- - - . . - . . . . .. . . . . , . . .. 7 - ! r . .1,,,,\ .. •,„ 1 • . . . , _ . • .. •,r . , . . . .. , . A .. ' lll •• , .. . i., _ . ( ... • , ~. . . I . _ . - . 11 . I ME , •' 11 . 1 . . , r 14 , . . . - ....., -._ . ~ - . :SAW:ILL ViritlGEr, 'Editor and. Proprietor. VOLUME XXXIII, NUMBER 10.] PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY EDIPaIiG. Office in Carpel Hull, Yorliticestoorner of - :l ,7 rontar..d Locust sheets. Terms of Subscription: Coryyperanturn,i fpaidin advance. • tf not paid sylibin tit roe month srrome omracueementoftlie year, 9. .a 0 33.1t15i Ca. 0 40.1::b5r. • riot übscript ton received for Ice., tinter tlitm i.rx -mucks; and no paper will he discontinued on 111 all rereceraverreputd,uulcseut the optionOfthe pub ttiter. I . l7Wor.errtayi, mittc dlt mail on hepdblish r.t t rtuk. Rates of Advertising, Runts CC, ineslone week, three weeks. eachtuhsevendosertion, 10 [l:2 inesjoueweek. 50 three weeks, 1 00 tt eachrtubsequen insertion- 25 ' Large rid'vereisemelltrul proportion A iherall iscotrut wil Ibe mode to yourtcrly,bulf early.or:uarlytdrertitersocho are rtricti)confined otheir husiness DR. HOFFER, DENTIST.---OFFICE'y Front Street 4[hdoor Win Locust, over Nry ytor & 111 cDonald , s Book store Columbia, Pa- IrrEutnulce, basne a. Jolley'. l'ho °graph Gullery. [August:a, THOMAS IVELSII, JUSTICE OF THE, [ICE, Columbia., Pia, OFFICE, in W.ippers New Mudding, helm' Black's [lota!, From sweet. Mr -Prompt attention given to all business entrusted to his care. November 29, 1&57. M. M. NORTH, A ITORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW coluinbia.pn. Collections promptly made Lancaste t and York 'Guineas. Columbia May 4, 1950. J. W. FISIiER, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, COtumbill, Septemberln36.ll S. Atlee B ekius, D. D. S. DRACTICEt; the Opecubee, rg,ieut and Meehan J. ieul Departmesau of Deo balry; o F p u , I,o,u,t.treci, bet wetly be Franklin ilou , r e and l'ea Olfre, Columbia, 3iiiy i. 1.•450. Harrison's Coumbian Ink .fiThi WI/ i• a •uprrior o rt ein, permanently black. and nal eorro.ling the prn. rmn be land 111 11111 liar Niedocke 6tore, and OlteLer Cl s C.:"10-11 (foot Volt-It. Colanalp,...bao• V. 1:15d) We Have Just Received DR. CUTTER'S Improved Chest Expanding and shoulder Itrace, for lonplrinno, Inn! ['Mani SLlrt Supporter told • ltrnee for Lud,n., Suet the amele that ta wantad ut ttiitrite. Coop, timid .re thriu nUFumiip Medicine Store. Odd rn:towsr [April!). I:159 Prof. Gardner's Soap I,VE have the riew Sat; land soup bur those who the TV lint °limn it from the :row, Atha; 11 i, plea ft& to the skirt, and 10111 take grot , e .put. (rote Woolen Goods, tt to ‘lte..r.ttiare ua ttuttthwx. (kw 'yam fist she worth of your money at the Fatuity ittediebie Store. Columbia, June 11,1859. or L ßond's Boston Crackers, for Uy-peplies, nod Arrow Root Craeliersr, tor:ib valids and rhilthen—new urtieles in Columbia, al the nunily Meilieme Store, April 10. 18.59. QPALDINIPS PREPARED CLGE.—The want of such all aniele is felt so every Coolly, 011 d note it too lie supplied; for mend/og fuunture, china ware, °monism:ll work, toys. ke., there is nothing superior. We have (Good it toed lo rep:thing toasty whirls have been useless for wombs. You JIM V.',1111 It cat the ta.oollAr EMILY MEDICINE SPORE. IRON ZLIVD STEEL 7 filllESabe.criber.liave received a New and Large J. 'Stuck of ell kse,te d xm.+ot BAR IRON AND .F.TEL ! They are oou•taitly gape:tail with •lock iti thig branch of his 1at....Mew... it'll! Call 11111141 it 1a cusionier. in Jorge or small qualaitieb, at the too eat lutes RUM PLE& SON. Locu.t street below Secoial, Columbia, Pa. RITTER'S Compound Syrup of 'liar and 1C,41 Cherry, fur Conght.i;ol,l,.& e. 4nle Ire (Jokier' 51r3riar Dragjtord, Front at- luly2 A TER'S Compountl Concentrated Extract A Sarßapttrilla for the cure of SeroMa . t Kong', Evil. Raid till veroloinvii fri!.. l / 4 freviVed and for vide by Front Pit .Ciatontaa.. Rapt. di, IS d, FOR SALE. 200 Ono . Frgetioli Matches, vcry low fur cash IL. W 11.1.1 All 4 Dutch Herring! A Isfy one fond of u good MmHg Ull be supplied at S. P. I:IIERI.I'..IN'S Nor. 19,1419. Grocery Etore, No. 7t Locurn st. DON'S PUSS OHIO CSTAWBI BRINOY L rpm.: 11'1 NES. especially (or Alcatel:les aJ ehteretnetital purpa.e.t. et the Jaht.2S. rAmtLX it,IMICINF:S7OIIII. NICE RAISINS far 8 cts. per pond, arc to be had ol.ly ui 1:74113121.11IN'S Grocery Store, Morel, 10, ISOO. No. 71 Locus! aireet GSEED S: AUEN —Fresh Barden Seeds, war runted pule,of nil k•it.ht..tu.t tecewed rt katEttLEIN'S grocery Store, To. 71 Losust street. Aliarcle 10.16(10 POCKET BOOKS AND PURSES. ALA KG I.: lot of Fitts nod Common ?onkel Books and L'Ufbo4.al trutn IS snots to two dollars emelt lit ulquorters and .:ewe Depot. Columbia. April 14.1 ;GU. A EEW more of those beautiful Prints schtzil vetit Ire •old chenp, SAYLOR ar. NicUrnstALLYS MOE Just Received andEor Sale. 1500 SACHS Ground Alum Salt, ID large or smuli XL A PPOLD`.I Wnrelinu.e . Mlv.S.' 60 C OLD CREAM! OF GLYCERIN& —For the cure and picvenuou fn chapped howl.. Acm rur sale GOLDEN MORTAR DRUG STORE. Dec 3,1359. FlOlll. greet. Columbia. Turkish Prunes! .. r R a first rate orrisroot Proi:csyou quiet Ito to N.". gr ISW. Grocery Z.r . ot•C, k 4 1 4 1 -hi. Locustst GOLD PENS, GOLD PENS. JUST received a large and rove a.sortoltid or Gold Penn. of Newioa nd Grigwold'ot manufacture. ut VLOll.k. McDONdIArS !Judi: More, Agri/ 14 l'rout .t rect. above 1.0eu44 ritEsa. citocEßlEs. tir Ft continue to sell the heti og,,,,ytt syrup, IV WIC IP and Brown ttlagetrs.trood Colleer und Choice Teo.. to be hod Col4llllUtd. at the New Corner `diore. OP pante 001 Fellows' flat!, and at the old stood o.ljout itir the •tilc. 11. C. F*ONDNUISIIIITH. Began, Tobacco, ac. A LOT of Sewrate Segues. Tobacco and Snuff will be Schad at the 141lle of the subacriber. Ile keeps Otdy a foal...ate article Cell it. $. F. EBERIXIIPS Grocery Store. Locum st, Colombia, Pa, Oct B,Xt i CRANBERRIES, lg' Ev 7 ',leap Prunes, New Caron. at AI Oct. VO. Lunn- A. M. RAMBO'S, SA RDINES, W oe : 20 14;a1 for sole by Coeo. . jo•t $. EIMILLEIN. re No. 71 Loea•t CRANBERRIES. aTUST Tecee4 a tread" tot nf Cranbenias aniVew m Carrania, at No. 71 Locatt streaL .ocg, 7t le6o. e. E. ESE RLEIN Vittuj. When Thou Steepest We Cif A IILoTTE IMONTE. el 50 When thou sieepeq. lulled in »igin, Art thou lost in vacancy? Does nu elicit inwurti Softly breaking. Lill on ince? Does no deem on quiet wing Flout a moment innd that ray, Touch some nnoccring menial mriztg, Wake a note and puss away MU %%lien thou wateliest, ns the hours, Mute and blind. are -needing on, O'er that rayless path, where lowers Muffled midnight, black and lone; Comes there nothing hovering near, Thought or half reality, 'Whispering, marvels in thine ear, Every word a mystery. Chanting low an ancient lay. Every plaintive note a spelt, Clearing memory's cloud, away, Showing scenes thy heart loves well! Songs forgot, in childhood sung, Airs en youth beloved and known, 'Whispered by that airy tongue, Once again are made thine own. De it dream in Ituure.ed steep, Be it thought in vigil lone, Drinkotet thou hot a rupture deep l'ro,r. the getting, 1.1.3 thine OWII? All thine own; thcu•need'st not tell NVhltt hiight form.ttly stunther ble.l, All %hula own; remember well Night and shade ware round thy rest. Nothing looked upon thy bed Save the lonely wetett-tlgat'tglcam; Nut a tviii•per not :1 :read Seared thy Spurt'. &Haiti dream Sometime, when the midiii.;h: gale Urealliad a taaau and then was Scented the stieii o th main to fait, Checked by one ecvliitie Limn; Felt its ail external Rotted in moonll3ltt,.lllolC thine eye; Then tby spirit's waning, tetn,;s Quivered, tretnoleal, -jtk cad to Sly; Thea Lb' abjurer, wildly bnelltag, Looked Where, mid trun-eentleney, Star to star vett, mutely letting Heaven's resolve arid fate's tket en. Ole it longed for holier fire 'fhao tit. spat Is its earthly slit ilie; Oh: it soared and h nrlter, higher, ought tU rCuCli U home divine. flopete.s (peso! •cull weak and weary flagged the pititon droo,ted the plume, And again ill easlite,i dreary Came the bullied wanderer home. And ugain it t ura:sl fur socohol,g To 1.111613/ZI)Vd bioken d•oona; rutlica euneul smootltiag, Thought rolled on her monied stre.orn. I hove fel; ibis Sweet and known to oci.te out me: Still 1 felt a naghL,) Nealutg Each dark day 'e despondency. [Cornhill Maim:tine grtuting, Why Tompkins Married The mushroom villas which form a sort of fairy-ring round louden, increasing in cir cumference month by month, aro not per haps entitled to that rusticity which their names affect. Bobadil Bowers and Clemen tine. Cottages are to bona file Devonshire residences what bamon and' Clarissa are to actual shepherds an I shepordesses; still, there are make-believes—mock-turtle soup, for instance—which are much better than the realities they represent, and I do wish that some literary genius would pluck up courage to beard Carlyle, and write a defence of Shams. A shepherd in the flesh eats onions, which his biscuit-china repre sentative does not; and though a rural re treat in Wales or Westmoreland is very pleasant in its way, bow far it is from the club! No. 1 Morley Park Villa, my present home, is certainly not an ideal house; in style of architecture it bears a strong re semblance to those mansions which the young are accustomed to draw on their slates when they are supposed to be en gaged in arithmetical calculation; and the walls, which are but one brick in thickness, are plastered over with some composition like icing .if n Twerth-cake, which trill peel air every winter, to the great disarrangement of the words Morley Park 1.11/as, which are stuck up on the forehead of my house, and which wriggle sideways and topsy-turvy as the cement loosens until they resemble He brew rather than Christian characters, so that our abode has occasionally been taken fur a synagogue. Nor am I quite comfort able about the foundations, for we were rocked in an alarming manner by the gales last November; nor did the logical sugges tion of Mrs. Share, of No. 3, "that if the villas had intended to fall they would have done so long ago," entirely reassure me.— But what are these trifling drawbacks when balanced against our advantages? Our vil las ate within twelve miles of Hyde Park Corner, ten minutes walk of the railway station, and a quarter of a mile of the Thames. They are eight in number, each surrounded by about half an acre u£ garden; and these gardens are none of your newly laid out plots, with a few baby laurels, and embryo rose-trees dotted about them, but are gay with mature flowers, fringed with thick shrubberies, and adorned by lime, chestnut, and cedar trees of fifty or sixty years stand ing, which throw a grateful shade over mossy lawns, where thrushes and black birds hold their diets of worms. Behind our villas lies a nobleman's park; while the road in front, by which they are approached, divides them from a farm in a high state of cultivation. Report speaks of fabulous sums offered by building societies for this park and farm, which have all been hiiherto refused; and - so, despite our proximity' to London, ire are slightly pastoral, and sur rounded bye. faint halo of poetry and pigs. "NO ENTERTA.INMENTIS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING-, OCTOBER 5, 1861. It was in June, and shortly subsequent to my marriage, that 1 first took up my res idence in Morley Park Villas. The sun was shining, the birds were singing, the roses were--and the north-easterly gales were not—blowing; and altogether the weak er points of the place were not perceptible, while the strong ones came . out in bold re lief, so that I began to think that I had stumbled upon Paradise, and to prove Toy. self equal to the situation, took up garden ing. I have no curiosity in my compo-ition and so I cannot tell how I came to be water ing in the shrubbery which divided our gar den from that of No. .9. t.ne evening. There were no plants there which particularly required that attention, and thera were oth ers elsewhere which did; perhaps I was is an absent fit; perhaps I was fated to know who our nest door neighbors were; anyhow, there I found myself sprinkling the hardiest of laurels and glancing over the hedge. I saw a young man with a rod face and a wide awake, lounging on a garden seat in his shirt-sleeves, with a long pipe in his mouth, Dell's Life in his nand, and some brandy and water on a table before him, and was turning away in disappointment, when a peculiar movement of his head made me stop, stare, set down the watering-pot, and slide off to the left, to got a better view of his face, while a feeling of tarts, cricket, and switching-blocks stole over my senses, as I recognized an old school-fellow; a man, too, whom I had often wished to hear some• thing of, for he had been a character. rather a bad one, if it is true, but still original and eccentric, and I hare a peculiar weakness fur the society of people who are unlike the maas of their fellow-creatures. So I called out "Tompkit.s!" "Indloal Come round, and have some thing. Whu are you?" was the indiscrimi nately hospitable reply. S t I went round, and presently he recog nized me for it so happened that I had once done him• a good turn, and one of his extra ordinary pwmliarities was memory for that sort of thing. "Well," sail he, when old reminiscences had made him commttnicative, "du you know I hare got a wife in there?" and he pointed to the house. "Indeed: Ittro you been married long?" "Pretty well about tiro months?" am sure I congratulate you. lam in much the same position myself. Our wives must become acquainted." "Fur goodness sake don't bring a lady near me!" he cried; "[ hare escaped from al! that sort of thing at last. Why what do you suppose I got spliced for?" "Love?" "Gammon: Do I look, now, like a fellow who would do anything so romantic as that?" I must confess his appear:toe° was not that of fish likely to raise to any "fancy 9ies;" so I suggested the matrimonial ground-bait; "'Money!" "Nut a farthing. I had to set her up in clothes and hair-brushes for the wedding.— No, I married for peace and quietness." "Never heard of so paradoxical proceed ing in all my life before. Suppose you tell me all about it." "Well, I will. You remember me at school? I was not very happy there. The waiters were forever wanting me to learn Latin and Greek, and my tastes did nut lie in that di rection; the boys, too, were rather particular fellows about dress and ni inners; and as I. did not come up to their standard in those matters, they used to treat me in a swan - - cilious sort of way, which always made me feel uncomfortable. Even when they wart ed to barrow my money, or get toe t., treat them, they called ore '.Good Tmpltio...!" or "Honest old buffer!" or ti,Ml2 half-p.uroniz lag name or another, which antlered me es ccedingly, for I never could be sure when they were laughing; at me. I would hare given anything sometimes for a go ).i down right quarrel with one of my polite tortuea ' tors; but the fellows knew better than to push me too far, for I was strong and wiry, and could spar, not to mention that toy guar dian (my parents were dead) let me have plenty of money, and neither boys nor men are apt to quarrel With those they can get anything out of, if they can help it. Perhaps, being a shy sort of fellow, I imagined a ' good many slights which were never intend— ed. Anyhow; I did not live comfortably with either masters or boys; I always felt alone as it were, and made no friends; and so I used to skulk off in play-hours to Tom Badger's yard, where we kept our dogs and hawks, you remember; and there I would ' spend hours with the Bilbury Chicken, and Joe Noggins the pigeon-fancier. They would sit and drink with me, and bo grate ful for what I gave them. They koked upon me as a gentleman, listened to what I had to say, and gave in to my opinion; and I felt at my ease with them, which I never did with you fellows. At last, old Snitcher got an inkling of my habits, and I had to leave. My guardian was in a violent rage when I got to his house,mnd went on about proper pride and station, and so forth, till I got angry in my turn, and repaid him with some i nso l en ce; upon which he said I was a reprobate, arid he would have nothing more to do with me; whereat I gave him a. cheer. "lie did not keep his word however, fur he sent me to a private tutor, whose groom was a capital fellow; and soon after I had a commission in a light cavalry regiment.— That was worse than school. I never could titiderstand my brother officers; for, though . they would swear and drink like coal-beavers, , there was always a something about them which I could not pick op, and which I can not explatn or define; and when thrown off my guard by the general freedom from re straint which was apparent after mess sometimes, I wa.s continually saying or doing something - which brought them all up. as kite and grave as parsons, I overheard one of them say one day: •Poor Tompkins, what a blackguard he but one must make albm•auces for .neh a glod natured fellow.' and I know that was just the feeling they all had about me. I should have been much happier prirate trouper—if I cull hare kept rooderatery sober, that is than a. tar ,•tutor. lion• I used to long to go and jo n toy men, when I passed them drinking at the beer shops! However, that was quite out of the 11:110StiOn, 60 I made some acquaintances amongst the farmers round about our quarters, and had a quiet house now and then with them. If there had been a war, and some fighting to do, 1 1 think I might have won some respect in the regi ment, and then perhaps I should have done better; but as there was no prospect of ac. tive service, I sold out when I came t f age. for I had five thousand a year, a•nd. where was the use of stopping in the army till I should be turned out of it? "fitter this I gave gentility a fair trial, fur the uncle who had been my guardian got hold of me , and persuaded me to go down to an estate I had in Norfolk, where he and his family came and kept house fur me; and all the county folk gave dinners and to which I was dragged, and at which the people male a fuss about me, and tried to marry me to their daughters, till at last I could stand it no longer; so one night I lowered myself and a carpet-bag front my bed-room window, and went to London, where I got into what you fellows call "low company." Ido not think I spoke to a gen tleman—certainly not to a lady—for a year and a half. What swt of people did I asso ciate with? Why, all sorts_ I went up the river with bargemen; I patronized sparring cribs, and never missed a fight; I took the chair at different clubs of small sporting tradesmen; I did nut care, so long ns I was with a set of fellows who were my inferiors in education and fortune, and who looked upon the as a bit of a swell. That was the sort of life for me; and I dare say you won der how I ever came to give it up. Well, as I was never what you may call sober at that time, I have no clear notion of what the row wits about; but there was a row. You see, I ran through a good deal of money— how it went I cannot tell; some fighting-men who played at cards may have had some, and I used to drop a little pigeon-shooting and skittles; and then some foolish fellows got a cheque for five pounds from me, and turned it somehow into one for fire hundred, bat did it so clumsily that it was detected, and there was a shindy, which got into the papers, so that my uncle and a set of other relations, who hal before attempted to make a gentleman of me, care to bear about it, and they got o pack of lawyers and doctors together, who took a mean advantage of a little touch of delirium [reflect's. It was made out that I was nut fit to be trusted with the n•nuagernant of my own ,ffairs, and For three months I was treated just as if I had been cracked; seen when I was declared all ri,,tht again my relatione 'would not let me alone: thew 'wide 1)/P take a !um.° at Brighton, where they i t cone and stay %ritil wo, mud bo re nu' to death, partioularly au r.).1 aunt, who waic we read tract., and nitu ',lid I wag a brand, and it was her I»isNion to pluck me. As far as I can make out, that has been the mi , sion of st good many people! You may wonder why r put up with all this; but there were Pllveral reasons fir it. You t-etz., my node really had done me a qervioc. in re.ouing a g:‘ , ol .11e0 of my prop erty front the m tlx , of u set of turnkey lend ers, who were Lopping it up pretty r,i,t, and di I not like t r flv in !tiB face; then oavy offollow, apt to be lead by the note, and Br;gl.ton was not such a bad place after all; fur I had made friends with the fishermen, and used to go out with them in their smacks. Capital fellows some of those sailors were, who could tell stories and sing songs by the hour together. They were the beet companions I ever met for one thing, that they were just as jolly without drink—and they never got drunk at sea—as with it, which was never the case with the set I got mixed up with in London. "The man I liked hest of them was an old salt of the name of John Rudd, who had a small craft of his own, in which I have spent many a rough night, far happier in my pea jacket and sou'-wester than I should have been dressed up in a white choker and a stiff black coat, in one of those solemn draw room-rootus into which my relations were forever trying to drag me, and from which, to their intense disgust, I used often to es cape to a quiet pipe and glass of grog at old John's cottage, when be was on shore, "Sometimes, too, when he was at sea, for he had a wife and daughter who always gave me a hearty welcome, and who were much pleasanter people to talk to than any of the fine ladies I met out in society, in whose presence I felt shy and awkward, and afraid of saying something I ought not.— Mary Rudd was always bright and cheerful, and seemed glad to see me; and it is nice somehow to see a pretty girl look pleased when you come into the room. Not that I got at all spooney, you know, not a bit of it; I never even talked any nonsense to her, for I always thought, in a vague way that if I married at all, I mast, as smatter of ociarea, choose a lady, but I did nut mean to marry; and as for anything else, I would hare kick ed myself if I had dreamed of such a thing. flowerer, it seems that my relations took their own view of the object of my vi=its to the &lds, for one morning my uncle and former guardian came into my room with an extra grave face. " 'Glad to see you,' said I; and that is one of the nuisances of pulite society, one has to lie so! 'What Mill you hare?' "'Thank you,' said he, with the ,ort of bow the Duke of York's Column would make if introduced to the 'Victoria Tower. 'I have not come here for the purpose of r artakhrg of your hospitality, but to speak to you on a a subject of serious - importance.' " 'Halloo,' thought I, 'what is in the wind now?' for I knew from experience what all those fine words betokened. " "Vhose nearest related m you in name an& blood,' he went on, 'and' motet ha upholding the 110[10r of the family, have lately met together fpr the con-iderntion of certain matters concerning yourself.' " 'Very kind of them, I em "'And they have requested me to convey to you their earnest remonstrance audunani. mous resolution. We are all grieved to see that you retain your unfortunate Predilec tion for low company. Now, Robert, how is this? Have you not the blood of an old family in your veins?' "'Pet haps it is begining to run thick, like a barrel of beer near the bottom,' I suggested. "'Did you not receive a polite education?' " '0 yes; I was kicked by the bays aho were bigger than myself, and was just as polite to those who were smaller.' '"Did I not get you a emumission in n crack regiment? and, in short, have we not all done what we could to make a gentle man of you?' "'Certainly you have, end very much obliged I am; but you see I am unfortunately but a sow's ear, and article utterly unsuited fur the manufacture of a silk purse.' "'I fear you are right; but do not make the task utterly hopeless by contracting this low marriage.' " 'What marriage?' cried I, in great aston ishment, "'The report has reached us that you are about to take fur your wife a female of the lower orders—a creature of the name of Rudd, a fisherman's daughter; and lam deputed to inform you that if you inflict this last disgrace upon your family, we shall feel it to be our duty to repudiate you alto gether.' "'Wait a bit,' said I; let me clearly un derstand you. Do you mean to say that if I marry Itudd's daughter none of you will come near toe again?' "'That is the decision we hare arrived at,' he rei lied. nut my cousins come and stay with me as they hare done?' •• •Certainly not.' " 'Will no on ask tne out to dinner-par tics?' "jr%N balls, nor concerts?' `As far ns we are concerned, you will be debarred from all society.' "'You would not rut the in the street?' fear it w,n3hl be nor pai Ilryj an '3' du erect that.' 'Then,' crio'l 11:1.• hsnlan the " '111,14' ,I•, it!' " What? Are yoni, Then, infatuated ai4 to sire np all your family for the sake ot this girl?' "'lnfatuated! not a hit of it: the idea never catered my t01,,d untill you put it there.— Alony thanks for the hint, old gentleman: I'll go and make her en offer at once!' "And. so I did, and married her within the in onth, and I have riot soon or. heard of one of my relations since. It is delightful: I Imre no one to hither toe, one I do just as I like—Eli, what is it, .Jane?" "If v'iu please, sir, wants to sryeak to you." "Eh? MI say lam corning. You 'Co." ho aided, turning to me, "my wife i‘ a bit jealous of this," and he tappo f the qpirit-ca.e which stood on the table; "and though, of course. I ern not ruled by her in any way, yet still 1 t,,ink it better during the first months of our marriage to let bed down easy; but I see there is no use trying to humbug you, you era in the same boat, poor fellow!" `Nesse, sir, missis says —" coning immediately. Good-by, old fellow; glad to have a chat with you iu this way: but, I say, don't [From T.ble Traiu A Light Dinner for Two. Many years ago, when railways were things undreamt of, and when the journeys from Oxford to the metropolis were inevita bly performed on that goodly and pleasant high road which is now dreary and forlorn, a gentleman and his son, the latter newly flushed with college fame and university honors, rode forth over Magdalen Bridge and the Cherwell, purposing to reach Lon• den in a leisurely ride. A groom, their only attendant, carrying their scanty bag• gage with him on n good stout cob, had been sent on in advance to order dinner at a well known roadside hostelry, where Oxford nag.; baited, and where their more adventurous riders frequently caroused, out of reach of any supervision by Principals or PraProc tors. $ Q . 41 1 1: ". b, ;i t : l / 4 11 1 / 4 1 1 / 4 :1 1.7 Pleasant is the spot, well approved by past generations of Freshmen, picturesque and charming to an eye content with rich fields, luxuriant meadows, and pretty streams, tributaries of the now adolescent Thames, whose waters had not at that date been polluted by barge or lighter at that point of its course. The neighborhood is , famous for its plump larks; and whether in I a savory pudding, swimming with beef-steak gravy, or roasted, a round half-dozen togeth er, on an Iron skewer or a tiny spit, those little warblers furnished forth a pretty ad junet on a well-spread table, tempting to an appetite somewhat appeased by heavier and more substantial vianthl. dine host at our roadside quarters hod a cook who dressed them to a nicity; contriving to produce or develope a succulency and flavor which meaner practitioners would scarcely have deemed practicable. Now Martin, pursuant to his troi-teC.s instructions for securing a repast of duel:, :ql , l the dainty lark, finding the landlord brought ( ~ Zt ef,ffil hi, shady pareh.b3r the clatter of the horse's hoots en the well-beaten , road, announced tho ap proaching arrival, and ordered dirmer. "illy master wishes to find a couple of larks, and a dozen of ducks, well roasted, on his arrival at four o'clock." "Did 1 understand you rightly, young man?" said• Buniface. "Ol" said the varlet pettishly, "in Ox ford no landlord needs twice telling;" and betook himself to the stables, looking for ward to the enjoyment of a tankard of good house-brewed No—no brewer's iniquitous mixture—and the opportunity of shining with some lustre in the tap, or the kitchen, before country bumpkins, eager to listen to a man like himself, who had seen racing at Newmarket and Doncaster, and high life at Bath and Cheltenham. Meantime his mas ters came leisurely along the road, nor thought of applying a spur, until the craving bowels of the younger hon:cman, w ho s e di gestive organs were unimpaired by college themes and examinations, suAgestel a Lick of provender; and, their watches, when con sulted. indicating the near approach of the dinner hour, they broke off their chat, and soon drew rein at their place of temporary sojourn. Finding the cloth laid, and the busy waiter's preparations nearly complete, they glanced with satisfaction to a table of some what unnecessary dimensions, considering the limited extent of the party, which our young Ilellenist would hare described as a "quality." Just as our travellers were grow ing impatient, the landlord, having previous. ly satisfied himself, by obsequious inquiry, that his guests were quite ready, re-entered, bearing a dish with a bright cover, and heading as good a procession of amnesties, t each similarly laden, as the limited ro sources of his modest establishment admit ted. The large number of dishes rather sur prised the elder of the twain, whose mind was less absorbed by the suggestions of ap petite; and, having, dispatched the sole at tmilant left fur a bottle of the best Madeira the cellar could supply, and mk jug of that malt liquor for which the house had obtain ed some notoriety, he proceeded to look un der the formidable range of corers. Seeing under the first a couple of ducks, be :mid, I"Conic, this is all right!" but finding the nest, and the, next, and still the next, but a repesiti,,n of the coml., either with or with out the JroJ seasoning, In fairly stood aghast, when six couple of goodly docks stood retealed before biro. The young col- legiarr's mirth was great, his laugh hearty, at the climax of two pretty little chubby I larks which closed the litre of dishes. Ap- I de sauce and gravy, broccoli rind potatoes, stood sentries, flanking the array. Upon his ringing the bell with no gentle baud, the huullord himself stepped in from the puts sage, where be appeared to have awaited surrior rm.: arid, in answer to a question the I reader may easily anticipate, replied that the sonata's order precise, and that it was impariently epented ripen his own hes itation in iterrept:rrg it. The respe,oability of the laml/md, and the et ident truthfulness lof his manner, stayed all fortiror questions. But the elder gentleina.l said firmly that he should not pay for what had been en absurd 11y provided, alleging tl.at no two, ur even three, persons could t.o found who would do 'justice to such pros isirms. The landlord, like Othello, "upon that hint spoke," for he saw a faint chance of righting a somewhat difficult matter. "0, air," said he, "I think I could find a man bard by who would not consider the supplies too much for his own appetite." "Produce him," said the guest, "and settle the point; fur, if you du, I will settle the whole." The anxious landlord said no more; but left in searclt of a neighboring cobbler, whose prowess with the knife and fork was pro-eminent in the vicinity. Meantime, our hungry travellers sat down to dinner with such good will, that each of them had dis posed of one of the regiment; and in a joint attack, a third fell mutilated, leaving but fragmentary relics. A lark apiece was a mere pi-it-deal joke; and cheese, with celery, 1 left nothing further wanting to appease those cravings which had prompted them . to action. Whilo these little matters were m progress, the landlord had found the shoe maker, and told his story. t•Wcll," said Lapstone, "this is plaguy unlucky, for I've just had a gallon of broth! Such a famous chance, too; for if there is anything I auk particularly toad of, certain ly duck is A weak point, sir!" [WHOLE NUMBER 1,624. Bonifnee, thinking it his only chaiiee, urged him to try; and the man of bristles, nothing loth. consented. On being duly in troduced, orders were given for setting to on the spot, to insure fair play, and defeat any supplementary aid, ore deposit in any other pocket, save that with which the savage in a nude state finds himself provided—the stomach. While the travellers sipped their wine, and trifled with their dessert, the voracious cobbler fell heartily to work on the row of eight ducks before him—one having been sent down fur the undeserving groom, whose blunder had proved n godseratt to the loan of leather. 'Wisely eschewing vegetables, and eating scantily of bread, the diejecte monbra of the doomed ducks rapidly yielded up their savory integuments. llut - flesh is weak, and cobblers' appetites are not wholly unappeasable; so that while the fifth victim wes under discussion, a stimti- • last, in the shape of "n little brandy," wo requested; and when the was but s;ow ly and more slowly disappearing, poor stone, who began to think further progrers impossible, was seen whispering to the land- - lord. The gentleman loudly demanded u hat; the fellow was saying. "Sir," said the landlord, promptly and cunningly, "ho says he wishes there were a half-dozen more, for he is just beginning to enjoy them." "Confound the rascal's gluttony," said the travellers; "not a bit more shall he hare. Put the remaining couple by fur our supper; for we shall not /care your house till to morrow;" an arrangement affording much relief to the shoemaker, and entire satisfac tion to the innkeeper. She Will and She Wont DUestieks seems to be resuscitate: marriage, though too much di4posed tate his mother-in-taw. Ho say.: "One reason why it is dillienit to ;'.rase women is that she seldom knows horse!" what she wants. In most cases it is as hard to satisfy a woman as it would he to content a captain who should toll you to steer his ship and wouldn't tell you whether he want ed to go to Jersey or Japan. They wouldn't be satisfied whatever you (b. "Especially in the matter of war. "Particularly in the matter ofthe present: war. Your wife, or mother, or sister, or whoever may lie the woman that owns you, refuses to be content, no matter abut you do. Ifyou dont join a military comp .ny, sha sulks, insinuates you ore a coward, tiir:, , up her nose, and 'wishes she was a man.' If you do join said company, sloe Rk:,1,11 about the expense, grumbles about the loss of time, and growls whenever you go to drill—though in spite of her growling, she always saves the choisest part of the dinner when you do come. "Then she laughs nt you, and calls you, a 'dressed up monkey,' the first time she sees you in uniform; and then, as soon as you are gone out of the house she rushes over to Mrs. Jones to tell what a 'splendid officer' her husband is, and how magnificent he looks in his new military dress. "Then if your regiment is ordered away, and you insinuate that 'business affairs' will keep you at home, all her fire is blazing in an instant, and she upbraids you far 'back ing out' at the critical moment, and insinua tes that you aro e. `play-boy soldier,' and then she wishes that she were a man—she•d show folks how to tight. Then, when you finally mak,' up your mind to g., to thr, , ~,,t, of war, she bursts i til wet tears lis hicil spot your new uniform and tarnish the gold iiten i 1)n your sleeves), and thinks yt.m 'might to I he ashamed to go iitraril loove your family.' She seas she 'don't 1,01101 e you care a straw ; for your mire, or a cent for your Fcccot-eilit dren;* she 'knows you would rather Le any ; where than nt home,' mid 'wishes she wet 0 a man, she'd tcacli the Pi ;.-ident. Letter than to send men away feint their fam Mei.' "Then, when the day comes fur you to start, slic';vows that she will 'never speak to i 3 ,00 ag a in Wpm persist in going.' Then, when you take a paper out of your poel:.et, and pretend to read a furlough frun tl,O commandant, excusing you, and giving yort leave to stay at borne; she throa a her apron over her head, sits down an the fluor, 21.12,1 howls aloud, 'to think that she -Could have a coward for a husband'—'that her husband should be afraid to go to the wars.' And j then, when you tell her that it's all a mis , take, and that you are going after all, she bowls louder than ever, because she 'knows • you will be killed.' or she foils it in her bones that you'll come home with two wood en legs, and then huwean you take her to the Academy on opera nights? Then she resorts in turn to every one of the immense list of female tactics to keep you at lionie—.4ie wishes she was is man—she gets mad—sho sulks—she threatens to go Inane to he: mother—she coaxes—she 'won't eve.: live with you another day'—sho scolds, she en treats, and as a last resort, she faints—in this ease sho always falls into your arms, if you make an offer to cutcb her; if yon don't offer. and it is early in the morning, and rho hasn't made her bed yet, she'll falls on the I bed; but if the bed is made up nicely, she'll fall on the carpet so as not to muss the hod: if the fainting dodge don't work. and you still are resolved to go, she cows she•liatect you and that shell never speak to you ' again,' and then, to prove the bitterness of hor hate she pies off and packs your !Liter -1 sack full of all the dainties stud delicacies of the season; then, fitter all, at the very last , moment, she comes and throws her arras I around your neck. and whispers that she loves you best of all in tan world,' and that Ishe'll 'he such a good girl till you come back: and that she'll *take such good oare of the i children.' tied that 'you tonst'at fret about her,' and that she'll write every blasted day, and that you must write just as often csYetu can. and that sbelovets you best, beer, beak,' and a thousand little messages only for yoe, but all kind and loving and all toll withoot a tear, fur she doesn't cry now until you are out of the house; and when you are' gone sho veers like a shower bath for half an hour, then suddenly stops short, wipes her rye.., and doesn't waste another tear till she sees you again. 2 'That's the way they all dn; and:talk d. peacefully as . you can, she is a'ver ttatiefied in her heart tilt she um you. is =Ana