OIE D3LI.AR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA : Tbursday Morning, December 18,1862. Stledti (From the Hartford Conrant.) "FAITH AND ITS EFFECTS." it twilight by my open window sitting, Watching with curious eyes the passing crowd, Meting to one-a bridal, gay and fitting ; To one— disaster, and to one—a shroud ; j feU t o musing on Life's strange reverses, Its daily mystery of joy and woe ; Its cherished hopes, which breath of GOD disperses ; Its pride and power by sudden stroke brought low ; I thought upon its hard-won, quick-lost treasures ; Upon itshorrore-fleetingasa breath ; Upon its meagre, evanescent pleasures ; Upon the end of all—unwelcome Death ; And then I thought upon my own life's sorrow, Its hopeless present and its troubled past ; pondered with dread upon the coming morrow, And questioned— Would life brighten toward the last 1 I asked the future—had it joy or anguish For my poor, weary, overburdened heart ; Should I have rest ? Or should I always languish On couch of pain, and so " act well my part. No answer had I from the dread uncertain, * Joy, grief and pain alike were unrevealed ; No hand of mine might lift the misty curtain ; Eye could not pierce to that which it concealed. Weary and weak, I bowed in supplication Th.it Heaven's own strength be perfected in me ; So should 1 bear with cheerful resignation GOD'S holy will, whatever that should be. I prayed for grace to do the present duty, Taking, for diys to come, no anxious thought ; Asked to be led in paths whose wlioly beauty , All men behold, but few have ever sought. And soft and silent as the dew, descended Upon my waiting heart, the gift divine. Doubting and fear were for the moment ended, And peaceful trtis* and fullest joy were mine. Then came a voice—" Discard the o d wives fable Of " Special Providence and Heavenly aid ! Trust to yourself; and of yourself be able "Gainst sin and want to wage a bold crusade. - God loves his children with no partial favor ; For you and me He lakes no thought and care ; From laws established he will never waver- By Nature's changeless laws we governed are. And Nature's law is that of compensation, Who sows shall reap ; he shall obtiin who strives ; Victory is sine to strength in man or nation ; And whatsoe'er we make them are our lives."' Bund truth with rankest error subtly blended ! What wonder if exulting Faith died quickly out ? What w..nder if Despair with Hope contendedl ? What wonder it to Trust succeeded Doubt ?" Despondent, fearful, once again I drilted On-unbelief s wild sea—until, above The tumult of its surging waves, was lifted .Messiah ® voice. I heard his words of love . " Peace doubting soul! Thy father's care cxtendeth O'er all the works ol his creative skill. His love surrounds ; His potent arm delcndeth ; As in the past, so will he keep thee still. " His watchful eye beholds with love paternal Each falling sparrow—these are bought and sold, Five for two farthings ! Are thy hopes supwrnal Less worth his care ? O doubting heart be bold !" Bold am I now. Earth has no wort of sorrow Which, with this trust, I cannot do and bear, The present ill suffices—l refrain to borrow Care from the future. Get thee gone. Despair ! Uliste llaiuons. habbi :r,_a.sc:h:i. Rabbi Jarcbi, commonly called Rabbi Ras chi, lived in the 11th and 12ih centuries, — (1040—1105 A. .), and was boru at Troyes, in France. His name is still mentioned with fevereuce next to that of Maiinonides. lie wrote a commentary on some of the prophets, and likewise au explanation of the lalraud, a gigantic work, without which that obscure book would be almost unintelligible. He WHS, besides, a great mathematician, and a very religious mail. It is said of Rabbi Raschi, that on reach ing his sixtieth year, and feeling himself ap proach the pale of life, he was desirous of knowing who was to be his companion in Paradise. He, of cturse did not entertain the least doubt that such a pious and learned man as he, who had never transgressed any ceremonial law, would be ushered iuto the Garden of Eden, and be seated on a golden chair at a golden table, with a wreath of pearls round his head, and wouid be allowed to feast eteruully on ihe glory of God. But he wished to know who the pious men was that should be placed opposite to bim at the samo table, for the righteous sit two and two iu Paradise. Wheu he bad fasted aod pray ed a long time, God deigned to reveal him a.-lf in a dream,and to tell bim that bis future conipauion wtg Abruhuin-beu Gersoo, called Zid.k, at Barcelona. Having learned thus much, Rabbi Raschi became anxious to make acquaintance on earth with his tuture companion, and to this end undertook a journey to Bareeloua. To his imagination, the form of his Paradise frienu presented itself with ft thiu pale lace, sunken eyes, loug beard, a bent figure, a man who bad studied the law night aud day, had lasted aud prayed ; for such u raau only deserved the soruuuie of Zadik, the Righteous. Great was therefore ttie surprise of Rabbi Raschi when, ou arriving ut Barcelona, he could find no Abraham Zadik. Several per sous, certainly, had oeeu honored with this surname, but among them was no Abraham ben Gersou. At length, ou asking it there were not in the town a man called Abraham Gersou, he was auswered : " What! do you mean Don Abraham the Wealthy ? How can a uiuu like you condesceud even to ask for such a heathen, who is never seen at syu agogue the whole year round—oav, who eats meat prepared by Christians ? We all wou der why he does not at once become baptiz- THE BRADFORD REPORTER. Ed, and his name would thus be stricken from the book of life ! Surely, Rabbi Raschi, you can have no business with hiin. " A fine fellow is my companion," thought Rabbi Raschi, and be threw back a rapid glance on his own life, in order to discover any sin of omission or commission by which he might have incurred such a disgrace. " Surely, you will not visit that man ?" re peated the learned Rabbi, to whom Rabbi Raschi had addressed his question. " Why ?—1 may, perhaps, bring him back to the right path." " Do not flatter yourself with that—on him all endeavors are lost. But do as you like." When standing before the residence of Don Abraham, Rabbi Raschi was highly astonish ed, for it was a real palace, splendid, replete with beauty and taste, so thut it even moved the heart of the old rabbi, who could only fiud this fault with it—that it did not behoove a sou of Israel to live in such splendor, whilst so many of his brethren were doomed to be in poverty aud fi th. On entering the gate, he found himself in an open court, where servants in gilt livery were seen moving to and fro, re ceiving visitors, who had come in splendid carriages. The rabbi wished to return, and he only addressed a servant in 'be hope of being dismissed, aod thus having an excurse before God ; but the domestic received him with the greatest respect, aud ushered him up a broad marble staircase into a richly orna mented aute-room, where he requested hiin to wait a few moments. When lett alone, the rabbi said to himself : " There must be some mistake. This man is a bad Jew, a man of no religiou at all he has obtained here on eurtb bisgoldeu chair and golden table—his Paradise ; how can any such blessing be in store for him in the future ? He is too rich to become converted into the right path of resignation uud self denial. But I will do my best ; I an, perhaps, the instrument ol God." The door opened, and Don Abraham,a tall, handsome man, of i bout thirty, made his up pearauce. With a friendly greeting, he bade the rabbi welcome, ami added : " Let me hope that my humble roof tuny be honored during a long period by the presence of such un excellent, learned and pious guest." " Pious I"' exclaimed Rabbi Raschi." "How do you dare to say pious—to talk of piety — you, a scoruer of the law ! I aunojnce to you thut 1 have come iu the name of God our Lord—" " lam sure you have," interrupted Don Abraham, smiling, " and therefore I repeat that you are most welcome : but us lor your reproaches, you may as well reserve them, as 1 have once lor all chosen my manner of life. Come, be friendly ; let us become better ac quainted ; aud, first, of all, uo favor me with your company to morrow at the celebration ol my nuptials—" " All, you are going to be married ! and, perhaps, to a heathen girl ?" " No, to a duughti r of Iruel, a lovelv, am iable, kind hearted girl. Come to-morrow aod see her." "Is she rich ?" " No !" " Well ; if only she were Ic 1 into ft good Jewish house, it would be an agreeable sight in the eyes of God. Meanwhile it may be a mitzwa* I will come." The conversation was interrupted by a ser vant announcing a poor woman. " Let rer wait a momeut," said Don Abra bam. " A poor woman !" exclaimed the rabbi.— " Your mariiage is to take place to morrow, and you have not yet thought of the poor ; but you allowed them to come to you to re mind you of your duty ? For shame !" " My dear Rabbi Raschi," said Don Abra ham, " you are too severe. That you may judge for yourself, I beg you will accompany me to the woman, aud ask her any questions you please." They went into the room where she was waiting, and, on being questioned by the rab hi, she answered : " Alms have been given, as far as I know, to all the poor ; but Ido not come for alms." Rabbi Raschi was pleased to hear that his future companion was, at least charitable ; he was therefore silent, while Don Abraham asked the woman : " What is it you want ? What can I do for you ?" " I want your advice," said the woman. " Fpeak, aud be sure you shall have friend ly nivice." The woman said : "lam a poor widow, with four children, three of whom are quite young. My eldest son, a youth of eighteen, worked for us, by his homst i idnstry, has made a comfortable though modest home ; but now he is ill, dangerously ill." " Thet> my good woman, you must have a physician. I will send you my own doctor." " No, Don Abraham, a physician is of no avail ; my sou is ill through love, disapjioiiit ed love. There is a young girl, poor and honest, like myself, whom he had hoped to marry ; but now the poor girl is forced by her parents to marry another, a rich man " " Wo nan, why do you tell this to me ?" said Dou Abraham. • " Because you are the maD, Don Abraham; and now, having spoken, 1 leave you to God and vnur conscience." . " What is your sou's name ?" asked Don Abraham, faintly. " Abraham ben M :nuel " When they were le't alone, Rabbi Raschi seeing Dou Abraham deadly pale, with large drops of sweat on his l>row, said consolingly : " Af'er all it is nothing. I have never, in my life, heard of a man dying for love. " liave you not ?" said Don Abraham. " No, indeed not. You may be quite sure that young fellow is not going to die. Young folks sometimes make a great noise about their love. After some time, he will fiud an other woman quite as handsome." " There is no other beneath the sun I" Don Abraham exclaimed, passionately : " there is but one sun in the heavens. Take it away, and all is dark—the air is chilly, tkj •A goo 4 action. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. 0. GOODRICH. meadow has no verdure, the garden no flow er ! Take it away, and you take life away I Life without love is uotbiug 1 Oh, the wom an was right 1" " Well, well, Don Abraham, I only wished to comfort you. It is a bounded duty of a guest to share the grief of his host. It may be disgreeable, nay, painfuly to her lover ; but I bouestly think and say there is no dan ger of death. Such sorrows may be over came ; but of course, something must be done for the family, something of cousequeuce, even." " You are right, Rabbi Raschi ; I hope I shall have something arranged by to morrow. Do not forget to come to viincha." f Next day the rabbi was punctual at the palace of Don Abraham, round which an im mense crowd had gathered,*bi Ist through the gates flowed a magnificent stream of guests, who eagerly brought their congratulations to the rich owner of the palace. The hruppa, or baldachin, under which the wedding ceremony was to be performed, was erected in the court, the marble pavement of which was strewn with flowers. The prayer having been said, the bride, preceeded by a band of music and by torches, was led iuto the court, when the notary read the marriage contract, upon which Don Abraham said : " There is but one little thing to be correct ed ; the name of the bridegroom is not Ahra ham-ben-Gerson, but Abraham ben-Manuel : I have only been the schatchan* In all oth er respects, the stipulations are unaltered, and I leave Abraham Ben-Manuel to conduct my business, whilst I favel abroad. Hallo ! let musicians and the torch-bearers accompany Abraham ben Mauuel aud his relatives iuto the court." " Oh!" cried Rabbi Raschi, " thou art wor thy, indeed, to be my companion in Para dise 1" At first, the Rabbi's exclamation was un heeded ; but be afterwards related bis dream ti Don Abraham, who replied good liumored ly: "I am glad to hear it ; it is so pleasant to have a good neighbor ; and besides,' he added, with quivering lips, " I shall come sin gle " Since then, eight hundred years have elaps ed. We may all see, iu a short time, if they are seated together. fThe afternoon prayer with which the marriage ecremo ny commences. ♦lie who demands the briile from her parents for another PEDDLER VERSUS QUAKSR —A Yankee ped dler, traveling in Pennsylvania, met a Quaker going to mill with a bag of corn. " I snv mister, what do you ask for your corn ?" inquired the \ankoe. "It isn't for sale, friend," replied Broad brim. " But I'm greatly in need of corn just now, as my mare is nearly starved, and nobody round here 'pears willing to trade. I thought you Quaker fellers iva-* chock full of the m.lk of human kindness. Now, as Ive been tob bed back here a piece of all my cash, I don't know what on airth I'm goiu' to du wheu the mare's gin out." " Well, friend," said the shrewd Quaker, " if thee has anything that 1 can turn to the same account as my corn, 1 will trade with thee, at dollar a bushel, but uot otherwise. " And pray, whut are jon going to do with it." " Grind it, to be sure !" said Broadbrim, chuckling ut the thought that that was u po ser for the peddler. •' Wall, I'll dew it on them terms, and yon mnv empty your com iuto my feed box at onct," said the Yankee. " And prav, friend, what am I to have in exchange for the two bushels of corn that I can turn to the same account ?" '* Oh, you can take your choice ; I've got jack-knives at twenty-five cents a piece, razors at the same price, axes at a dollar, and va rious other notions. Aon'll find 'hat they can all be ground to great advantage. In short, you can grind 'em us often as you please, aud it won't hurt 'em 1" The Quaker was so tickled at the Yankee's wit that he let liira have the corn without further parley, and took bis pay iu trade. " llow do you do, Mrs. Towe ? Have you heard that stoi v about Mrs Ludy ?" " Why, uo, really Mrs. Gad ? What is it? Do tell." " Oh, I promised not to tell for all the world —no I must never tell on't; I'm afraid it will get out." " Why, I'll never tell on't as long as I live, just as true as the world. W hat is it ? Cotue tell." , . " Now, you won't say anything about it,will you ?" " No, I'll never open my month about it— never. ' Hope to die this miunte." " Well, if you'll believe it, Mrs. Fundy told me last night, that Mrs. Trot told her that her sister's husband was told by a person that dreamed it, that Mrs. Trouble's oldest daugh ter told Mrs. Nichens that ber grandmother beard by a letter she got from her sister's sec oud husband's oldest brother's step daughter, that it was reported by the captain of a clam boat just arrived from the Feejee Islands, that the mermaids about that section wear crino lines made out of shark skins " FRUIT AS MEDICINE —Ripe fruit is the medi cine ol uatnre ; noihiug can be more whole some for man or child, though green fruit is, of course, rank poi-on. Strawberries are fa vorites with all cla-ses and constitute a popu lar luxury. Who can tell the number of dis ordered livers aud digestive apparatuses gen erally restored by that fruit ? Alter them, we do homage especially to peaches, and ap ples, aud grapes. We once knew a person who, believing himself in a decline, determined to eat from four to six ripe apples a day, and note the result ; in three months he was well We know of another who was in general ill health that commenced the habit of orinkiog a glass of plain cider every morning, and I never had a uay's illness in twenty five years thereafter. Such remedies are simple eDongb. " RESARDLESS OF DENUMCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." Letter from Suffolk, Va. SUFFOLK, Va., Nov. 29,1562. DEAR SIR :—Your letter was very gladly received, and to show ray gratitude, I will an swer immediately. The REPORTER containing the Muster Rolls of the 141 st Regiment, P. V., also arrived, and it was with great inter est that 1 looked over the names. Many of them are persons of my acquaintance, and several were pupils of mine at my school in West Fraukliu years ago. Years ago 1 How strunge to cast a glance at the quiet past aud compare the years gone by with the exciting preseut. Boys of a little while ago—qniet, inoffen sive boys—insignificant as they thought them selves, are uow eurolled with the uatiou's hosts, writing their part on the great exclam atory page of American History. What a volume is being written ! And who will arise with so wonderful powers as to be abie to paint the untold agony of the mil lions bereaved ? No ! Let it not be written ; let History record deeds of valor, causes lost or yon, the numbers of killed, wounded and missing, and let some dashing novelist or writer of romance with imagination vivid as the lightning, re gale his readers with stories of lost loves and broken hearts, but let no man dare—even if it were possible—to enter the sacred portals of the broken household, with a view to pub lish abroad the keen aud poignant grief of those whose best loved have been sacrificed to the Moloch of Slavery. Truly, we have fallen upon troublous times, but we have nothing to complain of, for when we remember our National follies and pnju dices and sins which we have not only tolera ted, bat winked at, even if we come uot out till the " uttermost larthing " is paid, we are constraiued to say— it is a just sentence. In Jeremiah there is a complete description of the slaveholder. I will make a short quo tation from the stb chapter, commencing at verse 25, adding a word or two as I go on, to make the application clear ; " Your iniquities have torned away these things, and your sins have witholden good things from you. " For among my people are found wicked men ; (slaveholders, kidnappers, etc.) —they lay wait, as he that setteth snares ; they set a trap, they eaich men. (Slaves, ruuaways, contrabands, free black men, and some not so black, are caught in these snares.) " As a cage is full of birds, so are their houses full of deceit ; (deceit that covers the worst system of coucubfuage iu the world, where a man makes merehaudi.se of his own children) —therefore they are become great and waxen rich. "They are waxen fat, they shine; —(in silks and satins purchased with the price of blood)—yea, tliey overpass the deeds of the wicked : they judge not the cause, the cause ol the faiberless,— (but sell children from their mothers, wives from their husbands, and pa rents from their children) —yet they prosper, and the right of the needy do they not judge. " Shall I not visit for these things ? saith the Lord ; shall not my soul be aveuged on such a nation as this ? " A wonderful and horrible thing is com mitted in the land : (" American Slavery, the vilest that ever saw the sun.' Wesley. " The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests bear rule by their means ; (yes, min isters (!) declare that Slavery is a divine in stitution, and on the strength of this false prophecy, Southern aristocrats boldly asseit their rigfit to rule) —and my people love to have it so ; (mark that, every Northern dough face, every Southern sympathizer, every ex cuser for Slavery, every compromise man in all the world who is nominally a Christian, aud therefore my people is among those who love to have it so, aud the terrible, the awful, and as yet uuauswercd question follows) — and what will ye do in the end thereof ?" Without contending that Secretary Seward is without his weaknesses, which is too much to say of any great man. I canoot agree that onr disasters are attributable to /uVfollies, for the cousequences following men's weaknesses, depend altogether upou the re?ponsibilities of their position. A private in the ranks of an army may be a fool, and no one the worse for it, for, iu the language of a certain defunct Captain, " A private is supposed to know nothing but or ders but au officer is at least supposed to kuow how to command, and a sioglc mistake ou his part might work disaster to many. So, as effect follows cause, and as the effect is in proportion to the cause, I can fix upon uo one as directly responsible for our disas ters aud snailface movements as the President himself. Still I wculd support the President. Beeause he has made a great mistake,' we should uot desert bim ; for that would make a bad matter worse. President Lincoln is undoubtedly a great man, but has betrayed one great weakness ; uud that very weakness is esteemed by many to be his great virtue. That weakness is his wonderful conserva tism. This grand idea led him to select from all parties to fill places in his cabinet. In stead of having a preference for the Republi can party which elected him, he very kindly appoints men of known hostility, from the Breckinridge and Douglas ranks, to fill res ponsible positions and act as bis political ad visers, under the mistaken notion that this course would uuite the country. Is it to be wondered at, then, that with snch a mixed cabinet, he puts generals iuto the field of the same calibre ? The President's policy seemed to be to please everybody. His advisers undoubtedly disagreed, and so to satifv all, he will be very conservative, ap point a few good aud loyal men, a few abont half and half, and some who "(idn't know what the war was about. 11 The men most earnest in the struggle, were checked, lest the rebellion should be crushed too soon, aod the favor of some of the half and half men lost. When the quarrel about General Fremont arose, the demands of the party that placed bim in the Presidential chair, were set aside to satisfy the opposition. This course followed up, has divided the Re publican Party. Thus the President's grand struggle to uuite all parties and please every body has failed, and be has pleased nobody His conservative kindness led bim to keep generals at the head of our armies whose mo tive power was political jealousy, and whose highest ambition seemed to be to defeat each other. We hope Bnrnside will succeed, bat if he fails, let bim be removed before he causes as much loss of life and trrasure as did McClel lan. We are for the man that can and will win. And when the successful man is found, we are for the policy that will let him go forward, and the Cabinet that then begins to quarrel about him, should be hung. We believe in the Scriptural policy," What soever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might." Radical, isn't it ? but that is what we want in these trying times. We believe in Burnside, but are not so con fident of his success as are some. He has too many difficulties to encouuter. The good time to move was wasted by his predecessor, but an opportunity may offer to strike a deadly blow, aod no doubt Bnrnside is looking anxiously for just such an opportu nity. At this place nothiog of interest has trans pired. Toura truly, S. PARKHURST, Co. G, 39th Illinois. WHY CHILDREN SHOULD NOT BB ABSENT FROM SCHOOL —Some ooe has thus " summed up" the unfavorable results of unnecessary absence : 1. If a boy learns to feel that he may leave his duties as a scholar for trivial causes ; for causes equally trivial he will forsake his busi ness when a man. 2. The time of the teacher and the whole school is wasted, while this absence is beiug recorded. 3. The teacher's time is wasted, in reading and racording the delinquent's excuse, when he returns to the school. 4. He interrupts the exercise of the teach er, or some other part of the school, in finding the places at which his various lessons com mence. 5 He has lost the lesson recited yesterday, and does not understand the portion of to-day's which depends upon that of yesterday ; and such dependence usually exists. G. The teacher's time and patience are tax ed iu repeating to him the instructions of yes terday ; which, however, for waut of study, he does not clearly appreciate. 7. The rest of the class are deprived of the instructiou of their teacher, while he is teach ing the delinquent. 8 The progress of the rest of the clas3 is checked, and their ambitiou curbed in waiting for the tardy delinquent. 9. The pride of tee class is wounded, and their interests in their studies abated, by the conduct of the absentee. 10. The reputations of both teacher and scholar suffer, upon days of public examina tion, by failures, which are chargeable to the absence, and not to the instruction. 11. The means generously provided for the education of the delinquent are wrongly wast ed. 12. lie sets pernicious example for the rest of the school, and usually does some actual mischief while absent. llow HE GOT HIS WIFE. —John W was, or is a genius. He made quite a pile in the Mexican war, and invested it in a canal boat running on the Ohio Caual. John was a bachelor, but in course of time was smitten by the little god. An old farmer, who lived in the " heal" path, near Masillion, had two ro sy cheeked daughters, but all attempts to gain an introduction by their admirers, were foiled by the old man. But John was not discour aged. A large chunk of beef brought off the mastiff, and John proceeded to deliberately ap propriate the various articles hanging on the clothes' line. Cheraizettes and stockings, breeches, skirts, and things, were crowded in inglorious confusion into the capacious bag carried by Jonri on this occasion. They were brought aboard the boat and placed in the " bow cabin," to pave the way for an introduc tion on the return trip. A week after the boat passed the farm house on its way north, and John jarupea ashore, and went to the house. He represent ed that or.e of his drivers had stolen the cloth ing, and that he had discharged him, and de sired to restore the articles. The young la dies were delighted, as the sack contained all their " Sunday fixings." The old man said : " I always thought that all the boatmen would steal ; and I am delighted to fiud one honest one. Yon most call again captain." The captain did call again, and soon after married the " yoangest.'' On the wedding night, he toid bit wife the ruse he had used to gain an introduction, and the old man gave orders that no more clothing should be left " out o' night." ♦ WHISKY AND NEWSPAPERS. —A glass of whis ky is manufactured from perhaps a dozen grains of corn, the value of which is too small to be estimated. A pint of this mixture sells for one shilling, and if of a good brand, is con sidered well worth the money. It is drank in a minute or two—it fires the brain, sharpens the appetite, deranges and weakens the physi cal system. On the same sideboard npon which tbi3 pernicious beverage is served lies a newspaper. It is covered with half a million of types —it brings intelligence from the four quarters of the globe. The newspaper costs less than the glass of grog—the juice of a few grains of corn ; bat it is no less strange than true that there is a large portion of the com munity who think cora juice cheap and the newspaper dear. t®- What is the most woudarfuf of acro batic feats ? For a man to revoke in bis mind. VOX,. XXIII. —NO. 29. A Ghost Story. At a town in the west of England twenty four persons were accustomed to assemble once a week, to drink, smoke tobacco and talk poli tics. As at the academy of Rubens, at Ant werp, each member bad his peculiar chair, and the president's was more elevated than the rest. As one of the members had been in a dying state for some time, his chair, whilst he was absent, remained vacant. When the club met on the nsual night, in quiries were naturally made after their asso ciate. As he lived in the aujoining house, a particular friend went to inquire after bim, and returned with the melancholy intelligence that he could not survive the night. This threw a gloom on the company, and all efforts to turn the conversation from the sad subject before them were ineffectual. About raid night the door opened, and the form, in white, of the dying or the dead man, walked into tho room and took bis seat in his accustomed chair. There he remained in silence, and in silence was he gazed at. The apparition continued a sufficient time in the chair to assure all who were present of the reality of the vision. At length he arose and stalked towards the door, which he opened as if living ; went out aud shut the door after him. After a pause, soma one, at last, had the resolution to say, "If only one of us had seeo this, he would not have been believed ; but it is impossible so many of us can have been deceived." The company, by degrees, recovered their speech, and tho whole conversation, as may be imagined, waa npon the dreadfnl object which had engaged their attention. They broke op and went home. In the morning inqairy was made af ter their sick friend. It was answered by an account of his death, which happened nearly about the time of his appearance in the club room. There could be little doubt before ; but now nothing could be more certain thau the reality of the apparition which had been simultaneously seen by so many persons. It. is unnecessary to say that such a story spread over the country, and found credit even from infidels; for, in this case, all reasoning bo came superfluous, when opposed to a plain fact, attested by three-and-twenty witnesses. To assert the doctrine of the fixed, laws of na ture was ridiculoas, when there were so many people of credit to prove that they might bo unfixed. Years rolled OD, and the story was almost forgotten. One of the club was an apothecary. In the course of his practice he was called to an old woman whose business it was to attend to sick persons. She told him that she could leave the world with a quiet conscience, but for one thing which lay upon her mind. "Do you not remember Mr. •, whose ghost has been so much talked of ? I was his nurse.— On the night of his death I left his room for something I wanted. lam sure I had not been absent long ; but at my return I found the bed without my patient! He was delirious, and I feared bad throwu himself out of the wiudow. I was so frightened that I had no power to stir ; but, after some time, to my great astonishment, he entered the room, shiv ering, and his teeth chattering, laid himself down on the bed and died ! Considering my negligence as tbe cause of his death, I kept this a secret, for fear of what might be done to me. Though I could have contradicted ail the story of the ghost, I dared not do it. I knew, by what hud happened, that it was he himself who had been iu the club room (per haps recollecting it was the night of the meet ing ;) but I hope God aud the poor gentle man's friends will forgive me, and I shall dio contented." They have some bravo orator 3 out West. This fact there is no disputing, if wo admit that they are correctly reported, as the following specimen ot lofty and burning elo quence will testify : " Americans I—This is a great country —wide, vast, and in the South west unlimited. Our public is yet destined to reannex all South America ; to occupy the Russian Possessions, and again to recover the possession of those British Provinces which the prowess of the Old Thirteen Colonies won from the French on the plains of Abraham, ail rightfully ours to re occupy. Ours is a great and growing country. Faneuil Hall was its cradle, but whar—whar will be found timber enough for its coffin ? Scoop all the water out of the Atlautic Ocean, and its bed will not afford a grave sufficient for its corpse. And yet America has scarcely grown out of the gristle of boyhood. Europe—what is Eu rope ? She is uowhere, nothing, not. a circum stance, a cipher, an absolete idea. We have faster steamboats, swifter locomotives, better fire engines, louger rivers, broader lakes, high er mountains, louder thunder, forkeder light ning, prettier women, braver men, and more money than England dare have 1" 19* Mrs. Partington says : "It is a con federate shame for the Cabinet people at Washington to allow our men of war ou the Potomac to hug the Mary LaDd Shore so much." 19* Adam was fond of bis joke, aud when he saw his sons and daughters marry one an other, he dryly remarked to Eve, that if there had been no apple there would have been no pairing. 19 The Providence Press says the propo sition to amend the internal tax law so as to include babies under the head of "manufac tures" does not seem to meet with favor. The proposer is a bachelor. BQU A gentleman, in an inland town, ten dered a dollar bill to pay a charge of sixty cents, and was gravely offered forty squash seeds to represent the balance due him. j@- Folly bae often the same results as wisdom ; but wisdom would not engage in hor school-room so expensive an assistant as ca lamity.