G adnic.§ zan2o TOWANDA.: n m o rninn, %unmet 11, 1852. :-:;rlritrr linttrg. Fmm the lifmton Lem/cr. THE NEW ARISTOCRACY. %!le eneC eoul , l 'only show The sign` of noble birth, AO men of rank were years rgo The great one.; of-the earth. Tnr , it just the crowd should shrink, •IlFrare The cap and gown ; The , t h o rzht it wrong the poor should think, hod ncht to keep them down. Those were the days when books were things The People" could not touch ; Made for the use of lords and kings, I Ana only meant for such. To work the 1000.1. to till the soil, To ell( the costly gem-- To tread e round of daily toil. WOO :h e guil enough for them. Ti m e rr3s when just to read and write Wm thought a wondrous deal, write Here those who wake with the morning light Te earn their daily meal. The :Ilan a more submissive slave, The less his head-piece knew ; Ard so the inwis !rum habit gave The.; larch right to the few. cr ka 1 , the light of truth Ft‘r , ad.ng far and wide, In:: which tills the English youth, ,liatne our ancient pride. alone can wield the sword, ! ; ..pc j of wealth and rank i -- IL ;,...nu may face a lord thousands in the bank. m.l 'hose of high degree, F twcre wrong to do; T. r. men as rich can be, .I,) , te as noble t o o. T. 7.,11 , may act a gayer part, ‘l, h works for bread y. : iwrchance, a warmer heart, .I,. , !p'''ups a clearer head. Ta n _neti•e not for "the good old times," 13 , 1.i1t! a brighter dos'! in c au.es of oar fither's crimes Are wearing fast away. ft.c.re tilt , Pen, the Press, the:Rail, Must old opinions fall; T! , :ugh , y project cannot fail— TUea ail it one and all ! HE - MONOMANIAC RECOLLECTIONS OF A POUCE OFFICER. raviii2 in London in 1831, I took lodgings at ilenshawe'.s, in Mile-End Road, riot far from ?: , .;rl;; , itze gate. My inducement to do so was 1. 3 • the cheapness and neatness of the aecommo on, anl part:y that the landlord's maternal on a a Mr. Oxley, was slightly known to me.— • IZenflawe 1 knew by reputation only, he 11.2 Voik,zhire ten or ele% en years before, 'even that knowledge was slight and vague. I :lead tha' a tragical event had cast a deep ...ocv over Ii alter 'life ; that he had been for e monlhs the inmate of a private lunatic wry actl that 5. (ale persons believed his brain ever thoroughly recovered its originally heal actiun. lit this opinion both my wife and my ,: vert soon concurred : and yet I am not sure tr.t venal,' have given a satisfactory reasmi for lie was, it is true, usually kind and ir,:te, even to the verge of simplicity, but his gen -1; mode of expressing himself, and conducting iness, was quite coherent and sensible; although, lite of his resigned cheerfulness of tone and of Intl, it wag at times' quite evident that whatever e mental him he had received, it had left a rank :, pe;Laps remorseful, sting behind. A small, ! , ,.eleriited portrait in his sitting room suggested . pr.-..cinre of the nature of the calamity which .nlen Inm It was that of a fair, mill-eyed ~:::;wnnl an, bin of a pensive, almost mourn- C :nt irnipt.4, ai if the coming event, briefly I tiht hand corner of the L. a,:na,!y during lite and health, cast inn_ liLtliUW over her. That oriefrecord Iftrqreaves, born 1804 ; drown- . N., ,'..rret allusion to the picture ever in m) hearing, although, for being e :o , :e'ller of Yorkshire scenes and times ~ c ame excellent friends. Stit!, there from time to time, significant in ' . d.flicult to place in evidence, that e had not been wholly quenched, and glowed beneath the habit :l.sl which concealed it from the 'care casual nkerver. Exciting circumstances, al'er my arrival in the metropolis, e 1,0).1'0(1 those brief wild Fparkles into lIM tt , and consumingflame. • , o t. ', , i;awe was in fair circumstances—that • • - come, derived from funded property alone, y -3) a year ; but his habits were close, IniQerly. Ills personal appearance • a• ;:emlernanly, but he kept no servant. t came once a day to arrange his t,, per form other household work, and • p.l, very simply, at a coffee-house or • • • ll.t the exception of a sittiug to. was occupied by lodgers. Amongst •-•a pal'', weakly-looking young man of • la. lie was suffering from - diiea-e induced, I was in ,s careless lolly in remaining in his a tPr having assisted, during the .krreat ,.-1 a: mgl,t at a iarge fire at a coach-fagtory e %%a^ in gold and silver lace-work—billlion ',.t•to•ts :tn' so'en ; and as he had a good con- tt 1.11 , -ereral e,t-end . establishments, his io be a thriving one—so rnuclf so tt , u4i,y employed several assistants of &Mb "t's llc occupied the'first floor, and a workshop .e of the garden. His wife, a pretty-fentnr e -iortord, graceful young woman, of not `tart two or three-and twenty, was, they told dattider of a schoolmaster, and certainly Ltemly and carefully nurtured. They 11.1 one ; a sprightly, curly haired, bright-eyed = ~ ;,, , , ~ :. ; 1 . ~,. ..„ =, ... , 7 :., .:,, - ', 1 . ~. —— . —..,. . . . i. ~._. p .. ...- : ::: .. . ... , ~. I , t • . . .. Lf . . . . .. :,,r, ..1 . , ::: .. , e.. . V f'.. ... . E • , , , , ,• . .‘,..„...., , .. ~. ..,..I.,1" . ~. .... ~.:), " , .. ... •t 1 . . . ....: - - 5 0 . . . . boy, nearly four year, Old. , The wife, Ellen Ir win, was reputed to be a first rate hand,at eorneof the lighter parts of bet hcisband's huskiest.; and her aorta to lighten his toil, and compensate by increased exertion for his daily diminishing capaci ty for labor, were unwearying and incessant. Nev. er havell seen a more gentle, thoughtful tenderness than was displayed by that young wile towards het suffering, and sometimes not quite evenly-temper ed partner, who, however, let me add, appeared to reciprocate truthlully her affection—all the morcsso perhaps, that he knew their time together upon earth was already shrunk to a brief span. In my opinion, Ellen Irwin was a handsome, even an el egant young person ; this, hoviever, is in some de gree a matter of taste. But no one could deny that gentle Kindness, the beaming compassion, that irra diated her features as she tended the last sinking invalid, rendered her at such times absolutely beau tiful—angclind her, to use an-Tex - premien of my wife's, with whom she war a prime favorite. I was self-debating for about the twentieth time one evening where it was I had formerly sen her, with that sad mournful look of hers; for seen her I was sure I had, and not long since either.' It was late; I had just returned home ; my wife was in the sick-room, and I had entered it with two or three oranges. ‘, Oh, now I remember ;" I suddenly exclaimed, just above my breath; ,4 the picture in Mr. Renshawe's room ! What a remarkable coin cidence!" A low, chuckling laugh, close at my elbow, caused me to turn quickly towards the door. Just within the threshold stood Mr. Benshawe, looking like a white•stone-image rather than a living man, but for the fierce sparkling of his strangely gleam ing eyes, and the mocking, triumphant curl of his lips. " You, too, have at last obsemed it, then!" he muttered, faintly echoing the under-icne in which I spoke: I have known the truth for many, weeks. The manner, the expression, not the words quite started me. At the same moment, a cry of women rang through the room, and I immediately seized Mr Renshawe by the arm, and drew him forcibly away, for there was that in hiscountenance which should not meet the eye of a dying man. " What were y'on saying ? What truth have you known for weeks ?" I asked, as soon as we had reached his sitting room. Before he could , answer, another wailing sound ascended from the sick-room. Lightning leaped from Renshawe's lustrous, dilated eyes, and the exulting laugh again, but louder, burst from his lips : " Ha! ha !" he fiercely exclaimed ; I know that cry ! It is Death's !—Death's ! Thrice blessed Death, whom I have so often ignorantly cursed ! But that," he added qnickly and peering sharply in my lace; " was when, as you know, people said"—and he ground his teeth with rage-- " people said I was crazed—mad." " What can you mean by this wild talk, my dear friend ?'' I replied in as unconcerned and quieting a tone as] could immediately assume. " Come, sit down : I Ismsasking:the meaning of your strange words below, just now." " The meaning of my words ? You know as well as I do. Look there." "At the painting ? Well r it You have seen the original," he went on with the same excited tone and gestures. "It crossed me like a flash of lightning. Still, it is strange she does not know me. It is sure she does not !—But I am changed, no doubt—sadly changed !" he ad• ded, dejectedly, as he looked in the mirror. " Can you mean;that I have seen Laura Hargreave here ?" f stammered, thoroughly bewildered—she who was drowned ten or eleven years ago. '• To be su-e—to be sure! It was so believed I admit, by everybody by myself, and the belief drove me mad ! And yet I now remember, when at times I was calm—When the pale face blind staring eyes; and dripping hair, ceased for awhile to-pursue and haunt me, the low, sweet voice and gentle face came back, and I knew she lived, though all denied it. Rut look, it is her very im age!" he added fiercely, his glaring eyes flashing from th portrait to m,y taco alternately." Whose image 3" 44 Whose ima4e ! Why, Mrs. Irwin's, to be sure You yourself admitted it now." I was so confoundeil;'that for several minutes I remained stupidly and silently staring at the man. At length I said : " Well, there is a likeness, though not so great as I imagined—" "It is fa'se!" he broke i 7 furiously. "It is her very self.' 4 ( 4 We'll talk of that to-morrow. Yon are4,Ler excited, and must go to bed. I hear Dr. Garland's voice below ; he shall come to you." "No—no—no !" he almost screamed. " Send me no doctors-1 hate doctors ! But I'll go to bed —since—since you wish it. But no doctors f—not for the world !" As he spoke he shrank cowering ly backwards out of the room', his wavering, un quiet eyes fixed upon mine as long as we remain ed within view of each other. A moment after wards I heard him dart into his chamber, and bolt and double lock the door. It was plain that lunacy, but partially subdued, had resumed its former mastery over the unfortu nate gentleman. But what an extraordinary delu sion! I took, a candle, and examined the picture with renewed curiosity. It certainly bore a strong resemblance to Mrs. Irwin ; the brown curling hair the pensive eyes, the pale fairness of comple x ion, were the same ; but it was scarcely more girlish, more youthful, than the young wron was now, and the original, had she lived, would have been by this time approaching to thirty years of ago ! I went softly down stairs, and found, as 1 feared, that George Irwin was gone. My wife came weep• ing out of the death-ehamber, accompanied by Dr. Garland, to whom I forthwith related what had just taken place. lie listened with attention and inter. est ; and after some sage observations Upon the strange fancies which now and then take" possess ion of the minds of monomaniacs, agreed to see Mr. Itenshawe at ten the next morning. ) was not required trim) duty tiil eleven ; and if it ,were PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA;i BRADARD, COUNTY, PA., BY . B...OIIEARA 600DRICIL MESI!Mi!IMII!1 F.SCAILDLEISS OF DENUlietiliON PROM ANY QUA rite in the physician's opinion desirable, i was to . write at once to the patient's uncle, Mr. Oxley. Mr. Itenshame was, I beard, stirring before sev en o'clock, and the charwoman informed me that he hail fatten his breakfast as usual and appeared to be in cheerful, almost high spitits. The physi cian was punctual. I tapped at the sitting-room door,- and was desired to come in. Mr. Renshavre was seated at a table with some papers before him . evidently determined to feel cool and indifferent— Ile could•not, however, repress a start of surprise, almost of terror, at the sight of the physician, and a paleness, followed by a hectic flush, pasted quickly over his countenance. 1 observed, too, that the portrait was turned with its face towards the wall. By a strong effort, Mr. Renshaw° regained his simulated composure, and in reply to Dr. Garland's professional inquiry, as to the state of his health, said with a forced laugh : " My friend Waters has, suppose, been amusing you with the absurd eta ry that made him stare so last night. It is exceed. ingly droll, I must say, although many persons, oth erwise acute enough, cannot, except upon reflec tion, comprehend a jest. There was John Rem. ble the tragedian for instance who--" " Never mind John Kemble, my dear sir," in terrupted Dr. Garland. " Do, pray, tell us the sto ry over again. I love an amusing jest." Mr. Renshawe hesitated for an instant, and glen said with reserve, almost of dignity and manner " Ido not know sir,"—his face, by the way, was determinedly averted trom the cool, searching gaze , of the physician—" I do not know, sir, that I am obliged to find you in amusement; and as your presence hero was not incited I shall be oblig ed by your leaving the room as quickly as may be." " Certainly—certainly, sir. I am exceedingly sorry to have intruded—but I am sure you will per mit me to have a peep at this wonderful portrait." Renshawe sprang impulsively forward to prevent the doctor reaching it. Ile was too late; and Dr. Garland turning sharply, round with the painting in his hand, literally transfixed him in an attitude of surprise and consternation. Like the Ancient Ma riner, he held him by his glittering eye, but the spell was not an enduring one. "Truly,' remark ed Dr. Garland; as he found the kind of mesmeric influence he had exerted beginning to fail, " not so vcry bad a chance iesemblance, especially about the eyes and mouth—" "This is very extraordinary condnct, broke in Mr. Renshawe, and I must again request that you will both leave the room." It was useless to persist, and we almost immedi ately went away. " Your impression, Mr. Waters," said the physician, as he was leaving the house, " is, I dare say, the true one ; but he is on his guard now, and it will be prudent to wait for a fresh out break before acting decisively—more especially as the hallucination appears to be quite a harmless one." This was not, I thought, quite so sure, but of course I acquiesced, as in duty bound; and matters went on pretty much as 'usual for seven or eight weeks, - except that Mr. Renshawe manifested much aversion towards myself personally, and at last served me with a written notice to quit at the end of the term previously stipulated for. There was still some time to that ; and in the meanwhile, I caused a strict watch to be set, as far as was practi cable, without exciting observation, upon our land lords words and acts. Ellen Irwin's first tumult of grief subsided, the next and pressing question related to tier own and infant's son subsistence. An elderly man, Of the came of Tomlins, was engaged as foreman ; and it wag hoped that the business might still be carried on with sufficient profit. Mr: Renshawe's manner, though at times indicative of considerable nervous irritabili'y, was kind and respectful to the young widow ; and I began to hope that the delusion he had for awhile labored under had finally passed sway. The hope was a fallacious one. We were sitting at tea'on a Sunday evening,, when Mrs. Irwin, pale and trembling with fright and nervous agitation came hastily in with her little boy in her hand. I correctly divined what had occurred. In reply to my hurried questionin', the astounded young ma tron told me, in substance, that witliiri the last two or three days Mr. Renshawe's strange behavior and disjointed talk had both bewildered and alarmed her. He vaguely inlimateil that she, Ellen Irwin, was really Laura somebody else—that she had kept company wi:h hlm, Mr. Renshawe, in Yorkshire, before she knew poor George—with many other strange things he muttered rather than spoke out; and especially that it was owing to her son remind ing her continually of his father, that she pretended not to have known'lilr. Renshawe twelve or thir teen years ago. "In short," added the young wo man, with tears and blushes, "ho is utterly crazed, for he asked me just now to marry him—which f would nor do for the Indies—aril is gone away in a passion to find a paper that will prove, he says, that I am that other Laura something." There was something so ludicrous in all this, however vexatious and insulting under the circum stances—the recent death of the husband, and the young widow's unprotected state—that neither of its could forbear laughing at the conelpsion of Mrs. Irwin's . story. It struck me, too, that Renshawe had conceived a real and ardent passion for the very comely and interesting person before us—Gist prompted, no doubt, by her accidental likeness .to the portrait ; and that some mental flaw or other caused him to confound her with the Laura who had in early life excited the same emotion in his I mind. Laughable as the matter was in one sense, there was—and the fair widow had noticed it as well as myse;l—a serious, menacing expression in the man's eye not to be trifled with; and at her earnest l iegnest we accompanied her to her own apartment, to which Renshaw° threatened soon to return.— We 1,1.1 not been a minute in the room when his hurtled f:ite.ps was hea:d approachinr!, and Mrs. Wa- tent and (,stepped hastily into an adjoining ,closet, where. we could hear and panly see all that passed. Renetawe's speech trembled with fervency and an ger Is he broke at once into the subject with, which his disordered brain was reeling. You will not dare to say wilt you that you do not remember this song—that these pencil marks in the margin were not made by you thirteen years ago?" he menacingly ejaculated. " I know nothing about the song, Mr. Renshawe," rejoined the young woman, with more spirit than she might have exhibited but for my near presence. "It is really such nonsense. Thiiteen years ago l was only about nine years of age." " You persist, then, unfeeling woman, in this cruet deception ! After alt, too, that I have suffer. ed ; the days of gloom, the nights of horror, since that tearful moment when I beheld you dragged, a lifeless corpse from the water, and they told me you were dead !" " Dead ! Gracious goodness, Mr. Renshawe, don't go on in this shocking way ! I was never dragged out of a pond, nor supposed to be dead—never ! You quite frighten one." " Then you and 1, your sister, and that thrice-ac cused Bedford, did pot, on the 7th of August, 1821, go for a sail on the piece of water at Lowfield, and the skill was not, in the deadly, sudden, jealous strife between him and me, accidentally upset 1 But 1 know how it is ; it is this brat, and the memories he recalls, that—" "Mrs. Irwin screamed, and I stepped sharply into the room. The grasp of the lunatic was on the child's throat. I loosed it somewhat roughly, throw ing him oil - with a force that brought him to the ground. lie rose quickly, glared at me with a ti ger-like ferocity, and then darted out of the room. The affair had become serious, and the same night posted a letter to Yorkshire, informing Mr. Ox ley of what had occurred, and suggesting the pro priety of his immediately coming to London. Mea sures were also taken for securing Mrs. Irwin and her son from molestation. But the cunning of lunacy is not easily baffled.— On returning home the fourth evening alter the des patch of my letter, I found the house and immedi ate neighborhood in the wildest confusion. My own wife was in hysterics. Mrs. Irwin, I was told by half-a-dozen tongues at once, was dying ; and . the frightful cause of all was, that little George Ir win, a favorite with everybody, bad in some unac countable manner fallen into the river Lea, and been drowned. This, at least, was the general con• viction, although the river had been dragged to no purpose—the poor child's black beaver hat and feather having been discovered floated to the bank, a considerable way down the stream. The body, it was thought had been carried out into the Thames by the force of the current. A terrible suspicion glanced norms my mind,— " Where is Mr. Renshawe 7" I asked. Nobody knew. Be had not been seen since tive o'clock about the time, I soon tacertained, that the child was missed. I had the house cleared, as quickly as possible, of the numerous gossips that crowded it, and then sought a conference with. Dr. Garland, who was with Mrs. Irwin. The distracted mother had, I found, been profusely bled and cupped, and it was hoped that brain fever which bad been ap prehended, would not ensue. The physician's sus picions pointed the same way as mine; but he de. dined committing himself to any advice, and f was left to act according to my own discretion. I was new to such matters at that time—unlortunately so, as it proved, or the affair might have had t less painful issue. Tom line and I remained up, waiting for the re. turn of Mr. Renshavre; and as the long, slow hours limped past, the night silence only broken by the dull moaning and occasional spasmodic screams of poor Mrs. Irwin, I grew very much :excited. The prolonged absence of Mr. Rensbawe confirmed my impressions of his guilt, and f deternined to tax him with it, and take him into custody the instant he appeared. It was two in the morning before ho did so;, and the nervous fumbling, for full ten min utes, with hislatch-key, betnre he could open the door, quite prepared me for the spectral like aspect he presented on entering. Ile had met somebody, it afterwards appeared, outside, who had assured hinr that the mother of the child was either dead or dying. He never drank, I . knew, bat he staggered as if intoxicated ; and after lie had with difficulty reached the head of the stairs, in my reply to my question as to where he had been, be could only stutter with white trembling lips ; " It—it—cannot be—be true—that Lau—that Mrs, Irwin is—dying r " Quite true, Mr. Renshawe," I very imprudent: ly replied, and in much too loud a tone, for we were but a few paces from Mrs. Irwin's bedroom door. " And it, as I suspect, the child had been drowned by you, you will have before long two murders on your head " A choking, bubbling noise came from the wretch ed man's throat, and his shaking angers vainly strove to loosen his neck-tie. At the same moment I heard a noise, as of struggling, in the bedroom, and the nurse's voice is eager remonstrance. lin sternly made a movement towards Mr. Renshawe, with a view to loosen his cravat—his features be ing frightfully convulsed, and to get him out Of the way as quickly as possible, for I guessed what was about to happen—when he mistaking my intention, started back, turned halt round, and found himself confronted by Mrs. Irwin, her pale features and white night dress dabbled with blood, in conse- quence of a partial disturbance of the bandages in struggling with the nurse—a terrifying, ghastly sight evert to me; to him utterly overwhelming, and scarcely needing her frenzied execrations on the murderer of her child to deprive him utterly al all remaining sense and strength. He suddenly reeled, threw his arms wildly in the air, anll before I could stretch forth my hand to save himatpeay. ily backwards from the edge of the sffibte stairs where he was standing to the bottom. Tomlin! and 1 hastened whir assistance, lifted him up, and as we did so a jet of blood austral from his mouth. EMI He had otherwise received a terrible, wound near the right temple, from which the life-stream issued copiously. We got him to bed.' Dr. Garland and a neigh hering surgeon wrp soup with os, an,prompt reme dies were applied. It was a fruitless labor. Day bad scarcely dawned before we heard from the pby sician's lips that life with him was swiftly ebbing to its ChM*. He was perfectly conscious and col lected. Happily there was no stain of murder on his soul; he had merely enticed the child away, and placed him, under an ingenious pretence, with an acquaintance at Canden-Town ; and by this time both he and his mother were standing, awe struck and weeping, by Henry Renshawe's deathbed He had thrown the child's hat into the river, and his motive in Thus acting appeared to have been a double one. In the first place, because he thought the boy's likeness to his father was the chief obsta cle to Mrs. Irwin's toleration of his addresses; and next, to bribe her into oompliarce by a promise to restore her son. But he could not be deemed ac countable for his actions. "I think," he murmur ed brokenly, " that the delusipn was partly self cherished, or of the Evil One. I observed the like ness long before, but it was not till the--the hus band was dying, the idea fastened itself upon my aching brain, and grew there. But the world is passing ; forgive me—Ellen—Laura... l He was dead ! PAT AT TEO Post OFFICE —A dandified looking chap, who was waiting for the mail to arrive at the post-office, took his seat in a rhair and stuck his feet on the window sill. Presently Patrick mime from Squire Lewis's letters. Pat 49*ed tobacco ; and as he too had to wait, he began spitting his nice round the floor. " I say, you fellow," said thedandy, " alr;—ah— what the d—l makes you spit so, eh !" Tobacey, yer honor," said Pat, with a merry twinkle in the corner of his eye. " Ah, possibly," said the dandy, in a rather drawling manner; " but don't you see you hare made the prae.e into a regular, hog-pen !" Paddy tinned round, and looling, the dandy di rectly in the face, replied— " Be my sowl, yer honor, if it is a hog-pen yer Making yourself at home, any way." The ace' was stooling upon the dandy. He bounded from his chair, and throwing a ferocious look at the grinning Hibernian, he strode out of the room, muttering as he went, that "the vulgawity of these dem faweigners was quite pwepostertnis." —Carpel Br g. As ANECDOTO AND • GOOD Oise —,We an.] in the " Courts of Europe at the close of the last Century," by Henry Swinburne, just published in London, the following illustration of American manners : "An English officer, Cul A—, was traveling in a stage coach to New York, and was extremely annoyed by a free and enlightened citizen's per petual spitting across him , out of the window. He bore it patiently for some time, till at last he ven tured to remonstrate, when the other said. " Why, Colonel, I estimate yonere poking fun at me—Libel I do. Now, I'm not agoing to chaw my own bilge water, not for no man; besides, you need not look so thundering big. Why, I've par deed all my life, and could spit through the eye of a needle without touching the steel—let alone such a great saliva box at that there WI -.dim?' Cul. A— retnained tranquil fur some time ; at last his anger got up, and he spat bang in his com panion's face, exclaiming—. " I beg you a thousand pardons, squire, but I've not practiced as much as you have. No doubt by the time we reach New York, I shall be as great a dabster as you are." The other rubbed his eye, and rern4irted bouche close. THE Sms.—The unusual spectacle is now pre sented of all the visible Planets being above the horizon early in the night ; and they are so distrib uted as to mark the line of the piptic, or the plane of their own and the Earth's orbits, with distinct ness. With Venus in the West, said lobe more fiant al present than at any time with!n the last ten years, and Jupiter with the usual splendor in the East, with the " letter lights" Mars and Saturn be tween them, the arrangement of the planetary orbs affords an interesting view to all who take pleasure in such contemplations. Mars now appears much reduced in size and brilliancy, on account of the relative position of himself and the Earth in their respective orbits, but still retains his ruddy glow,— The pale white light cf Saturn snakes him appear like a star of the second magnitude. These, with the fine constellations of the Scorpion, Lyra, and the Great Bear, all visible at presi*t, make the contemplation of the "starry heavens" interesting and instructive. F.xcr.ssyrs: MonvsTr.--Disraeli tells us ot a man of letters, of England, who had passed his life in constant study ; and it war observed that he had written several folio volumes, which his modest fears would not permit him to evpose to the eye even of his critical friends. He promised to leave his labors to posterity ; and he seemed sometimes, with a glow on his countenance, to exult that 'they would not be unworthy of their accep'ance. At his dew!), his sensibility took the alarm; he had the folios brought,to his be.l ; no one could open them, for they were closely locked. At the sight' of his favorite and mysterious labors, he winced ; he seemed disturbed in his mind, while he felt at every moment his strength decaying.. Suddenly he rais ed his feeble hands by an eflort of firm resolve, burnt his papers, and smiled as the greedy Vulcan licked up every page. ,Zhe ia4k exhausted hi• re maining strength, and he soon alter expired.-,-Cham bers' Journal. The or oldest inhabitant" is a man who has known the Mississippi river ever since it was a small creek, =I hiend.the'pthit itaiabotitifie late CDV. Dakio,.he related a little !meditate which is so characteristic of the man that we cannot retrain from repeating it, tho Ugh we think something of the same kitulyias told bytere of, : mu comapouilents during the Mexican war. Tho Colonel co:trio:ruled one of the _six regji menu of votunteers wriraisc 1 in Kis Stale, alter the battle el Pato Alto' amt Plesace de la Palma and which joined - Gen. Taylor's zraiy speedily.— The Colonel was an! old ;very Strict and capable, and in a short time his regiment excit ed the admiration of veteran regular officers, by !her ease-end precision With •whith it drilled and raq - • ' • . nittlVied , . One morning the regiment were drawn rip and the men Were standing at case, after a variety of marches and charges and eootutiong when the Col. took it into his head to put their discipline to a strong test. The regiment au thrmin into a square to receive cavalry. The commander rode off a feat hundred yards, and then wheeling his horse, came down sword in hand, at a fierce gallop straight at his men. He trd his steed /armed air imposing object, for he war a big man, and his steed was a big horse, and neither appeared to fear the glittering and bristling array of bayonets against which they were rushing. The men 'stood the charge very welt until the horse and his rider were Within a feW feet; then they broke right and left in confusion, and opened a broad passage for the "cavalry" into their ranks. Of course the Col was wroth, and the way the men and officers caught it, for a few moments, Was' by no means agreeable to their feelings. " You form a equate ! You repel cavalry ! Why what would you have done if a thousand dragoons hatf charged on you as I did'?" " Well, just try us again, Col , and see if we don't hurt your feelings f' cried a number of die. comfitted volunteers The square was again forrr ed ; oft rode the Col round he wheeledould here he came again at fell speed rushing straight at the bayotie's, and looked as if he would crush them to powder under the charger's heels. The bayonets wavered not, though the Norse game faster arid las- I ter, and finally with a terrible bound, sprang at the square. The square stood the shock, and the next moment the horse was stretched on the ground with a broken bayonet in his side, and his limbs quivering in the death agony, whilelthe stout rider lay, with his foot and knee caught, and himself on able to rise. Not a man tnovetlthe square was silent steady and unbroken. In another instant the Colonel was on his feet. He replaced his sword in the scabbard, looked gravely and cooly at thp dead horse, and at the firm array of soldiers and' then said in his usual quiet way—" Very well done my boys—both the horse and the square did then' duty. Now you'r ready for the lancers." The men cheered—not a title. Yuman HODIESPUN.— (1 When I lived in Maine," said Uncle Ezra, " I helped to break up a new piece ol ground. We got the wood off in Winter, and early in the Spring we begun plowing on't. It was so eonsamed rocky that we had to get forty yoke of oxerr to one plow—we did, faith; ant I held that plow more'n a week I thought I should die II e'en most killed me., I vow. Why. one day I was hold's, and the plow hi! a stump which measured nine feet and ri half through it, hard and sound white oak. The plow split it, and I was go. ing straight throngh it when I happened to think it might snap together again, so I threw my feet out, and had no sooner done this than it snapped togeth - er, taking a smart hold of the seat ol my pantaloons. Of course I was tight, but I held on the plow han dles; and, though the teamsters did all they could, that team or eighty oxen could not tear my panto loons, nor cause me to let go my grip. Al last, thought, after letting the cattle breathe, they gave another strong pull altogether, and the old stump came out about the quickest. It had monstrous long roots too, let me tell you. My wife made the cloth for them pantaloons, and I haven't worn any other kind since." The only reply made to this was: " I should have thought it would come hard opon your suspenders?' Q- THE following we consider quite neatly said :—" 13e not too ready to pronounce what you think, a bad youth will necessarily become a bad man. Yonder sturdy oak may have grown from an acorn that had been rejected by a hog !" (--• Ow Mrs. Pilkins was reading the foreign news by a late arrival, ((Cotten is declining !" ex claimed the old lady. " J thought. as mnch --the last thread I used was remarkably feeble.' Never attempt to do anything that not right.— Jost so sure as yob do, you will g,et in trouble. Sin always brings sorrow sooner or later. II you even suspect that anything is wicked, do rt not until you are sure your suspicions are around-less. Kr Soar. men devote themselves so exclusive• ly to their business as to almost entirely neglect their domestic and social relations. A gentleman of this class having faiteil, was asked what ho in tended to do. ,4 lam going home to get acquaint ed with my wife and children," said he. DEATH %T u Gnu=Fortm.—The wife of Mr. John Davis : of Bohlen, NLISF , while suffering from a severe toothache, induced her physician to let her inhale chloroform, for the purpose at haring the tooth extracted, when upon inhalation she expired Mons persons tall out concerning the right roadie heaven, than ever get to Ow end of their Journey. THRRE are two things +Mali cannot ha too short —pie crust and communications for a newspaper, Ba slow M forming intimate connexions; they may Wing dishonor and misery. CISME! ..~....:-~~rn~s~--: ; s..sq~ ~ - IMSE - • • 1,, • • - ' - _ - • . Ell i r") jai aAdak* . ~'L ~~