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The light athome I how bright it beams When evening shadows - round us - fall; 'And from the lattice far it gleams, To love, and rest; and comfort When wearied with the toils of day, And strife for glory, gold or fame, How sweet to seek the quiet way, Where loving lips will lisp our name Around the light at home. When through the dark and stormy night, The wayward wanderer homeward hies, How cheering is that twinkling light, Which through the forest gloom ho spies; It is the light at home; ho feels That loving hearts will greet him there, And softly through his bosom steals The joy and love that banish care, Around the light at home. The light at home! whene'er at last It greets the seamen through the storm, He feels no more the chilling blast That beats upon his manly form. Long years upon the sea have fled, Since Mary gave her parting kiss, But the sad tears which she then shed, Will now be paid with rapturous bliss, Around the light at home. The light at home! how still and sweet It .peeps from yonder cottage door— The'weary laborer to greet— When the rough toils of day are o'er, Sad is the soul that does not know The blessings that its beams impart, The cheerful hopes and jots that flow, And lighten up the heaviest heart Around the light at home. dui j . ui• BY EMERSON BENNETT. "We doctors sometimes meet with strange adventures," once said to me a distinguished physician, with whom I was on terms of in timacy. " I have often thought," I replied, " that the secret history of some of your profession, if written out in detail, would make a work of thrilling, interest." " I do not know that I exactly agree with you in regard to details," rejoined my friend; for we, medical men, like every one else, meet with a great deal that is common in its place, and therefore not worthy of being re corded ; but grant us the privilege of you nov elists, to select our characters and scenes and work them into a kind of a plot, with a stri king de no item e I, and I doubt not many of us could give you a romance in real life, com prising only what we had seen, which would equal, if not surpass, anything you ever met with in the way of fiction. By the by, I be lieve I never told you of the most romantic adventure in my life I" " You never told. me of any of your adven tures, Doctor," I replied, " but if yuu have a story to tell,. you will find me an eager listen er." " Very well, then, as I have a few minutes to spare, I will tell you one more wildly ro mantic, more incredibly remarkalle, if I may so speak, than you probably ever found in a work of fiction. " Twenty-five years ago," pursued the Dr., " I entered the medical college at F as a student. I was then young, inexperien ced, and inclined to be timid and sentimen tal ; and well do I remember the horror I ex perienced when one of the senior students, under pretence of showing me the beauties of the institution, suddenly thrust me into a dissecting room, among several dead bodies, and closed the door upon me ; nor do I forget how the screeches of terror, and prayers for release from that awful place made me the laughing stock of my old companions. Ridicule is a hard thing to bear ; the cow ard becomes brave to escape it, and the brave man fears it more than a belching cannon.— I suffered it till I could bear it no more ; and wrought up to a fit of desperation, I deman ded to .know what I could do to redeem my .character, and gain an honorable footing among my fellow students. " I will tell you,?' said one, his eyes spark ling with mischief, "if you will go at the midnight hour, and dig up a subject, and take it to your room and remain alone with it till morning, we will let you off, and never say-anotherword aboutyour womanly fright." I shuddered ; it was a fearful alternative, but it seemed less terrible to suffer all the horrors that might be concentrated into a sin gle night, than to bear day after day the jeers of my companions. " Where shall Igo ? and when ?" was my timid inquiry, and the very thought of such an adventure made my blood run cold. "To the Eastern Cemetery to-night at 12 o'clock," replied my tormentor, fixing his keen black eyes upon me, and. allowing his thin lip to curl with a smile of contempt. " But what is the use of asking such a, coward as you to :perform such a manly feat," he added deridingly, • Tlis words stung me to the quick ; and with out further reflection, and scarcely aware of what I was saying, rejoined boldly : " I am no coward, sir, as I will prove to you by performing what you call a manly feat." " You will go ?" he asked quickly. "I will." " Bravely said, my lad 1" he rejoined in a tone of approval, and exchanging his expres sion of contempt for one of surprise and'ad.- miration. "Do this, Morris, and the first man that insults you afterwards, makes an enemyof me." Again I felt a cold shudder run through My frame at the thought of what was before men but I had accepted his challenge in the presence of many witnesses—for this conver sation-had occurred as we were leaving the haThafter listening to an evening lecture— and I was resolved to make my:word good, should it even cost my life ; in fact, I knew I could not do otherwise now, without being in disgrace from the college. -' I should. here • observe that there were no professional. resurrectionists, and as it was absolutely necessary to have subjects for dis section, -the unpleasant business of procuring them _devolved upon - the students, who in con- $1 50 P-r WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL. XII. sequence, watched every funeral eagerly, and calculated the chances of cheating the sexton of its charge, and the grave of its victim. There bad been a funeral that day of a poor orphan girl, who had been followed to the grave by a very few friends, and this was considered a favorable chance for the party whose turn it was to procure the next sub ject, as the graves of the poor and friendless were never watched with the same keen vig ilance as those of the rich and influential.— Still it was no trifling risk to attempt to ex ume the bodies of the poorest and the hum blest—for not unfrequently persons were on the watch even over these ; and only a year before, one student, while, at his midnight work, had been mortally wounded by a pis tol ball, and another a month or two subse quently, had been rendered a cripple for life in the same way. All this was explained to me by a party of six or eight, who accompanied me to my room —which was in a building belonging to the college, and rented to such of the students as preferred bachelor's hall to regular board ing—and they took care to add several terri fying stories of ghosts and hob goblins, by way of calming my excited nerves, but, as I have before observed, old women stand round a feverish patient, and croak out their expe rience in seeing , awful sufferings and fatal terminations of just such maladies as the one with which their helpless victim was then af flicted. " Is it expected that I should go alone ?" I enquired in a tone that trembled in spite of me, and my knees almost knocked togeth er, and I felt as if my very lips were white. " Well, no," replied Benson, my most dreaded tormentor, " it would be hardly fair to send you alone, for one individual would hardly succeed in getting the body from the grave quick enough, and you a mere youth without experience, would be sure to fail al together. No, we will go with you, some three or four of us, and help you to dig up the corpse ; but then you must take it on your back, bring it up to your room here, and spend the night alone with it." It was some relief to me to find I was to have company during the first part of my awful undertakings; but still I felt far from agreeable, I assure you, and chancing to look into a mirror, as the time drew near for set ting out, I fairly started . at beholding the ghastly object reflected therein. " Come, boys," said Benson, who was al ways by general consent the leader of wh ever frolic, expedition or undertaking he w to have a hand in. - " Come boys, it is time to be on the move. A glorious night for us," he added, throwing up the window and let ting in a gust of wind and rain; " the devil himself would hardly venture out in. such a storm." lie lit a dark lantern, then threw on his long heavy cloak, took up a spade, and led the way down; the rest of us, three beside myself, threw on our cloaks, also, took each a spade and followed. , hine. We took a roundabout course, to avoid be ing seen by any citizens that might chance to be stirring, and in something less than half an hour we reached the cemetery, scaled the 'wall without difficulty, and stealthily searched for the grave till we found it in the pitchy darkness—the wind and rain sweep ing past us with dismal howls and moans, that to me, trembling with terror, seemed to be the unearthly wailings of the spirits of the damned. " Here we are," whispered Benson to me, as we at length stopped at a mound of fresh earth, over which one of the party stumbled. " Come, feel round, Morris, and strike in your spade, and let us see if you will make as good band at exhuming a dead body as you will some day at killing a, living one with physic." I did as directed, trembling in every limb, but the first spadeful I threw up, I started back with a yell of horror, that on any other than a howling, stormy night, would have betrayed us. It appeared to me as if I had thrust my spade into a buried lake of fire— for the first dirt was all, a glow with living coals; and as had fancied the moaning of the storm the wailings, of tormented spirits, I now fancied that I had uncovered a small portion of the bottomless pit itself. " Fool!" hissed Benson, grasping my arm with the grip of a vice, as I stood leaning on my spade for support, my very teeth chatter ing with terror , "another yell like that, and I'll make a subject of you! Are you not ashamed of yourself, to be seared out of your wits, if you ever had any, by a little phos phorescent earth ? Don't you know that it is often found in graveyards ?" His explanation re-assured me, though I was too weak from my late fright, to be of any assistance to the party, who all fell to with a will, secretly laughing at me, and soon reached the coffin. Splitting the lid with a hatchet which had been brought for the pur pose, they quickly lifted out the corpse, and then Benson and another of the party taking hold of it, one at the head and another at the feet, they hurried away, bidding me to follow, and leaving the others to fill up - the grave, that it might not be suspected that the body had been exhumed. Having got the corpse safely over the walls of the cemetery, Benson now called upon me to perform my part of the horrible business. • " Here, you quaking simpleton," he said, " I want you to take this on your back and make the best of your way to your room, and remain with it all night. If you do this brave ly, we will claim you as one of us to-morrow, and.the first man that dares to say a word ag,anast your courage after that, shall make a foe of me. But bark you! if you make any blunder on the way, and lose our prize, it will be better for you to quit this place be fore I set my eyes on you again. Do you un derstand me ?" "Ye-ye-ye-yes," I stammered with chatter ing teeth. , ' Are you. ready P' , "Ye-ye-yes," I gasped. - "Well come here—where are you "‘" At this time it was so dark that I could not see anything but a faint line of white, which I knew to , be the shroud of the corpse, but I felt carefully around till I got hold of Benson, who told me to take off my cloak ; and then rearing the cold dead body against my back, he began fixing its cold arms about my neck—bidding me to take hold of them and draw them well over, and keep them con cealed, and be sure not to let go of them, on any consideration whatever, as I valued my life. the torturing horror I experienced as I mechanically followed his directions ; tongue could not describe it At length having adjusted the corpse so that I might bear it o' with comparative ease, he threw my long cloak over it and my arms, and fastened it with a cord about my neck, and then inquired: " Now Morris, do you.think that you can find your way to your room ?" "I -I-do-do-don't know," I gasped, feeling as if . l should sink to te earth at the first step. " Well, you cannot lose your way if you go straight ahead," he replied, " keep in the middle of the road and it will take you to College Green, and then you are all right.— Come, push on before your burden grows too heavy ; the distance is only a half mile." I set forward with trembling nerves, ex pecting to sink to the ground at every step ; but gradually my terror, instead of weaken ing. gave me strength, and I was soon on the run—splashing through mud and water—with the storm howling about me in fury, and the cold corpse, as I fancied, clinging to me like a hideous viper. How I reached my room, I do not know— but probably by a sort of instinct; for I only remember of my brain being in a wild, fever ish whirl, with ghostly phantoms all about me, as one sees them in a dyspeptic dream ; reach my room I did, with my dead burden on my back ; and I was afterwards told that I made wonderful time ; for Benson and his fellow students, fearing the loss of their sub ject—which, on account of the difficulty of procuring bodies, was very valuable—follow ed close behind me, and were obliged to run at the top of their speed to keep within hail ing distance. The first Iremember distinctly after getting to my room, was finding myself awake in bed, with a dim consciousness of something horrible having happened—though what, for some minutes, I could not for the life of me recollect. Gradually, however, the truth dawned upon me ; and then I felt a cold per spiration start from every pore, at the thought that perhaps I was occupying a room alone with a corpse. The•-room was not- dark; there were a few embers in the grate which threw out a ruddy light ; and fearfully rais ing my head, I glanced timidly and quickly around. And there—there on the floor, against the right hand wall, but a few feet from me— there sure enough, lay the cold, still corpse, robed: in its white shroud, with a gleam of fire light resting on its ghastly face, which to my excited fancy seemed to move. Did it move? I was gazing upon it, thrilled and fascinated with an indescribable terror, when, as sure as I see you now, I saw the lids of its eyes unclose, saw its breast heave, and heard a low, stifled moan. "Great God !" I shrieked, and fell back into a swoon. How long I remained unconscious, I do not know, but when I came to myself again, it is a marvel to me that in my excited state I did not lose my senses altogether, and be come the tenant of a mad house ; for there— right before me—standing up in its white shroud—with its eyes wide open and staring upon me, and its features thin, hollow and death hued, was the corpse I had brought from the cemetery. "In God's name avaunt!" I gasped. "Go back to your grave and. rest in peace. I will never disturb you again!' The large, hollow eyes looked more wildly upon me—the head moved—the lips parted— and a voice in a somewhat sepulchral tone said: " Where am I? Who am I ? Who are you? Which world. am lin ? Am I living or dead ?" "You were dead," I gasped, sitting up in bed and feeling as if my brains would burst in a pressure of unspeakable horror; " you were dead and buried, and I was one of the guilty wretches who disturbed you in your peaceful rest. But go back, poor ghost, and no mortal power shall ever induce me to come near you again !" "Oh, I feel faint !" said the corpse, gradu ally sinking down upon the floor with a groan. "Great God!" I shouted, as the startling truth suddenly flashed upon me, " perhaps this poor girl was buried alive, and is now living 1" I bounded from the bed and grasped a. hand of the prostrate body. It was not warm —it was not cold. I put my trembling fin gers upon the pulse. Did it beat, or was it the pulse in my fingers.? I thrust my hand upon the heart. It Was warm—there was life there. The breast bemired; she breathed; butthe eyes wore now closed, mad the features had the look of death. Still it was a living body—or I myself was insane. I sprang to the door, tore it open and shout ed for help. "Quick 1 quick 1" cried I ; " the dead is alive ! the dead is alive I" Several of. the students sleeping in adjoin ing rooms came hurrying to mine, thinking I had gone mad, with terror, as some of them had heard - my voice before, and knew to what a fearful ordeal' I had beep subjected. "Poor fellow f" exclaimed one in a tone of sympathy ; " I predicted' this.", • • "It is too bad," said another ; "it was boo much for his nervous system." "I am not Mad," said I, comprehending their suspicions . ; '" but the corpse is alivel hasten and see it !"- • They hurried into the room, one after an other, and the foremost stooped down to what he thought was -a corpse, put his hand upon it and instantly exclaimed. : "Quick! -a light and some brandy ! sho lives, she lives 1" excite ment,• was now bustle, confusion and excite ment,. one proposing one thing, and another something else, and all speaking together— They placed her on the bed, and gave her PERSEVERE.- HUNTINGDON, PA., MAY 6 9 1857. some brandy, when she again revived. I ran for a physician, one of the faculty, who came and attended upon her through the night, and by sunrise the next morning she was reported to he in a fair way of recovery. " Now what do you think of my story thus far ?" queried the doctor with a quiet smile. " Very remarkable I" I replied. ; " very re markable, indeed But tell me, did the girl finally recover 2" "She did, and turned out to be a beautiful creature, and only sweet sixteen." " And I suppose she blest the resurrection ists all the rest of her life," I rejoined with a laugh: "She certainly held one of them in kind remembrance," replied the doctor with a sigh. " What became of her, doctor l" " What should have become of her, accord ing to the well known . rules of poetic justice of all you novel writers ?" returned my friend with a peculiar smile. "Why," said I, laughing, " she turned out an heiress and married you." " And that is exactly what she did," rejoin ed the Doctor. "Good Heaven are you jesting !" " No, no, my friend," replied the doctor in a faltering voice; " that night of horror only preceded the dawn of my happiness; for that girl—sweet, lovely Helen Leroy—in time be came my wife, and the mother of ' two boys. She sleeps now in death beneath the cold sod," added the doctor in a tremulous tone, and brushing, a tear from his eye, "no human resurrectionists shall ever raise her to life again." &ttruting ntisttilm. A Short Story with a Good Moral. We must work. Many who have been fortunate in business, and having early ac quired wealth, have retired from the active pursuits of life to find what they call ease, have found instead an accumulation of evils, which they never supposed to be connected with a life of idleness. There, for instance, is our old friend Coffee, for many years one of the firm of Coffee, Rice, & Co., wholesale grocers, in South street. Coffee commenced business. in early life, and being enterprising and energetic, and as "busy as a bee," the business prospered, and the firm became widely known for its successful trading.-- After Coffee , .had been, in business about twenty years; he concluded that he would retire from active life and spend the rest of his days (he was only forty-five) in some secluded spot, where the fluctuations of the flour market, or the rise and fall of pork and molasses would disturb his quiet no longer. He would not be an anchorite, no, not ho. He loved good living and good society too well for that. Ho would build him a mansion in the country, far from the noisy sound and noisome smell of South street. lie would provide ample accomoda tions for friends who might come to partake of his good cheer, and he would lead a pleas ant, easy life. uch were his plans. But, alas ! poor Coffee, while thou wast acquaint ed with all the ins and outs of trade, thou wast ignorant of thine own self. The partnership was dissolved, the site for a house selected, and in due time a splendid mansion was built. It was the most elegant mansion in all those parts. The honest rus tics gazed with astonishment at the eviden ces of wealth it displayed, the country store keeper congratulated himself on the proba ble acquisition of a customer, the village doc tor calculated on an additional patient, while the poor parson rejoiced in his heart, that there was some probability of having his small salary increased by the liberality of a retired merchant. For the first few months everything went on admirably. Coffee had enough to keep him at work in arranging matters around the place, and getting in proper order everything for permanent use. But when all this was done, time hung heavily on his hands. There was nothing to keep him employed, for all the work on his place was done by hired hands; and as he was determined to be free from all care, he even employed a man as overseer of the whole. The sum total of Coffee's daily occu pation was eating, drinking and sleeping, with a little reading and an occasional ride. Ikwas not long before symptoms of dyspep sy and gout appeared, and after suffering months of untold agony, he left his splendid mansion for " the narow house appointed for all the living." He .died because he had nothing else to do. Then there was neighbor Lapstone, who tried hard to keep souls in the bodies of him self, wife and eight children, by daily plying his honest trade of shoemaking. Lapstone's humble house was almost under the shadow of the great mansion, and he often sighed as he looked up from his leather seat and saw the rich Coffee whirled by -in his splendid coach, and was so often tempted to break the tenth commandment, and wish himself away from his wax-ends and his awls, and in possession of some of his neighbor's rich es. True, Lapstone was in comfortable cir cumstances, though lie was a poor man: He bad a little garden patch where he could labor an hour or two every day, and while providing for his table, be preparing, by out door exercise, for the in-door confinement of his trade. Then his wife was a perfect mod el of a woman, frugal and industrious, while the eight young Lapstones were heart and robust, and some of them able to work in the shop. But Lapstone had fancied, as lie saw the wealth and show of his neighbor, that it Was a fine thing to be rich and take the world easy. Therefore he sighed when his neighbor rode lazily along in his carriage, while he sat for ten hours a day hammering sole leather. But when at length he saw the funeral train which conveyed the rich idler to his long home, he came to the con clusion that health was better than wealth, and contentment more to be desired than, groat riches. All that's the moral "of this story. Xte" The lady whose *sleep was broken, has had it mended. An active business man is a rational man, and. a great blessing to the community. He keeps in exercise the talents confided to him, making them a blessing to himself, and a source of good to those by - whom he is daily surrounded. Ile furnishes employment to the industrious, which is far better than be stowing ams upon the unemployed. Herein are the legitimate and rational results of ac tive business pursuits and wealth-getting---- the employment of the gratification of the active powers, and the reward of industry.— But the slavish toil of accumulation merely for the sake of possession—the lust of cupidi ty—the remorseless desire of growing rich solely or principally to die rich, is one of the most foolish and debasing intentions which find lodgment in the heart of man. What can praise, if praise it be, have to do with "the dull, cold ear of death?"— What can it profit one, when he is lower and more insensible than the sod, to have it sounded above him, "How rich he died ?" Experience has fully and emphatically taught the lesson, that much wealth left to heirs is, in eight times out of ten, not a blessing, but rather a curse. Its expectation beguiles and spoils the manly powers; its possession leads to misjudgement, to excess, and finally to exhaustion, and ruin. Wealth is dangerous to all men, but especially to those who ac quire it by inheritance, and consequently without having sustained the toil or secured the maturity of character that was necessary for its acquisition. The time will yet come when men of wealth will be wise enough to make a gradual distribution of their proper ty while living—not prospective, but opera tive—thereby having an eye to the use that is made of it, and a participation in the greatest enjoyment its possession is capable of giving, that of seeing it do good to others. They will dismiss the foolish aspiration— foolish, especially in this country, where there are neither laws of primogeniture or entail, by which a succession of family mil lionaires may be kept up—of dying rich, with the certain reflection that the heirs will sooner or later die poor. To use borrowed but energetic language on this subject:— "After hypocrites, the greatest dupes the devil has, are those who exhaust an anxious existence in the vexations and disappoint ments of business, and live meanly and miserly only to die magnificent and rich." For, like the hypocrite, the only disinter ested motive these men can accuse them selves of, is that of serving the devil without receiving his wages; for the assumed morali ty of the one, is not a more effectual bar to enjoyment than the real avarice of the other. He who stands every day at the ledger till he drops into the grave,• may negotiate many profitable bargains ; but he has made a sin gle bad one, indeed, that more than counter balances all the rest; for the empty foolery of dying rich, he has laid down his health, his happiness, and his integrity; since, as a very old author observes, "mortar sticketh between buying and selling." Enterprise and activity in business, and a passion for honest money-getting are good things in the world, and he who uses his talents and capi tal in this way is a benefactor to his race— but he who does - all this for the sake of dying rich, is a not a wise man in any way. There is no wit, says the author of the Be haviour Book, in a lady to say " snooze" in stead of nap ; in calling pantaloons " pants" or gentlemen "gents ;" in saying of a man whose dress is bad that ho looks " seedy;" and in alluding to an amusing anecdote or diverting incident, to say that it is "rich." All slang words are detestable from the lips of ladies. We are always sorry to hear a young lady use such- a word as " polking " when she tells of her having engaged in a certain dance, too fashionable not long since, but happily now is going out and banished from the best society. To her honor be it re membered Queen Victoria has prohibited the polka being danced in her presence. Wo have little tolerance for young ladies who having in reality neither wit nor humor, sot up for both, and, havingnothing of the right stock to go upon, substitute coarseness and impertinence, not to say impudence, and try to excite laughter and attract the atten tion of gentlemen by talking slang. Where do they pick it up ? From low newspapers or from vulgar books? Surely not from low companions I We have heard one of these ladies, when her collar chanced to be pinned awry, say it was pinned on drunk, also that her bonnet was drunk, meaning crooked, on her head. When disconcerted, she was "floored." When submitting to do a thing unwillingly, she was 'brought to the "scratch?" Sometimes she " did things on the sly." She believed it very smart and piquant to use these vile expressions. And yet she was a woman of many good qualities, who boasted of having lived in good society. Zeno cure a pain in the breast, procure a well-made woollen dress—with an equally well constructed woman inside of it, and press closely to the part affected. Repeat the application till the pain ceases. This re ceipt, when the directions are carefully , ob served, has rarely been known to fail in effecting a cure. The medicine is found in almost every household, and may probably cost a trifle. lIED—It is said that inflammatory rheuma tism can be cured by the following simple method, which we extract from a medical publication an ounce of pulverized saltpetre put in half a pint of sweet oil. Bathe 'parts affected, and a sound cure will immediately follow. Ifte—Winter, which strips the leaves from around us, makes us see the distant regions they formerly . concealed ; so does old age rob us of our enjoyments ; only to enlarge the prospects of eternity before us.. Joseph's brethren cast him into the pit, because they thought it a good opening tor the young man. Editor and Proprietor. Dying Rich. Avoid Slang 'Words. Of all acts of folly, that expressed by tho phrase, "building castles in the air," is most consummate. There are thousands who em ploy their thoughts in this species of archi: tecture. They are not contented with their night dreams, but they encourage diky dreams' also—and thus they dream, dream', dream, td their sorrow I They build castles in imagi nation, which fall as soon as erected; • Like the house of the silly man Mentioned in the Se - riptural allegory, they build on an unstable: foundation. But they are even more silly, He built his house on the "sand." , The wind and flood were required, to. deinolish it. They build on "air," and the first,breath of expe rience brings their castles tumbling. and crash ing about their ears. A little forecast, as the dictate of common sense, would have preven ted the sorrowful catastrophe: As it as, they must pay the penalty, and suffer. . - To the young there is no mental habit more unfortunate than this of building air castlei —unless, indeed, it be a degree of intellectu: al laziness which would prevent their think ing at all. Such airy speculations would,: perhaps, be better than none. But, in a state of society like thepresent, there is really no. excuse for the building of air castles under any supposable circumstances. The age is full of enterprise, and of material for useful thought. It may do for the spider, of whose gossamer castles the old ditty sings— " And, when ehe aces 'Tie broke by the breeze, She woaves the bright tissue again." But it is unworthy of men and women, wire should be leading lives with more rational motives and better results I NO. 46. For tho habit of air-castle building, we know of no better remedy than the following words, attributed to a learned Brahmin: "In all thy desires, let reason go before thee, and fix not thy hopes beyond the bounds of probability. So shall success attend thy undertaking, and thy heart shall not he vexes with disappointment: It should be the aim of young men to go' into good society: We do not mean the rich, the proud and fashionable; but the society of the wise, the intelligent and good. Where you find men that know more than you do, and from whose conversation one can gain information; it is always safe to be found.— It has broken down many a man by associa ting with the low and vulgar—where the ri bald song was inculcated—and the indecent story, to excite laughter and influence the bad passions. Lord Clarendon has attributed his success and happiness in: life, to associating. with persons more virtuous than himself. If you wish . to be wise and respected—if you desire happiness and not misery, we advise you to associate with the intelligent and the good. Strive for mental excellence and strict integrity, and you will never be found in the sinks- of pollution; and on the benches of the retailers and gamblers: Once habituate your self to a virtuous coUrse-- - --once secure a love of good society, and no pUnishment would be greater than by o:ccident, to be obliged. for half a day to associate with the low and. vul-: gar. reir Why is a muffin like a chrysalis? Be- - cause it is a kind of grub that makes the but ter-fly. Jae' Somebody say* it, is better - o"die - poor than to live upon the hard earnings of the unsuspecting. The man who was: so forgetful, that he forgot his honest debts, we learn, had his memory jogged by a "Justice of the Peace." A Lancaster County Farmer's Method of Mn. Enixon.:—l give you herewith an ac-: count of the plan which I always pursne, and after an experience of nearly forty-eight years; have found under all circumstances to pro duce the best crops. Many years' observa tion has satisfied me of the fact, that my sys; tern will answer as well as any other, in fa vorable seasons, and far better during such a one as that just passed. I always make it a point, when practicable,, to put corn on sod ground, which Ditty be plowed in the fall, and with excellent effect; but which should be, at the earliest possible: period in the spring. I always plow eight inches in depth, then score out my ground very deep, leaving the distance between the furrows three feet. The corn is then drop-I ped, single grains, twelve inches apart. Where the ground is strong, the distance may be less. My ten-toothed harrow is next brought into play, being fashioned as follows : four teen inches in width in front, and eight inch; es behind. This is carefully drawn th6llo the furrow, thinly covering the corn, and the field permitted to lie in this condition for six . or seven days, when, with my twelve-toothed harrow I go over the whole, most thoroughly ; covering the corn. The effect of this last . harrowing is to retard somewhat fhe first ap-z pearance of the corn, (which, by the way, is act an objection,) and to keep' down the weed 6 and grass. When about four inches high, I go through the furrows lengthwise with a shovel harrow; which is another death-blow to the weeds and grass, and when it has reach ed the height of twelV.e inches, I give it an other and final dressing with one of Harnley's; corn plows. This last dressing effectually destroys the weeds ; and leaves the ground in a fine mellow condition. The advantages I claim for this method are' these: First, the deep plowing gives the roots. of the corn a fine chance to penetrate the soil, to a considerable depth, in search of suitable food. The depth which they reach ; secures them in a great measure against the effects usually produced by drought. A second good result of the deep plowmg is, that in very wet seasons, the over-moisture will effect the: young corn less than where the plowing is shallow, because, not being obstructed at a depth of four or five inches by the hard pan beneath, it has a chance to sink several inch- - es lower. Secondly, The heavy harrowing, after the corn has been six or eight days planted, cony: pletely exposes to the sun and air, the seeds. of weed and grass which have commenced germinating, and either kills them complete-: ly, or so injures them,- that their future growth and vigor is retarded so much us to place' them completely at the mercy of the shovel harrow and corn" plow, with which the after dressings are given. Again ' • the last dressing with the corn plow keeps the mellow earth around the stalk, and most cases the result is, a second set of roots which give increased vigor to the growing stalk - and ears - y the plan above detailed I have rarely ; if ever,. failed to have an average ()rep, ,even in the most unfavorable seasons, and when the seasons. have been good, I have been led to think the yield to be fully equal to any of my neighbors. CHRISTIAN STourrsm.• Pinc Farm, Lancaster county. Air Castles. Good Society. grintiturai. Planting Corn: El