'' ''''' ° OTOT^Y — >UY T ~ OB COPMTRY.” ■ ■ ~46. CAN VOLUNTEER. EVERY THURSDAY HORNING BY UN B. BRATTON. TERMS. —Ono Dollar and -Fifty £cnts, paid 70 Dollars if paid Within (ho year; .ra and Fifty Gents, if not paid within 30 terms will be rigidly adhered to fp No .subscription discontinued until ire paid unless at tUo option of fee Accompanied by the cAsp, and 6no square, will bo inserted throe 'liar, and twentyrfivo cents for each 1 TUbs? of a greater length, in ich as Hand-hills, Posting-bills, , Labels, ic. id., executed with \e shortest notice. -.- - va, laiti Cil w PI/iiGIJRBD CITY, tnV W. LONGFELLOW. .a som6 bid niarvclous tale jgentJ strange and vague, of spectres pale rod tho -oraUfl flf Prague. , Moldau'a stream, 3 wan moon oyej-bead, »d, as in an ayful-df oam, ' of the 4ca4, eoa-fog, landward bound, jtffll camp ,wa9 aeon, ' a sorjroiyibl, deep sound, ‘.r flow’d betjaroen.;' 'oico nor sound was tlieyc, m,' nor Sentry's pacej ike banners clasp'd the aip, Is with clouds embrace, £ho pJ4 ppthpdral beljl \*d tho siorouiff prayer, ipyJUious jropp apd fclj larmed aiiv . •road valley fast and fur jlcd ttrmy fled ; i glorious sao/ning star, itly host jrras dead. - in tho marvelous jheart of man, range and mystic, scroll, u army of phantoms vast and wan* leagurod tho human soul. )jimp’d beside Life's rushing stream, misty, light,-, ;£ntio shapes and shadows glcarty .. ’hrtoutious through the night , ■ 'f f itfl midnightijattlo-ground ie spectral oatnp is rfoon, i jnith a sorrowful deep sound, 'lows tho River of £ifo betJjreei^ jico, nor sound-is there, •my of jtho grave; : . iaijongo breaks the aift rushing of Life's wav-e. tb'ei solemn and deep ohuroh-boH •the soul to pry, . ;h£ phantoms feol Ujo spoil,•- ■ ■ kVa away. : . ofl’Eir; ~ ; djru.ee; originally descended irijmcih .pf the Scottish family of as borne in hupablo oircumstan-. close of tho last century, at; _jrDay, » ; .ao South of England J: ap(i there,. .^redi^i^Ma v seafaring life. ‘ '} v thirty years' of age, to-wit, in g i b; l ;yeafe'iB?9i ho was srst mate on a barque jhiyerpool anjl St. . ; Ojf .hor voyages bound westward, be i, I fiye or six weeks out, and ha-. . 1 i tlje.ppstern pprtion of the Banks i the ,■captain ,aijd mate had' ;' at noon, taking an observation ') which they both Responded day’s worlj. iuinhodiatply.at; (ina the Short s'tiiirw.ay < >iiiW^ & '” .gthwart ships; £mmedi- WW is stairway, just .beyond a iho jnato’e State-- & vt tending .there were two jl»‘ other; the ohd .opening aft Hu/ other, fronting the atair «pi -room. The desk in-tho le forward part of it, close any one sitting at it and '.older, could see ipto tile $ ip Ifls calailjition, which expected, varying'cohsid icL-reoboning, had not no jnojions. JViien t ho had he galled out with “l ipake our latitude and Can that be right! JJow ing no reply, he repeated >g .over his shoulder and s'Vuv' 0 .Wptain huay ' • ®tul no answer.— and, ns he fronted the he h#d mistaken for the head and disclosed, to the the features of an entire 'ward; but sag ho mot, the it him in grave silence, and it it was no one whom ho re, it was too much for him; iping to question tho seem |heiT upon deck in such ev instantly attract the cap ,‘Why, Mr. Bruce,” said in tho world is tho matter irV. IV-Uo ia .that your know of” .< .‘‘But there is, sir; there’s a, strancor Stranger 1 Why, man, you must he d&Mqilte.i vXou must hayo seen the; steward »Bond mate. . Who .else wild rithout my orders V’ T •• was sitting in your arm-chair, jor, writing on your slate.— up full in my face; and, if ev plainly,and distinctly in this I don’t: Tshw a man, ?; : had never seen in my life bir. ho going crazy, Mr, Bruce, A Ptrongcr and wo nearly six weeks out,!” wjiml. , “ I need not say,so,” rejoined tho other, looking at it, “ for yon saw mo write it." this ?" said the captain, turning the •slgteoyer, , I*-* l ® “ft ll looked first, at one writing, then at the other, finite confounded. At last, “ What is the moaning of this.?" said he. “I only W^mL° n ? ef tnoso. Who wrote the other?" 1 hat ,s more than I can toll you, sir. My mate hero says you wrote it, sitting at this desk, at noon to-day.” • Tho captain of the wrook and tho passen ger looked at each other, “ exchanging glances “ I know, sir; tpit then I saw, him.” “Go down and see who,it' is.” Brace hesitated, never was a believer in ghosts,” ho said; “ but, if the truth iflust he told sir, I’d rather not face it alone.” “ Oopie, comp, n;an t Go down at once, and don’t piakp fl, fool fif yourself bpforp t)ip crew.” . “ J hope yop’vp plways fopnd (no willing to do what’s, reasonahle,” Bruce replied, ohapg; Jpg color; “but if it’s all the same to you, sir, J'd rfl.thor we shojild both go dOtyn togeth er.” , ifhp captain descended the stairs, and the matp followed him. Nobody in" the cabin 1— They pxapiipe.4 the Btgtp-rooms, Not a soul to bo found! . ‘ “Well, Mr. Bruce” said the captain, 4$ not I tell you you hpd been dreaming?” _ “It’s all very well to say so, sir; but if | didn’t see that man writing on yopr.,slij,tp, may I never see my house and family again 1” “Ah! writing on the slate! Thouitshould ho there still.” And the captain took it up. ‘ f ßj he cxclainjed, “ here’s some thing, sure enough! Is that your writing, Mr. Bruce?” The mate took tho slate; and there, ini plain, legible .characters, stood the words, “ Steer .to the Nor'west.” ' 1 “ Have you been, trifling with me, sir ?" ad djcd tho captain, in a stern manner; “On my word as a. man and as a sailor, pir,” replied Bruce, “'I know, no more of this ■matter than you do. I have teld the exact truth.” ’ , The captain sat down at his desk, the slate before him, in deep thought.' 4-t last turning the slate over arid pushing it towards Bruce, he said, -“Writs down, ri Steer to thp nor*- west.”’' .. . .. The mate cojppjjed ; and the captain, after narrriwly .comparing the two hand-writings, said/ jjar/ Br.ufijs, go g-pfl fell tffe eegorid mate to conjc down hero,”' ’ , lie camp; and, at tire captain's request, ho also wr-rote the sau>® words. So did the stew ard. . ; So, in succession, did every man, of tho crew who could write at all. But not one of tho various hands resembled, in any degree, the mysterious writing.- When tho crow retired, the captain sat deep in thought. “ Could any one have been stow ed away t’ at lasf ho said. “ Tho ship must bo searched; and if I don’t find the fellow he must boa good hand at hide-and-seek. .Or der up all hands." Every nook and corner of the vessel, from -stern to stern, was thoroughly searched, and that with all the eagerness of excited curiosi ty—for the report had, gone out that a stran ger had shown himself onboard; but not a Jiving soul, beyond ..the crewpnd officers, was found, ■ . BoturpJjjg to the cabin after their fruitless search, “ Mr. Bruce,” said the captain, “ what the devil do you make of all this ?” “ Can't tell, sir, I saw the man write ; you see th,e writing. There must bo something in it;" , “ Woll, ifc would, sobn?i so. Wc havo iho wind free, and I have a giriht : mind to keep her away and see what will come of it.” “ I surely would, sir, if I were in your place. It’s only, a,few hours lost at the worst.” 1 V “Well, we'll see. Go on deck and give the cojjrso nor’wost. And, Mr. Bruce,” ,he added, as the mate rose to go, “have a look out aloft, and let it ho a hand you can depend on.” Ilia orders were obeyed. About three o’clock the look-out reported uu iceberg near - ly ahead, and, shortly after, what ho thought was a vessel of soipe kind close to it. jJ.s tliey.approached, tho captain’s glass dis closed the fact that it was a dismantled ship, • apparently frozen to the ice, 'and with a good j many, foeings on it. Shortly after, i they, hove te.jipd sent out the fibyig jto the: ! relief of tfie sufferers." ' ■ ; I ; It proved to.Jje ,a yisscilfron)i/Quebec,;boiundi cto Liverpool, with passengers on board. She ’ had gotfentangled in the ice, and finally fro ■; zen fast, and had .several weeks in a. most pritiefil .situation. ’ She was stave, fieri ,■ docks fiictya mere wreck f all her, 5 proyisiops, and almost all her water, gone.— Ifer .erew and passengers find lost all hopes of being, sayed, and their gratitude for the unex . poqted rescue was proportionately great, ' As one of the men who had been brought away in the third boat that had reached the wreck was ascending the ship's side, the mate, catching a glimpse of his face, started back in constofnatioit. : it tou tho very face he had seen; three or four hours before, looking up at hhn frtpfi the captain’s desk. At first ho tried to .pfersUado himself it might be fanfiy; b’it the more he examined the fisivn the more euro ho became that he was right; Not'only Orb ffico, but tfie person and the dress, exactly ’corresponded; h As .soon gs.the exhausted crow . and famish-! cd passengerswere oared for, and the barque. ,du hor the mgto called the cap tain aside; ‘'dt seems that was not a ghost 5 I saw to-day, sir; thii man’s alive.’” “ What do you mean? Who’s alive?” “ Why, sir, one of tho passengers wo have just saved is the same mftn I saw writing on your slabs [lt ndon, I would swear tp it i.u a .court of justice,” . ■4“ Upon hfy word, jVIr. Bruce,” replied the captain, “ this gets more and more puig-ular. Jjet us .’go Jftnd.-pee this gentleman:” ’’ ’ ■They fqund fiim ip obny.prsatiftp -jvfiifi tfie captain of the resqqed ship.' /Theyboth ckme forward, and expressed, in ’thowafnjest terms, ,their gratitude tor deliverance from a horrible death -fiy .exposure and starvation. ‘ The captain replied that lio had but,done cy would have done for hinj under the same circumstances,, and asked thorn both to stop down into the cabin. Then, turning to the passenger, ho said, “ I hope, air, you .will not tnink I am trifling with you; but I would bo much obliged to you if you would write a few words on this slate.”— Ajfr iT e . v a ?ded hup th,o slate, with’ sido up bn which the mysterious writing wOs not. “I will do anything you ask/’.'replied the passon gor; “but what shall I writ**?” “A fow words arc all I. want. ipupposo you write Steer to the nor’woat.-’ ” ‘ The passenger evidently puzzled to make out this motive for such a request, did so, how ever,.with a smile. The captain took up tho slate and examined it closely; then stepping' aside so ye to copceal the slate from the pas senger, jio turned it over, and gave it to pim i again with the other side up. ■‘You saythat ja your handwriting?" epid of intelligence and surprise; and the former asked tho latter, “ Did yog dream that ypu wrote on this s]ato ?” ' . ’ ' , “ No, sir, not that f remember.” f ‘ Yon speak of dreaming," said the captain of tho barque, “ What wps this gentleman gbout at noon to-day ?" . “ Captain,” rejoined the other, “ tho wholo thing is most mysterious and extraordinary and I had intended to speak.to you about it as soon as we got a little quiet. This gentle-: man',” ((pointing to the passenger,)' “ being much exhausted, foil into a heavy sleep, or what seemed such, some time before noon.—: 4fter an hour or more ho awoke, and said to mo, ” Captain, we shall be relieved this very day.” When'l asked him what reason, ho had for saying so, he replied that ho' had dreamed that ho was oh board a barque, and that she wqs coming to our rescue. He de scribed hpr appearp-opfi and rig; and, to my utter ostonisliipent/ whon your ypssol hove in sight she corresponded exactly to lps tion of her. W° bad not put much faith in what ho said i yet still wp hoppd there might bo something in it, for drowning men, you know, will catch at straws. As it has turned put, I cannot doubt that it was all arranged, iii some incomprehensible way, by an overru : ling Providence, so that we’ might bo saved, To Him be all thanks -for his goodness to us. “ There is not a doubt,” rejoined the other captain, “ that tho writing on tho slate, let it have come there as it may, saved all your lives. I was steering. at tho time considero: bly South of West, and I altered my course to nor’west, and had a look-out aloft, to see what would come of it. But you say,” ho added, .turning to the passenger, “ that you did not dream of writing on a slate J” , “ No, sir. I nave no recollection whatever of doing so. I got the impression that the barqqp I saw in my dream was coming to the rescue of us; but how that impression came f cannot tpll. There is another very strange thing about it,” ho added. “Every thing hero on board seems to mo 1 quite familiar; yet I am sqro that I never was in your vessel before. It is a puzzle to me. What did your mate spa?” Thereupon Mr.Bruco related to them all tho circumstances above detailed. Tho con clusion they finally arrived at was, that it was. a special interposition of Providence to save' them from what seemed a hopeless fate. The aboyo narrative was communicated to mo by Captain *J. S, Clarke, of jthp p.ohooner iJtdia Salloclf ,* who hgd it diiwtly from Sir. ■Bruce himself They sailed together for sev enteen months, in tho years 1836 and ’37; sp that Captain Clarke had the story from -the male about eight years after the occurrence. Ho has since lost sight of him; and does not : ktfow whether ho is alive. All,ho has heard of him since they wore shipmates is, that he continued to tracts to New Brunswick, that; ; ho became the master of tho brig Comet , and. I'that she was lost. I asked Captaip Clarke if he knew Bruce well, and what sort of a. man he was. ... ■ A B ,truthful. and..straigditforwardia man.’’ hereplied, “as ever I met ih all my life.; We were as intimate as brothers; and two men can’t be together, shut up for seventeen mouths in the same ship, without getting,to know whether they can trpst one another’s word or not. Ho always spoke of the circumstances in terms of reverence, as of an incident that seemed to bring him nearer to God .arid to an other world. I’d stake my life upon it that ho told mo no lie;” *ln July, 51859. ‘The Julia Efallock was then ly ing at. the foot of. Rutger's SHp, Now York and St. Jagp, in tho island of Cuba. The captain allowed, mo to use his name, and to rofer to him as evidence for .the truth of what is boro sot down. decidedly fool, ■ A Boston lady, who had somewhat of a ! Bace,haiialion spouse, resolved to frighten him into temperance! She therefore engaged a watchman, at a stipulated reward, to’ carry A* Philander",'to the watch house while ho was; in a stpto of insensibility, and frighten him a ! little when he recovered. In accordance with: this anrangemorit he woke up in the watch house about midnight and found himself on his back. Ho looked around bewildered un til his eyes'rested on a man sitting by a stove’ a cigar. ’ ‘ ; “ Where am 1,-?” asked Philander. “ In a medical college;” said the cigar epuK kor. What a doing there 1” ‘ Going to bo cut upf” ‘ Cut up!—how comes that ?'■’ ‘tyhy, you died while drunk, 1 we nave brought your carcas from your wife, who had a right to sell it, for it’s all the good could over niake out of you. If you’i;e hot dead it’s no fault of the' doctors, and they will cut you up dead or alive!” “Yob will, olif’-’ asked tho old sot. “ To be sure wo will—now immediately,” was the resolute answer. . “Well, now look o’here, old feller, can’t r ou let.ua have something to drink before you login ?” ’ j ' Death of the “ Talking Fish.”—The pub-. lie will be surprised to hear that this curious ■ performer lias-died. The recent hard frost' affected it ; very severely, and on. Wednesday afternoon; about hplf-paat six o’clock, it ceased to signs'-of life; aAerJihe hard, weather adt in it began to give indications of being ‘ out of torts,’ and was very ill for three days previous to its death, being unable to perform. Jt wad covered with blankets, and water was lot out of its tub. Several medical gentlemen, acquainted with the natural’.bla tory.of such animals; were sent for, and they gave what advice they ooiuld, which rvas acted upon. The animal, however, continued to get worse, and on Wednesday afternoon, be ing .unable to oat anything, the wife of the proprietor wont in ,to see it. It distinctly re cognized her, and answered her inquiry by its peculiar grunt of “ Mammal” In trying to raise itselrto come near her, the effort was tpo much for it, and it fell over on its side and expired. The loss will be a heavy one to the proprietor, as he was deriving a good income from its exhibition, and not long since was of fered by a speculator the sum of £1,500 for it.~Londoti Times, December 27, BD* A : speaker enlarging on the rascality of the devil, got off tho following. “ I tell .you that the deyil is on old liar; for when . I wpa about getting religion, ho told we that if f did get religion, I could not go into gay company, and lie; and .cheat, br any such thing; but I hpy.o found him out to bo a groat liar," , ’ DC?* Oh, 'tia hard, indeed 1-rrA mpu flamed Oats : was had up rocently for beating his.wife end children. On being sentenced to impris onment; tho 'brute remarked that it was very hard a pian was not allowed to thrash his own oats.. ' . . C7* A passenger on a steamer had a roll of canvass with him; in a. lurch of the boat it rolled overboard.' Ho pitched in after it; on seeing which, o, by-standor remarked, “As that fellow is in’for a duck, ho is bound to have the canvas-hack !” -CARLISLE, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 1, JB6Q. pY FRANCIS DB tiAISS JANVIER. ff Liberty and- Union,'now and forever, oro flpd Jnscpefablo .' , , Union 1 Tlio;Unioni Tho hope of thq free! , powsoo'er wo mny diffor, In this wo agree— Our glorious, banner No traitor shall mar, . I}y effacing a stripo Or destroying a star J ?ivision ! No# never J ho Union forever I ' And cursed be tho hand That our country would sever I ITho Union! Tho Union! • 'Twas purchased 'with blood! - £Hdo by side, to secure it, Our forefathers stood— From the Northto the South, Through iho length of tho land, pan the war-cry which summoned That patriot band! Division] No, neverl' The Union forever I' And cursed bo tho. hand V That.our counlry'wpuld sevor! The Union I Tho Union! At Lexington, first, Through the clouds of oppression, Its radiance burst— But, at Yorktown,'rolled back The last yapory.crest, And, a fright constellation, , It in.tho West! - Division I *' No/ never I ' The Union forever] And cursed bo the' hand That our pouutry /yybuld sever I Tho Union 1 The Union] Its hcayonly light Ohoers the hearts of the nations Who grope in tho night— * And, athwart the wide ocean, • Falls, gliding tbo tidcs, , A path to the country’ ■>’ Where Freedom abides! Division ! No, never! Tho Union forever I . And cursed bo the hand That, our country would sever ! The Unitpjkrl Tho Union! In God wfe jeposo! '■' Wo confide in the power That vanquished our.foes 1 Tho of bur fathers-7* ph, still may Ho be .. . The strength of the tlnion, Tho hopo of, tho frfie i/ Division# ’No,.never.!' Tho Union ibrbvcri ; , Ajid oure'ed be the hand. - J?hqt our country would sever I Tyro Ways to Save Money. John Poland didri’t say; anything about the l two animals ho had bought a ycarjmd a-balf and the calf thoy had'yielded him, for ,wmph he had been offered ■mthin - tlui.Aveck four. ImnrlreP of stock over, arid above ,the < stock ■ owfted by Lyman.. He turned the Subject of conversa tion as quickly as possible, for he wanted tp hear no more reasons from his friend* for riot lending him (he money.. ■ ;■. This afternoon he wont-over to see tho man of whom he had bought this how stock, who lent him the money ho needed readily. " “What afool,!" said Lymati, as ho saw the carpenters at work tearing away one whole side of his neighbor’s barn,'preparatory to adding an apartment capable of accommoda ting fortyefive head of cattle. However, Po land worked on, and tried* in; vain to get his neighbor to listen to some of his advice. “Don’t talk.to me," cried Lyman; at the end of that second year. “I’ve got four hundred dollars at interest. How much have- you got?" : ■ “A thousand or .so,” returned the other, “Eh? what do-you mean?" : 1 “Why all the money I have laid putonthis plp.ee, is on interest.” ah,.ha, hp., ha—rand howipuohiutc rest bpye , “So. far I've lbft.it all rjiri at’ppjppound in terest-put the interest right:ip' with the principal, gnd there it lies/’ - 1 ’ “ ’. , there it will lie. I don’t believe you can paise fifty' dollars now in cash.” “yon .are right Lyman—l cmild not raise it withdnt aelhng something which J do not wish at present to mrt with/’. “I thought, so. ijut take your own way.” Ere long Arison Lyman was astonished to hear that his’rieighbor had subscribed for a third paper, hesjdps. buying,a lot of bpoks for his children; ‘ ’ ’* - '' ” ' ' ' s “What’s the nee?” he sjiid, gs-be spijin his neighbor’s front room, arid saw.fi jlarge pile of books op the shelf. “I want my to learn to work—not to bp sppuding.thpir time over books. They getpchoQiingenpugb phen our school is open.’’ ’ ■ “ ■ ' “So 1 moan that my children shall learn to .work,” returned ; Polarid; /.‘but that shall not prevent them from becoming .well educated. I would, rather Jeave them with good health; good characters arid good education, than with akhpusands of dollars each miriiis tho educa tion.”-'' “Oho'l that's the .way you njcan to lay up a thousand dollars to have it in books and in papers, ahd-new tic-ups and such like.” “rou shall sco when the time is up.” -•‘■Wo ” returned. Lyman, as ho turned towards home. Mr. Lyman had not fully realized how much corn Poland had received from the' land ho manured sp lipavily and so carefully, and year ho only noticed that his neighbor, had “extraordinary good luck” with his wheat; getting about ninety bushels from three acres. But hd had occasion to open his byes on the third year; . . Onp evening, just at sunset, he wept oyer into Poland’s field, where,the nion wore just finishing raking up the three acre piece where the grain had been the year before—the firat piece the present owner had plowed up and dressed. ■ “Been piling some hay on hero?” said Ly man, as ho saw the huge bunches of hay near ly as thick as they could stapd. • “No; this is hllout from those three ppres/’ returned' Poland.- . Lyman counted the bundles, pud then es timated their average weight, and ufion reck oning up ho found.that tye land had yielded not for from four tops .to the aero 1 Ho know that-Ppljipd had got ipdvo'than ten bushels of wheat per gore thgri.ho. had done,, and .also more corn. Ho began to think;, but yet Ke wpuld not’leave his monpy go fpy any such •‘‘exnorimonta’ , eupon his place. : The five years came .around, 1 and Ansop Lyman went on that i'day, ,phd sold ifourteen bushels of corn in order to getfoiirteon dollars to put with nine hundred and eighty-six dob fers, which he had at homer 1 , , “Well, Poland, I’ve got the prize I”, said Lyman, entering the farmer’s barn in the. af ternoon. It was early spring, just fiyo. years from the day on which they bought.' “I've got h thousand dollars; now wlnit hove you got? . “Well, I have not far from four hundred ; dollars in money.” HE JJNtOlf, /By pOBB. “Aha—l thought so.” “But, Anson Lyman,” said Poland, almost fiternlyj ‘fare your pyep’not opened yot?” “Opened | \yhat tfo yop mean?” r “Well, I hipaii that my' farm tOrday will sell for onp more than yours will. Look at my I)ay mow. ’•’There arp ncar : ly twenty tons qf ftay; yon Imvo noj tap. And jnihd yoji, I have live hcpd of cattle iporp than you have. Next season I shall cut more hoy from twelve acres, which I have now regenc? rpted, than you will cut upon your forty acres; and you know my hay is worth far more a pound than your hoy is, I told you I had five more head of cattle than you had. For these five creatures J can, within six hours, take several hundred dollars cash, hut no such money can purchase them of mo. Ah, Lyman, you have keen saving money, hut you have taken it from your farm without re luming anything for it,” “Never mind—l've got my thousand dol lars, and I’ve got my farm as good os the day I- bought it.” " “Not quite, Lyman,” ■ “HowSO.” “You have taken off two hundred cords of good wood." “Well—so you take off some,” • “Aye—but what I took from my wood lot I put back.upon my field, 1, did not take it from my farm.” Mr. Lyman wont away with new thoughts, ipime passed on, and at the end of another five years the eyes of Anson Lynian were wholly opened; Poland had nowfailed quite p. stock of noble cattle from his first purchase, pud conjmejjced tq sell to the beef market. ’Two hundred dollars was the least spry one of .them brought when fatted; and onp -bpllock foiir’yeprs bid, brought him tln-po hundred and tqn dollars. His twenty acre field was Jiko a garden yielding, such as how mowed an avorago qf three tons to the acre. In short, his-whole farm wps under- the best training and improvement, and now yielded him,back a heavy interest ppon all that ho had expen ded. : 'Di)fiqg one fall he took over a thousand dollars tor stock and produce; and ho was of fered five thousand dollars for his place, while Lyman could not have fqund a purchaser at fifteeij hundred !''; ’ , “Holly,’-’ said Anson lyman, sinking into a chair, “I’ve been a fool! a fool I say,” “Why, Anson? What do you mean?” “Mean? Look at Poland’s farm." “I have looked at it from the first, A-a sotl .” “You have ? And,what have yoii seen ?” “Why I saw that John Poland was making a comfortable home for himself and family, and increasing the value of his farm ten fold,” - - ■ “And why didn’t you tell me so 7” • “I did tell you so, husband, and you said I was a fool.” , “I remember. Well, never mind. ’Han't ton late nojv.” Qn tJjo next morning Mr. Lyman vent over to his neighbor’s and frankly said;, ~ “Poland, you, must help me, I want to "Jojirn tO'bo a farmer.” v“. ■ ■ "wiU b ( ?lp you with pleasure; Anson; and you, mb' begin far more easily thaji I, did;'for yon have money.” ' " And iLyman commenced. The thousand dcjlara was nearly all expended in the work, but in the end ho found nimself the gainer, his ddllars came back to him with interest, ,t\vlce. told.. Ho had learned a. many might follow with profit. Dr. jFffljJkJiu on Dontb, Wo have lost a , most dear and" valuable re lation. But it is the will of God and nature that these mortal bodies bo laid aside when the soul is to enter real life. This is rather the embyro state; a preparation for living. A man is not completely born until he is dead. Why should wo grieve when a now child is Born to the immortals? We ars spirits! That bodies should bo lent us while they can afford i}S pleasure, assist us in acquiring knowledge, or doing good to our fellow' creatures, is a kind, benevolent act of God.' When they be come unfit for these purposes qnd afford us • pain instead of of aid be come ah answer none of the intentions for which they were given—it is equally kind and benevolent that a way is provided Jay which wo may get rid of them. Death is that Wo ourselves, in some cases..choos.o "a partial death, A jangled, painful limb, ‘which cannot be restored, we willingly cut off. Ho who pjuoka out a.tooth parts with it freely since pain goes with it; and ho who quits the whole body parts at once yyith all the pains and diseases it was liable to or capable of pjaking. Pur friends and we were invited abroad on .a parly of pleasure, which is to last forever. His chair was ready first and he has gone be fore pa; we. could not conveniently start to gether. Why should you and Ibo grieved at this, since we are soon, to follow, and know where to find him. The Secret of Happiness. —The most common error of men and women is that of looking for happiness somewhere outside of useful work. It has never yet been found when thus sought, and never will be while the world stands, and the sooner this truth is learned the better for every one. If you doubt the proposition, glance around among your friends and acquaintances, and select those; who appear to; have the. most onjoymppi in life. Are they the idlers and pleasure aeCk ors or the earnest workers 1 Wo know what your answer will be.. ’ Of all the miserable hjjtpan -bpiegs it has boon our fortjine, or misfortune, to know.they were the most wretched who had retired from gsoful. employments in. order to .enjoy them selves. Why, the slave, at his enforced labor, or the hungry toiler for bread, wero supreme ly happy in comparison; ‘ Earnestly would wo inipress upon young minds the truth wo have stated. It lies at the foundation of dll, well-doing and well-be ing; , It gives tranquility and pleasure to the youth just stepping across the threshold of rational life, as well as the man whose years beginning to rest upon his' stempphouldors. Be oyer .engaged in useful work ir yon would pd happy. This is tjie great sdoreti ■ ■ ’. Arthurs Magazine ■. CST If yop cannot reason or persuade & naan into the truth, never attempt tpforoe him into it. -Times are alteredhenctos i ‘ fire and fag-. got, .putting of bars; drowning witches, and Other holy games-. Jut the same spirit still lives ip opi* midst. [CP 1 A- negro was fined §lO nt. St. Louis On Tuesday, and ordered to leave the Slate with in* throe days, for being in Missouri without a license.; ' A woman in Louisa county, lowa, com mitted suicide, by jumping into a well, from depression,; because her husband was involved in d law suit; , DCa* At Ocohmowac; Wis.; last week a nian named Eivgen, quarreled with Joseph Mills; and struck him n powerful blow under tho jaw with his fist, killing him instantly. ; A Negro Dijcnssioa about Fggs. Genova, the lovely village on Seneca Lake, furnishes the following specimen of parlia mentary rpling; In the fairest village of Western New York the “culled ppssons, in imitation of their white tuptlirpn, fptnipd a debating society for the purpose of improving thqip' rpmds by the discussion of hjslrpoliye and entertaining top ics. _ 'file deliberations of thq society were presided over by a venerable dartey-j who performed his duties with the utmost dignity pecujifir to his color. The subject for discus sion oh the occasion on which we write, was: “What am dq mpddqr ob de chickens—do hen what lay de eggs or do hen what hatch do chicks ?” The question was warmly debated, and many reasons, pro -and con, were urged and combated by the excited disputants. Those in favor of thq latter proposition were evident ly in the majority, and the President made ho attempt to conceal that his sympathies wqro were with the dominant party,' At length (in intelligent darkey rose from the minority side, and.begged leave to state a proposition to this effect: • “Spbse," said ho, “dat you set one dozen duck eggs under a hen, and dey hatch, which am de mpdder— de duck op'do hen ?” This was a poser, was well put, aijd non plussed the other side, even staggering the President, who plainly saw the force of the smoke meat’s argument, and had committed himself too far to yield without a struggle; so, after cogitating and-scratching his woll a few moments, a bright idea Struck hjnj. Rising in his chair, with all the coneeiopsnesa qf su periority, be announced; ' ' ' “Ducks am not before’ do house; chiekpns am do question; derefo’ I rule do dueks out,” and do it ho did, to the, complete overthrow 'of his opponents,' -* • ■ Shun Affectation.— There is nothing more beautiful in the young than simplicity of char acter. It is honest, frank and attractive.— How different is affectation 1 The simple minded are always natural. They are at the samp time original. The affected are never natural," And as for originality, if they ever had it, they have crushed it out, and hurried it from sight utterly. . Be yourself then, young friend I To . attempt to bo anybody else ,is worse than folly. It,is an impostibility to at tain it. It is contemptible ,to try. But sup pose you could succeed in imitating the great est'man that ever, figured in history, would thatmakoyoK any the greater ? By no meats. You should always, suffer in comparison with the imitated png, pnd be-thought of only as a 1 shadow of a Coho of ;a real sound—the counterfeit of a pure coin I, Dr., Johnson aptly considered the heartless imi tator (for such is he who affects the character, of another) to the Empress of Jluaaia, when she had done the freakish .thing of erecting a palace of ice,. It was splendid ,and eonspicu-. chis while it lasted j' bpt the s,uu goon- ipolted : it, tvndcauaedita attraetionS te dissolve into. common watef, : while the humblest stone cot tage stood firm and unharmed, let the fab-, rio, though over so'humble,; be at least reah-^ . Avoid affecting the character of another, how-; ever great. Build your own; 'Bo'what God intended you to bo—yourself, .and not some body else. Shun affectation. ’ The Wife;— : There is a groat deal of truth in the following lines, written by one who has unquestionably had experience, and utters what he considers the truth: . It needs ho guilt to break a husband’s heart.. The absence Of icohjtent; Jthe of spleen, the ijijitidyrdfes,s 'and cheerless home, the forbidding scowl and:de?e'rtcd h®artb—• these, and of per nameless neglects without a .crime among them,’ hoyo harrowed to’ the quick the hparl’p. core of many a man and planted there, beyond the reach of cure, the germ of dark despair. 0, may woman, before the sight arrives, dwell on the recollections of her youth, and cherishing the dear idea of that tuneful time, awaken and keep alive tlje pro mise she so kindly gave. though she may bo the injured, not' the injuring one—the forgotten and not the forgetting wife—a hap py, allusion to the hour of peaceful love—a kindly welcome to a comfortable home—a smile of love to banish hostile words—a kiss of peace to pardon all the past, and the hard est heart that ever looked itself within the breast of selfish man, will Soften to her charms, and bid her live, as she had hoped, her years of matchless bliss, loved, loving, and contonl —the source of comfort, and the spring of joy, An Ohio editor gives his yiowS of tho several dances which he lately witnessed at a ball in, Washington. He says : “The want of variety in "this metropolitan dancing was, however;' fully made up by tho fancy things, such as' ££e waltz and polka. These were absolutely barbarous; Tho old fashioned wait?, the morality of which even Byron called into Question, is hero ignored as altogether too.cold and distant. The lady lays her head on the gentleman’s bosom, pitta one hand on liis, and tlio other on his coat tail pocket, and resigns herself to his embraces, and goes to sleep, all but her feet, which when carried by him clear off the floor, go pat .tipg around bn tho toes; Tho gentleman thus ■bntwined, throws his head back arid his eyes up; like a dying calf; his body .bent in tho shape of a figure 4, ho whirls, backs tip, swings. around, swoons, to all appearances, dashes forward, and leaves tho ring, to the delight of all decent people. Negro Excitement in Newburgh. —On Tuesday a man visited Newburgh and endea vored to got an insane negro woman into the aayluin therc. For some reason her admis sion was declined, and the man .proceeded to the yillogd with'the. woman'. A rumor spread 'through the town that the woman was a fugitive .slave, and that the man was her J owner, and was about faking her back to sla very. v 1 " •• A large Crowd, headed by the moat pronii nent Abolitionists of the place, congregated at the hotel. -The cum Jkept perfectly coo,l du ring the excitement, respectfully refusing to answer any inf the numerous questions that wore nut to him by the crowd, tie said, how ever, that tho woman was cwy, apd that ho I was anxious to place her in a proper retreat. This was not satisfactory. The crowd said ( they must liberate her, and they at length I made themselves so disagreeable that thC inan I took out his well-Hnod pocket-book, and said that ho would give any man in the crowd, who could give satisfactory evidence of his responsibility and kindness, S2OO to take tho woman off his hands. ’ Nobody took up tho oR for and the man loft. ,We understand ho is from Kentucky, and that tho .woman is a slave.—Cleveland Plaiiidealer, 16 th. ; JET” Plain >s the strongest word in the fem inine vocabulary to express ill looks; Some think it mild, but it is powerfully, though del icately, expressive; That which is plain is conspicuous., It means, therefore,' remarka bly ugly. A lady never calls a bull-dog plain, but a baboon; That would bo too severe. anb .(ffitob?.. O’ Speak little and well, and people will take you for somebody. [C7 - Thoae who attempt nothing themselves think everything performed. Of It is chiefly young ladies of narrow un derstanding' wjjq year plybea too tight for themv O’ Try to let everybody's faults b 6 forget ton, as you wish yours tp be. " ’ O’ Your character cahpot be essentially injured, except by your own aots. _O’ Kindness is the golden chain which hinds society together. . ’■ O’ What did a blind wood sawer take td restore his.'sight ? He took his horsfi and Saw. O’, He that cannot fqrgivc othera breaks the bridge over which he himself must pass. O’ Why are good husbands like dough f women (k) heed them. O’ Look out for paint,".ah the girl said when a fellow went to kiss her. O' Why is g cat’s tail like a swan’s bo som? Because it’grows dowiv DO The reporter who took rough notes is having them, smoothed' dowm ■ v ' O’ It should be remembered that a bare assertion js not fieoossarily'the naked truth. O’ One ought to have dptes at one’s fin iidr’s ends, seeing they' groyinpon the palm'. [O’ If you wish to collect together all . the pretty girls in town, advertise a “ lecture to young men.’’ O’ “What’s in a dress?’’ asks ii popular writer. Sometimes a great deal, and some tiines a precious littlfr. DO* “ I must leave in dis gust,” as the dar key said when he'bid his friend “goodnight’’ during & thunder storm. _0” The man who is fond of. puddings and. pies places himself fearfully in the power of nig wife. . DT7* Sydney Smith compares the whistle of a locomotive to the’squeal of an attorney when Satan first gets hirih ' ' E 7” The man who was hemmed in by' a crowd, has been troubled with a stitch in his side over since. XT” So long,as meh are imprudent in their. diet and their business, doctors and lawyers will ride in cariagoa. . OCT” “ What have you to remark, madam; about my singing ?” “ Nothing, sir, it is not remarkable.” C7* The “ first” business of. tynn ?S £he ' manufacture of shoes'. That, however, is ul i timately connected with the, “ last” business; CC7* Wo know sWo men, who, when they are perplexed in argument, get oht just as poor debtors,got O’ Elderly .unmarried ladies are .consid ered by sods pefsons'the lepst enviable of,all kinds of waiting rAaids-. O’ A child froze .to death in its cradle at Milwaukee, on the night of the 30th ult;, the mercury being 24° below zero; Fat Office.— Froitt statistics pilbliahed it is inferred that the income of the Sheriff of,Now- Fork is at least $60,000 a year I. - OC7” Don’t force a man to take your advice! I You ‘can advise him’to take a bath without pitching him into the liver. ' , .yoji fall into misfortune, disengage yourself aS well as you Pan; Creep through the bushes that have tli‘6 fewest briars. ' 0?ln France love is a comedy; ini England ji. tragedy; in Italy an opera.; in (Scrniany a' melodrama. ' DCT” It may seem a paradox, but it is never theless truth, that, Hit a man upon whatever' part of the body you will; the blow is sure to go against the stomach; ' OCT” Twenty-six persons, Aged one hundred and over, have died within the United. States in 1859. The oldest was Caesar, a colored' man in sged J3B. ' . . 1 OdfUerirri in childhood, if yoii can, that happiness is not outside;' but inside. ' A good heart and a clear conscience bring happiness; no riches or circumstances alone ever do; DCT” Fashionable circles were never so nu merous as they are , now. Almost every lady that appears in the streets is the centra of one; ■' OZh Why is a fool in a high station like a man in a balloon ? Because everybody apr pears little to hini, arid he appears little to everybody. ; ; ' ■ 1 ■ OCT” A Poet sajrs tliat the wind kisses the waves. That; wo suppose; is. the celebrated “ kiss for h blow" about which he have-heard so much; There lire doforriiitieswhieh attract no particular attention, but a man born without eot must necessarily bo a hento-rioua oharae- An Ice iJmjndlsr.— '-A s.entiinentftllady-vis itor to Mount Vornon was found weeping bib torly over the icc-biuse—mistaking it fir tho tomb of ~ . . Titaowixa jthje gen jo fde VpUAtE.-ySince holiday .week; the drygoods retailers, like tho mariners of Jonah’s ship, sink their profit ra ther than .shorten their sales.' keep eggs from spoiling, oat them: while they ire fresh. Wo have tried all kinds of methods,’ but this wo think is tho only one ; to be relied on “ in any climate:" , I H ST A sensible writer advises those who i would enjoy good eating to keep good natur-. od; “for," says ho, “ an ailgrytrian can’t tell whether he,is eating boiled cabbage or stewed umbrellas." BST, A poor fellow, having got His skull fractured, was told by tKo doctor that the brain was visible, when ho remarked," Do write to father, for ho always declared I had nono.” , CT" A Yankee bragging of, having killed a i - young panther whoso tail was “three feet long,’’ Brown observed that tho amiraal died seasonably, (Is the tail was jtiat long enough not “ to be continued.” Tho only " liberty cap,” edya a clev er and witty author, is the "night-cap;” In it men visit, ono third, of their fives, the land Of sleep—the only land where they arc always free and ecpial.” " i Well, J and, this is a queer world/’ said Joe to his wife; “a sect or women phi-r losophors has just sprung up.'”. "Indeed," said Jane, “ and what do, they hqld/" strangest thing is nature,” said he, their tongues?” M&38..,