I SAMUEL WRIGEr, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXXIII, NUMBER 24:1 PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING. Olflee in Carpet Ildl, North-tcestcorizer of Front and Locust streets. Terms of Subscription a e Copy peranruma f paitli a advance. • • if no] paid within 11l ree anonthsfromeomineneemeniofthe year. 4 Coats copy. NO: ith,eripitoit received torn lei., time timii six 4.6011.5; altiad 110 paper wtll he di-continued mill: sill ~.rrearitgeFitreprtad.uitle--,tt Ile optiolioi the pub isher. na y , oc'emittecil, vonail a it hepublisli r s risk Rates of Advertising. qua r [ii Ineo]one week. three weeks. each .ulisequen iiniertion. 10 [l2 ines Joneweek 50 • three weeks. 1 00 erteli:olischuentinsertion. t ),arge rid vortisement , t It proportion .11L iiiiern I !keno', iwillbe mode toquarterly.half satlyo :irtrlytilvertisers i orno are stricti3eonfined °their business. Itaftrg. , The Picket Slow across the blue Potomac fades the dim Novem ber light; And the darkness like a mantle folds the tented field from sight; Through the •hallowed wood beside me breaks the wind with quivering moan, Floating, sighing, Falling, dying, As I hold my watch alone. Forward, backward, stern and fearless, till the moon beam's dancing ray Breaks is mary a gleaming arrow from my bayonet's point away; So I pace the picket lonely—hut, apart from mortal Watch I'm keeping, With the .leepnia Loved 1111 t, fir ay to.night Oil th , , morrow come, Th :uuksgieuuT, wueo, front households far arid WC!, Ruwtd 'het: homes the ehill yeti gatlier—zeek once mare me old foe,de, F±.l 011 C, 11101,, tip; sdearzt p'occi lb at 11l left long tug' Proudly to in; All Tire, unknown joy and woe On the morrow come+ Thaa k:giving, not us long ago i 13r.gln, without a .4:We of sorrow lingering, on itsgood old II:Mlej War has waved her erint -on blither, aud beneath its blood stains re,t All his glory, thin and gorv, Laid on irthay a lifeless breast, Rife and child and aged another wake at morn to Lend the knee, And around die Itearilistone glowing, supplicate their God for 1111 . ; Near my vacant choir they gather, blending teurn Waal their payers— Goil %sill hear them, And oneur them, Will my spirit kneel with theirs! Nor i% darkly's% all around u•i—we run thank our God might; Fur the f..l.Cllgitt which he gi volt, mid to struggle for the righi; Et. the SOUS no grandly beating in the liallOICS onward ME For the .ptti t We tnheni. On dn. ocn• That k-givlng., day 1: 4 1i1; I 1.. Wue I . einin le ripples like a -aver thread AOll.O 11l lie - Ili. oil I: lill• firt • .- SIO p pi. “e, ir4/111 Mot lal W ..ch I In Looping' HEE =SE i • hip .It holm. In-night Los:; ; ; and Living MIMI Thy Marvel ./du/e• ler ,t-ei at ail; Jo, it t.t el) .111Tust-i r.l 1,. .uty .rod bum el I , prodigal. Oil II iiVr• 1n liii• 11 -weedy No ch., r fOf roe rare hut g!ory or doom— ol to WI/lier or bloom: To deity Is to die The env lend .ilvery rain to the land, The land di+ svphire ptreanns to the ocean; The heart sends flood to the brain of command The broth to the hears its lightning mourn': And ever and ever we yield our airmail— Till the mirror is dry and images death: To lave In to give Ile I. dead whose bond is not opened wide To help the need of a human brother: lie doubles the life of his life-long ride Who gives Lis fortunate place to mother, And u thousand million lives are his Who carries the world in his •y-mpathies: To deny Is to dm Throw gold to the far dispersing wave. And your ships sail home with tons of treasure; Care not for comfort. all hardships brave, And evening and oge shall sup with pleasure, Fling health to sunshine, wind and rain, Aml roses shall come to the cheek again: To give Is to live Wbat ;s our life! Is it wealth or strength? If we for the Master's sake will lose tt, AVe shall find it a hundred fold at length. VVllile they shall forever who refit.... And 11 1 1 a 11 11•01.11.11Arr thrir r.non or p• nee AI Inc ro-t of ugh•. r ••!. C; Touy A rrr•_ c& Mfrs. Pattington has a friend in the army. Being asked one day what his sta tion was, she replied: "For two years he was lament in the horse marines, and artor that be got promoted to be captain of a squad of eapheads and minors!" zeig-"Mamma," said littlo Nell, "ought governess to flog me for what I've not done?" 4 •No, my dear child; why do you ask?" "'Cause she flogged me to-lay whoa I didn't fie my sum." DM DOW HE TROLLED FOR JACK AND GOT HOOKED "Confound 'mu all!" amiably ejaculated Leicester Du Plat, of No. —, King's Bench walk, barrister-at-law, addressing his Skye, that sat bolt upright on the Times, a pipe in its teed), and spectacles on its nose•— "confound 'em all, Punch; I say, and you into the bargain." "Who, why, and what for? Have you been bumped at Putney, caught out at Lloyd's, or cheated in the yard? Has Daf fodil gone lame, or Octavio ceased to smile? It must be a desperate case, fur the devil's cold, and the beer's undrunk." The disconsolate Templar looked up. "Halloa, Lion, my boy, how are you? I'm simply going to the dogs, that's all." "No news, my dear fellow," said the new comer, seating himself in a rocking chair.— "You've been en route to join those mystical quadrupeds ever since we hooked jack after the second lesson, headed the Crick run, and worried poor Arnold's life out. But what's the particular mess just now?" QM "Oh! no end of a row!" swore the barris ter. "Priggs has cut up rough g and dunned the gover,lor, and t 12.0 nio,ra ble little Balls 1015 sent in a 101 l fora ci.ar thousand only Inc the horrid goc, lorry and Cape he's palm-d ull on ma—ttitt't It a ras cally sham...? The governoCx ut.td, of cour•4e, and, of 'di infernal thing-, v. - 11,1t do you think he says?—that it I uon't marry .:111/C woman he's found out fur me, he'll never give me another shilling! Marry—l—only fancy!" And Du Plat puffed away at hi, cutty-pipo with an air which plainly said, "The mines, or Cayenne, would be mercy to that." Canyon lay back in his chair and laughed a laugh like his vuiee, low, sweet, and musi cal. "\'hat an idea! Who's the poor vic- IME "I am, I should think," growled Du Plat. "Of course—sous•entendzc. But who's your follow-sufferer?" "Deuce take me if I know!" said the bar rister, taking a pull at the Burton, and sit ting down to the devilled drumsticks which were waiting for him on his breakfast-table. "I burnt the governor's stave, and forgot the woman's name—some heiress, you're sure—trust the old boy for that. But mar ry her I never will. The devil! I'll go to San Francisco, I'll work as a navvy, I'll sell hot pies at the crossings, or cry periwinkles in Oxford street, rather than tie myself to a lot of crinoliao who will eternally cheek me with her confounded—tin." "Are you better?" said Carlyon, quietly. ''Srou are visionary, my dear fellow. Why shoal tn't a man marry a woman because she chances to have some money that will keep her? Just now you think a pretty face worth all the world; by-and-by you'll eqi mate a gaud house, good position, and a good income at their right value." "I'll be shot if ever I buy 'em with my wife's tin." [ll.,Nton Plat Yes will , ,Jr “thor " "Oh, cour,c you say so!" said Du Plat, Testily. — Because I am engaged to lionoria Cosine tique? Yes,wlica I was onikutg St. George's, I had much such fantastic o .y,,111', uwn, but my Quixuti,m Ilk.' oat, ;1::. 3 nlv. will." "Hang it Phil, your heart's as coil as your head!" cried the barrister. "Belm ot up has of ten sai . there wasn't a wilder Mall in town than you were; yet you always look as cool as any jolly old stoic." Carlyon Nwiled. ''What would my pa tients soy if 1 reeled into their bed-rooms?— I never let anything excite me. This is the gr. at secret. You take cognac, and get entre deux rigs; I take claret and em only refreshed. Voilcd" "You never had a grand' passion, Phil?" "No, lam much obliged to you. Never wish to have." "What docH lionoria say to that?" "Nothing. She is philosophic. So am I. But how can you understand this, you in flammable Lauzun? Poor Mrs. Leicester Du Plat, how I pity her!" said Carlyon, throwing back his head with a laugh. "Cob! the ro.e notes that will destroy her peacel— The latch-key that will elude her wifely vig ilance! The curtain lectures she will have to prepare, the pretty danseuses she will have to rival her, the breakfasts and sup pers and Richmond dinners her purse will buy for other women!" "The devil take Mr-. L , !icester Du Plat! See here. Carlton," cried the lb.,r/t4ter, u:, rt , a pruz.ht ides struek "bn!.~ 0.0 if I din'td an ti C , kl Chip's —tlwn's Iv:: and dull—and that out-ntanoeu , re the governer charming ly; he wants me to go to llawtree, where the heiress hangs out, and he hates me to be at Chip's because they've gut a lot of girls there generally. Come with me old fellow —do!" [Congregational/at Carylon thought a minute. "Perhaps 1 can. I always take a month this timo of year, and there is not much illness now.— But I must be off. By Juvel it's just otie, and I've a consultation with Hawkins, op orations to see at St. Geora's, and no end of people—one of 'em at Greenwich— to visit before seven. So au remit!" grtertinno. Carlyon's Vacation MEMO CITA PTEII I =! 7 .----- N , '1 - • 7 ''''''' 7 4. .tt• _ , 1 - ;' 1.•:- - 4-- . .. ' . ~. .%, '. "NO ENTERTAINMENTIS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." "Good-bye, old boy!" And Du Plat relighted his pipe, filled a tumbler with sherry and seltzer, and sat down to rend "Arthur;" while Canyon sprang into a Hansom, and drove as fast as he could to St. George's, pondering as he went, on a very interesting case of gastralgia. Lion and Dupe, as the school nicknamed them, had been cronies at Rugby, and churns ever since. They were as unlike as soda water and brandy, but mixed as well togeth er; contrasts often do, you know. Their physiques were a type of them—faces gen erally are. Du Plat was like a young Greek, with his gay debonnaire sir, long chestnut hair, and languid hazel eyes; while Carly on's pale features were as classic as a Roman emperor's, and his graceful figure, his dark eyes, "so soft when they smiled," as ladies said, the haughty beauty of his mouth and forehead, joined to his suave manners and gentle ways, won him conquests right and left among his fairer patients. Du Plat furnished his chambers, kept his hack, his cab, and his out-rigger, gave his Richmond breakfasts and his opera suppers, as if he'd £3OOO a year instead of £3OO. Ile never rend, most surely never pleaded, was petted by every woman ho came near, from dowagers to dauseuses, and at eight and-twenty led as amusing a life as any fel low needs to do. Carlson, on the contrary, wild as the Quartier-Latin had seen him, freely as he had plunged into life at all flutes and in all scenes, unceremoniously as he once Celt his practice for a three months' scamper over the Continet, (N. B. All his patients came hack to him when he returned) mow worked hard with his masterly intellect ill town as a general practitioner his birth good, the contrast of hi-a nor may galled hat ceaselessly; on the spot ta, he tied hunt-ell to money. Though rt.—, tat ato hili uusly proud, and not a ilttlesent , ' • a man to be pas-oonately ias td its women, and histascinations won him na, iii t 11,.Ugh the daughter ot a a maths -toct. , %er. alliance was distast,cful to tae of born Carl3on, out--people Like :nett htatt ,r L. drive to their doors iu ha is ha co A thini--m• was three-and-thirty, the rotaatte 111, was over, he thought, and :su-1P: lat niuney buy Lim. ciiA.prEit =I That evening, i , rcp stately grace. Cor3 lon ri.a up thi—c.dr, ~t' a house in Pottnian ;quaic, mol gaudy drawing rooms unannounced. His •tiance glanced up from her cmla•o.- dery. Tall, severely !MIA:Ane, about live and-twenty, with black hair, dune, ladies say, a l'lmperatriee, and nu end of crino line, white moire, and jewelry, sat llouuria Cosmetique. Oae of those dragons—you know them, I dare say—who arc like a pro test against matrimony carved in marble, and on whose awful brows is written: '•lf you marry me, sir, you'll give up latch-keys, Epsom, bats d'Opera, 100 parties, and all the cognac of life, and be ironed down into a model husband forthwith." "You arc late, Philip," he said, without rising, In a voice as chilling as a nor'-wester =l3l "1 know I ant, flonoria, but I couldn't get away before." 11cr lir curled. "Your practice has in crea,ed uondertully?" "It has," he answered, simply, leaning his arm on the mantle-piece. (Entre 110118, hir, /often envy medical men the deliciously incontrt.vertable cxeuse they have in Lbw: "pi actlet.! " WilCl/ they don't want to do a thing.) There was a lung pause. He broke it.— " Town as quite empty now. Du you go to Muddybruok soon?" "Nett week. Will you take some coffee?" "None, thank you. I hope you will like to hear I shall be near there too. Du Plat has asked me to go down with him to his cousins the Chippeultams. 1 think I can get away; he promised me good fishing, and .llunkstone is very close to Muddybroolc." bliss Cosmetique froze a little harder.— "You could have come to Nuddybrouk; Philip, had you chosen. Since the same river runs through both, I should have im agined your only attraction, 'fishing,' would have been as good there as at Monk stone. If you have such a patrician disgust fur trade, it is a pity you should condescend to ally gout self to a stockbroker's daughter." "1 hate no disgust for trade, but I hare a great disgust for men who, like your Mud dybrook bust, have enriched themselves with the ruin of others, and try to gloss over vul garity by pretension. 1 hate no right to dictate your father's friends, but I have a right to dictate whether they shall become mine," replied Carlyon, haughtily. "But, ,'"me. llonoria, I nut tired tu-night; I want rest, nut quarreling. I was up all last night with au anxious case, and have been ab ,ut iu the beat to-day till I am weary and won, to death, and when I come here, where I hoped fur a little sympathy and qui.t, I sin received with nothing hut hinted repro:wiles and covert sneers. I hal better have •ta..o 1 at home with my pipe and hook; there. at least, if there be no happiness, there is ti., wrangling. By lleaven! if my life is to us nothing but toil abroad and biekerio4 et home, I wish I had diedin poor Montre.sor's stead at Scutari!" So unwonted a burst from C.irlyon touched the very small germ of kind feeling, in Nliss Cosmetique's chill and dignified soul. None knew him without becoming more or less fond of him. v. . COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SAURDAY MORNING, JANUARY "Poor Philip," she said, with a gentler intonation, as she looked at his pale, hand some, haughty face. Carlyon bent forward and kissed her forehead--certainly I can't say with much lover-like ardor—and sank back on the sofa with a sign as much of mental as of bodily fatigue. "Carlyon, my friend, you made a fool of yourself to-night," said he to himself, as he smoked his last pipe before turning in.— "Shut the door on all that boyish nonsense about sympathy, and peace, and happiness: it's all bosh for you to talk so. You've been alone all your life, and alone you al ways will be. Your fate is to work and make money, not to sentimentalize—you haven't time for it. Your destiny's settled, an ass only would quarrel with it; so put away regrets, they're very dangerous, and think of the tin and the brougham, and the nice easy life money will bring you? You ought to be a happy follow, Philip Carlyon —why ain't you?" With which query to himself, Carlyon put his pipe out and went to bed. A few days afterwards he went to Monk- stone "Neat trap that—showy gray! Trust old Chip for horseflesh," murmured Du Plut at the station, surveying v% ith critical glance the dog cart sent to meet them. "How a:e you, Robert? How's Katie? Slit any poacher:? When's the wedding?" Robert grinned--Katie, the still-room maid, was his future: "Thank'ee, sir—quite well, sir—haven't shot Lone, sir, took too —and it's on Christmas day, sir." 'All right; I'll come down on purpose to kiss the bride. Jump up, Lyon. Don't the country look jolly after six months of drums and crushes, and club windows and bouquet d'Ess atmosphere? 'Pun my life, it's quite refreshing—like soda water after one's last night's wine." '•17 , -; thrushes and hedgerows are plea - ; tor squares and cock-sparrows. I c•o&- , 3 I rather long fir my first day of Ii Ling itat Ihr all that," continued on, li,;hring a weed, "if country air be parer her tile body, London air's rather str. , ogef for the mind; and I like -tteceed itur in a critical Case still better than hoop la;; a thM„ pound trout." '•All very -Noll, my luminary of St. eorge's, , 0 that you don't chloroform me, I d.,z,'t e Lre. Ily Jove!" erid Du Plat, "lieri•', a t 11-rable loolinig little girl. net t}, ain't shc?" Carlyon put up his glass. "What a wild head, what breadth of shoulder, what good action," he muttered, admiringly. The two they apustrunhised passed them in a narrow lane. The mare was a ches nut, three parts thorough bred, fifteen hands high, with staight neck, slender legs, and coat like satin. The rider a girl, quits young, with gold-brown hair, large brilliant eyes, and a mignonne air, half-dashing, half-childlike. She wore a coquettish Span ish hat, a sky-blue tie, and a black habit. She glanced merrily at them, shook her bridle, and cantered past. "Who's that, Robert?" asked Du Plat. "Please, sir, that's Miss Wyndham." MEM= •Wyndham? Wyndham? w•hy the devil, Lion that's the name of the governor's heiress." "This one, sir, is oncoinmon rich, I have heerd say. A good many tin mines down somewhere in the south, sir," responded Robert. Leicester groaned audibly. "Heaven pre- serve us! It's the identical girl. Does she live near here, Robert?" "She is staying at our house, is Miss Wyndham, sir." "Oh, Phil!" whispered poor Do Plat.— It's fate, it's all up with me. I know it is. She'll make horrid love to me, and I shall give in. I never can say 'Nu' to a woman; and—" "You'll have a capital stud," laughed Carlyon. "Think of the tin mines, my dear fellow, and be practical and philosophic fur once in your life. Here we are. Mind the gate-posts; all right." Monkstocie Court was a sturdy pile of in congruous architecture, calculated to drive Mr. Ruskin mad, but to rejoice the heart of us barbarians, who like a comfortable bach elor's room, a good billiard table, and a nice wide sweep fur a deux temps, better than all the styles and orders, with Doric, Gothic, and lonian technicalities. Its own er, Sir Godfrey Chippenhatn, better known in the county as "Turnip Chip," from his marvellous swedes, was quite in keeping with it; neither literary nor scientific. po litical nor fashionable, but a jolly, generous good hearted sporting man. Ile was out at the petty sessions, and Carlyon and Du Plat found only Lady Chip peuhaw and a young girl in the drawing room. The latter was sitting in the win dow, making paper boats for a couple of little Chips. She, too, was a Windham, but spelt with an "i," as she afterwards made them observe; tall, handsome as an Andalusian, with a Spanish form and beauty, and something tia:f-pride, half-melancholy, in her dark eyes. "By George. what a stunning girl:" mars morel Da Plat. lounging over to her in the free-annl-eo.y manner of his sot —the fast men. who.o ways and slang. cutaways and wide-awake , :, would cause such acute agony to Drammen, or Alvanley, or 1: Igeworth, if we could resu4citate the dandified ghosts of of those worthies. "Will Tou tuke me out fithing„ Lethterr." asked one of the boys of Du Plat. "Certainly, Bertie," rejoined Du Plat, with amiability, to find favor in Miss Wind ham's eyes; "and you shall catch a stickle bach for the nursery dinner." Inez Windham looked up and smiled. "Do not let my little pupil fall headlong, into the Alder, as he did the other day. Town is quite empty, I suppose, as you left it for Nlonkstone?" "Pupil! Oh, hang it, she can't be the governess," thought Du Plat, as he answered "Quite. Not a lounger in the bay-window, or a Park hack in the ride. Piccolornini has a respite, and so have the Crystal Pal ace waiters. In the district 'IV,' as they now style it, all is barren, and the pare of Pall Mall is as hot as the sands of Sahara." "Town is disagreeable," she replied, "when the few, who are everyl.ody, are off; and the million, who are nobody, stay to work," "Town disagreeable! Oh, Inez! how can you say so? It's the most charming place in the world. The lots of people one sees are fun enough. Don't you know what Je kyll says?" If he had to live in the country he would pave the road before his house, and have a hackney coach to drive up and down on it, to make believe it was London.'" Clirlyon, chatting, with Lady Chippenham, turned in surprise 'at the glad laughing voice which greeted his ears, and saw, bal ancing herself on the French window-step, and swinging her black hat, the little Die Vernon. 'Tome in, Leila," said Lady Chip, a pretty, delicate woman, mother of six small male Chip 4. The girl shook her head, laughed, and ran off. "Not till lam co grande fence. Since I left Sir Godfrey I hare taken two gates and a staken•bound fence, not to mention ditches innumerable.,, 'What a ttran,ge little thing; but very graceful and attractive," mused Carlyon.— "She the heiress! She is scarcely out of the school room. Pu Plat will have neither eyes, nor taste, nor sense, it he does not take her." "I say, Phil, she's the governess," said Leicester, coming into his chum's room while Carlyon was dressing:. • W her "Who? Blockhead! \ that superb Spanish creature, of crone." —Well, why shouldn't she be?" "The devil take yon, Lion, how prosaic you are. What! a woman of that style. that beauty, that age, a governe• ? Preposter ous! "I don't see it at all. There is no partic ular reason why she sliouldrit impart in struction well because she happens ru be good-lookin:4." "Impart instruction! Good I, , rd deliver us front philosophy and platitudes. Fancy that girl teaching the little brutes their A B C, hearing the multiplication-table, and setting round hand copies!" "Useful if not interesting." "But, good Heavens! she can't be twenty." "Very sad if she has to support herself so soon; but at the same time no affair of ours," said Philip. smiling, as he brushed his hand some black whiskers. "Don't he romantic, my dear Dupe. Think of the tin mines, and keep out of the school-room." "The tin mines!" repeated Du Plat, with intense scorn. "I wouldn't marry that little heiress—not if the governor forbid me; and I can't picture a stronger motive. Marry money! Not I, old fellow." Carlyon shrugged his shoulders. "Co:ante roue voudrez. If you fancy the cap and bells, far be it from me to disuade you, 71107 i cher; but Client's role would nut be my taste.— There goes the gong." "The governess dines, that's all right," thought Du Plat, crissing over to where she sat, while Carlyon, leaning on the mantle piece, looked up as the little heiress entered, a Fay Oriande, in tulle illusion, with flowers Puck himself might have gathered, in her shining hair. As she gave him a pretty French reverence, and a bright, unaffected glance, Carlyon smiled and bowed with that winning grace and fascination which did such damage among his lady patients. I don't know whether he knew it or not, but Carlyon's smile was a very effective weapon, and had cured many a fair invalid of a mig rine only to give incurable disease of the heart. It now seemed to charm Leila Wynd ham, for she held up a King Charles she carried, with its paws in the attitude of pray er, and asked him if he liked dogs. Carlson assured her he liked everything in zoology, spoke of his dog Pluck, a Skye, he held in higher estimation than any other living thing, and told her of his pets—his monkey, cockato, Persian cat, bellises, dian thuses, serpulm, trogs, and madrepores. "And where are they all?" asked Leila. "At home—in town." "Yuu lice in London? Oh! how I envy , you. Don't you enjoy it?" "No, I can't sny I do particularly." "Not? What do you do there, then?" Catlyon smiled. "Work myself like a cab-horse all day long, get home an hour too late for dinner to find cold soup and over done meat, bring all my energies to bear on a. difficult case, only ten to one to be blamed for the issue, go to sleep with the pleasant conviction that I may be called up any min ute—that is my life Da you see much "en joyment in it?" "I see much that is noble and useful in it, and, therefore, a certain amountof enjoy ment," answered tho young lady decidedly. "The vocations of all men whose lives are A 11111 1, 1862. of any value to their generation entail on them an amount of toil and self-sacrifice.-- Be the end fame, money, position, whatever it may, it cannot be attained without the surrender of some leisure and some comforts. Neither riches or reputation will come to a man who folds his hands to slumber and doze in his arm chair. Were I you, I should glory in conquering death, to say nothing of the good you do." "Good? Not at all," laughed Philip. "1 am only getting money. I assure you lam very glad to hare no good to do, and to be able to go to sleep without fear of hearing the night-bell. Money is the sole lever now a-days, Miss Wyndham. It wakes all the eloquent philippic from the pulpit, and prompts all the holy zeal of the missionary papers. It wins forensic talent to the de fence of the guilty, and buys a conscience as easily as a commission or a borough. It makes an eminent 'Christian' as quickly as it erects a gin-palace, and tempts a bishop's virtue with the same bait that lures a bur glar. We are no better than our fellows.— Why should we be? Medical men never pretend to be the pharisees of the English synagogue, and our benevolence usually cor responds to the amount of the fee we receive." "There's plenty of, truth in all that, no doubt," said the little heiress, meditatively. "People's own interests are usually the guide for their conduct. But I fancy that though you would make yourself uut a terri ble egotist, still, unlike the generality who delight in belying others, you take pleasure in belying yourself." Carlyon laughed. Ile felt pleased to be read more truly in this five minutes acquain tance than by friends who had known him fur years. "IVell, of the many men I knew at St. George's one died of cholera at Scutari, another was shot down in the trenches, another of consumption brought on by the dis secting rooms, a fourth from the virus he got into his hand at a post-mortem, Ft fifth from low fever from distressat his fail ure in four consecutive delicate opera tions, which, if successful, would have established his reputation. Of myself I say naught, but do you suppose we run all these risks for anything but our own interest— for any other reason then the hope of put ting guineas in our pocket?" Leila lifted her eyebrows and looked dis gusted. "You might put a rather more ex alted motive—love of science or desire for fame! But you may say what you like, I don't believe your soul is shrilled in money bags." "Pray, why not?" asked Carlyon, highly amused. "You have not lived very long to study character." "Intuition is as good as study sometimes," said Leila, indignantly. "I g 6 by physiog nomy, and I know at once a face noble and true." Carlyon, but fur courtesy, would hare laughed outright, the compliment was so candid. Dinner was served. Jack Huntley, a man in the Fusiliers, gave the heiress his arm. Carlyon, to his disgust, had to take in a Mrs. Edgehill, who was staying at Monkstonc, a lively little woman separated from her hus band, and much happier since the separa tion than before it. Philip lapsed intu his grand hauteur, felt unreasoning but uncon querable hatred fur Huntley, thought him an insufferable puppy and wondered how woman could tolerate thtt style of man. Carlyon consequently gat satirical and severe, and electrified the table with his brilliant cutting and slashingat every thing and every body--at Palmerston and Louis Napoleon, John Bright and street organs, popular preachers and ct ino line, Puseyism and the perambulator nui sance. No matter what, he satirised every thing with wit as keen as Talleyrand's, till he caught Leila,s bright eyes fixed admir ingly on him from behind the epergne, when he dashed into a fire of repartee with her; after which his spirits were so good that poor unoffending Jack Huntley voted that dotor "a splendid fellow—a regular brick, and no mistake." In the evening, while the governess (no relation they found, to the heiress)sang bra vuras in an artistic contralto voice, and Do Plat hung over her, enraptured, Carlyon sat himself down besid the heiress on a ri.s•a-ris sofa, and chatted that quiet, clever, charm ing chat that wrought him half his cures nod won him half his reputation. They talked of zoophytology, of literature, of Comteo's Positivism, and all the other "isms" of GOSIO'S discoveries, and Dulwer's novels, and Carlyon found that the little heiress could talk with a wit, a depth, and an origi nality such as he had scarcely hoped fur with her girlish exterior. He found at last a young lady who was neither affected nor superficial, who had read a good deal and thought for herself, who could argue and reason, and fencis with him with his fa vorite weapons of wit and logic; and some how Carlyon thought of Ilonoria Cosmetique ns he retired to rest that night, and indulged himself with a few not over mild oaths at his destiny, and pondered much why the useful and agreable hadn't been combined in the stockbroker's daughter as they were in this bewitching little heiress. [ro BE CONTINUED.[ Z,a"•Give me a nice polish; you young scamp," said a dirty swell with a pipe and pork pio cap. "I can't give you one," said the lad; "It would take a cleverer man 'nor me to do that. But I can polish your boots, sir." ~ i i 0 4-t I I NM 1-V [WHOLE IC 1131 BER i ,G:.; -- The Philosophy of :f` :s A writer reinal 1:S a, , t • : A vision of tw.ses ztl.2 portion to the flrr . ti ; un Li', I.::_t i;ttell as arc ;10,i;i0i1:, L , i the length of the face, or l e ., ',i n ,: forehead. The varieties i,f inerous in the snub, ;La, Le r. u.r;, r.L.; upturned or Celestial no. •t.. 'll e na types to which they are gc•riera;i:..,:' , : are either the little Lo-es of e 1; : 'i• brow' noses of :11 , 1 it 1, with this that in wen of ea% 1;ii..1 r such noses indicato power: and do , J wil' holism %thich Lut r form of the heal, a , 1:1 the ra,.. .tan nentrnlize. !l °\ ten tt, 1 . isheti intelle.ttu 11 (leN,l plent: n I , lower au! ilatt , r, tn..re ,r.tth .1 the in .1'.3 COrt:ti:dy ! lICSS and meanness uf ..n ut mind in which dad temper la n.t.! thin judgment will have sway. It is not quite s,) with wo.nen. f the Nt hole urganiz.ll:on in it, L-,r,t,fual opulent diverge; I , s; than that, of men from the alnmst similar form both have in ("oily ehil The 1, a floe, thereC.ro, of the littie, 01111 , 1-U , 1. implies no such grace defer; mind. If her Ilea.' be w. 0,1 formo.l cm, ; nose :nay express 21,1 i eCie, or poi !I I; , s -in ness and eit, and dexterous • . If they are t, inueli to tii.• .- prossion of in,igTiilicauce or even , ness. The thicker and larger fonn nose, in eith e r sex, commonly i lid 0.3 • t.. predominance of the mate: character, and a turn-up iintic ni:L obvious nostrils, is an upon d:•o':u far as nose can make it, of on inflated mind; of a mind in : but a spurious imitation of that ,tre,)! , til ' loftier pride which the m,-;1 well formed head might indirata. Large noses in men are generally g),l signs; especially, they add emphasis to the good indication of a well fAnned head; they must nut be too fleshy or tqa lean. f they are long (yet short of being hnout -It •• they mark, as prolongation of the forehe..a. the intelligent, observant and produ.Ai re turn of the refined mind. If Boman, arcl,rd high and strong, they arc generally as , ,L-f ated with a less developed forehead and r , larger hindhead; and they disclose stren t l'i of will and energy, rather than intellectual power; they show also the want of that lc -finement which is indicated by the straig:.• • er nose. The Jewish, or bank nose, c• manly signifies shrewdness in worldly ma; tors; it adds force to the meaning of Ow narrow concentrative forehead, symbolic I! of singleness of oltject; and its usually nag row nostrils wear the unfailing sign of can tion and timidity. The Grecit, straight no indicates refinement of character, love for the fine arts and belles-lettrel, astafen. , - craft and preference for indirect : thal. direct action. Perpendicular nose., that is such as approach this form, supposes a mil. capable of acting and suffering with calm ness and energy. A nose slightly belied at its end, tcnu• and corroborates the indication o f the arc: lytic forehead. Such noses, large an: broad pointed, arc frequent in men wit:. acute practical knowledge of the we; Li The same belled end is often in the en cogitative; a wide nostriled nose, wide a the•end, thick and broad, indicate.; a tni , - that has strong powers of thought, and given to close and serious meditation. Wiz these symbols Larater's dicta falls in: •': nose whose ridge is broad, no matter ‘vi: er straight or curved, always announces • perior faculties. But this form is rory And again: "A small nostril is th • aorta: sign of a timid spirit." In a N% •Inn.l large nose is of more unem tail] it is apt to extend into enricntore well formed and finely moulds], large nose, a , :pecially one which is ne.trl straight, or slightly arched, is, in a woman, often characteristic of excellent mental holy - ex. But any of the more peenliarl:, forms of nose, if largely and coarsely ed in woman, denote a too sonseuline actor; and those that are of ill =en in !ma arc much more so in women; since the u,:t of being inapproptia;e is add •1 ;) ;liar „c tualformat ion. POTJU te AND BUT rEI:NI .1.411.1 story is told by some Ditbrri ;e boys of —lowa First," about the eiLtnge4 e Geri- password undemcnt about the battle of Sprinf;t:eld. (Joe of the Du bto: officers, whose duty it was to inritish •' gnat d with a pa , sword for the night. g o the word - Potomac." A Certnan on tzt:,u not underAanding distinctiy tiro tlitiere• • hotweon the Bs and undeil-tood it t "Bottotnie," and thiq, being tiond-..te_rr,. another, was crm:it:el to Soon afterward the office:. .4% I.', the word wiled r, tarn thr.,1; ; ; II and approaching . a , t , t,tincl cti.. r!crt halt and the %%,,r,: t:laanded. /lc ;2 : "Potomac.' 12= Gnu! this is Ow wci; I No, you shan't: :it ;11 ,, plac ;a bayonet nt hie to 0.1-t in a tr'T t told ?ir. (officer that is 31i.souri. "What is the word them?' "Buttermilk, tam you!" "Well then, Buttermilk, "Dat is right: now . you iiiit 73UrSt7.1t about your pizne , s." There was a generd cAcrlia•iling of the password, and the ditiorence between rot. sine and Butte:m:lk being under...toed. 0 1 , joke became one of the laughable ineiden• of the campaign. lin LIMN ESE =II . ra ii ME ma me ~i.:n'.. .:3