THE STAR OP THE NORTH. R. W. Reaver Proprietor.] VOLUME 7. THE STAR OF THE NORTH IS PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY MOKNINU BY R. W. WEAVER, OFFICE—Up stairs, in the new brick build- i ing, on the south side of Main Steert, third square below Market. TERMSTwo Dollars per annum, if paid within six months froin the time of sub scribing ; two dollars and fifty cents if not paid within the year. No subscription re ceived for a less period than six months; no discontinuance permitted until all arrearages •re paid, unless at the option of the editor. ADVERTISEMENTS not exceeding one square Will be inserted three times fot One Dollar and twenty-five cents for each additional in sertion. A liberal discount will be made to those who advertise by the year. TIIE SHEPHERD'S RESOLUTION. [This fine old song was written by George Wither; a satirical writer of ths times James and Charles the First. It is extracted from one of his long piscatorial poems, enti tled, " The Mistress ot Philarele," published ia 1622 ] Shall I waiting in diapair: Die, because a woman's fair' Or make pale my cheeks with care, -'Cause another's rosy are? Be she fairer than the day, Or the flower meads in May— If she be riot so to me, What care I how fair she be? Shall my foolish heart be pained, 'Cause I see a woman kind* Or a well-disposed nature Joined with a lovely feature ? Be she meeker, kinder than The turtle-dove or pelican, If she be not so to me, What care I how kind she be ? Shall a woman's virtues move Me to perish for her love ? Or her well deservings known, Make me quite forget mine own? Be she with that goodness blest, Whioh mßy merit name of best, If she be not such to me, What care I how good she be? >'Cause her fortune seems too high, Shall I play the fool, and die? Those that bear a noble mind, Where they want of riches find, Think, what with (hem tl.ey would do, That without them dare to woo ; And unless that mind I see, What care I how great she be? Great, or good, or kind, or fair, I will ne'er the more despair, If she love me, this believe I will die ere she shall grieve, If she slight me when I woo I can scorn and let her go ; It she be r.ot fit for me, What care I for whom she be? British Fiilibustering amf Annexation In East India- While the British Journals, without an ex ception scarcely, are loud in their denuncia tion of what they are pleased to call the greed j of territory oi the United States, and pretend j to see magnificent schemes of conquest by ! the American people, the British government j is engaged in a species of fillibustering and ( conquest in India which exceeds the wildest , dreams of manifest destiny in this country. — Two Eastern kingdoms, Nizam and, Oudo, the former a country of over ninety-seven thousand square miles, bordering on Bom- : bay and Madras, and the latter bordering on I Nepaul and Bengal, with an area of nearly thirty thousand square miles, after enjoying an English protectorate of an equivocal char acter, are to be eiezed and added as posses sions to tha British provinces in India. The London Times announces the fact with com mendation, instead of the indignation it leels whenever It looks westward and sees, or fan cies il sees, the inarch of American empire, (t says: "In Oude we have a Government steeped to the hips in profligacy, debauchery, cruel ty, and avarice, plundering and murdering its subjects without mercy, and allowing them in return to plunder and murder each other—-a barber for a Prime Miaister, a fid dler for a Chief Justice, a revenue collected at the cannon's mouth, a Court alternately di verted by cruel sports or by orgies at wbich Nero or Heliogabalus might blush, by bloody executions, and by dangerous fanaticism This is the State that we tolerate on the very frontier of lbs peaceful province of Bengal, and within a few days—soon to be dimin ished to a few hours—journey from Calcut ta l One of its correspondents says "it is cer tain annexation cannot be long delayed, and Oude will pay splendidly." Here is a real bnc canneering project, avowedly prompted by the most mercenary motives; but which, it is not improbable, is a movement towards still more extended acquisitions, not in India alone, but in Chins, to which the present dis iraoted condition of affairs in that country in vite an easy conquest. With such schemes as these in actual progress, sanctioned by the British goverment, how hypocritical are its denunciations of fillibustering, and how con temptible its fears of such unauthorized un dertakings as Walker's, wbich go forth in se crecy with the ban of the American govern ment upon them!— Ledger. THE SOCIETY OF HEAVEN.—The society of heaven constitutes one of its chief attractions. We will doubtless carry the social principle with us into the eternal world. The fact that our souls are divested tor a season by death of the bodies that now encase tliera, will not deprive them of the privilege of communi cating their thoughts and feelings to each other, and deriving happinere therefrom. The same God who furnished them with the fac ulty of speech for that purpose, while in the body, can very easily supply them with the >meana of inter-communication in their new state of being. Abraham and Dives coold interchange thoughts though one was in heaven and the other In hell. Lazarus was carried into Abr n-m's bosom, a Hebrew eapression for be r brought into the post jailmate relations with him BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY. DECEMBER 13, 1855. PERSONA LI LIES OF LITERATI. 3ERROJLD. Douglas Jerrold, a well known contributor to Punch, and editor of various publications, is a man about 60 years of age, and in per son is remarkably epare and diminutive.— His lace is sharp, angular, and bis eye is a greyish hue. He is probably one of the most caustic writers of the age, and, with keen sensibility, he often writes under the impulse of the moment articles which big cooler judgment condemns. Although a be liever in hydropathy, his habits do not con form to the internal application of Adam's ale. His Caudle Lectures have been read by every one. In conversation he is quick at retort—not always refined. He is a hus band and a'grandfatber. MACAULAY. The Hon. T. B. Macaulay is short in stst ure, round, and with a growing lendenoy to aldermanic disproportions. His head has the same rotundity as his body, and seems stuck on it as firmly as a pin-head. This is nearly the sum of his personal defects; all else, ex cept the voice (which is monotonous and disagreeable), is certainly in his favor. His face seems literally instinct with expression; his eyes, above ail, full of deep thought and meaning. As he walks, or rather straggles, along the street, he seems in a stale of total abstraction, unmindful of all that is going on around him, and solely occupied with his own working mind. You cannot help think ing that literature with him is not a mere profession or pursuit, but that it has almost grown a part of himself, as though historical 1 problems or analytical criticisms were a part of bis daily food. BAILEY. A correspondent of the Tribune, writing from Nottingham, England, says: "I have seen Bailey, the author of'Feslus.' His father is proprietor of the Nottingham Mercury, and the editorial department rests with him. He is a thick set sort of a man ; of a stature below the middle size; complex ion dark, and in years about eight-and-lhirty. His physiognomy would be clownish in ex pression if his eyes did not redeem his other features. He spoke of 'Festus,' and of its fame in America, of which he seems very proud. In England it has only reached its third edition, while eight or nine have been published in the United States." DE QUINCEY. He is one of the smallest legged, smallest bodied, and most attenuated elfigies of the human form divine that one could find in a crowded city during a day's walk. And if one adds to this figure clothes that are neith er fashionably cnt nor fastidiously adjusted, I e will have a tolerably rough idea ot De tjuincey. But then his brow, that pusher, his obtrusive hatto the back partofhis head, and his light grey eyes, that do not seem to look out, but to be turned inward, sounding the depths of his imagination, and searching out the mysteries of the most abstruse logic, are something that you would search a week to find the mates to, and then you Mould be disappointed. De Quincey now resides at La-sawade, a romantic rural village, once the residence of Sir Waller Scott, about sev dPmiles from Edinburg, Scotland, where an affectionate daughter watches over him, and where he is the wonder of the country peo ple for miles around. LAMARTINE. Lamartine is—yes young ladies, positive ly—a prim looking man with a long face, shott, grey hair, a slender figure, and a suit of black. Put a pen behind his ear and he would look like a "confidential clerk." Give his lace more character and he would remind you of Henry Clay. He has 3 fine head, phrenologically speaking—large and round 3t the top, with a spacious forehead, and a scant allotment of cheek. Prim is the word, though. There is nothing in his appearance which ia ever so remotely suggestive of the romantic. He is not even pale, anJ as for a rolling shirt collar, or a Byronic tie, ho is not the man to think of such things. Roman(rd* in fact, is the article he lives by, snd, like other men, he chooses to "sink the shop," at least when he sits for his portrait. DUMAS. On the contrary, is a burly fellow. His large, red, round cheeks stand out, till they seem to stretch the very skin that covers tbem, and it looks as smooth as a polished apple. His black crisped hair is piled high above bis forehead, and stands divided into two unequal masses, one inclining to the right, and the other to the left. His eyes are dark, and his mouth sensnous,bm not to the degree of vulgarity. His person is large, and his flowing mantle red. He is a gentleman to lay bare his throat, and look romantio, not Byronically so, but piratically. Yet he looks good humored, and like a man whose capaci ty for physical enjoyment is boundless. His negro blood is evident enough to one who knows he has it; but it would not be detect ed by one who knew it not. It appears in the peculiar rotundity of the man and ail his parts; it crisped and heaped his hair; it made him dress up in flowing red, to have his portrait taken. But his complexion is only a shade darker than the average. The portrait reminds us for a moment of the late Thomas Hamlin, the actor. EUGENE SUE. Is neither prim nor bnrley. He is a man of large freme, over whioh a loose black cost is carelessly buttoned. Complexion light, eyes blue, bait once black, now pep per snd salt, whiskers voluminous, eyebrows black and thick, good forehead, and the low er face ample: This conveys no better idea of the man's appearance than a French pass port. But ths truth is, Bue's countenance and figuts have none of thoae pecaliaritiea which make description possible. He looks in his portrait like a comfortable, careless, elderly gentleman, taking his ease in a chair and easy coat. He does not look like an author—authors seldom do. His hair is rath er that of a prosperous citizen. Sue is only forty-five years old, bat he has lived fast and looks fifty-five. Lamartine is sixty-three, and would pass easily for fifty-three. Dumas is fifty, and could get credit for thirty-eight. Extravagance In Living. Scarcely a week goes by, that we are not called upon to record some sad calamity in social life, the result of extravagance in liv ing. The evil is one of the vices of the times. The old-fashioned system of living within one's means, is repudiated—and high rents ana jpagnificenl furniture are the order of the day. In the olden time moderation and economy formed the basis on which the young were disposed to act. But now, it is far otherwise. The young man who thinks of matrimony, must in the first place, be prepared to rent a house at four or five hun dred dollars a year, to furnish it at cost of one or twb thousand, and then live accord ingly. The consequence is that very few make the venture. They are deleted by the prospect before them, and are in-'luced to hold back. Or, if they venture, how of ten do they struggle on for a year or two, and then discover that they have made a mis-step, and ard either compelled to re-! trench or involve themselves in ruin. Would it not be well for some of the Reformers of | the day to undertake the cute of this social \ evil. It is one of a truly serious character, and its consequences are often deplorable, j Young ladies, too, are taught by the same system, that of wild extravagance, to expect ! impossibilities. There may le half a dozen daughters living in good style under the pro tection of a father, and each expects, on marrying, to eclipse everything at hofne. A young man, who is prudent and moderate, j is pronounced as narrow end mean, while a 1 spend thrift, or a braggart is too often regar-! ded as exactly the thing. Late hours, large ! parties, abundance of wine and other luxu- j ries. are now regarded as among the cssen lials of genteel society, and without them, everything is voted common-place and vul ' gar The whole is not only hollow and arli-! ficial, but it is demoralizing. It in the first; place, induces extravagance; in ths second, dissipation : in the third, neglect of business, | and in the end, utter ruin. The story has been told again and again, but the vice still exists. There is scarcely a reader who can not point out some sad example in his imme diate neighborhood and among his most inti mate friends. Only a few days ago, a dash-1 ing fashionable ir. a neighboring city, was sold out by the sheriff. The members of his family had committed the error of the hour, ; had advanced beyond their depth, lived ; above their means, and hence the cataslro* ! phe, and this is no extraordinary case. The 1 folly of extravagance may be seen on all sides, and in individuals too, who find it dif- j ficult to make both ends meet. Often the 1 husband is at fault—sometimes the wife, and j again both. False pride and a desire to ere- ! ate a sensation, bewilder and lead astray. It 1 is, 100, so difficult to be modest and moder ate where others are inflated and excited.— The penalty, however, is often fearful; and when some adversity is encountered and the blow falls suddenly—how difficult it is to wrestle with misfortune! Moderation is a saving vtnue, it should be practiced daily and hourly ; moderation, not only ir. speech and in tone, but in tempe', in prejudice and in expenditure. Alas ! for the many who have repented, in sackcloth and ashes, the madness of another course. Alas / for the hundreds who are now hurrying on wildly and blindly, and who by violence and ex travagance, are sowing the seeds of a bitter harvest. The day of reckoning may be at hsnd.— Penn. Inquirer. The Spirit ol Religion. - Many things are charged upon religion for which it is not responsible. The bad con due! and ill temper of professors, and the se vere and uncharitable spirit with which they often enforce the most obvious truths and du ties, is not chargeable upon religion, ft is the result oi having the bead enlightened with the theory of religion, without having the heart imbued with its spirit. The spirit of true religion breathes gentle ness and tenderness. It is mild and affable, and gives a native unaffected ease to the be havior. It is social, kind and cheerful. It lifts from the brow the cloud of care and gloom whioh spreads so dark a shade over humanity, and lights up the countenance with the sunshine of benevolence and hope. The spirit of religion is the spirit of peace, the spirit of love, the spirit of social order and friendship, the spirit of hope, the spirit of jny, the spirit of heaven. FOJ.LV OF PBlOE.—After all, take some qui et, sober moment of life, and add together the two ideas ot pride and of man ; behold him, creature ole span high, stalking throngh infinite spree, in all the grandeur of littleness Perched on a speck of the universe, every wind ol Heaven strikes into his blood the coldness ol death; his soul floats from his I body like melody from the string; day and night, as dust on the wheel, he is rolled along the heavens through a labyrinth of worlds, and all the creatures of God are flaming above and beneath. Is this a crea ture to make himself a crown of glory to deny bis flesh, to mock at his fellow, sprung from the dust to which both will soon re turn* T-W-WB Troth and Bight Gad and ©or Contry. Henry A. Wise on Kuow-Nothlngism From a very poweriul letter written by Gov. Wise of Virginia, to a meeting of National Democrats in New York, we lake tho follow ing eloquent extracts. Gov. Wise is a trui American, and the manner in which he di rects his blows against bastard Americans, is quite refreshing. Hear him l As to the secret "Americans"—the know ' nothings—day has broke upon them. And it is amusing to soe Sam's bats and owls of midnight, flitting ar.d flapping, blind, about in the sunlight. They are seeking sorrily to skulk from light and sight—here some flap Back to poor, deserted whiggery, and there some escape to the "republican" fusion. The day has dissolved the charm. The true bird of America, Jove's own oagie, hs on a wing that never tires, in the lambent light of the mid-heavens. Uncle Sam has roused him self and shaken oft the slumber and stupor of the night dreams, and is at his active work in broad day. The devil baited the hooks of some preach ers with the politics of the Pope's big toe, and the books of some politicians with the unco-righteousness of a knavish priestcraft, and set them bobbing together for the souls of dupes, for the corruption of the church, and for the destruction of the State. No heal but one could have ever welded such a fu- I sion. In the shades they were taught their parts by the gloom-light of the dark lantern ! But "Trie sJ'i ' 8 ' n heavens, and life on earth!" Day ha.s c'aoght them in their incantations, and light fc dispelling their mysteries. The next you will bO> Sam > hB wi " be " n his knees praying agaii lß ' slavery and John Bar leyoorn. He has Fope Pins Nonus, and has just discovered, attcf a " b ® ' ias sa ' t ' about his holiness, supremacy, every naturalized Catholic takes an oath e*'pt? Bß 'y to renounce oil allegiance to any and every prince, power, potentate, king, sovereign, or State, and particularly to the prince, power, potentate, king, sovereign, or State, of which he was before a subject. And he begins to admit that an extra-judicial oath may bind a know-nothing to passive obedience and non-resistance to an unseen, intangible, irre sponsible, secret oligarchy, perchance, we may rely on the judicial oaths of naturalized citizens to renounce allegiance to all supre macy whatever, except the sovereignty of the United States of North America. I give you ihe right hand of fellowship in opposition to the sumptuary laws which have of late years disgraced the codes of some of our Stales. Why some legislatures seem to have lost the horn-boolts of persona! liberty! They are for free soil and free negroes, but war upon the liberties of free white men!— They seem to have never known that there were such things, first invented in North America, as bills of lights defining those which are inalienable and fixing the limits of legislation ! Where was the principle of liquor laws to stop ? Nowhere short of inva ding every inalienable right of individual man. If municipal law cannot touch vested i rights, much le6B can it invade the natural rights of the individual person. In such a dominion as that of England they may hard ly dare to confine the rights of the person to "air, to light, to flowing water" at this day; but here there was never a moment since co lonial times when the rights of persons were j not infinitely extended beyond those out of the reach of legislation. Ob! but they say that such laws are sanitary, not sumptuary. And who made them Hospitalers of Hygeia, health n urges for the people.* Health ia about as piivate a possession, about as "intut et in cute," personal as any man can be endowed with. Who created a government to turn quaok and prescribe physic? ''Physic to the dogs There are other things which de stroy health besides alcohol. Eating as well as drinking, gluttony as well as drunkenness hurts health. Will any one say that legislation may take charge of my table, and my diet a:d appetite, and say wha. I shall eat? If they may prohibit a man from buying and selling whiskey, may they not prohibit his planting and sowing on his own fee-simple soil, of his buying and selling the corn and rye from which the whiskey is distilled ? Again: French corsets have hurl more the health of whole generations, have crippled for their own lives and for their posterity, too, more women and children than ever John Barleycorn slew of men ! Shall a Hiss committee be allowed by law to inspect Ma daraes' and Misses' chambers, and see wheth er whalebone and hard cord encompass la dies' waists to tight? The idea would be ri diculous it it was not so insufferable tyran nous. You cannot legislate man to morality; you must educate them to liberty and virtue. Manners and morals must begin at the moth er's knee ; must be trained in the schools; and home and domestic teaching mnai give to Ihe country pupils fit for the schools, and the schools must give to the country a people who wilt require no such despotic laws They don't suit a people fit to be free: they corrupt and demoralize a people already fit to be slaves. The last source 1 would appeal to, for temperance in eating and drinking, is a legislature federal or Slate. O! ye Metropo litan high livers! what tales Champagne and London dock, aDd oanvass-backa, and terra pine, and oysters could tell upon your exam ples of abstemiousness and self denial! How your temperance tells upon your lives! and your legislature, too, at times! The truth is, alt these "isms" come from the eame nidus of the same cocatrix. They come from the Scribes and Pharisees, who would lake care of othera* consciences; they are inventions of ambitious priestctaft, or man who have a little religion to help Ibeir secular affair*, and who ate a little worldly to help their religious affairs—of "preachers of Christian politics," who are subtly aspiring to civil, secular, and political power—of men who don't "render unto Csesar the things which are Cmsar's," nor "unto God the things which are God's"— of hypocrites who would superserviceably cut off an ear tor their Master with the sword, without his orders and against his law, and who would deny Him thrice before the cock crew once. And these are aided by coward ly and knavish politicians, who either fear or lawn upon their secret and sinister influen ces. We have only to drive out all such from the temple, as the dove-sellers were driven out by the Mastor whose "pure and undefiled religion before God and the father is, to visit the widow and the fatherless, and to keep one's self unspotted from the world !" A Woman that wanted jnst a peep Into that Private Closet. A lodge of I. 0, O. F., at Woodstown, de termined to have their lodge room.(lone up cleun and nice, it was resolved unanimously that Mrs. K. should be employed to do the job. After the meeting adjourned, the guardian, who knew the inquisitive character of Mrs. K., procured a billy goat, and placed him in a closet that was kept as a reservoir for the secret things. He then informed the lady of the wishes ot the lodge, and requested her to come enrljr next morning, as he would then be at leisure to 6how her what was and { what was not to be done. Morning came, and with it came Madame j K. with her broom, brushes, pails, tuba, &c., prepared and armed for the job, and found (he guardian waiting for her. "Now Madame," said he, "I tell you what wo want done, and how we came to employ you. The brothers said it was dif ficult to get anybody to do the job, and not be meddling with the sr.-rets in that little clos- I ,s|; we have lost the key and cannot find it to lock the door. I assured tbem that you 00l ;ld be depended on." "Depended ° n '-" " a "l sh®, "I guess I can. My poor dt>. a< ' an( l 6 one husband, who be longed to the Frb'e Masons or anti-Masons, I don't know which, H®ecl to tell me all the secrets of the concern, and when .he showed me all the marks the gridiron made vhen he was initiated, and told me how they fixed poor Morgan, I never told a living soul to this day. If nobody '.roubles your closot to find out your secrets, till I do, they 'II lay there till they rot—they will." "I thought so," said the guardian, "and now I want yon to commence in that corner, ai d give the whole room a decent cleaning, and I have pledged my word an honor for the fidelity to your promise : now don't go into that closet," snd then left the lady to herself. No sooner had she heard the sound of his feet on the last step of the stairs, than she exclaimed, "don't go into that closet I" I'll warrant there is a gridiron, or some nonsense, just like the anti-Masons for all the world.— I'll be bound, I will just take one peep, and nobody will be any wiser, as I can keep it to myself. Suiting the action to the word, she stepped lightly to the forbidden closet, turned the button, which was no sooner done, than bah I went the billy goat, with a spring to regain his liberty, which came near upset ting her ladyship. Both started for the door, but it was filled with implements for house cleaning, and all were swept from their po sition down to the bottom of the stairs. The noise and confusion occasioned by such unceremonious coming down stairs, drew half the town to witness Mrs. K'e ef fort to get from under the pile of pails, tubs, brooms, and brushes in the street. Who should be first to the spot but the rascally door keeper, who, after releasing the goat, which was a cripple for life, and uplifting the rubbish that bound the good wo man to the earth, anxiously inquired if she had been taking the degrees ? ''Taking the degrees !" exclaimed the la dy, "if yon call tumbling from the top to the bottom of the stairs with the devil after ye, taking things by degrees, I have them, and if ye frighten folks as you have me, and hurt them to boot, I'll warrant they'll make as much noise as I did." " I hope you did not open the cloeet, mad am," said the door keeper. " Open the closet 1 Rve ate the apple she was forbidden ! If you want a woman to do anything, tell her not to do ii, and she'll do it certain. 1 could not stand the temptation.— The secret was there, 1 wanted to know it. I opened the door, and out popped the tarnal critter right into my face. 1 thought the dev il had me, and I broke for the stairs with the devil butting me at every jump—l fell over the tub and got down the stairs as you found us, all in a heap." " But madam," said the doorkeeper, "yon are in possession of the great secret of the Order, and must go up and be initiated, sworn, and then go in the regular way." "Regular way !" exclaimed the lady, "and do you suppose I am going near the tarnal place again, and ride that ar critter without bridle or lady's saddle 1 No, never! I don't want nothing to do with the man that rides it. I'd look nice perched on a billy goat— wouldn't 11 No, never! I'll never nigh it again, nor your hall nulher—if I can prevent it no lady shall ever join the Odd Feliowa.— Why I'd sooner be a Free Mason, and be broiled on a gridiron as long as fire could be kept under it, and garret to cel lar, with a baiter, in a pair of old breeohes and slippera, just as my poor, dear husband was. And he lived over it, but I never oonld lire over sueh another ride at I took to-day." ' A GIRL TO DO HOl/BEWORK. Early one morntng Mr. Jones was seen in i his bnggy, driving a spirited horse, in pnr9uit of a girl to do housework. This was the fourth day of the campaign, and proved as unsuccessful as the former ones, yet he drove on, hoping against all past experience, till meeting a neighbor, he reined in his horse. "Good morning, Mr. Mason ; can you tell me where I can find a girl to do housework? My wife is sick, and I wibh to get one for a few weeks. lam wilting to pav any prico I" "Indeed, Mr. Jones, that's a hard question; there's girls enough to be sure, but they won't do housework. Neighbor Hardpnn, down in the hollow there, has a hall dozen, but 1 don't suppose you could gel one for love or money, I've tried them time and again, but they won't go out." "Thank yon," said Mr. Jones; "there's nothing like trying." So saying, he stopped at the door of Mr. Hardpan. "Good morning, Mrs. Hardpan : I called to see if I could get one of your daughters to do housework for rr.e a few days?" "0! dear man! why, massy on ns, oh Mr. Jones, you've no idea how feeble my darters are, they wouldn't be tough enough any way: they couldn't stand it to do housework a week. Anna Maria has got a desperate lame side, and 1 don't purtend to put her to doing anything, she's so leeble ; and Susan Sophia has s dreadful weak stomach; she can't eat anything unless it iacooked jitßtso—she don't even make her own bed; and as lor Amelia Angeline, she is troubled with a terrible pal pitation of the heart; she can't lift a pale of water. Why don't you get an Irish girl ?" Here Mr 9. Hardpan paused for breath, and Mr. Jones bade her good morning, and re newed his journey; and just atuighl succeed ed in getting a married woman who brought her baby with her, to come and do a little baking, and stay a day or IM-O, till he should make a farther trial. This, reader, is no fancy sketch. And now let us for a moment look at the feebleness of Mrs. Hardpan's daughters. Anna Maria is tough enough to live in a dress which compresses her ribs for six inches, atidlefives for both lungs Abou: as muoh room as one ought to occupy I Of course she could not do housework. Susan Sophia can stand it to dance till midnighl, then read novels nil day light, sleep till eleven o'clock in tho morn ing, eat hot cakes, and drink strong coffee for breakfast; beef soup, butter gravies, mince pies, and fruit puddings for dinner, poundcake, lemon tarts, and a half dozen cups of greeD tea for supper; with cloves, chalk, charcoal, and slate pencils for a des sert. Poor, weak stomach ! Amelia Ange lina is a pale, slim, delicate creature, yet she "can stand" it with her breast-bone pressed upon her heart by a light dress, so that it can scarcely beat! No wonder il is at times obliged to make a "terrible" effort to free it self of surplus blood. Amelia Angelina, too, is strong enongh to carry six or eight pounds of cotton batiing, and a smalt 'cut of cloth' about her hips, wear thin shoes; and go 'bare-armed' tn winter. What a wonder that she should have palpitation of the heart I Now, is il any wonder that young ladies, managed in this way, are not able and wil ling to do housework ? Their dress, manner of living, habits of thinking, all have a di rect tendency to engender and confirm dis ease. Hence, Bpinal complaint, dyspepsia, heart-disease, consumption, &C-, are the la gitimate results, If we would have our daughters healthy let us see that these and kindred evils are corrected. Let them lay aside the straight-jacket and adopt a dress which allows the tree motion ol every joint and muscle, and the full expansion ol the chest; exchange their novels for histories, biography, poetry, etc.; take at least half an hour's exercise in the open air daily during pleasant weather; retire and rise early; ex change tho hot cakes and coffee for cool bread and water; eat no rich dinners or late suppers, open the blinds, and let the light shine in upon them, if you would nol have them look like plants which grew in the cel lar; take tbem into the kitchen, and instruct them in the various branches of housewifery; do not be afraid of soiling their hands—they are much more easily cleansed than their hearts. And knowing how to perform the duliee of the household only helps to make a lady, nor will it lower them in the estima tion of any man, whose respect is worth se curing. Washing, baking and sweeping need not prevent your daughters f:om becoming smart musicians, finished painters, profound mathematicians, or good wives. FAULT FINDING. There is a disposition observable in some, to view unfavorably everything that falls un der their notice. They seek to gain eonfi deuce by always differing from others in judgment, and to deprecate what they allow to be worthy in itself, by hinting at some mis take or imperfection in the performance.— You are 100 lofty, or too low in your manners; you are too frugal or too profuse in your expenditure; you are too taciturn, or too free in your speech; and so of the rest. Now, guard against this tendency. Nothing will more conduce to your uncomfortable ness than living in the neighborhood of ill nature, and being familiar with discontent. The disposition grows with indulgence, and is low and base within itsell; and if any should be ready to pride themselves on skill and facility in the scene, let them remember that the acquisition is cheap and easy; a child can deface and destroy; dullness ami stupidi ty, wbich seldom lack Inclination or meaus, can cavil and find fault; and everything can furnish ignorance, prejudice and envy, with 1 a handle of reproach.— Rev. ffm Jay. [Two Dollars per Anita. NUMBER 47. From the Central lUinoian. THE AGE OF FACT. j Two more asteroids hare been added <• i the thirty-three already discovered between 1 Mars and Jupiter. Bilk, of Pruaaia, and Gold, schmidt,of France,firat caught a sight of tbeae i little globes. Oura is a fast-collecting age. Soieno# nod art have a settled place ia the world. Afr" our philosophies and systems recognize their agency and usefulness, and cheerfully accord to them "A local habitation and a name." vaiicn. *?he numbers thus at isolated work are daily increasing, and vast is the aggrah gate of facts which have been brought to gather. Steam ploughs the universal sea and land. The "lightnings of heaven,, are " Cabined, cribbed, confined," to a number Eight wire, and travel in alralgh t linen; obsorvatories are erected in every part of the civilized world ; the winds are watch ed on the land and on the seas ; the temper ature of the earth is recorded from the equa tor to the farthest attainable position toward the poles; the wateis that wash the poles are themselves ready to be laid dOwi> in charts ; the barometer and needle are trans ported over the whole surface of the globe, and their fluctuations noted in its deepest caves and mines, and on the summits of its highest mountains, f.et any one turn over the reports of our permanent scientific asso ciations, and he will appreciate the skill, (ha minute and exact knowledge, displayed in every department. Great are the advantages of this minute division of fact-manufacture ! valuable in deed, is the accuracy of detail which baa been the result! And this advantage, tbia value, will become every succeeding year more fully developed by the increasing use of the collected materials. \ fact-collecting age has always been as a co-laborator, a (act using age. We may look, therefore, that the noble struciute will gradually raise itself from the elements now preparing, so high towards the heavens, that there will be spread before the eye a wider sweep of the horizon than ever before was seen by man.. No one, now-a-days, can be otherwise than sanguine and hopeful for science. If the philosophers of other times had had cogni zance of the facts now embodied in our ic< nual reports, if the improvements ol philo sophical apparatus and the almost perfected ! instruments of observation had been in their hands, they would not have rested in their theories as the ultimate reach oT the mind. There certainly is as much zeal and genius in the world now at ever; and there is the vantage-ground of accumulated stores of knowledge and the perfeotion of the arts, that will insure a rapid advance so soon ae there is altogether, what there is now in part, a right direction and distribution of effort. We shall then have a real properly in the world. It will be wholly ours. It will be a connecting link between the Dei'y and mart —common ground, if we may be allowed the expression—something which has flow ed out of the heavens, lying between (be Creator and the created. A Child Angel- Death has closed those little eyes and for ever shrouded their bright glances. How sweetly she sleeps, that little covered angel! Haw lightly curl the glossy ringlets on bar forehead. You could weep your very soul away to think those cherub lips will never unclose. Vainly you clasp and un clasp that passive, darling hand that wander ed so very often over your cheeks. Vainly your nnguished glances strive to read the dim story of love in those faded orbs. That voice, sweet as winds blowing through wreath and garlands, slumbers forever. And still the busy world knocks at your door and will let you have no peace, ft ohouti in your ear, it smiles in your face, it meeta yon at the coffin, at the grave, and its heavy foot steps tramp up and down in the empty room from whence yon have borne your dead.—' But it comes never in the hush of night to> wipe away your tears! In tht solran silence of the grave we feel the force of the sicken ing sorrow which hangs heavily upon the heart as though it would pass it down into that narrow space over which the Spirit dwells in mournful snspence. Bui a bright er vision meets the eye. Can you lookup* Can you bear the splendor of thai sight*— The thousand celestial beings, and your ra< diant child angel in the midst— In her eyes a glory bright, On her brow a glory crown.'* Faithful Forever, It is a dear delight for the sou! to havtf trust in the laithof another. It makes a pillow of softness for the cheek which is burning with tears and touch of pain. It it an undeferred seclusion into which the mind, when weary oi sadness, may retreat for the caress of constant love —a warmth in tha clasp of friendship for ever lingering on the hand; a consoling voice that dwells with an eternal echo on the car —a dew of mercy falling on the troubled hearts of this world. Bereavements and wishes, long withheld, sometimes descend as chastening grief upon our nature , hot there is no solace to the bitterness of (goksn faith. W Franklin says "a poor man must work to find meat for his stomach ; a rich one to find a stomach for his meat."