THE STAR 01? THE NORTH, W. 11. JJIfOBY, I'roprlelor.] VOLUME 11. STAR OF THE NORTH. WBLISHKTI EVERY WttIISESnAY BY WM. 11. J,IUOIIY, flffirc o* Main St,,!nl Sqiinrc below Market, TERMSTwo Dollars per annum if paid Within six mouths from the time of subscrib ing: two dollars and fifty cts. if not paid with in the year. No subscription taken lor a less period than six months; no discontinuance permitted milil all arrearages aro paid, un ross at the option of the editor. ( I'l/c fcinis if advertising mill be as follows : One square, twelve lines, three times, SI tlO Every subsequent insertion, ...... 25 Duo square, three mouths 3 00 j tfneyfraV, 8 00 I) oi c c $) oet ro. Firm Ike Waverly Magozint. BY-CDSE DAYS AND THEE. Oh ! let me sing one gentle strain Of by goi e clays and ihee— Ol days that ne'er will come again, Vet's bright in memory. Fond memory in the tun will keep Tho cherished flowers there, And softly o'er them bend and weep With kitid and gentle care. Her sighs will fan each leaflet light, A lid tears as dew will he. To keep them ever true and bright— Those by-gone days with thee. Like incense from that urn will rise The light of oilier hours ; Ah ! happy thoughts and tender tics Are linked around those flower. They will not wither, but will bloom Till memory's urn is broken ; Then, scattered faded o'er the tomb, Of by-gone days a token. EONA Cono. WEALTH AND LABOR. BY HON. It. U. O. COLBY. There aro instances in this country of enormous individual wealth—frequent in stances of independent individual fortunes. Hut who are they that possess, and whenco did they derive Irom ? Ftom some old ancestors, who won broad lands and proud lilies in the field of battle—or in the Senate —at the bar—or the counting house ? If you look for such inherited fortunes as I these, you will discover that they were long since dismembered—that with every revo lution of the seasons, they are diminishing —and in a very few instances can one of their descendants call the roof tree of his] father's house his own. No! These are the fruits of individual industry, skid, or enterprise. And you can seldom trace their history further j back than to find them commanding a trading sloop to tho West Indies, pur chasing fur in small quantities on the frontier, or selling excellent groceries at a lirst-rate stand for busitie-s They are self-made men—the architects of their own fortunes ; and I yield a thousand-fold more respect to such as they, than 1 can over feel for one who owes Ins wealth and his standing it. this world to the mere ac cident ol birth ; and when their names are uttered in the marts of commerce, and the country ring? from side to side with the story of their success, 1 leel that this, of all ' countries, is the best for human labor and enterprise. A very important and striking feature in our political and social system, which, indeed, is tho inevitable result of our in stitutions and laws, is, that there is no aristocracy amongst us—not even an ar istocracy of wealth. An aristocracy can not exist without peculiar and exclusive privileges and rights, recognized, sanction ed, and upheld by law. There cannot bo, in this country, even a confederacy or combination among the rich men to acquire peculiar jtrivileges. They have none to defend. There is no clanship, no esprit de corps among them. They are not like the hereditary nobles of Europe whose names are enrolled in a heraldic colleges, set apart from the rest of man kind, designated by titles, marked by badges of honor, bound together by inter marriages, by a community of interests and of feelings, a distinct order in the state; nothing of all this, and they areas mutable besides as the motes that float in the summer air. Death is ever busily at work in dismembering all overgrown for tunes. Misfortunes, too—and, alas ! they occasionally rain thick and fast, and do their part in the ceaseless work of distribu tion. The rich man of to-day is the poor man of to-morrow. .And, while, from those causes, multi tudes are passing out, thousands are, in 1 the land, passing into this charmed circle; for, those who commenced life with no inheritance but poverty, aro urually the individuals that rise to affluence. If a 'drawn between the two claA. at apy given moment, and then five pass away, I doubt whether the Jgmlei portion could not be recog nizcJsgH the same. Hundreds and hun>- dredaTaould be found to have changed to apeak of a clan of men thus constituted as an aristocracy, is as sound and sensible philosophy us to point to the insects of sdtftmer as the emblems of eternity. Yes, ye laborers, thoi% is no land like yours, it is yours to pMMM, to enjoy. Here is a fair field for all to labor, in whatever vocation they fKiife ail> l '' lo rewards of diligence aro amplr and se cure. There is not an aven®je wealth or distinction which is a post unattainable. There is no BttjWL for any hostility or utikinducss of tween tho rich and the laboring classes* BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, l'A., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1859. but tho strongest reason, on tho contrary, lor mutual friendship and the most cordial union. It may well be questioned whether they should ever be spoken ol as classes, since the term prosupposes a lino of demarcation, which cannot he drawn. Moth are striving with the same eagerness for the same object—some portion of wealth—and both are interested in the protection of property. If, instead of spending time in mutual jealousies and recriminations, they would join heart and hand in all great and good undertaking, the one contributing the means, the other the skill and labor, they would accom plish more for themselves and their coun try in one year than by fifty years of dis sension. We should not forgot that there are those who grace and gladden our festivi ties by their presence; who do not mingle with ns, indeed, in the walks of business, hut exert a mcro potent influence upon the atlairs of men than we aro always willing to acknowledge ; whose empire is absolute over the world of fashion ; whose appearance in the mid.-t of dissensions is like the radiant how that spans the 9lorm. If their smiles do sometimes kindle dis sensions, they oftener allay it, and 1 would invoke their gentie influence in the work of reforming the national manners. If they would besiow more of their kind regards upon their aihlctic and manly forms that make our hill sides and valleys laugh and ring with tho wealth of golden harvests and less upon those whiskered and bedizened apes that inlcst the drawing room, we should love them better, and our country would regard them as her jewels. What honest vocation can he named that does r.ot contribue, in a greater or less de gree, to the enjoyment of man 1 It may be humble, indeed, but it goes to swell the mighty aggregate ; it may be a rill that trickles from the mountain side, but it dif fuses fertility through the valley, and min gles its drops at last with the ocean. The true American motto is and must be—mar ked upon our loreheads, written upon otf door posts—channelled in the earth, and wafted upon the waves— INDUSTRY, LABOR IS HONORABLE, and idleness is dishonorable —and I care not if it be labor, whether it be of the head or hands. Whitney, whose cotton gin doubled the value of every acre of land in the 8011 th, raised more cotton with his head than any twenty men ever raised with their hands, f.et me exhort those of you who are devoted to intellectual pursuits, to cherish, on your part, an ex alted and just idea of manual labor, and to make that opinion known in your works nnd seen in the earnest of your actions. The laboring men of this country arc vast in number and respectable in character. We owe to them, under l'rovidenee, the most gladsome spectacle the sun beholds in its course—a land of cultivated and fer tile fields, an ocean while with canvass. We owe to them the annual spectacle of golden harvests, which carries plenty and happiness alike to the palace and the cot tage. We owe to them the fortresses that guard our coasts—the ships that have borne our flag to every clime and carried the thunder of our cannon triumphant over the waters of the deep. Sir Walter Scott, a mere writer of poetry and romance, has given employment to ten thousand paper-makers, type-founders, printers, tanners, book-binders; and beyond that has awakened the love of elegant lite rature in millions of minds. Sir Isaac Newton spent his days partly in sleep, and his nights in watching the stars in the midnight sky ; and yet his discoveries have enabled the mariner to pursue his forming pathway in the deep, as safely as on the land, and thus poured the products of every clime into the lap of labor. The benefactions of these men were indeed great and illustrious : but there are men in our midst engaged in similar pursuits every day of their lives, bestowing the same kind of benefits on mankind. The merchant's life is a life of excitement and care, of risk and uncertainty, bnt of '.ho first importance to every commu nity ; as indispensible to the laborer as the laborer is to him. The village school master who devotes tho years ol his youth or his manhood to the exhausting drudgery of instruction; who moulds the characters and fixes the principles of an advancing generations—is as eminently useful, though he sinks at last into tho grave unhonored and unsung, as the demagogues whose presence is greeted in caucuses, or whose voice is heard in the halls of legislauon, discussing the constitutional power of Congress to buy a penknife. AN AMERICAN KACLK FOR TIIB KMPF.ROR OF AUSTRIA.—A Richmond correspondent of Ihe Petersburg Express says : The Virginia Central brought down on its train of yesterday afternoon a rare bird of the faglo species. At the invitation of a friend I visited this natural curiosity to-day. It is of enormous size, resembles tho com mon grey eagle so frequently caught in Virginia, but is bicipitous, or double-headed —and in this its peculiarity consists. The two heads are clearly defined, and seom to be perfect in all respects. It receives its food with the same facility in either beak, and apparently hears and sees alike through all its eyes and ears. It was captured when a mere fledgling, near Luray, Page county, by Mr. Joannas Schwartzberger, and has been carefully nurtured and fed by himself and family ever since. Mr. S. has disposed of this curious bird to the Austrian Consul at Now Yoik, who intends presenting it to Emperor, Francis Joseph. A List of Wonders. Among the thousands of marvelous in ventions which American genius has pro duced, within the last few years, are tho following, compiled in an abstract from the Patent Office Report. Read them over,and then say if you can, that there is nothing new under the sun. The report explains the principle of the I celebrated Hobb lock. Its 'unpickability' j depends upon a secondary or false set of tumblers, which prevent instruments used in picking from reaching the real ones.— Moreover, the lock is powder proof, and may be loaded through the key-hole and fired off till the burglar is tired of his fruit less work, or fears that tho explosions will to view his exprimeiits more witness than he desires. Doors and shutters have been patented that cannot be broken through with either pick or sledge-hammer. The burglar'a 'oc cupation's gone.' A harpoon is described which makes the whale kill himself. The more he pulls the line, the deeper goes the harpoon. An ice-making machine has been paten ted, which is worked by a steam-engine. Ir. an experimental trial, it froze several bot tles of sherry, and produced blocks of ice the size of a cubic foot when the thermome ter was up eighty degrees. It is calculated that for every ton of coal put into the fur nace, it will make a ton ot ice. From Mr. Dale's examiners report, we gather some idea of the value ol patents. — A man who had make a slight improve ment is straw-cutters, took a model of his machine through the Western States, and after a tour of eight mouths, returned with forty thousand .dollars. Another man had a machine to thrash and clean grain, which in fifteen months he sold for sixty thousand dollars. These aro ordinary cases—while such inventions as tho telegraph, the plan ing machine, and India rubber patents, are worth millions each. Examiner Lane's report describes new electrical inventions. Among these is an electrical whaling apparatus, by which lite whale is literally 'shocked to death.' An other is an electro magnetic alarm, which rings bells and displays signals in caso of fire and burglars. Another is an electric clock, which wakes you tip, tells you what timo il is, and lights a lamp (or you at any hour you please. There is a 'sound gatherer,' a sort of huge trumpet, to be placed in front of a locomo tive, bringing to the engineer's ear all the noise ahead ; perfectly distinct, notwith standing the noise of the train. There is an invention that picks up pins from a confused heap, turns them around witli their heads up, and sticks them in pa pers in regular rows. Another goes through the wholo process of cigar making, taking in leaves and turn ing out finished cigars. One machine cuts cheese ; another scours knives and forks; another rocks the cradle : and seven or eight lake in washing and ironing. There is a parlor chair patented that can not be lipped back on two legs, and a rail way chair that can be lipped. back to any position without any legs at all. Another patent is for a machine that counts passengers in an omnibus and taku their fares. When a very fat gentleman gets in, it counts two and charges double. There are a variety of guns patented that load themselves, a fishing line that adjusts its own bait, and a rat trap that throws away the rat, and baits itself and stands in the corner for another. 'J here is a machine also, by which a man prints, instead of writes, his thoughts. It is played like a piano-forte. And sheak ing of pianos, it is estimated that nine thou sand are made every year giving constant employment to one thousand nine hundred persons, costing over two millions of dollars. HERE is a paragraph of plain talk to the girls, by a anonymous author, which is worth a library of Young Ladies, Friends, or whatever may be the title of the wishy washy compounds that are sold for the benefit of that interesting portion of the community : Men who are worth having, want women for wives. A bundle of gew gaws bound with a string of flats and qua vers, sprinkled with cologne and sot in a carmine saucisse—this is no help for a man who expects to raise a family on veri table bread and meat. The piano and lace frames aro good in their places, and so aro ribbons, trills and tinsels, but you cannot make a dinner of tho former, nor a bed blanket of the latter. And, awlul as the idea may seem to you, both dinner and bed-blanket are essential to domestic hap piness. Lile has its realities as well as fancies; but you may make it a matter of decoration remembering the tassel curtains, but forgeting the bedstead. Supposing a man of good sense, and of course good prospocts, to bo looking for a wife—what chance have you to be chosen ? You may trap him, but how much belter to make it an object for him to catch you. Render yourself worth catching, and you will need no shrewd mother to help you to find a market. THE Second Annual Fair of tho Lycoming County Agricultural Society, will be hold at Kcpstone Park, Williamsport, on Tues day, Wednesday, and Thursday, Oct. 24th, 25th, and 26th inst. To VOUNG MEN ONLY. —When your lady love can't be moved by any other process, try the leavo-hor. Trwtfe ami Rlffltl Go or Country. Wlml n Lady Thinks of Hairy Fnces. A disgusted fomulo at Xenia, Ohio, is ma king a terrific crusade against hairy faced men. Hear her: What expression of kindness and mild humanity can be observed in a face cover ed with hair, from the nose down? Not | any. As well might a poor rat look in the ' grizzly muzzle of a Scotch terrier for mercy when about to be caught in his crushing jaws, as to look for an expression of human | kindness and sympathy in the lace of a hir ; sate man. Who can apprcciato tlio value of a smile? j It lightens up the countenance with ador | ing sweetness, indicates a kind heart, and radiates gladness to tin"*Sekrls of others, ' encourages the desponding, soothes tho af ! Dieted, cheers the sorrowing, disarms wrath, f and kindles up genial sympathy and reci procal rogard. Hut a smile cannot crop out from tho face ' of a man, "bearded and moustached" like 1 the pard. You suppose, from the agitation j of tall grass, that some animal was crawl- I ing through it. So you may infer, from the , whisking of hair, tnat a smile was burrow ing along there somewhere, out of sight.— | The smile of such a man cannot be distin -1 guished from the grin of a ribbed nosed ba ' boon, which had burnt its mouth with a hot | chestnut. I The lips are capable of indicating a varie !ly of passions and emotions. They can ex- I press kindness, good humor, sweetness of i disposition, sorrow, firmness, and disposi tion, of character, or the manifest scorn, [contempt, disdain, loathing, anger and threaten like loaded revolvers. Tho chief j expression of the best traits in Napoleon's I nature were in his mouth and chin, which he could clothe with so much sweet win ning mute, persuasive elotptence as to ren der his look irresistible. Hut when lip and chin are covered with hair, you might as well look for expression in the hole of a bank swallow in the side of a gully, over hung with a tuft ol grass. The passions and affections have their j poles in the face, firmness in the upper lip, mirthfulness near the outer corners of the mouth, and the affections in the edges of j the lips, &e., hence the philosophy and de | light el kissing ; the more intense the pas I sion, the more soul-thrilling ami enraptur | ing the kiss- Behold the lovely woman, I with a lorm'shapec! by the hand of harmony, regular features ri -K'. -, | bright eyes beaming with intelligence, woll j arranged pearly teeth, a soil delicate skin, a j mouth like Cupid's bow, a nock like ivory, a breast like alabaster, and the swelling un dulations of love like snow, her lips like two rosebuds moist with morning dew, and her cheeks, "Where tho live crimson through tho na tive while, Shooting over the face difiuses bloom, And every nameless grace." Radiant in beauty, she is surrounded by an atmosphere of love, as a rose exhales fra grance. Just think of one of these hair-fa ced fellows attempting to kiss her—see him pulling up htschevaux-de-frese ol bris tles to reveal his wild, beast-looking, caver nous slit of a mouth ! Halt, its abominable, the idea is disgusting—nauseous—get out —scat ! "Give us an otinco of civit, good apothe cary, to sweeten my iitiugTtfcnion Whom do moustaches and beards be come ? Brigands, pirates, fillibustera, and especial professional executioners. Jack j Ketch, the hangman, would effectually con ! ceal all expressions of human sympathy and compassion—causing him to look as grim and unrelenting as death in whose office he officiates. Origlon of Printing. The Art Journal says that it is partly to the use of playing cards that we are indebt ed for the invention which has been justly regarded as one of the greatest benefits of mankind. The first cards were printed with the hand. They were subsequently made more rapid by a process called sten ciling—that is, by cutting the rude forms through a piece of paistboard,parchment,or thin metal, which, when placed on the card board intended to receive the impres sion, was brushed over with ink or color, which paessed through tho cut-out lines, and imparted the figure to the material be neath. A farther improvement was made by cutting the figure on blocks of wood and literally printing them on cards. The card blocks are supposed to have given the first idea of wood engraving. When the peoplo saw the effects of cutting the figures of the cards upon blocks, they began the same manner, and then applied the method to ot her subjects, cutting in like manner the few words of necessory explanation. This practice further expanded itself into what are called block books, consisting of picto rial subjects, with copious explanatory texts. Some one, at iontgth, hit upon the idea of cutting the pages of a regular book on so many blocks, of wood, and taking the im pression on wood, aod paper or vellum, in stead of Writing tho manuscript? and this plan was soon further improved by cutting letters or words on seperate pieces of wood and sotting them up together so as to form pages. The wood was subsequently su perseded by mental aud thus originated the noble art of Printing. CF" " Thou rain'st in this bosom," as the chap said when a basin of water was thrown over him by tho lady he was serenading. CF" It is a waste of raw materials to put live dollars worth of beaver on ten cents worth of brains. BEAUTIFUL STANZAS. Leaf by leaf the roses fall, Drop by drop the springs run dry; One by one, beyond recall, Summer beauties fade and die; Rut the roses bloom again, And the spring will gush anew, In the pleasant April rain And the Summer sun and dew. So in hours of deepest gloom, When the spring of gladness fail, And the roses in the bloom, Droop like maidens wan and pale, We shall find somo hope that lies Like a silent gem apart, Hidden far from careless eyes, in tho garden of the heart. Some s*eot hope to gladness wed, That will spring alresh and new, When grief's winter shall have fled, Giving place to fain and dew— Some sweet hope that breaths of spring, Through tho weary, weary time Budding for its blossoming, In the spirit's glorious climo. Experiences of Imprisonment. The following is an extract from Count Goufall Cottier's account of his imprison ment : "Fifteen years I existed in a dungeon ten feet square ! During six years I had a com panion ; during nine I was alone 1 I never could rightly distinguish the face of htm who shared my captivity, in the eternal twilight of our cell. The first year we talk ed incessantly together; wo related our past lives our joys forever gone, over and over again. Tho next year we communicated to each other our thoughts and ideas on all subjects. The third year we had no ideas to communicate; we were beginning to lose the power of reflection. The fourth, at au interval of a month or two we would open our lips to ask each other if it were possi ble that the world went on as gay and bust ling as when we formed a portion of man kind. Tho fifth we were silent. The sixth he was taken away—l never knew where— to execution or liberty. But I was glad when he was gone; even solitude was bet ter than the pale, vacant face. One day (it must have been a year or two after my companion loft me) the dungeon door was opened ; whence proceeding I know not, the following words were uttered : "by or der of his imperial majesty, I intimate to you that your wile died a year ago." Then the door was shut, and 1 heard no more ; they had but flung this great agony upon mo, and left tno alone with it." TRUE GREATNESS.—Who are the truly great ? Not always those who occupy a high position among the sons of earth. It may not bo those who have toiled ap edu cation 's step and who have ascended to what men call fames, highest pir.icle of re nown, whose elotjuence enchains the mind of millions, ami who sways them at his will. It may not be him who has thousands of votaries that bow at his shrino, for wealth and friends may gain man a high position, midst his fellow-men, even if not deserving. It is not always those that occupy the high est position that are most deserving, very far from it. The truly great are those that do not strive to obtain a high position among the sons cf earth, but whose greatest object and motto is to do good and to benefit his fellow-men, regardless of self and the opi nions of tho fashionable and wealthy ones of earth. Live not for thy self but for oth ers, is the rule which he is striving to carry out; and when lie shall enter the scenes of another life, for his noble actions and phil anthropic zeal, he 6halt receive a never failing crown of glory. Wo need build no monuments to such worth as this—monu ments that would pierce even to the clouds would be far too insignificant: their monu ments are there noble deeds imperishably engravon in tho hearts of those whom they have benefit ed. I.et us so live that when we have finished this life, we shall be en abled to say we have done right, and be this the enduring monument to perpetuate our name. ANECDOTE OF GOVERNOR SEWARD.—Coz zens, in his last I Vine Press, tells an old story, which he says few persons have not heard. When Governor of New York, Se ward, in those pre-railroad days, had occa sion to visit a certain part of the Stale, ar.d accordingly mounted upon the top of the mail coach, in order that he might enjoy his cigar and the scenery. The driver was an inquisitive fellow aud his passenger humor ed him. " Land agent 1" said the driver. " No," quoth Seward. " Selling goods ?" " No." " Traveling preacher?" " No." " Circus?'' " No." " What, then ?" said tho baffled driver, " what is your business ?" " Governor," replied Seward, with a tranquil pufl. " Go vernor o' what?" " Governor of the Slate of New York," replied the smoking passen ger with composure. "Getaout!" "Well, I can couvinco you of that," said Seward, " for horo is a man on tho road with whom I am acquainted," and, as the stage passed by, he saluted him. " Good morning, Mr. Bunker, I want to ask you a question—am 1 not the Governor of the State of New York." " No, by thunder !" was Bunker's unex pected answer. " Who is, then V said the startled smoker. " Thurlow Weed 1" CF" There is a man in Exeter whose mo mory is so short that it only reaches to his knees. Ter consequence, he has not paid for his last pair of boots A Thrilling Adventure, A merchant who wished to celebrate his daughter's wedding, collected a party of her young companions They circled around her, wishing much happiness to the youth lul bride and her chosen one. Her father gazed proudly oil the lovely bride, and hop ed that as bright prospects for the future might open for the rest of his children, who were playing among the guests. Passing through the hall of the basement, he met a servant, who was carrying a lighted candle in Iter hand and without a candlestick. He blamed her for such conduct, and went into the kitchen to see about snpper. Tho girl soon returned, hut without the candle- The merchant immediately recollected that sev eral barrels of gunpowder had been placed in the cellar during the day, and that one had been opened. " Where is your candle ?" hejinquired in the utmost alarm. " I couldn't bring it np with mo, for my arms were full of wood," replied the girl. " Where did you put it 1" " Well, I'd no candle stick, so 1 stuck it in somo black eand(tliat's in tho small bar rel." Here master dashed down the stairs—the passage was long and dark—his knees threatened to give way—his breath was | choked—his flesh seemed dry and parched, as if he clearly felt the suffocating blast of death. At the end of the cellar, under the very room where his children and their friends were reveling in felicity, he saw the open barrel of powder full to the >op: the candle stuck loosely in the grain, with a long red snuff of burnt wick ; this sight seemed to wither all his powers; tho laughter of the company struck upon his ear like tho knell of death. He stood a moment unable to move. The music com menced above, the feet of the dancers re sponding with vivacity; the floor shook, and the loose bottles jingled with the mo tion. He fancied that the candle moved was falling; with desperate energy he sprang forward—but how to remove it; the slightest touch would cause the red hot wick to fall into the powder. With une qualled presence of mind, he placed a hand on each side of tho candle, with the open palm upwards, and the fingers pointed to wards the object ol his care, which as his hands met, were secured in the clasping of his fingers, aml-snfuiy moved away from its dangerous position. When he reached the head of the stairs he smiled at his previous alarm—but the re-action was too powerful, and he fell into fits of the most violent laughter. He was conveyed to his bed senseless, and many weeks elapsed ero his nerves recovered sufficiently to allow him to resume his business. Weislit of the World. Copernicus first distinctly demonstrated that the apparent terrestrial plain was really a free and indepndent material mass, mov ing ill a definable path through space. Then Newton explained that it was sub stantial and heavy, and because it was un supported by props and chains; that, in fact, as a massive body, it is falling forever through the void; but that, as it falls it sweeps round the sun in a never-ending circuit, attracted towards it by magnet-like energy, but kept off from it by the force of its centrifugal movement. Next, Snell and l'icard, measured the dimensions of the hea vy and falling mass, and found that it was a spherical body, with a girdle of 25,000 miles. Subsequently to this, Baily contriv ed a pair of scales tha'. enabled him approxi mately to weigh the vast sphere; and he as certained that it had within itself somewhere about 1,256,105,670,000 000,000,0C0,000tons ol water. Toihese discoveriesFoncault has recently added demonstration to the actual senses of the fact, that the massive sphere is working on itself as it falls through space and round the sun, so that point after point of its vast surface is brought in succession into the genial influence of its sunshine ; an inverting atmosphere ol commingled vapor and air is made to present clouds, winds, and rain, and the inverted surface to bear vegetable forms and animated creatures in great diversity. Tho world is, then, a large, solid sphere, invested with a loosened shell of transparent, elastic, easily-moving vapor, and whirling through space within the do mains of sunshine ; so that by the combined action of the transparent mobile vapor and tho stimulant sunshine, organized creatures may grow and live on its surface, and those vital changes may be diffused,among which conscious and mental life Btand as the highest results.— Ediniurg Review. GV On the Cincinnati and Dayton Rail road, the other day, a lady and gentleman were seated together, and facing them on the opposite seat sat two gentleman, edi tors of two German papers. When near Dayton the train passed through a long, dark bridge. Amid the thundering and rat tling of tho cars, a very suspicious concus sion was heard by those nearest the lady and gentleman alluded to. As they emerg ed into the daylight, one of the German editors slowly drew his spectacles down over his nose, and exclaimed,— Veil, 1 link dat ish a bad bridge. 1 hear himcrack one, two, thiee, four times ! |-jr I' Oh, Jacob," said a master to his apprentice, "it is wonderful to see what a quantity you can oat." " Yes, sir," said the boy; " 1 have been practising ever since I was a child." [Two Hollar? per Jtrfhim NUMBER 38; Tribute lo Womaii. The closing pari of General Houston's Nacogdoches speech Is one of tlie most elo quent tributes to woman wc have ever read. The following is an extract: Ladies,! know tha' politics are always un interesting to you, yet 1 believe you have in the general result an abiding interest. It 18 always a gratification to me to behold my faireountrywomen in assemblages likethese. It is a guarrantce that their husbands and fa thers and brothers arc men of intelligence and refinements, who appreciate their mem tal capacities, and desire their countcnaiico in their undertakings. Your presence exer cises a calming influence upon those antago nisms, which aro too often engendered in the heat of political contests. All parlies desire your approving smile, and therefore all are encourage.d by your presence. I know that in the direct administration of po litical affairs you have no share; but yet, reigning as you do, supreme in the realm of love, your influence often controls the desti ny of nations. Woman's love is the great lever which rouses man to action. The gen eral, as he plans the etrategetie combina tions which are to insure victory, looks for ward to a recompense dearer than the lau rels upon his brow ; the soldier as he frud ges along on the weary march, or mingles in the scenes of the battle-field, even with death around him, forgets awhile the carnage, and turns his thoughts lo the fond girl lie left behind him; the mariner, tempest tossed, driven by the rude waves, sings merrily aloft as lie thinks of the littlo cottage by tho shore, where his wife and doar ones await him; the statesman, as he devises amid deep and painlul thought, plans of govern ment, which aro to tell upon his own and his country's fame, never loses sight of the boys which await him when cabinet councils aro over, and lie enters the portals of home; tho sentinel, as he paces his weary watch, loves the moonlight tramp, that he may look beneath its rays at the dear momento of a mother's or a sister's love. Over man, in all his relationships, the influence of woman hangs like a charm. Deprive us of your in fluence, which dignifies aud stimulates us to noble deeds, and we become worse than barbarians. Let it bo ours, and we can brave the - cannon's mouth, or face danger in ten thousand forms. You stimulate ua to all that is good. You check us in ig noble purposes. You have also an im portant influence upon posterity. The early impressions which the child receives from you outlive all the wisdom of latter days. Sages may reason, and philosoph ers may teach, but the voice, which we heard, in infancy will ever come to our ears, b earing a mother's words and a mo ther's counsel. Continue to instil ir.to your children virtue and patriotism. Imbue them with proper veneration for the fathers of liberty. Teach them to love their country, and labor for its good, as the great aim of thoir ambition. Bid them proudly maintain our institutions. Point them to the deeds of their ancestors. Make these their escutcheon, and bid them hand it down to their children as free from stain as it came to them. l)o this, ladies, and your influence will not be lost in the futuro. In the language of tho poet, it will etill bo said: " Woman is lovely to the sight, As gentle as the dews of even, As bright as morning's earliest light, And spotless as the snows of ticaveu." TUB A URORA BOREAMS AND THE TELEGRAPH . —During the auroral display on Thursday night in Boston some curious phenomena were witnessed in connection with the te legraph wires. The following conversation, says the Boston Traveler, between the Bos ton and Portland operators on the American telegraph line, will give an idea of the effect of the Aurora Borealis on the working tele graph wires: Boston operator, (to Portland operator,) " Please cut off your battery entirely from the line lor fifteen minutes. Boston—" Mine is disconnected, and we are working with the auroral current. How do you receive my writing?" Portland—" Belter than with our batteries on. Current comes and goes gradually." Boston—" My current is very strong at times, and can work belter without batteries, as the Aurora seems to neutralize and aug ment our batteries alternately, making cur rent too strong at times for our relay mag nets. Suppose we work with batteries while we are aficcted by this trouble." Portland—" Very well. Shall Igo ahead with business 1" ' Boston—" Yes. Go ahead." The wire was then worked for about two hours without the usual batteries, on tho aurora current, working better than with tho batteries connected. The current vari ed, increasing and decreasing alternately, but, by graduating the adjustment to the current, a sufficient steady effect was ob tained to work tho line very well. Thie is tho first instance on record of more than a word or two, having been transmitted with the auroral current. The usual effects of tho electric storm wero also manifested, as reversing tho poles of tho batteries, &o. ViT "Why don't you go to work, and stop picking your nose Boy.—" It's my noso, aint it, and it's tho Fourth of July, too, I'll pick thunder out on't,if I've a mind to." THE British Army at present consist# of 246,412 men, of whom 119,551 are stationed abroad. This includes the whole available force, militia, volunteers, rifle corpe, enrol j led pensioners, &c., &c.