-.. • . . '. . . il'i t i "1 - 4 - r a • :....,:...._,..., ~, .t 4 ..:c iiii , .....•. . .... 0. ..... . • . ~• • .1) .11 ,:.;..:,..,,,,..., ...v...,;.: SAMUEL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXVIII, NUMBER 18.1 PUBLISHED EVERY SITURDAY MORNING. Qißce in Arorthern antral Railroad Corn pany's g, north-west corner Front and rfiVainut streets. Terms of Subscription. One Copy per nunum, i f paid in If not paid within three months from COMITICIICCITICIII °file }oar, 200 91. coats' ask Copp. No sub4eriminn steel set! for is le-- time then enontll•; tool on paper will its Ji-coollourd owl: all rarrearage,s are paid, utllc•e at the option of the pub- ftrAloney may be remitted by mail at the publish er's risk. Rates of Advertising. square (6 one week, $0 three week+ • I each -uh.equellt insertion, 10 1 " (12:inet.) one wrrl,, .51) three week., I VU 1!= Larger ndverti.emeot In proportion. A litter.' dt•rouot will lie mode to quarterly, half. yearly or vrarlyndvertt.sers.who are ,trici* ruufiurJ to I heir Drs. John 8c Rohrer, H AVE associated in the Practice of Medi- C02n ". 11 . .in. April 1•1.1966• If DR. G. W. MIFFLIN, DENTIST, Locust street, a few doors above ihr Odd Fellow. , Ihi 11 , Columbia. P.,. Collatnlost Nhq S. 1K.6. • • 11. M. NORTH, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Col nmnia. Pa. Colleetma•, I romptly made. in Laiteakier and Ma Conatle•. e:nlomida,Ma OBE! J. W. FISH ER, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, Calu. - m.brice., Par. Col utnt,ot.+ryn.mu.• 10, iut. it _ - . GEORGE J. SiUUTII, \\[ HOLES and Retail Bread and Cake Baker.--.l'oloituatly on hand a variety of too nuincrou.4 to meinion. Soda. me. Scroll. and Sagur Cunfccuoner), of every de,riation. 11.0 , L75T sl`1:1:1•71', Feb. Between the Bank inol Frankhit TIROWA'S Essence of Jamaica Ginger, Gen aisle a% ri Idle . nor family Medicine bid,. Odd 1.. cl 11.111. July Q. 1%57. gOLUTION OF CITRATE OF MAGNESIA,or Pur -1,/ unitive Niiiierial is highlyrecommended n. Ntilodinine for EProin Sail , rovviior, l 1... ..3111 lir olol.itii• fresh every day at Du. E. B. 11E1111'6 1/rug Store. Front At. [r2 _ JUST received, a fresh supply of Corn :Rarest, Fan flu. and RO.l. Flour. at 51et'01121.1.F..4 DELLETT'S family Merlienie Qlore. Odd Fellow-' Ilull. C 011.1111 1 ,14 COIUOIIOtIL. Mac 30, LAMPS, LAMPS, LAMPS. Just received at Derr'- Drug : , 00 . C, u flow and benutilul lot al Lump+ of till rle.eripllMlA. May 2. ALOT of Fresh Vanilla Beans, at Ur. E B. Derr`A “olden Alortur Drug sure. C7nlieenhln. NI:ov ASUPERIOR urliele of burning Fluid jug re,...gveil ni..l foi ..11 it' by H :.U\ 11.\;11.1 :•4 IN. A LARGE lot of Cily cured Dried Beef, just rrrrivrd ut a lelLo.lol & miN Columbni 11..ermher 20.1,56 A NEW and fresh lot of Spices, just re. ceivral at It. ;LIDAII a •ON . , Crottunlim. nor ..21.1 JIOUNTRY Produce conhtantly on hand an d for -$416 by 11. sll 11. 11 A. SON - HOMINY, Cranberries, Raisins, Figs, Alm -1..L. °nth,. IValnut., CI earn Nut-. rr .311.1 revel wed u. FUYDAM & .2(1. 1.511 ASUPERIOR lot of Black and Green Teas, Coffee and Chocolate, jubt reet•teed at it -I.'l 14 11 Se f%o\ Corner for Front and Um on eta, LEIMIXIM JUST RECEIVED. a beautiful usxortment of (On.. Ileutiquatteri 11111.1 New.. 1/.1101. Col bin, April .VXTR I Family and Superfine Flour of the bruoid. for y II SON._ 1 EST received 1000 lbs. extra double bolted 41, itisekwhent Ate.l, at 11,v 220. I :14. 11. SUYDAM h SON'S._ NVEI KEL'S Instantaneous Yeast or Baking 1..." der. or ...Ile by 11. t•-tiVl/001 &S/ /N. Tnit & THOMPSON'S justly celebrated Com nterciiil and oilier ("old to.io e noirlort—jwit received. V. S. IMF:INF:It. Cilium in R.Apci I :2V. 1,955. WIDTH COODS.--A full line of White, Dress Good+ of every dc.criptioe.3,l received. nt ]wily 11. 1,57 I•ONDI.ItS%II.IrII'3. WHY should anyperson do without a Clock, when they can be hod for3l.soand unword, at tinimiNErrs? Colum , lin. April 4R.1Q56 QAITNEFIER, or Concentrated Lye, far ma k,/ king Soup. 1 lb. I"ttlitetetti for our hurry! of Soft Soap, or 11 4 .. fur 9 lbs. !lord Soup. Full dirre lion. Will he glue at the Counter for making Soft, Hard and Fancy Soups. For >ale by R. WILLIANIS. Coltonitin. March 31. 1P55 A LARGE lot of Baskrts, Brooms, Buckets Ace.. for.:: to by II St/ VI/AM kSt :it.. undersigned have been appointed ;teem+ forthe 4.41 e fff k l'1:1C IIA wnmoned not to corrode; ut e I -I legly the) almost equal the quill. SAYLOR & ntcUONA LD. Cnlumbin San. 17. 1457 DE GRATH'S r.l.EcTitin oil. Jll4l rereireJ. fresh roma). of this popular retn«,l% for It %VI 1.1.1 A AIS. Front Street, Colulutau., Pa._ nem A LATIUM loo.oronent of Rope.. nll no.ll.loziltr 1 . 1 on hood mod (or dela ut TIIOS 1C ICLBll'$. March li, 1 t ,57 No. 1. I I oth .Ifeet. aInoTA. stIOVIS, GROCERIES, Sc., also: Freak c.t.)l3urtung Flutd,jutt THOMAS Wlit.Sll'S Nn. 1. Iliab March M. 1657 ANF:AV 10l of WHAM.; AND CA IL OR lIP,SINC; OILS, received at the more of the Front Street. Colombo, Pa. Army In. 11556 r i RI ED 11E11:1 , , rams and Plainllam., Shoulders and mess Pork, for cute be _ THOMAS WETStI. No. I. Iligh sireet 'March 21. Corn, flay, and other feeds. for 4°lo hy_ THOMAS WELtzn Morrh 21.1.57 130XES C111:1>11 For sale chess. by D. I'. APPOLD 3. CO. Columbia, October .^..ti,ißrn A SUM:rill/It ortic:e of PAINT WI. for pair by May 10.7£50. Front St fret, Cohlinhio. Pa TUAT RECP.IVT4II.n Inrete ned well rrlrr,rd variety Braiilar•. rommillac w purloft-hoe. IN In, Clo th . Crumb, Nail, Hut and Teeth Dru.l.••. mid for .u , n by R. %% ILIA A S. From street Columbia. Pu. Nlarch 72. "A ASUPERIOR article orTONIE SPI CE girrE ß ; :, suitable for HOW' Keepers, for }.l e by R. WILLIAMS. Front etreet, Eolinntna. May 10.1454 .1-mesa W,PII CREAL OIL, ulxoy on band. and fo Iltie by N. ivit.t.lnAls. May 10. R5B. Front Street. COllll,llllll. Pa. -AST received, FKEdLI CA bl and for .6110. 41./ by R. Avii.LlAms. May 10,1456. Front Street. Columbia. PA. 1000 LAIS. New C ured City Hams and &molders Jain received and for sale by Peb..2l, LEW. /13..SUXHAbLodaiSON. prtq. Indian Summer. There is a time. Just WlKill the frost Prepares to pave old tViateis ♦ray, When Autumn in a reverie lost, The mellow daytime dreams away; When Summer comes, in musing mind, To gaze once more on hill and dell, To mark how inany sheaves they Lind, And see if all arc ripened well. - El] IVith balmy breath she %shivers low, The dying flowers look up and give Their sweetest incense, ere they go, For her who made their beauty live. She enters 'neath the woodlaturs shade; Her zephyrs lift the lingering leaf, And bear it gently a•ucre are luid The loved and Ithd 011C11 of its grief. At last. old Autumn, rising, takes Arian his sceptre and his throne; NVith boisterous hands the tree he shakes, Intent on gathering all his own. Sweet Summer. sighing. flies the plait:. And waiting Winter. gaunt and grim, Sees miser A utumu hoard his grain, And smiles to think Ws :ill for him. The Daisy. The daisy blossoms on the rucks, Amid the purple heath ; Itlossoins nn the river's bunks, That threads the glens beiicallij The eagle, in his pride of place, Beholds it by his nest; And in the naiad it enshions sort. Thu larks de...emeritus; breast. refore the cuckoo's earliest Spring .ilver circlet I. IIOWY, greeting Lurk begin to swell, And teplp r melt, the allow; And when breezes howl Along the moorlands Lore, And only bloom, the Christmas rose, The daisy still Is there Samaritan of flowers! to it All races are alike— The •swurcr on his glacier height, The Machin:lh ott his dl he, The seal- , kin vested Illyinanaux, Begirt a all icy kegs, Alia, underneath his homing noon, The purasolled Chinese. The emigrant on di , tant shore, scenes and faces strange, Behold it flowerang IA the sward Where'r ha% foohteps range ; And wheat his y turning, home•sek heart Would how to as de•pair, It rends his e 3 e u lesson -age— That God as everywhere! Stirs tire &Wes that begent The little fields of the sky. 13,Iteid by nil, and everywhere, Wight prototype, on !ugh. Bloom on, then, unpretending Rowers! And to the waverer he An emblem of St. Priers content And Stephen's constancy. gttzttiriit. All For The Best I do not think there could be found in the three kingdoms a blither old maid than Miss Mellicent Orme, otherwise Aunt Milly, fur she was universally called by her ne phews and nieces, first, second and third cousins—nay, even by many who could not boast the smallest tie of consanguinity.— But this sort of universal aunthood to the whole neighborhood was by no means dis agreeable to Mrs. hilly, for in a very little body she bad a large heart, of a most India rubber nature: not indeed as the simile is used in speaking of female hearts that 'nev er break—but always stretch.' But Miss Milly's heart possessed this elastic nature in the best sense—namely, that it ever found room for new occupants; and, moreover, it was remarkable for its quality of effacing all unkindness or injuries as easily as India rubber removes pencil-marks from paper. Aunt Milly—l have some right to call her so, being her own nephew, Godfrey Est court—was an extremely little woman.— She had pretty little features, pretty little figure, and always carried a pretty little work bag, in whose mysterious recesses all the children of the neighborhood loved to dive, seldom returning to the surface with out some pearl of price, in the shape of a lozenge or a sugur-plum. Iler dress was al ways neat, rather uld•fashioned perhaps, but invariably becoming; her soft brown hair—it really was brown still—lay smooth ly braided under a tiny cap; her white col lar was ever snowy; indeed Aunt Milly's whole attire seemed to have the amazing quality of never looking worn soiled or dus ty, but always fresh and new. Yet she was far from rich, as every one knew; but her little income was just enough to suffice for her little self. She lived in a nutshell of a house, with the smallest of small hand-insid e is; luleed everything al oJt Aunt Milly's was on the diminutive scale. She did not abide much at home, for she was every where in request—at weddings, christen ings, etc. To her credit be it spoken, Aunt Maly did not turn her feet from the house of mourning. She could weep with those that wept, yet somehow or other she con trived to infuse hope amidst despair. And in general her blithe nature converted all life's minor evils into things not worth la menting about. Every one felt that Aunt Milly's entrance into their doors brought sunshine. She was a sunbeam in herself; there was cheerful ness in her light step, her merry laugh; the jingling of the keys in her pocket, dear lit tle soul! musical. She had a word of en couragement fur all, and had an inclination to look on the sunny side of everything and everybody-. No one was more welcome in mirthful days, no one more sought for in :adversity, fur she had the quality of making .the hoariest trouble seem lighter; and her -unfailing ,motto Ices !All happens for the best.' "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 7, 1857. All my schoolboy disasters were depos ited in Aunt !dilly's sympathizing ear; and when I grew up still kept to the old habit. I came to her one day with what I consid ered my first real sorrow. it was the loss, by the sudden failure of a country bank, of nearly all the few hundreds my poor father had laid up f me. My std news had travelled before me, and I was not surprised to see Aunt Milly's cheerful face grave as she met me with. 'My dear boy, lam very sorry for you' 'lt is the greatest misfortune I could have,' I cried. 'I wish that wretch Sharples—' 'Don't wish him anything worse than he has to bear already, poor man, with his large family,' said Aunt Milly, gently. 'But you do not know all I have lost.— That—that Laura ,' and I stopped, looking, I doubt not, very miserable, and possibly very silly. 'You mean to say, Godfrey, that since, in stead of having a little fortune to begin the world with, you have hardly anything at all, Miss Laura Ashton will not consider that her engagement holds. I expected it.' 'Oh, Aunt MiHy. she is not so mean as that; but we were to have been 'parried in two years, and I could. have got a share in Mortlake's office, and we Should have been so happy ! All that is over now. Her father says we must wait, and Laura is to lie considered free. Life is nothing to me! I will go to America, or shoot myself.' old are you, Godfrey?' asked Aunt Milly, with a quiet smile that rather an noyed me. shall be twenty next June,' I said.— Young people always put their age in the future tense ; it sounds better. 'lt is now July, so that I may call you ninteen and a month. My dear boy, the world mu , 4 ben horrible place, indeed, fur you to grow tired of it snzoon. I would ad vise you to wait a little while before you gest o desperate.' Aunt Milly,' I said, turning away, ' it is easy for you to talk—you were never in love' A shadow passed over her bright face, but Aunt Milly did not answer my allusion. '1 do not think any boy of nineteen is doomed to be a victim to loss of fortune or hopeless love,' she said after a pause. gMy dear Godfrey, this will be a trial of your Laura's constancy, and of your own pa tience and industry. Depend upon it, all will turn out for the beat.' 'Oh!' I sighed, you talk very well, Aunt Milly ; what can I do ?' ' I will tell you. You are young, clever, and have been fur two years in a good pro fession. It will be your own fault if you do not rise in the world. Every man is, in a great measure, the architect of his own for tune ; and where, as in your case, the foun dation of a good education is laid, so much the easier is it to raise the superstructure. You may yet be a rich man by your own exertions, and the best of fortunes is a for tune self-earned.' This was the longest and gravest speech I bad ever heard from Aunt Milly's lips.— Its truth struck me forcibly, and I felt rath er ashamed of having so soon succumbed to disaster; it seemed cowardly, and unworthy the manly dignity of nearly twenty years. Aunt Milly, with true feminine tact, saw her advantage, and followed it up. Now, as to your heart troubles, my dear nephew. To tell the truth, I hardly believe in boyish love; it is so often so much of a dream and so little of a reality. Do not be vexed, Godfrey ; but I should not be sur prised if, five years hence, you tell me how fortunate it was that this trial came. Men rarely see with the same eyes at nineteen and twenty-five. I energetically quoted Shakespeare: Doubt flint the star, arc fire. Doubt that the still data move, Doubt truth to be a liar. Hut never doubt 1 love.' Aunt Milly laughed. As both these as tronomical facts are rather questionable, you must excuse my doubting the final fact also. But time will show. Meanwhile, do not despair; be diligent, and he careful of the little you have left. Matters might have been worso with you.' ' Ah, Aunt Milly, what a cheerful heart you have ! But trouble never comes to you, as it does to other people.' You are a little mistaken for once, God frey. By Sharpies' failure I have lost every farthing I had in the world.' I was struck dumb with surprise and re gret. Poor dear Aunt Milly I when she was listening to my lamentations, and con soling me, how little did I know that she was more unfortunate than myself! And yet she neither complained nor desponded, but only smiled—a little sadly, perhaps— and said she knew even this disaster was ' all for the best,' though she could not see it at the time. She calmly made prepara tions for quitting her pretty home, confided her little handmaid to one cousin, in whose kitchen the tidy Rachel was gladly admitted, gave her few household pets to another, and prepared to bravo the wide world. Some unfeeling people forgot Aunt Milly in her trouble; but the greater part of her friendly circle proved how much they esteemed and valued her. Some asked her to visit them for a month, three months, a year, indeed, had she chosen, Aunt Milky might have spent her life as a passing guest among her friends; but she was too proud to do any such thing. At last a third or fourth cousin—a widow er of largo fortune—invited Miss Milly to reside at his house, as chaperon to his_two daughters, young girls just growing up into womanhood. This proposal, kindly meant, was warmly accepted; and Aunt Milly set forward on her long journey, for Elphinstone Hall was some hundred miles off—a formi dable distance to one ivho had never been a day's journey from her own home ; now, alas, hers no more! Still, neither despon dency nor fear troubled her blithe spirit, as Miss Milly set out with her valorous neph ew; for I had pleaded so earnestly my right to be her squire to Mr. Elphinstone's door, that the concession was yielded at last. Of all the gloomy, looking old avenues that ever led to baronial hall, the •one we passed through was the gloomiest. It might have been pretty in May, but on a wet day in October it was most melancholy. Poor Aunt Milly shivered as the wind rustled in the trees, and the dead leaves fell in clouds on the top of the post-chaise. We alighted, and entered a hall equally lugubrious, and not much warmer than the avenue. The solemn old porter• was warming his chilled bands at the tiny fire ; he and the house were in perfect keeping—dreary, dull, and melancholy. The nta•ter was much in the same style ; a tall bl,•tck fi,;ure, with a lung lime and a white neekeloth, was the personi fied idea left behind by Mr. Elphinstone.— When he was gone, I earnestly entreated Aunt Milly to return with use, and not stay in this desolate place; but she refused. 'My cousin seems kind,' she said ; he looked and spoke as though he were glad to see me.' (I was too cold to hear or see much, certainly, but I declare I did notice this very friendly reception.) 'My dear Godfrey,' Aunt continued, I will stay and try to make a home hero ; the two girls may be amiable, and then I shall soon love them ; at all events let us hope for the best.' My hopes for poor Aunt Milly all van i.hed into thin air when, at the frigid din ner table, where the very eatables seemed made of stone, I saw two young ladies of fifteen or thereabouts ; one, the wildest and rude , t holyden that ever disgraced female habiliments ; the other, a pale, stooping girl, with sleepy blue eyes, and lank fair hair, who never uttered a word, nor once ' lifted her eyes from the tablecloth.. 'What will become of poor Aunt Milly ?' I thought, internally: Yet there she was, as cheerful as ever, talking to that old icicle, Mr. Elphinstone ; listening patiently to the lava•flood of Miss Louisa's tongue ; and now and then speaking to Miss Euphemia, whoso only answer was a nod o' : head, or a stare from her immense blue eyes.— ' Well !' I mentally ejaculated, " Aunt Milly's talent fur making the best of everything will be called into full requisition here, I suspect.' Nevertheless, when we parted, she as sured me that she was quite content; that she would no doubt be very comfortable at the Hall. But those two dreadful girls, how will you manage them, Aunt 31i ?' and a faint vision of the tall, stout Louisa going in a passion, and knocking my poor little aunt off her chair, came across my mind's eye. ' Poor things they have no mother to teach them better. • I am sorry for them ; I was a motherless child myself,' said Aunt Milly, softly. 'They will improve by and by ; depend upon it, Godfrey, all will turn out well for both you and me.' ' Amen said lin my heart : for I thought of my own Laura. How different she was from the Miss Elphinstones And the image of my beloved eclipsed that of desolate Aunt Milly, I fear, before I had traveled many miles from the Hall. Aunt Milly's epistles were not very fre- quent , for, like many excellent people, she disliked letter-writing, and only indulged her very particular friends with a few lines now and then, in which she fully acted up to the golden rule. 'lf you have any thing to say, say it: if nothing—why, say it. too.' Thus my infimmation as to how matters were going on at Elphinstone hall was of a very slender nature. However, when a few months had rolled by, chance led me into the neighborhood, and I surprised Aunt Milly with a visit from her loving nephew. It was early spring, and a few peeping primroses brightened the old avenue. Un derneath the dining room windows, was a gay bed of purple and yel low crocuses, which I thought bore tokens of Aunt Milly's care ; she was always so fond of flowers. I fan cied the Hall did not look quite so cheerless as before ; the bright March sunbeams en livened, though they could not warm it. Ina few moments appeared Aunt !Hilly herself, not in the least attired, but as lively and active as ever. She took me into her own little sitting room, and told me how the winter had pas sed with her. It had been rather a gloomy one, she acknowledged ; the girls had been accustomed to run wild ; Louisa would have her own way ; but that she was easily guided by love, and her nature was frank and warm. Phemie, the pale girl, who had been delicate from her cradle, was rather indolent, but— (oh ! what a blessing these buts are some times )—but then she was so sweet and gen tle. I own when I again saw the young damsels, thus leniently described by Aunt Milly, I did not perceive the marvelous change ; Louisa seemed as nearly talkative, and her sister as nearly as insipid ever; still there was a slight improvement even to my eyes, and I gladly allowed Aunt Milly the full benefit of that losing glamour which was cast by her hopeful creed and sweet disposition. 'But now, Godfrey, how faros it with you?' I said my good aunt. 'flow is Laura, and I I how are you getting along in the world?' I could givo but melancholy answer to these questions; for I had to work hard, and law was a dry study. Besides many people looked coldly on me after they knew I was poorer than I had been: and even Laura her self was not so frank and kind. Vague jealousies were spring up in my heart for every smile she bestowed. elsewhere; and these smiles were not few. I was in truth, far from happy; and so I told Aunt Milly, adding, •If Laura dues not love me I don't care what becomes of me.' Aunt Milly smiled and then looked grave. 'My dear Godfrey, if Laura married to-mor row you would recover in time.' 'No, never! To lose the girl I love is to lose everything in the world.' 'lt may be you do not know what real love is, my dear nephew. The strength and duration of a man's character depend chiefly upon the character and disposition of the woman he loves. Fur your Laura— But we shall see. Once mure have good courage; work hard at your profession, and grieve as little about Laura as you can. If she ever did love you, she does so still, and will us long as you keep constant to her, otherwise she is not worth the winning.' I did not agree with Aunt Middy's theory, but I said no more: my heart was too sore. She took me over the !louse and grounds; both looked cheerful under the influence of the soft spring: and then she told me how kind Mr. Elphinstone was, and how lie had gradually wearied from his solitary life to take pleasure in the society of his daugh ters. 'And I hope he is grateful to to you who have made it endurable!' I said. Aunt Milly smiled. 'Yes, I believe he is, but I have only dune what I ought; the girl. both love me dearly, and it is sufficient re ward to see them improved. I (lid not see Mr. Elphinstono, but earnest ly hoped the solemn, coldly polite, middle aged gentleman had shared in the general amelioration and reform effected by the cheerful hearted Miss Mills. Months had glided into years ere I again saw Aunt Milly. Everything had changed with me: from a buy I had grown a man. from toying to struggling with the world.— I bad followed Aunt Milly's advice, and had begun to reap the fruit of it in the good opinion of those whose opinion was worth having. I had proved also the truth of her old saying. 'How sweet is the bread of our own earning!' Another of her prophecies, alas: had come but too true. Laura Ashton had married—but I was not her husband; a richer man stole the jewel of my boyhood's fancy; but—and this was the saddest to bear —not before I had found it to be a false pearl, unworthy of my manhood's wearing. But I will not speak of this; in spite of Aunt Milly's sage speeches, nu one can forget his first love. 'When I visited Elpbinstone Hall, it was in the golden days of midsummer. I thought I had never beheld a more lovely place.— The old trees were so bowery and full of leaves ; the grassy lawn so very green ; the flower garden so bright with blossoms. Age and youth were not more different than the ancient, cheerless Hall of former times and the beautiful spot I now looked upon. Even Aunt Milly seemed to share in the general rejuvenescence. The two years which had changed me so much, had not made her look the older. She had the same clear,. fresh cheerful face, and neat little figure ; both perhaps a little rounder, the result of a hap- , py life and a few cares. Her dress was as • tasteful as ever, but not quite so precise, and it was of richer materials. She wore, too, I various handsome articles of jewelry, a re markable eircum.tance fur unpretending Aunt Milly. I thought her pipits must be very generous with presents. We had not sat triking long when a very graceful girl crossed the lawn to the French window of Aunt Milly's room. • I will come soon ; go and take your walk, Phemie dear,' said Aunt Milly. Wonder of wonders! Could that beauti ful fair face and golden ringlets which I saw through the open window belong to the lackadaisical Miss Euphemia of old? I absolutely started from my chair. ' You don't mean to say, Aunt Milly, that that lovely girl is Miss Elphinstone ?' • Most certainly,' said Aunt Milly, laugh ing—her own musical laugh. • Well, if I ever saw such a transforma tion! You aro as much of a fairy as Cinde rella's god•mother.' • Not at all ; I only did as a gardener does with half-cultivated ground; I pulled up the weeds and nurtured the flowers. As for Phemie's beauty, I never thought her ugly, though you were too much occupied with your disgust at the place to perceive that she really had fair skin and pretty fea tures. I have only made the best of what I found." •-end how has Miss Louisa turned out in your hands?' I asked, zmilingly. • Look at her; she is coming up the ave nue on horseback.' And a very graceful, fearless horsewoman the quondam hoyden seemed ; her wildness was subdued into spiritly, but not unlady like manners: in short, Louisa had become what men would admire as a fine, lively girl. ' Why, Aunt Maly,' I said, ' you must have grown quite attached to these girls; it will really be painful for you to leave them.' ' I do not think of leaving them very soon," said Aunt :►Lilly, °eating down her eyes, end $1,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; $2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE. playing with her gold watch chain, while a very faint rosyness deepening of her fair cheek, and a scarcely perceptible smile hove ring round her mouth, were distinctly visi ble. ' Indeed !' snid I, inquiringly. ' Yes; Mr. Elphinstono is very kind; he does not wish me to go ; the girls love me very much ; end my cousin—' 'Follows his daughters' good example!' I cried, at last arriving at the truth. ' Well, I don't see how he could possibly help it ; and so, dear Aunt Milly, I wish you joy.' Aunt Milly muttered something in return blushing as prettily as a girl of fifteen, and at last fairly ran out of the room. ' After all, everything was for the best,' thought I, as I attended the quiet wedding of Mr. Elphinstolie, and his second wife— loved and loving sincerely ; though to both the affection was but the Indian summer of their lives. He did not loot: half so grave and austere as I fancied, and really was a very noble looking man, in spite of his half century ; and if his winning little wife trod oily ten years behind him in the road of life, why, I have seen many older looking brides wino were not thirty by the church register. After all, what matters years when the heart is still young. They both did right in marrying, and the Indian summer shines peacefully on them still. I have nothing to add, except that I have for these two years keen a married man my self; and therefore fully sympathized with Aunt Milly's keeping of her seventh wed ding anniversary week. I may, just mention, en possum', that 1 rarely cull her Aunt dilly now happening to be her son-in-law as well as nephew.— Perhaps, to clear up all mysteries, I had better confess that my wife has fair hair, sweet blue eyes, and that her name is Eu phernia, A True Ghost Story 'Did you ever hear,' said a friend once to me, 'a real true ghost story—one you might depend upon?' 'There are not many such to be heard,' I replied, 'and I am afraid it has never been my good fortune to meet trith those who were really able to give me a genuine well ! authenticated story.' I 'Well, you shall never have cause to say so again; and as it was an adventure that happened to myself, you can scarcely think it other than well authenticrund. I know 1 you to be no coward, or I might hesitate before I told it to you. You need not stir the fire; there is plenty of light by which you can hear it. And now to begin. I had been riding hard one day in the autumn for nearly five or six hours, through some of the most tempestuous weather to which it has ever been my ill luck to be exposed. It was just about the time of the equinox, and per fect hurricanes swept over the hills, as if every wind in heaven had broken loose and had gone mad, and on every hill the rain and driving sleet poured down in one unbro ken shower. 'When I reached the head of' Wentfurd valley, It narrow ravine with rocks on one side and rich full woods on the other, with a clear little stream winding through the hollow dell—when I came to the entrance of this valley, weather-beaten veteran as I was, I scarcely knew how to hold on my way.— The wind, as it were, held in between the two high banks, rushed like a river just bro ken loose into a new course, carrying with it a perfect sheet of rain, against which my poor horse and I struggled with considera ble diffieulty. Still I went on. fur the village lay at the other end, and I had a patient to ; see there, who bad sent a very urgent mes sage, entreating me to came to him as soon as possible. We are slaves to a message, we poor medical men, and I urged on my poor jaded brute with a keen relish f,r the warm fire and good dinner that awaited me as soon as I could see my unfortunate patient and get back to a home doubly valued on such a day as that in which I was then out. It was indeed dreary riding in such weather: and the scene altogether, through which I passed. was certainly not the most conduci% towards raising a man's spirits; but I posi tively half wished myself out in it all again rather than sit the hour I was obliged to ; spend by the sick-bed of the wretched man I had been summoned to visit. Ile had met ' with an accident the day before, and as be I had been drinking up to the time, and the people had delayed sending fur me, I found ' him in a frightful state of fever; and it was really an awful thing either to look at or to hear him. He was delirious and perfectly furious; and his face, swelled with passion and crimson with the fever that was burning him up, was a sight to frighten children. and not one calculated to add to the tranquil ity even of full grown men. I dare say you think me very weak, and that I ought to have been inured to such things, minding! his ravings no more than the dash of the rain against the window; but during the whole of my practice, 1 had never seen man or woman, in health or in fever, in so fright ful a state of furious frenzy, with the impress of every bad passion stamped broadly and fearfully upon the face; and, in the miserable hovel that then held me. with his old witch like mother standing by, the babel of the wind and rain outside added to the ravings of the wretched creature within, I began to feel neither in a happy nor an enviable frame of mind. There is nothing so frightful as where the reasonable spirit seems to aban don man's body, and leave it to a fiend in stead. [WHOLE NUMBER, 1,423. `After an hour or more waiting patiently by his bedide, not liking to leave the help less old woman alone with so dangerous a. companion, (for I could not answer for any thing he might do in his frenzy,) I thought that the remedies by which I hoped in some measure to subdue the fever seemed begin ning to take effect, and that I might leave him, promising to send all that was neces sary, though fearing much that he had gone beyond all my power to restore him; and desiring that I might be immediately called back again should he get worse instead of better, which I felt almost certain would be the case, I hastened homewards, glad enough to be leaving wretched huts and raving men, driving wind and windy hills, for a comfort able house, dry clothes, a warns fire and a good dinner. I think I never saw such a fire in my life as the one that blazed up my chimney; it looked so wonderfully warm and bright, and there scented an indescriba ble air of comfort about the room that I had. never noticed before. One would have thought I should have enjoyed it all intensely after my wet ride, but throughout the whole evening the scenes of the day would keep recurring to my mind with most uncomfort able distinctness, and it was in vain that I endeavored to forget it all in a book, one of my old favorites, too; so that at last I fairly gave up the attempt as the hideous face would come continually between my eyes and an especially good passage; and I went off to bed heartily tired and expecting sleep very readily to visit me. Nor was I disap pointed: I was soon deep asleep, though my last thought was on the little valley I had left. ' How long this heavy and dreamless sleep continued I cannot tell, but gradually I felt consciousness returning in the shape of the very thoughts with which I fell asleep, and at last I opened my eyes, thoroughly roused by a heavy blow at my window. I cannot describe my horror, when, by the light of the room, struggling among the heavy surge like clouds, I saw the very face, the face of that man, looking in at me through the case ment, the eyes distended and the face pres sed close to the glass. I started up in bed to convince myself that I really was awake, and not suffering from some frightful dream. There it stayed perfectly moveless, its wide, ghastly eyes fixed unwaveringly on mine, which, by a kind of fascination, became equally fixed and rigid, gazing upon the dreadful face, which alone, without n„body, was visible at the window, unless an indefi nable black shadow, that seemed to float be yond it, might be fancied into one. I caa scarcely tell how long I so sat looking at it, but I remember something of a rushing sound, a feeling of relief, a falling exhaus ted hack upon my pillow, and then I awoke in the - morning ill and unrefreshed. ' I was ill at ease, and the first question I asked on coming down stairs was whether any messenger had come to summon mo to Wentfurd. A messenger had come, they told me, but it was to say I need trouble myself no further, as the man was already beyond all aid, having died about the middle of the night. I never felt so strangely in my life as when they told me this, and my brain almost reeled as the events of the pre vious day and night passed through my mind in rapid succession. That I had seen something supernatural in the darkness of the night I had never doubted ; but when the sun shone brightly into my room in the morning. through the same window where I had seen so frightful and strange a sight by the spectral light of the moon, I began to believe more it was a dream, and endeavored to ridicule myself out of all uncomfortable feelings, which, nevertheless, I could not quite shake off. ' Haunted by what I considered a painful dream, I left my room, and the first thing I heard was a confirmation of what I had been fur the last hour endeavoring to reason and ridicule myself out of believing. It was some hours before I could recover my ordi nary tranquility: and then it came back, not slowly as you might have expected, as the impression gradually wore off„ and time wrought his usual changes in mind as in body, but sullenly—by the discovery that our large white owl had escaped during the night and had honored my window with a visit before he became quite accustomed to his liberty.' TIIE MexurAcTritt or WORDS.—Tbe fol lowing sensible remarks are extracted from Frarcr's Magazine; No permission has been 80 much abused in our day as that of Horace for the manu facture of words. Ile allows men to mould one now and then, with a modest discretion; but he is addressing poets, not venders of patent leather or dealers in marine stores. Would he not have stood aghast at the terns 'annpropylus.' Would it not puzzle a Sam'. iger or Bently? It is time we protest to these vile coinages when every breeches maker or blacking manufacturer invents a compound word of six syllables as expressive of his wares. Ladies do not wear petticoats now a-days, but crinolines. 'Mat is their new name for garters? Men do not ride on horseback as aforetime—they take eques trian exercise; women are not married like their grandmothers—they are led to the hy rneneal altar. A bookseller, forsooth, be comes a biblopole; and a servant is convert ed into a maniciple. Barbers do not sell tooth powder and shaving soap as their fath ers did, but odonto and dentifrice, and ryix.- ;Amgen; hair wash has passed away—it is capillary fluid. Can any one tall what is