~. - - . . . . . . . • ' - - • -•- I - _ . • .. _ T .,. ,"......,:: --_ --:_.: :•-- : -.-. , _._ .f-:_ ~........ ~ , . ~,_ • _ ~.„,„ , i. . 5 .., ...4 , .....,. --., ...... - „ : ,, g . t , .- ~ . --- 1,... - , ... ~..,,, 4T. :1; 4 w .. , / ... . 4, - ... '' ?,1%, , - '' ' ' '' "-.- ' - ''. •'•. , _ ......, .. ..- •:. n ' . • . --?.- ' . ,'.... ._. * .. '. .. ,:.:;:.. • . 7 . '. .... . , ~.-.' -4 . - I.' '' , i ~ •.: _, i • , ' ' - . - 7 . - - 77 e t ~ . ... - , . . , ... "......`.;:_.- ".. .......:.."---..,., - _."17i 7 " ,. .'..;-:- . ; - :::: , -. 1, ...7 4 '''t . .." 4. " -.: ' - -,...--:',..- . . 4. .. i •- - • '•:„0...}..* ".5-.. • . •.:e ' • • - • ' • - - . _ ...2 : . . , ..:,. :._. -..-... _, - . . . • r . ' • .?.- 1 -i-,,t5 . ~ ..... --. , - ..- - to CY ~ , . . . . . ~ . .1 SAMUEL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. voLumg xxxi, NUMBER a.] PUBLISHED EVERY SiTuRDAV MORNING (Nee in Carpet Hall, .Worth-rcest corner of Front and Locust streets. Torras of Subscription, ORC COpy p c ran num,i f paidin advance, • 4 i( not paid within three month sfrom coMmencemenloiLlie year, 200 4 C-c)33. - tisi ca. cor:0 - 37'. No; üb.Leri print: renewed fora leett time than six !months; and no Paper will he diicantinued until nil av o aragesure paid,ualessur the optional pub- .4C7.yloncyrsaybc:ers.Etteilbytnail aithepublish er's risk. ..... Rates of. Aditrtising; ~ liquor rith I nesjone week. g'o3B ' 4 4 - three weeks. 75. , . , each-tibsequentinsertion, 10 (I .1 tnes)onevreek.... 50 three week - s, 100 r r eat, o.lllb. , equenlinsertion . .85 -Largeradvertisementkt ii proportion ...-7 Al iberal li4courit will be made to ounrterly.balf early orinarly id vertiie rs,who are strict hconfined ',their business. - , DR.• HOFFER, - DENTIST.--OFFlCE,..Front,Sirect Ailt, door from Lormat. over 5.131 . 01 . Ef.. 51 cDonald'A Honk *tore Columbia. Pa. ECrEbtpltl%-Jiatne Pho tograph Gallery., :JAugust.M,•39.lia. ' - TUSTICE OF THE'PElleg s tolunibieja. OPPICF.:, in Whipkter's New Building, below Black's Hotel, Prone 'street. '• " , E - , P n r r o m uttantion given to all business entrusted November 29,1,857. - - U. N. niortrn; ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW c01t,nib,..p... Collections .y. rout ptly made n Luneaste and Yort &unties. Columbia, May 4,1850. J. w. Elsrum, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, ch:a.1.2233.1E:acL, Colnmlnu September 11, 1.7.31.1.1 f S. Atlee Bocklus,,D. D. S. 1)11i A C'FICES Ire Operative, Surgical and Meehan kill Depa ri mein:. of Dcatiairyl. ()mem. Loco.' si reel, hal weca. he Fianklin liou•=e Ull,l fort (Mee, Cblambla; Pa'" Nay,7:1115,0 1 . • . - GUSTAVUS HEGDIAN, Professor of Ancient and Alodcrn Languages MADAME HEGMAN, Tender of Vocal and Instrumental Music- W &nut slrret,ai Prom, - 0a1,1fr 4 1 410 . cs , Columbia, May 02. 1;1430. •-•-• - ra at of . Tomatoes;. a _fi_ cathartic and Tome. For ,ale al J. S. DEL I.Krr& CCPS Golden oriar Drug :nom Dec 2 ,59 BROOMS, -400 Doz.-Brooms, at-Wholesale or Rel. ii. at. 11. PPA /PLOWS, Dec. 14, 1b37. 140(.11.4 reet. SINE'S .Compound of Syrup of Tar, Wild Cherry and 11,airlinund, for the cure rf Cough, c01d..., Whooping Cough. Clow. 3ce. Vor sale +it AI.•COIi IS LE DELLE•rrs Vittilliy Medicine t 4 iort, Odd reilows' /lull C slober . st-ateht'Steam Wash Bci oe'ollAbown ;ire 1. Nil eciimuint/y on Imd at linr4ity I' CA 1 I I, fl epo Cite. t. opposite the VfLUI Alin House. COIUMbIU. July IR, I \ors for sale tylhe bushel or larger quail- Malty yY B. F. APPOI.D. Colwell, in Dec. ec, a•s3s. • Beim' B:1.411. TIJ Tin now. u Grub lot of Brehm.; & pro/limbos bl celebrated Yegeta'r:e Cattle Powder, end for sale by ' ft- WI !AAA MS, Trout street, CJltun .te Frpt. 17,1559 Harrison's Conmbian Ink i, it supe!.wr nruldie. permanently blnek. nod lint corro.l.g the pen, eon be had in aol ..entity , of the l'lttfilly Medieble Store, and blacker fei t. Uun U.sigli+ll Columbia, JII dr. On : and l‘l n g S ra:: l r ‘ .;% l • N i7:l ° V. S. „ l :;r 6 . Ilrel=„SiPTetaitt.ll:y will re 'luring Milani:tun., nnayrrie num, 4 mr•»lorne action, &c., in very short time. For vale- iv.' R. WILLIAMS, Sopi.l7,lSsD. rront gin.ei, Columbia. NG k fO'S Bass in lver — ThiS fretm)V 33l)l l -• r uuiu outs ,a 3 , .. w p w op f l o l r a , r saey remed y or the curt o R. WILLIAMS. Front M., Columbia. rept.:14,1559. CISTERN PUMPS. 11111 E subscriber has a large stock of Cistern Pomp. and Rams. to which he calls the [mention of the public. Ile is prepared to put Mein up for use In a substantial and enduring manner. . December 12,1557 Just Received and For Sale, (2,00 1' , ' , '. 15 .. , , G T, - ;?,V„ r it""lri. O rd b i t i'oFtier:.l, l- .l,lll' } y, ;,.PO bur. Ground Alum Sall, by . _ _ 13:F. tPPOLD, No.l ands Cana: Bain March 20, ;52 aRANAM, or, Bond's Boston Crackersaor Dy+pcpuc•, 11111 i ...View. Root Crackers, for in valids tend shildlen—new articles in Columbia, at the Family Medicine Store, April Id. 1859. NEW CROP SEEDLESS RAISINS. TITS best for Pies, Pudding, .fresh simply at If SUYDAM'S Grocery Store, Corner Frontanillosiat%. .Nov. 19.1599. Seedless .Raisins! ALnT of very choice eedleen ben receive:. at S. F. 1:111.111LEIN'S - Nov.lo, 'SO. Grocery Store. No. 71, Locust ,t. SHAKER CORN JUST received., a first rate lot of Shnlrvr Corn 11. S.Uit DAM'S Grocery Store, earner Front and Union It. Nov. 20, LOGO. ,QPALDINC'S PREPA R E CLUE. -- The want or Lti„,iaFft!le supplied;urla: sfofenit..!:aczewryLatrtiTetndeht;n7 ware, ornamental work, toy,s, &c., th ere is no th ing superior. We hope (iolai stumtful in repairmg meny *melee which have beau useless for months. You Jen Mott at the ta.oon.A.: VAIILY EDICIIIE STORE. AFIRST-RATH article- of Dried' Beei,,ind of llum, can Le hooglit'at ' EBERLEMS Grocery Store; - No. :1 Locust ctrect ar;IL 10, I S9O, VOICE TEAS, Black. and Green, of differ %) eat varieties. A (re-it /MUSS( received at EBEII.LEIN , d Grocery Store, Atax.03.19.196p. No. 71 Lccu.t street. ni"w- S t it JOUN FMMiLIN , the em thomed edam. r"CC!intoc Price, int AO hootrano on- the , Ippondery or Anotter World.— Price,Bl,2o. Memofro orGarvosso. ' - Prier. 40 cent.. ELIAS'S AAR & CO, Opposite Court House. EiMEI I_4TON'S PURR CIT.AWBA. BILANDY.4 very superior And genuine article for medicinal par ..l6 W.:W.F.:Tr.& CO • Agents for Colenlnn. .wses. Feb.ll,*6o. =Low AND E ! UWE Subeerthers have 'receivd ST NEew L and Large Stock of atl kinds and Ater. of BAR' IRON AND STEEL They are eanataritly aapplied with, stei.k In this breech of las haaiecite.-and can &Mph to, customers in large or "44 9°"411"'" tha I n ea tIMLE ON. Loeuel Street below tlecond, Colombia, Pa. A gni IMO, 1100, The General's Match-Naking ELM "Where the deuee.shall I go this Long? Paris-is, too hot; theinside , of my adorable Chateau-•des Pleura would give one a lively idea-of- the feelings of eels in a frying-pan, and the yin oreina.ire would be sourer than ever—tt most unnecessary evil, as every body knows. Rome's only Et to melt down puffy.eardinals, as jocks set themselves be fore the kitchen fire preparatory to the Spring Meetings. _ln Switzerland there's nothing fit to eat. Spain might be the ticket—the Andalusiuns are a good-looking lot, but they haven't a notion of beer.r— Scotland-I daren't-enter,,beenuse I know I should get married under their rascally laws. I'd go to the Bads, but the V. P.'s fillies say they mean to du 'em this summer, and I won't risk meeting them if I know it; the baits they set to catch the unsuspecting are quite frightful. Where the deuce shall I go? So spoke Sydenham Morton, whilom Cap tain of Rton,naw in due course Junior Fellow of King's discussing- ham-pis and audit, devils and coffee, while the June sun streamed through the large oriel windows, tinting up the Turf and Millet pets on the wall with every whit as tender a radiance as if they had-been India• paper proofs of Messieurs Bellew and Cadman. "To-the deuce, if you only find your proper confreres," said a man, coming - in. Oak was never sported by Sydie, except when he was rattling certain.little squares of ivory in boxes lined with green felt. ISertne; is- that you?' Comein." The permission was needless, insomuch as Keane was already in and donm in rt, rock ing chair—a Man of eight or nine-and-thir ty, " with muscles that hint made him Stroke of the Cambridge Eight in his time. and a head like the antique, that will one day be done in marble anti stack up with Milton and Macaulay' in' thcriThiversity library. "You incorrigible lazy young dog," began Keane, surveying Sydie and' his sofa.— "One o'clock, an' only just begun your breakfast! Why, I've walked weer to Cherry hinton and given my lecture, and after wards 'coached that terrible young owl Magnus fur an hour, and read old Rabelais to ref/ esh myself since; not to mention ooffeo and , a Om"' "I dare say, my dear .Keane," answered , Sydie: "knit one shining light like you is enough for college. Why the deuce should Is exert : myself? . ',swore I• hadn't four marks a year, and Vv.() my fellowship ibr telling the fur-below. We all go in. for the &lee here except you, and you're such a patent machinefur turning out-Q...E. D.s by the dozen,• that you can. no more• help work ing than the bedmaker can help taking my tea and saying the cat did• if,. and "Mar she never be forgiven if she ever so much as looked at that there blessed• lock." say, find a Q. E. D. fur me, to the most vexatious problem, where Vna to go - this Long?" "Go a quiet reading tour; mark out a regular plan, and trarel somewhere rugged and lonely, with not a crinoline, or a trout stream, or a pack of hounds within a hun dred miles; the middle of Stonehenge, par example, or with the lighthouse men out at the Smalls or Eddystone. You'd do won ders when you came back, Sydie. Shouldn't bo surprised if you go into the Tripos," said Keane, with a quizzical smile. Sydie shook his head and puffed gravely at his pipe. 11. PPAIILEIL Locust street "Thank you. Crammlng's not my line. As fur history, L don't see• anything par- 1 tieularly interesting in the. blackguordisms of men all dust rind ashes and gelatine now; if I were the Prince of Wales, I might think it my duty to inquire into the characters of my grandfathers; but not being that indi vidual, I find the Derhy list much more suited to My classics;. they won't help me to ask fur my dianerct Tortoni's,. and I. prefer following Ovid's counsels, and enjoying the Falertlian of life represented in-these days by milk punch, to plodding through. the De Offteils. As for mathematics, it may be something very grand to draw triangles and circles till A meets B because C is n 9 long as D; but I know, when I did the some operation in chalk when I was a small boy on the nursery floor, my nurse (who might have gone along with the barbarian who stuck Archimedes) called me an idle brat, , , just as you, Keane, misappreciating gentus, term me a lazy dog-ra lazy dog! I, who intend, if malice and envy don't shut me up altogether, to be one of the most brilliant of modern men, and 'take the shine oat of Sheridian, Selwyn, Talleyrand, and all those muffs who set themselves up fur wits. Lazy dog, indeed I But that's always the way talent is run down. Well, I say, about the Long? Where are you going, most grave and reverend seignior?" "Where. them are-no impertinent boys, if therein such a paradise: on earth," rejoined Keane, lighting his pipe. "Ego to my moor, ' of course, fur the I.2th, but until then I haven't made up I think I shall scamper over South America; I want re freshing up, and-I've a great fancy to see those buried cities, not to mention a cbitilee Of buffalo-hunting. "Traveling's each a bore," hater!, upted Sydie, stretching himself out like a s India rubber tube. "Talk of the Cherub that's grirttitcrto, L--TWO FELLOWS OF XING'S "NO ENTERTAMIENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, 'NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY 3 always sitting up aloft to watch over poor Jack (by the way, I hope it'll never get dizzy and tumble down; I should think it did when they were up in the Baltic, and that's why Jack's cut such a miserable figure lately,) there are always ten thous and demons badgering the life of any luck less .Eothen; there are the Custom Itouse men, whose natural prey he becomes, and the hotel keepers, who fasten on him to suck his life-blood; and there are the mos quitoes, and other things less minute but not less agonizing: and there are guides and muleteers, and waiters• and cicerones—oh, hang it! traveling's a dreadful bore, if it were only fur the inevitable widow with fuur. daughters whom you've danced with once at a charity bull, who rusho , up m you on the Boulevards or a Rhine steamer, and tacks herself on to you, and whom it's well for you if you can shake off when you scat ter the dust of thecity from the sulesofyour feet." . "rya can't talk, can you, Sydie?" ob served Keane, quietly. "Yes; my frtenum was happily cut when I was a baby. Fancy what a loss the world would have endu-ed if it hadn't been!" said Sydie, lazily shutting his half-elo•ed blue eyes. "I say, the governor has been both ering my life out to go down to St. Crucis; he's an old brick, you know, and has the primest dry in-the kingdom. I wish you'd keep me company. Do, Keane. You shall have the best mount in the kingdom, and the General will do You no, end of good on llippocrates's role 7 --oontrarieties coca con trarieties." , •'l'll think about it," answered' Keane, getting out of his rocking-chair. "but you know I prefer solitude generally; misan thropical, I admit, but decidedly lucky fur me, as my companions through life will always be my ink-stand, my terrier, and my paperesses. b have never wished fax any other yet, and I hope I never shall.— Are you going to smoke and drink audit on that sofa all day, you. confounded young Sybarite?" "Nit," answered Sydie; "I'm going to take a turn at beer and Brown's for a change.— Well, I shall take you down with me on Tuesday, Keane, so that's settled." Keane laughed, and want across the quad to his own rooms to plunge into the intrica cies of Fourier and Llplace, or give the rigor of his brain to stuffing some young goose's empty head, or cramming some idle young dog with ballast enough to carry him through the shoals and quicksands of his Greats. Gerald Keane was a mathematical coach, and had taken high honors—a rare thing for a Kingsman to do; for arc they not, by their own confession, the laziest disciples of the Dolce in the whole of Granta, invari ably bumped and. caught out, and from sheer idleness letting other men beat Lords and shame the Oxford Eleven, and Graduate with Double Fiists, while they lie perdu in the shades of Holy Henry? Keane, how ever, was the one exception to the rule.— Ile was droadfully wild, as ladies say, for his first term or two, though equally elo quent at the Union; then his family exulting in the accuracies of their prophecies regard ing his worthlessness, and somebody else daring hint to go in for honors, his pluck was put up, and he set himself to work to show them all what he could , do if be chose. Once roused to put out his powers, he liked using them; the bother of the trainingover, it is no trouble to keep place as stroke oar; and now men pointed him out in the Senate House, and at tile Senior Fellows' table, and he bid fair to rank with the writer on Jasher and the author of the Tuduckire Sciences. People called him very cold. It xra.; popularly averred that lie had no more feeling than noubilliac's or Thttrwaidgen's statues; but ho woe a great favorite with the under-gradq. and always gaud-natural to them. There were a few men who doultted the theory, though lie never tried to refute or dispute it. Of all the Young fellows, the one Keane liked the best, and to-whom lie was kindest, was Sydenham Itlorton—S;iidie • to every body in' Granta, frotn the little tleuriste opposite in King's Parade, to the V. P.'s wife; who petted• him., par escellence, be cause his uncle was a millionaire—the dearest fellow in the world, according to all the Cambridge young ladies--the darling of all the milliner and confectioner girls in Trumpington street and Putty Cury—the best chap going among the kindred spirits who got gated, and lectured, and rusticated for skying over to Newmarket, or pommel ing bargees, or taking a lark over at Cher rybinton—the best dressed, • fastest, and most charming of Cantabas, - as he himself would gravely assure you. What there was in common between the haughty, reserved tutor, who .had long ago tired of young England epicureanism, and the wild, gay, light-hearted under grad, I can't say, for I much question if the wisest sage ever puzzled out a stiffer problem than that common human mystery—mutual at tachments. The Commencement came and went, with its speeches and its IL R. IL Chancellor, and its pretty women gliding witli their crinoline and lace parasols among the elms of Neville's Court (poor Leslie Ellis's the haunt,) falingthe grim benchei of the &M -ate house, and sitting past tile' carved benches of "Ring's Chapel.' Urania was hencefuith 'a desert to all Cambridgebellie; they could walk down Tremilingtou itreot, without meeting a score of little straw hats, and Trumping,tan street became as odious as Sahara; the darling Backs were free to them, and, of course, the dear little con tradictory things, who, by all relations, from those of Genesis to those of Vanity Fair, have never cared, save for fruit defendu, saw nothing to admire in the trees, and grass, and river, minus outriggers and collegians. There was a general exodus; Masters' red hoods, Fellows Commoners' gold lace, Fellows' gown and mortar boards, morning chapel surplices, and under-grads' straw hate and cut-away coats, all vanished from court :aid - library, street and cloister. Cambridge was empty; the married Dons and their families went off.to country-houses or Rhino steamers; unmarried Fellows went touring with views to mediaeval architec— ture, Roman remains, Greek inscriptions, Paris laisser alter, or Norwegian fishing, according to their tastes and habits; under grads scattered themselves over the face of the globe, and were to be found in knots of two or three calling for stout in Velour's, kicking up a row with Austrian gendar merle, chalking up effigies of Thanba on Italian walls, striding up every mountain from Skiddaw to The Pic du Midi, burrow ing like rabbits in a warren fur reading purposes on Dartmoor, kissing sunny-haired I Grctchens in German hostelrioq, swinging through the Vaterland with knapsacks and sticks, doing a walking tour—in fact, swarm ing everywhere with their impossible French and hearty voices, and little English muscle, Granta marked on them as distinctly as an M. B. waistcoarmarks an Anglican, or utter ignorance of madam polities a "great t classic." Cambridge had emptied itself of the scores of naughty boys that lie in the arms of Mater, and on Tuesday Keane and Sydie were shaking and rattling over those dread ful nervous Ristern Counties tenders, throbgh that picturesque and' beautiful country that does permutations with such laudalde . perseverance on pollards, fens and flats—flats, fens and pollards—at the snail's pace that, according.to the E. U. R., we must believe to be "express." "I wrote and told-the governor you were 1 1 coming down with me, Keane," said Sydie, hanoirg up his hat. didn't tell him what a trouble I. bad to make you throw over South America for a fortnight, and come and taste his curry at the Beeches. You'll like the old boy, Keane; he's as hot and choleric, and as genial and goodhearted, as any old brick that ever walked. lie was burn as sweet-tempered and sift:meuthed as mamma when an eldest son waltzes twice with Adelina, and the pepper's been put into him by the curry-powder, the gentle manlike transportation, end the unlitnite command ever black devils, enjoyed by, gentlemen of the U. R. I. C. S." "A nobob•uncle," thought Keane. ''Oh, I see—yellow, dyspeptic, adways.boring one with 'flow to govern In be,' and reconee• tions of 'When I served with N.apier.'— What n foal I was to let Sydie persuade me to go! A. month in Lima and the Pampas would be much pleasanter." "lie came over last yew emtinned Sydie, in blessed ignorance, "aid bought the Beeches, a very jolly place I can tell you, only he's crammed it with everything any body suggested., and tried anything that any farmer recommended, so that the house and 'the estate present a peculiar compendium of 411 theories of architecture, and a general exhibition of all sorts of tastes. He's his hobble.; pouncing on and apprehending boys is one of 'em, for which nrnetice he is endeared to the youth of St. Crneis as the 'old cove,' the 'lnjian devil,' and like affec tionate cognomens. Bet he's a prime old boy. the exception to governors generally; tLoy're often a nasty, spiteful lot, and 4ru Ig one the fun they've outgrown thorn s& ve. , li•tt the General's weak point is me —.no and little Pay." "His m.tre. I suppose," said Keane, un folding his Times . Though he was a con tr'butor to the Jo 7 ten ii de? ..lfttitun'ttiques nn 1 the Cambridis Transactoinl, he was up in all things of the day, and knew Palmer ston's measure's as thoroughly as Plate's Ita pu'olic. "Ilis mare—bless my heart, no!—his mare!" And Sydic lay back and. Imighed silently. "Ws mare! Ly George. whet would she soy?. She's a good deal to lively a young lady to run in harness. fur anybody, though she's soft-mouthed enough when she's led.. Mare! No, Fay's his niece—my cousin. Her father and my father went to gl ry when we were both smalls, and left us in legacy to Cm General, and a pretty pot of money the legaey has cost late.' "Your cousin. indeed! The name's more like a mare's than a girl's," answered Keane thinking to. himself. "A cousin! I just wish I'd known that. One of those In dian girl's, I bet, tanned brown asnberry, flirts a l'outrance, has run the gauntlet of all the Calcutta balls, been engaged to men in all the arms, talks horribly broad Anglo- Indian-English. I know the style." At this juncture the train stopped, and a dashing young widow in very deep ;crape and very bright smiles getting into the car riage, Sydie been a small introductory flir tation in the way of arranging her traps and discoursing on the weather, and Keane opened his Tinto and began the loader. , ll. THE riinr OF TILE REECE:MB The eogina invest& ad and pulled' up 'tit the Si. Crania station, esme seventy miles farth - n. on, lying in the midst of Creewiel- OR,NING, SEPTEMBER 8, inn landscipes, with woodlands, and cot tages, and sweet fresh stretches of meadow land, such as do one's heart good after hard days and late nights in dust and gaslight. The pretty widow gathered her sable round her, and bid , Sydie quite an affectionate farewell. Keane folded up his Times and got down with a murmured curse on the P. U. It., and the train sped on, the prett; ) widow gleaning out of the window to look at the country, or at Sydie taking the rib bons of a high-stepping bay that had brought one of the neatest possible traps to take him and Keane to the Beeches! "Deuced fine woman." said Sydie, taking off his hat to her, and springing in all his glory to the hoz-, than which no imperial throne could have offered to him one-half so delightful a sent. "Poor thing! how sorry she is to pln with me. However, she has a 'Parlor Library' to console her. I always talk to the women in a train that are read ing the green books, but if I sle 'em with the red one's I know they're blue, and never venture to spring the awful mines of intel lectual ore that s.re sure to be aid away in the bumps under the bandeux. The bay's in good condition, ain't it, Keane? and I say Harris, how's Scamp? What n crying shame we're not allowel to keep the sorriest hack at King's! That comes of gentlemen slip ping into shoes that were meant for beggars. Hallo! there are the old beech-trecs; I vow I can almost taste the curry and dry from looking a t them." In dashed the bay through the park gates, and the dog-cart tore through the quarter of a mile of avenues, sending the shingle flying up in small simoons, and the rooks cawing in supremo surprise from their nests in the branches of the beech•trees. ••1Lallo! my ancient, how are you?" begun Sydie to the kinder, while that stately per son expanded. into, a smile of welcome.— "Down, dog, down! 'Pon my life-the old place looks very jolly. What bare you hung all that armor up. for, to make believe our ancestors dwelt in these iir-irble balls? !row devilish dusty lan Where's the General? Did'nt, knoW we were coming till next train. Fay!' Fay! where are you? Alton where's . Miss Morton?" "Ilere, Sydie dear," cried the young lady in question, rushing, across the ball with the most ecstatic delight, and throwing herself into' the Cantab's arms, who received her with no less cordiality, and kissel her straightway, regardless of the presence of Keane, the butler, and Harris. "Oh, Sydie," began the yotng lady, breathlessly, "I'm so delighted you're come There's the archery fete, and a picnic at Shnllowton, and an election ball over at Coverdale, and I want you to donee with me and to 'try thc new billiard table, and to come and see'my' aviary, and to teach me pistol shooting (because Julia Dupuis can shoot splendidly, and talks - of joining the Rifles); and to show me how to do Euclid, and to amuse me; and to play with me, and to tell me which is the prettiest of Snow drop's paps to be saved, and to—" She stopped suddenly, and dropped from enthu siastic tirade to subdued surprise, as she caught sight of Keane for the first time.— "Oh, Sydie, why did you not introduce me t, your friend? How rude I have been ! Repair the mischief, monsieur, directly, and let me make the amend° honorable, pray." "Mr. Keane, my cousin, the torment of my existence, Miss Morton in public, Little Fay in private life. There, you know one another now. L caret say any more. D,, tell me where the governor is." "Any friend of Sydenhim's is most wel come to the Beeches," cried Fay, coloring a little, and Laughing aurlarc clic, "nnl my uncle will scold me frightfully for giving you such a.reception. Please do forgive me, I WWI so delighted to see my cousin." "Which I can fully enter into, having n weakness for Sydie myself," smiled Keane. "1 am sure ha is•rery fortunate in. being the cause of such an excuse." Keane said it par complaisance, but rather carelessly; young ladies, as a class, being rather one of his aversions—perhaps that is too strung a term, seeing that, generally speaking, ho took very little notice of them, and when he found himself with them, thought talking sense far too high a corn. pliment to thorn. Ile looked at Fay Nor. ton, however, critically, as ho would have done at a thorough-bred filly, or a Carlo Dolce, noticed that she was prettily dressed (regarding women as lay figures, he thought the least they could do was to get themselves up in good style,) and she was not an In (lionised girl after all. She was_not yellotv, but, au contraire, fair as those pretty Pardon statuettes which Lord lladdo of course covers with, crape in his drawing rooms, waving, fair hair, long dark eyes, and mischievous, sunny face— A rn-eliii.l set with. hit le willful thorns. And sweet as Eng ash air caul , ' make tier. "Whera'a the governor, Fay ?" reiterated Sydie. "Here, my dear boy. ' Thought of your old uncle-the first thing, Sydie ! Bleu 'my 40111, how well you look ! Confonnd you I ivlly didn't you tell me what train you were coming by? Devil take plan, Ashton, why's there no fre•in the Lall l - :Thought 'fa was warm, did you? mum! more foot yoi then," •"•trncle dear,"' Said Mimi Pay. "here , is Sydie's" friend, Mr: Keane; you are tieing - as rude as I havo Wei." The Genernl, - at this conjunction; irwung sharp round—a stout, 'hale; handsome OM Fellow; with gray Moustaches - and' a high color, holding a spade in his band and clad $1,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; k''.2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE. 860. 'n a linen coat, just come in from doing the I rural, and-full of glee and excitement be cause his Egyptian peas (the identical vege table that Pharaoh was wont to regale him ,elf with, if Mr. Grimstnno's advertise ment may be credited) were sprouting beautifully. "Bless my soul, sir," cried the General, slinking Keane's hand with the greatest possible energy, "charmed to see you— lelighted, 'pon my honor; only hope you're come to stay till Christmas; there are plenty of bachelors' dens. Devil take me! of what vas I thinking? I was pleased to see that boy, I suppose. More fool I, you'll say— lazy, good-for-nothing young doglike him. Don't let me keep you standing in the hall. Cursed cold, isn't it? and there's Little Fay in mustily! Acliton, send some hot water into the west room for Mr.—Mr.—Con found you, Sydie, why didn't you tell—l mean introduce me ?—Mr. Keane. Lun cheon will 1 e on the talde in ten minutes. Like curry, Mr. Renne ? There, get along,, Sydie, you foolish boy; you ran talk to Fay after "When I'm a little cleaner," rz, , ponded Sydie, going up the stair- three at a time. "What with be:ng moistened with the tears the V. P. shed over me at my departure, and dried again by the calcined fragments the engine bceton•ed on me on my travels. I should say I'm pretty well as dusty as a mummy. Keane's provoking to look at; lie's for all the world as c•,ul as if he'd just conic out of a cold bath." "Sydie," whispered Fay, whoa the curry and dalh, bass and amontillado had been duly discussed, and • she had teased the Cantab's life out of him till he had con sented to pronounce ;judgment on the pup pies, "what a splendid heal that man has you brought with yuu; he'd do for Plato, with that grand calm brow, and bay, un approachable look. Who is he ?" "The greatest philosopher of modern times," responded her cousin, solemnly.— "A condensation.of Solon, 'Males, Plutarch, Seneca, Cicero, Liteullus, Bion, Theo phrastes,. and Co.; such a giant of mathe matical knowledge, and.all other knowledge, too, that every day, when he pasles under Bacon's Gate, we are afraid.. the old legend will coma to , pass, and it will tumble down to flat as a pancake; a homage to him, but a loss to Cambridge." "Nonsense," said Miss Fay, impatiently. "(I like that sweet little thing with the black nose best, dear.) Who is lac? What is he? How old is he? inat's his name? Where dues he live?" "Gently, young woman," cried Sydie.-- "lle is Tutor and Fellow of King's, and a great gun besides; lie's some eighteen years older than you and I. Ills name on the rolls is Gerald,'l believe, and lie dwells in the shadow of Mater, beyond the reach of my corner; for which fact, not being musically inclined, he is barbarian enough to return thanks daily in chapel." "I am sorry he is come. It W 4 stupid in you bring him." And Pay hugged the pups closer with :t heavy sigh. "Wherefore, ma c ne? Are you afraid of him? You needn't be. Young ladies are too inzagnificant atmni of creation for him to criticize. 110'11 no mere expect sense from you than thoe! from Snowdrop and her pups." ".afraid!" replied Pay, with great indig nation. "I should like to see any man of whom I should feel afraid! If lie doesn't like fun and, nonsense, I pity him; but if he despise me ever so munch for it, I shall en joy myself before him, and. in spite of him. I was sorry you brought him, beeanse he will take you away when I want you all to myself; and he I t oks so haughty and ratline, that"— Yon are afraid of him, Fap, und won't .iri ii it." "I am not," reiterate I E.Ly, impetuously, with a squeeze to the luckless pups, a more agreeable vent to her feelin,gs than caress to them: "and I will smoke a cigar with him alter dinner, to show you I am not one Lit." "I bet yob six pair of gloves you do no such thing, young lady." "Dole. Do keep the one with a black nose, Sydie; and yet that little liver colored darling is too pretty to be killed. Suppose we save them all? Snowdrop will be so pledsed." Whereon Fay kissed nll the little snub noses with the deepest affection, and was caught in the act by Keane and the Goner._ al. Koano was relieved by finding that the General had never had a toueh.of dyspepsia, or caged two straws how India was govern ed;and had captivated the governor with his own very able and seagible views on the non-desirability of flogging in. the army. "There's that child with.hcr arina full of dogs," said the General, beaming with sat isfaction at sight of hie niece. She's a, lit tle, spoilt, wil(ul thing, Keane. She's an old bachelor's pet,. and you must make al lowances. lean her the Fairy of the Beech es, God bless her? She nursed me last win ter, when r was'at death's door from these cursed col& winds, sir, better than Miss Nightingale could have done. What n climate-it is: never two days alike. I don't trcnder Englishwomen are such icicles, peer thing" they're frostbitten froii thsir ' cradle upwards." "India warms them up, General, doesn't it?" smiled Keane. The General shook with laughter. •'To be sure, to be sure; if piOderre the &Oslo'', they'll wear it, sir, netbey would patches, or hair powder; !but they're always [WHOLE NUMBER 1,568. uncommonly glad to leave it off and lock it out of sight when they can. :What do you think of the kennels, Keane? I say, Sydie, confound you, why did you, bring any traps down with you! Haven't room for 'cm;_not fur one. Couldn't cram a tilbury into the eoachltouse." "A. trap, governor?" said Sydie, straight ening his back after examination of the pups; "can't keep even a wall-eyed cab horse; wish I could." "Where's your drag, then?" domatded the General "My drag? Don't I just wish I had one, to offer my bosom friend the V. P. a seat on the boy. Calvert, of Trinity, tooled us over in his to the Spring Meetings, and his grays are the sweetest pair of goers—the leaders especially—that ever you saw in harness.— We came bock 'cro , s country, to get in time for ball, and a pretty mess we made of it. fur we broke the aalc', and lamed the off wheeler, anti—" "But, bless my soul," stormed the Gen eral, excited beyond measure, "you wrote me word you were going to bring a drag down with you, and of course- supposed you meant what you said, and I lied. Harris in about it, and he swore the coach-house, was as full of traps as ever it could hold,. so I had my tas•cart and Fay's phaeton turned into one of the stalls, and then, after all, it comes out you've never bron A t it! Devil take it, Sydie-, why can't you be more thoughtfUl—" "But, my dear governor—" "Nonsense; don't talk to me!" cried the General, trying to work himself into a pas sion, and diving into the recesses of six sep arate rockets one after another. "Look here, sir; I suppose you'll believe your own words? Hero it is in black and white: 'P. S. I shall bring nay Coach down with me.' There, what do you say now? Confound you, what are you laughing at? /don't see anything to laugh at. In my day, young follows didn't make fools of old moo in this way. Bless my soul, why the devil don't you leave off laughing, and talk a little common sense? The thing's plain enough I shall bring my Coach down with ISM "So I have." said Sydie, screaming, with laughter. "Look at him—he's a first•rate Coach, too! Wheels always oiled and ready for nny road; always going up hill, and never caught coming down; started at a rattling pace, and now keeps ahead of all other vehicles on all highways. A first class Coach, that will tool mo through the tortuous lanes and treacherous pitfalls of tho Greats with flying colors. My Coach!. Bravo, General! that's tho best bit of fun I've had since I dresqed up lik e seph en ia m Briggs, and led the V. P. a dance all round the quad, every hair on his head standing erect in his virtuous indignation at the aw ful morali of his college." "Eh, what?" grunted the General, light beginning to dawn upon him. "Do you moan Keane? Hum! how's one to be up to all your confounded slang? flow could I know? Devil take you, Sydie, why can't you write common English? You young fol lows talk as bad jargon as Sepoys. You're sure I'm &lighten to see you, Keane, though f did make the mistake." • •'Thank you, General," said Keane: "but it's rather cool of you, Master Sydie, to have forced one on your uncle's hands with out his wish or his leave." "Net at all, not at all," swore the General, with vehemont cordiality, "I gave him carte blanche to a.;1; whom he would, and unexpected p, , iets arc always most welcome: nd. that you were unexpected though, fur I'd told that boy to be sure and bring some )(ly down here And have hnd the tax cart and my phte ton turned out to-mate comfortable quarters for him," said Miss Pay, with a glance at The Coach t , see how he took a chaff. "and I only hope Mir. Keane may like his accom modation." "Perhapq, Migg Morton," said Keane, Smiling,. "I shall like it so well that you wilt hare to say to me as poor VOltiLire to his troublesome abbe, "Don Quichette prerinit les auberges pour les chateaux, mails 'Sous arcs prix lee chateaus pour los anberg,es!" "Tiresome man," thought Fay, "one can't tell whether he means satire or fun. I wish Sydio hadn't brought him here; but I shall do as I always do, however grand - and ea percilious lie• may look. He has lived among ali those men and books till he has grown as cold as granite. What a pity itis people-don't enjoy existence as -I dot" A "You are thinking, Miss Morton.." ^ said Keane, as he walked on baud, her; with an amused glance at her face, which .was'ex pressive ;enough of her thoughts, "that if your uncle is glad to see me, you are not, and that Sydie was very stupid not to bring down ono of his kindred spirits instead of —Don't disclaim it now; you should veil your face if you wish your thoughts not to be read." "I was not going to disclaim it," said• Fey, quickly looking up at him with a rapid glance, half penitence, half irritation. "I { always tell the truth; but I was not think : log exactly that; I don't want any of Sydie's friends—l detest boys, and I think from fif teen to twenty-flve your sex is simply odione; but I certainly was thinking that as you look down on everything that we all-delightla. fancied you awl the Beeches wilt [assay agree. If lam rade, you must not be an gin you wanted me to tell you the truth." - ..Beane smiled again—the enignsatioal smile that provoked Fay beyond measure. L#~ OOZE MI EZZI3 OM ESE • 4.,4.4,