TERNS OF TIE GLOBE. II Pet kinnnin in advance Six months Throe months A failure to.notify EL tliscontinuauce at the expiration of the term Subscribed for will be considered a now engago . . . ' TERitS 'OE ADVERTISING. : • . • . 1 insertion.. _2 do. 3 do. Vent' lines or less,... ,$ 25 $ 373 /f. $ 50 One square, (12 lines,) 50' 75 1 00 Two squitres 1 00 1 5Q 2 00 Three squares, 1 DO 2 25 - 3 00 Over three week and less than tlu•ee mouths, 25 cents per square for each Insertion. 3 moutikii: 6 months. 12 months. Six lines or loss, $l5O $3 00 $5 00 One 'square, 3 00 5 00 7 00 Two squares, 5 00 8 00 10 00 Three squares, .• 7 00 10 00 15 00 Four squares, 9 00 13 00 20 00 'Haifa column, , 12 03 16 00 24 00 One - column, . 20 00 30 00 50 00 . Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, ono year, $3 00 Administrators' and Bxecutors' Notices,.... ........ ...S1 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac- Strolling to these terms. IVEW GOODS, N E W G- 00D S, at I_l • D. P. GAVIN'S CHEAP STOREI P. GWIN has Just received from Philadelphia the largest and most beautiful assortment of brought_ SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS iver uto Huntingdon, consisting of the most Josh 'ionOble dress goods for Ladies and Gentlemen. Such as Blaik and Fancy Silks, All-wool Bettina, Challis Delains, Plain Braizo, Figured Braise Robes, Brilliants., different colors; Brilliant Robes, Lawn Robes, Ducals Chintz Calico, Plain and Fancy Dress Ginghams,Hum - mills. Cloth, Silk Warp Levens Cloth for travelling dresses, 31.uhair Debarse, Lawns and Prints of every description. Also,—a large lot of Dress Trimmings, Fringe's, Buttons, Bonnet Silks, Bonnet Crapes, all colors; Ribbons, Gloves, Mitts, Toils, Laces, Hosiery, Gum Belts, Ribbons for Belting, Whalebone and Brass Hoops for Skirts, Silk and Linen Handkerchiefs, Silk and Gingham Cravats, Zepher. French Working Cotton, Linen and Cot ton Hop, Tidy Yarn.! Also, The best assortment of Collars and Under sleeves in town., Barred and plain Jaconets, Mull - Muslin, Swiss, Plain, Figured and Dotted Crinoline, Maroon and Grass Cloth for Skirts, Book Muslin, Irish Linen, Linen !Cable Cloths, Napkins, Towels, &c. -Also,_ A fine assortment of Spring Shawls, Silk mid Braize Mantillas, and a variety of Dress and Fancy Goods too numerous to Mention. Also; Cloths, Cassimeres, Cassinets, Merino Cassimei, Tweeds, Kentucky Jeans, Cotton Drills for pants, _Blue Demim, Blue' Drill, Plain and Fancy Linens, Mar. .sailies'and Silk. 'Vesting, Muslims, bleached and unbleached; Sheeting and. Pillow - Case ' 31uslin, Nankeens, Ticking, 'Checks, Table diaper, &C. Bonnets of the latest styles, and at lower prices than can be found in town. - Also, Moleskin, Fur, Wool and Summer Hats of tho latest styles, and _Boots & Shoes, Hardware, Queensware, Buckets, Tubs, Churns, Butter Bowls, Bask- Uts, Brooms and Brushes, CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS, Fish & Sidt, and all goods usually kept in a country store. '.My old custorners, and as many new ones as call crowd in, are respectfully requested to come and examine my goods. All .kinds of Country Produce taken in exchange for good's at the highest market prices. Huntingdon, April 29,1857. WAR IN KANSAS ! ALEXAN- DRIA FOUNDRY. R. C. MeGILL ik CROSS wish to inform their friends and the public generally that they -ossecolhave the above foundry in full blast, and are prepared to furnish castings of every description, stoves of all kinds and sizes prirmttow for wood or coal, improved plough shears for all kinds of ploughs, thrashing ma chines, the best in the five counties. In short, everything in the casting line; and having turning lathes we will finish any work that requires turning. All of which we will sell cheap for cash, lumber, and all kinds of country produce. Old metal taken for castings. By a strict atten tion to business, being practical workmen of long experi ence in the business, we hope to receive a liberal share of public patronage. It. C. 3IcOILL & CROSS. Alexandria, April 29, 1857. A DMINISTRATOR'S NOT I C E.- . Letters of Administration hare been granted to me on the Estate of ELIZABETH ZIIII3.IERMAN, late of Tod township, Huntingdon county, deed. All persons indebt ed are requested to make payment, and those having claims to present them to me. Tod tap., April .29, 1857. CHINESE SUGAR CAN.:SIi3EI). An intelligent farmer of Cumberland county, N.J., sums up his experience thus as the product of one acre:- 49,368 ibs cane; 1694 galls. Juice; 332 galls. thick syrup; 1936 lbs. fodder ; 90 bus, seed, 40 lbs to the bus. A. quan tity sufficient for a trial will be mailed for 25 cents. For sale by JOINT READ, Ihmtingdon, Pa. April 29, 1.857-*3t. CIASSVILLE MALE AND FEMALE SEMINARY.—Rev. A. S. HANK, A. M., Principal, Assisted by Competent Instructors. This institution,. remote from scenes of vice and dissipa tion, is healthfully located among the mountains of Hun tingdon county, Pa. Cassvillo is 15 miles front Mill Creel: station, Penna. R. R., and is accessible by Stage on Monday, Wednesday and Friday of each week. The Trustees have made arrangements for a Summer 'Session, in order to accommodate young gentlemen and ladies, who have been engaged in teaching during the win ter months. - . The Summer Session will commence Slay 4th, and con tinuo 21 weeks. Eighty students were in attendance du ring the past year, and a number more can be accommoda ted. TERMS: Board, Washing and Boom rent, per week ......S2 00 Tuition in I.3nglisb. Branches, per Nessiout 10 00 Ancient and Modern Languages, Music and Ornamental Branches, extra. Incidental fee, per session April 22, 1857-2t* 4—T IGHT Great Bargains to the Trade. The Fi ub so r hers respectfully solicit their Friends and the Public in general, to call and examine for them selves, our stock of the Latest Styles of GAS FIXTURES, Chandeliers, Pendants and Brackets of most beautiful finish, fancy and plain: also, Pine Oil, fluid and Lard LAMPS, Girandoles, Parlor Lamps, Globes, Vanes, &e..&c., Lamp Chandeliers, Brackets and Pendants. Where-ever LIGHT is wanted, wo will supply it at short notice.— Lamps or Gas Fixtures, at large percentage in favor of buyers. HEIDR/CK & HORNING, Store : NO. 321 (late 221) North SECOND Street, above Vine, PHILAPELPITIA. Factory: Mercer Street, near Norris. April 15, 1857-2 m. FASTATE OF JOHN G-EO. MOSSEII, deed.—All persons interested are hereby notified that Letters testamentary have been granted by the Regis ter of Iluntingdon county to the undersigned Executor of the last will and testament of John George :11os.,er, late of the borough of Lluntingdon, in said county, deceastsl, and all persons having claims against his Estate arc requi red to present them duly authenticated for settlement. and - persons indebted to him are requested to pay their liabili ties. ISAAC LININGEIt, Executor. flnntingdort, April 15, 1857. LD NOSE AT HONE! If you don't believe it, call at his now Bier° room Z:lark - et Square, where you will find a splendid assort ment of Goods for the season. Ladies Dress Goods, 'Ready-Made Clothing, Groceries, And everything else usually found in tho Uuntingdon Mores. Call, but don't all call at the same time. Huntingdon, April 15, 1857. NOSES STROUS. -PREMIUM AWARDED TO 11. T. STAINS, of Scottsville, linntingdon county, Pa., for est specimen of marble work. Send on your orders soon: - Scottsville, Oct. 21, 1856.1 y. COME AGAIN. THE LATEST AND BEST! KILT stock !lt 00K ling just opened a large ant *len _ _ _ BOOTS & SHOES, iif ihe best and latest styles, for ladies, gentlemen ' misses, boys, and children of ages. He returns thanks for the liberal patronage ho has heretofore received, and hopes his ,new, stock will not fail to please everybody, and all their lations, and that all who want a gmd and fashionable article will continue to call as usual at the old place and bo accommodated. • . Call soon and examine my splendid stock. iinntingdon, April 15, 1857. ' LEVI WESTBROOK. XEC IJ TORS NOTICE. (ESTATE OF JOHN AITAH/UV, DECD.) Ati persons interested are hereby notified that Letters 'Testamentary have been granted to the undersigned, Ex ecutors of the last will and testament of JOHN =ARAN, late of Walker township, Huntingdon county, dec'd., and all persons having claims or demands against said estate, are requested to present them -without delay, and thosoin debted to said estate, will pay the same to John K. Me- Callan, Birmingham, or Jas. A. McCaban, Hollidaysburg. JOHN K. IKTARAN, Birmingham, JAS. A. MT.AIIAN, Hollidaysburg, JAS. K. MOREECEAD. Pittsburg, JOHN CRESSWELL, Petersburg, Executors. April 15, 1557. GRINDSTONES on friction rollers and patent hangings, for sale by apr. 8. JAS. A. BROWN & CO. DB. SANFORD'S Invigorator or Liver Remedy, can be had nt the cheap Drug Store of apr23 HENRY .11cM4NIDILL. FOR SALE.—Three Carts and Gears. CI3rAP. Apply to PRIM. SOW - EIDER, Sr.. lion- Zerson township. April 22, 1827. $1 50 75 5() 11ENRY ZIMIE11:11:1N 2 00 WILLIATII LEWIS, VOL. XII. Welect Vattrll. THE UNBROKEN SLUMBER. Yes, I shall rest! some coming day When blossoms in the wind are dancing, And children in their mirthful play Treed not the'monmful crowd advancing, Up through the long and busy street They'll bear me to my last retreat. Or else—it matters not—may rave The storms and blasts of winter weather, Above the narrow, new-made grave, Where care and. I lie down together; Enough that I should know it not, Beneath, in the dark, narrow spot. For I shall sleep! As sweet a sleep As ever graced a child reposing, Awaits me in the cell so deep, Where I my weary eyelids closing, At length shall lay me down to rest, Heedless of clods above my breast. Asleep how deep will be that rest, Free from life's fever moving wildly, That when is past the earth's unrest, Its bosom shall receive me mildly: For not one dream of earth shall come To invade the slumber of that home. Oh, deep repose! Oh, slumber blest! Oh, Night of pence No storm, no sorrow, No heavy stirring in my rest To meet another meary morrow! I &hall heed neither night nor dawn, But still, with folded hands, sleep ou! Sleep on, though just above my head. Prowl sin and misery's haggard ihces! For the deep slumber of the dead All sense of human woe erases, ratsiee the heart and cures the braiu Of every thought of outward pain. Armies above my rest may tramp— 'Twill not disturb one rigid muscle I I shall not heed their iron stamp More than a leafs complaining rustle; Nay, were the earth convened to 1 weak :My leaden sleep, I should not wake. And yet, methinks, if steps of those I'd known and loved on earth were round me, .'"fwouid tame the might of my repose : Shiver the iron cords that I;ound Inc-- Save that I know this cannot be, For death disowns all sympathy! Well, be it sof Since I should yearn, Anxiously watch for their appearing, Chiding each lingering, late return, And ever sad and ever fearing— Livin~ life's drama o'er again, lts tragedy of hope and pain. Then mourn not, friends, when ye may lay The clods of earth above my ashes; Think what a rest awaits my clay, And smooth the mound with tearless lashes; Glad that the resting form within Has done at length with woe and sin. Think, that with me the strife is o'er, Life's .stormy, struggling battle! ended; Rejoice that I have gained that shore To which, though weak, my footsteps tended; Breathe the blest hope above the sod, And leave me to my rest with God. csidtti MY OLD WIFE AND I BY PUTNAM.. She is sitting close beside me in the old arm-chair, mate to my own—the earnest true hearted friend of a long lifetime—my own meek-eyed Ruth. Years ago, so very long ago, that memory sees those years as far-off pictures, indistinctly and dreamy. Years ago, •nty Ruth whispered to me in the purple twi light of a mid-summer evening, " Whither thou goest, I will go"—and trustfully has the promise been kept. Sometimes, when the winter-fire burns low, and coals glow blood-red in the broad, open chimney, I take her withered hand in mine, and we talk with hushed voices of those buri ed days, and of the buried dead, who danced with us in the hey-day of youth. Voices si lent, hearts pulseless, and eyes close veiled— Ruth and I are gladly looking forward to the hour when we shall see the band of dear de parted ones, beyond the golden gates of the city ." Beautiful." " We shall go soon, very soon, Jack," says the tranquil voice; and I answer hopefully, "Very soon." Then she strikes the sweet old melody of "Summer," and the tones of our old trembling voices ring through the quiet room, like the echoes of afar-away song, sung by a group of forms known and loved in the past. In the warm summer nights we sit, each by the other, on the verandah that commands a view - of the heaving sea, and the white-sail ed ships that glide hither and thither with their great wings. " Life is like thebillowy ocean," I say to the mild face and the dim eyes, "covered with countless barks, some filled with every thing rich and glorious, laded with the wealth and beauty of other lands ; others idle and bare with gaping seams and tattered sails. They float serenely on the blue depths, tossed, un harmed, by the fickle winds, while the nobly laded ones, freighted with the hopes of lov ing friends, go down even in the soft sunlight and the lightest of breezes. Yonder go two fairy sails, side by side, like old companions, happy, if the winds do not drive them asun der. So we, rocked by the billows, wafted by prosperous breezes, have kept closely to gether, till our barks have grown almost un seaworthy. " The pilot will come to us, Jack, ere many moons," says the old wife, cheerfully," "and I thank God that he has suffered us towear out so nearly in the service of what is good and true." " I thank him, also, deep in my heart of hearts, that he gave me the unappropriated loveliness of Ruth Seymour, when the golden clouds of manhood's dawn hung over me-- that we together began the stately revel of life, and have kept undying and immortal, amid mortality, the pure love of husband and wife." Now, though age has sown a silvery har vest among the brown girl-locks, and made wrinkles where once smile played bo-peep to smile among dimples, she is still dear as in the firstars of married life—still beautiful, still my Ninon D'Enclos. I love her - for the memory . of what she has been to me through the devious pathway of circling days—for the freely-given trust, the perfect confidence, the unasked obedience of love and faith.— Dear old wife I We can now talk fearlessly of the poverty days. Days, -when we ate sparingly, and lived sparingly, that the noble children God gave us, might climb over the rugged heights more easily. "We shall yet reap bountifully, Jack ; " said Ruth—and I believed her. " Have we not reaped a plentiful harvest? Robert bless es his gray-haired parents every day, for the education he won by their self-denial—our Robert, the orator and the statesman." " Mother !"—I always call her " Mother," when I speak of her children—"our boy has made another speech-shall I read it for you?" Then the proud smile creeps over the wrin kled cheek, and lights up the fading eye, and as I read slowly and carefully, the burning words of the young politician. Ruth comes closely to my side and steals her shrunken fingers between my own, her foot tapping the floor nervously, as I speak of applauding crowds and eagerly excited multitudes.— Sometimes a tear slides down the thin cheek, a tear of gratitude, I know, and she knows, gr atitude that all our efforts were not in vain. There is Paul, too, the artist and poet—be loved by the noble and great. He came, last summer, - with the odor of laurels about him, here to the old homestead, with its gables and queer roofs; its gnarled oaks and wide-spread ing orchards, came to blend, in unfading col ors, upon the canvass, the bent forms and whitened hair of Ruth and I. God bless the boy. how the old wife gazed on the pictured couple, with their weight of years, their wrin- Ides and their fading eyes. Perhaps she saw backward over the purple bills, the twain who danced merrily in many a reel, when youth fired their hearts with happy dreams, and all the band of girls and boys, that has for years been broken ; saw them gathered again in festal mirth, a rosy train, with smi ling lips and laughing voices. Perhaps, too, she looked forward over the white sea, to that crowd of forms waiting among the brightness and glory for us, their comrades of old. "We shall renew a youth which will be eternal," I said softly, as she turned away from the canvas. "By-and-by we shall quaff from that fountain for which Ponce de Leon sought, and sought in vain. Thankful ought we to be rather, that our growing old has made our children what they are." A soft smile floated over the pale worn face, and I saw for a moment how she would look here after. For our son in the city, the ever hurrying city of New York, I think Ruth has a warm er-place in her heart, than for the rest; not even our daughter—dark-haired Sara—whose home is with us, and whose children shout and sing about our door every hour in the day, has the deep sympathy that Graham share's in that mother's heart. It is strange to me, but I know site knows best the wants Of her children, and I try not to wonder. When he comes home to the roof-tree, full of "cares and business, talking earnestly with Edward, Sara's husband, upon the rise of stocks, the fall of cotton, the news from Eu rope, and a hundred other things all at once —when he reads with frowning brow, the list of failures among the merchants, pitying this, condemning that—when- he tears open business letters and runs them through in a twinkling, always hurried, always hurrying, I can see the mother's eyes watching every careless movement, with a sad, sweet sympa thy in. them—why is it? Sometimes, when Robert brings his beau tiful young wife home, and Paul dallies with the curls of his adored bride, her head in his lap ; when Sara sits down on the footstool by her husband and. laughingly tumbles the hair of her first-born—sometimes, I say, when Graham helps to make up the family party, and chatters of the markets, of politics, of the fine arts and. of the farm, I have seen si lent tears fall from the quiet eyes of Ruth, as if all this hurry and worry of her boy was a 'mask. Perhaps it is. Ruth told me once of a fair young being whose soul was twined with the soul of Graham. How the chang ing years carried her away to sleep in a green grave, and left the boy alone. Maybe, mem ory is goading him to this incessant action, this constant labor. Who knows? We all have a name written somewhere among the records of the heart, dearer than all other names beside—a name that brings with it either pure enjoyment or bitter, bitter yearn ings. It must be so with Graham, for I have seen him stand, silent as the frozen snow, for hours, leaning over the bannisters and gazing on a simple picture hung in the hall, with the name of "Rosamond" written underneath it. "Rose of the world," and yet the world knew only as much of her beauty as had. ripened under Moen summer's suns. She was my cousin, and a fairer face never bloomed out on the bleak winter airs of New England, but I was not suffered to marvel at her ex.- ceeding loveliness long, for God took her, and the simple picture and an old man's memory are all that remain of her now. _Perhaps, I only say perhaps, the rare vision that steals through 'Graham's silent hours, and even glides between him and the rustling ledger, bore the fragrant name of Rosamond; if she did, or if my young cousin's face bears a faint likeness to his "lost one," I wonder not that the boy loves to linger on the stairs and watch the eastern red sunlight steal in and glow suddenly all over the bright, beaming coun tenance. How sad and how strange that so many of our best beloved memories are seen ted with the perfume of cypress and of shrouds. Ruth says "The reason of this is because such memories would lose their sweetness, had we the power to make them oft-recur ring. Those we love go home to their Fath er, when we remember only what is beauti ful of them—years of long life might rob them of what makes us cherish their memo ry so fondly; now their beauty will remain unfading through the long lapses of an un lapsing eternity, and no stain on their purity can make us love them less." She has whis pered the same words to Graham in the twi light's purple hush, and he has gone back to his city home more cheerfully ; ah I I'll dare to say he has gazed down memory's long gal lery with less regret as his eye drinks in the beauty of his beautiful "Rose." He thinks of the changeless years beyond the narrow sea, and of the changeless form watching be side its banks for him. He has often closed ^PERSEVERE.-- HUNTINGDON, PA., MAY 27, 1857. his day-book and ledger, I doubt not, with the unuttered wish that he might step across that narrow sea as easily as he can cross the busy streets. Ruth and I have a whole troop of lovely and much loved grand children, who site per sists in spoiling, and whom I persist in bring ing up as they should be brought up. Truly enough, the young rogues are always hunt ing my large pockets for sweetmeats and stray bits with which to buy toys, and my wife sometimes tells me I am spoiling the whole troop, instead of herself. But children are children, and I have two green a: memory not to know that plums and candies are so sweet to small lips. Dear children, they are all lumps of pure gold, and .cunning must the. artisan's hand be that can mould the pure gold aright. Paul's young wife, with her azure eyes and amber curls, looks far too young and frail to guide the stout 'youngster whose saucy black eyes - are for all the world the exact counterpart of his old grandpa's. Who, then, like Ruth and I, can feed small lips and dandle baby limbs ? Who, though her hands have grown unsteady and weak, can fold the tiny form in.a drowsy robe like my dear old wife ? Ah, me I how we are 'shutting out slowly and. more slowly this fee ble lamp of life Bv-and-hy the flickering light will fall, and of us—bits of poor worn clay—Will be borne by our children with tears and lamentations to the vault yonder on the hill overlooking the sea. Overlooking the sea? h_ye, even as we now in life are over looking that white sea with the purple shores and the far twilight skirting it forever. Dear old wife, how patiently we will wait the com ing of a messenger from yonder shores. No need, then, to pull down the rumpled ker chief, to straighten the white locks or grasp more firmly the stout cane for angels will minister to us, and g ive to these feeble limbs a newness of life and immortality of youth. Will our children follow too? afittertsfing 4nizttliait22. Serving a Subpoena. It is singular what shifts love will make to accomplish its objects. Both gates and bars are of little avail against Cupid's pick-lock contrivances—his counting will devise ways and means to open them all. A young gen tleman had-courted a fair damsel of this city and it was supposed that two in time would " become one." Some little quarrel of a trivial nature, as lover's quarrels generally are, ~occurred. Neither would confess the wrong to be on their side—presents and cor respondence were mutually sent hack and the match was broken off. The young gen tleman immediately started off to New Or leans, to enter into commercial business, thinking that distance would lessen the at tachment he really felt for the young lady. When the woman is injured, or thinks she is injured, by the one sho loves, she is more apt than the male sex "to bite off her own nose," as the saying is, to inflict pain, and be revenged on the offending object. A gentle man that the young lady had once rejected renewed his proposals and was accepted within a week after her old lover bad embark ed for the South. On reaching New-Orleans he found that distance, instead of weakening his attachment, only made the lady dearer, and he became melancholy and low-spirited. The first letter he received from New-York from a friend of his, announced that his old name was shortly to be married to ancther. His course was quickly taken—the next morning saw him on board a packet-ship bound for Gotham. The passage unfortunately was long, and the poor fellow chafed and fretted so much that the passengers began to think him de ranged or else a fugitive escaping from jus tice. The instant the vessel touched the wharf he darted for the office of his friend, the lawyer. It is to be supposed the latter was much surprised to see his friend, imagin ing him a couple of thousand miles away.— After the usual salutations, he exclaimed : " My dear fellow, you are in time to see the wedding. Miss , your old sweet heart, is to be married this morning at eleven o'clock. To tell you the truth, I don't believe there is much love about it, and the girl really thinks more of one hair of your head than the fortunate bridegroom's whole body. " Good Heaven I Where is she to be mar ried—in church ?" " No, at her father's house." "My dear fellow—l—l—yes—no—yes, I will have it. Have you any case coming on in either of the courts at IL o'clock ?" -yes.” " Then fill up a subpoena with the bride groom's name. Don't stop to ask any ques tions. It matters not whether he knows any thing about the parties in the suit. By Heav ens! Julia shall be mine 1" - - - _ Ms friend saw the object at once, and prom ised to carry on the matter. The subpeena, was made out and placed in the hands of a clerk to serve on the unsuspecting bridegroom the instant he should leave his residence, and was dispatched in a cab to watch the house. About ten minutes before eleven, as the soon to-be happy man was about entering a coach before the door of his residence, he was served with a subpoena. " Can't help it," said the clerk, in reply to his gesticulating about "not knowing the par ties going to be married," &c. We shan't reach the Hall now before eleven—imprison ment for contempt," &c. The bridegroom, who was rather of a timid nature, finally consented, particularly as the clerk promised to send a friend of his who sat in the cab wrapped up in a large cloak, explaining the reasons of his absence. The reader can imagine who this person was. Eleven o'cloc came, but still no bride groom. The guests were staring at each oth er—the priest began to grow impatient—and. the bride that was to be, looked pale and ag itated, when a carriage drove up and the bell rung. "There he is 1 There he is 1" mur mured many voices. A gentleman did enter, whose appearance created almost as much astonishment as that of Edgar 'Ravenswood, in the Tian of Ashton Castle, at the marriage of Lucy Ashton, in Scott's ".Brige of Lammernoor." The lady fainted; private explanations ensued between the parents and the lover, and the result was that, in ten minutes after, the' two real lovers were joined in the sacred bond of matrimo ny, much to the satisfaction of all. The bridegroom that-was-to-have-been, af terwards made his appearance pulling and blowing. What he said and what ho did, on beholding his rival, and being made acquaint ed with the condition of affairs, was really tragi-comical. The story of the subpcena, shortly after wards leaked out, and has created so much amusement, that the poor fellow declares he will sue the lawyer for ten thousand dollars damages in subpoenaing him as a witness in a case of which_ lie knew nothing, and by Achich he lost a wife. It will be a novel suit indeed, if he should do so.--New York, ra per. It is a miserable thing to be rich ! We aver it not from experience, but from obser vation. - Solomon Southwick, the veteran Rhode Island editor, once published a poem, entitled the "Pleasures of Poverty," and, although nobody read more than the first page, it was the best thing that Solomon— and he really was a man of genius—ever did. It was the perversity of mankind not the "absence of caloric" in the poem, that prevented the "Pleasures of Poverty" from becoming as immortal as the "Pleasures of Memory." We pity a rich man—and why? Because he is like the unlucky fellow who used to adorn Ulm - first page of all old-fashioned Al manacs. Aries, the ram is eternally jump ing over his head, ready to butt out his brains for the sake of getting at his purse.— Taurus, the bull, is goring him with horns, to make him. bleed freely—[Gemini, the twins, generally fall to the lot of the poor man, so we will pass over them.] The claws of Cancer are fastened on his breast in the shape of needy relations. Leo is couchant before him, watching the opportunity to prey upon his possessions. Virgo is laying snares for his heart. Libra is weighing his losses. Sagittarius transfixes him with the arrows of envy. Capricornus is bearding him with the spirit of rivalry. Aquarius ( changing the sex) is keeping him in a whirlpool of routs, parties and balls, to please a dashing wife and money-wasting daugh ters. And to sum. up his miseries the slip pery fishes render his footing unstable, and his standing uncertain—for they are neither more nor less than the changes and chances of life. Who so hard-hearted as not to pity the rich man ? Who is dogged in the streets, and knocked down at midnight ? Whose house is broken into by robbers ? The rich man's. Who has his pocket cut out, and his coat spoiled in a crowd? The rich man. Who is in doubt whether the people are not laughing at him in their sleeves, when they are eating his dinner? The rich man. Who adds to his trouble by every stone lie adds to his house? The rich man—for the higher he ascends, the colder is the atmosphere. A bank breaks, and who suffers? The rich stockholder and depositor. War blows his horn, who trembles? Death approaches, and who fears to look him in the face? Why, the rich man, and yet, all the world envies the rich. Depend upon it, reader, the length of your face will always be proportioned to the length or your purse. If you live in a two-storied house, be thankful and covet not the loftier mansion of your neighbor. You but dishonor yourself, and insult your desti ny by fretting and repining. There is a false necessity with which we continually surround ourselves—a restraint of conventional forms. Under this influence, men and women. check their best impulses, and suppress their highest thoughts. Each longs for a free communication with other souls, but dares not give utterance to his yearnings. What hinders? The fear of what Mrs. Somebody will say; or the frown of some sect; or the anathema of some syn od; or the fashion clique ; or the laugh of some club; or the misrepresentation of some political party. Thou art afraid of thy neigh bor, and knowest not that he is equally afraid of thee. Ile has bound thy hands, and thou hast fettered his feet. It were wiser for both to snap the imaginary bond, and walk onward unshackled. What is there of joyful freedom in our so cial intercourse? We wish to enjoy our selves and take away all onr freedom, while we destroy his own. If the host wishes to ride or walk, he dares not, lest it should seem impolite to the guests. So they remain slaves, and feel it a relief to part company. A few individuals, mostly in foreign lands, arrange this matter with wiser wisdom. If a visitor arrives, they say, I am very busy to-day; if you want to work, the naeu are raking hay in the field ; if you want to romp, the children are at play in the court; if you want to read to me, I can be with you at such an hour. Go where you please, and while you are here, do as you please. At some houses in Florence, large parties meet without the slightest preparation. It is understood that on some particular even ing of the week, a lady or gentleman always receive their friends. In one room are books and flowers; in another, pictures and engrav ings; in a third, music. Couples are en sconced in some shaded alcove, or groups dotted about the rooms, in mirthful or seri ons conversation. No man is required to speak to his host, either on entering or de parting. Lemonade and baskets fruit stand here and there, on the side tables, that all may take who like; but eating, which constitutes so great a part of American en tertainment, is a light and almost unnoticed incident at these festivals of intellect and taste.—Mrs. Dr. William Elder, of Philadelphia, is now engaged in writing a memoir of the late Dr. Elisha Kent Kane. Editor and Proprietor. Riches Social Intercourse The purpose of irrigation is not only moist; ening, as many farmers may think, butchieflj maatiriiig by means of irrigation; darn up little stream, and make a small ditch along the higher part of a piece of land, so as to cause the water to overflow ; in the immediate vicinity of the ditch the grass *ill grow a great deal longer and faster than at some dis: tance from the ditch, where the moistening part had been executed to the same degree as above, showing that the Water had left its ma: nuro at the first contact with the surface of the ground. In laying out the ditches for ir.; rigation, make many ditches, instead of a sin gle one. There is no loss even by the great ost number of ditches, provided they are put in the right place. The distribution of wa ter, and the different modes of arranging the land for irrigation and drainage, depend on the shape of surface of the ground, 4:e., and require a very firm judgment and at least some knowledge of leveling and surveying.— The rain water has no manuring effect on the soil ; but its great efficacy is its dissolving qual ity, by which it makes the manure fit for feed ing the vegetables. The water of running streams, led on the land for irrigation, fulfills. two important conditions, namely, that of yielding manure, and that of dissolving the manure, and is therefore superior to rain wa ter for irrigation. Some have contended that rain water contains a little ammonia, and that it therefore possesses fertilising properties but the most refined analysis has failed to prove' this. NO, 49. Many persons plead a love of truth as an apology for rough manners,: as if truth kiss never gentle and kind, but always harsh, mo rose and forbidding. Surely good manners and a good conscience are no more inconsistent with each other than beauty and. innocence, which are strikingly akin, and always look the better for companionship. Roughness and honesty are indeed some times found togeth: er in the same person, but he is a poor judge of human nature who takes ill manners to be a onarentee of probity of character ; or sus: peets a stranger to be a rascal, bdeause he has;• the manners of a gentleman. Some persons object to politeness, that its language is un meaning and false. But this is easily an swered. A lie is not locked up in a phrase, but must exist, if at all in the mind of the' speaker. In the ordinary compliments of civ ilized life, there is no intention to deceive, and consequently no falsehood. Polite language' is pleasant to the ear, and something to the heart. while rough words are just the reverse;. and if not the product of ill-temper are very apt to produce it. The plainest of truths, let it be remembered, that can be conveyed is civil speech while the most malignant of lies may, find utterance, and often do, in the languago* of the fish market. Sleep is the gift of God; and not a man' would close his eyes, did not God put his in-' ger on his eyelids. True, there are some drugs with which men can poison themselves well-nigh to death, and then call it sleep ; but the sleep of the healthy body is the gift of God ; he bestows it ; he rocks the cradle for us every night; draws the curtain of darkness, he bids the sun shut up his burn ing eyes, and then he comes and says,: " Sleep, sleep, my child ; I give thee sleep." You have sometimes laid your head upon your pillow, and tried to go to sleep, but you could not do it; but still you see; and there are sounds in your ears, and ten thou- . sand things drive through your brain.— Sleep is the best physician that I know of.— It has healed more pains than the most emi-' nent physician on earth. It is the best medicine. There is nothing like it. And what a mercy it is that it belongs to all.— God does not give it merely to the noble or the rich, so they can keep it as a special luxury for themselves; but he bestows it upon all. Yes, if there be any difference, it . is in favor of the poor. " The sleep of the laboring man is sweet, whether he eat little or much. Not only the flowers unfold their petals to receive the light—the heart of man also has a power of expansion. It is love which . opens it and expands it, so that the rays of the spiritual sun may penetrate and ilium° . it. The Christian, in the work of self-exami nation, need not direct his attention to many points ; it is included in the daily question— Ifow is it with my love to Christ? That love to him is of great importance, we must' conclude, since he, in truth, requires of us an affection for his own person such as no one else ever claimed. 0, thou must ha' more than father and mother, than brother and sister, else bow couldst thou the lowliest among the children of men, lay claim to" such superabundant love ? Since I have be lieved in the - word, all my desire has been to love thee_ I will not cease to love thee, until thou art dearer to me than father,., mother and brother! ;If they deny thee, if they revile thee; what is so dreadful as to see one's father and mother reviled at our side! but more than when they reproach father and mother, shall thy reproaches, thy wrongs go to my heart.—T Muck. A SENSIBLE FATTIER.—The Sunday Atlas says a gentleman of great wealth in New York, but who has never cared to mingle much in fashionable society, recently settled 15,000 a year on a daughter who had mar- - tied. to his satisfaction. In speaking on the subject to a friend the other day, he was wit; ling to do the same by his other daughters; on one condition—that they married respec table, "upright and industrious young men.H lie did not care how poor they were if they were only of this description, and their char; actor would bear investigation. NOBLE SENTIMENTS.—Condemn no Mali for not thinking as you think. Let every one enjoy the full and free liberty of think= ing for himself. Let every man use his owri judgment, since every man must give an ac count of himself to God. Abhor tivery tql= proacli, in any kind of degree, to the spirit of persecution. If you cannot reason . ,_ or persuade a man into the truth, never attempt to force a man into it. If love will not cone. el him to come, leave him to God, the Judge of Ins/ey. 1-n-Th ere are about 3,000 newspapers id the United States which circulate annually about 500,000,000 copies. Between fifteen and twenty millions of dollars are expended. in their publication ; and if the whole issue, for ono year be estimated, it would cover a surface of 100 square miles, or form a belt 30 feet wide around the earth. gErA good book !and a good woman arel excellent things for those who know how just. ly to appreciate their value. There are men, however, who judge from the beauty of their covering. Object and Effects of Irrigation. Good Manners. A Great Gift. Love to Christ.