' -it, Mall Train Kut and West and .with Fart Line AinSVILLE BSANCn connects with Johnstown y ir' i Eastoud West, Express Train West nod Mai i'minEas;. Dcc.2l, ’56-tfl MEETINGS OF ASSOCIATIONS- Mountain Lodge, A. T. I L, So, 281, meets on second Taes <-iy of each month, in the third story of the Mosouk Tem ple, at *U o’clock, V, M. . Ifoanton £nmmp)naU, A. T. M., .No-10, meets oh the fourth Tuesday of each month, hi the third story of the Mn tuule Tmpic, it I\i o’clock,P. M.i Altoona Lodge, 1.0. of 0. P-, No. A 73, meets every Friday evening, in the second story of Tempts, at 7Jit Veranda Lodge, 1. 0. of O. N0j532, meets every Friday crenlug,fn the third story of Patton’sßunding, onTirgiuia • “t % o’clock,-P. M. jnshtW, IHle,*ko. 36,1. O. R. SL, hold stated Conn cflsevery Tuesday, evening In the-I. 0-0. F.-Hall, In the Masoulc Temple. CotwcU Slre kindhal at 7th run 3Qth l«0th. IV. A AbAMg; a R. ttttneS*, ’57-ly Junior fimt 0 landing. ' • vi»£d»nt tf-ameO-X H. McCormick. 'urk Co. ivurtal—John McClelland. ‘ ■ TSwiwv>wr— /ajn«g J,owtljer. ->Jm ft'recfcrr—Ooorec. W; Patton, C B. Sink, C. C. • f '.wn, Ow. TTI Spartat Jo«ph Motet; Jfnr. O. McOonnick. 2b.3 PRUNES, CITRONS V!Il w V i' ***■>.*• SHUOAED, - MiygrthM rtroeM’UDodclphlo. 4 tHON3)BP WALNUTS, CREAM ' v.,4* 1 . W3i. h, snuaAaD, _2^*r , Wy} 181 North.3d street, Philadelphia. LEAD AND ZINC aWOhntae. Green, Tellow, Paris Orecn, dry fl-ttj KE&SLKH’B. mi- NEW ORLEANS v ■_ J ! uu ffii3K^ Iw ?' rt price8 * amaw ugrica. f »WcrLiMi .AND 11 00 A.M 8 00 A.M. 6 10 P.M. -* 00 800 “ 8 35 A. M. 11 30 P. M. ,6 49 • JOHN BHOKMAKKB, P. U. tiios. a. soorr, sup't. SWtct Jflttrg. THE DIISG WIFE. Though many a sorrow stricken heart may bleed afresh and many a manly eye grow dim with tears over the re membrances of a reality which the following beantUUl lines will awaken, no one. Wo anrsuto. will w™» us for publishing them: Lay the gem npoiuny bosom. Let me feel her sweet warm breath; For a strange chill o’er me pngney, , And I know that it is death. I would gare upon the treasure— . Bcarcely given ere I go; Feel her rosy dimpled fingers, Wander o’er my cheek of snow. 1 I am passing through the waters, - But a blessed shore appears - * Kneel beside me husband dearest. Let me kin away thy tears. Wrestle with thy grief) my husband, Strive from midnight until day, It may leave an angel’s blessing When it vanishes away. • Lay the gem upon my bosom, ' Tis nut long she can be there; Bee!, how to my heart she nestles, Tis the pearl I love to wear. It in after years beside thee, Sits another in my chair, Though her voice be sweeter music. And her loco than mine more tail. If a cherub call the ‘Father I* Far more beautiful than this, Love thy first-born I Oh, my husband I ' Turn not from the motherless, * Tell her sometimes other mother— You can coll her by my name! Shield her from the winds of sorrow ; If she errs, oh I gently blame. Lead her sometimes where I’m sleeping; I will answer if she calls, And my breath will stir her ringlets, When my voice in blessings tails. Her soft, black eyes, will brighten And wonder whence it came; In her heart, when years pass o’er her, She will find her mother’s name. It is,saMtbat every mortal Walks between two.angela here; One records the ilfbut blots it, ; If before the midnight drear. Man repenteth—if uncancelled, Then he seals it for the skies.; And tjie rigbtehand angel' weejseth,' Bowing low with veiled eyes. I will be her right-hand angel. Scaling np the good for Heaven; Striving that the midnight watches I Find no misdeed unforgiven. Yon will not forget me, hnsband. When I’m'sleeping ’ncath the sod? Oh, love the jewel given us. As I love thee—next to God. Utled IpsceUang. A MARRIAGE OR A DUEL. There is a deal of talk in the Parisian world about a marriage which has just tar ten place It is*the denouement of rather rather a romantic adventure. Sir Edward S , a baronet, ; twenty eightyears of age, of an aggreeable ap pearance, fine family, with an income of 25,000 litres, was terribly afflicted with ennui, ahd with that English malady, the spleen. Nothing surprising in that By ron would have had the spleen and would have blown out his brains, had he remain ed in England. Happily for-himheogiuld 1 live in Italy, die in Greece, and he was saved by the Mediterranean, thai smiling and poetic sea, which saw the birth of Venice, and the dangerous enchantments of wlpoh Othello compares .the peifiduous graces of his wife. Tnat sea was needed n>r the sumptuous vessel of Lara. Sir Edward, then, was dying of ennui. The blondes of Epgland hap no attraction for him. All the marriageable young la dies and their mothers addressed their most provoking smiles to him but without effect. Sir Edward. decided to fly from Eughmd. He went ctd board the first steamer he saw, without even inquiring the destination. The steamer «i»iled and some hours afterwards entered the port of :Qssend. He waited along the wharf where eveiy day assembled bathers from ail coun tries. There he met the Viscountess de , a young widow and of charming and perfect Parisian beauty. He saw her, and immediately loved her. Too essen tially English to dare to speak to her, he contented himself with following her.— He stopped at the same hotelrwith her. He followed her everywhere j and every where she perceived shad ow. This dumb homage fatigued her.— AJil ter efforteto escape It were- in vain. At last she determined tofly from her im- She warned ho,one of her resolution,rose at five in the morning, had her trunks put. on a coach, and star ted for the railroad which would take her to Brussels. She found Sir Edward in the same coach. At Brussels, instead. of going to Paris she had herself driven all about the oily, and then took the cars for Cologne.- There she again found Sir Edward, who still maintained the • most respectful si lence —he had not been introduced. At Cologne the Viscountess stopped with a lady friend, who possessed a charm ing residence. She passed two days) de parted ini the middle of the. night, and took ike train for 'Strasbnrg. Shd tbia iime-did Jiot.see Sir Edward; doubtless ho had lost $ll traces of her, - At Sttwlmrg \ > • ■ \ she had a brother, the young Count de P , sub-lieutenant in the luzzars, whose regiment was garrisoned ; here.'— He could deliver her from the indiscret Englishman. AtSjiasburg, however, she learned that her brother had obtained leave of absence and hacrqnitted the city. So she went to the Hotefd’ Angletere, and in order not to risk the arrival of Sir Edward she en gaged all the rooms until the next day, up to the very moment of her departure.— She had hardly entered her room after having made this agreement with the land lord when Sir Edward arrived, and asked for a room. \ ‘ Impossible ! I have not 'OnevvacSml * How! not one even V \ ‘ Not one.' \ x ‘ But this vestibule—it has hot been let!’ ‘ No, sir.’ ‘Very well, I’ll take it. I’ll pay you ten guineas a day. This is my first day.’ ‘ Well,’.said the landlord incapable of resisting this argument, ‘if the lady has leased all my rooms she has not leased all my entries. It is a bargain.” - Left alone, Sir Edward walked up and down before the room of tjhe Viscountess. Suddenly the door opened and she appear ed. She was thunderstruck on preceving him, but, carried away by impatience ask ed, ‘ Once |br all, sir, will you tell me why you are so obstinately bent upon following me?’ The Englishman very respectfully thank ed the Viscountess for having designed to commence a conversation with him who never would have dared to begin, and by his pcserved and impressive replies so much embarassed the lady, that she final ly told him that she was married, and to rid herself of his presence presented to him a follow traveler, stopping at the ho tel, as her husband, Sir Edward when she left him was in despair* but-then con soled himself by thinking, < I will kill her husband.”- And so he sought a quarrel" with'the pretended husband, who, being something of a coward gave up his marital rights at the sight of two pistols politely offered him. ‘ I thought that I was dealing with a true husband/ said Sir Edward. ‘Do not rejoice so much at it/ remark ed an unknown person, who intruded upon the conversation at that moment. ‘ And why S’ asked Sir Edward. * Because you are now dealing with a true brother/ was the answer. The unknown man was in fact the broth er of our heroine. Detained at' the mo ment of his departure, hei had returned to dine at the hotel when the landlord told him the story of the Viscountess pursued by the Englishman. s 1 Sir/ asked the huzzar, ‘is this story true ?’ . The Englishman confessed that it was. ‘ Can you offer an excuse for such con duct V ‘ Yes, sir, my excuse is the purity of my intentions. I am called Sir Edward S ■ —. I have wealth and family. I have the honor to ask of you your sister’s hand.’ .‘My dear sir, I can qn iy fransnsilrytiui*' proposition to her. But I make you judge of one point, if my sister don’t accept your proposal, .does not your conduct to her en title me to seek satisfaction.’ ‘Certainly, sir; In five minutes I will return to know your sister’s answer, and if she refuses my, offer, I place myself at your disposal/ ; ‘ Very well, sirf you are a gentleman/ said the officer, extending his hand to Sir Edward, ‘ I will speak to my sister, and desire her to accept your offer/ In fact the officer proposed to his sister to'marry Sir Edward, the Viscountess hav ing only the had impression of the yqung baronet caused by . Jus persecution, avow ed that ho was young, good looking, a de sirable match —butshe refused him. The officer informed Sir Edward of the feet. ■ ‘Very well, sir/; replied the English man, ‘lam at your orders. You have the choice of arms/ ‘ Pistols 1 in half an hour I will come to you with seconds/ But |be Viscountess, who doubted the issue pf ahusiness in which her brother had; interested himself, heard ’those words ahd eanwi to them very decided to prevent a duel. v Onprecemng her, Sir Edward said that he was aboutto depart on a long journey, and that he should no longer have the pleasure of seeing her. He begged her to pardon the ' imjmtuosity of his conduct, and trusted that she. .would not preserve a disagreeable remembrance of him. Thei Viscountess remeasured him in that respect llren she sjpeke to him nf the duel-—she had heard eyerything-rshe did hot ihsh a dud and there should not be a duel, k/; ‘ Whynot? saidSijrEdward. Calm yourself, madame. In a duel between two men who love you, there is only danger for him whom you do not love/ The Indy did not understand this, but she did not wish the dud to take place.— While she feared for her brother, she did not care to cause the death of Sir Edward, however, indigent hh was to her, But ALTOONA, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1858. ; [independent in everything ] Sir Edward declared that he would rather die than decline a duel, which would be a baseness on his part. So that finally the Conntess cried: ‘ Well, since there is no other means to stop this duel, learn, cruel man, that —that —that- —I love you!’ Sir Edward fell on his knees, and the hnzzar discharged his two pistols in the air, exclaiming, ‘ The family honor is sat isfied !’ Accordingly the marriage took place last week. There was a rumor that Alex ander Dumas was about to dramatize the incident. Perhaps he has already done so !—Boston Gazette. Terrific Adventure in tlie Mam moth Cave. At the supposed end of what has always been considered the longest avenue of the Mammoth Gave, nine miles from its en trance, there is a pit, dark and deep and terrible, known as the Maelstrom. Tens of thousands have gazed into it with awe, whilst Bengal lights were thrown down it to make its depth visible, but none ever had the daring to explore it. The celebra ted guide Stephen, who was deemed in sensible to fear, was offered six hundred dollars by the proprietors of the cave if he would decend to the bottom of it; but he shrank from the peril. A few years ago a Tennesse professor, a learned and bold man, resolved to do what no one before him had dared to do, and, making his ar rangement with great care and precaution, he had himself lowered down by a strong rope a hundred, feet, but at that point his courage failed him, and he called aloud to be drawn out. No human power could ever have induced him to repeat the ap palling experiment. A couple of weeks ago, however, a young gentleman of Louisville, whose nerves never trembled at mortal peril, being at the Mam moth Gave with-professor Wright, of our city, and others, determined, no .matter, •what-thedanger atid'difficulties might be, to explore the depths of the Maelstrom.— Mr. Proctor, the enterprising proprietor of the .Cave, sent to Nashville and procur ed a long rope of great strength expressly for the purpose' The rope and some ne cessary timbers were borne by the guides and others to the point of proposed ex ploration. The arrangements being soon completed, the rope, with a heavy frag ment' of rock affixed to it, was let down and swung to and fro to dislodge any loose rocks that would be likely to fall at the touch. Several were thus dislodged, and the long continued reverberations, rising up like distant thunder from below, proclaimed the depth of the horrid, chasm. Then the young hero of the occasion, with several hats drawn over his head to pro tect it as far as possible, against any mas ses falling from above, and with a light in his hand and the rope fastened around his body took his place over the awful pit and directed the half dozen men, who held the end of the rope, tq let him down into Cim merian gloom. We have heard from his own lips an account of; the descent. Occasionally ipas; ses of earth and rock‘were’whizzing past, But none struck him. Thirty or forty feet from the top, he saw a ledge, from which, as he judged from appearances, two or three avenues led off in different directions. About a hundred feet from the top, a'cat aract from the side of the pit, went rush ing down the abyss, and as he descended by the side of the falling water and in the midst of the spray, he felt some apprehen sion that his light would be extinguished; but his care prevented this. He was landed at the bottom of the pit, a hundred and ninety feet from the top. He found it almost perfectly circular, about 18 feet in diameter, with a small opening ot one point, leading to a fine chamber of no great extent. He found on the floor beautiful specimens of black silk silex, of immense size, vastly‘larger than were ever discov ered in any other part of the Mammoth Cave, and also a multitude of exquisite formations, as pure and white as virgin snow. Making himself heard, with great effort, by his fiends, he at length asked them to pull him partly up, intending to stop on the way and explore a Cave that he had observed opening about forjy feet above the bottom -of tub' pit. 'Beaching the mouth of the cave, he swung himself, with much exertion Into it, and, holding the end of the tope in'his hand, he incau tiously let it go, and it swung out appar ently beyond his reach. The situation was a fearful one, and his friends above could do nothing for him.— Soon, however, he made a hook of the end of hif l&np, and, by extending himself as far oyer the verge as possible without fal ling, he succeeded in securing the rope. Fastening it to a foofcj he followed the av enue one hundred arid fifty or two hun dred yards to a point where he found it blocked by an impassable avalanche of rbek and earth. Returning to the mouth of this avenue, he beheld an almost exactly similar month of another on the opposite side of the pit, but, not being able to swing himself into it, he fastened the rope around his body, snspened himself again oyer the abyss, and shouted to his friends to raise him to the top. - i The pull was exceedingly sOTere one) N . , and the rope, being ill adjusted around, his body, gave him the most excruciating pain. But soon his pain was forgotten in a new and dreadful peril. When he was 90 feet from the mouth of the pit and 100 from the bottom, swaying and swinging in the mid-air, he heard rapid and excited words of horror and alarm above, and soon learned that the rope by which he was up held had taken fire from the friction of the timber over which it passed. Several .moments of awful suspense to those above, and still more awful to him below, ensued. To them and him a fatal and instant cat astrophe seemed inevitable. But thefire was extinguished* with a bottle of water belonging to himself, and the party above, though almost exhausted by their labors, : succeeded in drawing him to the top. He i was as calm and self-possessed as upon; his entrance into the pit, but all of his companions, overcome by fatigue, sank down upon the ground, and his friend, •Professor Wright, from over exertion and excitement fainted, and remained for a I time insensible. The young adventurer left his name carved in the depths of the Maestrom — the name of the first and only person that ever gazed upon its mysteries —Louisville Journal. tST An old Dutch Justice of the Peace did up a marriage in this way: ' He first said to the man; “Yell, you wants to be marrit, do you? Yell, you ovesh this woman so goot as any one you lave ever seen ?” “Yes," answered the man. Then to the woman— “ Yell do you love dis man so better as any man you ever seen ?" She hesitated a little, and he repeat ed— “ Yell, do you love him so veil as to be lis wife ?'* “Yes yes," she answered. “Yell, that is all any reasonable man could expect. So you are married;. 1 pro nounce you man and wife." The man asked the Justice what was to pay. “Nothing at all, nothing at all, you arc welcome, if it will do you any goot!" A Child’s Laughter.—ls there any thing like the ringing laugh of an innocent, happy child ? , Pan any other music so echo through the heart’s inner-chambers? It is : sympathefic, too, beyond other mel odies. When the father is absorbed over his book, which seems to concentrate every faculty, he hears the little boy laughing in his sports, and'laughs also, he knows! not wherefor. The bright'being continu ally gathering -casts.-around us gems of thoughts and pearls of affec tion, till our path seems paved with pre cious stones from Heaven’s treasury. -No day of stonn is dark where he is—no win try evening long. A young child is a full fountain of delight to the house and heart. A Young Man in a Bad Way.—A sentimental swain of our acquaintance grows romantically; ecstatic when the name “ woman,” is mentioned and says: There is a <( something” than. which there is nothing more bewitching; no thing piore sweet on the face of God’s green sarth; a “something” that steals upon aq£ entrances the ear like the sound of flutes dancing over water on a moon light ni£bt; that something is the answer ing voice of the girl you know it’s “ $ll right.” (Poor fellow, we know what’s the matter with him—he’s a goner.) A Singular Surgical Operation. —A man named Berry, residing at Pe tersburg Ya., was suffering intense pain, last weebpfrom a felon on his hand. On the 7th inst., he seated himself by the track of the Petersburg railroad, and when the train apprpached, coolly laid" his hand on the rail, the cars passing oyer and sever ing it from the wrist. The conse quence is, that he will have t 6 undergo a second amputation, at the hand of aeur gcon. ' | Most Strange. —A man was once de lating a story of being on a locomotive that , struck a cow standing on the tmjk, and threw her several rods into a field, where she lib squarely upon her feet, with her head toward the tmn, and strangeto tell wasn’t hurt a mite. J 1 ‘But didn’t she look scared?’ enquired a listener. . ? ‘Well, rdon’t know whether she was scared or npt, bat she looked a good djeal discouraged-’ .'.S- wapitis*said to be dangerous to!be working nidi a sewing machine, neir a window, whtn'there is a thunder storm. — Exchange, It is dane§rons to at neariwmo seinng machines wnpn there is no thunder storm. At least we have found it so. (JreatJxess Hea not in being strong, but in the rightusibg of strength. When hot used rightly it only serves to carry a man above'his fellows for his own soli tary glory. He is greatest whose strength 'carries np ilb moit by the attraction' his own. ' T '• EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS. Enlsv JRu* the jonrney «r XJMfcp ■ The following rules from the. papas of I>r. West, wereaccording to his memoran dum thrown together as general w«|jr mark* oh the journey of lift t ; Never rtdioule sacred things, or whal others may. esteem such, howeverabsurd they may appear to be. Never to show levity when people a» professedly engaged in wotshir Af. Never to resent a supposed upjdiry till I know the views and motives of the author ofit. Never on any occasion to retaliate* ■: Always to take the part of an absent per* son, who is censured in. company, ao&r as truth and propriety will allow. • Nfeker to think the worse of another on aoeount of his differing with me in political and religous opinions. Not to dispute with a man; more than seventy years of age, noir with a woman, nor an enthusiast. : Not to affect to be witty, or to jest, bo as to wound the feelings of another. : To say as little as possible of myself and those who are near me. To aim at cheerfulness without levity* Not to obtrude my advice unasked. Never to court the favor of therioh by flattering either their vanity or vices. \ To speak with calmness and deliberation On all occasions; especially in oiroumstan* Ces which tend to irritate. Frequency to review my conduct and note my feelings. : On all occasions to have in prospect the end of life and future state. ' ~ Christian Cheerfiilaew< Christian cheerfulness is 1 honorable to God and of happy influence to yman. .Let the cheering and tranquilizijig power- of the Gospel break fortn and shine from your character. Jeremiah sting psalms m the dungeon. John beheld the bright* est visions of the New Jerusalem in Pat? mos; Bunyan, in later days, composed his Pilgrim in confinement. Luther tranii> luted the Bible while in prison. Theresia very expressive power in Christian happi ness, on those who see it from without— It is a sunshipe amid dripping clouds; a Subbath hear( * Q a weekday body.; qnd Sabhuth speech amid the dialects of Babel! It is brightest*when all around is blankest. When our natural affections cease their musio, we then hear sung out of the sky unutterable melodies which ear hath not beard: when the wor)d is all gloom, a re generated soul treads , glories out of every pebble, and sees the btars as’arteries along which pulsations of felicity reach him.—» He can say with Habakknk, ‘ Although tne fig tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be on the fines, the labor of the slave shall yield no meat, the flocks shall be cat ■off from the field, and there shall be no herd in tbe.stalls, yet I will rejdice in the Lprd; I will joy in the God of my salva 4m.’ | ; 1 Pete, did you see him scfe de log afore you'saw him saw it V* ] ’ “Dc tminterlectual stupendity ofrsome niggers is perfectly incredulous J Why, I seed him saw it more Xuw; hup see, it’s a consequential ensurancV oak hp saw he. saw’d it afore he saW he seed it j bul he couldn’t help seein, he'saw it afore he-saw he saw’d it] for ef he sawde&Win, afdte he saw de seein’, consgquinchillyhe mu#t a saW’d it afore he seed it, which n ahaprdcdly—darcforc, X must' ,s seed it afo|olsaw it; qudddy rat detnonstrtUim‘. Justices' Of the Peace - have great trouble to make Chinamen comprehend the solemnity qf ah path, but a ‘‘ Squirt?' at Mud Springs, California,haa found out how to moke the yellow idolaters shake in their boots. He recently h swore" one thus : “You do solemnly swear In the presence of God ■ Almighty, that you tell the truth in the case noW on. neanro, and if you don’t, you hope to be dropped on your way bo Canton, and go to fceuand be damned." f |®vA hevy of little children were tel ling thou father whet they got at school Tie eldest got grammar, geography, acitla ipetie, etc. The next got reading, speP ling and definitions. “And what do yon get,: my little soldier V* said the father to a rosy-cheeked little fellow who was at that moment slyly driving a ten-penny hail into a door pannel. “ Me?—oh I gets tendin', spellin' and tpanJeingt” Meanness. —Wlup you sec a man ia business, who will pot advertise ortake * newspaper, look out for a mean penoriona Skinflint, too tight to enjoy good health, and who holds a penny so near bis eyeb that he can’t see a dollar, AST Speaking of cheap things—boosts but a trifle to get a wife, but doesn't dtp sometimes prove “ a little dear 1" IQu A horse dealer, in describing a used up horse, said he looked “as if ho had been editing a daily newspaper." In the school of the jpjh that of love, we must begin iy wiki; ■;Wefliflh to leanp ' : n * NO. 39, • •