1 Efl IF. II. JACOBF, Proprietor. Troth and Right God and our Country. Two Dollars per Annan. VOLUME 12. BLOOMS BURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 12, 1860. NUMBER 36. r ID STAR 0 imj u a. i u. iio 7 i STAR OF THE NORTH ftBilSHKD EVERT WIDKISPAT IT " wa. n. jacoby, Office on Main St., Jrd Sqnare below Marfcet, TERMS: Two Dollars per annum if paid within six months from the time of subscri bing : two dollars and fifty cents if not paid Vrithir. the year. No subscription taken fur 'a. tess period, than six months; no discon tinuances permitted until all arrearages are !paid, unless at the option of the editor. , The term of advertising will be as fellows : ;Orie square, twelve lines, three times, SI 00 (Every subsequent insertion, 25 One square, three months, 3 00 One year, 8 00 M fBIVATE OPISIDWS. BY SOCGH AND BEAD 7. Mankind are no better than robbers, And Charity proves but a lie; Salvation is doled out by jobbers; Benevolence's all io your eye. Friendship a thing of convenience; Happiness does' not exist ; Hope something far in the distance ; Honor a prize fighter's fist. Contentment is found in the gutter, And wealth comes of robbing the poor; Trnst steals the bread and the butter From every grocery stor3. True greatness is being successful, No matter how wrong or how right ; True love, while it lasts, is quite blissful, But it seldom remains over night. Slander is something quite common ; -.Where it touches it raises a blister; It's much used by every true woman Who is anxious to hold a "frail sister." True Virtue a sorry old maid is, Whose looks keep temp'ations away, While fashion makes all our fine ladies Who live only to make a display. Foverty is the worst of all evils ; -Twill keep you in bondage for life, - Change all your relations to devils, And make a poor slave of your wife. Vour children are objects of pity ; Aristocracy christians the ' brats;" They are kicked about over our city like eo many troublesome rats. Christianity dwells where the steeple Lifts op its tall form tOTards heaven, And belongs to a privileged people Who are christians just one day in seven. Religion is something too holy For common mankind to possess ; It is with the meek and the lowly Who do something more than ''profess." Deception is found n all places ; Tis confined io no section or class; We all have its mark oi our face ; To prove ixjust look in the glass ! THE CMFKLCOJIL' IMS S EAGER. A cold winter's night found a stae load of us gathered about the warm fire of a tav ern bat room in a New England village. Shortly after we arrived, a peddler drove up and ordered that his horse should be sta bled for the night. Alter we had eaten supper we repaired to the bar room, and soon as the ice was broken the conversation flowed freely. Several anecdotes had been related, and finally the peddler was asked to give us a story, as men of .his profession were generally full or adventures and anec dotes. He was a short, thick-set man, somewhere about forty years of age, and gave evidence of physical strength. He gave his name as Lemuel Viney, and his home was in Dover, New Hampshire. " Well, gentlemen," he commenced knocking the ashes from his pipe, and put ting it in his pocket, "suppose I tell you of about the last thing that happened to me ? You Bee I am now right from the lar west, and on my way home for winter quarters. It was about two months ago, one pleasant evening, that 1 pulled up at the door of a small village tavern in Hancock county, In. I said it was pleasant I meant, it was warm, bat it was cloudy and likely to be Tery dark. I went in and called for cupper, and bad my horse taken care of, and after I bad eaten I sat down in the bar-room. It began to rain about eight o'clock, and for awhile it poured down good, and it was awful dark out of door?. ''Now, I wanted to be in Jackson early the next morning, for I expected, a load of goods there for me which I intended to dis pose of on my way home. The moon would rise about midnight, and I knew, if it did not rain, I could getalotjg very comfort ably through the mod arter that. . So I ask ed the landlord if he could not see that my horse was fed about midnight, as I wished to be off before two. He expressed some surprise at this, and asked me why I didn't stop for breakfast. I told him I had told my last load about all out, and that a new lot of goods was waiting for me at Jackson, and I wanted to be there before the express train left " in the morning. There was a number of people sitting round while I told this, bet t took little notice of them ; one only arrested my attention. I had in my possession a small package of play-card., which 1 was to deliver to the Sheriff at Jackson, and they were notices for the de tection of a notorious robber, named Dick Hardhead. The bills gave a description of his person, and the man before roe answer ed very well to it. In fact, it was perfect. He was a tall, well-formed man rather slight cf frame, and bad the appearance of a gen tleman, save that his lace bore those ' hard, crnel marks which an observing man. can rot mistake for anything but the index to a rillainous disposition. "When I went to my chamber I asked the landlord who that man was, describing the suspicious IndiviJuaL He said he did cot knor? ViZX,. lis had come there that af-t-rr : r.4 izlzzizd to Isaya Iho next day. The host asked why 1 wished to know, and I simply told tim that the man's counte nance was familiar, acd I merely wished to know if ever I was acquainted with him. 1 resolved not to let the landlord into the se cret, but to hurry on to Jackson, and there give inlormaticn to the Sheriff, and perhaps he might reach the inn before the villain left, for I had no doubts with regard to hi' identity. "I bad an alarm watch, and having , set it to give the alarm at one o'clock, I went to sleep. I was aroused at the proper time, and immediate ly got up and dressed my self. When I reached the yard, I found the clouds all paused away, aqd the moon was shining . brigb ily. The ostler was easily aroused, and by two o'clock I was on my road. The mud was deep, and my horse could not travel fast yet it struck me that the beast made more work than there was any need of, for the cart was nearly empty. " However, on we went, and in the course cf half an hour I was clear of the village. At a short distance ahead, lay a large tract of forest, mostly of great pines. The road led directly through this wood, and as near as I could remember, the dis tance was twelve miles. Yet the moon was in the east, and as the road ran nearly west, I should have light enough. I had entered the woods, and had gone about half a mile, when i my wagon wheels settled, with a bump, and a jerk, into a deep hole. I uttereJ an e.iclamation of astonishment, but that was cot all. I heard another ex clamation from another source ! "What could it be 1 I looked quickly around, but could see nothing. Yet I knew that the sound I heard was very close to me. As the hind wheels came up I felt something besides the jerk of the hole. I hear something tumble frorri one side to the other of my wagon, and I could feel the jar occasioned by the movement. It was sim ply a man in my cart ! I knew this on the instant. Of course I felt puzzled. At first I imagined some poor fellow had taken this method to obtain a ride ; but I soon gave this up, fori knew that any decent man would have asked me for a ride. My next idea was somebody had gone to sleep ; but they passed away as quickly as it came for no man would have broken into my cart for that purpose. And that thought, gentle men, opened my eyes. Whoever was there had broken in. "My cext thoughts were of Dick Hard head. He had heard rne say that my load was sold out, and of course he supposed I had some money with me. In this he was right, for I had over two thousand dollars. I also thought he meant to leave the cart when he supposed I had reached some quiet place, And then either creep over and shoot me, or knock me down. All this pas sed through my mind by the time lhad got a rod from the hole. "Now, I never make it a point to brag of myself, but I have seen some of the world, and I am prcitly cool and clear headed un der a difficulty. In a very few moments my resolution was formed. My horse was now knee deep in the mud, and I knew 1 could slip oil without noise. So I drew my revolver I never travel in that country without one I drew this, and having twin ed the reins about the whip stock. I care fully slipped down iu the mud, and as the cart passed on I went behind it and exam ined the haiip. "The door of the cart lets down, and is fastened by a hasp, which slips over a sta ple and is then secured by a padlock. The padlock was gone, and the hasp was secur ed in its pliice by a bit of pina so that a slight forco within would break it. My wheel wrer.ch hong in a leather bucket on the side of the cart, and 1 quietly tock it put and slipped it into the staple, the iron handle just sliding down. "Now I had him. My cart was almost new, made in a stout frame of white oak, and made on purpose for hard usage. I did not believe any ordinary man could break on!. I got on my cart as noiselessly as 1 got off, and then urged my horse on, still keeping my pistol handy. 1 knew that the distance of half a mile further I should come to a good hard road, and al lowed my borse to pick his own way thro' the mud. About ten minutes after this 1 heard a motion in the cart, followed by a grinding nmse, as though some heavy force were being applied to the door. 1 said nothing, but the idea struck me that the Til lain might judge where I sat and shoot up through th3 top of the cart at me, so 1 eat down upon the foot-board. "Of course I knew that ray unexpected passenger was a villain, for he must have been awake ever since I started, and noth ing in the world but absolute villainy would have caused him to remain quiet so long, and then start tip in this particular place. The thumping and pushing grew louder and louder, and pretty soon I heard a human voice. " "Let mo out of this !'' he cried, and he yelled pretty loud. ... "I lifted op my head so as to make him think I w;is sitting in the usual place, and then asked him what be was doing there. "Tell ice what you axe in there for," said I. "I got in here to sleep on your rags," he anrwered. 'How did yon get in ?" "Let m Boat, or I'll shoot yoa through the head '!" he yelled. "Jast it that moment my horse's feet struck tho hard road, and I knew - that the rest of lha route to Jackson would be good goinj. 1'he distance was twelre miles.. I slipped tack c-a the foot board and tock tbe whip. I had the same then I've got now a tall, t tout, powerful ba7 mare and you "may believe there's some go in her. At any rate, she struck a gait that even aston ished me. She had receive a good mess of oats, the kit was cool, and she felfc like going. In fifteen minutes we cleared the woods, and away we went at a keen jump. The chap inside kept yelling tp be let out. "Finally he stopped, and in a few min utes there came the report of a pistol one two three four one right after the oth er, and 1 Ijeard the balls over my head. If I had been on my seat, one of those balls, if not two of them, would have gone thro' me. 1 popped up my head again and gave a yell, and then a deep groan, and then I said, 'O, God save me, I'm a dead man !' Then I made a shuffling noise as though I were falling off, and finally settled down on the foot-board again. I now urged op the old mare by giving her an occasional poke with the butt of ray whip stock, and she peeled it faster than ever. "The man called out to me twice more pretty soon after this, and as he got no re ply he made some tremendous endeavors to break the door open, and as this failed him, he made several attempts on the pp. But 1 had no fear of doing anything there, for the top ofhe1i tt is framed with dovetails, and each slefr bolted to tire posts with iron bolts. I had it made so I could carry heavy loads there. By and by, after all else had failed, the scamp commen ced to holler whoa to the horse, and kept it up until he became hoarse. All this time I had kept perfectly quiet, holding the reins firmly, and kept poking the beast with the stock. "We-were not an hour in going that doz en miles not a bit of it. I hadn't much fear; perhaps I might tell the truth and say that I had none, for I had a good pistol, and with that, my passenger was saftjyet I was glad when I came to the oloffii -brrel factory that stood at the edge of Vickson Tillage, and in ten minutes more 1 Tiauled up in front of the tavern, and found a coup le of men in the barn cleaning down some stage horses. "Well, old feller,' says I, as I got down and went round to the back of the wagon, 'you have had a good ride haven't ye ?" " 'Who are you V he cried, and he kind of swore a little, too, as he asked the ques tion. " 'I'm the man yon tried to shoot,' was my reply. " 'Where am I ? Let me out !" he yell ed. "Look here, we've come to a safe stop ping place, and mind ye, my revolver is ready for ye the moment you show your self. Now lay quiet.' ."By this time two ostlers had come up to see what was the matter, and I explained it all to them. Alter this I got one of them to run and rout out the Sheriff, and tell what I believed I'd got for him. The first streaks of daylight were jnst coming up, and in half an hour it would be broad day light. In less than that time the Sheriff came, and two men with him. I told him the whole in a few words exhibited the handbills I had for him, and then he made for the cart. He told the chap inside who he was, and if he made the least resistance he'd be a dead man. Then I slipped the iron wrench out, and as I let the door down the fellow made a spring. I caught him by the ankle and he came down on his face, and in a moment more the officers had him. It was now daylight, and the moment I saw the chap I recognized him. He was marched off to the lock-up, and I told the Sheriff I should remain in town all day. "After breakfast the Sheriff came down to the tavern and told ma that I had caught the very bird, and that if I would remain until the next morning I should have the reward of two hundred dollars which had been offered. "I found my goods all safe, paid the ex press agent for bringing them from Indiana polis, and then went to work to stow them away in my cart. The bullet holes were found in the top of my vehicle just as I ex pected. They were in a line about five in ches apart, and had I been where 1 usuall7 sit, two of them would have hit me some where about the small of the back and pass ed npward, for they were sent with a heavy charge of powder, and his pistol was a very heavy one. "On the next morning the Sheriff called upon rae and paid me two hundred dollars in gold, for he had made himself sure that he had got the villain. I afterwards found a letter in the post office at Portsmouth for rae, from the Sheriff of Hancock coonty,and he informed me that Mr. Dick Hardhead is in prison for life." So ended the peddler's story. In the morning I had the curiosity to look at his cart, and I fonnd the four bullet-holes just as he bad told us, though they were now plugged up with vial corks. "Uncle," said a young man, who thought that his guardian supplied him rather sel dom with pocket money, yet fel: a little hesitation in beginning an assaalt on his re lative's generosity. "Is the Queen's head still on the shilKng piece V , "Of course it is, you stupid lad. Why do yon ask that V "Because it is now such a length of time 6ince I saw one." Lawyers, according to Martial, are men who hire out their word and anger. Juries, like guns, are often "charged," acd some- Work and Recreation. The Americans are a hard working peo ple. There is no nation on the globe which allows itself so few holidays and recreations as we do. Our English progenitors are not thought to be Tery far advanced in what the French call the savoir virve, or the art of living hapily; but eyen the English, hard as they are known to work, allow them selves more play .hanwe do, they acquire and keep a bluff, hearty physique, by much open air exercise, to which we, as a nation, are strangers. Our national habit is spare and lank; our faces are sallow, or pale; our chests are too narrow, and our stomachs are too prone to dyspepsia. ' - Habits imprint themselves upon the na tures of men after a few generations almost ineffaceably. Modes of life are sure to af fect the constitution of the livers. Too much monotony in occupation repeats its elf in the character, and too constant labor extracts the spring and elastic energy which make labor most effective. The man who plays a little now and then, works a great deal better for it afterwards. Work is noble and elevating, and all idle ness is detestable. But recreation is not idleness; it is rather a higher kind of work. It is exhilerating to the spirits, and serves as oil to the machinery, making everything move more smoothly and swiftly diminishing friction, and lessening the wear and tear of the vital powers. The best recreations are donbtless the social ones. It is a fault, both in English and American life, that there is so little geniality and spontaneous off hand social intercourse. We learned from our progen itors to be stiff and unbending; rarely to speak, unless spoken to, and to consider too much familiarity on the part of any body an unpardonable sin. Some writer has whimsically declared that if an Englishman were to see a man's house on fire, he would not venture to tell him of it, unless he had previously been introduced. This criticism indicates a fact, though it overstates it. See how much pleasanter is the French bonhom mie and the German heartiness and sim plicity ! The chief end of life with those nations, is to make life cheerful and happy. Many of the Anglo-Sxon race seem to live as if the chief end were to make things as gloomy and uncomfortable as possible. In a crowd of Germans or French, exclu siveness is laid aside, and good manners consist, not in the preservation of punctilio, but in the natural play of feelings. Polite ness is not a system of rules, but the free acting-out of ger.erous impulses. Among cultivated people, reins and padlocks are not necessary. They can be trusted, who live from a law of their own natcre, and conventionalities are chiefly of use to school the boorish and savage, so as to make them presentable. The worst thing fashion does for us, is to keep us apart If we could come together, we could not fail to learn more good man ners than we get out of all this exclusive ness. Social pleasures are not necessarily ex pensive ones. Hospitality need cost no more than we make it. A little pleasure, when shared, goes a great way. If we come together to enjoy ourselves and each other, and riot the eating and drinking, we bhall speedily find that hilarity does not demand a long purse. No people enjoy social pleas ures more than the Germans yet none spend 60 little upon them. If our hearts are well provided, we need not busy ourselves to pamper our bodies, and if our minds are well furnished, we shall not need to aston ish our neighbors with the gold and mahog any of our parlors. Recreation is an art to be cultivated, with mostof us. It comes naturally to some races. Our American absorp'ion in busi ness, and all-devouring pursuit ot th'e main chance, keeps us in great, strangers to its value. If we would Eel ourselves to learn ing how, we should soon find that recreation takes less time and less money, than we had imagined. A French traveler has remarked, that in the United States, there is less misery, and less happiness, than in any other part of the world. We suspect there is some truth in the paradox. Brother Jonathan thinks it a Tery serious thing to be merry. To be al ways grinding in his ideal of practical life, though he does not permit himself to enter tain visions of a good time coming, when he shall recreate and rest. But as this good time is postponed to the further side of what is called "a fortune," it commonly recedes before him as he advances in his career,, like a mirage in the desert tantalizing, but unattained. It is not possible that it would be wiser to take his comfort as he goes along, lest he should somehow fail to get it at the end of the journey ? Large Mosquitoes. In speaking of mos quitoes of a large size, seen by one of the party in a Southern lake, Lemon, (who was a sea faring man many years,) remarked : "Well, there, Surinam is the darndest place for mosquitoes I ever seed. Last time I went for a load of merlasses, my cousin driv rne about to a plantation, and 'mong other things on a farm I 6eed one o! the prettiest yoke ot cattle I ever laid my eyes on. Neow, (I'm tellin' the truth you neen't laugh,) when I came back where them cattle was fust, one ox was missin', or there was nothin' of him left but skin and bone, any way ; and, if you believe xne, I squinted up a tree, and there wan the enssedest big muskeeter I ever teed, a pick in' his teeth with one of the horns." THE FATHERLESS. ' Speak softlj to the fatherless ! And check tho harsh reply That sends the crimson to the cheek, The tear-drop to the eye ; They have the weight of loneliness, In this wide world to bear ; Then gently raise the fallen bud, The drooping floweret spare. Speak kindly to the fatherless ! The lowliest of their band God keepeth, as the waters, In the hollow of his hand. Tis sad to see life's evening sun Go down in sorrow's shroud ; But sadder still when the morning dawn Js darkened by the cloud. Look mildly on the fatherless ! Ye may have power to wile Their hearts from saddened memory, By the magic of a smile, Deal gently with these litile ones ; Be pitiful, and He, The friend and father of us all, Shall gently deal with thee. Stealing Water Melons. A man in a country town took great pleasure in having a neat garden. He had aH kinds ot vegetables and fruits earlier than his neighbors. But thieving boys in the neighborhood annoyed him ; damaged his trees, trampled down his flowers, and "hooked" his choicest fruits. He tried va rious ways to protect his grounds : but his watch-dogs were poisoned, and his set traps caught nothing but his fattest fowls and fa vorite cat. One afternoon, however, just at nightfall, he overheard a couple of mischievous boys talking together, when one of them says : "What do you say, Joe ? Shall we come the grab over them melons to-night. Old Swipes will be snoring like ten men before twelve o'clock." The other objected, as there was a high wall to get over. "Oh, pshaw !" was the reply ; ''I know a place where you can get over just as easy know it like a book. Come, Joe, let's go it." The owner of the melon-patch didn't like the idea of being an eaves-dropper ; but the- conversation so intimately concerned his melons, which he had taken so much pains to raise, that he kept quiet, and list ened to the plans of the scapegraces, so that he might make i. somewhat bother some for them. Ned proposed to get over the wall on the south side, by the great pear tree, and cut directly across to the summer-house, just north ot which were the melons. Joe was a clever fellow, who loved good fruit exceedingly, and was as obstinate as an ass. Get him once started to do a thing and he would stick to it, like a mud-turtle to a negroe's toe. The other didn't care so much for the melons as for the fun of get ing them. Now hear the owner's story. "I made all needful preparations for the visit ; put in brads pretty thick in the scant ling along the wall where they intended to get over; uncovered a large water vat that had been filled for some time, which, in , dry weather, I was accustomed to water ! my garden ; dug a trench a foot or so deep, ' and placed slender beards over it which i were slightly covered with dirt, and just beyond them some little cords, fastened j tightly, some eight inches above the ground. I picked all the melons I cared to preserve, leaving pumpkins and squashes, about the size ad shape of melons, in their places." The boys were quite right in supposing it would be dark ; but they missed it a little in inferring that ''old Swipes" as they call him, would be in bed. The old man liked a little fun as well as they, and when the time came, from his hiding place he list ened : "Whist, Joe ! don't you hear something?" I think that it was very probable they did, for hardly were the words uttered, than there came a sound of forcibly tearing lustian. "Get off my coat tail !" whispered one. "There goes one flap as sure as a gun! Why get off, Ned." And Ned was oF, and one leg off his breeches besides ; and then he was "oh," ing, and telling Joe that he "believed there was nails in the side of the wall, for some thing had scratched him most tremendously and had totn his breeches all to pieces." Joe sympathized with him, for he said half his coat was hanging up there some where." They now started hand in hand, for Ned believed "he knew the way." They had arrived a little beyond the trees when something went swash! swash! into the water-vat. A sneeze ensues, and then exclamation : "Thunder ! that water smells rather old!" Ned wanted In go home at once, but Joe was tho much excited to listen for a mo ment to such a proposition. "Never heard anything about that cistern before ; the old fellow must have fixed it on purpose to drown people in. Curious, though, that we should both fall in it." They pushed on for the melons. Pres ently they were caught by the cords, and headlong they went into a heap of briers and thistles, and the like, which had been placed there for their express accommoda tion. " Such a cettin up stairs !" muttered one. "Nettles and thistles; how they prick !" exclaimed the other. They now determined to go on more cau tiously. At length they - arrived at the JJE?J There's more than a dozen fat ones right here !" And down they sat in the 'midst of them and seemed' to think that they were amply rewarded for all their mishaps. "Here, take this melon, isn't it a rouser ? Slash into it." " It cuts tremendous hard. Ned it's a squash !" "No it isn't I tell you ; it's a new kind. Old Swipes sent to Rhode Island for the seed last spring." " Well then, all I've got to say is that the old fellow got sucket in that's all." "I'm going to gouge into this water-melon ; halloo ! there goes a half dollar ; I've broke my knife. If 1 didn't know that was a water-melon, I should call it a pumpkin." What the boys did besides, while the onwner went to the stable and unmuzzled the dog, and led him to the garden, he couldn't say ; that they took long steps the onion and the flower beds revealed the next morning. They had paid pretty dearly for the whis tle. They had not tasted a single melon ; they had got scratched,, had torn their clothes, were as wet as drowned rats, and half scared out of their wits at the raven ous dog and tho apprehension of being discovered. The next night the owner of the melon patch invited all the boys of the village, in cluding Ned and Joe, to a least of melons, on the principle of returning good lor evil. This circumstance changed the boy's opin ion of "old Swipes," and his melons were never again disturbed. Harper's Magazine. Stimulants. The Louisville Journal beautifully says : "There are times when the pulse 'lies low' in the bosom, and beats slow in the veins ; when the spirit sleeps the sleep, apparent ly, that knows no waking, in its house of clay, and the window shutters are closed, and the door is hung with the invisible crape of melancholy ; when we wish the golden sunshine, pitchy blackness, and ev er willing to 'fancy clouds where no clouds be.' This is a state of sickness when physic may be thrown lo the dogs, for we will have none of it. What shall raise the Bleep ing Lazarus ? What shall make the heart beat music again, and the pulses dance to it through all the myriad thronged halls in our house of life ? What shall make the sun kiss the Eastern hills again for us with all his old awakening gladness, and the night overflow with moonlight, music, Jove and flowers V Love itself is the great slimulent the most intoxicating of all and performs all these miracles ; but it is a miracle itself, and is not at the drug store, whatever they say. The counterfeit is in the market, but the winged god is not a money changer, we assure you. "Men have tried many things but still they ask for stimulants. The stimulants we use, but require the use of more. Men try to drown the floating dead of their own souls in the wine cup, but the corpses will rise. We see their faces in the bubbles. The intoxication of drink sets the world whirling again, and the pulses playing wild est music, aud the thoughts galloping but the fast clock runs down sooner, and the unnatural stimulation only leaves the hone it fills with wildest revelry,, more silent, more sad, more deserted, more dead. There is only one stimulent that never fails, and yet never intoxicates duty. Duty puts a blue sky over every man up in his heart may be into which the skylark Hap piness always goes, singing.'.' A Beautifcl Idea. Away among the Alleghanies, there is a spring so small that a single ox, in a summer's day could drain it dry. It steals its unobtrusive way among the hills, till it spreads out in the beautiful Ohio. Thence it stretches out a thousand miles, leaving on its banks more than a hundred villages and cities, and many a cultivated farm, and bearing on its bosom more than half a thousand steamboats. Then joining the Mississippi, it stretches away and away some twelve hundred miles more till it falls into the great emblem of eternity. It is one of the great tributaries of the ocean, which, obedient only to God, shall roil and roar till the angel with one foot on sea, and the other on the land, shall lift up his hands to heaven, anJ swear that time shall not be no longer. So with moral influence. It is a rill a rivulet an ocean, boundless and fathomless as eternity. ' Mother." O, woij of undying beauty! Thine echoes sound along the walls of time until the crumble at the bieath of the Eter nal. In all the world there ' not a habita ble spot where the music of that word is not sounded. Ay, by the golden flower of the river, by the crystal margin of rte rock, under the leafy shade of the forest tre, in the hut built of bamboo cane, in the rtmd and thatched cottage, by the peaks of ht kissing moontains, in the wide spread val ley, or the blue ocean, in the changeless desert, where the angel came down to give the parched lips the sweet waters of the wilderness; under the white tent of the Arab, and in the dark covered wigwam of Indian hunter; wherever the pulses of the human heart beat quick aid warm, or float feebly along the current of falling life,there is that sweet word spoken, like a universal p ray e r 'ro ot h er. " "Mr dear Julia," said one pretty girl to another, "can't you make up your mind to marry that odious Mr. Snuff?" "Why," ray Snmmer in the Country - ;, The bright skies, green trees; ripening corn, broad roeadows,orchards and gardens streams and rivers, the ever-varying and ever-beautiful aspects of the country wear their most inviting garb at this season of the year ; and those of us who are compelled to dwell in the labyrinths of brickwork, called towns and cities, sigh for the healthy breeze and bright face of Nature. Who amongst us at this time of the year, at all events would not willingly exchange all the pleasures of town for a quiet home in the country i We want wholesome air. Air, says old Fuller, is a dish one feeds on every minute, and therefore it must needs be good. We want light, God's eldest daughter ; such si fair, bright light as never shines in town. We want a pleasant prospect, a medley of land and water ; something that shall refresh us with its beauty and tranquility. We" want a garden where we may rusticate, and sit beneath the shadow of old trees ; a gar den that shall yield us flowers and fruits. We want a home to live in, fit for the sum" mer weather, that shall look pleasant, and likea cheerful friend, seem to welcome us when come home, and that shall be thor oughly comfortable in all its arrangements. How we long for the pleasant walk in the shady lane for the ramble in the wood, where of old we gathered nuts and black berries! for the velvety meadow, where thd lounging kine are blinking in the sunshine ! for the pa.h through the cornfields, on the yellow upland! for the wide prospect from the hill that stretches away to sea. Lord Bacou tells us LucuIIus answered Tompey well, who, when he saw his stately galleries and rooms so large and well-lighted in one of bis houses, said, "Surely, art excellent place for tummer, but how do you do in winter V The migration of the swallows has enga ged the attention of every observant man, and is one of the many remarkable illus trations of the animal instinct. Winter is unknown to the swallows for they leave the green meadows before it arrives, and live a life of enjoyment among the myrtle and orange groves of Italy and the palms of Africa. In this respect we cannot copy their example, and indeed it would be tedi ous work ; and but comparatively few of us can adopt the plan of Lucullcs, .possess ourselves of separate mansions, especially suitable for summer or winter; but, thanks to steamboats and railways, we can enjoy the fresh air and green fields for a trifle, coming back to their homes, wherever they may be, all the better and brighter for our trip our frames invigorated by the change of air and mode of life, and our minds stored with new ideas. The following correspondence is said to have taker, place between a New Haven merchant and one of his customers : "Sir Your account has been standing for two years, and I must have it settled imme diately." To which the customer replied : 'Sir Things usually do settle by stands ing; I regret that my account is an excep tion. If it has been standing too long sup pose you let it run a little while." "There is no peace on this side of the grave," said a distinguished clergyman when preaching at the grave of a friend. "Well, old chap," said a jolly jack tar, "yon can come over on this side, we are quiet enough here." A crust of bread, a pitcher of water, and a thatched roof, and love there is happi ness for you, whether they day be rainy or sunny. It is the heart that makes the home, whether the eye rests upon a potato patch or a flower garden. A depot in Illinois has the following over the door : "Notice Tobacco-chewers are requested not to come to this depot Tery long before the train leaves." A gentle hint that they are considered a nuisance if they remain too long. "Now, then, my hearties," said a gallaa captain, "yon have a lough battle before you. Fight like heroes till your powder'e gone, then run ! I'm a little lame, and I'll slirl now " "Good morning, Mr. Henpeck, hare you got any daughters that would make good type setters?" "Not exactly, but I have got a wife that would make a first rate devil." The printer's devil of the Columbia Demo crat office, wanted to kiss his sweet-heart addressed her as follows : "Miss Lucy, can I have the pleasure of placing my "imprint" on your 'bill ?' " " Fortune knocks once at every rntn's door." If she ever knocked at ours it was wfcen we were out. Dot'QLAS worked his way from cabinet maker toU. S. Senator. Breckinridge will work his way from Senator up to Cabiuct maker. Ir you turn away from worthy wen be cause they are humbly clad, they can boast that you cut their coat and pantaloons. TuAxepoRTCDfor life The man that mar ries happily.