COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT. If v AND BLOOMSBURG GENERAL ADVERTISER. LEVI. Li TATE, Editor. 2 00 PER ANNUM. "TO HOLD AND TRIM THE TOUCH OP TItUTH AND WAVE IT O'ER THE DARKENED KAKTII." VOL. 14.--NO. 20. BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA-, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, I860. VOL. 24. I J ) 1 V T II E Ctilttiitliia Immirrnt M rVSLHItCD FV8RT ftATlTRDAY MnRISO, DT LEVI li. TATJE. IN 33LOOMSBOBO, COLOMBIA COUNTY, TA. OFFICE in it Drid nmUinf. eppmite t ircAtjrr. it tidt Hf tnw tvrt iiVHtt, tyrmirt runs snua rfiuiricrw. art en." TERMS OK SUltdCIUPTtO.V. $l 00 In advance, for one copy, fur tit month. I 75 In advance, fur ono cojiy, mm yvnr, tt 00 If nut nid within tlic tirnt three nmnthn. it 5 If not it.ifil wiilim the flmt ait months. j 30 If not pnhl within they tar. ITT" No nlHrfljitldii taken for leu a thin lt montln, ad do paper ditmiiitinuvd until nil Arrearage iliall have ketn pU. Unit nary ADVKRTisFMKVTuliiicrUifl.aad Job Work leciteii. at ttiu est-ibliilicd nriccn. l)otcc Jpoctru. 'THE HEART'S GUESTS. When nge has cut it shadow O'er life'! declining w ay, And the evening twilight gather! Jlound our departing da)'. Then, ulule we sit and ponder On tliii deep and shadowy past. Wilhln tbe heart's still chamber! (v , 't 'VUs gurils will gather fast. --,. t) ' . The frlcadi in youth wo cherished I Shall rurue tuui .Mice more, Again tu huld communion t Aa in days nf yore. They may be stern and somber ; They may tie bright and fair ; But the heart wi'l liateits chamber! i The guesti will gallnr there. Haw shall it be, my sirtirs t Who, then, shaft be our guests t lluw shall it be. my brother!, a Whtu the shadow on us rests I Shall we not, amid the silence, Wn au'euts soft ami low, Then hear familiar vmeea, AndwurJs of loiighgof . Bhall.vrc not see dear'farra, Sw est smiling aa.fold, ill the mists of that dearehembcr J Are .ousel's rloud! Y.f gold. ',.VvTien age li.ia castas shadow. m. O'er life's declining wny, ' Ab1 ilie ci cuing twilight gather! ;ttnuinl eur departing day I XHtsccllaneou 51. af- THE LITTLE BOUND BOY S DUE AM A little fair-hairud child laid iU pale clictk against a pillow of straw. It kad toiled up three pairs of narrow dark stairs to gain its miserable garret, for it was-a little "bound child,' that had neither father nor mother ; fo no i-oft bed -awaited, its tired limbs, but a miserable pallet with one coverlet. It had neither lamp nor caudle to light en the room, if such it iiiicht be called ; tdll that was not so bad, for the beautiful gave mo this tall, beautiful body, which j wondered ;" made melody with their rouud moon smiled in upon the poor bound shall never feel corruption. And this was . hearts'' and sent forth no books but liv loy, and almost kissed his forehead, as tho reason, dear little orphan, because 1 1 iug volumes, that honored their authors his sad eyes closed dreamiugly. Rut after awhile, as ho lav there, what a wondrous change came over tho place, A great light shono down, the huge black ratters turned to polid gold, and thuso seemed all studdfd with tiny, precious, sparkling stones. Tho brokiii floor, too, was cuerustt'd with bhining crystals, and tho child raised hinirclf upon his elbow, and gazed with a half- foariii", half dc- lightcd look upon the glorious spectacle Ouo spot on the wall seemed too bright for bis vision to endure, but presently, as peaily, the old floor studded with bril If oniereing from it, camo a soft, white hatieo, and the same soft mysterious si-'ht figure, that sdood by tho poor bound boy's bedside. Tho child shut his eyes ; ho was a littlo, only a little,, frightened, and his heartbeat quickly, but he found breath to murmur ' Tell me who aro you?" " Look up, be not afraid," said a sweet voico that sounded like the harps of Heav- tn; "look up, darling I am your brother Willio, Bent down from tho angels to speak with you; and tell yu to bear all your sorrow patiently, for you will Eoon be with u.." " What, you are my brother Willie ! Oh, no. no, that cannot be. My brother "Willio was very pale, and his clothes wore patched aud torn ; and thcro was a hump on Jtis back, and ho used to go into tho muddy streets aud pick up bits of woo'd and chips. But your face is quite too Landsomo, and your clothes prettier than I ever saw bsforc ; .and there is no ugly hump on your back. Besides, my brother Willi is dead, long ago." " I am your brother Willie, your im mortal brother ; my body with tho ugly hump is dead and turned to ashos ; but just as that died I went up to the great heavens, aud saw lights that I cannot tell you about now, they were so very, very beautiful. But God, who is your Father and tho holy one of Eternity, gavo 1110 tljese bright garments that ncvor get soiled, and I'waa so happy that I expect my face was changed very much, aud I grew tall and straight ; so it is no wouder you do not knowuie," And now the little bound ihild'e tears be"n to full. " Oil !" lio exclaimed, "If I, too, could go to heaven 1'' " You can go," replied the angel, with n emilo of ineffable sweetness; "you have learned to read I" " Yes, a little." " Well to-morrow get your Uiblo, and find very reverently for it is God's most holy book these words of the Lord Jesus i " Hut I eay unto you, lovo your enemies ; blcs3 them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, aud pray for them that de spitefully use and persecute you." ' " Do nil these, and you shall bo the child of your Father which is above." " Even if they beat me I" murmured the little bound boy with a quivering lip. A ray of hope flashed across the angel's : face as ho replied, "the more you forgive, around there was no light, solemn still the nearer you will be to heaven." ness reigned ; the radiance, the rafters of Iu another moment the vision wasgouo, gold, the silver beams, the music, the an but still the room was all blazing with uti-' gels, all were gone. And then ho know earthly radiaucc, An thu little boy fell back upon the pil low his wan face reflected tho angel's smile, and he thought, "I will iorgivc thorn, even though they should beat me." Suddenly a more musical voice than tho former fell upon his ear. This time ho was not afraid, but sitting up in his miser able couch, he saw a ligure that seemed to lift itself to thu wall j a ray of intense brightness outlined all its form ; its eyes blazed, yet there was a mild beauty in them every time they looked into his own Little one, I am yotir father" said 1 the form, in melting accents. " 1 don't think you can be my father," whimpered the boy timidly. " My father Used to look very old indeed ; and he got hurt and wore a crutch, theie were wrink les on his face, and all owr hii forehead, and his hair was short and white; not long like yours. Aud my father used to stoop over, and wear u little black apron, and put patches on shoe in h little dark room." " And what else:" " lie usod to pray and ting very sweet- j ly, but I never hear any praying and sing ing now," sobbed the child. " Don't cry, dear lit tic boy but listen to me. 1 am your father, ymr immortal father ; that poor, lame body is gone now, mingled with the dust in the grave yard. As soon as the breath left that deformed body, I was with tho shining angels, hosts' and hosts of them boro me up to heaven ; and the King of that glorious place clothed mo in these lobes, white and stainless, and I loved Ilin., and my chief delight was in praying to Him and talking about Him,' and altho I was very poor, I triad to be honeat, aud many limes went hungry rath- w tlinu do wrong.'' j " And you, you never forget to say your little prayers that I taught you if you 1 will keep God's holy commandments, and trust in him always, you shall soon be with ' mc in my sweet heavenly home." Once more tho child was left alone, but! sti.l tho rafters were coldcn, the walls over all. A straiu of holy musio fell faint-1 ly upon bis enraptured senses; it grow ! louder and came near to the head of his' littlo bed. And then a voice oh, far sweeter than cither of the others, sang ; " My child, my littlo earth child, look upon me, I am thy mother." Iu a moment what emotions swelled tho bosom of tho lonely boy. Ho thought of ! her cherished tenderness to him long years 1 ago, of her soft arms round his nock, her ! gentle lips pressing his forehead then j came up the cruelties of strangers, who, after she had been put away iu tho deep ' ground, treated him harshly. He turned towards her; oh, what a ' glorious being ; her eyes wero like stars, her hair like the most precious gold ; but , there was that iu her face that uono other 1 might so truly know. I Ho had doubted if tho first was his J brother, if tho second was his father, but not onco did ho doubt this beautiful being was his own do ir mother. A littlo while ho kept down his strong feeling ; but tho thought of tho past aud the present overpowered him. " O, mother, mother, mother," ho cried, stretching forth his hands, "let 1110 come to you, let mo oiuio; there is nobody in this world liko you ; no ono kisses me now, no one loves mo ; oh, mother, mother I let mo como," uud tho hot tears rained down his checks " My orphau child," i-ho said, in low tones that thrilled him to the heart, "you cannot come to me now, but listen to mo. I am very often near you whon you know it not Every day I am by your side ; and when you como to this lonely room to weep, my wings oucirclo you. I behold you suffer, hut I know that God will not givo you more sorrow than you can hear. When you resist the evil, I whisper calm and tender thought unto your soul ; hut when you givo way to anger, when you cherish a spirit of revenge, you displease the great and holy God. " Bo good, bo happy even amidst your trials ; and, if that is a consolation, know that thy immortal mother often communes with thy soul. And further, thou shalt soon be with me.1' " Oh t mother, mother, mother," mur- ! mured the hoy, sprincinc from his bed. and striving to lean towards her. The keen air chilled him ; ho lookid eagerly he bad been dreaming ; but oh 1 what a dream how strengthening, how cheering ; never, never would hu forjet it. Tho next morning, when he went down to his scant breakfast, there was such a beautiful tcrcnety upon his face, such a sweet gladness in his eyes, that all who looked upon him foreborc to taunt or chide him. Ho told his dream, and the hearts that listened were softoned j and tho mother who held her own babe was so choked with her tears that she could not cat ; and the fatllcr sM inwardly that henceforth he would be kind to the poor little orphan bound boy, and so ho was. The child found his way into their affections j ho was so meek, so powerful, and at the end of a twelvemonth, when tho angels did, in very deed, take him to heaven, the whole family wept around tho littlo coffin as if he were one of their own. l!ut they all felt that lie was in the bright heavens with his broth er, his father, aud his dear angul mother. THE OLD-FASHIONED MOTHER. Old fashion mothers have nearly all passed away with the blue cheek and home spun wolleu of a simpler hut purer time. Ik-re and there aru remains, truly accom plished in heart and life, for the sphere of home. Old-fashinoncd mothers God bless them ! who followed m with heart and prayer over the world lived in our lives and sorrowed in our grief; who knew ro about patching than poetry ; spoke no dialect but love never preached nor and bles-icd the world. J ho old homestead ! We wish we could paiut it for you as it U no, we dare not say it is as it was; that wo should go together from room to room sit by tho hearth, round which that circle of light and lovo once swept, and there linger till all those simpler, purer times returned, and wo should grow young again, And how can we leave that spot with- reiiicmbring ouo form that occupied, in days gone liy, " tuo old armchair," that old fashion mother ono in all tho world the law of whose life was love ; one who was tho divinity ot our infancy, and the sacred presence in tho shrine of our first earthly idolatry; ouo who.-o heart is far below tho frost that gathers so thickly 011 her brow; one to whom wo never grow old, but in ths " ploomed 'roop,"or tho grave council, arc children still ; ono who welcomed us coming, bless ed us going, aud never forgets u nev er ! And when in some elo-'ct, some drawer, some corner, she finds a garmeut or a toy that onco was yours, how does she weep, as she thinks you may bo suffering or sad. And when Spring " leaves her robes on the treei," docs she not remember your tree and wish you wero there to see its gloryj! RllRPK- rvimirip tvn f1r.v TUn rn spou.0 of Henry Clay to tho" speech Qf Mr. Breckinridge, delivered at Lexington, is often spoken of. Tho New Orleans Delta gives it as follows : "Major Breckinridge, I congratulate you. You aro worthy to rcprcseut tho pcoplo of this district, whoso esteem and favor have been the chief objects of my ambition, and laborious life ;" and then dropping his voico to tho milder tone of , affection, ho added : "Mv dear John. I ho true to your name. Never forget you Ifn,.l.-!r... n..,l llrnl.inri,!,,.. nn.l the highest honors of the Republic, or what is more valuable, tho consciousncs , , 1 it . mi of having served well your country, will , , . , ,, bo ycur glorious reward." This was the noble response of a noliti- cal opponent, whoso famo as an crator and a statesman the world has not vet eccu eclipsed. HISTORICAL FACTS. The tardinrs with which mankind a dopt improvements may be in some degree illustrated by tho following facts, hastily thrown together : Canal locks were invented in 1591, by engineers of Viterbo, in Italy. They were nearly a hundred years getting fair ly into use in France and about one hun dred aud fifty in crossing the British Chan nel. At this time it was made felony in sev eral European stated, to ride in wheel carriages. Tho btcam engine was mvonted, or, rather, the principles of it discovered, by the ManpiU of Worcester as early us 1000. Few understood and none encour aged it. He died in great mortification. The honor was afterwards cugrosscd by Savary. In 170S the Earl of Stanhope applied the steam-engine to propelling a vessel. A steamboat was run twenty miles on the Saukey Canal, Liverpool, in 1707, and another on the Forth Clyde Canal, in 1801. A steamboat trip was made on the Delaware as early as 1701. In 1607, when Robert Fulton was fit ting up his first steamboat at New York, rcspeetablo and gray-hcaded men pronoun ced him a fool for his pains." Oliver Evans went before committees of Legislatures, first in Pennsylvania, and then in Maryland, with a project of a as 1801. Ho steam-carriage, as early akon a little aid to defray the expense. They could hardly be prevented from ro porting iu favor, not of steam-engines for carriages, but of a straight jacket for him self. Now almost all nations, have had the sagacity and ingenuity to seize aud utilize the precious idea. ucnj A cter tlio Ureat, in 1700 or thereabouts commenced a canal between the Wolga and the Don, the Governors and Royards of tho country opposed it earnestly thinking it impiety to turn riv crs out of channels whicli Heaven had assigned them. When some Dutchmen proposed to mako tho river Manzanares uavigablo to the Tagus aud that to Lisbon, the Council said if it had been tho will of God that the liver should bo navigable, he would have made them so. When llriuley, the great engineer told a committee of Parliament, to whom Bridgewater's petition was referred, that canals were better than rivers and would supcrsode them for tho purpose of naviga tion, tho committee were shocked, and asked him, " And pray, sir, what were rivers nude for V " To feed the canals," was the answer. Dr. Franklin surveyed tho rout of tho Delaware and Chesapeako Canal at his own expense in 1757. Baron Napier purveyed the route tho Forth and Clyde Canal at his own ex pense 1701. Both of theso works were subsequently accomplished but after great delay. Dr. Zabdiel Boyalston introduced in oeulation for tho small-box into Boston, in 1721, and tried at first on his son 1 1 homas, and other members of tho family but such was tho foreo of prejudice and ! unbelief that the other physicians gave a , unanimous oninion nsninst it ; tho muni ' cipal government prohibited its practice, and the populace would have torn him to dceics if ho had not retired from the city. X uiiDEti ami Suicide. Richard Mad den, of Springfield township this couuty, killed his wife, on Friday evening hist, by striking her several blows on tho head with a piece of tho head of a hogshcod ; after which ho draped her under tho porch of the house, A small son was thu 'only human witness of the terrible deed and ho said,1 Pojxi you ItavekiMal mother,' to which tho father replied ' knoio Ihnve.' He then left the house, and search being made, tor him tuo next morning ho was found in a corn field near by, having hung himself with a bridle. An inquest was held over both tho dead bodies on Friday uight aud Satuaday, and on Sunday they were both buried Mrs. Madden in tho Baptist gravo yard ; and tho murderer under the trco upon which ho had hung himself. No cause can be assigned for this tcrriblo occurrence, unless wo attrih- ju it to Hisaiuty, It is said that Madden """gu IV well ..King, , 1're.p.cntly exhibited symptoms of in . ! samt' ' od it u prob.Uo that a fit ofde. rangcuicnt haviui; suddenly seized him, he 0 . ' b . , ,;. , . , , , unconsciously committed this horrid uceti. 1 , , ' , 1 Madden was respectably connected, and Madden was a daughter of Mr. Locke '- 1!'ack Log Valley. They leave n'tfie children, Uunttngdw Union A COLLEGE YARN. Ono night as my friend P. and myself who were both students at old Yale, were out taking a little run around the city, we found ourselves, at rather a lata hour of tho night, before tho door of a well known grocer by tho name of Snip. "Stop a moment," said P., turning and gazing at Snip's fancy sign that was swinging to and fro in the breeze, "What's up 1" I asked, after P. had eyed it for some time contemplatively. "Nothing in particular, Rob," said ha, ''but just give mo a littlo hoist here, and I'll fetch that picture down in double quick time. That Snip is a .eoundrel for he presented my bill this morning, and i wli.iTi T rnfncpil tn tihv it. he thrtifitenetl to inform the tutor. ' ' No sooner asked than received ; the sign was down,and wo were off in triumph Suddenly a window opened, and out pop ped the head of Snip, crying : "Bring that back, you infornal young villains 1 Bring that back, now mind I tell ycr." . . i , IV anew ,d VAtiiPTinf! Imf a tftftr-t- , , ,. ... ', . He men of very tall walking took place. We ..i .i i ii were soon in our room with the door lock- , , . , , , cd, and the glittering pnzo before us, for ', , , . ,., . , we had hung on to it like crim death, liy , , , , . hand, it was soon reduced to pieces re markably adapted to our stove, into which it was disappearing as fast as time would permit. Ere it had passed from sight, wo were suddenly startled by tho cautious tread of two persons apparently nearing our door. The steps of one we rocog nized a3 being thoso of tho tutor, and the other wo very rightly conjectured belonged to thu late proprietor of tho relics around us. Here was a fix for us. Enough of tho sign left to convict us, aud no placo in which to conceal it Rap, rap, rap, was sounded at the door I gave myself up to fate, and was about to go and unlocked it, when I was arrest ed by the voico of 1, exclaiming in the most solemn tones imaginable ; "From everlasting to everlasting art Thou, Oh, Lord of Hosts." Turning round in astonishment, I be held my friend on his knees engaged iu prayer. The outsiders wore evidently astonished aa no further attack on tho door took place. Snin's confidence as the precise individual r, , , , , . j t T ...... . , tuo meaninuo i. iook me mm auu weui iu piling in the sign with a vengeance. P. snutl uub tits lracr tut iuu itisi, uicuu n o,o 1 , , , . . , . reduced to ashes, and raisui" his voice to a high key, he finished off with the quota tion : .Vnd oh, have mercy upon this wicked aud adulterous generation, who go about seeking for a siax, butshail have no sia.v given them. A-m-e-n." This last renewed the suspicious of the outsiders, and they repeated the knocking. Wo opened the door ; they entered, and after a minuto search in every corner,thcy gave it up, and decided that we wero not the guilty ones. Still I noticed, as our victim disappeared, his last gaze turned most wistfully on our stove. The tuack or the Meteor. The track of the great meteor of the liOth of July is being gradually traced out. De troit, Michigan, was the farthest point West at which it was first noticed, accor ding to tho Caiubridgo astronomers. It, however, appeared still farther West, as wo learn from a correspondent of tho Al bany Journal of the i!d inst. writing from Sycamore, DeKalb county, Illinoiso who describes it as "a Bhootiug star, crossing about one-half of tho southern sky, from west to cast, moviug slowly, and leawng lcainc a large track, liko a comet." Sycamore is within a hundred miles of tho Mississippi river, aud no uoiiui iuriucr iniormauon from the West will provo that this fircry traveler in the firmament first struck the earth's orbit on or near the Pacific ocean. Its flight, says tho Journal of Commerce, has already been traced 300 miles cast ward on tho Atlantic Ocean, and ships yet to come in will probably give us furthur accounts of its course. Wo seo no reason to doubt tho truth of the theory published in this Journal on tho U3d, that this moto or was a fragment of a broken planet, or nn accumulation of ucbuloiw matter circu lating nrouud tho sun and ignited by the friction of our atmosphere. Judged by the above facts, and al30 by the opinion ot astronomers, that tho leat diameter of tho meteor was not less than hulf a mile, there is reason to believe that its velocity was not overcomo by tho gravitation of the earth, and that it is still pursuing its eourso around the suu in an orbit whose plane is coincident with tho planes of motion of the other bodies iu tho solar pyitom. THE ENCHANTMENT OF CHILD HOOD. How true is this, which we find afloat. "The child s eyes aro enchanted, but ho docs not know it, and believes in all hor sees. Ha docs not doubt the shimmer and the glory of tho scenes that lie before him To him the future is no sandy desert strcw cd with dead men's bones ; it U a wide upread savanna fruitful as the tropics, and delightful as Elysian plains. He gates down tho vista of life, and every phan tasm seems to his ardent sight as n real and pleasant thing. There h not n P-B"""' ' '. si .t:.. . .!.. "u" " " ' "" -f- r , ' . o b ' All the r . .' ,, . h.vomlis eiswi Hint, nnnnsp In 1 prysmatic views that appear to flash across his forward path ho thinks aro really lighting it, and that ho shall bo touched aud beautified by their radience when once he is there. Bright aud fair is tho appa rent prospect before him ; no wonder that the child is in haste to get on. Thcro is i t.. !.:. i i... tcieijiuiue to iuiu iiim- u uuuuuit uitiiby I - sweet gardens, flowing fountains, noble, ,, ? ' .,. , , , , . nouie lorms, smiuiiK laces, auu uecKonin- I , , , ' , . . . line hand'), lie sees the waving of palms 6 . b r and the glittering of jewels ; he hoars the 1 . f , ' , . . , ., . i voice of trumpet aud of harp; oh I all is before him ; on, on. on. And on he rush I cs breathlessly to the end of childhood, through youth, and often into manhood, before he becomes fully aware that the thape complexion and mein of his phan toms have all been rapidly changing, and that what he took for true worth and beau ty, is, in reality, no better than a rare show or mirage of the desert. At last, grown keen eyed by hard lessons, he pierces through tho cheat, and sees the hare and barren seed of life. For him there is afterwards no more enchantment. THE YOUNG WIFE. Ittakc3 a heroine to be rconomieal,;aye Miss Muloch. "For, will not another run in debt for a bonnet than wear her old one a year behind the muilt ? give a ball, and stint the family dinner for a month alter! take a large house, and furnish handsome reception rooms, while her household hud dle together anyhow in untidy attic bed chambers, and her servants swelter on BhakfidowiiSjbeside tho kitchen fire ? She prefers this a hundred times to stating plainly, by word or manner : My income is so much a year isso much a year I don't care who knows it it will not allow me to live beyond a iti-irtntn vrtrt k ri.1 Hint l-nnti rrrrf o Vil f my nuJ ... . thm.. r .1 . p ! 'ore excuse my preferring the comfort of my family to the entertainment of m j ac quaiiitanees. And, Society, if you choose to look in upon us, you must just take us ! we 3rc wit,l0ut ani' pretences of any- Kind ; or you may shut the door and- good bye !" " MoTHKR." 0, word of undying beauty 1 Thine echoes sound along the walls of time until they crumble at tho brcatb of tho Eternal. In all the world ! there is not a habitable spot wheru the iiiumc of that holiest word is not sounded, Ay, by at golden flower of the river, by j the crystal margiu of tho rock, under the leaf of shade of .he forest tree, and in the 1 hut built of bamboo cane, in the mud and thatched cottage, by the peaks of the kissing mountains, iu the wido spread valley, on the blue ocean in the change-1 less desert where tho angel came down to. give the parched lips tho sweet waters I of tho wilderness ; under the white tent of i the Arab and m the dark covered wigwam of the Indian hunter ; wherever the pul- ses of tho human heart quick and warm, ' or float feebly along tho current of fail - mg life thcro is that sweet word spoken liko a universal prayer " Mother." A Thought. When there is a thought in my heart, aud I wish it to be in thine also, I seek a sound, as it were, for a vo- hide by which it may pass to thee. I take , - -- ti souuu anu, ro, pub uic .nougn luvu iv. .lima x inter, auu uruuuiu, aim teach that thought, yet lose it not. If my thought can go forth to theo and still re main with me, cannot tlvo Word of God do the same thing by means of the flesh which he took on him ? Behold tho Word of God, God with God, tho Wisdom of God, remaining unceasingly with the Father, that ho might proceed to us, sought the flesh, as it were a sound, and introduced himself into it. By this expedient ho both proceeded to us aud did not recede from tlvo Father. A vgustine. ft5y A Poet says : "Oh, sho was fair, but sorrow came and left his traocs there What becanns of thu rat of thu harncs bo don't state SABBATH READING. T HE DO V E . Th dove, lt lo"eein eastern !ktc, Returning fondly home, Ns'er stoops lot-art tur wing, nor rliei Where idl warblers roam. Hut high she shoots, through air and light, Abnte all low delay; U'herc nothing earthly bourida her flight, Nor aliadow dims her way. 80 grant me, I.nrd. from evtry ilaln Ofiiifut passion free. Aloft on merry's pinions borne, Tu ateer hi) course to time. No sin tn dond. no lure to stay My soul, nahome she springs; Thy sunshine nn lierjojful way,, Thy freedom on her wings. DEAUTIFUL INCIDENT. Last Sunday afternoon, as Dr. Tefft was opening his sermon in Noroiubcga Hall, a small bird, a swallow or a martin began to soar and flutter among tho niches and frescoes of that noble room,and seem ed to take too much attention of the largo audience there assembled. Tho speaker paused a moment, and looking first at tho bird, Ihcn nt the congregation, said tlftt he hoped his hearers would cot allow themselves to bo disturbed, for he was not himself disturbed, by tlu twittering of their little visitor. Ho received tho visit, indeed, as a friendly omen, for ho remem bered what the bard of Avon had put into the mouth of Bauquo : "This guest of summer TtietemDld.hauntitiiiiifmlet, does upprove, liy his loved mansioiir), that the licawh'a breath suo-lls wooingly Iwro." And he also rcnicmbcrcd,with still grea ter interest, what the Bard of Israel had uttered upon the same subject : "How amiable rrc thy taScrnacles, O Lord or Hosts, My soul longuh, yea, tun faint, th, ftr the courts ti tb. I,urd. My heart and my fjestirrletb nut fur the living Uod ; Yea tile sparrow hath fofmd a house. And tin swallow anestforh rsdf. Wlure she may lay her young," Ho hoped that the religion of universal love would so prevail among his people, that ' the heaven's breath" would "smell wooingly there;" and that tho placo they occupied would, by lhis means, become a spot o soft and snnny, that thu most de fenseless human inhabitants of earth might dwell there with quietness, security, and joy. The little messenger hovered over tho congregation while his visit was being thus disposed of, and then escaped into tho open world, to relate to his comrades, wj will fancy, what he had beheld and listen ed to in that place of prayer. H'Aijf ami Couritr, PURSUIT OF PLEASURE. A young man left London for tho pur pose of " enjoying bimelf." His object was not tho gratification of a laudable curiosity, but pleaure. He reached IJomo in time for the car nival ; his purpose was to enter into all its gaieties. He obtained an introduction to a lady of fashion, who sent him a card of invitation to a splendid masquerade ball. It was on Sabbath oveniu; that he joined 1 tho masks, and continued with them in tho uaiiec till morning, On Monday hu returned to his lodging in a paroxysm of delirium. On Tuesday an acquaintance found him in that state, He called a physician, who pronounced tho life of his patient to bo in iumicdiatu danger. His friend, anxious about his spiritual state, sent for a minister. Ho came, but could do the sufferer 110 good, His reason had departed. No words of truth could reach hiin, On Saturday he was laid in the grave Saturday, the week preceding, his mind was wholly occupied with thu anticipated pleasures of the ball. A part of God holy day was spent 111 the excitement of tho ! daucc. During tho remainder of his stay on earth he was delirious. Tbui ended his pursuit of pleasure. FAITH IN GOD. Have faith iu God. Faith will be stag gered even by loose stones in the way, if I .1UITO,U4UI1UIU wo look mauward ; if we look Godward. faith mt bo staggeml hy iuacccs8ab,8 mouutaina stretching across and obstruct apparently onr onward progress, "Go forward," is the voiee from heaven ; and faith obeying, finds the mountains beforo it as fiat as plains. '-God with us," is tho watchword of our warfare, the seerct of pur strength, the security of our triumph. "If thou canst believe, all things arc poss ible to him that believcth." How strong faith is when we are jut fresh from tho fountain of redeeming lovo ! A good con science, and then faith will do all things, for it is in its very nature such as to kt God work all. Wo may say that it is tho most activo when it is moot paesive, and that it wearies least when it deco most i vorL.