1 a. i r 17. U. JACOBY, Proprietor. Truth and Right God and our Country. Two Dollars per Annum. VOLUME 12. BLOOMS BURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WENESJAY SEPTEMBER 26, 1860. NUMBER 38. T STAR 0 T STAR OF THE NORTH PCBLISHXD EVERT WEDKI3PAT ST WX D. JACOBY, Office on Haia St.,Srd Square below Market, TERMS: Two Dollars per annum if paid 'within fix months from the time of subscri bing : two dollars and fifty cents il not paid within the year. No subscription taken for & less period than six months; no discon tinuance permitted until ail arrearages are paid, unless at the option oi the editor. The terms of advertising will be as follows : One square, twelve lines, three times, $1 00 Every subsequent insertion, ...... 25 One square, three months, .3 00 One year, 800 L1DI BIRO.VS REPLY TJ LORD iJYROS'S FAREWELL. Yes! farewell farewell forever! Thou thyself has fixed our doom, Bade hope's fairest blossoms wither, Never again lor me to bloom. . Unforgiving thou hast called me Didst ihoa ever say torsive? Poor the wretch whose wiles beguiled thee, Thou alone didst seem to live. Short the space which time has given. To complete thy love's decay ; By unhallowed passions driven, Soon thy heart was taught to stray; Lived for me that feeling tender Which :hy vere so well can 6how, From my arms why diJst thou wander ! My endearments why forego! Oh ! too late thy breast was bared, Oh! too soon to me 'twas shown, That thy love but once I shared, And already it is down. Wrapped in dreams of joy abiding, On thy breast my head hath lain, . In thy love and truth confiding Bliss I ne'er can know again. The dark hour did first discover In thy soul the hideous stain Would these eyes had closed forever, Ne'er to weep thy crimes again. But the impious wish O, Leaven 1 Ficm the record blotted be ; Yes, I yet would live, O, Byron, For the babe I've born tor thee ! Ia whose lovely features (let me ' All my weakness here confess. Whilst the struggling tears permit me) All the father 'h 1 can trace He whose imaje never leaves me, He whose image still I prize, Who this bitterest feeling gives me, Still to love where I despise. With regret and sorrow rather When our child's first accents flow, I will teach her to say Father, But his guilt she ne'er shall know. Whilst to-mrrow and to-morrow Wake me from a widow'd bed, On another's arms no sorrow Will thou fell, no tear wiit shed. 1 the world's approval songht not, When 1 tore myself from thee ; 01 its praise or blame i thought not What's it praise or blame to me 1 . He so prized so loved adored, From my heart his image drove, On my head contempt has poured, And preferred a wanton's love. ' ' Tboa art proud, but mark me, Byron, ' I've a heart proud as thine own ; , Soft to love, but bard as iron When contempt is o'er it thrown; . But farewell ! I'll not upbraid thee, Never, never wish thee ill - Wreched though thy crimes have made me, If thou canst be happy still. The Press and Dead Heads. One of our exchange speak a great deal of truth in the following: Railroads, steamboats and stage-coaches complain of dead heading that is to say, of editors and clergymen, riding so much without pay. The newspaper press endures more of this dead heading than all three of these modes of conveyance combiued. The pulpit, the bar and the theatre; corpora tions, legislative assembles, societies, reli- r gions, benevolent, agricultural, mercantile establishments, venders of quack medicines, railroad companies, steamboats, stage lines, - and every variety of individuals, including political parties and politicians, draw large ly on the liberality of the press. The press is expected to yield to all these interests ; it is required to give strength to all weak in stitutions and enterprises ; it is asked to puff small preachers into overshadowing pulpit orators ; to puff small politicians and unprincipled demagogues into great men and patriots ; to magnify incompetent rail- ' road officers into railroad kings ; - it is ex pected to herald abroad the fame of quacks, of all cases, bolster op dull authors ; im mortalize weak Congressional speeches ; it is required to give sight to the blind, bread to the hungry, taleats to fools and honor to " thieves tad robbers ; it is asked to cover op the infirmities of the weak, to hide the faults of guilty men and wink at the fraud- nlent schemes of scoundrels, it is expected to flatter the vain, to extol the merits of those who deserve nothing but the scorn and contempt of all good citizens; it is re " quired, ia a word, of the newspaper press, to become all things to all men ; and if it ' look for pay, or send out its bills for sub scriptioos and advertising, it is denounced as mean and sordid,- and its conductors are warning in liberality. There is no interest ' on the face of this green earth that is ex pected to give so much to society, without ' pay or thanks, as the newspaper pres of .; tha country. . - . .- ;, . - Thcse is a certain amount of indelicacy and want of consideration in crowding ma- " terial and external happiness on those who have emerged- from a sombre condition, to which we know they are destined certainly to return .Sometimes the bright spot cheers the memory, but more often destroys con- ' lant by contrast. r .". v A Toast "The Ladies! They; divide our sorrows, tl3S.tl3 orr joys; and trefcja our The Bnsiian. Wolf Bant, We transate the following 6tory from a late number of M. Alex. Duraas'.newspaper. It is an extract from one of his letters from St. Petersburg: "Wolf hunting and bear hunting are the favorite pleasures of the Russians. Wolves are hunted in this way in the winter, when the wolves being hungry are ferocious. Three or lour huntsmen, each armed with a double barrelled gun, get into a troika, which is any sort of a carriage drawn by three horses its name being derived from its team, and not from its form. The middle horse trots with his head hanging down, and he is called the Snow-Eater. The two other have only one rein, and they are faMened to the- poles by the middle of the body, and gallop, their heads free they are called the Furious. The troika is driven by a sure coachman, if there is such a thing in the wotld as a sure coachman. A pig is tied to the rear of the vehicle by a rope, or a chain (lor greater security) some twelve yards long. The pig is kept in the vehicle until the huntsmen reach the forest where the hunt is to take place, when he is taken out and the horses started. Tha pig, not being accustomed to this gait, squeals ; and his squeals soon degenerate into lamenta tions. His cries bring out one wolf, who give the pig chase ; then two wolves, then three, then ten, then fifty wolves all post ing as hard as they can go after the poor pig, fighting among themselves for the best places, snapping and striking at the poor pig at every opportunity, who squeals with despair. These squeals of agony arouse all the wolves in the forest, within a circuit of three miles, and the troik is followed by an immense flock ot wolves. It is now a good driver is indispensable. The horses have an instinctive horror for wolves, and go almost crazy ; they run as fast as they can go. The huntsmen fire as fast as they can load ; there is no necessity to take any aim. The pig squeals the horses neigh the wolves howl the guns rattle ; it is a con cert to make Mephistopheles jealous. As long as the driver commands his horses, fast as they may be running away, there is no danger. Bat, if he ceases to be master of them ; if they balk, if the troika is upset, there i no hope. The next day, or the day af'.er, or a week afterwards, nothing will re main of the party but the wreck of the troika, the barrels of 'he guns, and the lar ger bones of the horses, huntsmen, and driver. Last winter Prince Pepnine went on one of these hunts, and it came very near being his last hunt. He was on a visit with two of his friends to one of his estates near the steppe, and they determined to go on a wolf hunt. They piepared a large sleigh in which three persons could move at ease, three vigorous horses were put into it, and tney selected ior a driver a man born in the country, and thoroughly experienced in the sport. Every huntsman had a pair of double barrel guns, and one hundred and fifty ball cartriges It was night when they reached the steppe ; that is an immense prairie cov ered with snow. The moon was full, and shone brilliantly ; its beams refracted by the snow gave a light scarcely ' inferior to day light. The pig was put out of the sleigh and the horses whipped up. As soon as the pig fett that he was dragged he began to squeal. A wolf or two appeared ; but they were timed and kept a long way off. Their num bers gradually increased, and as they gain ed in strength they became bolder. There were about twenty wolves when they came within gun range of the troika. One of the early fired : a wolf fell, The flock became alarmed and half fled away. Seven or eight hungry wolves remained behind to devour their dead companion. The gaps were soon filled. On every side howls an swered howls ; on every side sharp noses and brilliant eyes were seen peering. The guns rattled volley after volley ; but the flock of wolves increased instead of dimin ishing, and soon it was not a flock, but a vast herd of wolves in thick serrid columns, which gave chase to the sleigh. The wolves bounded forward so rapidly they seemed to fly over the snow, and so lightlj not a pound was heard; their num bers continued to increase and increase, and increase; they seemed to be a silent tide drawing nearer and nearer, and which the guns of the party, rapidly as they were dis charged, had no effect on. The wolves formed a vast crescent, whose horns began to encompass the horses The numbers in creased so rapidly they seemed to spring out of the ground. There was something weird in their appearance, for where could three thousand wolves come from in such a desert of snow ? The party had taken the pig into the sleigh ;. his squeal increased the wolves' boldness. The party continued to fire, but they had now used above half their ammunition, and but two hundred cartriges left, while they were surrounded by three thousand wolves. The two horns of the crescent became nearer and nearer, and threatened to envelope the whole party. If one of the horses should have given cut, the fate of the whole party was sealed. ''What do yon think of this, Ivan !" said the Prince Repnine, speaking to the driver. 'l would rather be at home, Prince." "Are you afraid of any evil consequences 1" "The tleirils have tasted blood, and the more you fire the more wolves you'll have." "What do yon think is the best thing to be done I" "Make the horses go faster.' "Are you sure of the horses?" "Are yon sure of He quickened the horses, and turned their heads towards home. The horses flew fas ter than ever. The driver excited them to increased speed by a sharp whistle, and made them describe a curve which inter sected one of the horns of the crescent. The wolves opened their ranks and let the horses pass. The Prince raised his gun to his shoulder. "For God's sake, don't Are !," exclaimed the driver; "we are dead men if you do!" He obeyed Ivan. The wolves, astonished by this unexpected act, remained motion less for a minute. During this minute the troika was a verest from them. When the wolves started again after it," it was too late, they could not overtake it. ' A. quarter of an hour afterward they were in sight of borne. Prince Repnine thinks his horses ran at least six miles in these fifteen minutes. He rode over the steppe the next day, and found the bones of more than two hundred wolves. - - Scenes at Palermo. The wretched state of the poor sufferers at Palermo, who have lost their all in the bombarment by the Neapolitan troops, Is clearly shown in the following extract of a letter from Palermo ; "This morning I was determined to witness with my own eyes the distribution ot bread which is made daily in Garibaldi's house at 8 o'clock, and which takes place literally in his antecham ber. The poor creatures enter at one door two or three at a time each receiving a loaf weighing about two ponnds, and then they go out at another. It was indeed a heartrendering scene ; for often some one of the poor sufferers wept bitterly, and, crying, begged for yet another loaf, for a son, or father, or husband, or wife, who had been wounded by the falling in of the bom barded houses, and who was unable to come in person to ask for his or ber share of the charily. Yon saw mothers with two or even three children in their arms, just a month old, or a year, or very little more, a prey to shame as they ask for two or three loves ; but a few days ago their little business, or the industry ot a husband, was sufficient lor their support, and now five of the bom bardment has utterly beggard them, and made miserable victims of these orphans, these mothers and wives. "1 accosted a well dressed man, who was waiting thera with the others. With a tim id, bashful expression, he assured me that he vat wailing till tha crowd cleared away, in the hope ot obtainiug an audience with Garibaldi. I offered to speak to the senti nels for that purpose, that be might pass sooner and more easily ; but, with an air ot embarrassment, he declined the offer, so that I could at once perceive he was wait ing only to receive charity, like the rest. At that very moment his turn came, and he received three or four loaves, which he hastily concealed under his coat. Being a-vare that 1 had observed him, he said to me, with tears in his eyes, "You see, Sir, to what I am reduced by the cruelty of the Bourbons.'7 On quesuoning him further, he told me that he had five children, all girls, the eldest only six years old; that he kept a draper's shop, which had been burned to the ground, as well as his house, and that with the greatest difficulty, he had succeed ed in saving the lives of bis little ones by hiding them behind a garden wall, where they remained for three days, with no other food than a little fruit. "All the property that he had in the world was destroyed, and as ill-luck would have it, on that day he happened to leave even his purse, which he usually carried on his person, in the shop, so that he was left lit erally without a single farthing, and the two or three relatives to whom he could have applied for aid was absent from Palermo. I asked him to let me accompany him on his return to the hovel where, I understood him to say, his children had now found shelter. They were five sweet-looking lit tle girls, and it was indeed a touching sight when their father gave them the bread, for which they had been anxiously waiting Unobserved by him, I slipped a trifle into the hands of the eldest girl, and, greatly moved by the spectacle, I walked away, following up a train of reflection which many others 1 suspect, wiit, share on the blessings of a Bourbon dynasty and the benefits of a despotic rule. Every morning Garibaldi distributes in this way about 3 000 loaves. The like is done by a Capuchin Convent, which gives also a small cup of soup Scene ok the Ohio. Our boat stopped to lake in wood. On the shore among the crowd, stood a remarkbly stupid looking fellow, with his hands in his pockets, and his under lip hanging down. A dandy, ripe for a scrape, tipped nods and winks all about saying : "Now I'll have some fun, I'll frighten that green horn." He ojuraped ashore a drawn bowie knife, brandishing it in the face of the '-green 'un" exclaiming : "Now I'll punish you. I have been look ing for you a week." The fallow suddenly started at bis assilant. He evidently had not sense enough to be scared but as the bowie knife, came near his face, once of his hugh fists suddenly vacated his pocket, and fell solid and heavy between the dan dy 's eyes, and the poor fellow was flounder ing in the river. Greeny jumped on board our boat, put his hande in his pockets, and looked around. "Maj be," said he, there's somebody else that's be?n looking for me a week."- ''- "' " X.Th Germans would h a v e madoA d z njp Another Great Fislic Event. -., Heenan and Morrissey, it is announced, are to have a ring fight in abouttwo months, the tenth of November being the day des ignated, for which both men are in training. The New York Sunday Mercury says : In conversation at Saratoga, one day last week, Morrissey was asked : "Shall you fight Heenan again V Me at once replied ; "I certainly shall, and I shall lick him too " . He went on to say that he wanted he challenge to come from Heenan, as Hee nan, having been defeated by. Morrissey, ought, of course, to issue the defiance. He 1 siad he should at once, accept the chal lenge, and, added he, "It you've -got any money to bet on the event, put it or. me, and I'll win it for you. He continued : "1 am confident that I can lick this man Say ers would have licked him easy, if he had fought tim as I shall fiht him. He can't stand body punishment, and I shall give him my head to hammer away at, while 1 make my fighting at his body. I can out stay him, and I'll win the fight be sure of that. His hands will go in a lit le while, and then I can take him as I want to." Morrissey is full of confie'ence, and wants only, as he says, once more to face his old antagonist on the turf, to teach him thai he is still his master. Morrissey has many friends, who are equally confident with himself, and who, with him, will stake ev ery dollar they can raise oi the issue ot the fight. Experienced fightirg men also de clare their belief that Merrissey will win the fight, and they found their assertion on the same theory that is propounded by Morrissey, that Morrissey can stay longer than Heenan, and take all the punishment his adversary can inflict, End can then go in and lick him. Oa the other hand, the friends of Heenan have the most implicit confidence in their champion, and.will risk on him every dol lar they can muster. Heenan himself is in admirable coiidition ; he has entirely recov ered from the disease that disabled hira at Long Point, and is leading a 6ober and tem perate life. He does not touch a drop of liquor, no matter how pressing may be the invitation of his friends. The constant ex ercise he has with Ottignon, Aaron Jones Ed Price all .sparrers of the very ; first class keeps him up to the topmost mark of Ducilis ic science. He learns something every day, lor who could fail to impwve under the instruction of constant experience with the most eminent professors of a giv en sicence that the day affords? He tho' always a marvel of agility and quickness, becomes more and more quick and agile every day ; his wind is improved by his constant exercise ; and when he 6teps into the ring to fight Morrissey, he will prove by far the most formidable antagonist that veteran pugilist has ever yet put up hands before In a conversation with a friend, a few davs since. Heenan said : ' The next t finlll won't be a short fight j - , The next man that fights me has to fight m three hours." It would seem from this that he has gain ed unbounded confidence in his own pow ers of endurance, or what is terrneJ hi slaying abilities. In his former fiht wim Morrissey, his only hope was to knock his adversary out of time in three rounds, for he expressly stated to his backers that it he could not eflect that consummation, he could not win. He knew that alter the first keen struggle was over, his lack of condi tion would tell learfully against him, as it proved. Accordingly, he expended all his energies on the first two or tnree rounds, hoping to so far stun Morrissey by that ire mendous cannonade of blows he adminis tered to his head, that he would not be able after that time to lace the scratch Probably no skull in the world other than Morrissey:s, could have received that tre mendous pounding, and have recovr-red from it to answer to the call of "rime.' But Morrissey did recover, did answer to call, and Heenan failed, as he had predict ed, and the result is known. Heenan after ward challenged Morrissey, but the defi ance was not taken up, for reason herein before stated. From that eventful day to this, Heenan has been anxious to again confront his conqueror, and try once again the chances of battle with him. The time has nearly come. Heenan is aware that Morrissey stands ready to accept his chal lenge, and soon as his present engagement is concluded, he will issue the defiant doc ument. Like Morrissey, Heenan expresses the most undounded confidence in himself. In deed, he looks upon the battle as already decided, although he knows too well the temper of his valliant foe to hold him undu ly cheap. Confident as Heenan is, he will throw away no chauce to secure the vic tory. He will train with the utmost care, omitting no precaution to bring himself in to the field in the best condition possible He will do all his work most scrupulously, and abide in all things by ihe commands of his trainer, who will be Jame Cusick, as of old. It is ruinous to the young to demand of thera more than you are quite sure that they can accomplish with moderate industry ; it not only tends to make their minds super ficial, but, what is still less thought of their characters slippery, slip shod, and slip-slop. Encouraging to theGibls -Naomi.Enoch's daughter, was five hundred and eighty years f Jp 1 d w T1 t THE RIVKR PATH. BY JOIJX O WHITTIER. No bird song floated down the hill, The tangled Bank below was still ; No rustle from the birchen stem ; No ripple from the water s hem. The dunk of twilight roand us grew, We felt the falling of the dew. For, from us, ere the dy was done, The wooded hills shut out the sun, But on the river's farther side We saw the hill-tops glorified. A tender glow, exreeding fair, A dream of day withou: iis glare. With us the damp, the chid, the gloom; With tkera the unset' rosy bloom; While dark, through willowy vistas seen, The river rolled in shades between. From out the darkness where we trod, We gazed upon those hills ot God. Whose light seemed not of moon or sun, We spake not, but our thought was one. We paused,, as if from that bright shore Beckoned our dear ones gone before; And Milled our breathing hearts to hear The voices lost to mortal ear ! Sudden our pathway turned from night; . The tiill cwung open to the light, Thro' their green gates the sunshine sho'd, A long slant splendor downward flowed. Down glade and glen and bank it rolled; It bridged the shaded stream with gold; And borne on piers of mist, allied The shadowy with the sunlit side "So," prayed we, "when our feel draw The river, dark with mortal fear, near And the night cometh chill with dew, Oh, Father ! let thy light break through ! So let the hills of doubt divide, So bridge with taiih the sunless tide ! So let the eyes that fall on earth On thy eternal hills look forth; And in thy beckoning angels know The dear ones whom we loved below!" Romance at Cape May. A New York paper relates the following incident, in connection wiih the trip of the Great Easiern : A certain well known artist, who has been connected with one of the illustrated papers, and who-e talents have gained him some celebrity, was among the excursionists who first landed at Cape May. Quite a number of those who went ashore indulged in a plunge amid the breakers, among them our artist, who, unfortunately, is not an expert swimmer, and having ventured out too far, became exhausted. He was in the most imminent danger of being drowned, and every one seemed in capable of rendering him assistance, when a lady whose scarlet tathing dress, and dar ing behavior in the water had attracted much attention, darted out through the mighty waves, seized the drowning man by ihe collar of his flannel shirt, aud con veyed hira saie'y to the shore, amid the deafening cheers of those who looked ou admiring the spirit that prompted the hu mane teat. This brave and noble girl is a member of an excellent family, belonging to what is called the ''lest society" in New York fciie fir.-t learned to swim perfectly at her fitaei'. couiitry's seat on the Hudson river, aid many old watering places habitues well remt-mber her extraordinary skill and ceif po-sesr-ion in the sport of surf bathing. The acquaintance between her and the ar tift, thus romantically begun, prospered fa vorably ot. the parage home, and already the gosfips say ttial the parents of the hero ine have been sucees.xlully consulted on an inlerea.Mg snl ject, concerning the future condition ol the lady that will result in a tpeedy union of talent and beauty, in the way ol inarridgc at a mode, at Cape May. 1 HKtt Mk.i Suffocated in a Well. In Aiiegtieny c;ty on Friday, as we iearn from tt.e l'iiiiurg Coronicle, three men named v iln.im Bottles, James Vance and Ahreu e i.ad sunk a well in the rear ot HciLi.i.i llewdal's beer hall, corner of Federal street and Central alley, the object ol which was the draining of a privy vault in Hie viBCini.y. The well having reached a buificienl depth, Alfred Bottles descended the ladJer and proceeded to tap the vault. A lew moments sufficed to open a com in u nication between the vault, and this effect ed a quantity of foul air rushed into the for mer, evepowering Bottles, and caQsing him to tail helpless to the bottom of the well. Vance, who saw him fall, hurried to his aid, but had not descended more than four or five feet when he loo was overcome aud fell a senseless mass on the body of his colaborer below. William Bottles now attempted to descend, and was overpower ed and dropped off ihe ladder to the bottom in the same way. A Mr. Ja mes Taggarl at tempted to rescue them but failed. Alfred Bottles and James Vance were dead when taken out. Taggart was yet living, but he survived only a few miuutes, and was ta ken to his home a corpse. William Bottles was also alive, and was taken to his home on Kilbuck street, wither a large crowd fol lowed him. He was thrown into convul sions during the evening, and was so low that his recovery was deemed highly ira- nrobable. He survived throughout the night, however, aud may now be consider ed out of danger. "Wht doctor," said a sick lady, "you give me the same medicine as you are giv ing my husband how's that ?" 'AH right.' From the Sublime to the Ridiculous. I believe the only lime I laughed, except J at the jokes of a greater man than myself, I a during the perjod I remained an object of envy to millions, said James Madison, was on an occasion I shall never forget. 1 was called out of my bed early one cold winter morning by a person coming on business of the utmost consequence, and dressed my self in great haste, supposing it might be a summons to a Cabinet Council. When I came into my private office I found a long silled man at least six feet hih, with a lit tle apple head, a queue, and a lace criti cally round, as rosy as a ripe cherry. He handed me a letter from his excellency, the Honorable lo my patronage. I was a lit tie inclined to be rude, but checksd myself, remembering that I was the servant of such men as my visitor, and that I mighf get the reputation of an aristocrat, if I made any distinction between man and man. "Well, my friead, what situation do you wish 1"' "Why-y-y, I'm not very particular ; but somehow or other I think I should like to be a mi&ister. 1 don't mean of the gospel, but on of those ministers to foreign ports." "I'm very se'ry, very sorry indeed ; there is n vacancy just now. Would not some thing ele suit you V "Whyy y," answered the apple-headed man, ' l wouldn't much care if I took a situ ation in one of the departments. 1 wouldn't much mind beir g a controller, or an audi tor, or some such thing " 'My dear sir, I'm sorry, very sorry, in deed, but it happens, unfortnnalley, that all these situations are at present filled. Would not you take something elsel" My friend stroked his chin, and seemed struggling to keep down the soarings of his high ambition to the present crisis. At last he answered : "Why-y-y, y-e s; I don't care if I get a good collectorship, or inspectorship, or sur veyorship, or navy agency." "Really, my good M,. Phippenny," said I, "I regret exceedingly that not only all these phces, but every other place of con sequence in the government is at present occupied. Tray think of something else ?" He then after some hesitation, asked for a clerkship, and finally the place of messen- 1 ger to one of the public officers. Finding no vacancy here, he seemed in vast per plexity, and looking all around the room, fixing his eyes at length on me, and meas uring my height from head to foot. Then putting on one of the drollest faces that ever adorned the face of man, he said : ' Mister, you and I seem to be built much alike haven't jou soraeold clothes yon can spare V Oh, what a falling off was there! from a foreign mission to a suit of old clothes, which the reader may be astured 1 gave with infinite pleasure for the only honest laugh 1 enjoyed for years afterward. The Man uho WoV't Paj the Printer. May he be shod with lightning, aud com pelled to wander over gunpowder. May he have sore eyes, and a chestnut burr for an eye -stone. May every day of his life be more despo tic than the Dey of Algiers. May he never be permitted to kiss a pret ty woman. May he be bored to death by boarding school misses practicing their first lessons in music, without the privilege of seeing his tormentors. May his sheets be sprinkled with cows age, and bed bugs and fleas be the sharers of his couch. May 2:40 night mares trot quarter races over hi stomach every night. May his boot leak, his gun hang fire, and his fishing lines break. May his coffee be sweetened with flies, and his soup seasoned with spiders. May his friends run off with his wife, and his children take the hooping cough. May his cattle die of murrain, and the pigs destroy his garden. 1 May a troop of printer's devils, lean, lank and hungry, dog his heels each day, and a regiment of cats cattawaul under bis win dow each night. May the famine stricken ghost of an edi tor's body haunt his rlumbers, and hiss "Murdei" in bis dreaming eye. May his cow give sour milk, ar.d his churn rancid butter. In short, may his business go to ruin, and he go to the Legislature. Attempt to Blow Up a Man-of-War. During the celebration of the Emperor's fete in Vienna, an attempt was made to blow up a mommoih man-of-war named the Kaiser. An account says: The atten tion of the sentinel on guard over the pow der magazine of the Kaiser having been attracted by a faint, grating noise, seeming to issue from the wood work, he gave the alarm. A search was made and crouching upon his hands and knees was discovered an individual, who, having succeeded in boring an auger hole into the powder mag azine, was already inserting the wire to which was fixed the match which he had destined to blow up the vessel with every soul on board, the whole of the ship lying in the neighborhood, the Archdnke and al his company, including, besides, the greater part of the town iuelf. The culprit be longed to the Kaiser, aud turns out to be the officer called in the Austrian service Snnnd Caotain. which answers to First - x i Lieutenant in our own. He was of course immediately seized,- but before he could be t i .t T. V ... ' - - 1 3 ji c..r. . I. . " Joc'i Opinion of Love. . Love observed Joe, scarcastically, 'love's' himposition There's been more people him posed upon by that air vord lhan by all the professional swindel in natur. It's a gros, a uniwersal himposition j and' it's on'y werry wonderful to me that ain't long ago been hexpunged. , A gal says she loves yer. Werry well ; but are you consequent ially obligated to make a fool o' yourself No ? you've on'y got 'er hipisjdixy, and vst s ihe good o' that ? Marry 'er, aud you'll werry soon see how sweet's the love as meets return.' But arout that, look 'ere ot'y just for an instance, a gal loves a sol ger vich they all do ; it's reglar ; he's a private j still she loves 'im oh I bout and hout ! Werry well ! don't yer, think atiM " giv rin up for an hotficer ! Vy cos it 'ud be a better chance. Has for love, vicked nest, the swindelinest, himposition as ia. The chance is vol gals look out for. The on'y question vith them is it a good chancel If it is they'll have it; if it ain't, they won't unless tat-n'l got noothing belter. It's the deadest take ia, is love, ever heard on ; a deader vas never hinvented. You take my adwice. and don't be toozled. Venoveryer 'ear the vord love, always wiew it as a gro himposition. II if yer don't you'll be done, and ou'y find out the difference Ten il't too1 late. Look at me ; jist for hinstance. I was sixty-two in Jennewerry last ; look at that ! Sixty-two, and I ain't done yet. I'm inwited to all the parlies ; I'm never forgot. There's the old uns as is married, a seitia' their darters upon me; it 'ud be sich a chance ! and all, in course cos I'm single. Eepnblieaa Appeals to Irishmen. In a speech, a few nights 6ince, from the steps at Berlin's Hotei, to a 'Republican meeting in this place, Edgar Cowan Esq. made a strong and earneet appeal to Irish men to cast their votes with the Republi cans. "Irishmen," said he, "who vote with the Democracy are false to their own Green Isle of the Ocean false lo the literature of Erin false to its poetry, and false to that love of liberty which beats in the breast of Irishman everywhere." We call the attention of Irishmen to the nrgent and burning language in which they have been besought to turn their backs up on the party which not Ion? ago stood be tween them and proscription, and then, w e add, as a fit and proper commentary thereon, ihe fact that, on last Saturday night the Republican Torch-Light procession, which paraded the streets of Greensburg, and was adJressed by the same gentleman, whose remarks we have quoted above,kept s ep to the music of the "Boyne Water.". Irishmen should remember that even as they were appealed to to desert their party, they were met with sn open, shameless ia suit, and that the faith of their fathers has been derided by a party that profess the most enlarged liberality. They would be "false lo their own Green Isle of the Ocean fase lo the literature of Erin false to its poetry, and false to that love of liberty which beats in the breasts of Irishmen ev erywhere," if ihey failed lo feel ihe keen and cutting taunts, which has thus been thrust into their very faces. Grcensburg Democrat. Coal Oil Makufactcrc The extent to which the manufacture of oil from coal is carried on, will surprise many of our read ers. The number of coal oil companies and firms in this country is said to be fifty- seven : the works bein principally situated n this city and Boston, the valleys of the Ohio and its tributaries. Besides these there are a number of small coal oil works in hiladelphia, Baltimore, and some of the Western cities, owned by individuals. Tha quantity of coal oil produced is estimated ' at 30,000 gallons per day, or nine millions per annum, worth about 70 cects a gallon, or over six millions ot aoiiars in the aggre gate. The capital expended in coal oil works and cannel coal mining is estimated at lour mil ions, about one-fifth of which has been invested in the Kanawha valley alone. This is independent of the petroleum or oil wells which continue to shed their liquid treasures in abundance. Fears had long been entertained that the whale species would become extinct, and thas the world be obliged to progress the best way it could without lubricatioa ; but the oil wells and the oil manufactures promise a supply ad equate to all our wants. Already the per sons employed in this new department of ndustry may be numbered by thousands. Pittsburgh paper. A Signal Instance of Lincoln's Hones- tt. Tne New York Courier and Enquirer stanies lis iiepuuuran reaaers cy ciuung a signal instance of Mr. Lincoln s honesty. In a word or two, it seems tha: Mr. Lincoln who was a Postmaster in a little town m Illinois, while Mr Barry was Postmaster General, resigned his small office, retaining in his hands about two huudred dollars ot Government funds. Owing this money he ought to have promptly paid it op when he resigned, but he kept it. When Mr. Kendall became Postmaster General, he "drew on Mr. Lincoln for the amount standing against him oa the books of the department " Wonderful to tell. Mr. Lincoln honored the draft and paid the money. He paid two hundred dollars which he ought to have paid before, and the argument is that for paying this money he ought to be made President ! Il would seem that the Courier and Enqui rer expected nothing less than he should have stolen it. Its surprise at finding that he did not, is a significant indication of its want of confidence in the men with whom it is associated. Had he stolen it, in the eyes of the Courier aid Enquirer, it would have been tha most natural thing in the sWr