!ar volunteer. lyifeßY THURSDAY MORNING. BT ii B. Braltom TERMS. One Dollar and Fifty Cents, j Two Dollars if paid within tlio Dollars and Fifty-Cents, if not year. These torips will bo rig , in every instance. Mo sub mtinued until nil arrearages are Iho option of the Editor. ents: —AocompaniedbythccAsir, ling one square, will bo inserted One Dollar, and twenty-flve cents onal insertion. Thoseofagrcat •oportion. . i—Such a? Hand-bills, Posting-, i, Blanks, Labels, &c.,&c.,eXe iracy and at the shortest notice. |WmL t THE BRIGHT SIDE. . . prithee, tell me why t i i vtfs«£SUways wear a smile: look wan and sad, ‘Sped from my feeble tongue, icarts were there, and kindly words softly on my ear, )ving Ones wore always nigh . tainting heart to cheer. through a long and wearied life learn’d this lesson well— this world of care and'strife, —.ore's more of good than ill; And o’er in poverty and toil, ’ Peace with us will abide; . Jlfan may be happy, if he will . But see the brightest side.” TUG ASPIRATION. .. . ■> ~-KiMy bark is On life’s troubled .sea, p I care not where it goes; . ft'V'i KWhat .matter life’s wild storms to me .7 *> Whafmaftor where it close 7 ||L(i. ‘ The best ot cartli, its hopes and joys, Are dreamy, lady things; SBjjT , V, c wislt, wo sigh, we grasp some prize (•feZ It flies on magic wings. V r . is not that I hate the world, i Or It has hated me; • . ‘' ■' It i s not that no eye hath smiled, r To light my weary way ■.■■■■ vo madly loved, yet all in vain ; M. . still madly, still noblest, ■ mm.: ,- i love, and nurse the growing pam WBKjU'’;--.-That burnswithiqmy.breast., heart must weep, it will not break— rjiy, soul must writhe and bear— . Sfflßvi'. '3Lnd none shall know the inward ache, BHff, By word, or sign, or tear. P' XTnloved I como, unloved I go ; |p : , , , < What is there left for nie 7 h. ' What bitterness is yet to know, ■ B '' When gone for'ayo from thee 7 p ' When driven down life’s dark abyss, f' ■ - And death is hanging o’er, - S' '. I will not wish.l’d loved thee less, f I I Blit thou had’sf loved mo more. £ ' ' • BY I'. HENRY, i ffitarcllaneoua. tub Dorr of owning books. IT W-ABD BBECIIP' » N ' * V» form iudgments of men from little things f ilMut their houses, of which the owner, per : ‘ Imps, never thinks. In earlier years, when 1 ‘travelling in the West, where taverns Were fitter scarce, or in other places unknown, and flMfevelfy settler’s house was a houseof en^ t “"’' was a matter of some importance and »%lrihe experience to select wisely where,you put »®;'.,ihdwe always looked ,for flowers. If |||p''therewere no trees tor shade, no patch of Bow H C rs in the yard, we were suspicious of the place. |S? Bufe-ho matter liow rude the cabin, or rough ?l»Surrouhdiiigs, if we saw that the window held trough for flowers, and that some vines strings let down from the eaves, -confident that there was-somo taste jind wrefulnessin the. log cabin. In the new A:"fcountry:V w^ere have to tug for a living, it no one will take the trouble to rear flowers, un !l': less tbd love of them is pretty strong—and this If fciste blossoming out of plain and uncultivated p kpeople'is. itself, like a clump of hare bells grow ,v fnc*ont of the seams of a rock. We were sel misted. A patch of flowers came to sigm • Tv-Biha people, clean beds, and good bread. (Blit: other signs are more significant in other Ik slates of society. Flowers abopt a rich man s &V .houseimay signify only that he is a good gar ip', ‘denety fid that he has refined neighbors, and dobs what he sees them do. , , : Bufc.nien are not acciistomcd to buy books want them. If, on visiting the Ik-. . f'diS'elShk of a man of. slender means, I find the he hds cheap carpet, and very plain S®Mbrnilure, to be that he may purchase books, he iiiKTar expelling .any other in his line of business; indeed we could not learn an art that wbhld supply any silk worth the name without him#, With what wonderful properties and powers has it pleased our Heavenly to endow tho lowly creatures! ■ * * , Young friends, is not this. marvel lously wonderful ? Who endowed those animals with wisdom 7. God! Who,ofvps could make cells or honey like the bee, silk! like the silk worm, or. music like the singing .'birds? iruiy the. goodness of God is sepn in hjl his works.. Be Sure You Are ( The injustice done:.tb,.pBrA'S®ib<>rßas well ( as to ourselves by tioh of facts, Is perhaps ■ extent ol its baneful influencejB, J to.anyitem in the list of man’s inhumanities to map countless millions too readily lead, us to embrace ff£ ( without further , perhaps, only to wound nocont, and to suffer-ddrselvds upon conviotipn of our error. To, thp motivos.of our neighbors is a serious matter, and. tends- many times to very serious results* and they, who think to censure with impunity without, jpositive evidence of the wrong done, by the party cen. ; aured, must oven sutler the.sevcrest penalty^, Ho who acts deliberately, and conscientious ly. triumphs as certainly as truth is superior to error, and the consciousness of right in one a own heart gives a peace of .mipd; and affords that sweet rest which malignity cannot disturb. «Bo sure you are, right, then go ahead, and though falsified and maligned as you may he, your course will stand the teat of timoj and they who draw hasty and erroneous conclusions from appearances, and misrepresent because they have not fully examined the facts* must sooner or later acknowledge the truth and suffer that mortification which a candid acknowledgement of their error alone' can cure. Duties and Pieasckus of Women.—Great indeed is the task- assigned to women. Who can exaggerate its importance? Not to mato laws, not to govern empires, but to form those by whom laws are made, armies led and empires governed; to guard from the slightest taint of possible infirmity, the frail and yet spotless, creatures whoso moral, no. loss than physical being must ho derived from her; to inspire those principles, to inculcate those doctrines, to animate those sentiments which generations yet unborn, and nations yet uncivilized, shall leam to bless; to soften firmness into mercy, to cha sten honor into virtue j by her soothing cares to allay the anguish of the mind i by her purity to triumph over sense ; to cheer the scholar labor ing under his toil; to console the statesman for the ingratitude of a mistaken people; to com pensate for hopes that, are blighted, for the friends that are perfidious, for happiness that has passed away. Snch is her vocation. The couch of the tortured sufferer, the person of the deserted friends, the cross of the neglected Sa vior these are the theatres on which her great est triumphs have been achieved. . Such is her destiny; to visit the forsaken; amid the forget fulness of myriads, to remember; amid the exe crations of multitudes, to bless; whenmonarchs abandon, when' brethren and disdples fly, to re main unshaken and unchanged, and to exhibit in this lower world a fypo of that love, pure, constant, and ineffable, which m another world, as we are taught to believe, is the best reward of virtue. ' Evening Hours for MccHANioa.-Wlmt have evening hours done for mechanics who had only ten hours’ toil ? Hatkon to facts: t 6“ One o« fto best the Westminster Review could ever boast of,-and one of the most brilliant writers of the passing hour, was acoop er in Aberdeen. One of the editors of the London Daily Journal was a baker, in Elgin ; nftrhimq one of tho best reporters of tho London of the Witness was a stone-mason. One of the ablest ministers in London was a blacksmith in Dundee, and another was a watchmaker in Banff Tho late Dr. Milne, of China,.was a herd boy in Rhvne. The principal of the London Mission ary Society's College, at Bong Kong, was a saddler in Huntly. and One of the’ best arioa that over went to Indiawari a Keith. Tfio leading machinist on, tho London and Birmingham railway was a mechanic in Glasgow, and perhaps the veiy. richest iron founder in England was a workingman in Mo rap. ■ Sir James Clark, her majesty a physician* was a druggist in Banff. Joseph,Hum?.was a, sailor first, and then a laborer at the jportarand pestle, in Montrose; Mr. M Gregor, fho memfjer from Glasgow, was a poor boy, in.Rossniro. James ’Wilson, the momborfrom Westbury, was a ploughman, in Haddington,; and Arthur An derson! tho member from Orkney, carnodhis bread by the sweat of his brow in tho Ultima Thule. ' 0»lt costs a deal of money to be rich, and it is a question if so much is worth so little . After all, is wealth worth the cost, first in ac quiring it, next in supporting it, and lastly, in bearing up under it when you have lost it I. a . ■ Punch. o*Lifo runfi not smoothly at all seasons, even with the happiest; hut after a long course, the rocks subside, the views widen, and it flows on 1 more equably at- the end. — Landor . A Lesson for Boys and Citls. A Practical Memory. A clergyman in Wiltshire, walking near a brook, observed a woman washing wool in a stream. This was done by puttinglt in a scivc, and then dipping the seive in the water repeat edly, until the wool became white and clean.— Ho engaged in conversation with her, and, from some expressioh 'she dropped, asked her it she know him. > , T , , ~ « Oh yes, sir,” she replied, “and I hope shall have reason to bless God to eternity for liming heard you preach at W- »°w® fears ago. Yonr sermon was the means of doing mo great g °«X rejoice to hear it. Fray what-was the BU “ Ah/air, Ican’t recollect that, my memory is so bad.” «How, then, can the sermon have done you so much good, if you don’t remember even what it was about 7” . „ “ Sir, my mind is like this sieve; the sieve docs not hold the water, hut as the water runs through, it cleanses.the wool; so my memory does not retain the words X hear, but as they pass through ray heart, by God’s grace, they cleanse it. Now Ino longer love sin, and every day I entreat my Savior to wash mo in his own. blood, and to cleanse mo from all sin;” ' - A Speech on Scolding Wives. At a Young Men’s Debating- Society some where out in Illinois, the question of discussion was, “Which.is the greatest evil—a scolding wife or a smoking chimney ?’ After the np poinlants had concluded tho debate, a spectator rose and begged the privilege of making a lew remarks on tho occasion. Permission being granted, he delivered himself in this way : “Mr. President—l’ve been almost mart lis tening to the debate of these youngsters. Ahoy, don’t know anything about a scolding wife. Wait till they have had one ! upwards of .eight years, and-hammered and jnmmered and jawed at all the while-wait till they have been scal ded because the fire wouldn’t burn: because the oven was too hot; because the cow kicked over the milk; because,the sun shined ; because the hens didn’t lay; ,because the butter would not come; because they were too soon lor din ner ; because they were one minute too late: because they slapped the young ones; because they tore their trowaers, or because they did anything, whether they, could help it or not, beforo they begin to talk of the evils of a scot a 'wby[ e Mr, President, I’d rather hear the clatter of hammer and stones, and twenty tin pans, and nine brass kettles, than a din dm 01 £ scolding wife. Yes sir ce, thews my senti ments. To my mind, Mr. President, n smokj chimney is no more to be compared toasooldmg wife than a little negro is to a dark night.. CnißOGnAruY.— Good penmanship does not consist in sprcad-eaglo flourishes and five-story capitals I . True, there should bo a freenesa-of movement in the hand and arm, evinced by the pon-tracings, but never any We ■like a plain, round hand-writing., that is me boat phase of cbirography which is most easily read. Affected penmanship, like mock polish of any sort, is devoid oi grace and beauty. ~We.hear, of some groat men jwhoajenot .good penmen, hut their faulty penmanship does not make them great. Wo know of some halfr hatched- lawyers, and aspiring young men _oi other vocafions, who claim,to bo greatond dis tinguished in proportion ,to tho awkwardness and uninlolligibility ot their scribbling-ship.— And if such were the gange of guessing at great ness, how incomprehensibly great some men would be I ■ , • A good story is fold of tho wretched writing of a certain very celebrated. Railroad manager in Michigan. He had written a letter to a man on tho Contralrdute, notifying him that he must remove a bam that !h some way incommoded the road, under the penalty of prosecution.— Tho threatened map was unable to road any part of the letter but the signature! but he took it to bo a free, pass, over tho .road, and used it for a couple of years as such, none ol the conductors ' being able to dispute bis interpretation oi tbo E document! —School Visitor. The Fiust White Woman in Downikviixe, Oax..—Downieville, California, being perched high up in the mountains, was not gladdened by the sight of a white woman until a long time after the miners had been there: and ma ny of them,' hot having seen' a woman for many months, made the arrival of the pioneer of the fair sex the occasion for a grand demonstra tion, which is chronicled by the San Andress Independent. . The men all turned out. setting their best foot foremost. Several shirts were aported on the occasion, and a certain member of Congress, to mark his high satisfaction, drew from the bottom of his clothes box. an antique “ yaller vest,” that bad not seen the light for many a month. The-boys, dressed in their neatest duds, were grouped around in every part of the camp, eager to catch sight of the first p'etticoat that was to flutter in the moun tain breeze. Long, and anxious was the sus pense, but toward evening the new comer hove in sight. Cheer upon cheer greeted her. The rooks and hills fairly rang with their joyous shouts. The lady was pale, and seemed frigh tened nt the apparent madness oi such a rcccp tion : and her surprise was by no. means dimin ished when, again and again, ‘• three times three” was proposed and vociferated m her lie nor. Such was the reception of the ‘ • Pioneer Woman of Downieville.” \ry m The latest case of faithful Biddyism is chronicled by the Greenfield, Mass., Gazette :. An Irish girl was despatched to a neighbor s with a note, and directed to give it personally to-the person addressed. On ai rival, Biddy found that the neighbor bad gonotokorthamp ton, whither she wended her way. twelve miles, oh foot, and traversed the streets till she found the individual and delivered the note. She then started to return, stopping over night with some friends, and reaching home next day. when she told her mistress that she must give up her place, for she could not go any more such long errands. ny “There are few countries which," says Dean Swift, “if well cultivated, would hot sup port double the number of their inhabitants, and yet fewer where one-third of the people arc not extremely stinted even in the necessaries of life. I send out twenty barrels of corn, which would maintain a family in bread for a year, and f bring back in return a barrel of Wine, which half a dozen good fellows would drink in less, than a month at the expense of their health and reason." But what would the worthy Dean say could he Witness the criminal speculators’conduct now, by by which artificial scarcity id h hun dred fold increased. A Lowerin' a" Dilemma. — An unfortunat swain who has been duped by some fair mai den, thus"relates the cade: With whiskers thick upon my face, . 1 went my fair ,to see ;, She told mo she coiild never love A beau faced man like me., ~ I shaved them clean and called again. And thougt my trouble o’er, Sho laughed outright, and said I was More babe faced than bclore. IX7” Mexico had seven Presidents in of January. 1&T $2,00 PER ANN A Boy for the Times. We like an active boy : one who has the im pulse of the age-of the steam-engine nf him.— A lady, plodding, snail-paced Chap, might have got along in the world fifty years’ ago : but he won’t do for these times. We live in an age of quick ideas; men think quick—speak quick eat. sleep, court, marry, die quick—and slow conches ain’t tolerated. “Go ahead if you burst your biler, is the motto of the age; and he succeeds the beat in every lino of business, who-has the most of the do or-die in him. Strive boys, to catch the spirit of the times: be up and dressed always, no grasping and rub bing your eyes; as if you were half asleep, but wide awake, whatever may turn up—and you may be somebody before you die. Think, plan, reflect ns much as you please before you act; but think quickly and closely, and when you have fixed your eyes upon an ob ject, spring to the mark at once. But Above alf things bo honest. If you in tend to be an artist, carve it in the wood, chisel it in marble; if a merchant, write it in your day book and spread it in capitals in your ledger. Let honesty of purpose be your guiding star. Unconscious Influence. The very handling of the .nursery is signifi cant, and the petulance, the passion, the gentle ness, the tranquility indicated by it; are all re produced in the child. His soul is a purely re ceptive nature, and that, for a considerable pe riod, without choice or selection., A little far- ■ thcr on, he begins voluntarily to copy every thing he sees. Voice, manner, gait, everything which the eye sees, the mimic instinct delights to act over. And thus we have a whole gener ation of future men, receiving from us their very beginnings, and the. deepest impulses ot their life and immortality. They, watch us every moment, in the family, before the hearth, and at the table ; and when we are meaning them no good or evil, when we are conscious of exerting no influence over them, they are draw ing from us impressions and molds of habit, which if wrong, no heavenly discipline can wholly remove; or. if right, no bad associations utterly dissipate. Now it may bo doubted. 1 think, whether, in all the active influence of our lives, we do as' much to shape the destiny of our fellow-men, ns we do in this single article of uncdnscious influence over children. Rhymes, Curious and True. I have never before, says the gossiper of the Washington Stales, come across the annexed lines. Few, I dare say, have read them. They are worth remembering,-for they express as much as roanv poems: ' . What is earth, sexton 1 A. place for digging graves. „ , , . What;is earth, rich man 1 A place to grow 0ll \Vhal is earth, miser? A place for digging 6 °What is earth, school-boy 1 A place for my What is earth, maiden I A place to be gay. Whafts earth, seamstress WA place where I W< What is earth, sluggard ?A. good place to What is earth, soldier ? A good place for battle.' . . . . What is earth, herdsman ?, A place to raise cattle. • What is earth, widow ? A place of true sor row. What is earth, tradesman ? I’ll tell you to morrow. _ , ~ . What is.earth, sick mas? Its nothing.to What is earth, sailor ? My homo is on. the sea. What is earth, statesman 1 A place to win fame. Paying Legislators.—An Ohio paper re lates tte following anecdote, which is certainly too good to be lost: Mr. Joe Whitehill, of Columbia, formerly Treasurer of the State of Ohio, .was a rough jo ker, even in his office. Some twenty years ago, a verdant member of the General Assembly, called at the State Treasury and said ho wanted * some money.’ How much do.you want ?” said Whitehill., “ Well! I—don’t—know,"said the member. <■ How do you suppose I can pay you money, then, if you don’t know ?” ■ , , “ Well, then, pay me about* what I have i i) V earned. , . „ .. Earned! "said Whitehill, “ earned ! You area member of the Legislature, ain't you? and if that’s all you want, I can pay you oft “what you’ve earned" very easy. 'Bob! give this member that ten dollar counterfeit bill we t c had so Ion"." ■ (£7" Boys are queer institutions, and have a happy faculty of extracting fun out of every thing that comes in their way. which it would be well lor them if they could preserve and ex ercise after they arrive at manhood’s estate. A six year old- will take more genuine pleasure out of turning summersets in a snow bank, playing shinney in a mud puddle, or shooting marbles with the thermometer down to zero, than his daddy could in a life time, with the wealth of a Rothschild at his command. DC7* The wise men of Prussia are predicting a grand future for the little Prince of a week; because his birthday is the. same os that of Frederick the Great; because the constellation known as Frederick’s honor stood in the zenith of Berlin at the moment of his entrance to light, and because, half an' hour later, another con stellation, “ The Stars in Crown and Sword," culminated over Berlin. Difficulties.— Wait not for your difficulties to coaso; there is no soldier’s glory to be won on peaceful Golds, nosaiior’sdaringtobo shown on sunny seas, no trust or friendship to bo pro. vod when all goes well. Faith, patience, heroic I love, devout courage and gentleness, are not to be formed when there are no doubts, no pains, no irritations, no difficulties. The highly favor ed are they who amid rebuffs are meek, amid chastisements are resigned, amid pains are cou rageous, amid provocations are gentle, amid enemies aro full of love, amid doubts hold fast the faith, amid sorrows And joy in Christ. t£7* Byron is said to have remarked that “the greatest trial to a woman’s beauty is th 6 un graceful act of eating egfes.’' Some Yankee re marks that the poe£ coaid never have seen a la dy hanging on by her, teeth to a biasing hot corn-cob. ■ O' Some tiuie since, a Mr. Michael Brady, of Philadelphia, was bitten by a white pet fox. At the time nothing serious was expected to .re sult from' the bite. Recently, however, Mr. Brady was attacked with quite a serious ill ness and exhibited unmistakable symptoms of. hydrophobia'., Ife suflered tho most intense ag ony, and died soon afterward. r ttA child uttered a very beautiful thought I while looking at the comet. Ho said it was Hi “God's railroad car, in which ho went riding (.through the sky ?” [from 1 the JUckport Mverluer.J | SihgiM History—A Itlillidnarrc ft a Bnf falo Work House? We have had related, to us the- following .fair gular narrative of an event that recently pired, which is aiiqost too, remarkable '.for fcrer denqe. The chain df oircomstanccs .which Ira' to the fortunate discovery savors of the roman tic. It adds, however, another proof of the'ad age that “ truth is stranger than fiction.” , , f “Some two weeks since, a young, man of gentlemanly address, and who, from appear ance, bore evidence of having seen belter days, , - arrived at Tdnawanda, and, calling at the house of Mr. Browning, of that place, begged frit something to eat, and asked for a situation.— He gave a history of his circumstances as fol lows : He said his father was wealthy, lived in France, arid that ho bad left his. ho'me, in that country, on a pleasure trip to the United States,- bringing with him 503,000 for spending money and other purposes. . ' . .. “ On landing in New York, 4nd after sojour* ning in that city a short tirne, ho deposited $20,000 with a banker, who was a Jew, He: was then led by some.new made acquaintances; into scenes of dissipation and,gaming, Where, lost the remainder of his money.. To add. to hiS misfortunes, the Jew banker also failed! arid swindled him out of the money he had depost- 3 ted with him. His father, he said, had a- bari kcr in New York, from whom he might hare, obtained assistance, but ho determined, from,: motives of pride and chagrin, not to appeal to-* him in his extremity, by giving a Statement :of his condition. On receiving, with some doubts » of its truthfulness, the above statement, Mr. . Browning took the young man into his employ;' for a few days, and sot him to work " packing shingles.” He afterwards Went to Buffalo.^— Mrs. Browning, in the meantime, however, out’ of motives of curiosity, wrote a letter to the ’ above mentioned banker, whom the young mad . , had stated was doing business for his father,' inquiring of him in regard W the truth of the matter. “ The banker, on receipt of Mrs.B s letter, immediately repaired to Touawanda, and con- • firmed the truth of the statement, And also rela ted other facts in connection With thoease more , wonderful still. Ho stated that lie had recent- - ly learned of the decease of jthe young man's father, who had died, leaving the young, iriah heir to 52,000,000, and also that $60,000 had ’ already been remitted, and was in the bands of " himself. The bariker on receiving.the. nows, and not finding the unfortunate inheritor ofthtS.. vast sflm, advertised fdr hiin in the papers.- - ; The banker then gave Mr. Browning $25 to prosecute the search for him in Buffalo, where it was supposed he bad repaired. After two ; days spent, the object of the visit was found in i the Erie county’ workhouse, where he had been • committed a few days previous ns a vagrant.;— . He was very sick, and his disease Was pro pounced by the doctors to be incurable. He had two days longer to remain before the lime for which he was committed would expire. “ It maybe readily conceived that the neWS ■ of his good fortune, and the certainty not only, of immediate relief, - but of restoration to the , head of a wealthy estate, with all the surroun dings of case and"luxury, incited the most pdw-. orful efnotions in his breast. The Ibw days hri had yet to linger arttong the destitute. seemcd to him ages; but it was found impracticable to , obtain a release, except through the interposi tion of' the Governor. Accordingly it was ar; ranged that the Count remaid i until his time should expire without any fur- ; thcr effort being made to obtain his release.— t . After his release from the work house, he wa# ] brought to the house of Mr. Browning, at Ton-’ awanda, his forriicr place of abode, Where he. ; still remains very sick, under the medical at tendance of Dr. Locke. The young Count.has j since two more remittances fVom his banket and ■his condition is.as good under ■ the circuiristan-- • ces, as could be expected. Thus ends for the,, ' present the first chapter of, this strange, event r ful but nevertheless true history." NO. 41. Death.— Wo thought nothing new could to BBidib6bti:fleoth, but Tailor ofnthe ebitap? ■/oiirnai.h'nsthcfollowingideas:-:, r 'v There is a dignity about (hat going away alone, wo call .dying: that wrapping the mantle, of immortality about us; that putting aside; with a pale hand, thcasiire curtains that are drawn around this cradle of a world: that ven turing away from homo the first ! time in our lives, for we are not dead; there is nothing dead lo speak of and seeing foreign dourtlries hot laid down on aily maps we know about. Thera must be lovely lands starward, for none,ever re turn that go thither, and we very much doubt if any would if they could. (£7* A correspondent of the St. Louis Repub lican says -•• If you die on the Island of Cu-. ba, it will cost your friends 3600 before your, remains can he taken away. If you die poor, and those expenses are not paid, you am taken in the public dead cart and pitched into a diten among the remains of paupeis and those who have been executed. Q2P"The neat old lady in this place who scrubbed through the floor and 101 l into the cel lar, is bat one among the many of the very nice ■ females with which our countiy abounds. Wo know a good lady in Now Jersey, who white, washed all the wood she burnt; and another in, Connecticut, who used three times a day to; scour the nose of her lap dog to keep him front: soiling the dish ottt of which he ate his meals; The same good lady took her own food through a napkin ring to keep it from coming id contact with her Ups. (£7- •• Do you believe in second love, Mistbet* McQuade?” ,■ - •_ ' , “Do I believe in second love ? Humph; if a, man buys a pound of sugar, is’nt it swatc ? and when it’s gone, don’t he want ttno.her .pound; and isn’t that swate. loo? Troth Murphy,'l belave in second love !” ", , The curious student of human nature should be very careful whilst observing vice as it is exhibited in others, that he does not him self come, too-near the influence of its deleteri ous sphere, and thus suffer his moral vision, M bo obscured by the murky vapors which envel op it. ■ 'sy “Why don’t you wheel that bafrow of coals, Ned ?” said a learned miner to onoof his , sons; “it is not a very hard job; there is an inclined plane to relievo you." „“Ah,” replied Ned. who had more relish for wit than work, “the plane may be inclined; but hang, me if £ S r min, ng Leaf, Cgvsptfiffi. Con-, da gross, and Fine Cut Tobacco aha Smill', the best oc material. . , b 6 Peeling thankful to tho thus .noticed, by one of our exchanges: ,• % ” “Married, last week, Lolko Cobb to Miss' Kate Webb.” What a family of cob-webs may be the result! .• {“ Jeff, why BID you iike.de Cedar 1" “Jl guv’si it up, Sam ; can’t tell you-” ‘‘Casa you are green both Summer and Winter ' '• IC7* Shoemakers and milkmen good, sailors—they are both used to wording af the pumps'. - - iry, “if Infs' the use,” asked ah idle, “of a 1 man’s working himself to death to get a living.” .. ■ try- Stephen EllMj. «d«d BS. the oldest, of the " Light house ..tribe", of Indians, died'at Wirihstead.-Conn., oh‘ Monday, The re sides in four huts, and is a miserable remnant' of the once powerful-Narraganetts. ■ . ■ Semsibie.— Aunt Betsy has said many, good things, and among the rest, that a newapipoyig like a wife, because every man should have oho lot his ovrd’, ’ ■ >- ITT Airs. Partington has bought a horse SO spirituous that he alwaysgoesott ura dectm ter.’ '■ —,