I AMERICAN VOLUNTEER. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING BY. John B. Biaiton. p tB t /■V, i - ' TERMS. ■«te nfl _ n „TpTiow,—Ono Dollar and Fifty Cents, Tiro Dollars it paid within the Shlr-' ahd Two hollars and Fifty Cents, if not paM wUhin tho " terms will bo rig- Mlv adhered to In every instance.. No sub acHnrton discontinued until all arrearages are Sunless at the option of the Editor. • *ADvia TI3E)IK!)TS — Accompanied by tlio cash, and not exceeding one square, will ho inserted ithroc times for One Dollar, and twenty-flvo cents (or each additional insertion. Those of a greab (cr length in proportion. ' Jon-FniNTiNQ —Snell as Hand-bills, Posting jills, Pamphlets, Blanks, Labels, &0., &c.,oxe nited with accuracy and at the shortest notice. futiral, , MIGHT SONG. #“ I>r WILLIE E. PABOB Tlip evening’s sort shimmer " Is falling around— Anddow, like a mantle, , Descends on the ground. The last gentle sunbeam Has faded away— Which tthged for a moment, : Slade, blossom and spray. if Tiio'robin’s last carol * Has died on the air, " Like the incense of south, . As offered in prayer. The dove and the blue bird . Have sunk to their nest. Their twitter is silenced, .They’re safely at rest. The glade and the heather. In silence serene, Rest under the moonbeams , That fall on the scene. The rill’s gentle ripple Sounds soft on the ear, Like the sigh that succeeds The fall of a tear. The far distant murmur v Of Ocean is home On the breath of the wind ■ ■ Through the, silence forlorn; Andiar to .the nor’ward Aurora appears. Like the Genii of love . To calm all. our fears. . The sigh of the mourner Is stilled and low, For the angel of sleep Is staying all woe. The head of the sleeper . Calm halos susround, For angels, good angels. In vigils ate found. Ob! groat is.tlio Author, Tho God we adore— And may. mortals bless Him And praise Him the more. Who gives us all blessings That hover around, ; And watches the sparrow , That falls to the ground. DARE TO STAND ALOSM. ’Be flrmj bo boldj bo strong, be (rue, And dare to stand alone; Strive for tho right, what’cr you do, Though helpers there are none. Nay, bend not to tho’awelling surge, Of popular sneer and wrong; . ’Twill bear thee on to ruin’s-verge, With current wild and strong. g Stand for. the. rights Humanity Ie ’ Implores with groans and tears, Jte Thine aid to break tho festering links ||| . That bind her toiling years. Wm Stand-for thc right! Tho 1 falsehood reign, |j| And proud Hps coldly sneer, ' A poisoned arrow cannot wound. . H A conscience pure and-clear. W Stand-for.tho right!-and with clean hands W Exalt the true on high ; Tliou’lt find warm sympathizing hearts ! Among tile passers by. I Mon who have seen, and thought, and fcjt— I ' Yet could not hardly dare ft The battle’s brunt, hut by thy sido Will ever dangers share. . ji Stand for the right!—proclaim it loud, I * : Thou’lt find an answering lone li Xu honest hearts, and thou no more iße doomed to stand alone! ~ Mmllmmm. THE MODERN YOUNG LADY. The public are experiencing a vast number of f Sensations now-a-days on the much agitated . subjefct of Woman. Her rights—her wrongs— ■ her troubles and her trials, are being sounded 1 forth from the brazen lungs of scores of Wo man's Associations, Ameliorating Conventions, . and Debating Socielies, Now, is it not right ~.. and fair tluu somebody should hand down to I posterity an exact daguerrolype of the fair creature for whom all the revolution is being Wrought ? We are not going to portray the ideal Wo men of essayists and poets—nor the angelic Woman to whom rhymers address florid effu sions in execrable blank - verse —nor the real woman, whose pure and unwearying devotion burns unheralded beside the hearth of Home— simply tAe modern youngludy, whom you may meet in nearly every dwelling in New York — ay, and throughout the United States, too, if you choose to seek for her. One might think, from the frequent allusions to ‘frqsy cheeks" in our national litcrature.thal we abound in such natural advantages,but that isn’t the case. The complexion of the modern « young lady isa dull lead white—like tallow, or !;i'.,discolored wax—her eyes look as though they g had been boiled, and are about as devoid of ex- f l,l '; preasion as the optics of any wax doll in a shop : window. Her hair, which she generally wears in a profusion of bushy ringlets, is screwed up if in bits of old newspaper all night and half the next day. Her lips are pale, and her teeth are C: black and decaying—the result of eating too % much candy, cloves, a.nd cardamon seeds, of kr which the modern young lady generally keeps a good supply in dier. pocket. Her shape is “ex- V •"'"""■'—So »n otir female friends say—by >i which we understand that she is tall and slim. J\,like'ah overgrown celery stalk, and about as large around the excruciating waist ns thedia —wof a moderately.sized bean pole. is ‘extravagantly fond of reading;’ knows rofi and Tom Jloore by heart, and peru ihe yellow covered literature as fast ns it from the press. Indeed, she sometimes poetry herself, of whiclt we can devise no comparison than a quantity of thrice di iilk. She considers Shakespeare a bore, iorial reading “makes her head ache!’’ health is extremely delicate ; strange to te is almost martyrized with those horrid dies in the morning Whenever she lias ! and sipped water ices until midnight the ; before. ; She is otliicted with “strange i" and unaccountable fluttorings of the and any little excitement throws her into hysterics. Ofodurse, the modern young oh't believe in daily exercise—it would death of her to walk a half a block, im ire-isa prospector meeting Theodore Ex- and thenaho will walk - 'without a mur . fat** r£P* andthcn saw & spider and nearly fainted ! sho don’t know whether soup is made frying pan or a tea kettle ; cant make fmimm M I Q *■ BJr 18,, I t|B B B ' ' - H. ’ II J f >( 3 f|i S I li B- BY JOHN B. BBATTON. YOL. 45. bread; don’t know the use of a dish pan, and couldn't roast a turkey if her life depended upon it. It is so refined to be ignorant on these sub jects! ■ She never sews—this part of the household economy, together with the kitchen responsibil ities rests upon the much enduring shoulders of her tired looking mother, who never coriiplains, however, for “Arrabella is so genteel !• If a button comes off the parental garments, Papa never thinks of asking Arrabella to sew it on. If Peter’s toes make a breach in the stocking department, he never dreams of requiring his sister’s .aid; and if you asle where the mother is, you are told she is repairing Arabella's clothes! She dotes on music—spends three or four hours every day on strumming bn the piano, and warbling sentimental ballads;. she draws divinely, and there are several monstrosities in crayon and water colors, hanging up .framed and glazed on the parlor walla in everlasting ev idence of her genius." She makes wax flowers and does crotchet work. • She was “finished” at Madame —r -’s fashionable seminary, where she learned to speak ungrammatical French, and to dance so “sweetly.” There’s no denying that she has received “every advantage.” She can’t bear the country—it is so dull and stupid—she abominates a quiet domestic eve ning at home, because it is so prosy! When her weary old father asks her to play a tunc for him, she disposes of the subject summarily and sharply, “she is too tired;” but when Mr. Bev erly Brainless comes in a few minutes, after ward, rendolent of Frangipanni and rose oil, and repeats the request, she replies with, smil ing alacrity, and sings and strums until you would think the piano was coming literally to pieces." She goes to church, regularly every Sunday, bearing a prayep bpok bound in gold and velvet, and while the preacher is preaching, she takes ah inventory of every bonnet, dress, and collar in the sacred edifice; she should think Mrs. Jenkins would be ashamed ,to come week after week in that old-Lcghorn bonnet: is sure that if /ter father- was as rich as tho Misses Atkins’ papa, she wouldn't wear those horrid dyed over silks to church—wonders why Tom Sea ward don’t look this way; and is forced to have resource to her smelling bottle when the two poor Miss Browns go by her. pew ;in neat gingham dresses. , llow vulgar! She never thanks any gentleman who gives up his seat to her in a railroad car—is very angry because the infirm old gentleman who sits next to her don’t squeeze himself up into a fraction of no room at all to give her crinoline a fairer field, and puts perfumed handkerchief to her aristocratic nose if simple calico approaches her rustling silks and gossamer lace! Adores children whenever she con get up a picturesque effect by so doing, but is very cross to her little brothers and sis ters at home.. The modern young lady always grows deli cate as the; Saratoga season approaches, and talks about melancholy dooms and early death. VVherefipori papa leeks incredulous—he’s been caught more than once in that trap 1 But he is at length subdued by a skillfully gotten up se ries of hysterics, vapors, sobs, and entreaties, ■and Miss Afrabella goes oft to Saratoga, while , the rest of . the family economize pitifully at home, and an extra wrinkle grows by degrees on papa's forehead, down In his dusty counting room on Pulton strfeet. . Here she meets a young gcnllcmnn equally well stocked with sentimentality and silliness; She falls in love with his distingue graces and. liyacinthine curls; with his quotations of Alex ander Smith, and his agreeable conversations about the moonlight, music, and so forth; and he with her aptitude at the redowa and the sim pering smiles with which she listens to his whispered nothings. After a series of prelimi nary softness, he falls on one knee in a roman- tic manner, and declares his everlasting pas sion. Then follows an episode of white ribbon, shopping, snow colored kid gloves, and orange blossoms, and the young couple,, both of whom know about ns much as an intelligent calf,start hand on the journey of life. How they'lb get along as travelling companions, wo leave the public to imagine. Reader, this is an accurate delineation.sketch ed from real life—don't you admire the exquis ite character of our Modern Young Lady?— Life Illustrated. The Stub-Tocrl Boots.' A certain party, whose names it is unneces sary to mention, were camped out West near the Des Moines improvement. They had a large tent fitted up very comfortably, and the Iloosiers about there were in the habit of drop ping in and making themselves perfectly at homo. One afternoon, one of the party, O.was sitting straddle of a trunk, with a glass before him, shaving,, and a pair of stub toed boots sit ting on the trunk before him—not such stubs as the fancy used to wear, but different in eve ry way. You may form- some idea of their shape by the doctor saying that the “shoemak er who made them was too poor to buy a last, and therefore must have made them over his lap-stone.” 0. had not.been engaged over five minutes, when in comes one of the hoosiers.and leisurely taking a seat, commenced taking a good survey. After endeavoring to draw out one or two of the party, and finding “no go,” his gaze 'at length rested on pur friend O.’s shoes. Thinking he had a good subject fur discoursing on, he said: “I say; stranger, how did the toes of them ’ar (pointing to hisshoes) ever git drawed up so 1” C. got up and. looked at him a minute, and then, in a rather unpleasant tone of voice, said: "Sir, I drove the toes of those boots,.ns you see, by kicking men out of this.tent for asking I lupuuvuv tjupovivov The fellow did .not stay a great while after lhat, but moved out witlahis face towards 0., with bis,eyes fixed firmly on the great stbb-toed boots. . K 5” An absent wife is thus advertised for : “ Jane, your absence will ruin, all. Think of your husband—your parents—yburtf children. Keturn—return—all may well—happy. At any rate, inclose the key of the cupboard where the gin is.” K 5” Hero is a sum in addition for you to work out. It will require dilligonco and caro, and admit of no wasted time: Add.to your faith, virtue; to your virtue, .knowledge j to knowledge, temperance; to temperance, pa tience; to patience, godliness; to godliness, brotherly kindness; to brotherly kindness, charity. IC7“ Let every young person bear in mind that the government of the passion is, of all things, the moat conducive of happiness and prosperity. Remember that fools only allow their passions to nils-— suffer much rather than fight. 0: 7- “ I say, Mick, what sort of potatoes are those you are planting?” ‘‘Raw ones, to bo sure —your Honor wouldn’t bo thinking I would plant boiled ones V- ■' “I tell you, sir, that Mr. Airblast is nothing bat a windbag—l wouldn’t give two strawsfor his opinion!” “And I tell you, sir,” snapped the “Indepen dent,” “that if he be, the fact proves nothing against his success. The only question is,is he a bag of the right soft and of the right size? It is very easy for you and I to sit here and call a fellow a wind-bag, (as we. know ho. is.) but as far as 1 can judge the world wants wind more than anything else. It don’t seem to need peo ple who thoroughly investigate things, looking at all sides of the question—but its railroads, banks, parties, churches, and so on. call for wind and superficialness continually—for some body who can swell and fume and,bluster,mak- ■ ing a grand spread and appearance for a while, until his wind bag collapses, and he sinks to his proper level, through the lack of genuine, substantial merit and backbone. It is this world’s insatiable taste for wind-bags, my dear fellow, that causes such a crop of ill-managed corporations* half-baked merchants, incompe tent mechanics,-and over idolized ministers. The world is sure to take these people, for a time, at their own estimate, and is terribly dis appointed when the wind of their favorite es capes, as escape it will.if they live long enough. But in their palmy season they are great men. There is nothing that they can’t do, nothing that people think they can’t do. They lead folks by the nose, wheresoever they Will, blind leaders of the blind, and they generally tumble themselves and their followers into some ditch, or other more or less disagreeable^ No.'niy boy, it is no use to sneer at a man as being a bag of wind, unless for your own pri vate satisfaction; fori tell you he is just the thing the world wants in most cases.. Nay. there are times when wind is really uselul. I have known people with scarcely twb ideas in their heads, but wilh the peculiar sort of wind that the case required, who not only attained wonderful success in certain ways, but who maintained themselves and their wind to the last, and finally died uncollapsed ornaments to society. Practically, it is no more a demerit to be a windbag than to be a man, if one can judge by immediate results and outside opin ion. Wind bags do most of the world’s work, after some fashion brother, and it is very pro per they should have the world’s good word and as much of its money as they can get and keep. To be sure, they are ,only wind bags after all So saying, the “Independent” stumped-oft, striking his cane against the pavement at every stop. —Boston Post., . , A Brave Young Uncle. A correspondent of the Pittsburg Post relates the following touching incident: “As. we left Pittsburg in tho cars, we observed a small boy named Stitt, about 12 years of age, poorly clad, but very intelligent, having with him an infant ten months old, the child, of his sister, who'died a few weeks ago. The, lad brought the infant from lowa city, where the mother died, and was on his way to Harrisburg. Tho young uncle had oared for arid nursed it all the way —a weighty charge for one. so; young,... It would not, perhaps,"have been so much remark ed had a young girl been the custodian of the young babe; but here was a mere babe putting' away childish things,'and assuming all the cares and responsibility of a parent, during.a journey of a thousand miles at' least. The pas sengers manifested the greatest interest in the little wayfarer and his charge, the ladies espeo-. tally in turn relieving the lad of_his burden, as he appeared to be almost exhausted with his long journey. Such constancy and manliness in one of such youthful years is nqtoftcn exhib ited, and certainly well deserves "the name of heroism. Bodgin' Hie Hatter, . The St. Louis papers are telling a good story of an individual who purchased a hat in a store of a tradesman named Dodgion. The article was got in the absence of the proprietor, and the purchaser left the store, entirely forgetting (by mistake, of course) to pay for the aforesaid ‘tile.’ The trader, upon hearing the (acts, started for the levee in hot pursuit of the delin quent. Upon overhauling him the following scene occurred: “See here, sir, I wish to speak to you.” “Move on.” "I am Dodgion, the hatter.” “That’s my fix.” “I tell you, I am Dodgion, the hatter." “So am 1,.l am dodgin’ the hatter, too—and very likely we are both of us dodgin’ the same chap.” ■ The scene ended with a ‘striking’ tableaux,in which Mr. Diddler found himself considerably ‘mixed up’ with “Dodgoin, the hatter.” A Letter for Dennis.—“Hillo. Misther Postmaster, and is there iver a letter here for Dennis O’Flatherty ?” “ I believe there is,” said the postmaster, stepping back and producing the letter. “ And will you be so kind as to, rado it to me ; seein’l had-the misfortune to be edicated to rode niver a bit “To be sure,” said the accommodating post master. He then opened to, read the epistle, which was from the “old country,” concerning his re lations, &o. When he had finished, Dennis ob served-: “ And what would you be axin for tho post age on that letter ?” “Fifty cents.” “ And its cheap enough your honor, but as I think of axin ye to trust, just kape the letter for pay ; and say Misther, if I'd call in, one of these days, would j’e write an answer to it?” , aJ~ A rCffmmio young lady fell the other day into the river and came very near drown ing. but succor being fortunately at hatid, she was drawn out senseless and carried home- On cuming to, she declared to her family that she must marry him who payed her. V Impossible,” said her papa. “ What, is he already married ?” “ Wasn’t it that interesting young man who lives hero in the neighborhood , “ Dear me, .no—lt vyag_thaJJewfoundland dog.”. O” A writer in Blackwood says that every man who is not a monster, a mathematiciao.hr a mad philosopher, is a. slave of some woman. 0°'"“ I’m afraid I shall comb to want,” said an old lady to a young gentleman. ‘.‘ I have come to want already,” was the reply. “I wan’t your daughter!” Tho old lady opened her eyes. , , Happiness. —There are two' things which will make us happy in this life, if we attend to theip. The first is never to vex.ourselves about what we can’t help: and the second, never to vex ourselves about what we can help. OCT* An ill-natured editor says the women all use paint and bo sets his face against it. “OtJB OOHNTBT—MAYIT ALWAYS BB BIGHTT —BUT BIGHT OB WRONG, OUB COUNTRY.” CAR WIND DAGS. isle; -pa;, THURSDAY, august 5, jsss. DAILY DUTIES. Our daily paths 1 with thorps or flow its "We can at will bestrew them, What bliss would gild tho passing hours Xf we but rightly knew them. Tho way of life .is rough at ibest; But briars yield the roses, So that which yields to joyjand rest, Tho hardest path discloses. The weeds that oft we’ve east away, Their simple beauty scorning, Would form a wreath of purest ray, And prove tho best adorning. So in our daily path, ’twero well , To call each gift a treasure, However slight, where love can dwell With file renewing pleasure ! A EOMANCE, Some fourteen years ago, an Englishman, named Mark Knight, married Cborlotta -, in Syracuse, N. Y. Mark, at tho lime of his marriage, was fifty-four years of ago, and. bis wife aeVnteon. One child—a girl—was tho fruit of this union. She ,was : namod Charlotte Elizabeth Kingdom Knight. About the time tho child was;a year old, Mark Knight got a divorce from bis wife for.adnllvy, and the court decreed to him the care and custody of thq child. Tho old man was in very modofats cir cumstances, yet' ho provided well for bis little Charlotte, clothed her, as handsomely as lijs means would;permit,.and when she had attained proper ago, sent her. to school; On tho 4th of July, 1855, the school to which Charlotte belonged bad a picnic. She was dressed for the occasion, and accompanied the children to file woods; but she never, returned to. her father’s house. Her mother, since Mrs. Bruce with the .aid of some of her relatives, ah ducied tho child, and bringing her to Cleveland. took board , in. a, family, named H , who figures prominently in the latter phase of this story. Sometime in the year 1857,' Mrs. Bruce went tp Cincinnati, leaving Charlotte in charge of this man H——-, who seems to have conceiv ed for her, young as she is, a passion as violent, as unfortunate. Sometime afterwards, Mrs. ! Bruce fearful something might occur whereby, she might loss her child, wrote to Charlotte to ‘•come to Cincinnati.” Charlotte did not go.— A few days afterward, Charlotte received a lej • cgraphic dispatch announcing the death of her mother, and requesting her presence at the fu neral. She was persuaded by H not to go, and did not. . She was',greatly surprised a day or two subsequently, at the appearance of her mother, not only alive, but lu excellent good health. Mrs. Bruce prevailed upon tier daugh ter to accompany her to Cincinnati, and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce and Charlotte, together left for that city. i But the indefatigable H-—; was not to be shaken from the pursuit so easily. lie had ac quainted himself with 1 the circumstances of the girl’s history; and written to her father Mark, (who had unsuccessfully exerted himself to dis cover her whereabouts,) and bad obtained from him legal power to retain Cluirlolto in his cus tody. Before this document, waa in his posses* aion, however, ho had got out ft warrant tor the arrest of Charlotte, on the charge of stealing IromTiim a gold ring, valued a{.S4‘. This war rant was placcd in thc hands oFCMcf ol police, •TVhito; whovproceedCd ' To Cincinnati and arrested the girl. . ■ , . While,in the cars.on fheirretprri,'boprocured ■from her.a full ’ statement of fhe circumstances of H ’a attachment for bei. ahd also a to tal denial,of (ho arri val of the parties at ClevelspidJ'they repaired at" once to the Mayor’s office, and XI failing to establish Ids accusation against her, she was discharged and remanded inter"the custody of her mother. The tables were now effectually turned upon Mr. H , and, in order to save the costs of a charge of malicious prosecution ol the girl, and the penally of-A sti.il graver of fence, ho paid into the bands Of the mother and her husband, $2OO in cash. This occurred on Tuesday last,- and Mrs. Bruce made arrange ments to return, with her husband and daugh ter, to Cincinnati) by the first train on Wcdnea daymprning. The same evening (Tuesday) the power of attorney, giving H tho custody of Char- lotto, arrived iby mail., II at once got put a Writ of habeas corpus for the person of the girl, which was served about 5 o’clock, A. M., of Wednesday, At 9 o’clock the. same morn ing, all the parties appeared before Judge Til dbn, and the case was continued to Friday in order to allow the presence of the father, Mark Knight, who had been telegraphed to .at Syra. cuse, tho girl remaining, in the interim, in tho family of Judge Tildon. At 9 o’clock yesterday morning Mark Knight Mr. and Mrs.;Bruco and Charlotte were all pre sent at Judge Tilden’s Court. Tho major por tion of tho facts recited above transpired in the evidence given. The case was rested by the counsel without argument. In giving his deci sion, the judge adverted to tho moral peril of' the girl either in possession of the mother or ll———, and to the spares she had already es caped. Tho daughter Charlotte was not willing to elect between her parents, but tho Judge, in view of the circumstances, and with reference to the best interests of the girl, delivered lier into the custody of her father, Mark Knight. Of course the mother cried biiterly when tho decision of-the Court was rendered. The daughter was also deeply affected, and in part ing with her mother yesterday afternoon, when about-to depart for- her now home in Syracuse, showed the intensity of her love by tho violence of her grief. We hope her future life may in some degree atone for tho troubles she has ex perienced in the past. She is evidently a girl of much more than ordinary intelligence, and with proper training will make a good wo. man. A Man Huno Himself in Fun and Hung in Earnest.— The Hamilton (Butler CO., 0.,) in telligencer of the 14th, says: “A very sad affair transpired at Princeton, near onr city, on Thursday last. A Mr. Daniel Elliott, who lived in Princeton, butchering beeves and selling them in the neighborhood,— hung himself in the slaughter house; He was in an exceedingly good' humor during the day andlTVbning, and naturally of a playful disposi tion, gave vent to it by many playful things.— Ho had Bought some cattle, had extended hla business, was doing well, and felt lively and encouraged; Ho so .expressed himself to his wife anid friends. ... , ~, ■ Going from the bouse to his stable bo fed bis horse, and taking his little girl and a neighbor’s little boy, some thirteen years old, ho wont on about twenty-flvo yards from his hpuso to the slaughter bouse. Hero was,-a machine for rais. ing dead cattle—a rope with a large hook in It run over a reel and attached to a windless l with a ratchet. Adjusting the rope in a noose n round his neck, ho playfully bid the. little girl to go tell her mother ‘somebody was hanging out there who looked like Dan Elliott.’ Then showing the boy exactly how many notches, be bid him, still laughing, to draw him up. The boy did so, and'drew him off. his feet. Once up ho could not, because pf the ratchet, got him down again, and when, in answer to the little girl’s anxiety, Mrs, E,-came out, her husband hung dead, his foettouching tho floor, and the hook pressed hard against his jugular. From all tho circumstances, it is not doubted that tho act was done accidentally in a burst ot playful ness.” Hy ‘‘Comoin out of tho wot,” os tho shark said when ho swallowed the little negro bojr. Uoltuitffr. A Visit to tLe Hermitage. Mr. J. W; Kelly, who was one of tho dele gates to tho Nashville Conferencg, publishes in the Yorkville Enquirer, the following account of a visit to the Hermitage: Early in the session, the South Carolina Del egation resolved on a visit to the Hermitage,; where Jackson lived, died, and is buried. It is a fine old homestead, situated on the south ern bank of the. Cumberland, about eleven miles nostheast of Nashville. Wd invited, for the sake of variety and good cheer a couple of la dies—one little boy, Jonio Stones—and four, outside delegates, viz: one from Virginia, one from Tennessee, one from Missouri, and anoth er from Louisiana—and took along with us a fine specimen of the peculiar institution in the person of Adolphus, from Georgetown, who generally attends Annual Conferences with Key. C. Betts, tmd as his body servant was al so in attendggee at the General Conference.— Thus, IS'Ttnlll, in four handsome and comfort able coaches, with a liberal basket of lunch— (and to tell tho whole truth, a nice little box of cigars, though I don’t touch such things)—we started at oho o’clock oh tho 3th, hot of Janua ry but of May; and rattled away for the hermi tage—to many the Mecca-of -the South: as T hope Mount Vernon will, ever be to all Ameri can lovers of their country. . A two hours drive brought us all safe to a fins old country scat, away from tho public road about a quarter of a mile in toward the river. You enter from a lane or cross road an iron gate—stone’ pests, X, think—and then up a gravelled oedsr avenue— it should have been hickory—and halted at-the front of a venerable old mansion now occupied by the family of Mr. Jackson, an adopted son or nephew of the old hero, . John, the old General’s body servant, os he told us, during both Presidential terms; was soon forthcoming.. Dr. Wrightman, as our chief, sent in a card, end we soon had tho liber ty of the halls, and parlors,; gardens and ' grounds, and plenty of fresh water. Wo all sat down in an antique chair, said to have been Washington’s, and given to General Jackson * by Mr. Guslis—may be. It evidently apper- ■ tained to another generation; nevertheless, with leelings of reverenc«*ar.d as well r.s of curiosity, wo looked upbn.it, sat in it for a moment, hav-- ing the honor of so doing without being in any wise rested. Paintings on tho walls, quaint and tasteful gifts on the shelves and tables there were, but I am no connoisseur, and there fore will not attempt a description, especially as I made no notes at the time. The General and his wife lie buried under the same plain tomb; at the northeast corner of the garden, be tween the dwelling and the public road ; “life's fitful fever over, they sleep well”—both haying died in the faith and hope of the Christian reli gion. Fact and Fancy, Thero is only one bad wife in the world, and every crusty husband thinks that she has fallen to hislpt. Somebody has written a book on the art of making people happy without money. Wo aio .in an excellent condition to be experimented upon. ‘‘Sally,’’ said a young man to a damsel, who bad red hair, ‘f keep away from me, or yon will sot me afire.” “No danger of that,” whs tho answer, “you are too green to bum.” Tho woman who undertook to scour. the woods has abandoned tho job, owing to the high price ol soap. The last that was hoard of her she was> skimming the sea. Take a company of hoys chasing butterflies ; put long-tailed coats on The boys, and turntho butterflies into guineas, and you have a beauti ful panorama of the world. Tho man who planted himsoli on his good in tentions has not yet sprouted. An editor acknowledges the receipt of a bot tle of brandy 48 years old, and says, “ This brandy is so old that wo very much fear it can not live much longer.” An old bachelor of ninety-eight, who is halo and hearty, gives as a reason for his youthful appearance, that ho has ever remonstrated a gainst having anything to do with that which tended to niar-age, ’ ; " • It is staffed that one of the editors of tho Lewisburg Chronicle, soon after ho .went to learn the printing business, wont to see a prea cher’s daughter. Tho next time ho attended meeting, he was considerably astonished at hearing tho minister announce as his text, “My daughter is greviously fonnohted with a devil.” At a Virginia prayer-meeting, the choiristcr being absent, tho presiding elder, whwuj name was Jeeter, called upon one of the deacons and said, after reading a hymn, “Brother Moon, Will you raise a tune ?” Tho deacon lifted up his voice, but, instead of singing at once, ho inquired, “Brother Jeeter, What’s the metro 7” This being satisfactorily answered, Deacon Moon pitched tho tunc. “ Donald,” said a Scotch dame, looking up from catechism to her son, “ What’s a slander?’ “ A slander gudo mlther?’? quoth young Don ald, twisting the corner of his plaid, “aweel, I hardly ken,.unless it be mayhap, an over true fale which one gudo woman tolls of anither.” An exchange paper tells of a person who pre faced his sermon with : “My dear friends, lot us say a few words before wo bgin.” This is about equal to tho chap who took a short nap before ho went to sleep. It has boon thought that people aro degener ating, becanso they don’t live ns long ns in tho days of Methuselah. Dot the fact is, provisions aro so high that nobody can afford to live very long at tho current prices. Impudent littlo boy (to very fat old gentlo tleman, who is trying to got along as fast as be can, but with very indiiicront success) «I say, old follow, you would get on a jolly sight quick er, if you would 110 down on tho pavement, and lot roo roll you along.” Horace Walpole once said: “In my youth I thought of writing n satire on mankind—but now ic my ago, I think I should write an apolo gy for them.” «* What Was the use of the eclipse?” asked'a young lady. “Oh it gave the sun time for re flection,” replied a wag. 1 have very little respect for the ties of this world, os the chap said when tho tope was put around his neck. [ltT'Real fidelity is very rare, but it. exists in the heart. They only deny its worth and power who never loved a . friend, or who never labored to make a friend happy. O” Why aro country girl’s checks like well printed cotton 1 Because they arc “warranted to wash and keep their color.” O* Tho rose has its thorns, tho diamond its specks, and the best man his failings. O” A good country minister lately prayed fervently for those of his congregation who were too proud to kneel and too lazy to stand. AT §2,00 PER ANNUM. A Wholesale Wedding, A correspondent of the Memphis Appeal thus describes a connubial convention and demon stration that occurred recently on tho planta tion ofCapt. J. W. Jones, near that city: Mr. James Hubbard, the faithful and excel lent manager, assisted by his kind and affec tionate wife, had everything in readiness. The brides, beautifully attired, were in watting, tho bridegrooms, each of ebony color, nine in num ber, made their appearance,and were conducted to the proper cottage, and the order of the eve ning made known. , Then, with preliminary arrangements, they, with each of their atten dants, four in number, went forth to join the brides, and their attendants, under the blue canopy of heaven, arid on a beautiful grass plot, prepared for the occasion, for no house 9uuld be found to accommodate the crowd of over one hundred and fifty. They, the nine couple and fondants, then formed and. marched in front of the dwelling, where had assembled many friends of Capt. Jones, and Mr. and Mrs. Hubbard to see an unusual sight, nine happy couple W be united in the holy bonds of matri mony by the Eev. John Rosser, of Camden, South Carolina. , Each couple, with their attendants, marched up after Ihe ceremony by our pious minister, and he knelt in prayer, imploring heaven to bless, each one of tho nine couple. . And, sir, the prayer seemed to be breathed with fervor nnd devotion for assistance from on high on his fellow servants. After prayer,, such kissing nnd joy as was manifested by the friends of each! Then in a few minutes supper was an nounced ; arid permit-mo to say. that it was the most orderly crowd I have ever seen of blacks; attributable, no doubt, to no spirits or wine being used on the occasion. After supper came the dance for the non-religious ; but near by, on another equally beautiful grass plot, were found about one-half—the religious—in play of sister Phoabeand other kindred plays. And never have I had the pleasure of seeing a happier crowd. ' They danced and played until near the break of day,-we understand, and to their credit be it said, everything passed ofi W'thout any inter ruption and the next morning, each is ready with cheerful heart, (recounting his fun at tho wedding,) to do his day’s work. A Colored Discourse, A correspondent of the Knickerbocker, who writes from Mansfield, Ohio, sends the follow ing ‘‘discourse,” for- tho entire authority of which he vouches without reserve, havhSgtaken it down Irom the thick-lips of the reverend or ator.himself: sly tex, brcdrcn and sister, will bo foun’ in de fus chapter of Gemesis and twenty-sebenth worse.'-. ' “An de Lord make Adam." Itoleyouhow he make him. Ho make him out ob clay, and when he gel dri he breathe into him de breff ob life. Ho! put him’ in de garden ob Eden, and ho set him in de korner ob de lot, and he tole him to cat all de apples, ’ceptin dem in the middle ob.doorchar; dem bo want for de winter ap ples., .. ’ ■• ■ -, Byme by, Adam he .be lonesurn. .So do Lor’, make Ebe. ,1 tole you how he make her. He give Adarii Igddiuro till he go t sound ’sleep, den ho gouge rib out he side and make Ebo: nn‘ ho tole her to eat allde apples ’ceptin’ dem in de middle of de orchard; dem he want he winter apples. , . ' VYun day de Lord he go visiting; de dcbble he cum along, he dross himself up in the skin ob de snake, and he fine Ebe, and he told her : “Ebe why for you not eat de apples in de mid dle ob de orchard ?” Ebe says,, “Dem de Lord’s winter apples.” But do debblc says. “I tole you for to cat dem. case day’s de best apples in do orchard.” So Ebo ate de apple, and gib Adam a bite, and den de debble, he go away. By tube by de Lor’ cum home, and he call Adam. Adam ho lay low, so do Lor’ call again, “You! Adam!” Adam say, "Hea, Lord!” and de Lor’ say, “Who stole winter ap ples?” Adam tole him, “Don’t know—Ebe, he’spcct.” /So de Lor’call "Ebo !’’ Ebe lay low; de Lor’ call again, “You Ebe!" Ebe say, “Hea Lor’ 1" Do Lor’ say, "Who stole •de winter apples ?” Ebe told him, “Don’t know—Adam, she ’spect.” So de “Lor’cotoh em bolt, and trow dem ober de fence, and he I tole cm, “Go work for your libbin.” ■ ' I DC7* A little girl, five years of age.was equal ly fond of her mother ’ and'grandmother'. On the birthday of■ the latter her mother said to her. ‘•My dear, you must pray to God to bless your grandmother, and that she may live to be very old.” . The child looked with some surprise, at her mother, who, perceiving it, said, — “Well, will you nor, pray to God to bless your grandmother, and that she may become vcry.old?” “Ah, mamma,” said the child, “she is very old already, I would rather pray that she fnay become young.” XC/~ Laura Leo is a daughter of a wealthy far mer near Detroit, for whom Thomas Barnes was plowboy. Thomas, tho rogue, stole Laura’s heart, and then herself. They ran away and .by legal process got- spliced. Old Loo offered S5OO for tho recovery of his daughter. . Tho young couple concluded to go back and lake tho money and bourses. When they arrived homo they were agreeably astonished to find themselves heartily forgiven by the old man, and awarded a homestead and'a farm of sixty acres: There was common sense all around. SmpiDE of A Physician. —Dr. O. D. Wilcox, of Elmira, N. V., because accused ol' malprac tice and prosecuted on account of tlio death of a man whose leg ho had amputated, took poison last Friday, and died in half an hour. Dr. W. wont to Klmira from Easton, Pa., in October, 1857, and although a comparative Stranger in the place, bad acquired a high character as a .man, and no mean reputation as a physician.— He appears to have boon led to iho act of aelf doslruction, by an oror-sensitivo disposition. A Good Sentiment.— Senator Jefferson Da vis, of Mississippi, was on tho''stcamcr Joseph Whitney, at sea, on the 4th of July. Ho made a speech on the occasion, from which we extract the following sentiment; which contains' some thing good, said with a point: “And this great country will continue united. Trifling politi cians in the South, or in the North, or in the West, may continue to talk otherwise, but it will be of nn avail. They aro like the mosquitoes around the ox—they annoy- but they cannot wound, and never kill.” What disuuionlst “musquito” is going to buz on that ? D 3“ A dreadful affair occurred in Anderson county, Kentucky, on Thursday last. At a pic nic, three brothers named Miller, excited by li quor, got into.a quarrel. Three or four men in terfered to prevent violence and preserve peace, When the brothers turned on them and killed two. The Millers were arrested and confined ir, tbojail at Liiwrencoburg (E7* India has a population of 180,884)597 souls. Green, the The New York, Courier and Enquirer gtv&- the following narrative of the descent of Green, the diver to tho Atlantic, lying at'the bottom of Lake Erie. Poor Green! his daring was too severely punished: Not many months since a vessel was lost in a water whose depth nt the piacbijof' the foun dering was about 147 feet. There was a por tion of the cargo so valuable that it bcoamelsd ■ visable to use every effort possible to recover.'jt. It was scarcely possible to-do. anything. It was far beyond all ordinary means' of human .action; it might be reached, though it would bo a bold attempt, by tho diver. He was sought and found, and a recompense which on land would be a princely one was guaranteed lo him. Men will do more' than “docs, become a man” for rich reward. To feed him with air, a powerful pump, worked by six men,, was brought, and a hose doubly strengthened,' was made. All the opplicanocs that the most liber al management could suggest were ready forhfs aid. He was surrounded by intelligence and courage and humanity. He dared tho .deep water once, twice,, seven times. The men at the break of ,tjic. air pump wrought , with tho might of earnest strength. They ( Jecl .the vital current to the bold diver, and he'hdd' thecour ago to trust them, Their work was his breath. When he came up ho told the gentleman' that superintended the trial, that the air at that depth, as tho machinery forced it to him, cracks * led and hissed tike th e frying of hot fat, and that every movement of the pump fell on his breast like the blow of a crow-bar! You go down no more for me, said tho kind hearted gentleman, who stood by him, as he catne on deck; In the intensity of all his-experience, . this too daring man besought for the opportu nity for another trial. The gentleman refused, but tho diver insisted ongoing for himself.He went, and returned a paralyzed mqn, and just holding life, now craws along. The claret not-* tie at his girdle, corked tightly apdiempty, was tilled when’be came back, though the cork was not disturbed. The water had forocd.itsclf be-; yond power of cork or glass. r NO. 8. It is said.to be very common with Oomic no-, tors to be constitutional hypochondriacs—men: who never laugh themselves—are entjrely un-, conscious of a joke, except those sot' down for them in the play. These men are often bowed' down under the weight of a mobid melancholy.’ or fidgeting in a state of nervous irritation, not many degrees, removed from lunacy. -vTho fact is well illustrated by an anecdote of Liston.,. “ Go and see Liston,” said an eminent physi .clap to a patient who consulted him as to tbo best euro oMow spirits. » . . “ Alas, lam the man 1” replied the sufferer,. in a despairing tone. ... ET" A girl with two heads, four .arms and four legs, is now on exhibition at Su Louis, and attracting a large amount' of attention. The , St, Louis Democrat says: “At the first an-' nouncement of so wonderful a freak of nature, : wo weic disposed to regard it as a humbug.; but, having seen it, we can assure oax readers that she is, far beyond all matters onloubt, tho most extraordinary and astonishing freak ofna ture we have ever witnessed; . ' Ew* A few years ago, when the' river Dela- ; ware was frozen over, a number of booths were erected on the ice, near one of which an Irish- ", man observed a person to fall in ; he ran irome- : diately to the proprietor of the booth n and told him that, he had just seen a man enter his cellar, and advised him to take care of his liquor. . ’ . Over Shrewd.—A wine merchant left a sus pected assistant in bis cellar, and said to him, , “ Now, lest you should drink tho wine while I am away, 1 will chalk your mouth sa- that I may know it.”. He-then passed-his finger over tho man’s lips, pretending to leave the mark of the chalk on them. The man drank of the wine, and then to be even with bis.master, chalked bis: mouth, and thus discovered himself. E?’’A formal fashionable visitor thus ad dressed a litclo girl;— . “Hoiv are you, my dear ?’’ “Very well, I thank you,” she replied. The visitor then added—• - f. , “Now, ray dear, you should ask met how I am.”. . , j , ~ - The child simply and honestly replied, “I don’t want, to know.” , E 7" A Quaker having sold a fine looklng hut blind horse, asked tho purchaser in- his dry way: “Well, my friend, dost thou sell any fault in him?” :.... . “No,” was the answer. “Neither will he see any in thee,” said old Broadrim. • ' ETT A country sculptor was orderiai .tp en grave bn a tombstone these words: “ A virtuous woman is a crown to her hus band.” f- But the stone being small, ho engraved it— “ A virtuous woman is fls to her husband.” ; Jerome! Jerome!” screamed Mrs. But terfield, tho other day, to her biggest boy, “what are you throwin’ to those pigeons ?” “Gold beads, mother, and the darned fools are eaten ’em; ’spect they think it’s corn!" , C7* An editor in lowa has', been fined two hundred dollars for hugging a young girl in church. —Daily Argits. “ Cheap chough 1 We once hugged a girl in church, some ten years agdLpnd the scrape has cost us. a thousand a year cv£r since.' Chicago Young American. Cv” What, do you drive such a pitful looking carcass as that for? Why don’t you put a heavy coatoi flesh on him f ” “ A heavy coat of tlesh! By the powers the poor crater can hardly carry what little tbero is on him.” O” Have you got a sister ? Then lovo and cherish her with a holy friendship.— Warnock. lf you have no sister of your own, we ad vise you to love somebody else’s sister. ■, Bardstown Gazette. ' K 7” “May I bo married, ma V' said a little beauty lo her mother. ‘Why do yout.want to be married 1" returned the molheh. “ Why, ma, you know that the children have never seen anybody married, and I thought it might please them." Charms—A fortune of twenty thousands pounds.. Counter Charms—Pretty shop girls. OUT” A man in Boston who stoutly objected, last winter to his wife’s learning to skate, has since concluded to “lot her slide.” Cpf Why is a watch dog larger at night than he is in the morning ? Because he is let out at night, and taken in, in the morning. •, 03* Why is a person asking questions the strangest of all individuals i Because be is tba querist. - [C7* Bo polite to every person, and you will secure their esteem. OCT" “ This augurs well,” as the mosquito said when ho settled ou a fat man’s nose. 03?" The annua! production of sugar in the United States is about 136.500 tons. ( , 03“ What is it you must keep after giving it to another. Bad Hearts —Some people’s hearts are shrunk in them like dried nuts. You can hew ’em rattle as they walk- 1 ‘’l'W". The People We Laugh at. ;