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T B.R M S BimfloniPTiow. —Two Dollars if paid-fciltlifh tho .|i)orj and’Two Dollars anil Fifty Cants, if not paid >rftfain the year.- Those terms will ho rigidly fid~ ’bored to .in every instance. No'subscription dii jontinuod until ’ nil arrearages are paid unless At ■‘the option of the Editor. ‘ AnveartsniiENTS —Accompanied hy tboc.lsn, and set exceeding one square, will ■ bo inserted tbroo 'times for $1.60, and ' twenty-live cents for each additional insertion. Thbso of a greater length in ■proportion. • * , Joa-I’amrura—Such as Hand-bills, Posting-bills pamphlets, Blanks, Labels, Ac. Ac., executed with j-oraov and at the shortest notice. -.. ■ pottitaL MY OWN FIRESIDE, .Lot otliors Book for empty-jdyS • i At ball or concert, rout or play '; _Whilst,.far-frdm rashion's idle noise, Her gilded domes and trappings gay, I while tho wintry eve away^-. Twist ho ole and lute the hours divide; 'And marvel how I o'er could stray , Prom thee—my own fireside 1 'My own fireside ! Those simple words Can bid tho sweetest dreams arise, Awaken'feeling’s tondofost cords, ' ..And fill with tears of joy mine eyes. • .'W’hat is therejhy. wild heart can prize, That doth not in thy sphoro abide; Haunt of my home-bred sympathies, My own-r-my Own fireside 1 A gentle form is near mo now; ' . A* small white hand is clasped in mine, X,gaze upon her plaoid brow, And ask, what joys can equal thine?. A babe, whoso beauties half divine, . In sleep his mother's eyes doth hidej \Vhoro may.loyo seek a fitter -shrino ■ I'hiih thou—my own fireside I “My refuge'o'vo’r from tho storm . Of this world’s passion, strife and caro> Though thAndor-clouds tho skies deform, ** Thore fury cannot jeach’m‘o there. There all Is cboofful, calm and'fair; Wrath, Envy, Malice, Strife or Prido Hath never made its hated lair- By thod-rmy own firosidd I ’Shrifio of rhy household deities ! Bright scone ol homo’s unsuUiod'jjoyt; . To thee ihy bu’rdo'&od spirit flies ' When fortune frowns or ,Caro annoys I Thine is tho bliss tbit never cloys; ' Tho smile vrUorfb truth has oft boon What, thou, Are this world’s ‘tinsel toys To thee—my own fireside I Oil. umy tlio ye/irbifigH, fond and nwoo’e. That bid my thoughts bo all of thoo', Thus .over guide my wandering foot ■ To thy holirt-soothing aiinctuary 1 Whatever my future years Itoay ho " Lot joy or grief niy fate botidb* bo still un Eden bright to mb* My own—niy own fireside 1 . alleuttantotio. A Born lllacliiniM. Ilonvy Maudsley, one of the thesVehliriSrit of English mechanics (whose death is report oil to uS among the nows brought by tlio last foreign steamer) had this mechanical instinct strikingly developed. Ilia lather waa a car penter, but young Maudsley himself ,\Vas much fonder of working in iron, and Would/ niton excite the anger of the foreman hy„ateal ing off to an adjoining smithy, ,11c urged so Imrdfui; the change that wheh ; fifteen years (ud, ho was transferred from the carpenter’s to the blacksmith shop. Hero he became am export worker in metal, and was.soon quite noted for forgipg “ trivors’.' with great speed ami skill, the old experienced hands gather ing round, to admire him when at this work. They had in this shop—which belonged ,to the naval works of Woolwich —a very ac commodating superintending offiber, Who would blow, his nose in a peculiar manner when approaching, so that all forbidden jobs, end making," trivors” was among them, was put out of the way by the time he entered the shop. When a hoy has the innate love of his trade that Maudsley had, and thou sands of American youth all ovor the country to-day, he does not-remain at the foot of the ladder. Take a boy—there are plenty such —who has no particular predilection foil any thing, and put him at a trade* and ho will always remain a mere workman. But boys like Maunsley, almost without knowing it aro urged-on to something hotter- At this time* llrabmah, the lockmaker, bad great difficulty to find mechanics skillful enough to make hisj looks with -the neat precision ho. wanted.—; Young Maudsley was suggested to him* and on being sent for, the 'Woolwich blacksmith came to London. lie was then but 18 years old, strong, muscular, tall* and remarkably l handsome. But both Brahinah and his fore man thought ho Waa too young to bo put in the shop with old workmen. A wornout.yieo bench was laying, near by, and-. Maudsley seeing his chances were in danger, asked permission to go right to work and fix .it up. lie did so, and tlio job was so splendidly ox ecutod that ho was at opoe engaged* and ho became as much a favorite in this as his fer ine! 1 shop. As hofore said he was*extremely handsome—an Apolo among Vulcana; and his personal advantages, with his mental ac tivity, had their clfeot on his follow workmen) trim tacitly acknowledged him as their leads Or and superior.' 1 He road in position, ond hocamo foreman. In 1797 he opened si shop <’f his own and lie, and his wife (for a pretty girl had a little time before accepted the hand of the handsome blacksmith) clearing the hired shop of tho dirt and rubbish loft in 't by a former tenant, Tits first customer tvas. an artist,- who gave an, order for, the irori frame of , a largo, easel; and thenceforth Maudsloy’s shop had plenty of work. Ills next success was tlio invention of the slide rest with which his namo is usually idonti rmd, an invention, too, which dll familiar with the use of the turning" lathe, now consider mdispbnsabla;;’ MiiuMay subsequently he* came a famous manufacturer of machinery; hut oven when he employed numbers of men and found it nbbessqry to labor more with the head than the hands, ho used to go often ™ Ihe forge and ’work enthusiastically with me sledge hammier,-just from sheer love of 1118 art. In time his shop became as it were ? “ollego of mathematical art; from whinh the wort mechanics worn proud to graduate. THE RUNAWAY MATCH. " I would not condemn them so swoopingly, Robert, my boy.” Robert looked up in surprise,and the old father gave a meaning glance at bis old wife, sitting opposite him, and chuckled audibly. .Whatl do you : mean to say, father, that you aro in favor of runaway marriages ?’’ asked Robert, breathless from the slio'ck ho liAd.rccoived. lie had been declaiming with 'hilt intense satisfaction one feels in the con aei outness of being able to talk!Well, ana the certainly'of carrying his audience'ivitli him, Against all clandestine matches. The mild check of his father's Words wr.s lifco a peal of thunder in his curs. “ Why, no, my son,” the old man answer ed. “I object to sweeping assertions of all kinds. As a rule, perhaps, the fact of a clandestine arrangement ofthis kind argues , the existence of somethingwrong.. But there may exist circumstances perfectly nnd fully justifying a runaway marriage—oh, mother?” Robert looked from one to the other. On the wan, faded cheek of his mother’s a faint flush was glowing and a soft light was in -her dimmed eye.- The big,'portly, figure of his father was shaking .with suppressed laughter, and his eyCs twinkled with mirth. Robert had'just graduated at - College, and was now. about to enter the ThooligioAl Seminary. . Hewnsa good scholar, and an 'earnest, practical young man. lie had a most exalted opinion of his vocation and of himself. Ho was accustomed to being lis tened to with much deference, nnd ho by no means relished being laughed at. Ho got up and stalked out of the room with most im pressive tread nnd head considerably eleva ted. Ho was about equally puzzled' and an gry. The joyous ha 1 ha 1 of his dear old father’s voice-followed him as ho strode away nnd mado him somehow angrier. But angry At his : parents I Surely that was wrong. Ho must go back!' ho must humble himself to ask their forgiveness; ho must not indulge in such sinful feelings a minute longer. So, without going into the garden, ns ho had in tended, ho turned about and entered the room again. • - His father and mother had never been ashamed to seem to love each other in the presence of their children. And now he found his mother, whore he had often soon her before, sitting by his father’s side, and listening with a well-pleased smile to some very lover-like talk. And sire neither looked nor felt ashamed, though shehad been a-wife almost fifty years, and it was already planned to celebrate the golden wedding the following 'spring. “ Never mind, Bob,” the father said, when his son,'in a few: hesitating but manly words had signified his penitence for the anger ho bad displayed. “It is not strange for young people to believe their llit'onos bettor than old people's experience. Ynnr mother and I can readily forgive you for differing from us in opinion, ’especially as ours has the roost substantial foundation, and has already with stood the tempests of well nigh fifty years.— Look, my boy 1 Hero are wo’, a hale and happy old pair, and a living exemplification of my doctrine that people who run away to get married are not always either wicked or miserable.” , Robert looked from l his father’s smiling face to th/s serious and tender ono of his mother. Par down the valley of life they had passed, serene and loving, undismayed hy the storms of life, untouched ,by its temp tations, beloved, honored, respected. Their life had.been rich alike in household joys and in Worldly honor, Spuifo Thorn was the ar bitof of all 11V6 country round aild his opinion was respected almost more tl;au the law.— Mrs. Thorn was a, “mother in Israel;” a gentle minister in all things that concerned' tfie material as well as the spiritual .welfare of her vast circle of acquaintance. Wisdom and purity and kindness had been the law of those gontlof beautiful lives now drawing to their close. It was hard fd believe that this aged pair had signalized the outset of their of their joint existence hv an not which he, their son, had ju'st designated as “oneof the’ insancat folly of which human beirgs are ca pable;” Ho drew ,a loiig breath and sit' down bewildered. . ... . “ I can hardly believe it yet, father,'’ ho said, feebly. : , '• • “But it,is truij, nevertheless, my toy; ahd lost you should bo tempted to despise your parents—never mind depreciations— I’ll tell you all about it. Sit still, mother,.you need not be ashamed to hear your youthful ex ploits spoken of.”. Oh, Mr. Thorn 1 wo never told any of oU,r children. Do you think it is tho host'to till Robert?” . . This was the most violent eipostijlntiqn that-good, gentle filrs. Thorn ever, uttered; and after that, if Mi-. Thorn signified that lie did “ think it best/’ she acquiesced placidly, perfectly satisfied th’dt ho niust bo right. , This was an ancient household jest, to pre tend to fancy the niild little woman frighten ing somebody, and putting tho family in mor al terror for daring to dispute hor will. It put thorn all in good humor with themselves and each other. - “ Now, Sob,” the old gentleman, commen ced, “ I take it for granted limit, notwithstan ding your objection, to a rmidway match, you are inclined to think tolerably well of your parents. You’ve noddea that in his youth, your father-was‘a ravenous wretch, going about the world seeking whom he might de vour, in tho shape of richly endowed,dam sels With more money than brains. Nor do you think your mother. Who, 1 cart testify, Was really e very passable looking girl when in he teens, never flirted and road novels* af ter the fashion Of those silly Miss Sodmoys down at the mill village* Nor wore Wo eif ther of Us, persons of that class. I was tho son of a poor widow, Who Worked and'Strove to keep arid educate mo while t was a Child, and I worked and strove to lift this and all other burdens from her shoulders as soon ns ,1 was old' enough. I really had no time to roam about in search of oven such delicious food.- And Patty, there, though her father was a wealthy farmer, she bad. to spin, and bake,and brow; and 1 remember tho sum mer she was sixteen she was engaged in •weaving a web.of linen to- bo made into ta ble cloths for hor 'own outfit. She had spun and ,prepared the yarn, and after she had wo ven it (was it the lemon pool or the bird's eye* Patty?) slid bleached it, cut it into lengths, and sowed it with her own hands. That is tho way girls did in those days, and they had notmuoh tithe for novels or flirtation either. I was a groat awkward lad of twenty, flint summer. For two winters I had taught the school in tho log sohobl houso on’the lull, and all tlio summers I worked for onoior otli or of the rich farmers in the neighborhood. This year". I had hired 1 out to Squire Evaris’ for ton dollars a month. I guess ybff do'n’t, remember your grandairo Evans, do you,' Robert f lie must liavb died before you vrafo old enough to riotiee. Well; lie.was Patty’s (father, and. accounted a hard, Stern man) with “OUH COUNTRY—MAX IT ALWAYS BE RIGHT—BUT RIGHT OR WRONG OUR COUNTRY.” gusty passions, and given to liaroji words if people or oilier things displeased him. 'But Patty had been my scholar the two winters I had been teaching, and I made up my mind that I could got along with her father for the s'iko of being where I could see her every day. So I closed with his offer, and went there to, live, though Deacon Thompson had offered mo a dollar mco a month. I should have been very angry if any one had called me a sorVrnt. I did not feel like one; nor Wes I treated ns one. I sat ht Scarcely a moment had elapsed ere it was.walled in by a Hundred ice hills, anil ‘the whole mass moved forward and was soon beyond the horizon. That the galley of the narrator escaped.was wonderful ; ,it remained however, uneontradicted and the vessel of Er rick Raudo was never move seen. - Half a century after that, a Danish colony was established' oh the western coast of Greenland. The crew of the. vessel which carried the colonists thither, in their excur sions into the interior, crossed.a tango of hills that stretched to the. northward ; they ■had approached nearer to the polo.than .‘any preceding adventures, ‘Upon looking down from the summit of, the. hills they behold a vast and interminable field of ice, undulating, in various'places, and formed into a thou sand grotesque shapes. 1 •; , They, saw, not fur from the shore, a llgiitp .of an iced vessel, with glittering icicles in stead of niasjbs amsing from it. ’Cariosity’ prompted fliom to'tfppruauh, and they behold a : dismal sight. Figures of men in every*at titude of w.oo,,were-upon the dock, buc-Uioy, were icy things then ; one figure aluuo stood erect .and with folded arms, leaned against the mast. A'. Hatchet’•wits procured and the: ice split away; and the features of a chieftain disclosed, pallid uud deathly dud free from decay. . > .■ . This was doubtless tlie vessel, and that tlio figureandforiri ofßrriekllando. Benumbed with Cold in an agony of dispair his crow had fallen around him. The spray of the pecan and Iho fogs had frozen as it lighted updn them, and covered'each figure with an iqy fbbe, which the short lived ghiiicd of a Grrdep land sun had nottlmo to removed TheDanpd gazed upon the spectacle withbemldihgeyeß., They knew not .but the sccuo .migiit. be their fate, too. They knelt down* upon the deck hud muttered a prayer in their native tongue for the souls of the frozen crow, theti huvriolb’. ly loft the place; for night woolgathering around them’; , • . / no- 23., The Indians a&d TnE'TEi.EdßAPii.— lt is a'noticinbltf fact; thafin' all of'the -Indian troubles in the Northwest, tho telegraph lines have hot.boon disturbed. "When'the line be tween Forts Kearney and Lamario, which are 500 miles apart, was completed, tho super intendent of the line made, arrangements for two-influential chiefs of the Sioux and- Ara pahoe.tribes to have n, talk over the, wires,; the Sioux being at ,Fort l/amarie', : and the. Araprohob at Fort Kearney. After' their, talk, which pleased thein^ wonderfully; they started, on horseback, and after riding two hundred, and fifty' miles each, met and com pared . notes, and.found their talk of a week' was all real and not illusion. Sipco then no telegraph wire or pole has been / harmed.by Indian hands.—The Indians know tho great the great power of, this discovery,- and as they, think it has something jto.do with the Holy Spirit, they dare not tonyli the lines. This is a fortunate fact forf tho. permanency, of telegraphic communication in the .Northwest.' ; 1 1 1 , r ; ' ’■ - - MANUFACTURE OF TaR JN 'PENNSnvAmii;—,' Perhaps in no State in tho Union have tho resources, thereof boon moro.largdly .develops cd than in. Pennsylvania. Ip sovoral of.tho. Southern counties cotton has heen.sncessfully cultivated on a small, scale, while tlio grow ing of tobacco has boon made one’of the prin cipal crpps of tho farmer. Indeed,the import tanco of tobaccq planting bis haw; become of the first character, and its harvest a matter of great,, importance. Wo noW‘ observe that in Cambria, Somerset, - and the adjoining coun ties a good quality of tar is being manufac tured from the,knots of the pitch pine. The manufacture of this siibstitute/or North Car olina tar is carried on quite estbbsively, and has already tho .price of the latter article. Ihe tar thus pro duced ahswors,nearly all tho requisites a? ip/ substitute for tlie original article.— PtUshyrg Chronicle. - ■ • " , Live jloT for Tuvselp;—No wonder men are unhappy,in the world. There,is' always’ clashing whop the machinery is but of goarj There, is always trouble whon tho wheels are .“. off the track.” . Man seeks to liv,e for him.r self—God, inadn him to, livq for others. How. swells that.mother’s, peart with joy wbqn she can mak,e, liet childrqh happy 1 . What a thrill of delight cornea with that look of grat itude; that tear of joy, and that ono of love) which aro. all tho widow and tho orphan can render to their benefactor! Tlio enp of hap piness is aq. overflowing cup,; If is like a bubbling fauntainy, ever pouring forth Us’ blessings to refresh the weary audfairiting, ■ and made pure only by its own overflow. It .is like, the,-quiet meadow rill; fringed, all along with flowers, yet concealed hy the yory exuberance of beauty and verdure'itself doth nourish. - ... ~ J!@“ 1 pious old gentleman, one,p.f the salt of the earth ; sort,-wont out into, tliq,field. to catch diiij mare. , lie shook a measure of corn -ot her tp,.deiude,her into tjiq,belief ,that ahq was, to get it, but qho was nbt to be .deceived by any qpooious qqtl She would come nigh pud then off . again,- until the good, man was fretted*.At last ho -got her into a corner a mang some briars, and made . a dash,-at hor. When she hound over the *wal) and left him Bprawjing.among the'bushes. ..His chrjstiap fortitude gave way at this and gathering him self up hq cried, ■ “Oh hell;” ’fhe .ejeculatiod had passed hie lips before lie thought, hut ime imqdiately, conscious of liis wickedness, hq cried ■ “lelqjah I” „ and translated tho profano wofd into a.nolo of,triumph;. ■it/*’ Statistics published the, latest liiy erpool papers show-that vessels, arc now on the way to England from tjb.o East. Indies, with cargoes of, jeotton rapgl n l£ from eighteen hupsred { to : seven thousimq bales each. •-? The aggregate tiifionnt landless than 221,864 bales., All these vessels areq.t sea, and their arrival at. Liverpool at di&jp- periods will keep the cotton mills.ip ; pp.pyr ntion.fora considerable part of winter. The now fields' seem to bo doing well, - - ...Op"* A wife in San Francisco" latojy. pjqt a petition for divorce in the Court on the grpund that her husband was?a ** confounded .f30,ql* ,# The court would'nt admit the plop, alihost every married man would b.o'liable td the Suiiio imputation. Did yoti over I , j, IfeST" the Pennsylvania coal. fields,'Jiavq Yielded 200,000-tons of coal per week for iho last three months, making Ihisyeiir’a produc tion 1,700,000 'tons,more than lastyoar’s.— T The supply i H s no\vgreater .than the demand,' ami lower prices must result * • - O 2 * A ; movement is on,foot in Now York to sond fifty thousand turkeys to Gen. Grant fora thanksgiving dinner 4\>r the Armyof the Rotyhjac,.. Fifty thousand barrels ap ples ard to constitute the desert. say John, whore did you got time loafer's Imt r “ Pleaso-yoiir h«;nor,” ssiid •John, “ it’s an old ono of yours that missed gave-nie yesterday morning,’ when you were to•to\v■n. ,, #27** From a trqo that measures about a foot in diameter, belonging to Abraham Hug gins, nl Sheffield, was gathered, thisypai\ 22,- 750 apules, averaging nearly 1200. apples pet bushel. Tho colored laborers,. in mmlhci ; 25(1, atMaltby’s ovstor packing house in Balti more, have struck because tho boss opened another store where ho employed white wo men HIT" Kev. Henry Baylcs,"tif Pall Klver has a head # of Franklin which was painted in I*7BB, by Hubert Pultptl; yVlip was.for a timd a portrait painter. His works are very rare/ p~ A, *\V]qnntn,; ngccl 30 haying fivsf children, died id Haverhill last week of in tern poi anep'and starvation. ' The money that ought to hdVo b'ouglit bread bought gin.; : DCT* -An old widower says.* Always pop the question with a laugh.; if you are' accep ted well mid good; if not you can say you werc.only joking. Here's wickedness, b The popple in Taunton are dissatisfied liGcrmwe the wells don't fill up jidt st/inding the rains, A committee ■wilbgo'to Washington on the subject'nt once. - .t . OT?* BookoUt for yourcornhma*. /TJigtihfiif Constable ,oi.a(;hlpadittayUluge,cortjfiad4bat he had Vibr attempting-to marry his wile, being alive/' i 1 / WBds;>of,theiAmoakeag; gun. works, Manchcfiteiy /hiis, .perfeptedj u b.reephdWihg7.r) > fto I ''iyhicli tliroyysjfourteen bullous without! reloading.. V. r ! - yo • 017^. Two-thirds of the product of? l(e*oif Wolfs of America is shipped -• ’it.