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Six lines or less, Quo square, Two squares, 5 00 S 00 10 00 Three squares, 7 00 10 00 15 00 Four squares, 9 00 11 00 '0 00 Half a column, 12 00 16 00 ' , i 00 One column, 0 0 00 10 00 50 00 Professional and Ilusines Cards not exceeding four lines, one year, S 3 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, il 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. - - THE ‘ BROADWAY OMNIBUS," THE GREATEST PAPER' OP 771 E AGE! lIII,IIITIEULLY ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY SIIELT, AND A PAPER TH.IT IS A. PAPER, A budget of Wit, Humor, Facts and Scenes drawn from life--111,un YOU ARD, RIGHT AWAY, linmy AWAY, Wolum BROADWAY, RIGHT UP!" Only Fitty Cents —jump in and take a ride. Once seated in. our '•Nmus," we will en dryer to both amuse and instruct you. and give you, in the course of the year. at least fifty cents' worth of IfuN and useful information. We will show }on up Broailway, down the old Bowery, through Clinton and the other principal streets, giving you ample tittle to ;,:e0 the Ele phant get a good peep at the Peter Funks, Confidence iperators, Se.. &c. We will show you the city by day light. by gar light, by moon light, by candlelight, by star and will drive the OnNiuus" to some parts of the city tt here there is No Licirt ! We will (.11.1.eaVor to pe.,t 3 on on' all the tricks and traps of the ;;reset metropolis, and amuse Many an hour with interesting reading matter. " Throw physic to the dogs." If you have the Blues, the Dyspepsia, Bout. Rheumatism, or are unfortunately trou bled with a scolding wile, we will guarantee to make you forget your troubles. laugh almost against your will, and glow iitt. Everybody shoald subscribe to the "OMNIBUS' at :nee. The I:ILOADWAY (IMNIUUS" will 1n:0:e its appear ance on the hist of each month, Tilled with amusement and instruction for all. Price. Fifty Cents it year in ad- Vallee—three copies to one address, On Dollar; the cheap c.-t paper in the fitates l Who will get its two subserfmr,4 and receive one copy free? All communications should be addressed to CHAS. I'. BRITTON, Editor " Broadway Omnilms," B)7. Pearl street, N. Y. October "13, .3S-St T i IANCY FURS, FOR LADIES AND CHILDREN. don N FAR-ETRA &Co., No. SIS, (new N 0..) NI \t:111:1 Street, abo‘o Eighth. PIIIL UM.LPIIII-1111 - I , orterS, MalliliaCtUrCrS Zl.lld. Dealers In FANCY FURS, for Ladies ;1114 Children; also, Gent's Furs, Fur Collars, and Gloves. The number of years that we have been engaged in the Fur business, and the general (diameter of our Furs, both fur quality and priY. is so generally known throughout the Country, that we think it is not necessary for us to say anything more than that we bare now opened our assortment of FURS, for the Fall and Winter Sales, of the largest and must beautiful assortment that we have ever offered before to the public. Our Furs have all been Imported during the present season, when money was seal ce and Furs much lower than at the present time, and have been manufac tured by the must competent workmen; we are therethre determined to sell than at such prices as ill continue to give us the reputation we have born for years, that is to sell a good article for a very small, profit. Storekeepers will do \veil to give us a call, as they will find the largest assortment, by far, to select bola in the city, and at manufacturers prices. FAREIRA. & CO.. SIS, Market Street, ctbore Sth, Phint oteraber 15, 1855.--Im. G R E - E XCITE MEN T Al TIILI MATAIMOTH STORE!! J. BRICE:ER has returned from the E:c.t with a tromen dons Stock of Goods. They are upon the shelves in hi- New Rooms, on Hill street, near 11.7.. tee r ..., Hotel, ready for customers. Ins Stock consists of every variety or LADIES' DRESS GOODS, DItY GOODS, GENERALLY, GROCERIES AND QUEEN SW A RE, HARDWARE AND GLASSWARE, CROCKERY AND CEDARWARE, BOOTS AND SIIOHS, HATS AND CAPS. And everything to be found in the ma,t exten , ,ive stores. His Stock is New and of the Best, and Hie public uie in vited to call and examine, free'of eltargo. 11 -1 01. - i - EVERYBODY TRY TIIE NEW STORE, On Hill Street, opposite Miles d Dorris' Office TUE BEST SUGAR and MOLASSES. COFFEE, TEA and CHOCOLATE, FLOUR, FISH, SALT and "VINEGAR, CONFECTIONERIES , CLUAU and. TaiiACCO, SPICES OF TUE BEST, AND BALI, KENDS, nutl•overy other article usually found in a Grocery Store Dings, Chemicals, Dye Stuff:, Paints, Varnishes, Oils and Sias. Turpentine, • Fluid, Alcohol, Glass and Putty, BEST WINE and BRANDY for medical purposes. /Mr, TILE" BEST PATENT MEDICI N ES, and a large number of articles too numerous to mention, The public generally will please call and examine for themselves and learn my prices, linntingdon, May 25,1858 ALSO- J. BRICKER o BRICK ER'S J. BILICKER'S MAINIMOTII STORE MAMMOTH STOP I•; m.A3nionr. IS VIE PLACE IS T[l PLACE IS TUE PLACE FOR. DRY GOODS, TIARDWARE, Sc FOR DRY GOODS, HARDWARE, Sc YOR DRY GOODS, HARDWARE, Sc TOVES ! STOVES ! STOVES? kj INDUSTRIAL STOVE WORKS, No. 33, North SEcoxo Street, oppottite Christ elotrch, PHIIADELPIIII.. The subscriber respectfnlly in forms his friends and the public generally that he lies taken the Store, at 210. 33, North Svat,7 Street, where he will be pleased to see his oil customers :vt friends. lle has now on hand a splendid assortment of PARLOR, ,TIALL, OFFICE, STORE and COOKING STOVES. of the latest and. most approved Rinds, at wholesale and 11'51. C. NIDIA.N, Ka. 33, North S•teenit SL. Phila. N.B.—Your particul:u• attention is invited to MEOEE'S PATENT GAS B VEINING WARMING and V ENTILATI STOVES, for Parlors, Offices, Stores, Halls, Cars. &c., which for economy, purety of air, and ease of management has no equal. W. C. N. tcr - •• Odd' Castings for all kinds of Stores, en hand. Se itember 15, ISsB.—ffin. lIUNTINGDON HOTEL. The subscriber respectfully announces to his friends and the public generally, that he leis leased that old and well established TA' LRN STAND, known as the, Huntingdon House. on the corner of Hill and Charles Street, in the Borough of Huntingdon.— He has fitted up the House in such a style as to. It - render it very comfortable for lodging Strangers and Tray elers. HIS TABLV, will always be stored with the best the sea son can am,rd, to snit the tastes and appetites of his guests. BIS BAR, will always be filled with Choice Liquors, and HIS STAI3LE always attended by careful and attentive Ostlers. trir , -He hopes by strict attention to business and a spirit of accommodation, to merit and receive Fiberl share ot public patronage. ATEEI. May Li, 1858—Iy. ALEX ANDRIA FOUNDRY ! The Alexandria Foundry has been bought by It. C. McGILL, and is in blast, FErtift: and have all kinds of Castings, Stoves, Ma-,) , chines,Plows, Kettles. &c., tic., which he .., i , 8 , 4 r „„„ will sel at the lowest prices. All kinds 'l4. of Country Produce and old Metal taken in exchange for ,Castings, at market prices April 7,1855, COUNTRY DEALERS can buy CLOTHING from mo in Huntingdon at WHOLESALE as cheap as they can in the cities, as I have a wholesale store in Philadelphia. Huntingdon, April 11, 1858. 11. ROMAN. TARNISH VARNISH I ! ALL KINDS, warranted good, for sale at BROWN'S hardware Store, Huntingdon, Pa. April 28, 185S-tf. HARD -WARE A Large Stock. just received, and for sale at BRICKER'S MA3IXIOTII STORE THE MAMMOTH STORE Is the place for Latest Styles of Ladies' Dress Goods RRICKER'S Mammoth Store is the o place to get the we rth of your money, in Dry Goods, Hardware, Groceries, &c., &c. kLASS Preserving Jars, different sizes, for sale cheap, by FISHER. Sr. 31:311.111TRIE. HEAT! For sale at 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. ...$1 50 , z;: , 00 4 :5 00 .... 00 500 700 S. S. SMITH IL C. AfcGILL D. P.OWIN'S $1 50 3 do. .s 50 . 1 00 . 2 00 .30J WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL, XIV. del.cc`9,gtinj. “I .411t1 NOT OLD.” I am not old—though years have cast Their shadows on my day; I am not old—though youth has passed On rapid wings away ; For in my heart a fountain flows, And round it pleasant thoughts repose, Ana sympathies and feelings high Spring like stars on evening's sky. I am not old—Time may have set His signet on my brow, And some faint furrows there have met, Which care may deepen now; Yet Love, fond love a chaplet weaves Of fresh young buds and verdant leaves, And still I fancy, I can twine Thoughts sweet as flowers that once were mine I am not obl—the snowy tinge That's fallen on my hair, What is it but a silver fringe That makes the head more fair! Sad contract, may be, to the brown Which used. to deck my early crown ; nut, lot the senile tokens stay, No impulse of my soul is gray. I am not old—though I moat leave This earth and he at rest; Soon, very soon, I will but grieve For those whom Love loves best. What through this fragile frame shall fade lii Age's cold and gloomy shade, I shall regain the light, and be Youthful in immortality. c itoq. [From the London Family Herald.] A TALE FOR TRUANT HUSBANDS " Where are you going, George ?" asked Mrs. "Wilson, as her husband rose from the tea table, and took his hat. o—l'm going out," was the careless re sponse. " But where ?" asked his wife. " What odds does it make, Emma?" re turned her husband. "I shall be back at my usual time." The young wife hesitated, and a quick flush overspread her face. She seemed to have made up her mind to speak plainly upon a subject which had lain uneasily upon her heart for some time, and she could not let the opportunity pass. It required an ef furt—Lut she persevered. " Let me tell you what odds it makes to me," she said in a kind but tremulous tone. "If I cannot have your company here at home, I should at least feel better if I knew where you were." " But you know that I am safe, Emma— and what more can you ask?" " I do not know that you are safe, George. I know nothing about you when you are away." "'Pooh ! pooh ! Would you have it that I am not capable of taking care of myself?" " Yua put a wrong construction upon my words, George. Love is always anxious when its dearest object is away. If I did not love you as I do, I might not be thus un easy. When you are at your place of busi ness, I never feelthus, because I know I can seek and find you at any moment ; but when you are absent during these long even iners, I get to wondering where you are.— Tan begin to feel lonesome ; and so one thought follows another, until I feel troubled and uneasy. Oh—if you would only stay with me a portion of your evenings!" " Aha—l thought that was what you were aiming at," said George, with a playful shake of the head. "You would have me itere every evening." " Well—can you wonder at it ?" returned Emma. "I used to be very happy when you came to spend an evening with me, be fore we were married ; and I know I should be very happy in your society, now." Ah," said George, with a smile, "those were business meetings. We were arranging then for the future." "And why not continue so to do, my hus band ? lam sure we could be as happy now as ever. If you will remember one of our plans was to make a HOME." " And havent we got one, Emma?" ' VT; have certainly a place in which to live, answered the wife, somewhat evasively. And it is our home," pursued George, " and," he added, with a sort of confident flourish, " home is the wife's peculiar prov ince. She has charge of it, and all her work is there ; while the duties of the husband call him to other scenes." " Well, I will admit that, so far as certain duties are concerned," replied Emma. "But you must remember that we both need relax ation from labor ; we need. time for social and mental improvement and enjoyment; and what time have we for this, save even ings? Why should not this be my home of an evening, as well as in the daytime and in the night ?" " Well—isn't it ?" asked George. " How can it be if you are not here ? What makes a home for children, if it be not the abode of the parents ? What home can a husband have where there is no wife? And—what real borne comforts can a wife enjoy where there is no husband ? You do not consider how lonesome I am, all alone here, during these long evenings. They are the very seasons when I am at leisure to en joy your companionship, and when you would be at leisure to enjoy mine, if it is worth enjoying. They are the seasons when the happiest hours of home life might be passed. Come—will you not spend a few evenings with me ?" " You see enough of me as it is," said the husband, lightly. " Allow me to be the best judge of that, George. You would be very lonesome here, all alone." " Not if it was my place of business, as it is of yours," returned the young man.— " You are used to staying here. All wives belong to home." BY DARK BENJAMIN HUNTINGDON, PA. Just remember, husband, that, previous to our marriage, I had pleasant society all the time. Of course, I remained at home much of my time ; but I had a father and mother there, and I had brothers and sisters there —and our evenings were happily spent.— Finally I gave all up for you. I left the old home and sought a home with my husband ; And now, have I not a right to expect some of your companionship? How would you like it to have me away every evening, while you were obliged to remain here alone ?" " Why—l should like it well enough." " Ah—but you would not be willing to try HE " Yes, I would," said George, at a ven ture. " Will you remain here every evening, next week, and let me spend my time among, my female friends ?" " Certainly I will," he replied; "and I as sure you I shall not be so lonesome as you imagine." With this the husband went out, and was soon among his friends. He was a steady, industrious man, and loved his wife truly ; but, like thousands of others, he had contrac ted a habit of spending his evenings abroad, and thought it no harm. His only practical idea of home seemed to be, that it was a place which his wife took care of, and where he could eat, drink and sleep, as long as he could pay for it. In short, he treated it as a sort of private boarding house, of which his wife was landlady; and if he paid all the bills he considered his duty done, His wife had fre quently asked him to stay at home with her, but she had never ventured upon any argu ment before, and he had no conception of how much she missed him. She always seemed happy when he came home, and he supposed she could always be so. Monday evening came, and George Wilson remained true to his promise. His wife put on her bonnet and shawl, and he said he would remain and keep house. " What will you do when I am gone ?" Em ma asked. Oh—l shall read and sing, and enjoy myself generally." " Very well," said Emma. "I shall be back early." The wife went out, and the husband was left alone. He had an interesting , book and he began to read it. He read - till eight o'clock, and then he began to yawn, and Look frequently at the clock. The book did not interest him as usual. Ever and anon he would come to a passage which he knew would please his wife, and instinctively he turned as though be would read it aloud ; but there was no wife to hear ie. Ai; eight he rose from his chair and began to pace the floor, and whistle. Then he went and got his flute, and played several of his favorit airs. After this he got a chess board, and played a game with an imaginary partner. Then he walked the floor and whistled again. Finally, the clock struck nine, and his wife returned. "Well George," said she, "I am hack in g ood time. How have you enjoyed your self ?" "Capitally !" returned the husband. I had no idea it was so late. I hope you have en joyed yourself." "Oh, splendidly !" said his wife, "I had no idea how much enjoyment there was away from borne. Home is a dull place after all —isn't it ?" "Why—no—l can't say that it is, returned George, carelessly. "In fact," he added, "I rather like it." " I am glad of that," retorted Emma, "for we shall both enjoy ourselves now. You shall have a nice comfortable week of it." George -winced at this, but ho kept his countenance, and determined to stand it out. On the next evening Emma prepared to go away again. "I shall be back in good time," she said. " Where are you going ?" her husband asked. "Oh, I can't tell exactly. I may go to sev eral places." So George Wilson was left alone again and he tried to amuse himself as Wore; but he found it a difficult task. Ever and anon he would cast his eyes upon that empty chair, and the thought would come,," How pleasant it would be if she were here 1" The clock finally struck nine, and: he began to listen for the step of his wife. Half an hour more slipped by, and he became very nervous and uneasy. " I declare," he muttered to himself, after he had listened for some time in vain, " this is too bad. She ought not to stay out so late 1" But he happened to remember that he often remained away much later than that, so he concluded that he must make the best of it. At a quarter to ten Emma came home. "A little late, am I not ?" she said, look ing up at the clock. "But I fell in with some old friends. How have you enjoyed yourself?" " First-rate," returned George bravely.— "I think home 'is a capital place." "Especially when a man can have it all to himself," added the wife, with a sidelong glance at her husband. But he made no reply. On the next evening, Emma prepared to go out as before • but this time she kissed her husband ere le went, and seemed to hes itate. • _ "Where do you intend going ?" George asked in an undertone. " I may drop into see Uncle John," replied Emma. " However, you won't be uneasy.— You'll know I'm safe." " Oh, certainly," said her husband ; but when left to his own reflections he began to ponder seriously upon the subject that pre sented for consideration. He could not read —he could not play—nor enjoy himself in any way, while that chair was empty.— In short, he found that home had no real comfort without his wife. The one thing needed to make his home cheerful was not present. "I declare," ho said to himself, "I did not think it would be so lonesome. And can it be that sho feels as I do, when she is hero f ..:. R yxt. ..1 ..' , l - .• . .... r- - ..- - ' ,, W , c -,. • c•:;- : '''.:•.k :711... ;1'. . ' . :,';', .I‘. ' '-- .;!tr,. 0 ' .; -PERSEVERE.- DECEMBER 8, 1858. alone? It must be so," he pursued thought fully. "It is just as she says. Before we were married she was very happy in her childhood's home. ller parents loved her, and her brothers and sisters loved her, and they did all they could to make her comfor table." After this he walked up and down the room several times, and then stopped again and communed with himself. " I can't stand this I" said he. "I should die in a week. If Emma were only here, I think I could amuse myself very well. How lonesome and dreary it is ! And only eight o'clock ! I declare—l've a mind to walk down as far as Uncle John's and see if she is there. It would be a relief if I only saw her. I won't go in. She shan't know yet that I hold out so faintly." George Wilson took another turn across the room, glanced once more at the clock, and then took his hat and went out. He locked the door after him, and then bent his steps towards Uncle John's. It was a beautiful moonlight night, and the air was keen and bracing. He was walking along, with his eyes bent upon the pavement, when he heard a light step approaching him. He looked up, and—he could not be mistaken—saw his wife. His first impulse was to avoid her, but she had recognized him. "George," she said, in surprise, "is this you ?" "It is," was the response. "And you do not pass your evenings at home ?" " This is the first time I have been out, Emma, upon my word ; and even now I have not been absent from the house ten minutes. I merely came out to take the fresh air.— But where are you going ?" "I am going home, George. Will• you go with me ?" Certainly," returned tlie husband. She took his arm, and they walked home in 2i . lenee. When Emma had taken off her things, she sat down in her chair, and looked at the clock. "You have come home early to night," remarked George. The young wife looked up into her hus band's face, and, with an expression half smiling and half tearful, she answered, " will confess the truth George ; I have given up the experiment. I managed to stand it last evening, but I, could not bear it through to-night. "When I thought of you here all alone, I. wanted to be with you. It didn't seem right. I haven't enjoyed myself at all. I have no home but this." " Say you so !" cried George, moving his chairwife's side, and taking one of her hands. "Then let me make my confession. I have stood it not a whit better. When I left the house this evening, I could bear it no longer. I found that this was no home for me, while my sweet wife was absent. I thought I would walk down by Uncle John's, and see your face, if possible. I had gazed upon your empty chair till my heart ached." Ile kissed her as. he spoke, and then added, while she reclined her head upon his arm, " I have learned a very good lesson. Your presence here is like the bursting forth of the sun after a storm ; and if you love me as I love you—which of course, I cannot doubt— my presence may afford some sunlight for you. At all events, our next experiment skall be to that effect. I will try and see how much home comfort we can find while we are both here to enjoy." Emma was too happy to express her joy in words ; but she expressed. it neverthe less, and in a manner, too, not to be mista ken. The next evening was spent at home by both husband and wife, and it was a season of much enjoyment. In a short time George began to realize how much comfort was to be fund in a quiet and peaceful home ; and the longer he enjoyed this comfort, the more plainly did he see and understand the simple truth, that it takes two to make a happy home, and that if the wife is one party, and the husband must be the other. The book of Job is generally regarded as the most . perfect specimen of the poetry of the Hebrews. It is alike picturesque in the declination of individual phenomena, and ar tistically skilful in the didactic arrangements of the whole work. In all the modern lan guages in which the book of Job has been translated, its images, drawn from the natu ral scenery of the East, leave a deep impres sion on the mind. " The Lord walketh in the height of the waters, on the ridges of the waves, towering high beneath the force of the wind." "The morning red has colored the margins of the earth, and variously formed the covering of the clouds, as the hand of man holds the yielding clay." The habits of animals are described, as for instance, those of the wild ass, the horse, the buffalo, the rhinoceros, the crocodile, the ea gle and the ostrich. We see "pure ether spread, during the scorching heat of the South wind, as a plaited mirror over the parched desert." The poetic literature of the Hebrews is not deficient in variety of forms; for while the Hebrew poetry breathes a tone of war like enthusiasm from Joshua to Samuel, the little book of the gleaner Ruth presents us with a charming and exquisite picture of na ture. Goethe, at the period of his enthusi asm for the East, spoke of it "as the loveli est of epic and idyl poetry which we pos sess."—Humbolt's Cosmos. A good anecdote of Professor Ages- Biz is told in a new volume in press at Bos ton. The Professor bad declined to deliver a lecture before some lyceum or public soci ety, on account of the inroads which previ ous lectures given by him had Made upon his studies and habits of thought. The gen tlemen who had been deputed to invite him, continued to press the invitation, assuring him that the society were ready to pay him liberally for his services. "That is no in ducement to me," replied Agassiz ; "I can not afford to waste my time iu making money." The Book of Job. Editor and Proprietor. The Lowly and the Loving " The alms most precious man can givo to man, Aro kind and lovely words. Nor come £1.711i99 Warm sympathising tears to eyes that scan Thu world aright. The only error is Neglect to do the little good we can." Love has often more influence than talent. The last appeals to the reason, the first to the affections—the last speaks to the intellect, but the first goes straight to the heart. "It is beautiful," exclaims a Swedish author, "to believe ourselves loved, especially by those whom we love and value." Yes, it is beautiful, certainly, but woe to us if we neg lect the responsibility attached to it. When God permits us to win the regards of others, he places in our bounds a sweet and powerful influence which we should he very careful to use in his service and for his glory. Human affections, sanctified by the divine blessing, may be made the instrument of much good ; wanting that blessing, it is but a shining light without life or warmth. The pious Jonathan Edwards describes a Christian as being like " such a little flower as we see in the Spring of the year ; low and humble on the ground ; opening its bosom to receive the pleasant beams of the son's glo ry, rejoicing, as it were, in a calm rupture, diffusing around a sweet fragrance, standing peacefully and lowly in the midst of other flowers. The world may think nothing of the little flower—they maynot even notice it, but, nevertheless, it will be diffusing around a sweet fragrance upon all who dwell within its lovely sphere." It has been truly said that the amiable, the loving and the unselfish, almost insensi bly dissuade from evil, and persuadt , to good, all who come within the reach of their sooth ing power ; that no one can advance alone toward the happiness or misery of another world ; and little can the most insignificant of beings conjecture how extensive may have been the beneficial or ill effects which have attended their own apparently unimportant conduct. "In the heraldy of heaven," writes Bishop Horne, "goodness precedes greatness ; so on earth it is far more powerful. The lowly and the loving may frequently do more in their own limited sphere than the gifted.— To yield constantly in little things, begets the same yielding spirit in others, and ren ders life happier. We must never forget that we are all appointed to some station which fill in this life by the wise Disposer of events, who knows what is suited to our va rious capacities and talents much better than we do ourselves, and who would not have placed us there if He had not something for us to do. now few there are who live up to their own power of being useful. Earth is our dwelling place, where each has his or her appointed sphere of usefulness, their mission of love and duty, as they pass homeward to heaven." The Book of Ruth It is said that Dr. Samuel Johnson, on one occasion - had gathered around him that select circle of literary friends who often met to hear the recitations of each other's produc tions of•genius, vr to listen to such results of literary discovery as anyone might find among the unknown relics stored away in the corners of great libraries or among restored fragments of ancient learning, which were now and then brought to light. At this interview, the celebrated critic and essayist read to his friends what he said was a pastoral in prose, or what they might call a Bucolic or a Georgic, if they could call it a name, and locate its authorship and charac ters. After reading from some manuscripts or scattered leaves, the entire book of Ruth, his literary associates were enraptured with admiration. They inquired where such au original and matchless production had origi nated ; how it came to be known ; and they declared that in all their classical readings they had never seen it, nor the like of it, and that such a relic of literature was now destined to immortality. The reader at length told them that this literary gem could be found in their printed bibles, far back among the unread records of the Jewish judges and kings ; and that in neglecting the ancient chronicles for heathen classic and for modern literature, they had overlooked the fountain of the purest learning. It is one of the peculiar excellencies of these ancient Scripture narratives, that their portraits of character are true to life—are at once recognized by the lovers of what is genuine in nature, even in the remotest times and countries. Full three thousand years have passed since the events and persons of this narrative formed a part of the then acting age ; and yet so fresh are these strokes of nature, that artists have vied with each other, in bringing out these features as the choicest subjects of their genius, whether in poetry, sculpture or painting.—Southern Baptist. TIIE GOOD WIFE.-A farmer was once bles sed with a good natured, contented wife ; but it not being in the nature of man to be satis fied, he one day said to a neighbor, he really wished he could hear his wife scold once, for the novelty of the thing. Whereupon his sympathizing neighbor advised him to go to the woods and get a load of crooked sticks, which would certainly make her as cross as he could desire. Accordingly, the farmer collected a load of the most ill-shaped, crook ed, crotchety materials that were ever known under the name of fuel. This he deposited in the place taking care that his spouse should have accession to no other wood.— Day after day passed without a complaint.— At length the pile was consumed. "Well, wife," said the farmer, "I am go ing after more wood, I'll get another load just such as I got last time." " Oh, yes, Jacob," she replied, "it will be nice if you will ; for such crooked, crotchety wood as you brought before DOES lie around the pot so nicely." A Dutchman thinks that "oneslay ish de pesht policy, but it keeps a man tam poor!" —Mynheer should mix it. Vii" To prevent the second glass from in toxicating a person—never take the first. SPEECIIES.-.A Good Hin!for Preachersancl PuliticianN.—Mr. Jefferson said he bad been in deliberative bodies with Gen. Washington and Dr. Franklin, .and that he bad never heard either of them make a speech more than fifteen minutes long, and then always to the point. He adds that no members possessed more influence, or who were listened to with more profound attention. Mr. Jefferson him self, we believe, was never noted for much speaking, although every speech he made told among the members. One secret of Patrick Henry's almost superhuman elo quence was that be never spoke without be had something to say, and always stopped when he had gotten through. Mr. Madison and Chief Justice Marshall were famous for the strength and compression of theirspeech es. In general, it may be set down as an in contestable fact, that when a man makes an long speech, he has not digested his subject properly, either from indolence, from want of time or from lack of capacity. Compres sion requires study, and is the most difß cult of all the arts connected with either writing or speaking. Mr. Webster, in hisfa,- mous speech in the India Rubber case, apolo gised to the Court fur its length, on the plea of want of time to condense his ideas, NO. 24. SEEING FAIR PLAY.—Strolling leisurely about Uncle Sam's big ship-yard ,in Washing ton, the other day, we observed a regular hard-weather, sailor-looking chap, from a man-o'-war, who, in turn, was watching two men dragging a large cross-cut saw through a huge live oak log. The saw was dull, the log terribly hard, and there they went—see saw, see-saw—pull, push, push, pull. Jack studied the matter over awhile, until he came to the conclusion they were pulling to see who would get the saw, and as one was a monstrous big chap, while the other was a little fellow, Jack decided to see fair play ; so giving the big one a clip under the ear that capsized him end over end, he jerked the saw out of the log, and giving it to the small one, sung out: "Now run, you beggar!" SYDNEY SMITH ON ENJOYMENT.—The great wit and reviewer never penned wiser and tru er words than these : "Mankind are always happier for having been happy ; so that if you make them hap py now you make them happy twenty years hence by the memory of it. A childhood passed with a due mixture of rational indul gence, under fond and wise parents, diffuses over the whole of life a feeling of calm pleas ure, and in extreme old age, is the very last remembrance which time can erase from the mind of man. No enjoyment, however in considerable, is confined to the present mo ment. A man is the happier for life from having once made an agreeable tour, or lived for any length of time with pleaSant people, or enjoyed any considerable interval of inno cent pleasure; which contributes to render old men so inattentive to . the scenes before them, and carries them back to a world that is past and to scenes never to be renewed again." WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR ?-A man was angry with his wife, either because she talked too much, or for some reason or other, and resolved not to speak to her for a long, long time. He kept his resolution for a few days very strictly. One evening he is lying in bed and wishes to sleep ; he draws his night-cap over his ears, and his wife may say what she will, he hears nothing of it. The wife then takes a candle, and carries it to every nook and corner in the room ; she removed stools, chairs, and tables, and looks very carefully behind them. The husband sits up in bed, and gazes inquiringly at her movements; ho thinks that the din must have an end at last; but he is mistaken, his wife keeps on looking and searching. The husband loses all pa tience, and cries, " What are you looking for ?" " For your tongue," she answers ; " and now that I have found it, tell me why you are angry." Hereupon they became good friends again. Tax BELLs or Moscow.—Bayard Taylor,. in an exceedingly interesting letter from Moscow, gives an account of the great . bells of that city—the largest and most costly in the world. The Russians have a peculiar penchana for large bells. The largest among them, which is on the Tower of the Kremlin, was east by order of the Empress Anne, in 1730, and weighs one hundred and twenty tons. It is twenty-two feet high, and twenty one in diameter at the bottom. It cost one million and a half of dollars. There is an other bell near it which weighs sixty-four tons. It takes three men to ring its tongue. It is only rung three times a year, then all the bells are silent. It is said the vibration of the air is like the simultaneous discharge of a hundred cannons. A French woman slides, a Spanish woman glides, an American lady trots, an English woman tramps with the strong de termination of a forlron hope grenadier—we mean after a certain age—because, up to that certain uncertainty, English girls, at least the unreal ones, consider it their duty to put on with other attributes of the angel —such as living on air, doting on moonlight, kissing babies in an aggravating way—an angel walk, which is a sort of dancing gam bol, significative of tripping over clouds, and of a gushing, redundant, laughing innocence and heedlessness, very destructive to a ba chelor's peace of mind. YANKEE ALL Ovmt.—Bayard Taylor says that a Yankee in walking in St. Petersburg, one muddy day, met the Grand Duke Con stantino. The sidewalk was not wide enough fur two to pass, and. the street was very deep in filth, whereupon the American took a sil ver rouble from his pocket, shook it in his closed hand and cried out "Crown or tail?" "Crown" guessed the Grand Duke. "Your Highness has won" said the American, look ing at the rouble, and stepping into the mud. The next day the Yankee was invited• by the Grand Duke to dinner. r. A. Connecticut schoolmaster asked alad from Newberryport— "How many Gods are there?" The boy, after scratching his head for some time replied— "l don't know how many you have in Con necticut, but we have none in Rhode Island." Vlr'" Scatter the germs of the beautiful," as the poet said when he kicked his wife and children out of doors. Bribery—Offering you a pair of lips-- for a kiss. Justifiable Corruption—Taking the bribe. il-.,•a-Keep your temper in disputes. The cool hammer fashions the rod-hot iron into any shape needed. XE - -3-There is iron enough in the blooll of 42 men to make a ploughshare of the weight of 24 pounds.