A* - v • r W- V. Teyf. wj VNTRT A Gllnore.] VOLUME 2. THB STAR OF TUB WORTH Is published every Thursday Morning, by Weaver A Gflmore. OFFICE—Up stairs in the New Brick building on Use South suit qf Main street, third square below Market. TERMS :—Two Dollars nor annum, if paid within six months from the time of subscri bing ; two dollars and fifty cents if not paid within the year. No subscription received tor a less period than six months : no discon tinuance permitted until all arrearages are J, unless at the option of the editors. ADVESTISEM*NTS not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for one dollar, find twenty-five cents for each additional insertion. Ji liberal discount will be made to thpse who ad vertise by the year. Fro m the N. O. Delta. THE ®KKIETON HAND. , - . BY JOHN O. DUNN. flap tap 1 rap lap! at the door of tho heart; Bap tap! with a loud demand ! Oh who is it raps at the Coor of the heart, Crying, matter and spirit shall surely part, The one to the dust, for dust thou art, Ti.e rest to the spirit land ? Tis I! 'tis I, who knocketh without,— 'Tie I of the Skeleton Hand! Rap tap.' rap tap!—I have startled thee up From the midst of a misty dream! Rep, tap! rap, tap!—l have startled thee up When thy lips were red from the deadly cup And thy curses grew louder at every sup, And thy orbs in a frenzy gleara'd For 'tis I! 'tis I!, who knocketh without, With a bony arm and a knuckle stout— Tis I of the Sickle Keen ! Kap,tap! rap, tap! on the bony walls!! whet, hot Art ready within? • Rap, tap! rap, tap! or>l ie bony wallah - Rap,(tap ! rap, tap!" Still louder it falls!! I'll sent thee no longer these carnal halls— CThou hast made them s den of sin! Make ready! Make ready! 'Tis I without, With a bony arm and knuckle stout— Tis I of the Skeleton Grim! Rep, tap! rap, tap!— But a voice of prayer Gushed forth from tho sinful weight. Rap, tap! rap, tap!—A voice of prayer Went trembling upward, to spare—oh spare For another year —a year to prepare For the regions of glory and light!— A year to prepare for him without," With the skeleton arm and the knuckle stout— For him with tho breath of blight. Rap, tap—no more! The year is given— A year of neglect and crime. Rap, tap—no more! A year is given To fight in the fields where the righteous have striv'n For theirspotlessrobesand a heme n heaven, But alas! how fleeting is time! Tiapaste—and again is heart! without' bony arm and the knuckle sfeut Like a wild and deathly crime! Rap' tap! rap, tap! on the bony walla! What, ho! Art ready within? Rap, lap! rap, tap ! on the bony walls- Rap, tap! rap, Like the thunder it falls!! I'M rent thee no longer these carnal halls, Thou monster of falsehood and sin! In a tumult of horror the spirit went out O'er Avenius, with him of the knuckle stout! With him of the Skeleton Grim!!! [From the Public Ledger.] Dissolve the Union I Never I V * BT THE HKV. EDWAHD C. JONES, A. M Dissolve the Union! never;: 'Twere e'en a madman's part, The golden chain to sever, Which girdles Freedom's heart. What! Faction rear her Altar, And discord wave her brand, And hearts from duty falter, At Party's base demand ? Look up—'tis Freedom's temple You long to overthrow: And if your arm's uplifted, A demon prompts the blow. Think f every radiant column, Has cost a Patriot's blood, And would yo'u have them shattered, Where long in pride they stood ? That flag—that honored pennon, Mirrored in every sea; What, would you quench one beaming star, Nor sink in infamy? Rond it—and e'en its speechless fold, So mercilessly riven, Like martyred Abel's blood would cry, For vengeance to the Heaven. Dissolve the Union ! never— Yon may not, if you would, Go. Traitor, go for over, And hide you where you should: For he who breathes dissension, To shake a people's trust, Should cower back to nothingness, Or crumble into dust. Written for the Star of tho North. Perplexities of a Mao with a Family. BY".EXPERIENCE." CHAP. VI. "Well, Ella, I bec.xmc an initiated Odd Fellow last night," said I to my gentle half one morning at breakfast. "Why, Mr. Poe!" and Eila dropped her filled cup from her lips over he.rdress,shriek ing most wildly as the coffee burnt her. "I thought it best to tell you at once, for 1 desire to have no secrets from you." "Indeed but I think this looks very much like having secrets. I thought all last night that some horrible dream was troubling you. But no wonder. I understand it all now." "But, Ella dear, it was not that that annoy ed me in my sleep." "Ah, I know you would be very loth to confess, for you cannot but feel some reproa ches of conscience for an attempted decep of me." "But my frank confession of my member ship as an Odd Fellow should prove that I ant free from any attempt to deceive you." "Ab, your cunning will not avail you. 1 will set, and I cannot believe yeu fully hon BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, Ml, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, IBsof est in this matter of wishing to have no so crot from mo, until you prove this to me." ."And what further proof do yon ask ?" • "That you disclose to mo tho secrets of last night" "What, those of the lodge ?" "Yes." "But I dare net." "Pray why I" "That itself is a part of the secret." "Fie, I see it all," and Ella put her hands over her face, and walked out of the room sobbing. She looked sad and sick when I next saw her. I pitied her, and reproached'mysolf for my rude disregard of her wishes. But what was to be done ? I dared Jiot make a con fession to hor, and J had not the courage to explain and reason har out of her whim. I was miserable, and felt that 1 deserved to be so. My wife was agendo soul, and I must be a brute to wound har feelings. Tell her the simple secrets of tho order I dared not, and for not doing it I would be subject to perpetual importunities and suspicions. It was strange that I could not haved acted more discreetly in this matter ! What a per. plexity this was again ! CHAPTER VII. "Well, Doctor, I commend your respectful treatment of your lady," said Mrs. Prim,with a sly meaning wink, to me one morning, as I paid her family a professional visit "I certainly always attempt to treat her with the utmost kindness and respect," I re. plied half enquiringly, for I did not under derstand her inuendo. " But I was so pleased to hear that you trusted her to a degree that few men venture to do with their wives." "I hope, indeed, she is to be trusted to any extent in every respet, for I should feel most meanly to find myself suspicious of her. But pray explain yaurself, for I confess I do not fairly understand you "I had reference, sir, to your communica ting to her the secrets of the Lodge," an swered the lady in a lower tone, and half distrustfully. And she added, after a little pause ; for I was so astonished that I could not reply at once—"But of course, I would not for the world tattle this to any one else, so you need not fear. I was so pleased with your frankness toward your lady in this mat ter that I could not refrain from compliment ing you, as a merited act of justice." "Your admiration is lost then, I must say to you, Mrs. Print," I replied as soon as I recovered from the shock of astonishment, for 1 half some horrible plot to qn trap me. I "Nay don't attempt to joko with me, for you know, Doctor, I dislike tricks." "I was never in more serious earnest than when 1 say, that Mrs. Poe knows none of the secrets of the Odd Fellows from mo. If your information was true it might indeed work me a sad injury." "Then of course you would conceal your breach of faith. Never mind, Doctor, 1 lor give it for the sake of the love you bear El la," and the dignified lady insisted upon be lieving that I had been false to the lodge for the sake of my wife, for sho declared site had ''heard so." * • • • • Not long after this I paid a professional vis it to Mr. Forsyth's family; and, while left a lone with my patient, 1 heard something like the following conversation carried on in ra ther low voices, in the adjoining room." "I say he's a brute to act so to his wife!" "Yes, it's bad enough." "How sorry 1 am for Ella." ' Ho, ho," muttered I, "so they're talking about me." "Yes," ropliod the secondvoico, "1 always thought it would come to this with him." "And now he'll get into bad company,and run down the road of dissipation to .uttor ruin." "Poor Ella." "Indeed, it's too bad!" "He treats her just like a servant to his family, and not at all like a wife. lam so glad I had the prudence to shun him when he attempted to annoy mo with his atten tions." "1 have perhaps still greater reason for thankfulness." "How so, pray toll ?" "Oh, il'souly an old flirtation of no con sequence, that can now do neither credit nor service." "What, with the doctor?" "Y as, before I knew him so well as I do now." "You may thank your stars that you es caped." "Indeed I do," and here there was a sup pressed "ha! ha 1" Here too there was a short pause in the conversation. A third person seemed to come into the room, and the talk wont on." "Wc were talking, Mrs. Siddon, about the brutality of Dr. Poe." "Brutality!— The woakness or villainy you should rather say. Why they say he had to go and tell his wile all the Odd Fellows' se crets. I think he must be extremely uxori ous, or weak minded, or—" "Oh no, Mrs. Siddon, the news is that he brutally refused to tell his wife any thing." "Why indeed I heard he told her every tiling about the Odd Fellows—their secrets —and all." "You must have been misinformed then, for I heard possitively that he utterly, and stubbornly refused to tell her any thing at all." "Well, ho cannot attend our family any i more." | "Nor .. "Nor ours either." "Such a brute!" "But, indeed, I think he told his wife tho secrets." "Oh no." "Indeed he didn't." Here I could contain myself no longer,and with a smothered laugh, I accidentally kick ed over a chair, the noise of which adjourn ed the caucus of the adjoining room. ■i ■ . Coming it over a Hatter. Many years sinco, there did dwell in a certain town not a hundred miles from that far-famed place where Orthodox divines are fitted up for their profession and calling, a certain D. D. notorious for his parsimonious ness, which would occasionally run into the wildest extremes. "Like a peach that's got the yallers, With it's mealiness 'bustin out." One day this of divinity chanced into a hat store in this city, and after running j over the wares selected an ordinary looking , ha'.-put it on his reverend head'ogled him- I self in the glass-then asked the very lowest price of it-telling the vender that if he could get it cheap enough he thought he might buy it. "But," said tho hatter, "that hat is not good enough for you to wear hero is what you want, showing one of his best beavers "'Tis the best 1 can afford though," return ed the theologian. "Well, there, doctor—l'll make a present of that host bearer, if you'll wear it and j tell your friends whose store it came from l'U warrant you'll send me customers enough to get my money back with interest; you are pretty extensively acquainted. "Thank you-thank yon?" said the doctor hiseyes gleaming with pleasure at raising a castor so cheaply-how much may this bea ver be worth ?" "We selithat kind of hat for eight dollars, replied the man of nap. •' And the other ?" continued the reverend gentlemen. "Three." The man of sermons put on tho beavers; looked in the glass-then ot tho three dollar hat. "I think sir" said he-taking ofi tho beaver; and holding it in one hand as he donned the cheap "tile," I think sir that this hat will an swer my purpose full as well as the best." "But you had better take tho the bost one. sir, it costs you no more." "B-u-l—bu-t," replied the parson hesita tingly—l didn't know—but—would as lief I would take the cheap one-mid leave the othor-and perhaps you would not mind giving me the difference in a five dollar bill !"— Boston Post. How Put Learned to make a Fire. "Can you make a fire, Pat?" asked a gentleman of a newly arrived son of Erin. "Indade I can, sia, and I learned to do that same, yer honor, to my cost, sure—Whin I came over, you see, there was no one a long wid me, except meself alone, and my sister Bridget. Whin,we got ashore, we wont together to a boording house, the boor dingmaster took me up stairs to a room, and whin I went to bed 1 took tho coat and shirt off my back, and for foar some dirty spal peen would be after stealing 'em away snug and tidy in a great iron cliist, that stood right forninst the bed. lu tho mornin, whin the day was breakiu through my winder, sais I to myself," Tho lop av the mornin to ye, Pat: is yer clothes safo ? "and I jist open ed the door av the big chist, and 1)6 gorra, the coat off mo body and the shirt off mo back was burnt ashes. Be dad, sir, that ould diril of a chist was a stove, bad luck to it; — aud iver since, that, I've knowd how to kin dle fires, sir." A Rational Conclusion. An honest Dutchman, in training up his son iu the way he should go, frequently ex ercised him in bible lessons. On one of these occasions ho asked him: 'Who vas dat vat would not shleop mit Botipher's vife?' 'Shoseph.' 'Dat's a cootpoy! Veil, vat vas de rcasou vy he would not shleep mit her?' 'Don't know—shpose he was not shleopy.' VERY CLEVER. —They toll a good joko in Paris of the F'rench polico, who seeing two persons fighting, interposed, and said—"No fighting in tho streets, you blackguards ; go inside the Chamber, if you wish to do that " IFA "State's cvidenco" has been defined as tho term by which wo designate the wretch who is pardoned fur being more base than his comrades. ty "Mr. Brown, 1 owe you a grudge, re member that!" "I shall not be frightened then, fot I never know you to pay anything that you owed." fy Poverty is the mother of many arts— That ocoounls for the fact that so many arts are very "poor ones"—they "tako after their mother." BT"I'll watch and prey," as the fox said when he saw a poultry yard. EF*Malico is said to driuk ono-half of its own poison. Troth and Right—God ftp our Country. A WEDDING EXCURSION. PROM THE UREAT WEST. Tho evening the ceremony was performed which made Tim and Rachael a unite, and the company hod "liquored" all round, Tim having previously "talked it up" with Rach eljbolcily announcing the desperale resolu tioh of starting tho next morning on a grand tour of observation. 'He had always bin tu hum," he said, "and never seen nuthin, and now he was goin' straight to G , and afore he come bock ho would BCO a steamboat if there was such a thing any how." Tho village of G was about fifty mile 3 distant, lying on the Ohio river, and a journey there from Tim's residence in those days, was deemed a tr"""' Some of itiein iliougni Tim had taken loavc of hi 3 senses, or certainly he was not in earnest, but he assured them he was, and th next morning, tocking up "old gray," #hd putting in a tupply of poik and beans for the journey. Tim and the now Mrs. Hig gins started on their bridal tour The sec ond day the hopeful pair, without accident, arrived at G——. Just as they were enter ing tho town it so happened that tho steam boa*. Pennsylvania was rounding in to make landing. Tim caught sight of her sraoko pipes, aud in an ccstacy of wonder and de light cried out; "There sho cemos now, by hokey! Look at her Rach ! Je-rr.-sa-lcm ! jest as Sq'rira Stekely said—smokes like a burnin' toller- Sire's comin in tu shore, tu! Jemima, what a creek ! furdcr cross than from our houso to Shodlow's tnill! ain't it Rach I See, they are tying up the varmint with a halter. Wonder if it's skeery and pulls. Here's a post, let's tie gray, and go down to the crit ter." ''Thunder! what's that? how it snorts! You better keep way from it, Tim," said Rachel; "it monght swaller you down like winkin." "I ain't afcared," said Tim: "folks are coining off on't now. She's good natured 1 reckon, only spirited" By this time "gray" was made fast, and Tim and Rachel were moving cautiously in the diiection of the boat. "No balking, ltachel, I'm going on to her." Tho plank was out, and Tim, followed slowly by Rachel, boldly walked up, and soon stood along side the engine. "See how she sweats, thoy must have put her through, ' said Tkn. "J say, old boss, - ' said Tim, addressing *' e engineer, "movo her jints a little, I waa't to see how she trav els." "She'll move directly," replied the man of steam, "belter keep out of her way." Tim and Rachel now wendod their way to the main deck, aud so completely were thoy absorbed with what they saw, that they did not observe the preparations making for her departure. At the last tap of the bell, Tim thought there must be a meetin' somewhere, but had no idea it was anything which con cerned him. At length, as Tim afterwards expressed i:, "alio began to breathe hard, & the water began to smash," aud Tim for tho first time, observed they were in the midst of the liver. "Hello hero, old boss!" screamed Tirn; "1 say, cap'n, what you 'bout? where you goin' tu ?" They were now under full head-way, and Tim saw the town and old gray disappear ing like magic. "Thunder, why don't you hold in ?" roar ed Tim, "she's running away.—VVhat'll 1 do ? Oh Lord, cuss the critter—can't sho bo bro't tu?" A wag, who comprehended poor Tim's predicament, observed: "You are in for it now, my friend, wo don't stop till we get to Orleans." "1 told you to keep way from the blasted varmint," screamed Rachel; "now what will become of us ?'' Tim was in despair. At this moment the steamer's whistle uttered one of its sharpest notes, and Tim's hair stood on end. "She's loose, sqncoling and kickin!" shrieked Tim. "Oh Lord, Rachel, wo are lost," and tho absence of the knowledge of any prayer, ho tried to repeat a part of tho blessing he had heard Deacon Snively ask at the table. By this limo tho captain had learned of poor Tim's misfortune, and kindly ordered the boat to land, and Tim and Rachel once mora stood on terra firma.—Footing it back with all possible dispatch, they found old gray still fast to tho post, and not many min utes elapsed before head was turned home ward, with Tim and Rachel, who wore per fectly satisfied with what they had .seen of tho world in general, aud their experience iu steamboaliug in particular. Bcmisstonof Punishment. — We learn from tke Frederick Examiner, that Gov. Thomas has commuted the punishment of John Tho mas, convicted iu Frederick City' in Novem ber last, on his own confession, of the murder of Mrs. Preston, and ser.tenced by the Court to be hung, to confinement in the Penitenti ary. Bustles are all a fleeting show, For man's illusion given, They're filled with bran or stuffed with tow, And slick out about 'a feet or so,' On six girls out of seven. EF* The Bank at Danville is in operation. TO MY WIFE. BY REV. 0. W. BETHUNE. Afar from thee! The morning breaks, But morning brings no joys to me ; Alas my spirit only wakes To know that 1 am far from theo ! In dreams I saw that blessed face, And then wort nestled on my breast ; In dreams I felt tby fond embrace, And to my own thy hoart was pressed. Afar from thee ! 'Tis solitude, Though smiling crowds around me be; The kind, the beautiful, the good— For I can only think of thee. Of thee, the kindest, lovliest, best, My earliest, and my only one; Without thee I am all unblest, And wholly blest with thee alone. Afar from thee! Tho words of praise WJ LLBTICSV VAT UIILIOCDIJLT' j What sweetest seemed in better days, Without thee seems no longer sweet; The dearest joy fame can bestow, Is in thy moistened eye to see, And in thy cheek's unusual glow, Thou deem'st me not unworthy thee. Afar from thee! The night is come, But slumbers from my pillow lice; 1 cannot rest so fartjom home, And try heart's home is, lovo, with thee ! I kneel before the throno of prayer, And then I know thou art nigh ; For God, who seeth everywhere, Bends on us a watchful eye. Together in his !ove embrace, No distance can our hearts divide; Forgotten quite the mediate space, I kneel thy kneeling form beside; My tranquil frame then sinks to sleep, But sours the spirit Jar and froo ; O welcome be night's slumbers deep— For, then, de„r love, I am with thee ! t Dow, JR., DKXIUBKS life at twenty in tho following unique manner; "FRIENDS, at twenty we are wild as partrid ges. There's no such thing as taming us; we ride that fierce, and headstrong animal, Passion, over fences, ditches, hedges on to the deyil—leap the five-barred gate of rea son without touching the curb cf discration, or pnlling harder than a tit mouse, upon the strong rein of judgment. And twenty you ate perfect locomotives, going at the rate of sixty miles an hour, your heart the boiler, lovo the steam which you sometimes blow off in sighes,—and hope, fear, anxiety and jealousy, are the train that you drag. At this season of life you are filed with exhilir ating gas of romance eve."}' thing looks ro mantic by spells—oven a jackass philoso phising over a barrel of vinegar. You (both ;'i.ls and boys) now road novels till your gizzards have softened into a sentimental jelly, aud settled into the pit of your stom ach. Oh ! I know how you feel! —you feel aa tho' you would like to soar from star to star! kick little planets aside, lake qrazy comets by their blazing hair, and pull 'them into their right courses, sit on the highest lak of a thunder cloud and dangle tho red i lightning between your thumb and fingers, as a watch-chain, and then dive into'thc gol don sunset sea and sport with the celestial syrens, speed on, pull the nose of the man in the moon, ransack all creation, knock a few panes out of Ileavon, and then flutter down gently as a breeze and find the dar ling object of your lovo mending stockings! Tnat's how you feel." BEAUTIFUL SENTIMENT. Our life is dying with the dying yoars. Such is tho inevitable course of nature. But wisdom, truth and love, and above all, the heavenly grace from whence they spring, can, under another law, save life—save the whole of life—its buds, its blossoms, its fruits, and treasure them up forever. Our true life is not in the ordinary measures of time—in setting suns, and beating hearts— but in our thoughts, our sentiments, our principles, our doods. Just as wo consecrate ourselves to wisdom, truth and lovo, just as God and Christ reign in us, just so far wo live a deathless life, and nothing is lost to us. Our progressive life now becomes an accumulation of life. Every year, instead of taking away, adds to our store. The good old man who lias ulways walked with God, carries all his years with him into immortal ity.—N. Y. Evimgclist. SIMPLE CURE FOR CROUP. —Wo find in tho Journal of Health the following simple rem edy for this dangerous disease. Those who have passed nights of almost agony at the bedside of loved children, will treasure it up ns an invaluablo piece of information. If a child is taken with croup, instantly ap ply cold water, ice water if possible, sud denly ond freely to tho neck and chest, with a sponge. The breathing will almost instant ly be relieved. So soon as possible, let the 6nffered drink as much as it can; thon wipe it dry, cover it up warm, and soon a quiet slumber will relieve tho paront's anxiety, & lead the heart in thankfulness to the power which has given to the yure gushing foun tain such medical qualities. THE Census Bill, now before the United States Senate, provides that tho enumeration shall commence in June, and that the re turns shall be completed in October. The forms must bo printed and distributed before the first of June. If the bill were to pass this week, this would be possible; but the bill will hardly become a law before April next. The Census Board have proposed a system of inquiries, and the Census Com mittee another system; but there is no es sential differenco between them. The oen sus will cost <1,200,000. The last one cost • million. j AN ELOQUENT APPEAL. The following is the eloquent close of a speech lalely delivered in Congress by Hon. James McLanahan of this state upon the subject of slavery and disunion : "With us tho preservation of the Union is a paramount consideration. We cling to it as the sheet-anchor of all our hopes. We venerate it as the ark of the conveuant of our rational oxhistence, and withered be tho hand that sacrilegiously touches it. The great confederation of sister States cannot perish; it must not be. Having manymem bers, the republic has but one body. This nation has but one hoart, and every pulsa tion of that heart beats high for the Union. Sir, cool, cunning, deliberate calculations have been made in this Capitol as well as will not stop to point out the miserable fal lacy of sucn calculations. My feelings re volt at the mournful task. Judas Iscariot sold his Lord and Master for thirty pieces of silver. Conscience-stung ho flung back at the feet of those who had bribed htm the glittering treasure, and hang ed himself. His bloated and disembowelled body fell a disgusting spectacle to the earth, and his guilty spirit went hissing to hell. That American citizen who should betray his country, and barter away the Union for mere pecuniary considorations_doserves no bettor fate. But, sir, I say again, this Union is safe. If tho President of llio United States and Congress assembled cannot preserve it, twonty millions of freemen can and will; and wo be unto him who, either North or South, raises the traitor cry of disunion. Au invisible but an electric chain of national sympathy binds the jieople of this country indissolubly together in one common bond of brolheihdou. It ia their pride and theii glory to be one. What, sir, dissolve this Union.'—a Union comented by the highest and holiest associations of the past, the proud triumphs of the present, and the glo rious prospects of the future! Never! Dis solve this Union ! God of my country for bid it." ty A Returned Californian, at Boston with $22,000 of the dust, ran away with a nother man's wife. They were pursued and caught. Tho Californian agreed to pay the injured husband's travelling expenses, take | the lady off the old gentleman's bands, and I call accounts square. This "compromise" 1 was agreed to and the parties separated ,rau ! tually satisfied. "DOWN EAST," somewhere, a pious old ! lady was summoned as a witness in an im portant case.—Having lived in the back woods all her days, she was wholly unac quainted with the rules of a court ot justice. Being told that sho must "swear," the poor woman was filled with horror at tho thoughts After much persuasion she yielded, and hnet ing told to "holdup her right hand," so, exclaiming, " Well, if I must The court immediately adjourned. 19 IRISH DENIAL —An Irish boy, who was try ing to get a place, denied that he was an Irish boy. "I don't know what you mean by not being an Irishman," said the gentle man who was about hiring him; "but this I know, you were born in Ireland." "Och, your honor," Baid the boy, "that's all small blame to that. Suppose 1 had been born in a stable, would I have been a horse?'' CP* Some curious person at the North has been calculating the area of the territory of the Unitod States not yet organized into Sta tes not yet organized into States, and finds that we have domain enough for forty six and a half States as large as Pennsylvania. Of these, thirty five will lie north of 36° 30 min. and be free States, if that fine of compromise was adopted. tSPThe following colloquy came off be tween two belles, one evening m')he draw ing room, at a ball, between the dances.— "Beck, how docs my head geer look?" "O, like a jilty flower!" "What did Mose Jewell say about me?" "He said you looked slick as a candle, and slicker toe!" "Gingcrarion —None, let,s fix and go in agin!" LAUGHABLE. —To see half a dozen uncles, one or two brotheis, and an old maiden aunt of seventy, holding consultation to t'evise ways and means" to prevent a young girl from marrying the "feller she leves." It's just about as ridiculous, as to see an intoxi cated inan attempt to should :r his owu shad ow. 137* A certain Irish attorney threatened to prosecute a Dublin printer for inserting the death of a living person. The menace con cluded with tho remark, that "no printer should publish a death unless informed of the fact by the party deceased. "Is that clean butter?" asked a grocor, to a boy who had brought a quantity to mar ket. "I should think it ought to be," re plied the boy, "lor marm aud Sal were more than two hours picking the hairs and motes out of it last nigt.t." Divorce in Massachusetts. —There are said to be in the county of Suffolk, (Mass.) embra cing Boston alone, forty-eight suite for divor- I eo, now ponding before the Supreme Court. [Two ; Dollars per Aunum' ''NUMBER 5. I'uoiECTrow. There is en Article in the February num ber of Hunt's Merchant's Magazine, which ought to be procured and carefully read by those ''democratic" dough-faces wfco periodi cally disgrace themselvos by oflering; •'pro tective' resolutions and making high tariff speeches in our State and National Legisia tures. We commend it to the particular at tention of Simun Cameron and Henry Church. The article alluded to is Written by Gpn'l, C. T. James, of Rhode Island, who is largely interested in the new ootton factory •at Har risburg, and is a reply to the clamors of Mr. Amos A. Lawrence, in a previous number of the Magazine, for more protection to the cotton manufactures of the country. four first rate mills, which,.according to their declared dividends, had oamed a little more than 8 per cent, on the aggregate capital for elevon years past—and this was not enough more "protection" was needed]! Now there are hundreds—perhaps we might say there are thousands of farmers in tho Cumberland valley, who work from morning till night, in heat, cold, and rain, who do not cloar any thing like 8 per cent, on their capital*invest- 1 ed. These hard-working men would be' laughed at if they askod the government to protect them. But Mr. Jaraos, himsolf a manufactured, says tho manufacturers make much higher profits than they admit or tlieir published dividends show, and ho explains tho matter in the following satisfactory way : "As to dividends—what a criterion do they atford, by which to judge of the amount of pro-' fitst Neno at all. A company]jnay~wiehf a capital of 8300,000, and owe one half of it. They may earn $150,000 in one year, or 50 percent on the capital ; 'and, instead of de claring a dividend, take tho profits to pay the debts. There arc a great many compa nies, one of them as wealthy and as success ful as any in New England, which latter was established in 1808, and tho othera since, which have never declared a,dividoud ;.but all have made how .with tile first-class Lowell companies* Have thoydi vided all their, profits ? „ Or have lhey]reserv ed a groator proportion from yearjto year, to bring up a nominal capital to a real one, and to build new and extensive cotton-mills as most of them have done* Mr. Lawrence has given us no light] from the books on tins point. One company, to bo sure, ho tolls us, has made a stock dividend this year of 25 per cent., which amounts to $500,000. — Thin niuncj'hsn Owen expended tn the erec tion of a new cotton-mill. This amount and more, was on hand last year; but, had Mr. Lawrence's statement been made out of them, wo should have heard nothing of it. Is it not true, that vast amou nts of profits frpm Logtell mills have thus been reserved and HJWSIcd, even within ten or five years past, IBRirhich not even stock dividends have Eagta declared f If so, what reliance can be Uttered otiTMr- Lawrence's columns of de ■flpred dividends, as to the amount of profits* ™ho can tell "byjlicm whether the profits have averaged 8 percent., 18, 28, I— Some of these mills are reported, W1849, with two thousand more spindles .than in 1845, and so on, up to twelve thousand more; yet they represent no increase of cap ital stock. How is this, if the business has been so extendedjby moans of new subscrip tions * Besides tho voluntary testimony of Mr. Jamos as to tho profitableness of American cotton manufactures, under the exis'ting tar iff, we have other strong evidence furnished us in the fact that an English house has sent out to Boston a cargo of Ginghams mado in exact imitation of those manufactured at the '•'Lancas'er Mills" in this country. Even tho labels of the American goods have been im itated by the English manufacturer. This shows thaj tho Americans haveTairly beaten out foreign "competition in the article of Ginghams, at least, reducing the Englishman to Jjie degrading necessity of counterfeiting in order to get a sale for his goods. Does a ta riff that produces such results as these neon amendment ?— Valley! Spirit. WM. C. PRESTOH, of S. C.—The Baltimore Sun on the authority of a letter from Col umbia, S. C., denies the Now York Tribune's statement, that the Hon. Wm C Preston has become hopelessly imbecilo, from softening of the brain. He is still discharging Jhi* in tellectual duties as President of South Caro lina College. IT Barono Boenne, Envoy Extraordin ary and Minister Plenipotentiary of tho Cen tral Power of Germany at Washington, tho Republic announces, has been recalled, a new central power having boon constituted in Prussia, Of The Iron Works at Kitlanning, (Pa) ure, it is said, to be greatly improved, and will be put in blast in April or May next. CTGold and Silver are metals quito too heavy to be carried to Heaven, but, in good hands, they may pave the way to it. U" "You have broken the SabbatteJohn ny," said a good man to his. MB,. said his little siste., and Mather's long eomb too, right in threo pieces !' . HT The conscience don't trouble an honeifcjpßP*