' - ..........'''' , .' , .: , .'i'Ll- 4 . ...111:::;T;, - ....,.;..•-,..•.:-LtAi. i':1?--...::.•:i*..../.:•4 SAMUEL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXVIII, NUMBER, 5.] PUBLISHED EYE&Y SATURDAY MORNING. 'Office in Northern Central Railroad Com ryany's Building, north-west corner Front and t.3 7 alnut streets. Terms of Subscription. tun . ! Copy per s: , rtnum, i i f f Ettidpiatld within three three . months from commencement of the year, 2On Cicora.tiEs ara, 'No subscription received for a less time than six 'lsmaili', and no paper will be diiicontinued until all -marreariages are paid, unless at the option of the pub iisher. aryoney may be remitted by mail at the publish- Vs risk. Rates of Advertising. ik square [6 lines] one week, three weeks, each subsequent insertion, 10 1 [l2 lines] one. week, 50 three weeks, 1 00 each subsequent insertion, 25 Larger advertisements in proportion. A liberal discount will be made to quarterly, half yearly or yearly adverasers,who are strictly confined to their business. DR. S. ARMOR HOMEOPATIIIC PHYSICIAN. Office and Residence in Locust street, opposite the Post Office; OFFICE. PRIVATE. Columbia, April 25, 1857-Gin Drs. John Rohrer, AVE associated in the Practice of ,Itedi- Hcine. Columbia, April let, 185041 DR. G. W. MIFFLIN, DENTIST, Locust street, opposite the Post Office. Columbia, Pa. Columbia, May 3, IBM. H. M. NORTH, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Columbia,Pa. Collections, promptly made, in Lancasteeand York Counties. Columbia, May 4,1850. J. W. FISHER, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, C1cau.222.11=34.4% , „, X 3 '.19". Columbia, September ti, 1056-tf GEORGE J. SMITE', WHOLESALE and Retail Bread and Cake Dairen—Constantly on hand a variety of Cakes, too numerous to mention; Crackers; Soda, Wine, Scroll, and Sugar Biscuit; Confectionery, of every description, /cc., lc. LOCUST sTaur.r, Feb. 2,'56. Between the Bank and Franklin House. B. F. APPOLD at. CO., ; GENERAL FORWARDING AND COMMIS SION MERCHANTS, ivi la r RECEIVERS OF COA LAND PRODUCE, And Deliverers on any point on the Columbia and Philadelphia Railroad. to York and Baltimore and to Pittsburg; DEALERS IN COAL. FLOUR AND GRAIN, WHISKY AND BACON, have just received a large lot of Monongahela Rectified Whiskey, from Pittsburg, of whichthey will keep a supply constantly on hand, at low prices, Nos. 1,2 and 6 Canal Basin. Columbia, January 27.1954. OATS FOR SALE BY THE BUSHEL, or in larger qnantities, at Nos. 1,2 & 0 Canal Basin. E. F. APPOLD & CO. Columbia, January 26,1655 Just Received, 5v BUS. PRIME GROUND NUTS, at J. F. n SMITH'S Wholesale and Retail Confectionery establishment. Front street, two doors below the iVashington House, Columbia. [October 25. 1.858. Just Received, 20 MIDS. SIIOULDERS, 15 TIERCES HAMS.— For sale by B. F. APPOLD & CO., Nos. I, 2 and 0, Canal Basin. Columbia, October 18, 1156. Rapp's Gold Pens. CONSTANTLY on hand, an assortment of N.,/ these celebrated PENS. Persons in want of a good article are invited to call and examine them. Columbia, June 30,1855. JOHN FELIX. Just Received, era.ALARGE LOT of Children's Carriage, Gigs, Roeking Horses, Wheelbarrows. Propel- Nursery Swings, &c. GEORGE. .1. 13M1T.11. April 19, 1996. Locust street. CHINA and other Pitney Articles. too numerous to mention, for sale by G.. 1. SA, ITII, Locust street, between the Bank and Franklin House. Columbia, April 19, 1856. THE undersimd have been appointed agents for the sale of Cook &Co's GOTTA P ER- C A PENS, warranted not to corrode; in e laslicity they almost equal the quill. SAYLOR & McDONALD. Columbia Jan. 17, 18.57 Just Received, A BEAUTIFUL lot of Lamp Ehadez, viz: Tie torine, Volcano, Drum. Butter Fly, Red Roses, and the new French Fruit Shade, which can be seen in the window of the Golden Mortar Drug Store. November 0,1856. ALARGE lot of Shaker Corn, from the Shaker settlement in New Yotk, just received, D. SUYDAM & SON'S at Columbia, Dec. 40,1856 T_TAIR DYE'S. Jones' Batchelor's, Peter's and Egyptian hair dyes, warranted to color the hair any dented shade, without injury to the skin. For sale by It. WILLIAMS. May 10, Front at., Columbia, Pa. FARR & THOMPSON'S justly celebrated Com mercial -and other Gold Peue---.the Letitia the oterket—just received. P. SHREINER. Columbia,April 39,1833. F / %1&1 PAM FLOUR, by the barrel, for aide by B. F. APPOLD & CO, Columbia...rune 7. No.. 1,2 and 6 Canal Basin. WIIY ihould.any person-do withpnt a Clock, when they can be had (or 81.50 and upwards. t SIIREINERW Colombia. April 24 1E45 QAPONUIBII, or, Conookitted Lye, for ma king heap. 1 lb. is sufficient for one barrel of rlllelltilitap or tlb.for 9 lbs. Hard Soap. Fall *Wee itions will ,e given at the Counter for making Soli, railed and Fancy Soaps. For sale by R. WILLIAMS. , Columbia, March 31,1E153. ALAUB lot of Baskets, Brooms, Baskets &c,, for sate by If SOYDAAI I SON. WEIKEL'S Instantaneous Yeast or Baking VV : Powder, for sale by H. SUYDAM & SON. t2ODOZEN DROONS, •10 BOXES CHEESE. For sale cheap, by D. F. APPOLD & CO. Columbia, October 25, 1856. A. surzazoB article of PAINT on.. for Pain by IL WILLIAMS, Front !Street, Columbia, Pa May 10, 1E56 TWIT RECEIVED, a large and well selected variety of Brushes, consisting an pan of Sboe, Mar, Cloth, Arnoth, Nall, Hat and Teeth Brushes, and for sale by IL WILLIAMS. Tront street Columbia. Pa. March 22, ,S 6 ASUPERIOR article ofTONIC suitable for Hotel Keepers, for sale by R. WILLIAMS, .Front street, Columbia. May 10,1836 MESH ErREREAL OIL, alwayann Land, and fo 3. salad); R. WILLIAMS. May 10,18 Z. Front Street, Columbia, Pa. TUST raceirradokltSS II CAW II ENE, and for sale el by it. WILLIAMS, May 10,1558. Trani Street, Columbia, Pa. if) '4 l ` l la" n hew City Cured Ha= and Bhouktirts,, fecund and for salell?y Feb. a u t M.I11).111 80N. Igrtry. Absence and Presence. To live alone; to think, to grieve alone; With winds and sounding falls to mingle man; To sit long hours as silent as a stone. OM To live with you, and be your lover still; To bend all wishes to your gentle will; With you to weep, to smile, to joy, to thrill To utter useless thought, to vacant air, To labor always with a causeless care; To seek for joy, and still &ad sorrow there To speak your name, and hear mine whispered sweet; To listen for the sound of coming feet; With ardent smile and honeyed kiss to greet. CEI To sit with books, and commune with the deed; Racking all day the strained, unfruitful head! Then seek, with fevered brain, a thoughtless bed To feel a tender hand upon my face, And turn from labor to a long embrace; From pain to blies, love, laughter, music. grace To lie alone and wear the age-long night, While fancy, grieving both for love and light, In darkness shudders at her lonely plight. To hear the murmur of a peaceful rest Breathed by an angel sleeping on my breast— Like love's fair planet on the glowing west. No joys know I of dismal solitude; Nor in those bards whose cold, fictitious mood, Seeks ever scenes devoid of life, and rude. I, not in herbs, nor trees with hoary rind, Nor tumbling rivers, nor complaining wind, Aught ever ot their vaunted solace find. The sun-eyed daisy charms not me, unless My darling's foot doth on it gently press; But then it seems to feel a dear caress. Or in the shadowy folding of her hair Deign she the happy, modest flower to wear, It seems a star of love fallen out of air. Sounds not for me a mu.ie in the brook, 'Lees on its trembling foam my love doth look, And then it seems with a sweet rapture shook. Dear are the dusky hollows of the gloom, And ember-light within the curtained room, But this, alone, were an upholstered tomb. Joy of the voice, the viol, or the vine, Concerts of pleasure. music, dance, and wine— Give me not these, till Love can make them mine Thou selfish bard, that &test unloving try The ennobling verse, thy song and name shall dio-- Die like the weeds thou singest, utterly. India Ink. It is a tarry sailor man Doth Fbili his quid and sigh, Andimusing o'er his "hijin lie spits and pipes his eye. In all their queer variety, Perusing one by one, Spars, anchors, ensimts, binnacles, Ilia "fokesal" chums have done. Around his arms, all down his back, Betwixt his shoulder blades, Are Peg, and Poll, and July-Ann, Andler, and other maids; And just below his collar bones, Amidships on his chest, He has a sun in blue and red, A-rising in the wort. A bit abaft a pirate craft, Upon his starboard side, There is a thing lie made himself, The day Ma Nancy died. Mayhap it he a lock a( hair, May hap a '•kite co' rope"— lie says it is a true love knot, And so it is I hope. Naught reeks that gentle foremast hand, What shape it wear to you— With soul elate and hand expert, He pricked it—so he knew. To •"Ward Cuttle, mariner,n His sugar tongs and spoons Not dearer than that rose pink heart, Transfixed by two harpoons; And underneath, a grave in blue, A grave-stone all in red— " Here lies all right, poor Tom's delight:; God save the mark—she's dead!" Permit that tarry mariner To shift his quid and sigh, Nor chide him if he sometimes swear, For piping of his eye. Few sadder emblems arc the heart's Than, traced at first in pink, And pricked till all the picture smarts, Are fixed with "Injinistk." [Putnam's Monthly griEttiono. The Lost Wife. OR, THE WHISPERING TREE. In the city of Cairo, there once dwelt a Christian merchant named Hanna, who had amassed a considerable fortune, so that en vy often turned its glances towards him. As is usual, however, in this world, Hanna found cause to complain of his condition. It was true that ho had a fine house in the street of the saddle-makers, and his furs& niture was costly I that his slaves, pipes, mules and asses were of the first quality. = Ono thing was wanted a son and heir to inherit his wealth and continue his mame. Now, in an Eastern story, no sooner is this difficulty mentioued, than we can, as a general rule, foresee, that in some manner more or less ingenious, the much desired ad dition to the family is miraculously made. Sometimes a pilgrimage is taken to the tomb of a saint ; sometimes prayers are addressed directly to Heaven; sometimes a magician makes his appearance and gives two child ren, on condition that at a certain age he shall be allowed to claim one and slay it for the purpose of some horrible incantation; lowing that - he chooses - the' favorite, and leaves the disconsolate parent to cover his head with ashes, to clothe himself in sack cloth, and to perform all the heart-breaking ceremonies of an Eastern mourning. The difficulty in the case of Mums was that he had no wife, and was determined never to get married; and considering that he was past his seventieth year, the determination can scarcely be called unwise. There was mystery, however, in the life of this Christian, which would explain in some measure why he did not give himself up to sullen And absolute despair. About "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 8, 1857. half a century before the period of which we speak, he had been a traveler, had visited Hind and Sind, with many other wonderful places, and had resided in Persia and sailed upon the Caspian. Ile would tell to one or two friends that when at Ispahan, he had loved and been be loved by a lady whom he married and lived with for nearly a year. A child was born to them, on whom both showered all the treasures of their affection. But it happen ed one day that they were in the gardens in the neighborhood of the city, and Hanna feeling weary, went under some trees to sleep, whilst his wife sat with the child, by the side of a stream of water, that danced gaily along through a grass-fingered bed.— The young man's slumbers lasted some time. The shadow which protected him when he lay down, had moved away when he awoke. Indeed, it was the sun playing upon his eye- lids that recalled him from the land of dreams. He arose from the warm turf, and called lan guidly for Lisbet ; but though he could see all across the meadow where he had left her under a locust tree by the water, his eyes discerned no sign of life. He went forward slowly, stretching his arms and yawning, until he came to the spot where the young mother had been sitting. Here he saw traces of the trampling of many feet, both of horses and men, and a riband that had adorned the wrist of the child lay on the ground. Fear of a calamity came upon him—he gazed more eagerly over the meadow, and beheld a track through the grass as if a body of horse had rushed along. One loud cry of " Lisbet 1" —a cry which burst in anguish from his lips, but to which he did not expect an answer— showed that he understood what disaster had befallen him. He sprang on the track of the ravishers, crossed the meadow, burst through a little screen of trees, and saw upon the ex treme limit of the plain, just fading from his view, as it were a little moving cloud with a cluster of sparkling rays of light above it. The Turkomans were shaking their spears in triumph, as they entered the desert with their prey. Hanna had never obtained any reasonable ' information as to the fate of Lisbet. Per haps he did not do all that some heroic na tures would do to recover her and the child. Hs sent messengers with offers of money to some of the tribes ; he undertook a journey to the stronghold of Jaffir Khan, but with out success. The Turkomans hinted that perhaps the charms of Lisbet lad smitten some independent chief, who had carried her far away into the wilderness. After some years of vain waiting, the extreme manifes. tations of grief disappeared. Hanna resumed his commercial enterprises, and at length be came established in Egypt, where he re mained buying and selling until wealth sur rounded him. But fifty years passed away, and he did not take unto himself another wife. So far, he easily confided to the few whom he called his friends ; and when these would condole with him on his childless position, he used to smile strangely and insinuate that there might yet be found an heir to in herit what he had amassed. Yet he never admitted that his hopes lay in the child of Lisbet, and that he had some faint reason for believing that he was not feeding upon a delusion. The truth is that Hanna, who was a good, kind man,—made better and kinder by all his misfortunes,—as he was travelling be tween Damascns and Bagdad; several years after the loss of Lisbet, fell in with a poor man, who begged for succor from amidst some bushes—for he was totally naked, hav ing been stripped by robbers. All he asked was a cloak and a loaf, that he might contin ue his journey to another town. But Han na stopped his kafila and clothed and fed him, and gave him money, and sot him on a mule—his own spare mule, white, and fit for a king—and took him all the way to Da mascus, where he sat him down in tho street without so much as asking his name, his country or his faith. This poor stranger was a Jew, who came many years afterwards to Egypt, and recog nized his benefactor. He was also a magi cian, who discovered the secret thoughts of those with whom he conversed,—so ho said ono day to Hanna, " There is a mighty sorrow within thee ; for I see the signature of regiet upon thy brow, near the right tem ple." " I regret not to have a child," replied the merchant. " Nay," said the Jew, "thy grief bath re lation to a thing past. Tell me thy story, and I may bo of service." Hanna told his story, and the Jew forth with went away, and burnt perfumes, and uttered words and wrote symbols, and wres tled with the keepers of the unknown. When he came back to the merchant, he said, "I have not discovered all I wish to know; but they tell me that if thou canst find the Whis pering Tree, it will speak to tho of Lisbet and her child." Tho Jew could give no further informa tion; but Hanna, who believed, began forth with to make cautious inquiries about the Whispering Tree. Ile questioned not only the people of Cairo, but wrote to all his cor respondents in various parts of the globe asking them about this strange thing. In deed he went about catechising the world in general respecting the mysterious Whisper ing Tree. But he got no information. All replied that they were ignorant. Nobody had heard of a tree that whispered. Year after year Hanna persisted in inquiring of every stranger who argued from various provinces whether he knew anything about the Whispering Tree, until time had passed and strength began to fail. When all his friends were tired of hearing him ask the same question, and he became tired of ask ing it, despair was a frequent visitor with him. One day he was at Gizneh, in a garden drinking coffee with his friend Malek, and listening to the bubbling of his water pipe, when, along the path leading from the pyr amids, appeared coming a string of laden camels acoompanied by many men. "Is it the caravan from Mourzuk?" inquired Han " Nay," replied Malek, "that caravan IME came in the week past; and I know not from what country this arrival may be." They went to the garden gate, moved by curiosity, and waited until the forerunners of the car avan came by. Their costume was that of the sons of the desert, except that round the head was a wrapper which enfolded both the brow and the mouth, leaving little more than the eyes exposed. "They are of the Muthelameen," said Malek, "and come from the deserts towards Beled-es- Soudan, but of what tribe we shall only learn by asking." Then he raised his voice and said: "0 strangers, merchants; from what country and with what merchan dise?" The man addressed muttered from beneath his muffler, "From Agdaz in the land of Ahir, with gold-dust and ivory, and a rem nant of slaves, the strong and sturdy—the rest having perished by the way." So say ing, he passed on. "Hest thou ever heard of this country?" inquired Hanna. "But little," said Malek. "It is not a country of commerce; and I cannot under stand why they should have come this way." As he spoke a youth of pleasant countenance riding on a camel, with his mouth uncover ed, came slowly towards them. "0! young man," cried Hanna, as if obey ing a sudden inspiration, "thou comest from unknown lands over wonderful regions.— Perchance thou canst tell me of the Whis pering Tree." "It is at Kama," replied the youth strik ing with his heel the neck of his camel, and causing it to turn out of the line and stop, "and what, my father, is the reason of thy curiosity?" "Tie a long story," replied Hanna; "but if thou wilt alight and repose thyself after thy fatigue, I will relate it to thee." The young man leaped down, called to a black man who had followed him on foot to take care of the camel, and entered the garden with the two old men. When he had heard the story of the mer chant, the young stranger said, "My story is similar to thine, 0, my father. Thou art seeking what thou host perhaps never seen. I am seeking what has only appeared to me in a vision. I come not of the Muthelameen of Agdaz. My father was a merchant of Egypt, who traveled with me into the land of Talebs, of wise men and magicians, and dying, left me there a child.— Now it happened a year ago that I dreamed a dream, and lo! a maiden of surpassing beauty, came and bent over mo like a lily over a pool of sleeping water; bent and bent until her lips swept my temple, and I awoke tremulous as after a kiss of love. I stretch ed my arms in the darkness, but there was nothing. Then I knew that I had dreamed, and turned upon my pillow again, and sought to return to the country I had quitted. Soon I slept again. and the same maiden appeared, but this time afar off, beckoning me to follow. I endeavored to rise, but my limbs had lost their vigor. I struggled, but in vain. The earth drew me still closer to it, until I burst away into consciousness, and found myself trembling in the bed.— From that time I pined for love of the maid en in my dream, and naught would content me. My friends at first, laughed and mock ed; but when I became in truth sick and pale, and unable to rise from the bed—una ble and unworthy; for whenever I slumbered the same form of beauty appeared—when I drew near to the gates of death, they brought to me a wise man who inquired into my case, and smiled when ho heard what had befallen, saying: "'The remedy is not easy; for the road is long, and there are dangers by the way.— But if thou bast courage thou wilt hear what thou wishest, murmuring amidst the leaves of the Whispering Tree.' "He then told me that the tree was situ ated at a place called Kama, in Khorasan, ' beyond Persia. I instantly sold all my goods and prepared to depart with a caravan that was bound for Tripoli. After we had trav eled a month, we came to a country where there was war; and we were compelled to traverse the regions of Thibet, and the Ho ronj Mountains, and the Walls, and to travel through many disasters to Egypt. This is the reason why we have met; and now it will be better for us both to journey together in search of this wonderful tree." When Hanna heard what this young man said, that Sams was in the country of new sman beyond Persia, he doubted not but that he should hear there some news of the lost Lisbet and her child. He therefore re solved to depart in company with the young man, whose name was Gorges, although the prudent Mal& objected to his great age and the possibility of danger and death. In a few days the worthy merchant bad closed his business for that season, and, with a. purse of money and a case of jewels, was ready to socompany the love-lore Gorges. The narrative need not trace their itiner acy. Many months elapsed ere the young and the old traveler—the toys of love and parental affection—were wandering, dis guised in humble raiment, through the wilds of Khorassan, asking of the rare people they met for a place called Kama. Nobody seemed able to give them any intelligence. The place was a place unknown. They began to think they were the victims of de lusion, and when they had passed several years in the vain search, it is said they be came, as it were, mad. They thought and talked of nothing but the Whispering Tree of Kama. The people in the villages and encampment knew them as the strange ques tioners, and pitied their case; and instead of harming them on the road, would cry: "Has there any news been heard by ye, 0 melan choly searchers? .0, father! 0, brother! has the unknown place been made known? Has the place been revealed?" Thus they con tinued wearying the desert with constant going to and fro, until Haena became a bent shadow and the youth grew up to be a beard ed man. It happened one evening, as they were go ing through a mountainous country which theyhad not hitherto trodden, far on the way to Bucharia, they came to a small valley locked in the embrace of rugged rocks. Its surface was like a green emerald. Grass, and shrubs„ and trees, and flowers, spread to the feet of perpendicular cliffs. A silver stream wound here and there, as if unwilling to leave so pleasant a spot, and at last gath ered into a small lake without apparent is sue: The two wayfarers expected to find a village where they might pass the night.— But there was no sign of human habitation. The night began balmily; the stars shone warmly: there was scarcely any breeze, and the little that blew was warm and fragrant as the breath of woman. Hanna, and Gor ges lay down under the shadow of a tree, and slept as the travel-weary alone can sleep. They both dreamed a dream—if dream it was. The tree above their heads began to wave and wave its boughs; murmurs seemed to creep from every leaf, there was a hum and a buzz, as if a swarm of bees was set tling over head; and by degrees a chorus of small voices seemed to sing, "This is Kama, Kama, Kama! Go no further; but tarry hero. Rest and peaco will find you; for this is Rama, Kama, Kama!" All night long the same melody refreshed their ears; and an evil spirit, who bent over them intending to do them wrnog, fled away; for, on seeing their smile of happiness, ho said to himself: "That is the smile of the angels of God!" The birds were singing when the old man and young awoke. The name of Kama was still ringing in their ears; and it seemed as if the thrush that had come to perch in the boughs overhead was repeating it. Sudden ly a clear, sweet voice sounded over the meadow, and the wayfarers beheld a maiden with a jar upon ber head, tripping lightly along a pathway that passed near them and led to the stream. She was singing, and the burden of her song was: "Fair is the valley of Kama!" Hanna turned up his eyes with gratitude towards the whispering Tree; but Gorges kept gazing intently at the maiden. His dream stood before him embodied. The maiden of Kama was alarmed at first at the aspect of strangers; they soon con trived to reassure her, and bidding them wait until she returned from the spring, she promised to conduct them to her dwelling. They waited accordingly and followed her steps, which she made slow out of rsspect to the age of Hanna, passed by a green gar den, in the midst of which were three graves, and reached a kind of hermitage scooped in the rock, in front of which on a sunnybench, sat an old man with a huge white beard that swept to his knees. No stranger had penetrated into that valley for•many a long year; but the patriarch was past the age when surprise is possible, and meekly bade the travellers to be seated on the bench be side him. When they had refreshed themselves with rest and food, the old hermit bade them tell their stories, whilst the maiden sat at their feet, a little nearer Gorges than to the oth ers, listening with downcast eyes. Hanna related what had sent them in search of the Whispering Tree of Kama, omitting nothing, not even the love of the young man for the being of his dream. The hermit smiled in his white board and said: "I am one hun dred years old, and no longer fear the en mity of man; for I am in hopes of the mercy of God. I have sinned, but I have suffered. It was I, 0 Hanna, who took away your wife, Lisbet. I took her to my tents, not far from this valley, but she refused her love and died. Then I desponded and retired to this hermitage with her child, which I bred as my own. I called him Kama, which in our tongue means the Bereaved, and named the place of our dwelling after him. lie grew up not knowing his origin, and in due time he knew a maiden, and took her and dwelt with her in happiness until he died, and she died, leaving her daughter to my care. There are the graves of Lisbet and her son, and her son's wife," said the old man, pointing to the three mounds of earth. His hand fell, says the story with a rattle. Old age had done its work. He bad lived to restore the granddaughter of Lisbet to him who had so long sought for herself, and was buried in the little garden before hie hermitage. 10,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; , 2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE. The worthy gentleman who related this story to me, after observing that of course Miriam became the wife of Gorges, and that they and Fianna returned in safety to Cairo, endeavored to play the free-thinker by ex plaining whatever seemed supernatural in this story was purely ornament; that the tree most probably did not whisper at all; and that there was nothing in it incompati ble with the supposition of an extraordinary coincidence. I observed, however, that while venturing on this ticklish ground he had an uneasy look, which reminded me of those philosoph ical young gentlemen who one meets in so ciety, and who observe in a dismal voice that they believe in nothing they do not un derstand. The fact is, these Levanites are credulous as the Muslims; and, although their stories are not quite so wild and extravagant as those of the Arabian Nights' Entertainments, they exact the exercise of nearly as great an amount of faith. I mentioned this to the narrator, and observed, instead of entering upon a philosophical discussion with him, that he seemed to lay no stress on the joy of Hanna at recovering hi , grand-daughter, or on that of Gorges at beholding the lady of his dream. "As to the latter point," said he, "we can all imagine the feelings of the young man; but I remember it is usual to say, in telling this story, that the good old Hanna whilst the hermit was telling his story, put his arms round the neck of Miriam and Gorges, and, pressing them to his bre:l,f, tried to speak, but could only give utterance to a loud cry of triumph and joy. They say, too, that he always wandered in his speech a little afterwards, and would now and then wish that he were a•lecp in Kama by the side of Lisbet."—Household Words. To l!y Elderly Friends There are two extremes my reverend se niors, into which we are tempted to fall when we find ourselves upon the wane. Declining ladies, especially married ladies, are more given, I think, than men, to neglect their personal appearance, when they are con scious that the bloom of their youth is gone. I do not speak of state occasions, of set din ner parties and full dress balls, but of the daily meetings of domestic life. Now, how ever, is the time, above all others, when the wife must determine to remain the pleasing wife, and retain her John Anderson's affec tions to the last, by neatness, taste, and ap propriate variety of dress. That a lady has fast growing daughters, strapping sons, and a husband hard at work at his office all day long, is no reason why she should ever enter the family circle with rumpled hair, soiled cap, or unfastened gown. The prettiest woman in the world would be spoiled by such sins in her toilette. The morning's duties, even in store-room and kitchen, may be performed in fitting, tidy costume, and then changed for parlor habiliments, equally tidy and fitting. The fashion of the day should always be reflected in a woman's dress, according to her position and age: the eye craves for variety as keenly as the pal ate; and then, I honestly protest, whatever her age, a naturally good looking woman is always handsome. For, happily, there ex ists more than one kind of beauty. There is the beauty of infancy, the beauty of youth, the beauty of maturity, and, believe me, la dies and gentlemen, the beauty of age, if you do not spoil it by your own want of judgement. At any ago a woman may be becomingly and pleasingly dressed. The other error— the more pardonable of the two, because it shows an amiable love of approbation and a desire to please, though it implies weakness—is a continuation of of the costume and decorations of youth after they have ceased to be fitting ornaments fur the wearer's age. I must say that ladies in general are less addicted to the mistake than men. The number of quinquag,enarian fe males who display themselves in society in white muslin frocks, with their locks in ringlets, and a girl's pink sash tied behind, is considerabiy less than that of old bucks, with their padded substitute for muscular grace, their wigs, their jewelry, their per fumes, and even their rouge. Baldness, in men, is neither a disfigurement nor a dis graeo. To soothe your personal vanity, you may call to mind that many young and hand some men aro bald; to console your intellect ual dignity, remember that "calvi, prompti," ready are the bald—an invaluable quality in the affairs of life. As a rule, the harder we fogies try to convert ourselves into boyish cupids, the less do we succeed. There is a great truth in Alphonse Karr's remarks, that modern men are ugly, because they don't wear their beards. Take a fine man of forty, with a handsome round Medi cian board, not a pointed Jew's beard, look at him well, so as to retain his portait in your mind's eye; and then shave him close, leaving him, perhaps, out of charity, a couple of mutton chop whiskers, one on each cheek, and you will see the humiliating difference. And if you select an old man of seventy for your experiment, and convey a. snowy bearded head that might sit for a portrait in a historical picture, into a close-scraped, weazen-faced visage, like an avaricious French peasant on his way to haggle for swine at a monthly frano-marcha, the descent from the sublime to the ridiculous is still more painfully apparent. Beard or no beard, must remain at present an open question in England; there are social difficulties of a practical nature in the way, however we may decide as to the theory. A servant [WHOLE NUMBER, 1,410. would hardly be allowed to consider his beard as his own. A bearded tradesman might be thought by many customers to be giving himself airs and to be Resuming un due consequence. Many find fault with beards, as too aristocratic, too vulgar, too foreign, too philosophic, too symptomatic of Socialism, in short, too they don't quite know what; forgetting all the while that the beard was planted on the chin of man by the same Power that adorned the lion with his mane, and the peacock with his plumes. But, certainly, it is the artistic interest of us elderlies, as far as our own personal appearance is concerned, that beards should at least be tolerated. Perfumes are better altogether discarded by well-dressed gentlemen who are past the age of dandihoud. Extreme personal clean liness is the most judicious cosmetic we can use. Our money is more wisely laid out on Windsor soap and huckaback towels than on Eau de Cologne and essence of millefleure. False teeth are permi..able or not, accord ing to their object and their animus. An accidental deserter from an otherwise even and goodly set may have a substitute bought for him without reasonable blame. Teeth that really and truly help either to eat or to articulate, are no more than the natural tools to carry on the business of life. But if you cause your two or three remaining stumps to be extracted, in order to make room for a complete set of pearly ivories, both top and bottom, with patent spring hinges, which you want to display at the opera while you smile at the girls in the boxes, or ogle the dancers on the stage through your binocular glass—then, you are no better than a foolish old fellow; and do not forget the true proverb, "There is no fool like an d foil" I take it for granted that you have made your will. Many elderlies (who grow older and older every day, whether they know it and like it or nut,) look upon will-making, as an unpleasant or painful operation of t'te same class as bleeding or tooth-drawing.— They will submit to it under the influence of chloroform, not otherwise. I assure you they are mistaken, having tried it myself and found it a very comfortable anodyne against several uneasy sensations; of course to have that healingvirtue, the last will and testatiwnt must be a fair and just one, with nothing set down in malice or caprice.— !People will sometimes avenge themselves in their wills of affronts, little or great, real or fancied, that have been put on them. Peo ple also often repent of the harsh resolutions they have made. Now, if personal reconcil iation has taken place, or even if the offend ing party is only forgiven in the secret chamber of the complainant's heart, the re cord of estrangement in black and white ought not to remain uncanceled a single hour. Death may step in, without pre viously sending in his card, and may con vert a free pardon into a vindictive sentence, thus baffling the dilatory testator, who thought and meant to have made his peace with all men before departing hence. Merciful change of mind may come too late to be carried into execution—a strong reason for not fixing on parchment any un merciful resolution in black and white. At the last death bed at which I was present others had retired, and I was left alone with the sinking patient. Consciousness and in tellect remained clear to the last; but, as strength ebbed away, the eyes alone re mained eloquent, while the lips continued to move in the attempt to speak, without the faculty of uttering a sound. I guessed pret ty nearly what the moribund person was wishing to say; at least I felt sure of the tenor of it, because the previous contersa tion, while speech was possible, had been an expression of thanks and blessings, with good advice and judicious observations.— But, I thought, had those unutterable last words been, instead of what they were, an unavailing expression of forgiveness, a desire to restore some young offender to his sus pended rights, now forfeited forever—what an awful struggle must take place in the mind of him who feels himself quitting earthly things under such conditions, the re sult of his own hasty harshness or his tardy tenderness.—Household Words. BarWe copy another chapter of the an cient Natural History, recently discorered by the editor of the Boston Post, and now again brought to light in print: Parte X.—ro Vayde Seruant. A Damsel of a pleasante dysposytion ys a eerie greats helps to ye goode Horserrife. Ye chearful mayden vvyll Synge righte mer rielye abort ye Horse. She lyketh better a merrye songe than ye Psalmes of Sternholde do Hophyns. She lykervyse loueth not to abyde jn ye horse of ye Lorde upon a pleas ante Sabbathe; but yf so be that she mygbt, vrolde readylie vralke jn ye Fields & Woodee vvyth herr svvetehearte, and sytt vvyth hym yn some shadie playce, vntyl ye goings dovvne of ye sun. Herr take ye heede, listo and hearken rate me, alle ye Hvsbandes: yt ye nott vvyse for ye Goodman of ye Horse to have larch talke vvyth ye Damsel, (more especiallie yf she be comelie I faire to looks upon,) leste, per adventure, ye Gooderryfe should be trovbel led vvyth jealonsie thereatt, the vvych ya nott goode yn mayntainynng ye peace of ye Hovseholde. • GOOD DsvrvtrtoN.—The Chicago Journal ,eye that by the term "Strong-minded wo man," it moans - •one who spoils a very re spectable woman in vain endeavors to become s very ordinary men."