4 www n jyu B Lk I 1 IL I IL II fir II LEVI L. TATE, Editor. VOL. 14.-NO. 5. THE Citlitiithia Junarrnt H rCBLWUtKD EVERT SlITRDtT MOKdK0. BT LEVI L.. TATE, IN 8L00MSBUHQ, COLUMBIA OOUNTT, PA. O f"fTc E fU o Pritk Building, epputitt Me Lichangi, by tide fl tk$ Court tloKtt. "Democratic Jltad Quarter"." TKKM OF HIWSCIUPTION. $1 CO In alvnitcc, f'r on copy, for six tnonthfl. 1 75 In it'I n tire, for one copy, one yrar. 3 (X) If not paid within tlm firtl tlircc months. 3 M Iftintpnl't within the first six month. 3 50 If not pnil within tlicycnr. 17 N'o sutwcrliiinii taken for Icmuthan iU months, nl no p.ipci ill continue J until nil arrearage shall have tem pniit. rty Ordinary Am'nrriKiriT IniuTtcd, anl job ork iiKiiteii, at lltu crt.iblmhrit pricey. CHOICE POE'l KY. MY ROSE. BY TUB INVALID. I had a Hose, n blushing Hobc, A Undtr little flower, Which Mnnmcd in u-onilcroui loveliness Within my garden bower. The evening zephyrs kissed its brow, And left bright Jewels there, The clear and pearly drops of dew, 80 glittering and fair. The morning shed its fairest beams Upon Its little It react, And jo)o'isly the humming-bird Hipped honey from its crest ; The rotibin sang its sweeten! kong To cheer each loiuly hour, And all hearts loieil the little Uose. Which graced my garden bower. Ytt mill it pined for realms cf light, T11 reach its native home ; That genial clime, where chilling Hinds, And storm may never come; To bloom hemde the crjktal stream, And in the pasture green ; Wheic only uinaratittiiuu (lowers, And vernal shrubs arc twin. Nor could our fondest luic detain Th4 gently little (lower, Hut for a eiason brirf, though trectt It blest our earthly bower ; Then faded from our sight, to bloom In itn own native- clime', In loneliness too fiir for earth, Untouched by blight ur time. THE ORPHAN. Happy children 1 oil I heard them SliijUting ; " I'lithcr cornel" As hi! from bin toil, aweuriud, Xfiiri his humble home, Then he c.UU hu pratlmg household, I'untly, to bis knee, I look and list' 11, but alas t No father calls for me. In her cheerful palace-parlor Hits a mother ienr, CireM by her cherub treasures, 11-ippy. ull the year. An the gleeful children in tier Komlling arms I ece, I cannot s resile down the righ. No mother fondles in?. Homo are happy all around me, Whcresoe'er I go ; Full of little merrymakers. Who no sorrow know. Yen ; I r;c tliuin bright and happy Happy as can bu ; Oh, It t me never envy them Uut there's 110 home for me. Towards the little homehsu wanderer Art 11 father's part ; To I Ik bigbing of the lone one flivc a mother's heart. Then 1 lie orphan, blithe and happy Happy as can be, No more tliall wake the sad rrfraui . But thtrc'g no hope for me. SELECT STORY. THREE SCENES IX A LIFE. IiV DAISY HOWAnO. " My heart is thrilling high with hap piness to-night, Jcar Arthur. Aro you very turn you will always love me as you do now J" " Darling, I shall loarn, with each pas sing year, to Iovo you more fondly ; it shall he the one effort of my lifo to insure your perfect happiness. May my hcait cease to heat when, by word or deed, I bring sorrow upon your head." Aud tho moonlight falling upon tho speaker's up turned brow, almost glorified it. It fell, too, upon shining hair and tear-gemmed ejos of sweet Carrio Stanley, who gazed with loving trust upon the handsome, ear nest faco of her lover. 'Twas the bridal night of Arthur Clare and Carrio Stanley. Thoy stood by tho window, gazing upon tho sublime and beau tiful bcenery bounding Carrie's home. As Arthur ceased speaking, Mrs. Stanley canio to bid them hasten below, as tho guests were assembled, and the man of God wait ing to utter tho solemn words which would wcavo together these two young lives for ill time. Tho sacred words wcro spoken, and friends crowd aroud with congratula tions, but Carrio hears only the low sobs of her widowed mother, and the tearful blessing of the old pastor, who lores her as his own child. Tho picture we gaze upon is very sweet. The fair, young bride, with white ro-cs wound among her glossy hair, and looping up the folds of the rich, white satin dress, aud tho clear blue eyes ever seeking the face of her young hus. band. As cue reads upon that glowing, happy faco tho eecrot of his lore for her, fh fluttering heart lettles down into a sweet content j and fancy, looking down the long vista of coming years, sees only rose-tinted clouds and bright hopes, all meeting a rich fruition. Ah! woman's heart, so easily attaches itself, is so depen dunt and clinging in its naturo ever reach ing out for some loving heart whereon to loan but I digress. Look well upon this picture fix the sweet faco of Carrie Clair upon your heart; for never again will your eyes rest upon the happy, radi ant face of the child-bride. Ah I what a fairy spot ! WJiose beau tiful homo is this wo seo just outside tho city of W , with tho tiny lawn of cm- crald-grcen, and tho porch covered with clambeiing vines 1 'Tis tho homo of Car rie Clare, the wife of six years. Entering, we will scat ourselves in a quiet corner ; and all unseen, will gaze upon the changes time has wrought. Arthur Clare is little changed ; yet something is missing from his eyes, and the white brow wears not the open, fearless look of yore ; and Carrie, tho peerless one, whom he had one to love htm iu thdsc halcyon hours of long ago, what has the passing years brought to her ? Has happiness filled her heart and home, or has the serpent trailed through this Edcn-likc home ? Ah, mo! "The trail of the serpent is over us all.'' So should wo wonder that the blue eyes shelter them selves dreamily beneath tho snowy lids, urtliat the faintest trace of sadness should linger around tho beautiful lips, or grieve that the rich glow of her cheek has faded to the faint tint found among the inner leaves of the blush-rose ? I fear mo there is something hidden in thy heart, Carrie o'er which thou hast wept and prayed. Everything betokened comfort even ele gance. The traces of woman's sweet fan cies linger everywhere. The tilkened cur tains were looped with flowers ; and from numerous vases ranged arouud tho room, stole fourth the bweet perfume of those sweet messengers of happiness, hearing the glad tidings o'er forest aud hill, that sum mer is coining to gladden our hearts. A handsome piano stood in one corner with a flute lying upon it, which told (or should tell) a tale of pleasant evenings. Sad that so deep a cloud should loom at times about the master's brow, or that so deep a sor row should be nestling away down in the depths of Carrie's blue eyes. " Arthur, will you accompany mo with your flute, whilst I sing mother's now song !" " Excu me, Carrio j I do not feci mu sical, but will listen to your song." A low bigli told the wife's disappointment at the failure of her innocent plot to chase the sadne.-.s from Arthur's brow. Once more there is silcnee iu that pleasant par lor. Then Carrie, rising, scats herself upon a low scat at her husband's feet, aud the bright head is laid upon his knee. Unconsciously his fingers stray among the soft curls ; and Carrie's heart bounds with joy, as slio realizes that some outward thing has shadowed his brow, that he loves her still. "Will you not read aloud, Ar thur 1 'Tis buch exquisit pleasure to have. you read whilst I sew." 11 I cannot to night, Carrio, darling. Oho ! You almost ruin me, in spite of myself. Rut I am weary, my pet, and full of unrest. I could not concentrate my thoughts upon tho most brilliant work. Carrio walked to the window, to hide the tears that would not bo crushed back ; and Arthur, rising hastily, said : " Carrie, I must leave you alono again this evening. Business calls mo to tho office to-night." As hu spoke, Carrie's whito arms wcroj wound about his neck, aud her tearful face ' pressed against his own. j ' Why ! Carrie, why these tears ? I shall return by ten o'clock." j " Oh, Arthur, don't go out to-night, I1 beg of jou; stay with me this ono evening please do, I will bring your dressing gown and slippers j and you can rest upon tho sofa, if you do not feel well. I will read to you, or be ittll to you though I am a woman just as you wish. Ah, Ar thur, which shall it be ?" and tho old girl ish smile, of raro sweetness, rippled over tho face even while tho lips quivered. " It cannot bo to night, darling !" and pressing a passionate kiss upon tho plead ing lips lifted to his, Arthur Claro hurried from the room. Rushing wildly through tho hall, ho decended tin) marble steps; aud as ho did so, struck his forehead with his clenched hands, and in tones of agony littered the words : " Eternal curses on the earth ! I swear that, if luck is mine to night, and I win enough to clear mo of thoso wearying debts, I will forever give up this absorbing pas stou. I nm bewitched, infatuated ; led shout by a power Icantiot resist ; and yet, AND BL00MSBURG GENERAL ADVERTISER. 'TO HOLD AXD TRIM THE BLOOMSBUKG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA-, SATURDAY, ........ uiim ui my iiegiecicu wile, l am r irtn I i..ni t . i . . . t wretched, cvch with tho painted cheats in my hands ; Carrio is ever before me, and memory u-ill conjure up pictures of my poor darling -not as she looks now, out worn by weary watchings but as sho was when I won her from her happy homo, where tho shadow of care or grief never reached her and my boy my noble boy what a heritage of shame aud woe thy tatlicr is laying up for thee 1 Oh, mad ness i madness ! If I win this night, 1 will never touch a card again, so help mo Heaven I" Thus it is ever. If a man sin, ho must surely suffer. The noble soul of Arthur Claro was filled with anguish, and yet he would not root from out his heart this ono sin. I say "noble soul" for, though fal Ion, ho was still such kind, gentle, with almost a woman's tenderness filling his heart, ho was worthy yet of tho prayers Carrio nightly offered up, pleading for blessings upou his wayward head. And tho sorrowing wile. Long sho sat in silent anguish; then hope, as it will do, whispered : "Ho may return to-night early, business may call him away." And a look of relief passed over her face. Ringing the bell, she gave orders that when Willio returned ho should come to her, in place of going to bed. Poor, lonely mother! were it not for that brave boy, thy heart would break. Little footsteps upon tho stairs, a sweet clear, childish voice, and in another nio- ment the mother's arms are arouud herboy. ' guutlc Inoth(.r. Willie, you have never Ihe child s eyes search the room, but'si.cu i1Pr ,,. , , ... where is the father for whom hois looking? ' Iiere is papa .' I want to tell him of the beautiful music wo had to niirht. "He has gone out upon business ; but if you are very good, darling, you may sit until he returns. The mother forgot her fears in wntrliimr tlm line's i. .;... c. , J ""fe"" uu iuiu in giowing language, ot Ins eve ning's pleasure. Talking thus, the hours pas-ed till ten o'clock ; then Willie's eyes g.-ew heavy, and Carrie seating herself at tlie piano, . ang over her favorite songs. rio time crept on, and the weary look deep ened on Willie's face, and the mother's heaat sank, and the tcais filled her eyes. " Will Pupa come soon ? I am getting very tired, mamma." " Yes, he will come soon, I hope. Try to keep awake, darling poor mamma is so loneiy. Tho brave, manly boy opened wide his great blue eyes, saying : " I am not sleepy, but tired." Then placing himself upou his mother's knee, ho said : " Do not cry, mamma. Willio loves 1 you, and will not leave you till papa comes i home, All iu vain tho wish to keep awake.- fioon tuo wlnte lids drooned hcav lv. and . then entirely closed over tho beautiful eyes of blue. Slumber had stolen upon her lit- . 1 j tie son ; yet still Carrio sat holding him J till her arms grew weary, listening to ov j cry passing footstep. Oftentimes her heart bounded, as she fancied thoso foot- stops stopped at her own door; but tho poor heart sank again for the loved one came not yet. Eleven twelve o'clock rang out, clear and startling; then Carrio carried her sleeping child up stairs, and, gently re moving his garments, robed tho little pol ished limbs for rest. On till tho " wo sma' hours" lengthened toward tho morn ing, tho wife sat liting eagerly watching for him who camo not. Rut, alas ! no sound reached her car but her child's gen tle breathing, and tho boatings of her own heart that heart filled with a thousand nameless fears for his safety who was her "all on earth." Even Willio lying before her in safty, seemed not half so dear to her as tho absent one who might bo in dang er. Long sho sat silent and motionless, then (as is often tho case, even when a loved lifo is slowly wanning) tired nature became clamorous for rest ; and with fast falling tear, she laid her check close by her boys, aud in sleep found what tho tired heart is ever longing for forgetful ness. Iu a gloomy frame house in the suburbs of M , a woman lies upon, a narrow cot-bed, ill and dying. Tho air is hot aud stifling ; and the noise of crying children and harsh voices enter the window from tho crowded court. An air of poverty and misery prevades the room. Tho only relief to its dreariness is the geutlo suffer er. Mark well tho puro, whito brow, and sunkeu blue eyes ! Surely, this cannot be tho cherished, pelted child of tho widow Stanley ,tho gentle darling of Arthur Claro's heart I Ah ! sweet Carrio, her bouuio head so low ! poor, faded flower 'tis even so, Alas ! the graceful limbs lie languijHyjwwj. TOUUII OF TltUTII AND WAVE IT reer riots in tho veins, and tho wings of searching for her clothes, the widow found FAULT SEEKERS, tho angel Azraol arc folding about her. j an old, faded paper. She recognized it as It is easier to cavil than to applaud Como nearer, -Willie; it grows dark, that exquwt liitlc song, Tho Widow's 1 easier to carp than to appreciate. The and I would hold you once more to n.y Child," which she had long ago given to 1 voice of praise bow and feoble.it ksues breaking heart. I am dying my darling boy. Oh, that I could hold you tightly clasped to my heart, and thus carry you sinless spirit to God ! Willio, Willio, how can I leavo you in this bitter world, with out a mother's caro I Oh, for a few short years of liTe to shield my darling from tho storms which will beat upon his bright head ! Come closer, little son ; lay your hands in mino, and promise that you will never forgot me, or tho prayers and hymns I have taught you." ' Mamma, Mamui, do notdioand leave me hero alono. I will not let you die ! God is not good to take you from poor Willio ! " Hush, my child ; you grieve inc. Mamma will bo so happy in heaven, and will watch over you from tho blue sky. God will take caro of you," and sadly the dying mother parted tho golden brown curls from off his brow ; and her anguish ed eyes gazed lovingly far down into the tear dimmed eyes of her darling her lov ing boy, her patient friend, and only com panion for three long years. Tho boy strove to hush his sobs, lest ho should grieve his worshiped mother ; hut tho slight form quivered with emotion. " Willio, when mamma lies sleeping j su ,.(.na.ii, vuuieiiiiru, you IlltlSt Iiui Wltll veinr rr'iiirli,, ll'tt)l' 111 flu. ,.l,,nn... ..I...u..1.. 1 ! 6,10 w:n 1,0 a s(!Cn,l ,nt.,,.r .,', t ,..,.... . i. . i , long to see her once more my loving mother. When she comes, Willie, tell her mamma's last request was, that she would forgive your father, and love and comfort him. fell her that hu never snnk :i harsh word to mo that that " Rut the words died in an indistinct whisper ; a slight shiver passed over the graceful limbs, and the freed soul of Carrie Clare was with G .d. When Arthur Clare returned to his home, a sight met his eyes that filled his soul with never-dying remorse. Rjfore him lay his sweet, patient wife, dead ; and Willio lying motionless, with his arms witll nounu arouuu nis motncr s neeu. When, moans, he would have lifted him, the child turned such a faco of lovo upon him, that the strong man bowed his head and wept aloud. " Hush, papa; sho sleeps speak softly." " Ah ! Willio my boy, sho sleeps but a droamless slumber. Come witli mo, my bOll." " No, no j mamma will ween aud fret if sh 'f Q,,d luii,SC3 Willie-sbo weeps i en ill m mi nnw." nun ntinn mnrn Mm , "v" " ",wv" "'"T ing head is laid uijou his mother's cold breast. Alarmed at his looks and manner, tho father called in a neighbor, a woman, who gently removed him, and, still sleeping, laid him upou his little cot; then sadly prepared Carrie's beautiful form for tho grave. In searching through au old trunk, sho found a simple white dress, with which fho robed her still from. Then folding tho small hands upon the quiet heart, she left the mourner alono with his dead wife. Dead aud through his neglect! Ah! all in vaiu do tho hot tears rain over tho sweet faco, and glitter among tho soft, brown curls, and dampen the polished brow. In vaiu docs the cry of '"Carrie, Carrie," ring out through the quiet room. Tho lov iusr lips arc mute the blue eyes scaled the hands which but an hour ago, would have been flung lovingly arouud his neck, aro motionless. What reeks it now that this night ho has won money enough at tho faro-bank to buy back tho pleasant cot tage that Carrio loved ! She heeds it not ; sho hath found a homo "eternal iu tho heavens." On tho morrow, came the widowed moth cr, iu time to see the dust piled above her darling's head. Willio lay upon the bed, when she entered, alone; and so sadly changed from tho plump little fellow of five years ago, that sho did not know him. " Who aro you, my boy! whose house in this t" " I am mamma's little Willie. My mam ma went to heaven yesterday; I heard her singing among the angols last night." Over tho bereaved mother's grief wo will draw a veil. Mr. Clare entered, and would have approached her, but sho moved him away. From a fiieud she had loam his cruel treatment of her gentle child learned all that tho loving Carrio had so carefully hidden from her. Ho niado no rcsistauco when told of her iutcntion to tako Willio home with her, Tho boy still O'ER THE DARKENED EAltTli.' Arthur Clare. Tho sight hardened her heart more and moro against tho grief- bowed man, whoso late repentanco could not restore her child. Sho handed him tho paper, and in answer to his "what is it, mother ?" sternly answered : in What L gavo you tho night you bore my daughter from her happy home, promising to lovo and cherish her forever. Shall I read it to you Arthur Claro V ' " As you will, mother, for my heart is already broken." In firm tones she read tho touching words : "Deal Rfivtly thou w hen fir away, '.Mid ttr.uigir .cene h r fu(.t rthall rove : Nor let thy tcmlerr rare decay The boul of woman lied in love. "And HliouM.t tli.iti wondering mark a tear, Unruticioiis from her c)clidd break ; 11c pitiful uml goolh the fear, That man's Mrong heart can nu'er partake. "A ni'illier )iUtls iter pun to thee, on thy true lrcn.t to sparkle rare ; The places 'nentli thy hniHt-hold tree, The idol of lur loudest rare. "And by thy tru.t to be forgltcn, When judgment walks in terror wild, lly all thy treasured hopes of Heaven, Dout gently with it widow's clnlJ." Alt, stern woman ! probe not too deeply tho bleeding heart! Memory has carried him back to that bright night, aud pic tures the peerless beauty of his bride. Now his eye rests upon tho pale, wan face before him, beautiful iu its waxen purity, as the . snow-white jas.niue-upon tho white, glistening shoulders, now shrunken from their beautiful symmetry upon the closed I eyes and compressed lips ; and maddened by tho sight, he rushed wildly from tho house, and wandered all night and next I day till the hour for burial, alone and des perate. Willie seeing his father's grief, ! repeated his mother's parting request, that her own loving mother should deal gently with hererring husband. Tho widow was melted to tears ; aud, kneeling, she prayed for strength to forgive the man who had broken the heart of her only child ; and strength was given her. The coffin was lowered into tho grave, and the sod piled above the broken hear ted. Then tho stricken woman laid her hand upou the arm of Arthur Claro, and said : " My son, return with us. 1 have much to say to you." Together tho sorrow ing ones returned to their desolate homo ; together they mournfully reviewed tho past; and when at night thoy parted, kindly words spoken and mutual tears bhed. Mrs. Stanley and Willie left by tho night train for tho former's home, their hearts swelling with grief ; yet in the heart of Mrs. Stanley dawned a faint hope, that through the great sorrow that had fallen upon them, tho father of Willio, tho idol of Carrie's heart, might yet be reclaimed. " When you havo settled your business, Arthur, come to us at my quiet home j together we will strive to tread the truo i path, so that when this life is over, wo may rejoin our loved ono in heaven." Tur, Mississiri'l. The Mississippi pos sesses all the attributes of a great and no ble stream. Receiving contributions from such a great variety of large and far-reach' ing branches, it is not to be wondered at ' that its waters aro not of the limpid de-1 ordered flowers in tho garden of his heart, scriptiou. Flowing through a champaign on his faults as tho weeds, sown by an en country unequaled in point of beauty and envy, that must bo rooted out with tender fertility in the universe through forests est hands, for fear that some delicate violet dn-k with the lapse ot'centuiics, and which of promise may be be plucked up with tho yet resound with tho yell of the aboriginal nightshade besido which it grew. Indian ; under every variety of climate, j SUouW it )10t bo llie ,)0rpctual aspiration from tho snow and wild-rico lakes of tho nf that mnn wlm lmnp m nssm.intn will, north, it traverses the whole of tho tempe rate zone, aud heaves its amazing volume of waters at the Lino. Tho primeval for est, the fairy islet, the hoar and castellated crag, the silent prairie, the mysterious sep ulchral mound of a shadowy race long since passed away, tho dwellings and works oi a civiuzeu race, mo advancing wave oi an energetic people, acsuiii'ii lo go ioriu .rom ,e nrst mcr.uian anu encompass me world : these are features worth v of a river ' sucn as tno .ui-siss.ppi. Aim www us wild luxuriance remains unchecked and unmodified by tho hand of man, it is not strango that its occasionally erratic waters should, under a burning eun, send forth ' pestilential exhiiltations, destructive, in instances to life itself. Such evils will dis appear beforo the improvements of tho whito man. His industry will behold ouo of its rewards in tho subjection of thoso un doubted hindcrauces to many, who, theso things apart, would rejoice to fill up a re gion which offers so many decided advan tages to themselves and their offspring. ter A good key ia necessary to enter APRIL 7, 18Gf from tho generous and discriminating few ; its tone is readily drowned by iQ loud cries of condemnation roared from the lips of tho captious million. No talent, no taste no information are requisite to qualify the self-constituted censor for his office. ' A man uiu.t nerve hit limp tonery trarto ?ave censor rrilics all tire rrnrfy mmlr." says tho poet These surgeons of litera ture pass through ho college, and chrn no diplomas, to establish their right to cut and slash, dismember and decapitate, the fair offsprings of mightier mind. Walter Sctott aplly designates them as "tinkers who unable to make pots aud pans them selves set up for menders of them." In Ait as in Literature, their eyes search out defects alono, aud are as blind Id beau ties as bats to sunshine. Iu the wonders of seieuco they behold not the marvels she has achieved but the desirable endsshehas failed to co'tnpasJ. Their indulgence of this fault-finding passion gradually renders them skeptical of the existence of all genius and greatness all truth aud triumph. They believe in nothing but tho earths imperfections and man s short coinings. Rut it is in tho evcry-day contact with humanity that this condemning hypocriti cal spirit proves most tormenting and most disastrous. The constitutional fault seeker never makes a ncv acquaintance without tearing the unlucky individual s character to pieces, to bearch out all its crooked turns, sharp angle.s,aud weak points. If the.uature he is dissecting chance to be one enriched with many virtues viitues which the ready censor never himself possessed he tries to drag it down to his own level, by pronouncing its graces assumed and its goodness spuiious. If, on the other hand it be a temperament full of faults, ho glo ries over their discovery, and points them out with eompassionless zeal. lie never admits, as excuse, tho plea of inherited evil, the lack of early discipline, the con tagion of forced association ; and ho nev er dreams that he is prone to tho same failings himself, but lifts up his eyes aud hands and thanks Heaven that he is "not such a1 man." Not a foible escapes his keen scrutiny ho drags tho merest weak nesses into broad light aiagnifies them into vices, unsparingly judges and con demns tho culprit, and wholly that ho is making a merciless law by which ho will bo judged iu turn. Is it thus that the angels, with their pure eves, look down on mortals? Those eyes pierce the coarse veil of flesh, and gaze into the depths of tho spirit; there fore all our imperfections they must sure ly see; but upon these their holy contem plation never dwi-lls. They seek out the hidden gems of the mind, and toiling re move the surrounding ore of evil, and ecu tly polish the lea-t valuable jewel, with the attrition of circumst juee, until all its spar kle is developed. Thoy search out aud foster every little, weak, struggling germ of goodness.givo it the suushinj of their ce lestial smiles, aud when it droops, -as though about to die, pour upon it tho re freshing rain of their pitying tears. The look upon a man's virtues as the heaven- angels hereafter to makothis, his prepara tory life, approach as noraly as possible to the lives of tho wished for companions of his future 't If ho would cultivate the angelic within himself, (which alono can bring him in communion with angelic ex istences,) he mu-t cast out the spiiit of f.luit-.,eekiiig, and substitute in its place taat lovi,lg gazo wlliol, Ijeliolil.s th least ,)recious gem of worthi tll01,h Ltuicil i i. .i.. ...: -c : .i .. . uuiiuiuu me nine oi liiniuiitv utaL uoiv vision which discovers the feeblest shoot of virtuiJ) thougll overshadowed by the flauu ting weeds of Folly. Ar 1'. .algcr. IttT LU no one supposo that by acting I reflecting back his sunshine, gratefully a good part through lifo ho will escape thanking him for tho light with which it slander. There will bo thoso who bate has been made to glisten, and for tho glad him for the possession of the very qualities j nc of which -it is tho solitary speetator,as that ought to procuro esteem. There aro i's grandeur it looks dowu upon tho somo folks in tho world who aro not will- laughing valleys. Tho tuuo to which heav ing that others should do any better than en n,d earth are set, is tho same. In themselves. . heaven they sing, "Tho Lord bo ajcalted ; let his name bo magnified forever." And BaT An old soaker, down catt, ac - counts for bis cvcrlistinii thirstincss. bv tb S2 00 PER ANNUM. YOL 24. SABBATH HEADING. SPURGEON'S GEMS. A hf.kui.kss spirit is a curse to tho soul; a rash, presumptuous conversation will cat as doth a canker. "Too-bold" was never Too-w ise nor Too-loving. Careful walkin" is one of the best securities of safe and happy standing. It is solemn causo for doubting when we aro indifferent in our behavior to our best Friend. That maniac nonsense about God do ing his own work and our sitting still and doing nothing, ought to havo been buried long ago. I know not how to character ize it : it has done us immense damage. We know that God has accomplished his own work ; but he always has worked and always will work with means. Ir you would find God, lie dwclleth on every hill-top, and in every valley ; God is everywhere in creation ; but if you want a special display of him, if you would know what is the secret placb of the tabcrnacls of the Most High, the inner chamber of divinity, vou must rrn w!inr, vm. i. church of truo believers, for it is here he makes his coritiuual residence known in the hearts of the humble and contrite, who tremble at his word. Happy the day when every war-horse shall bo houghed, when every snoar shall become a pruning-hook, and every iword snail be made till the soil which once it stained with blood. It is of that my text prophesies, and my text naturally brings mo to that, as tho great climax of the gos pel dispensation. This will bo the last triumph of Christ , before death itself shall bo dead ; death's great Jackal, war, must die also, and then shall there bo peace on earth, and tho angel shall say, "I hav gone up and down through tho earth, and tho earth silteth still and is at rest ; I heard no tumult of war no noiso of battle." This is what we hope for. Let us fight on with dilligeuce and carucstlio'ss. Christ must ho his own architect. He will bring out different points of truth in different ways. Why, I believe that different denominations aro sent on pur pose to set out different truths. There aro some of our brethren a littlo too high, thoy briug out better than any other people tho grand old truths of sovereign grace. There arc some, on the other hand, a little too low ; they bring out with great clear ness the great and truthful doctrines of man's responsibility. So that two truths that might have been neglected, either ono or the other, if only one form of Christians ity existed, are both brought out, bdth made resplendent, by tho different denom inations of God's people, who aro alike chosen of God, aud precious to him. Suppose some one entering heaven wcro to say to the redeemed, "Suspend your songs for a moment 1 Ye have been prais ing Christ, lo, these six thousand years many of you hao without cessation prais. ee him now these many centuries ! Stop your song a moment ! pause and give your songs to some one else for an instant." Oh, can you conceive the scorn with which myriad eyes for the redeemed would smitu the tempter? ''Stop from praising him ! No never. Time may stop, for it shall be no more ; the world may stop, for its revolu tions! must cease ; tho univcrss may stop its cycles and tho iiwwngs of its world, but tor us to stop our songs never, never!'' - and it shall bo said, ''Hallelujah, hallelu- jab, hallelujah, tho Lord God Omnipotent rcignetli ! ' IIkavkn siugeth evermore. Before the throne of God, angels and redeemed saints extol his name. And this world Is siiif- ing too; sometimes with tho loud noiso of the rolling thunder, of tho boiling sea, of the dashing cataract, and of the lowing cattle ; and often with that still, solemn harmony, which floweth from tho vast ere- , 8. when n hj i ... ... Such is the song which gushes in silcuco from tho mountain lifting its head to the sky, cOveriug its face sometimes with the wings of mist, and at other times unveiling its suowwhi'.e brow before its Maker, and , the earth eingcth tho samo; "Grtat art I thou in thv works. Jl.IiilliTOliini'viW