M. DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: ftinrsUao fflornino, CApril 8,1858. .Stlecttb HAPPY HOME. Wiifn Sabbath bells have ceased their sound, And the hours of day are passed. And twilight draws its curtains round. And shadows gather fast— There is one spot and one alone. R..unJ which onr hearts mast cling— A-,1 fondest memories, one by one. Their choicest treasure bring. That spot is home : its sacred walls. Admit no discord then ; v , r crowded marts, nor festive balls. y.r gsvest haunts of men. Can not a joy impart so pure— S-.ne -uch to rliem is given ; 1! cht joys like these for age endure, TVs earth were quite a heaven. | ; ,c wandered far 'mong others bowers Than th-'-e ray childhood knew. With bope of gathering fairer flowers Than in those gardens grew ; Vet in the cold world's earnest throngs— ■\fid its iiim and stormy strife. \Ve:ti ''i turn- to scenes and songs Of r.'.v young and joyous life. :i •,.(.■ wr'.l-loved gror.p Its Sabbath song. It- tunes I -eetn to hear : T g:i borne full many a league along. jh. v come distinct and clear ; ,i s. ath nightO treasured home '. i' m pride of memory's train— a id thoughts of ye, where'er I roam, Suaii bring my youth again. Ml isc ell auto ns. ' ' rrespondence of the Buffalo Express.] THE CARNIVAL AT ROME. Rcmr. Feb. IX 1 vVS. TV? returned from Naples earlier than onr g; contemplated, for the purpose of being tin Rome during the Carnival. One i ? most important features of our visit i . . uave been wanting, if the Carnival had ~ omitted. The Carnival is now over, with fan and frolic.'' but it has not b?en so was anticipated ; for the weather was . tious, either dowuright rain or drizzle f- -he comfort and good looks of the ac i•. The Corso in the rain and the Corso in i: weather are very different places : and to T pie riding through the rain under um r. AS. and others pelting them with damp tr.fetti from the balconies w-s rather ludi and seemed a solemn kind of sport ■ Javsof fine wether, showed us what the might l>e, under more favorable cir -. -es Tito Corso, in which all Rome i •-ongregate every afternoon, is a i it two miles in length and nearly leading from the*' Piazza del Fopolo" . r.azza Venezia. The other s'reets are [ .rativeiv deserted, but the Corso is all I' mat ion. For weeks before the Carni the lalcoities most favorably situated, the c locations as we say " at home." are rent s' ?h prices, and temporary balconies are i :' - the use of the throng of spectators > •• -: Koine on this occassion. Each bal t ;rd window is hung with drapery of a I . : .'..dor and filled with people armed with \ :t - - and confetti, to scatter down upon t - who pass beneath, exposed to the fire ' tioecu; nits These boquet-s are not what lane imports, being manufactured with p": regard to weight thou beauty or fragran r* irj when they are composed of genuine t there is always some sentiment in it, 1 .h .5 better understood by the parties than '.?er persons. The confetti are made of ' and lime, and a well-directed h&nd ' - ring upon the face is capable of making £--? s in the shape of black eyes, swollen r.oses b- the i ke. as many sufferers can testify.— laws regulating the sale of the confetti, C very stringent and they are strictly eu ■; . a:.y infringement thereof is severely :-• -J A luavy fine is imposed upon those throw unauthorized coufetti, as many 1 rs are made to learn by experitnee— t ple-sai: way of acquiring facts, by quite ' - i not readily forgotten. The eere ; *re ou this wi luted, appeared on the Corso, ' -ir t right uniforms, covered nnder ain "• 'to cloaks, and the plumes of their pol luiets hang lithe and disconsolate in ■ -r.pr.css. Some of these fall out of rank l: - -tet u themselves along the street to ' r "e order among the people, and others v and down the Corso to keep the two ; "* ."rages apart at >nch a distance as _ free passage for the crowd on foot - -tits of the carriages are carefully eover " protect them from injury atul are filled -tea i.. fanciful costumes and women iu " - 7> to (loiui r oes gaily trimmed with rib " shieltic •> races from the shower b'-t which assails them with merciless g ' they wear strong wire masks. — ~ baskets filled with boquets and Hoy return the attack with vigorous •--** and au enjoyment of the w ork, quite • • -' aiding variety to the scene andmak - - feature of tlie sport. > Rogers are ea-ily recognized, we are told, i-ly English and American, from the | x..v-$ w.-.h which they euter into ItM'.-iness, and the indiscriminate way in ' - -- they throw double hand-fulls of boquets 1 • p'-ttt An Italian rides leisurely along ce d.scovtr- a party of friends, or a group ''sons which he may surprise, throwing - ss.t - aAh remarkable accuracy, always ; goa the r.ght person ; he bows low to - • aad passes on, to resume hi fun in V"'/y wti'i Ragged little boys, in I_' iGrt e. dah about after the things thus * i*ar ml] drive quite a trade n rcsell ' 'me is supposed to be penitent for the sins of the past year, and to commence a better life for the future NEARLY A HORN TOO Mien.—Stanley Smith, editor of the Auburn American, gives the fol lowing amusing anecdote of his chase by and escape from a savage bull, during a recent vis it to a farm in the neighborhood of Auburn, to witness a trial of mowers : " That bull was one of them "He was monarch'' of all he could eat, chase, or gore. Being deeply interested in the apple crop, we wandered out of the field in which the mow ing was going on into friend Shot well's orchard. Fat and handsome blooded cows were lying about chewing their cuds, and utterly indiffer ent as to what was going on. We wandered from tree to tree in the large orchard ; and while critically examining some very fine fruit, were suddenly and rather unpleasantly star tled from our train of thought by the bellow ing of Mr. Taurus, whose majesty had been recliuing, and of whose august appearance we were unaware. He elevated his tail, made the earth fly with his " awfu' paws," and hav ing thus manifested his hostility, aud given tone, if not color, to his idea that we were an interloper, made a plnnge towards us. A mo ment's view of our antagonist wa- just enough. Ilis eves flashed fire : he roared like a " bull of Bashan." We did not at all fancy the -tvle of his horns ; they were os straight as needles and about as sharp lie exhibited un mistakable desires to employ them upon us. " Knowing that it was expected of us to report the contest trial going on in another field, we remembered the prior and pressing interest of our friends, and set up a smart run. So did Mr Bull. We scampered ; he scarajv pered : he made " better time" than we could '• bottom out he gained on us rapidly :we could almost feel his hot breath on the back of our neck : it was neck or nothing ; rail fence tweuty rods off ; ball within five rods ; give up for " goner j" no such thing ; friend- Iv apple tree with low branches : clutched two , of them, and lifted our precious body into the tree : Taurus arrived just as we cleared the ground ! " Our enemy pawed around the tree : bel lowed after the manner of " Boanerges, the son of Thunder," glared at us. and finally walk ed off about the distance of three trees. — Thinking all was right, we did down vertical ly, and " put for the crazy old rail fence.*' The distance from tree to bull, and from tree to fence, was just about an even thing But our assailant saw the movement, and at once again the chase was a hot one : but this time we distanced the " horned critter," and scaling the fence, landed in a field of rye at about the same moment our pursuer's horns struck the top ra : is of the fence, and set them flying Sep arated bv the fence, we read the scoundrel a lecture that we hope he will remember to his last moments." THE UNBELIEVER —I pity the unbeliever— one who can gaze upon the grandeur, the g!c rv. and beauty of the natural universe, and be hold not the touches of Ilis finger, who is over, and with, and aliove all—from my very heart Ido commiserate hi* condition The unbeliev er ! ou whose intellect the light of rtvala'.ion never penetrated ; who can gaze upon the sun. moon, and rtirs. ar.d upon the unfading and imperishable sky. spread out so magnfi cmulv above him, and say all this is the work of chance. The near;' of such a bing is a dull and cheerless void. In his rnind—the go "like g.u of intellect—is debased, destroy ed ; ail Is dark—a fearful chaotic labyrinth— ravless, eiieeriess, hoj>e*c>s No gleam of light from heaven penetrates the blackne-s of the horrible delusion ! No voice from t'.e dreadfully . frightened He gave one more tag. when an j unearthly yell, as of a fiend in distress, burst , from the inside, then the clock ease pitched i head foremost at the deacou, feil headlong on the floor, smash 1 its face, and wrecked it fair proportions —Tue current of the air ex tir.r i shed the lij'it—the lieacon, the old lady and Sally fled up stairs, ami Joe Mayweed ex tricated himself from the clock, and effected escape in the same way he entered. The next day all Appleton was alive with the story that Deacon Barber's eiock had been bewitched, and a'though many believed iiis version, yet some, and especially Joe Mayweed affected to discredit the whole affair and hint id that the deacou had been trying the ex periment of tasting hard cider, and that the vagaries of the clock only existed in his dis j tempered imuffination. However, the interdict being taken off. J in lien of sonic we landed there. Among the new coiners wa* a iady of a most violent tera;*cr, so un governable that she hated morally all every thing. Her husband informed iii that ju-t In fore his marriage he w;> warned <>f the la ly's fiery disposition ; an.l to test the v* -iraty of the information, one evening as h- sal next ' her at dinner, he managed clevrriy to jog t! servant's elbow,as a plate of in- k tm'Y -• q> was offered to her. which of course. u|<: •">vcr the yonng lady's white dre* 4 f.j i|.-t lcc No complaint, nor even a flow*, hi ij i rimrnl. the delighted suitor eoarladeti lit at what hi* had heard was a mistake, and that his ina morata ha.i the tenij#T of a lamb A ho had !KN*U fed on mashed jK.Uitocs, nod as !i.-rni!.-elt. us is the caeareh for the mangled corpse, and tbo prxc with al! ijteed set out with dogs and arms.—The fwsture was thn-nugbly searched, and then the adjacent thickets, when lo oar liero driven out from Ids lair by the keen vent of the dogs, nil safe, alive aud well, minus the linen. At expbina';o-j ther. endued at the expense >!" <-fir hero but h w-.i* --ncvcssful in the end. and m irried the lady, and now living com fortn'.iy in one of •!:.• flourishing little towns • >f low J SktV \\ it dull 1 help yon to ? nqnlred ! c daughter <>f a landlady, of a mode-1 youth nt the i|imi-r table A ' wife." was the meek reply Tie young lady blush'd. perhaps in il ly and it :* KIHI that the kindly offices of a tuisrhWmg clergyman wore requisite to rccoi.t ..i tie parties tee™ Sai'r Jones iv that when *hc was M love sin- frit 4is ;f she was in a tuoii I with a traiu of car* com ng froin both ways. KaT* M ittcr of money -marrying a rich old mid or whlow for the ak* of board ami lodg ing N3"™ 1 y a-- j kc~ 'iX" mtt. * C*can# i '"er r *r - tlr v a <-r