1 i r m A IF, II. JACOBF, Proprietor. Truth and Right God and onr Country. Two Dollars per Annum. VOLUME 12. BLOOMS BURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 19, 1860. NUMBER 37 T Wl Q, IL iilio 3 I; I) M r STAlt OF THE NORTH rUBLISHKD ITKBT ITEDHKSPAT IT W3I. II. Jil'OBT, Of nee on Main St., 3rd Square below Market, TERMS: Two Dollars per annum if paid within fix months from the time of subscri bing : two dollars and fifty cents it not paid withir. the year. No subscription taken fur a less period than six mon;hs; no discon tinuances permitted until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option o? the editor. The terms of advertising wilt be as follows : One square, twelve lines, three times, $1 00 Every subsequent insertion, 25 One square, three months, ....... 3 00 One year, 8 00 TUB CHILDREN'S flOCR. BY HEKRT WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW. . Betweer, the dark and the daylight.' When the night is beginning to lower, Comes a pause in the day's occupation That is known as the Children's Hour. I hear in the Chamber above me The patter of I'mle feet, The sound of a door that is opened, And voices soft and sweet. From my study 1 seo in the lamplight, Descending the b'oad hall stair, Grave Alice and laughing Allegta, And Edith with golden hair. A whisper,-and ther. a silence ; Yel I know by thoir merry eyes They are plotting and planning together To take me by surprise. A sudden rush from the stairway, A sudden raid from the hall By three doors left unguarded They eater roy castle wall ! They climb up into my turret. O'er the arms and back of my chair ; If I try :o escape, they surround me ; They seem to be everywhere. They almost devour me with kisses, Their arms about me entwine, Till I think cf the Bishop of Bingen Iu his Mouse-Tower on the Rhine ! Do you think O blue eyed banditti, Because you have ccaled the wall, Such an old moustache as I am is not a match for you all 1 I have yon fast in my fortress, And will not Ietyoj depart, But put you down in the dungeons la the round tower of my heart. And there will I keep you forever. Yes, forever and a day, Ti l the walls shall crumble to ruin, And moulder in dost away ! Eight to Sixteen. r . J I observation he had ascertained that of the - ,..!. -i :.:. r .u. -. t it J' 1 iiau iaiiea iiuo a course 01 crime ueiween , the ages of eight to sixteen years, and that if a young mart lived an honesr life up to inciiti jeais ui aye, iuero . were luriy mues . J f chances in his favor, and only one against t . . ' . 1 i nim, as to an honorable life thereafter. Thus is it in the physical world. Half of all who are born, die under twenty years of age. while four fifths of all who reach that - age, and die before another score, owe their death to causes of disease . which were ori ginated in their teens. On a careful Inquiry, it will be ascertained that in nearly all cases j . the causes of moral and premature physi cal death are pretty much one and the same and are laid between the ages ot "eight and sixteen years"' This is a fact of startling import to fathers and mothers, and shows a fearful responsibility. Certainly a parent should secure and retain and exercise abso- - late control over the child until sixteen ; it cannot be a difficult matter to do this, ex cept in very rare cases," and if that control is not wisely and efficiently exercised, it must be the parent's fault ; it is owing to parental neglect or remissness. Hence the real source of ninety-eight per cent of the crime of a country such as England or the ,' United State lies at the door of parents. It is a fearful reflection ; we throw it before the minds of the fathers and mothers of our land, and there leave it to be thought of in wisdom,' remarking only as to the early seeds of bodily disease, that they are nearly in every case sown between sun-down and bed-time, in absence frorathe family circle, tn the spending of money never earned by the spender, opening the doors of confec- tionaries and soda-fountain, of beer and tobacco and wine, of the circa, the negro . minstrel, the . restaurant and dance ; tbec , follow the Sunday, excursion, the Sunday. drive,- with easy transition to the company of those ways leading down to the gates of social, physical . and moral ruin. From ''eight :o sixteen I", in these few years are the destinies of children fixed ! in forty-nine case ootof fifty ; fixed by the parent ! Let every father and mother solely vow ; "By God's help. I'll fix mjr daughter's - destiny . for good by making home more attractive than the street." llalFs Journal of Health. - Thkhe are two kinds of brevity ' which a ' keen eye soon distinguishes ; the one arro gant and .dictatorial, evidently asserting r that it ha sattJed the question forever in a -sentence ; the other implying that the wri . terbas said the best thing be has to say' on the subject, and .tbat he wishes " to have done with it for the time, leaving it for the jrtader'i judgement -i ; .'t Give a man the necessaries of life and he wasts the conveniences. Give hirn the conveniences and he craves the lexurjes. - Grant him the luxuries and he sighs for the elegancies. Lst him have the elegancies and be yearns for the follies. Give him all testher and he complains that he has been Expression of the Month. . The mouth is a feature upon which very much of the character of the face depends. No woman can be a pretty woman who has an ugly mouth. To the most regular fea tures a gaping mouth, or ugly, drooping, and badly formed lips, will give an air ot listless ignorance, of half idiocy, which is repulsive. Firmness, general decision, cruelty, aoflnes?, and gentleness of mind, love ot our fellows, eloquence, spite, via dictiveness, generosity, and strength of character, are all indicated by the mouth. It is iucumbent, therefore, with astute and cunning men with those who are crafty and politic, and who plot against humanity to conceal the play and workings of the mouth- As Caesar covered his baldness with a laurel crown, so a modern Caesar covers his lips with a thick drooping moustache; in this, too, nature has admirably aided him Forrester, the Bow-street runner,and Fouche, Napoleon's celebrated chef of police, almost invariably detected the guilty by noticing the play of the lips. Forrester, in his curi ous "Memoirs," has frequently told us that he saw ''guilt upon the lip" of more than one whom he suspected ; .and his eagacity, if not unerring, was great But who can watch the play of the mouth when it is covered by a thick grove of moustache ! All the celebrated police agents, from Fou che to Inspector Whicher, have been com pletely puzzled by such. It is well, there fore, on important occasions to conceal the mouth. It is too sure an index of charac ter. Thin, pale lips are supposed to be indi cative of ill-temper. They are more surely, perhaps, the consequence of a weakly and not too healthy habit of body. A very thin nether lip, clenched teeth, and a pale cheek have been for ages the stock in trade of the fictilionist when he wishes to draw a con spirator ; and the painter has followed him. Judas, iTf many of the Italian pictures, is seen biting his under lip. Richard the Third, as portrayed by Holingshed and by Shaks peare, had a similar habit. Men of ner vous and excitable temperament have, es pecially if suspicious, a habit of plucking at their lips and distorting their mouths. Small mouths are very much praised, and have been for a long time much in fashion. Fashionable painters and artists for the ! "Book of Beauty" have carried this small nes of mouth to an absurdity. Yon will ' see encrafinot of ladies with month rnn- Q - siderably smaller than their eyes, which, of coarse presuming the face to bo in due rtrnnnrt mn i na mil on o mnnlriitr n ir . the mouth, like that of a giant in a panto "w ' -o- mime. rte.nded from sr tn par. m imA TtPnr!d from ap In par ' Thn f male mouth should not be too small. From what we can gather from contemporary por traits, supposing them to be true, both Eliz- , . , . r.. f v i abe'.n and JMary, Uueen ot bcots, had . . . m trk . u, mouths much too small to De handsome That of the former, the greatest female ' monarch who has ever existed, should have at least indicated her capacious mind. That of Queen Charlotte was ugly ; that of the princess of that name was a true Bruns wick mouth exhibiting the two front teeth, from the shortness and curious elevation of , ,Ka iirtnar tin nhivK ia namolnatDil in tKct males of the present royal family. The house of Hapsburg has also a very ugly mouth, celebrated as the Austrian mouth. Certain roasters of the ceremonies have written much on the expression cf the mouth. "It is," says one, "the feature! which is called into play most frequently ; j and. therefore, even where beautv of form 1 exists, careful training is needed, to enable it to perform correctly iu manifold duties. An elegant manner of utterance renders words, insignificant in themselves, agreea ble and persuasive. In the act of eating, skillful management is necessary. A laugh is a very severe test to this feature." Mr. Dickens, whose observation is very wide, has ridiculed such teaching, when he makes one of his superfine old women in struct her pupils in the formation of the lips by ottering three magic wcuJ-s pota toes, prunes and prism. And we presume j that when Lord Byron nearly fainted at the sight of his wife enjoying a rumpsteak, the skillful management of hi Ada's mouth was neglected. Turning from such foppery to t! J poets, we may conclude by saying that from the Greek Anthology, eownward, to the fluent young fellows who write songs for music publishers, thousands of lines have been written in praise of ladies' mouths. The Latinists and the Iialians have paid great attention to this feature : rosy lips, pearly teeth and violet breath have been for ages the stock in trade of the poets. But, per haps, the best things said of them are by an Irish and English poet; the Irishman hyperbolicaUy, likens the mouth of his charmer to "a'dish of strawberries smoth ered in crame and Sir John Suckling paiiilslo the life the pretty pouting under lip of a beauty in his "Ballad on a Wed ding:" : '. "Her lips were red, and one was thin Compared to that was next her chin Some bee had 6tung it newly." ' ''Whim are -yon going." said a fast young gentleman to an elderly one, in a' white cravat, whom he overtook a few miles irom Little Bock. ' H I am going to Heaven, my son, and 1 have been on tha way there for eighteen years." " " ,; , . Well, good bye, old fellow, if you. have been traveling towards . Heaven eighteen nearer to it than Arkan Dow Indians make Stone Arrow-IIeads. The heads of the Indian arrows, spears, javelins, etc., often found in many parts of our continent, have been admired, but the process of forming them conjectured. Hon. Caleb Lyon, on a recent visit to California, met with a party of Shasta Indians, and as certained that they still used these weap ons, which in most tribes have been suc ceeded by rifles, or at least by iron pointed arrows and spears. He found a man that could manufacture them, and saw him at work at all parts of the process. The de scription which Lyon wrote and communi cated to the American Ethnological Socie ty, through Dr. E. II. David, we copy be low "The Shasta Indian seated himself upon the floor, and laying the stone anvil upon bis knee, which was of compact talcose slate, with one blow of his agate chisel he separated the obsidian pebble into two parts, then giving another blow to the frac tured side he 6plit off a slab some fourth of an inch in thickness. Holding the piece asainst the anvil with the thumb and fore finger of the left hand, he commenced a series of continuous blows, every one of which clipped off fragments of the brittle snbstance. It gradually assumed the re quired shape. After ftnishmg the base of the arrow-bead (the whole being only little over an inch in length,) he began striking gentler blows, every one of which I ex pected would break it into pieces. Yet such was their application, his skill and dexteri ty, that in little over an hour he produced a perfect obsidian arrow-head. "1 then requested him to carve me one from the remains of a broken porter bottle, which, after two failures, he succeeded in doing. He gave as a reason of his ill suc cess, that he did not understand the grain of the glass. No sculptor ever handled a chisel with greater precision, or more care fully measured the weight and effect of ev ery blow, than this ingenious Indian, for even among them arrow making is a dis tinct trade or profession, which many at tempt, but in which few attain excellence. He understood the capacity of the material he wrought, and before striking the first blow, by surveying the pebble, he could judge of its availability as well as the sculp tor judges of the perfectness of a block of Parian. I a moment all that I had read up on this subject, written by learned and spe culative antiquarians of the hardening of copper, for the working of flint axes,spears, chisels, and arrow heads, vanished before the simplest mechanical process. I felt that the world had been belter served bad they driven the pen less and the plow more A New Race or Men in South America. Prof. Newberry, in his paper, read before the American Scientific Association at New port, R. I , gave a vivid description of the geographical features of the great plateaux sweeping East and West from the Rocky Mountains, illustrated by colored drawings. His well browned, fiercely bearded face gave evidence of the effects of the sun and winds on the vast, treeless plains that skirt the Colorado. He incidentally gave a most interesting description of that strango peo ple, the Moqui, whose cities we have seen in New Mexico, and but a small remnant of whom now exist. They belong to a hith erto unknown race. Prof. Newberry says they may be remains of the Aztecs, who ruled that region on its discovery by the Spaniards. From the characteristics, how ever, of the melancholy remnant who now exist, it seems more probable that they are to be referred to the Toliecs, who were dis placed by the Aztecs. Mr. Newberry described them as a race apparently entirely distinct from any other Indians on this continent. They are smal ler, have a distinct conformation of skull and face, and are peaceful agriculturists. They weave cloth, work wih implements of stone, and build towns of stone and mortar, on the mountain table lands, which rise eight hundred or one thousand feet above the lowland plateiux. They build walls around their towns, and their only means ot ingress and egress is by laddert. which they draw after them when they en ter towns. There are seven of these small towns still inhabited by this fast fading race But their ruins extend over the whole val ley of the San Juan apparently ruins of a race once numbering millions of men and many of them (the towns) five hundred or one thousand years old. The Antediluvian Frog. This supposed inhabitant of another world, a creature that had lived before the flood, and in the time of Noah, died at Brongh, England. It was discovered in ' July, 1832, imbedded in a solid rock of millstone' grit on Stainmore, about three miles from Brough, by some .workmen who, were breaking up the rocks for building stones. It was found in a cav ity eight inches from the surface, and with out a seam, rent, or cleft in the block. When the rock was broken it leaped out, and so terrified the man that he fell down through fear,' and said, it leuked sae like a black devil." It was presented to Mr. Ro ney, snrgeon of Brough, who put it into a tub containing water, grass, and leaves ; it was also carniverous, and would devour earthworms, flies, etc.- ' Here it continued lively and active for some months ; but we presume, after taking a survey of this world and finding it so much worse than that in which it lived more than 4000 years ago, it had no longet any inclination to stay among us it sickened, drooped, and died ; and Mr. Roney has embalmed the. body of this A Romance in Baltimore. The Baltimore correspondent of the Charleston Courier relates the following sug gestive and pretty romance : "A little incident characteristic of good fortune, flowing from econemy, prudence perseverance, came within range of my notice during the recent year, which, jf properly portrayed, may serve to stimulate others. The story is yet unwritten. I will endeavor to present it briefly. Less than a semi-decade ago there might have been seen in our city, seated at some public cor ner of a crowded street a young, poorly clad Italian woman, with a small, rosy fa ced, black eyed child in her arms. Be neath dishevelled hair and sunburnt face could be discerned lineaments of beauty, heightened into sympathetic attraction by the sweet smile of innocence. Though the garments of mother and infant were course tattered, yet cleanliness and an air of neat ness always told that a careful hand adjust ed them. Day after day, verging far into evening shades, passed, giving place to new morrows, and still this apparently forsaken pilgrim of the Italian clime sat at her post amid the moving, busy throng, modestly begging a su6tenar.ee for herself and her tender off spring A year had made its revolution and still sLe was there, constant, unchanged, except to a browner hue. The babe grew ; its full eyes brightening into sweeter expression, while waves of sunlit happiness now and then illumed the mother's bosom. Another annual round, and she, with her tender charge, disappeared. The lonely place that knew them once found other occupants.- Time passed, and the were forgot ten. The sequel however, has recently come to my knowledge. Some days ago thee appeared in our metropolis an opu lent Southern merchant. He came to pur chase goods and pa cash tor a bill of sev eral thousand dollars. ' Who is my strange though fortunate customer ?" inquired the gentleman with whom he dealt. "I will tell yoO," replied the 6tranger. "I know you, but you have not the same advantage with me, excepiing my name. 1 am the husbaud o( that poor beggar-woman who sat in your streets with an infant in her arms, and to whom you often very often as she has, since told me, gave alms. We came to America yonng but poor and I think honest. 1 sought employment but without success. From the little my good Signora had saved, 1 purchased a hand-organ, and set out on a musical expedition. I made a tour, pa-sing through several States, going far West and South was gone many months and ground my organ all the time, while Signora still maintained herself upon charitable donation. I finally returned to Baltimore with three hundred dollais, found my wife and little one, and we departed for the south locating in Vir ginia, commencing business in a small way, fortune smiled on us, and we are now the owners and occupants of a comfortable home, possessing wealth, abundance and happiness " Such is in substance the 6tory of these parties; founded upon facts still cognizant to many who still recollect them. It is a stiiking commentary upon the unfailing virtue of perseverance, and shows what can be accomplished even under the most adverse circumstances. Only a few months ago this now enviable merchant was in our city, purchased joods to the amount of sev eral thousand dollars, and paid for them in cash. Cat Mama. A cat man is a singular thing; yet it existed in Mrs. Griggs of Sonthampton Row, who died on the 16th of January, 1792. Her executors found in her houfce eighty-six living and twenty eiaht dead cats ! Their owner, who died worth 30,000, left her black servant 150 per annum for Ibe maintenar.ee of the sur viving cats and himself. Pope records an instance of a famous Duchess R , who bequeathed considerable legacies and an nuities to her cats. But if, of the gentler sex, there are those "who crad e the blind offspring of their Selimas, and adorn the pensive mother's neck with coral beads," some also of the remarkable among o r sterner race have shown an extraordinary fondness for these luxurious quadrupeds. Mohammed, for . instance, had a cat to which he was so much attached tbat he pre ferred cutting off the sleeve of his garment to disturbing her repose when she had fall en arleep upon it. Petrarch was so fond of his cat that he had it embalmed after death, and placed in a niche in his apartment. Dr. Johnson had a feline favorite, and when it was itl, declined its usual food, but greedily seizing an 0 ster when it was offered, he was accustomed to bring home for her daily seme of those temptipg molluses. Mr. Peter King, who died at Islington in 1806, bad two torn cats that used to be set up at the table with him at his meals; but as he was a great admirer of fine clothes richly laced, he thought his cats might like them too. The grimalkius were accordingly measured, and wore rich liveries until death. A Young lady was discharged from one of the largest vinegar houses in Boston, last week, because she was so sweet that she kept the vinegar from fermenting. A sour old maid is wanted to fill her place. Johit, yon seem to gain flesh every day ; the grocery business must agree with you. What did you weigh last V "Well, Simon, I really donUknowbntJl ; efrtVe8)jtw?aX CAMPAIGN SONG. Air "Benny Haven.11 The campaign opens brisihtly Come fellows one and all Unfurl your banners to the breeze Upon the outer wall. But ere we charge the enemy Upon the open plain, We'll shout aloud our battle-cry For Breckinridge and Lane. The Douglas holds before us The squatter sovereign plan, And fain would cheat us of our rights, The tricky little man. But we'll teach him, ere he leaves the field His trials are in vain To take the Presidential chair 'From Breckinridge and Lane. For we strike for equal rights to all Rights won on many a field, By the blood of sires and brethern, By men who never yield. The li tie Douglas once deceived, But can't deceive again, Now -xe have braced onr armor on For Breckinridge and Lane. Then charae him boldly, comrades Charge every man and youth t hare lor the Constitution, For jujiic" and lor truth. The loe is fading fast away, Like snow before the rain, As fiercely on them fall the men Of Breckinridge arid Lane. 'Hark ! from the tombs a doleful sound,' We hear a mournful yell Old fogies cry discordant notes For Everett and Bell. Send f'rth a squad upon them And put to fiijlit the train ; Those fossil men are now too old For Breckinridge and Lane. A sombre group approaches next, A Lincoln leads them on, A Termessean dark is he, A renegado fon. But renegades are not our choice The people cry amain, As hill and dale resound with shouts For Breckinridge and 'Lane. So lovers of the Union, And lovers of the right. And honest men of every creed Are with us in the fight ; And victory shall crown the brows Of men without a stain. As the people rise in all their might For Breckinridge and Lane. ROD HEARTS. Let but the heart be beautiful, And I care not for the face ; I heed not that the form may want Pride, dignity, or grace. Let the mind be fill'd with glowing tho'ts And the soul with sympathy, And I care not if the cheek be pale, Or the eye lack brilliancy. What though the cheek be beautiful It soon must lose its bloom ; The eye's bright lustre soon will fade, In the dark and silent tomb. But the glory of the mind will live, Though the joyous life depart, And the magic charm can never die. Of a true and noble heart. The lips that utter fentle words Have a beauty all their owu, And more I prize a kindly voice, Than music;s sweetest tone; And tho' its sounds are har.h and shrill, If the heart within beats free, And echoes back each glad impulse, Tis all the world to me. American Hurry. The hurry, bustle, excitement and gen eral go a-headativeness that dirtinguish the Yankee character is thus happily hit ofl by a cotemporary : "Look at the theatres the people come rushin" in at the middle of the piece ; and before the curtain begins to fall, or the tag j to be spoken, or the moral explained, up start a hundred people in a tremendous hur ry to get out, as if their very lives depended ot their being somewhere else within two minutes and a halt. How many fine effects in a play how many chef doeuvres in a concert have we seen utterly destroyed by this ill-mannered and indecent haste. "Cross a ferry, and long before the hour j arrive, two thirds of the passengers are ; crowded at the head of the boat, ready to j jump ashore, risking life and limb to save! ten seconds of lime a child is knocked overboard a boy's toot smashed a young man in fitit!i s first bloom crippled for life. .... 1 ,. , . What matter? The man now walking lei- surely up ihe street cot ashore nearly half a minute earlier than he would have done had he not run the same risk, and caused, perhaps the incident. ' Get into an omnibus, and with one foot on the Me and ihe other inside, the driver pulls the door to, whips up his horses, and you are pitched head first into a stout old gentleman's diaphragm ; or settled down into a sentimental lady's lap. "Now, what in the name of wonder is the cause of all this do we gain anything No! Do we enjoy anything in this ever lasting rnt-h ? No ! Do we live any longer or die more happily ? No !" Ir you wish to ascertain the distance of a thunder storm place the finger of the pulse and commence counting the beats. If you feel six pulsations, before you hear the thunder, the etorm is one mile away ; if twelve pulsations, it is two miles, and so on. Old Parsons Peters, who was good deal of a wag, once married a Mr. Partridge to a Miss Brace. The parents of the bride re quested that he would wind up the cere mony with a short prayer, which he did in the following words : "God bless this Brace of Partriges 1" j . Some of the Wisconsin papers claim that - 'iiu3' Too Fast. A young lady, beautiful in person and at- tractive in manner, who resided in the im- .founded the institution in Philadelphia mediate vicinity of Boston, was sought in I which bears his name, had a favorite clerk, marriage some years ago by two men. One ' and he always said ' he intended to do well of these was poor and not a mechanic; j by Ben Lippencott." So, when Ben got to the other was rich and not a mechanic. j be twenty-one, he expected to hear Mr. Gi The woman loved the former : the family rard say something of his future prospects, of the woman liked the latter. As is the case in such affairs, the woman married to plea-e her friends. Having thus "sold her self," she ought to have been miserable, but she was not. Her husband's unaffected love subdued her heart, and his gold smoot hed the rough places in the human path. Fortune, seeing that this couple were too happy, frowned, and the man's fortune took wings and flew away. Thereupon the hus band wound up his business, put his wife and children, of whom there were two, at a comfortable boarding house, and then de parted for Califotnia in search of money. Some letters and some remittance arrived from him at first, then nothing came and there was a blank of several years. The wife thought herself deserted. The family, whose good opinion ot the husband had be gun to fail, told her that it was clearly a case for a divorce. When she had become well accustomed to the sound of this un pleasant word, the disconsolate was thrown inlo the society of her old mechanic lover, now prosperous, and still unmarried. The memory of her early, real love became up on her, and she believed with a secret joy that he remained single for her sake. This thought nourished her affection, and at last she obtained a divorce from her husband, who had deserted her, and remained absent beyond the time allowed by the statute. This accomplished, there was no barrier between her and the mechanic of her youth. She informed him that she was his forever, when he should choose to claim her hand. Her feelings could not have been pleasant to learn that, since his rejection by her and her marriage to another, the unromantic hewer of wood had drowned his passion for her in the waves of time, and that at the time of her handsome offer he no longer palpitated for her. In fact, 'Barkis was not willin.' As if all this was not embarrassing enough, who should turn up but the hus band, who made his appearance in the form of a letter, announcing that he had accumu lated a dazzling pile of wealth, that, he vras on his way home and that she was to meet him in New York. The letter also chid her for neglect in not writing to him for years, and it was clear that he had sent as- j su ranees of love and also money at intervals j during his absence ; where these had gone, J no one knew. Here, then, was trouble. No husband, no lover. The one she had divorced ; the other had refused her. Tak ing cousel with herself, she packed her trunk, seeing that her vrardrobe was unex ceptionable, and came to the metropolis. She met the coming man on his arrival, and told him the whole story as correctly as she, naturally prejudice in favor of the de fendant, could tell it. The husband scowl- 1 m marr.aae was periormea, ana a new vol- ume in their life's history was opened. Thirtv Years Ago. We are continually reminded that this age is a progressive one one that the present "eneration of chil- dren is a great way in advance of the chi' ' dren of thirty years ago that the young gentlemen and young ladies are more intel ligent aud more refined and that as a whole, the people who now live in the .. .l.i ,j :.i,t : -ii ' who have preceded them. hat was con- , . ,, .., sidered sensible then, would possibly seem . . , absurd now. Still, we had sweet, pretty . , , . , . . girls then girls who were equally at home in tne parlor and in tne kite tie n- we naa not as many pianos, nor were there as many costly silk dresses ; our houses were not carpeted from the kitchen to the garret ' as most of them now are, but we did not 1 regard them as an inconvenience. The (rirla rf ihirtp vpara arret anil (.snnriallir ; , . . , , . , 1 farmers daughters, were tanght to knit acd . , . . sew, cake aim urew - in a woru, iuey weio i taught to be good house-keepers. The greaiest surprise is that these girls mothers of the present generation should have so departed from the principles of their own early and judicious rraining, as to bring up their daughters in idleness and extrava gance. We learn that Col. H. A. Fonda has re ceived the appointment of Superintendant of the Williamsport and Elmira Railroad. We are pleased to note this as being a most superior and unexceptionable appointment. Col H. A. Fonda's predecessor, Mr. Redfield takes the position of Vice President of the road. How did lonah feel when he went iown the whale's throat ? He felt taken in, and was considerably put out in about three days. How did he look and hink ? He looked down in the mouth and tho'l he was going to blubber. The astronomer Herschel has predicted that England will this year be visited by a 6toim ol violence un preceded in the annals of the globe. Ir yon would learn how to bow, watch ei, crowieu, joowea at tne cnarrcing lace in nortr,eastern New York. During their and the becoming toilet, remembered Cali- j ong T;s;t they took seTeral long rides with fornia and its loneliness, and took her to ' ie ?JHghter of their host, abont the coun his heart. A clergyman was summoned, a ; try. Qn one of these occasions, as they ' Anecdote of Girard. Stephen Girard, the Frenchman who and perhaps lend a helping hand in start ing him in the world. But the old fox care fully avoided the subject. Ben mustered courage. "I suppose I am free, sir," said he, "and I thought I would say something to you as to my future course.. What do you think I had better do 1" "Yes, yes, I know you are," said the old miUioitaire, "and my advice is that you learn the cop er's trade." This application of ice nearly froze Ben out, but recovering his equilibrium, he said if Mr. Girard was in earnest, he would do so. I am in earnest," and Ben forthwith, 60 ugh t the best cooper in Spring Garden, became an apprentice, and in due time could make as good a barrel as the best. He announced to old Stephen that he had graduated, and was ready to set up busi ness. The old man seemed gratified, and immediately ordered three of the best bar rels he could turn out. Ben did his pret tiest and wheeled them op to tho old man's counting room. Old Girard pronounced them first rate, and demanded the price. "One dollar," said Ben, "uis as low as I can live by." ' Cheap enough make out your bill." The bill was made out and old Stephea settled it with a check of $20,000, which he accompanied with this little moral, to ef fect that Benjamin now had a trade, which, he could fall back on in case be did not succeed in business. The Mistakes of the Press. The most laughable case of 'mistakes of the printers' is tbat where there had been two article prepared for the paper (one concerning a sermon preached by an eminent divine,and the other about the freaks of a mad dog,) but unfortunately, the foreman in placing them into the form, "mixed'' them, making the following contretemps : "The Rev. James Thompson, rector of St. Andrew's Church, preached to a large concourse of people on Sunday last. This was his last sermon. In a few weeks ho wil bid farewell to his congregation, as his physicians advise him to cross the Atlantic. He exhorted his brethren and sisters, and after the expiration of a devout prayer, took a whim to cut up some frantic freaks. He ran up Timothy street to Johnson, and down Ben fit street to College. At this stage of the proceedings, a couple of boys seized him, tied a tin kettle to his tail, and he started. A great crowd collected, and for a time there was a grand scene of noise, running and confusion. After some troub le, he was shot by a Jersey policemaa." A Goon One. Two young ladies of Phil adelphia were lately spending the summer haj been traveling some distance, and the day was warm, and as a trough of running water stood mvitinsly by the roadside, they concluded to give their pony a drink. One of the ladies agreed to get out and arrange matters for this purpose. The others, re maining in the carriage, and deeply en gaged in conversation, for some time paid no attention to the movements of their com panion. When at last, surprised at the ! long delay, they turned to ascertain the ' ane thAT nurnrproM nor anrlowinrinff 1i . , , . . unbuckle the crupper. In amazement they , . . , 4 ( inquired : , .. , "What in the world are yon doing that - v, To which she naively replied, "Why, I am unbuckling this strap to let the horse's head down, so he can drink." Don't have too much commiseration for the accomplished, amiable and charming wife of a defalter, un'il yon know that 6he has not, by extravagance and pride, induced him to use money not his own, or ta specu late with the view to gratify her wishes. ' How curious is the passiou for balances and totals in some minds, where they seem little applicable to the subject matter. Kohl observed some Russian children calculating by addition and multiplication the number of archangels and angels in Heaven. Aunt E was trying to persuade little Eddy to retire at sundown using as an argument that little chickens went to roost at that time. "Yea," said Edny, "bnt the old hen always goes with them." Aunty tried no more arguments with him. ' An independent man is said to be one who can live without whisky and tobacco, and shave himself with brown soap and cold water without a mirror. An empty bottle must certainly be a very dangerous thing if we may judge from the fact that many a man has been found dead with one at his side. In the very heaviest griefs of all, the mind is so absorbed that we scarcely notice an addition. In the next degree of sorrow we feel every little addition ; our spirits have still movement etIOT7"rili'3resPiiiia. phrnt'd bcth ia L;3 pries and fjulity of the years and got co nea cr.::'". ' " j jes, l'I talra another routs.'-'