514 •tsiza r -11!Italigenter, pUBLIBBBII Evzei 'WEDmitiDAT'33T COO,PER,',6AApEifB4:I97. di. CO. J. M. Coomc, H i:g zm s', War; A. Mowroir, AMIED &umEwsow TERNO3-I`wo Dollars and Fifty Cents per annum, payaDla all cases in advance. OFFICE-BO'TNWEET MENNE OF - CENTRE squega. • letters. - .on business sbould be ad drese4d Cqopo., 84F33Elt$ON,& CO. Tittratm. Row - Godfrey Chose Ms Wi BY MARY B. CLARICE. " Godfrey, old boy," said Henry Clay ton, as he tilted back in his chair, and put his feet upon the mantle-piece, " when is the wedding to be. " Whose wedding ?" " Miss Laura Somers, orJenny, which is it ?" " I do not know, I'm sure." " NOw don't be mysterious, Godfrey ; you know you are a constant visitor, and all our set' are talking about the match. Don't pretend you have not selected one of the sisters," " How do you know whether either of them will have me ?,2 "Don't be absurd, old boy. Come be frank, which is the favorite sister ?" "Well, frankly then, I cannot tell you. I have visited the family for sev eral months, as you know, but I cannot decide. Laura is certainly the hand somest, with her flashing black eyes, and queenly manner ; but Jenny seems, although the youngest, to be the most womanly and useful of the two. Yet, I cannot be i sure of that. My entrance is the signal for cordial welcome and smiles, and let me call at what hour I will, they are always well dressed, and apparently disengaged. To be sure, I always, in the morning, have to wait some time before Laura is visible." " Pop in unexpectedly, and notice the internal economy." " How can I? A card at the door will put any lady on her guard, or even the notice of a gentleman visitor." "Go there in disguise. As a washer woman, for instance." "Good. I will." " Go there as a washerwoman"." cried Clayton. "Not exactly; but I will obtain ad mittance to a morning's privacy." " Well, let me know the result." Laura and Jenny Somers were the only children of a widower, who, al though in moderate circumstances, moved in fashionable society. At the period of my short sketch he was about to supply the lamented Mrs. Homer's place, after nearly ten years mourning;, and, although a kind and indulgent' parent, had no objections to his daugh ters' marriage, and, indeed, had told them so. Laura, whose high spirit re sented the probable supremacy of a step mother, had already selected Godfrey Horton for her future husband ; and Jenny, who was the younger, and gen tler in spirit, had tried to conquer a carefully concealed preference for the same ~arson. All his attentions were ascribed by her to a brotherly regard, though every act of kindness and cour tesy touched her to her very heart. It was the morning after a large ball and the sisters were in the breakfast room together. Laura, her glossy black hair pushed negligently off her face, with the rough, tumbled braids of last evening's coiffure gathered loosely iu a comb, wearing a soiled wrapper, torn stockings, and presented rather an alarming contrast to the brilliant ball room belle, was lounging on a sofa.— Jenny, in a neat morning dress, with a large gingham apron, and hair smooth ly brushed into a pretty knot, was wash ing the breakfast dishes. "There is an old man at the door with some artificial flowers," said the ser vant, opening the dining room door, "will you see him?" " No," said Jenny. " Yes," cried Laura, " send him up." The servant descended to obey the last order. In a few moments the old mein came. He was poorly clad, with a coarse, blue cloak, which was much too large for him. His hair was white, and he wore a beard and moustache of the same snowy hue. Making a low bow, he placed the. large basket upon a table and opened it. " I havea bunch of blue flowers here," said he, taking them from the basket, "that will just suit your golden hair, Miss," and held them up before Jenny. " It was my sister who wished to look at your flowers," said Jenny, quietly. " Yes, b;ing them here," was Laura's imperious ,command. The old man's eyes followed Jenny, as she washed, wiped, and put away the dishes, swept the room and dusted it, and then sat down beside Laura, who was still looking over the basket. " See, Jenny, this scarlet bunch. Will it not be lovely with a few dark leaves, to wear with my new silk ?" " But," whispered Jenny, " you can not afford it just now." "Aes I can. Father gave me some money yesterday." " To pay the last dry goods bill." " Well, I can have that carried to my private account." " Oh, Laura ! I hate to hear you talk of that private acconnt. It seems so much like cheating father." " It will stand till I am married, then I can easily save it out of my house keeping money." " I shouldn't wish to marry in debt," .said Jenny. The peddler looked at the sisters. " You had better take this blue bunch, Miss," he said to Jenny. ‘ ' If it ain't convenient to pay for it now, I will call again. " No, I shall not take them." " They are very becoming, Miss. Look in this glass." " I:wish my hair was light," said Laura. "I'd like to wear blue. Godfrey Horton said last night that forget-me nots were his favorite flowers." Jenny colored, and placing the bunch again in the basket, said : " Come Laura, decide. You are keeping one waiting whose time is probably valuable," and then passing a chair, she added, " Be seated, sir, you must be tired." " I am tired, indeed," was the reply. " I will take that scarlet bunch, and those red camelias, and this white clus ter," said Laura. "But, sister, you can't afford it." " Yes I can. Godfrey Horton Ls rich." The old man bit his lip. " Think," said Jenny, in an under -tone, "if you love him, how much it - will grieve him, if he should discover this deceit." • " Nonsense! Well, I'll tell you how -to remedy it. Lend me some money out of the housekeeping funds?" "Laura! Steal from father?" "There, dOn't preach." • ." Miss Jenny," said a servant, enter ' ing at that moment, "the dinner has come." • . Jenny left the room, and Laura still turned over the gay flowers, while the old man pointed out their various beauties, he, in the meantime, was run ning over the disordered'boiir, shabby dress, and lazy position, while he men ' 'tally -contrasted them witlaenny's neat Wire. • ' ' .i:ii '•••••1•'": - •.'" . 7".!';': :7:IT , . ...::-.,:!;-:". 7 1 ,. . , r . .': ~.• - 7 :', r'..:!:; , ` , 7 • ''''• •• • --• .23,...f.. , ..;.'4 . : . ' :.l ' . l 1 i - ' • ' ' ' ' ••••' . , , . ' !.• :'• . '.. r..- .: ...2 f. , ..) i ',i'l' '.'ic..i .' •..-. ',..i,.1,;;•.,- '." • "•• ' • 4' ' .—" f ' .:: - . ' ...'.:.- ','-';••„.,-.-.•••• i"__ 'in i - ... .: 1 i.d • . ~,..,, .• '‘ i -,- i ' - 1 ' .: V 'J - v --.,.. • . .._r:-.._.:- .:.,.:...7.;:fr " - 7.:. atii•L' fp . ''''./ • Ir. '• ••:-'. • 'I t•- , 9if ' '''' 7 ' . -;' : : : : .91:. ..9 - .••• .. '... '.'..: a•a; - ' • ' . . . i 9 • Jr•Oi o i l7l •I'•%"' X 9 ' ?.. 1 • ii:,, 97:1 1,.11' , tt)9 iv; ."':''' ,!-"---..--,'' •... j_ , :,. -:, • , ~. -1• I . -, - -•-• .... ,, tr , 1,1 ; •cs" i - r t,.- b 9 .:,...- ~• , ~1 1 ",-: .. - ' l. • - -In ''- -- --i:' II ;,:..., J-1 ~,,;,,, ~ „, ir: . . .. ... • • • . ... , .-/ : , .1 -.2t. , -;..i..... 1::. .1 -...11 9• , :. • 1 - .. . .- 1 illi9 . , , ••• • -,::.1 ;!::. , :""! : . 7 '• • -• -••'• ''' • • ••• '' . ~ . " " " • 44....,...... -•. • .. VOLUME 66 "Not.decided yet said Jenny, re turning after a short absence. "No. Come here." " I can't. Father has sent home a calf's head, and I'm afraid to trust it entirely to Margaret; I must superin tend the dinner, make a pudding, and the parlors must be dusted, and there is my white mull to be finished." " Before I'd be the drudge that you are," cried Laura. "Drudge! nonsense! I have plenty of time for enjoyment, and father cannot have a comfortable house if some one does not superintend these things. When I marry, you may do it," and she laughed merrily. " As if I should not marry first !"said Laura. "There, I have chosen all I want." "Shall I call again for the change?" said the peddler. " I shall be happy to put the Misses Somers on my list of customers." "Yes, call again," said Laura. So the peddler took up his basket, and walked home, threw aside his wig, beard, and disguise, and wrote an avow al of his hand and heart to Miss Jenny Somers, which was accepted. Laura Somers had two sources of pro found speculation. One was "why God frey Horton proposed to Jenny, instead of herself?" The other, " I wonder why that old man Dever called to be paid for those exquisite flowers ?" Avoiding a Dun A compositor in one of the daily news paper offices, though a good fellow, like many of the printing profession, (for they are all good fellows,) suffers from repeated attacks of limited finances, or revenue disproportional to his disburse ments. He has no objections to paying his debts, even to the last penny, when he has the money ; but when he is short, he abhors the idea of meeting his creditors, for he hates a dun as he hates the d—l or a dirty " proof." On one of the last occasions of the pressure upon typo';i monetary market, he was de seending from a news room to the street, when he meta collector, who asked him if James H. Smith—giving the prin ter's name—worked in that office. 'Why do you wish to see him ?' asked Smith. "I have a bill against him (producing 't) for $29, left by Dr.—, who, you re ,number, recently died, and his accounts have been placed in my hands for col lection." "James H. Smith," replied the com positor, repeating his own name slowly, as if it had a mysterious, familiar sound, and he was endeavoring to recall it. I have heard that name before, surely— James H. Smith—James H.—James H. —oh yes! (as if with sudden remem brance,) he used to be employed here, certainly he (lid. I remember now; he worked next to my case, poor fellow!" and the speaker paused and looked sad. " Did anything happen to him'?" ask ed the collector. " Yes, - he died one morning suddenly of the cholera, after attending the sick bed of a dying friend." "l)id he leave anything ?" asked the man of bills. " Oh, no, the boys in the office had to bury him. I gave five dollars myself to help in putting the generous creature under the sod. He died penniless." " Then there is no use in keeping this bill, I suppose." " None at all," said James H. Smith And as the collector tore up the bill and departed, he continued, to himself; " guess I've got rid of the old bore. It wasn't, perhaps, much of a story I was telling. Probably I was only anticipat ing a little after all—except in the five dollar contribution." A Word to Mothers Each mother is a historian. She writes not the history of empires or of nations on paper, but .she writes her history on the imperishable mind of her child. That tablet and that history will remain indelible when time shall be no more. That history each mother will meet again, and read with eternal joy or unutterable grief in the far-corn ing ages of eternity. This thought should weigh on the mind of every mother, and render her deeply circum spect, and prayerful and faithful in her solemn work of training her children for heaven and immortality. The minds of her children are very susceptible and easily impressed. A word, a look, a frown, may engrave au impressieht on the mind of a child which no lapse of time can efface or wash out. il'ou walk along the sea shore when the tide is out, and you form characters, or write words, or names in the smooth, white sand, which is spread out so clear and beautiful at your feet, according as your fancy may dictate ; but the return ing tide shall in a few hours wash out and efface forever all that you have written. Not so the lines and characters of truth or error, which your con duct imprints on the mind of your child. There you write impressions fir the everlasting good or ill of your child, which neither the floods nor the storms of the earth can wash out, nor Death's cold fingers erase, nor the slow moving ages of eternity obliterate. How care ful, then, should each mother be of her treatment of her child. How prayerful, and how serious and how earnest to write on the mind those truths which shall be his guide and teacher when her voice shall be silent in death, and her lips no longer move in his behalf, in commending her dear child to her cove nant God. A Fair Offer A veteran relates the following: It once happened that a mule driver was engaged in leading an unruly mule for a short distance, which job proved about as much as lie was able to do, and gave full employment for both his hands. As lie was thus engaged, a newly appointed brigadier rode by him in all the consequential radiance of his starlight ; when the mule driver hailed him as follows : " I say, I. wish that you would send a couple of men down here to help me to manage this mule." The brigadier, indignant at being so familiarly addressed, sternly replied : "Do you know who I am, sir!" " Yes," was the reply, " you are. Ge neral , I believe." " Then why do you not salute me be fore addressing me?" inquired the briga dier. " I will," responded the M. D.; "if you will get oir and hold the mule." Phe brigadier retired in good order. Botany is an inexhaustible, tra,n quil, ever interesting science, attaching the mind to nature with bonds of flowers, Many men dediaate business to the devil and shovel religion into the cracks and crevices' of time • and make it the hypobriticalout-einivll34 cot theirleisure and laziness. Mary . canayan An Incident of the Itigh Fandise.o It became part ri ,of my lot in life tohel the Irish government (Idling the event ful pdiod of the Irish famine of 1816 7. I was a Poor-Law Inspector, and had a large district in my charge. I had ne- cessarily to go about a good deal and visit workhotiSes, hospitals, and relief stations in the discharge of my duties. My - mode of conveyance, as a rule, was an outside Irish jaunting car, and with horse, or' rather indeed with a pony, I used of a day sometimes to get over 50 long Irish miles. I started one morning in the early spring from my headquarters to visit a station in a very remote and wild part of my district, my manservant—coach man, groom, butler, valet, all comprised in one very original and funny individ- ual called " Mick,"—accompanying me. The night before I left on this particu lar journey, in which occurred an inci dent which I arn about to relate, I told Mick to be sure to stock the " well" of he car with rye bread, which I used to bake in my own house, and above all not to forget to fill my flask with bran dy, which, as we shall presently see, was not altogether used for selfish pur poses. Many a time when I have been driving along the wild roads I have seen people who, to my of- finial knowledge, were in the re ceipt of the full amount of ration re lief, literally looking starved. The avidity with which they seized and de voured the loaves of rye bread I used to give them from the "well' satisfied me hat the money which was sent to us Poor Law Inspectors from all parts of the United Kingdom, to expend in auy way we thought fit, and which for the most part we applied to the establish ment of bakehouses, did all the good which it was intended to do, and even more than the generous donors could have anticipated. I scarcely think I was ever out on a more lovely day than that to which I allude, and if one could only have felt that the people were not dying in hun dreds throughout the district, and through the island generally, such a day, amidst such scenery, would have brought its fullest enjoyment. Skirting along lovely lakes, above which rose hills clad with venerable beauty, I drove some ten miles, and then turned off by a mountain road which led by a long descent to a wild and barran bog, stretching unbrokenly for many miles towards the seacost. As 'we got on the bog there was an indica I stopped to make some inquiries, when suddenly I felt my knees em braced, and I saw a girl about 18 years of age kissing my feet. " What do you want, my good girl?" on that there had been a turf road, but I said I. :radually its traces became more and ore Indistinct, and we had to make he best of our way across the "blasted heath." At last we came to a road again, and I was enabled to shape my course for the relief station, which I was about to inspect. The path, or road, or whatever else one might choose to call it, was straight, and so there was nothing to interrupt the view right before us. Mick, who was never much inclined to wrap himself up in himself, and had been discoursing eloquently on the value of good sound roads, giving me his private opinion as to the character of that on which we were then travelling, suddenly called out. " What o z u earth, sir, is that before us?" " Where?" said I. "Don't you see, sir? The Lord save us!—a body stretched across the road." On looking before me, at about a hundred yards' distance, I saw that to which Mick directed my attention. " Yes," said I, " no doubt it is some poor creature who has died on the way to the station at —, but \N:e shall soon know." On coming up we found it was the corpse of a woman apparently about 4n years of age. Accustomed as I was to see the effects of famine, I was horrified at the ghastly appearance which she presented. Her face was literally so attenuated that I could see all its venous and arterial anatomy as well as if the skin had been removed While looking at this horrid sight, it seemed to me that she could not have been very long dead. I could see no habitation for miles around. "Possibly," I said, " life is not quite extinct," and, recollecting the little smattering of doc toring which I learned iu early life, I thought it worth while to see what effect a stimulant might have. " Bring me my brandy flask at once, Mick," said I, " and help me to _raise her head." " For what, sir ?" said he. " Bedad, it would take more than your honor could do to bring her back again." " Well," I added, "do what I tell you, Mick, and let us hope for the best." We lifted her body and placed it against a little hillock which was quite I close to where we found the woman, and lat once proceeded to open her mouth, a proceeding attended with con siderable difficulty. Holding her head back I managed to pour nearly half the contents of my flask (a pretty large one, by the way) down her throat, when suddenly I felt a sort of convulsion at the back of her neck which rested on my baud. This convulsion was to my great delight speedily followed by a faint hic cough, and I at once made up my mind that if I only persevered, I might have the intense satisfaction of restoring a fellow creature to life. Mick, and I then set to work, and, taking the cushion of the car, we stretch ed our poor patient in a recumbent posi tion. We then commenced to rub the extremities, which were like ice, and with a good will we rubbed until We were rewarded by seeing the head move, the lips twitch, and various other indications of returning vitality. But to succeed must be a work of some time and here we were nearly fifteen miles away from the station. We worked on however, for a little time longer, and I then determined to get as fast as I could to my 'destination. We placed her on the car in a sitting position, and started for —. We had not gone more than four or five hundred yards when we encoun tered a most abominable stench, which was so sickly that'l determined to stop and ascertain what it was. Looking to the right, our attention was directed to a thin column of bluish sntioke, which came out of the hog. Walking over to the place from whence the smoke issued 'and scarcely able to breathe from the offensive odor, which became worse and worse, I found to . - my horror that the smoke was from u human habitation, if such it could be called—an old gravel pit, 'in which I very soon found tp 9ause ‘ a 'the stench : Here were laying . two bodies in an adVariced stage of de-, .compositionsn old man and wpan. shudder now when„l. think of ,t 4 sight I saw. It was horrible beyond de4; 31, 1865. LANCASTER, .P.A, WaMSDAY 314 9 - ,RNI-N9 - ; -111AY . , scriPtion: ocedried "to me at once that the woman•welound ,on throat bad crept out of this hovel on seeing the car coming across the bog, and had sunk in the lifeless state of exhaustion in which we found her. And so it filth ed out.to be when, I made subsequent inquiry. We now resumed our journey, and at last arrived at the station, where I lost no time in getting medicalrelief for my poor patient, and in sending to the gravel pit to have th e bod ies moved and buried. The next day I returned to headquart ers,,aud from time to time afterwards had letters from the doctor reporting to me that the woman very speedily re covered, and out of money placed at my disposal for charitable purposes I was enabled ° to contribute to her comfort in' the shape of clothing. A couple of months or more passed away, and the severity of the famine was mitigated by the abundance of food which came into the country. The people began to look better, and every one was in better spirits. My visits to the remoter stations of my district were necessarily fewer, for I had important duties to discharge at le town in which I lived, and where the union workhouse was situated.— They were now principally directed to the prevention of abuse iu the adminis tration of relief. Though the distress• was still great, yet it was an undoubted fact within the experience of all those engaged in the Poor-Law-service, that abuses crept in to a very large extent, and it was no easy matter to control them. On another lovely morning sow far advanced in the summer, I again started for the station at —, near which oc curred the incident which I have en deavored to tell. As I passed by the spot where our progress on the road was arrested by the body of the poor woman, Mick said:' " Ah, your honor, glory be to God and thanks to you, do you recollect the crayture we saw here?" " Yes, Mick," said I, " and I hope we shall never see such a sight again." " Amen, sir," said he, giving the pony a gentle reminder that he was to get along as quickly as he could. We drove on for a couple of miles, when we met a group of peasantry of the 'district going to the relief station for their ra tions of Indian meal stirabout. " Ah! your honor," said she, looking at me with an expression I can never forget, " don't you recollect Mary Can avan ?" " Mary Canavan ! Surely you canno be the woman I " Ah ! yes, sir," she cried. And there she was, the shrivelled hag of 40 transformed into a girl of 18, and all by the simple administration of wholesome food for a few weeks. To those who saw scenes such as I did, this will not appear strange. But even now, at this lapse of time, when the reat famine of Ireland when all its :iorrible circumstances is well-nigh for- gotten, I venture to tell this story abou poor Mary Canavan. Spare Moments. A lean, awkward boy came one morn ing to the door of the principal of acele brated school and asked to see him. The servant eyed his mean clothes and thinking he looked more like a beggar than anything else, told him to go around to the kitchen. The boy did as he was bidden, and soon appeared at he back door. " You want a breakfast, more like, lid the servant girl, " and I can give ou that without troubling him. Than you," said the boy, " I should ave no objection to a bite, but I should ke to see Mr. , if he can. seeme." "Some old clothes, may be you want," remarked the servant, again eyeing the boy's patched clothes. " I guess he has none to spare, he gives away a sight," and without minding the boy's request, she went away about her work. " Can I see Mr. the boy, after finishing the bread and butter. " Well, he is in the library, if he must be disturbed he must, but he does like to be.alone sometimes," said the girl in a peevish tone. She seemed to think it very foolish to admit such an ill-look ing fellow into her master's presence. However, she wiped her hands and bade him fellow. Opening the library door, she said: "Here's somebody, sir, who is dread ul anxious to see you, and so I let him I don't know how the boy introduced himself, or how he opened business, I ut I know that after talking awhile, the principal put aside the volume which he was studying, and took up some Greet hooks and began to examine the new comer. The examination lasted some time. Every question which the principal asked the boy, was answered readily. "Upon my word," exclaimed the principal, "you certainly do well," looking at the boy from head to foot, over his spectacles. "Why, my boy, where did you pick up so much ?" "In my spare moments," answered the boy. Here he was,poor, hard working, with but a few opportunities for schooling yet almost fitted for college, by simply improving his "spare moments." Truly, are not spare moments the " gold dust of time ?" How precious they should be? What account can you show for them? Look and see. This boy can tell you how very much can be laid up by improving them, and there are many other boys, I am, afraid, in jail, in the house of correction, in the forecastle of a whale ship, in the tippling shop, who, if you should ask them when they be gan their sinful courses, might answer, " in my spare moments." " In my spare moments I gambled for marbles. In my spare moments I began to smoke and drink. It was in my spare moments • that I gathered Wicked associates." • • • Oh, be "carefuljkow you spend your spare moments? . Temptation always hunts you out in seasons like these. When you are not busy, he gets into your hearti,ll hdposibly 4 Can, in just such gaps. There, h6,. : liideS himself, planning, ail sorts of :naischleti Take care of yoUr " spare moments." —"My dear said Mrs. Bumbler laugh " ,you. must 14ive-somitWag_ warm roimil piakip. thew , rip : 0.17 ; 34m B. mentioned the request 04 tterpuPt.her , to . lier:pdati;!!tttut hel inittiediatidr coin "r4id,*-4„4:; " • • Prieods to Prosperity One of the hardest trials of 'those who fall from affluence and honor: to poverty and obscurity.is to. find that the attachment of so many in whom they confided was a Mask, to gain their awn ends, or. was a miserable shalloWnEsa.. ometimes, doubtless, it is with regret that these frivolous followers of the world desert those upon whom they have fawned ; but they soon forget them. Flies leave the kitchen when the dishes .are empty. The parasites that cluster around the favorite of for ttine, to gather his gifts and climb -4 by his aid, linger in the sunshine, but scat ter at the approach of a storm as the leaves cling toatree in summer weather, but drop off at the breath of winter, and leave it naked to the stinging blast. Like ravens settled down for a banquet, suddenly scared by a noise, how quick ly, at the first sound of calamity, these superficial earthings are mere specks on the horizon. But a true friend sits in the centre, and is for all times. Our need only re veals him more fully, and binds him more closely to us. Prosperity and ad versity are both revealers, the difference being that in the former our friends know us, lathe latter we know them. But notwithstanding the insincerity and greediness prevalent among men, there is a vast deal more esteem and fellow yearning than is ever outwardly shown. There are more examples of unadulterated. affection, more deeds of silent love and magnanimity than is usually supposed. Our misfortunes bring to our side teal friends, before unknown. Benevolent impulses, where we could least expect them in modest privacy, enact many scenes of beautiful wonder amidst plaudits of angels. Music as a Physical Agent It communicates to the body shocks which agitate the members to their base. In churches the flame of candles oscillates to the quake of the organ. A powerful orchestra near a sheet of water ruffles its surface. A learned traveller speaks of an iron ring which swings to and fro to the murmur of the Tivoli Falls. In Switzerland I excited at will in a poor child afflicted with a fright ful nervous malady, hysterical and cataleptic crises, by playing in the minor key of E flat. The celebrated Dr. Bertier asserts that the sound of a drum gives the colic. Certain medical men state that the notes of the trumpet quicken the pulse and induce slight perspirations. The sound of the bassoon is cold, the notes of the French horn eta distance, and the harp, are voluptuous. The flute played softly in the middle register calms the nerves. I once had a dog who would generally sleep on hearing music, butthe moment I played in the minor key he would, bark piteously. The dog of a celebrated singer, whom I knew would moan bit terly, give signs of violent suffering, the instant that his Mistress chanted a chro matic gamut. A certain chord produces on my sense of hearing the same effect as the heliotrope on my sense of smell and the pine apple on my sense of taste. Rachel's voice delighted the ear by its ring before one had time to seize the sense of what was said, or appreciate the purity of her diction. We may affirm, then, that, musical sound, rythmical or not, agitates the whole physical econo my—quickens the pulse, incites perspi ration, and produces a pleasant momen tary irritation of the nervous system.— Got:4,11(.11k. Don't Complain Don't complain of your birth, your training, your employment, your hard ships ; never fancy you could be some thing if you only had a different lot or sphere assigned to you. God understands his own plans, and knows what you want a great deal better than you do. The very things that you most deprecate as fatal limitations and obs•ti notions, are probably what you most' want. What you call hindrances and discourage ments, are probably God's opportunities and it is nothing new that the patient should dislike his medicines, or any certain proof that they are poisons. No ! a truce to all such impatience. Choke that devilish envy which gnaws at your heart because you are not in the same lot with others ; bring down your soul, or rather bring it up to receive God's will, and do his word, in your lot, in your sphere, under your cloud of ob scurity, against your temptations ; and then you shall find that your condition is never opposed to your own good, but really consistent with it. Sea Sounding Various sea soundings, made by the new Telegraph Company in England, in preparation for the laying of the At lantic submarine cable this summer, revealthe following results : The Baltic ' sea between Germany and Sweden is only 120 feet deep, and the Adriatic be tween Venice and Trieste 130. The greatest depth of the channel between France and England does not exceed3oo whilst to the southw est of Irela n il, Where the sea is opened, the depth is more than 2,000 feet. The seas to the south of Europe are much deeper than those in the interior:. In the narrowest part of the Strait of Gibraltar the depth is only 1,000 feet, while a little more to the east it is 3,000. On the coast of Spain the depth is nearly 6,000 feet. At 230 miles south of Nantucket (south of Cape Cod) no bottom was found at 7,800 feet. The greatest depths o f all are to be met within the Southern Ocean. To the west of the Cape of Good Hope, 16,000 feet have been measured, and to the west of St. Helena 27,000. Dr. Young estimates the average depth of the At lantic at 26,000 feet, and of the Pacific at 29,000. IP Whatis a newspaper ?Itis a tran script of thoughts, and a record of what is passing in the world. But it is.not as most books are, the transcripts of the thoughts of a single, mind. It is an ex hibition of the thoughts of many minds. It is collected widom of the world, in some instances, perhaps, spiced with a little of the nonsense and folly of the same minds. It is a bequet of beautiful flowers, composed of all the varieties in nature. It is a casket of precious jewels of every, 'hue, size and shape. It is a sweet repast, a board spread before the hungry, comPrisirig'the choiceSt meats and richest, deserts that earth cati'iiiford —a feast'sf. fat thinA - s o a perfect of every dainty that, the mina can desire. Who would be without a newspaper Who would he without thee ? None; we venture to say, except the old fogies who are a hundred years behind the age. -Weak dosei . Of Washboard are now, reeommoil:ded t 4 ),laOjet WP3INii of dyspepsia. Tonn a % wen troubhpf.), t in, the B aum _way may ha cgred by a ,strong. preparation of wood taw, gttiorelatiiono. Letter from Jacob Thompson atiaa-,State Saverelgaty—aiwil War. To the .'them cy' the Y. Tribune: . When hostilities between the North ern and Southern States bioke out, and especially prior to that time, I enter tained, I confess, deep and strong pre judices against you and your paper, on account of your violent attacks npou Southern interests and institutions.— But since that'time I have really sought the Tribune to learn the truth. There is a frank and manly directness in your columns which I admire, and therefore I now make an appeal to your generosity to admit this communication into the columns of the Tribune.' Surely' there can be no longer any existing reason why Northern papers should desire to stain and stab the reputation of Southern men ; and I suppose the press will be muzzled no longer, and a difference of opinion no longer be regarded as treason. The search of a good man is for truth. To: set that before the people of the United States is the work in wkich I ask your assistance and that of Alt who hate unjust persecution. 'I have been attacked often in North etn journals within the last four years, but heretofore have attempted no reply. To defer longer, however, if the avenues to the public ear are open to me, would argue contempt for public sentiment on my part which I do not feel, and absence Might be construed into an admission of the justness of the attacks. Last summer, when my name was unnecessarily drawn into a correspond- enee between yourself and some of my friends at Niagara Falls, the New York Times began a regular charge upon me for "thieving," while Secretary of the Interior, u.ing the epithet " Mr. Bu- chanan's thieving Secretary," and others of the same purport. The Herald afterwards indulged iu the same kind of 'expressions. What was the transac tion by which these expressions are sought to be justified? there follows an explanation that it was not Thompson, but one of his clerks, who stole those Indian bonds.] An editorial appeared in the New York Herald evidently suggested by GenOal Dix, in which the impression is sought to be made that I was in some way connected with the hotel burning n - New York. This seems to be an in erence from the fact that a Mr. McDon- Id was arrested and -held in dread of his life for some time, because of his supposed participation in this attempt at incendiarism. The detectives find out that this McDonald has a brother in Toronto, C. WI, who is greatly devoted to him, to whom they make an appeal to save his brother's life, and point out to him how it may be (lone, and that was to appeal to the generosity and mag nanimity of those who were engaged in it to exonerate the prisoner, as they had no doubt it was true he had taken no part in the affair. The brother, under the guidance of his feelings, bit at the bait, and hunted up and induced the young men with whom his brother was charged to have been associated to state his entire innocence of all connection with them. The young men, fearing the strength of McDonald's feelings might induce him to act unwisely with their statement, and having full confidence in my discretion and friendliness, directed him to place it in my hand, to be used when I might deem it necessary to save the prisoner's life. I did not see the young men on the subject. Afterwards the detectives induced the different female members of the family to make the most piteous appeals to me for the paper. I never believed its production necessary to save the prisoner's life, be cause each messenger reported that Oen. Dix did not believe the prisoner guilty, but refused to release him until he could obtain this negative testimony thus playing upon the feelings of this most estimable family. When I saw the game that was played I wrote a letter to Mr. McDonald in prison, say ing I was willing to certify that I had a paper signed by some of the parties en gaged in the burning, in which he was entirely exonerated from all participa tion in it. But this did not satisfy the authorities. Finding they could not move me, they turned upon poor Capt. Kennedy, then under sentence of death, and induced him (under what circum stances I know not, but I presume when he was intoxicated) to certify - to a state ment as a true copy of the paper I held, : but which was no copy, and which con-, tained what I have since ascertained to ; be absolute falsehoods. They stimulated. , and excited Capt. Kennedy against me in every possible way, but they could not in his most desperate moments get him to implicate me in the plan for the burning, because he knew it wti.s false. Butyou see the extent of my connection. It assumes this proportion, no more. But of all the astonishing things which have happened during this war between the States, the late proclamu l tion''ofthe President is the most un, reasonable and unjust. It seems there has been created a new bureau, called the "Bureau of Military Justice." lii that it seems there is evidence that the assassination of the late President was " incited, concerted and procured by and between Jefferson Davis, at Rich mond, Va.," and myself mid others in Canada, and that myself and others are rebels and traitors, "harbored in Cana da." When this proclamation reached me I was in New Brunswick, on my way home. This is a novel mode of banishment. Now, sir, mark how a direct statement will meet every point made by the evidence in the " Bureau of Military Justice" and put to open shame so:solemn an act as a proclama.- tion. I aver upon my honor that I have never known, or conversed, or held communication, either directly or indirectly, with Booth, the assassin of the President, or with any one of his associates, so far as I have seen them named. I knew nothing of their plans. I defy the evidence in the Bureau of Military Justice. The proof, whatever it is, is a tissue of falsehoods, and its publication cannot be made without ex posing its utter rottenness. I know there is not half the ground to suspect me that there is to suspect President Johnson himself. First—There was absence of all motive On my part. To have removed Lincoln at the time it was done was most un fortunate both for me and for the peo ple of the South. This I have believed, and have often so expressed myself. President Johnson was to acquire a daz zling.power in the event of Lincoln's death. ASegoncl—A Paper is found in President Johnson's room, after the assassinaton, signed by the assassin himself, to the effect that he (Booth) does not wish to trouble him (Johnson), but wants to know if he (Johnson) is in. Now con sider this note is from a private citizen to a high official, and it is certain that if it had been sent by any other man, at any other time, to any other official except the one most deeply interested in the event about to happen, it would have implied previous intimacy and in tercourse, and a wish to have an inter view without witnesses, which the writer expected, circumstances admit ting it. Third—President Johnson goes to bed, on the night of the assassination, at the unusual, hour for Washington of nine o'cloc4, and is asleep, of course, when an aritious gentleman leaves the side of the dying. President to inform the new incumbent of his great good fortune, which filled him with unutter able distress. Now, mark me, I do not say ,that all this. creates.a suspicion. in my mind of the complicity of President Johnson in the fonl work upon President Lincoln: But ;this I do say; that if such circum stances could be so well taken against ,8.,G., narris, of Maryland; Ben.'Wood, of New York, or Mr. Val landigham o of Ohio, they would have beenreceived in the. Bureau of Military • Justimas testimony as strong as, proofs frqin Holy Writ. These facts may, pos- Efibly-suggest . to - 1 3 ,reSi4r0 Johnson and ,thosCiwho , o*.e': ; tl/gir ottiotsl goSltion and;perspnal consequence to the breath of his nostrils; ugqo - d and sufficient'rea-. son:why, the.excited. public mind of the. people of the United litotes, which hai NVIVIEER .21. „ been lashed into fury by Well ekinperted manipuhitions, and now d4inends victim, should believe that cthere was evidence in the "Bureau .of Military Justice" convict Southern men— "rebels and traitors"—of having "in cited, concerted and procured" the as sination of President Lincoln. But, at all events, these facts ought to teach President Johnson a lesson of modera- tion and charity to all those suspected. I feel ,confident no fact, susceptible of being 'tortured' by the shrewdest inge nultr.into a coloring so unfavorable, can be shown in truth against President Davis or myself, nor, do I believe, against any, pne of the gentlemen nam ed in the prochunation. Again, I atn denounced as a traitor and rebel in this proclamation. Let the world judgebetween President Johnson. mcal.myself, not according to the law of might, but according to the rules of right. For four years prior to the secession of Mississippi, I was absent from the State, engaged in the service of the United State;. I had no control and could ex- ert no influence over the political action of the State. President Johnson, on the contrary, had been in the meantime in the service of the State of Tennessee, a while her chief magistrate, and then the representative of her sovereignty in the Senate of the United States—a body in which all the States are sovereign and equal, irrespective of strength and popu lation. Prior to the war between the States, we both had been democrats and belonged to the same party. In our creed, the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions of '9B-'99 set forth the doctrine of State rights. The Democratic party for sixty years, with only temporary departures, had held to their cardinal principles as initiated by Jefferson and Madison who had become the great apostles of the party. By them, we learn that the Constitution of the United States is a compact between sovereign States, each State, acting for itself, and as an integral party. The powers granted were merely delegated powers, to be exercis ed by a common agency for the common - welfare. To avoid future misunder standings, three of the States, in their articles of ratification, expressly re served the right to resume the powers delegated whenever they believed they were not used for their advantage. On the subject of treason the United States could declare no act treason, except the making war upon the United States and the giving aid and comfort to the enemy. Each State, however, being sovereign and having a larger scope of powers, could declare almost any act treason—a refusal to bear arms in her defence, to return home when required to do so, to bring into the common treasury any proportion, of the property required of each citizen. We were both North Carolianians. When she refused to ratify the federal constitution we remained North Carolianians, owed our allegiance to the State, and were bound to obey her orders. By her act of ratification, afterwards, she made us citizens of the United States. In consequence of her act and in obedience to her order, we both were bound to obey the constitu tional laws and regulations of the United States, and if either of us had been guilty of resisting the law with an armed force, we would have been guilty of trea son, because we acted as individuals on our own responsibilty and by our own mere motion, and the laws of the United States operated directly on individuals and individuals only. But, on the con trary, if North Carolina, acting in her sovereign capacity, resumed her,delegate powers for any cause and then ordered us to take up arms in her defence, obedi ence to her order might be construed possibly as war upon the United States, but we would not be guilty of treason as individuals, because we would have had no volition. Our act would be the act of the State ; cud, if there was any guilt, the State will beguilty of treason, and that is' a manifest absurdity, as there is no legal mode of punishing a State. And have our institutions been so miserably constructed as to place the citizen in a position which forces him to be guilty of the highest crime known to the law, without any volition of his own, when obedience to the order of one government makes him guilty of trea son to another ? When Mississippi seceded I felt it to be my duty to leave the service of the United States, return home, and subject myself to the orders of my State; for the sacred cause of State rights and State sovereignty, 'the doctrine of the fathers, I was willing to stake my life, my fortune and all my hopes. Mr. John son thought it his duty when Tennessee seceded to hold on to his place, to set at nought the action of his State, which had so often honored him, and to place himself under the protection of the United States. He took sides with power; I took sides with weakness. Out motives are known only to the liv ing' God ; but I claim to have been honest, self-sacrificing and patriotic in the course I pursued, and I leave to pos terity to decide whether power has been given on earth to make wrong right. The fortune of war cannot change a principle, although it may revolutionize a government. I cannot but think this proclamation was not intended for me, but it was to furnish an excuse to deal harshly with President Jefferson Davis, if arrested.— A purer patriot, a more conscientious Christian, and a more honorable gentle man than he never lived in any age or country. All he has done has been in obedience to the behests of the sovereign States composing the confederacy. He leaves, if the power and cruelty of his enemies make it necessary for him to leave, with the proud consciousness of having nobly done his whole duty— More true joy Marcellus exiled feels, Than Cinsa.r with a Senate at his heels. The States were once considered sov ereignties, and as such, challenged our respect and obedience. Now, after a war of four years of unexampled suffer ing,distinguished by feats of gallantry, that reflect the highest honor upon the parties engaged, after the two parties have been recognized by themselves and by all the civilized world as bellig erents, to conclude the war by simply regarding the armies of the United States as a huge posse cornitatw, and the opposing armies as so many felons re sisting arrest, is a most lame and impo tent conclusion, which will shock the civilization of the age, and render this mighty war a tragical farce. There was no need of offering twenty five thousand dollars reward for my ar rest. If I felt the least assurance of being tried according to the recognized principles of law, without a pre-judg ment, without the arbitrariness of a court acting under the instructions of this " Bureau of Military Justice," and without contumely, I would go in per son and deliver myself up to the proper judicial authorities. Until I have such an assurance, I think I ought to keep out of the way, which no doubt will gratify my enemies,: With respect, JACOB THOM YSUIsi. —Some few years ago there was a notary public in Washington, an old and highly-respected gentleman, who had held his office through all the political twistings and turnings of our capital for nearly twenty years. A young friend was -in his office one day, and while sitting by the table picked up a small, old, leather covered book which, upon being opened, proved to be "Thaddeus of Warsaw." He casually remarked to Mr. Smith, the notary: "I see you have a copy of Thaddeus of Warsaw here." "Thaddeus of Warsaw!" was the reply."" "What do you mean?" "Why, this is a copy of It." "ThaddeUs Of Warsaw!" exclaimed the old gentlenian. He snatched the book, gave one glanCeat it, and then , cried out, "For twenty years I have been swearing ,people on that book, thinking itwas a Bible! . All those oaths ain't worth the paper they are written on!" That very day hp patronized the Bible, Society. Agency, and got a finely bound 0o y, which could by IVY possibility .1041cort, for a novel: ....:A=alkiliiikiiiNADNMlLlW l K9 6 :-.15=-.--_--- BrICES6.--ir --',.a- year--p_er . naregtsit " MiitßeteealOne.rWr 1 1 : ? 4 ,'' ran% i i ' , --;. :, ,i - I- ..J ., °NAL PROPERTY ant ear , ••'''') ftlikr,MiTATS. , ter.n - Anviertromro, - 7- - eanurarline - J o ,__. . Ural,tusk' -cents, for each pgbpt!ilvAlt.-t 4 9r , 7 - Ilion. toe Piarrr-MIrmOnCES and other advaes-by . - 'I. One "Vianin;:l yearr.......« , •—•'• ' :•.* ''• 6D Half eel_ tintn_,l-,Yelklr;”7----4; ' T= r ecutime,,i Te.r,rrni '' • ' n••••••!.! ' ''' , l , . , .., , . Ru ne scri year nss Ceauss,9olAPlPlPrAessi 10 .one sear , Business 4:36 7 .178,Ere . 1.1.nee Or ecrs, one ,• . - • .., .. —...----, 5 . .,:; : LEns.".. elmcal& HoTarsr • • Executors' notices-. fultninietrators' noti_oes, ................. , Assignees' notices, - ........„.,,-- 2.00 . Auditors' not. e 150 .• ether "Norreel," ten lines, or less,' ~ three times, A Startling Scene In Church There were many thrilling scenes in the New England churches during the revolutionary war. The following one occurred in Sharon, Connecticut, under the ministry of Rev. Cotton Mather Smith. It is found in kleadley's "Chap lains of the Revolution:" Mr. Smith one Sunday took for his text a part of Isaiah xxi, 11, 12: "Watch man, what of the night? The watch man said : The morning cometh." The question in the first part of this passage had been the daily, almost hourly, in quiry for nearly a month, of every one of that congregation, and hence its ap propriateness was keenly felt, but the startling announcement, "The morn ing cometh," took them by surprise, and they could not at first compre hend its significance, or how it could be adapted to the preSent gloomy prospect. Had he heard any good news ? What happened that he could say so confidently : " The morning cometh ?" No; he had noth ing new to tell them, only to proclaim over again his unshaken confidence in God's promises. He did not attempt to conceal or lessen the calamities that had befallen the country, nor deny that a fearful crisis was at hand. He ac knowledged that to human appearance " clouds and darkness were round about God's throne," but said that the eye of faith could .pierce the gloom. The throne was there, though wrapped in impenetrable darkness. In all the dis asters that had successively overwhelm ed them, he traced the hand of God, and declared that, to his mind, they clearly indicated some striking interposition of Nvine.Providence about to take place in their behalf. " Man's extremity was God's opportunity." Our extremity had come, and now was the time for him to make bare " His arm for the de- liverance of the people." Prophet-like, kindling with the vision on which the eyes of his faith rested, he boldly dropped the general subject of God's faithfulness, and told his aston ished hearers that he believed they were on the point of hearing extraordinary news of victory to our arms. He would not wait for an indefinite future to prove his faith to be well founded—he was willing to bring it to the test or the pres ent. They might judge whether he was right or wrong, for, said he, " The morning now cometh.' I see its beams already gliding the mountain tops, and you shall soon behold its brightness bursting over the laud." One cannot imagine the effect of such language uttered by the minister of God in such a time of doubt and suspense. He ceased, and, as he closed the Bible and exclaimed "Amen ! so let it be," a silence, profound and death-like, rested on the audience. Each one seemed to feel as if an invisible presence was there, and some weighty announcement was 'ust at hand. Suddenly the deep hush was broken by the distant clatter of a horse's hoof along the road. The sharp and rapid strokes told of swift riding and of ur gent haste. They knew at once what it meant. For days and weeks their eyes had strained up the street that led northward, to catch sight of the mes senger of good or evil tidings that was hourly expected. He had come at last, and as nearer, clearer, rang the sound of that wild gallop on the listening ear, each looked in mute and earnest inquiry into his neighbor's face. Right on through the place, straight for the meet ing-house, darted the swift rider, and drawing rein at the door, leaped from the saddle, and leaving his foam-cover ed steed unattended, strode into the main aisle. On the deep silence that filled the building like a sensible pres ence his armed heel rung like the blows of a hammer. As he passed along a sudden paleness spread over the crowd of faces turned with a painful eagerness toward him. But looking neither to the right, nor the left, the dread mes senger passed on, and, mounting the pulpit stairs, handed the pastor a letter. Notwithstanding, the good man's faith his hand trembled, and an ashy hue overspread his face as he reached out to receive it. " Burgoyne has sur rendered," were the first words that met his eye. He staggered under them as under a blow. The next moment a radiance like thatof the morning broke over his countenance, and he burst into tears. Rising to read the incredible tidings, such a tide of emotion flooded his heart - that he could scarcely utter them aloud. The audience sat for a moment overwhelmed and stupitied, then, as their pastor folded his hands And turned his eyes toward heaven in a thankful prayer, impelled by a simul taneous movement they fell like one man on the knees and wept aloud. Sobs, sighs, and fervently uttered " Amens" were heard on every side, attesting the depth of their gratitude and the ecstasy of their joy. " The morning" had come, bright and glorious, and its radiance filled all the heavens. Deaths of EnglistilElng,s and Queens. William the Conqueror died from enormous fat, from drink, and from the violence of his passions. William Rufus died the death of the poor stags that he had hunted. Henry the First died of gluttony.. Henry the Second died of a broken heart occasioned by the bad conduct of his children. Richard eclair de Lion died like the animal from which his heart was named by an arrow from an archer. John died, nobody knows how, but it is said of chagrin, which we suppose is another term for a dose of hellebore. Henry the Third is said to have died a natural death. Edward the First is likewise said to have died of a " natural sickness," a sickness which it would puzzle all the college of physicians to denominate. Edward the Second was most bar barously and indecently murdered by ruffians employed by Ids own mother and'her paramour. Edward the Third died of dotage, and Richard the Second of starvation, the very reverse of George the Fourth. Henry the Fourth is said to 'have died '"of fits caused by uneasiness/' and uneasiness in palaces in those times was a very common complaint. Henry the Fifth is said to have died " of "[painful affliction, prematurely !" This is a courtly phrase for getting rid of a king. Henry the Sixth died in prison, by means known then only to his jailor, and known now only to Heaven. Edward the Fifth was strangled in the tower by his uncle, Richard the third. Richard the Third was killed in bat tle. Henry the Seventh wasted away as a miser ought to, and Henry the Eighth died of carbuncles; fat and fury, while Edward the Sixth died of a decline. Queen Mary is said to have died of "a broken heart," whereas she died of a surfeit, from eating too much of black puddings. Old Queen Bess is said to have died of melancholy, from having sacrificed Essex to his enemies—her private char acter not being above suspicion. James 'the first died of drinking, and of the effects of a nameless vice. Charles the First died arighteous death on the'scaffold, and Charles the Second died suddenly, it is said of apoplexy. Williwn the Third died from con sumptive habits of body, and from, the stumbling of his horse. Queen Anne died from her attachment to strong water," or, in other words, from drunkenness, which the physicians politely called dropsy. George the First died of drunken ness, which his physicians a.s politely called an apoplectic fit: ", I George the Sedond died of a - rupture of the heart, which, the periodicals of that day termed a, visitation of God. It is the only instance in which 'God ever touched his heart. - George the Third died as he.hadJived --a madman.:: Throughout life, was at least a consistent monarch... • George. the Fourth, 'died of gluttony and drunkeimeas. • Wifilam the-Fourth died amidst the sympathi6 of his subjects.--The