t THE STAR F'THWTHORH IF, 11. JACOBT, rroprieler.' Truth and flight tod and onr Country Two Dollars per Annan. - -TV BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY DECF.MBKR 5, 18(50. NUMBER 48 "VOLUME 12. A STAR OF THE NORTH MBUSHIB KVIRT WED5E3PiT BT W3I. II. JACOBY, Office on Bluin St., 3rd Square lelow Market, TERMS : Two Dollars per annum if paid within fix months from tlie time of subscri ting : two dollars and fiUy cent it not paid withii. the year. No subscription taken lur period than six months; no discon tinuance permitted until all arrearage are paid, unless at the option o." the editor. . . . 1 - iff r if - Iht tarns cj v ilveri isms win ue asonmc . One square, twelve lines, mree umes.ji Every bubsequent insertion, Due square, three months 3 One year, 00 25 00 no GOOD ACTIONS. T MBS. tOKRlCT C. FUXCIS. Believe me, all itood action Are garnered np in Heaven. A"d yield to earth a hundred foli Ot rotl reviving Uaveu. We can not with our vision, E're see the blest return, No more than we in goblets The sunshii.e bright can urn. B-M we can feel it presence, Like soft distilling dew, Pres on our sense gently, Pulfing our heart-firings through. Turning each thonsht to pureness, To pat'ence meek, each fiah. Throwing net lope's false thing. Truth's robe of sober dye. Winning the onl to labor For finis- word and deeJ, fuch a will give to Heaven Again the t-recimis seed. Ficm BI'icLeooti's Mngatine ICE-WRECKED. Weliad hardly crossed the Atlantic, and were reginning to lok eagerly for our first ight of the New World, when a sudden change occurred in the temperature, and the balmy day ol April were followed by I.I ml cutting almost ai winter. At length we entered the boad estuary or in St Lawrence, and then the mystery was oived, for its entire surface was checkered with masses uf ice; evidently the broken up covering of the river above being sw.pl 1 y (he current out to pea. Nothing could exceed the beauty of the ice fields as they f!ahed and sparkled like gigantic gems in their celling of azure feu. Many were of treat ie a'so. like floating inlands, and trie heaped up blocks upon their surface gleam ed from a distance like cities of dazzling eynal. The wind was in our favor, and onr good nip sped up the gulf, threading her way through the channels of the floating, ice field, while, hour after hour, her pas-en-t'er flood watching with ctiwea'ied eye the splendid c-ne around them. Even whei night came there was the fame eager throng of gazers, for lhoe large frozen plains gH'tered in he moonlighl with a strange spectral beauty none ol us had ever een before AtVr time, a ma of ice larger lhan common appeared floating down. Subse quently we learned that it was part of the cone the spred forms every winter before the Falls of the Montmorency. On it came, ttleamii.g palely against the deep bine fky like a castle of spotless marble, rising in mwr and turret, and massive buttress, and :. I k.. mn.i ,LHca(-ii Irarprv nil.CIICll UJ hid - j Every eye was fixed upon it in breathless admiration, as it swept majestically by, until, as it passed between u and the wind, ty its loftiness it momentarily becalme.l us. Fuddenly the stationary ship received a se vere shock, which vibrated noi only thro' SA.1I.her limbers but through every one of the hundred and forty human beings who form ed her human Ireigh'. Never shall I for get the fhrieks of terror that followed, as women, well nigh frantic with fear, clasped their children to their bosoms, believiug that the ship had struck a rock and thai heir last moment had come. A cry from the bow that it was bnt a blow from the ice, somewhat relieved their fears, and they mood qoietly by while the helm was put down and the sails drawn round in ihe ef fort to free us from the huge mass of ice -which siill lay across the vessel's way. - nressin? and crating audibly against her timbers. A minute more, and above the diu ol blocks and cordage, and the stamp ing of men's feet, there arose a wild cry that echoed far and wide over the snrrouud ing ice-fields, and through every cranny of the neighboring ice castle, "The ship is Visjking !" It was an appalling announcement; and onfortuaately it was a true one. The ice hud struck us heavier lhan we thought, and ilii hard, sharp edge, keen and resistless as that of a knife, pressing against the bow oJ onr vessel undefended as Bhe was by the doable timbers needed for ice encounters had cut them completely through, to that tba water rnshed in with the foce and ra pidity of a cascade. What a rearful scene of terror and con fafion ensued i the shrieks and laments tons of women, the crie of children and the silent anguish of men, as they beheld the fears and danger of those dearest to them. On none did the blow fall heaver than ott me J for I had a delicate wife on board, aud f my two little ones, the youn gtr was an invalid. Meanwhile, no time w;n lost. There tsras no space to lower the "fcflau, and the pale, terrified passengers wore turriiJ'y passed down, by the bow- ?rst, ii3oa t3 tee. It was touching to fee eomo snatch a clcak; cr wrapper as they departed without ever. that. A few provis ions were next sent down, quickly follow ed by the crew ; and then we stood a wretched, cowering group, upon the ice field that had wrought us so much evil, wa'ching for the last moment of the good ship that had brought us more than two thousand miles. It was not long in coming. Suddenly the bow bent low, as if to ealute the waves, and the stern rose high into the air; then, with a rapid forward movement, the stately ship parsed silently down into the bosom of the deep, every tall mast and tapering yard iu iis place, and every sail spread to its utmost, and gleaming whitely j in the moonlight, until each iu its turn pass ed from our fight. For a lew moments there was a troubled bortex, and then the moonlit sea ro'led placidly on, and the gen tle night wind swept over the f pot, leaving no trace of the fearful shipwreck which, in carce ten minutes from the time the ice struck onr devoted vessel, had left us ex posed anJ helpless upon the broad sea, our only refuge that desolate field of ice hard, inhospitable and shelterless. That night was one of infinite suffering te hardy men ; what, then, must it have been to the teeble and helpless 1 A few Iooe planks and spars had been thrown over from the ship, and the scramble to ob tain them was like a struggle for gold I wa fortunate as to secure ore, and on it I placed my poor wife and elder child, rolled together iu our only cloak ; while through the livelong night I passed to and fro be side them, with '.he little one wrapped in the brea-t of my coat, striving in vain to still its rriesjand as 1 -walked, my feet clung to the frozen pavement beneath them, and The cold shot up through my limbs like an icy fire, causing intolerable pain As the night passed on the cold increas ed, or else we felt it more ; and many times as 1 looked on the shivering beings crouch- i.T around me, I thought that few of them c . . . . t i. - W( ould survive lid morning. iui tuauKs, under Providence to the officers of the ship, trnn on P.i mil nrsnort inieiai. r..u i lowances or spirits, the day dawned upon all .-avo a few small children, my own dear bale among them. And truly, when around us, dotted here and there by silvery ice fields, but uncheered by a single sail, and thought of our desolation our misery, and probable fate, I felt that it was mercifully called away from the evil to come. But the mother could not feel so, and amid her own sufferings, her tears fell fast on the sweet p'ueid face that would never weep again. With the morning, the ship's company and pa-sei.gers were mustered, to ascertain if any were missing, and great was oar con-s-ernation to find that Mr. Grant was ab sent. Every inquiry was made, and every search among the crevices and craanies of onr rugged ice raft , but all in vain. In the confusion and mi-ery of the night, none, had mi.ed him, nor was any trace of htm to be found, and we were at length com pelled to believe that our kind friend and master had either perished in the wreck, or else in his passage to the ice. Meanwhile mar.y were the eager eyes continually scanning the horizon in the vain search for a friendly -ail. As the day wore on, the sun shone out brilliantly and his beams flashed in a thousand dazzling rsys on our ice raft, until we were almost blir.d- ! ed by thir radiance, let tney sneu a warmth through our chilled Uames lor which we were most thankful, and in many apots they rnelied the ice, which ran in lit lie rills, enablit.g us to quench our unrsi without filling our mouths with ice. Twice a day a little buiscnit and raw pork were distributed to us. and thus sadly and suTer ing passed the day, till a second night of misery fet in This proved lar worse than the first, for, ere long, wi'd gusts began to howl over the ocean wastes ont among which we uow had drifted ; and heavy waves lashed and raged around us, and dashed themselves against our refuge and taough Ihey had not power to put it into motion, we knew :.ot how soon they might sweep over it or fhatter it in pieces. It was a fearful night, and eo exhausted and de pairing did it leave us, that we scarce could rouse ourselves lo exertion, until a sailor's cry of -Sail ho !" awoke fresh hope. How many tearful eyes brightened and heavy hearts throbbed quick and gratefully, as they watched that eail speed on towards us before Ihe last breath of the expiring gale! As fche drew near the only fear was least she should nor have space for all Nearer aud still nearer she came,nntil we could see ihf men upon ber decks, and then she passed us by, unobserving or on heeding the signal we had placed upon a spar, and ihe dark group of human beings clustered around iu If unheeding, Heaven forgive them, for it was a fearful depth of despair into which lo fling back so many ol their iellow creatures. , The woman sank down too heart-stricken for words, and the men lifted up their voice and bitter indig nation at the cruelly that could thus leave women and children to perish. Death in one of his most fearful forms did indeed seem pressiwg close upon us, for our scanty stock of food was exhausted. Many flung themselves at full length upon the ice, and utterly indifferent lo all outward object ; while others prayed earnestly over the dear one for whom all earthly hope is passed.. Suddenly a loud fhout rose above the plash of ihe waves and murmur of sorrow ful voices, and echoed cheerfully over our frozon resting pace. Every eye turned j seaward, and there, butja fewjathorns fr"T unpreceived. Her bulwarks were filled with sympathizing faces and to our feeble cheer of welcome there came back so hearty a; response that it sent a glow through oar shivering frames. I Never was kindness greater than we poor ice wrecked voyagers received from the i -i .i.-. .! ' crew anu passengers oi inai p.iijj-ciuwucu though she already was. To their care and attention we owed not only our own lives, but those of the dear ones who seemed about to die ; and never can we feel fully grateful for their good offices, or the many sacrifices they made in our behalf. The ship was westward bound, and on our arrival in Canada, the account of our misfortunes brought us many offers of em ployment. Years have passed since and the world has gone well with us, but noth ing can erase from our mind 4 the haunting remembrance of the days and nights of snf iering we passed upon that fearful ice field. Strange Romance. The St. Louis Bulletin says We have been placed in possession of the outlines of a strange story, which has almost too much Muuchauseu about it to seem true, yet, we are informed, it is substantially correct. In the rummer of 1853, John Hardcvick, a poor mechanic of Pittsburg, was induced by the gold evcitement then raging, to try his luck in the mines of California. He accordingly left his wife ant1 two children behind, and took passage around the horn for the E! Dorado. On arriving there his money had given out, and he was obliged to go to work at a mere pittance, to keep from starving. He made his way, however, as fa.t as he could, and, having entered into partnerhip with another man, commenced the working of a claim Hardwick prospered, ai.d be gan to think that, at the end of the year, he would be able to go home wi h a large pile of dust. Human calculations are some times wrong, air JlardwicK s calculations were wron for he was taken sick and ramp nonr death's door. When he got well his partner had de parted, and taken with him the earnings of both. The poor man was almo-t dis couraged. He had been away from home eighteen months, and had sent nothing back to his family. He wrote to his wife, giving her a true statement of his condition She never received the letter, and consequently he never received any letters from her Hardu ick wenl to work again, but the limes grew hard ami he earned but little. He fre- quenlly wrote to his wife, but she, strange to say, never received a single line from him. It is needless to go through every particular of his history suffice it to say, that, hearing nothing from his wife, he con - eluded that she was clad to get rid of him, and would not trouble herself to write to him. He therefore determined lo stay in California till he was rich, and then return to the Atlantic States. He set himself to work assiJnonsly. and male money. His business relations were such, after a few years, that he could not leave California, but stayed and accumulated a handsome fortune. In the meantime, Mrs. Hardwick, think ing her husband was dead, after three year", married another, and emigrated to St. Louis. Her name became Mathews. Her two children, of whom John Hardwick was father, died, and all traces of John were oblitera ed, except from a very re- mote corner of her heart. Mrs. Mathews was a good wife to her second husband, so , :ar as we learn, ana uore mm two cnuuren. Mathews was in the grocery trade, and throve well, but about a year ago he was taken sick with a fever, and died, leaving Mrs. Mathews and the children without a , protector, as she thought, but with a sung income. . John Hardwick, tired of California life, j and tired of bnsiness, too, collected together . his effects, which amounted lo a nice for- j lune, and started for home by ihe overland ; route. He arrived in ihis city two weeks j ago, and remained a few days lo rest before j i taking ihe cars for Pittsburg One morning, while walking through n.n.,.1ii.air - mfirlftft M r 1 1 i ril iv n Ir ftiiw . ... ; . . . , ... r laminar luce, it was me nrn laminar lace ; 1A li i , I t: aar cirtfA lia Ik i I lo f 1 n Tra iipirn t and that face belonged to a woman. He quickened his pace, and came up to the stall where the lady was about to purchase a beefsteak. Mr. Hardwick's heart beat wildly beneath his waistcoat. Could it be possible ? No. "What should Jane be do ing in St. Louis V thought he. He was abont lo turn away, when the lady raised her head, and their eyes met. "John Hard wick, as cure as I am living !" exclaimed she. "Jane, is it you!" said John. It proved to be both of thern.and after mutual explanations, Mr. Hardwick accompanied the lady home, carrying her market-basket for her. Two children met them at the door. They were blue-eyed and rosy cheeked just like those John had left be hind, and just as large but they did not have features like John's. "What matters it," thought our hero "my two children are dead, and these are rent to take their places I will be a father to them." Mr. John Hardwick was as good as his word He helped Mrs. Mathews formerly Mrs. Hardwick, and destined to be again to dispose of.her. property;" then calling a clergyman, they had the matrimonial link tied again strong and fast In two days they started for the East, where, we hope, in Pittsburg, or some other delightful lown. My renny Dip. Whai was it ? A tallow candle, to be sure. The gas wouldn't burn, the kerosene strangled me with its nnxiou odor, the I fltii.l rt iif I Aro. 1 tw.rnl f.fiiA nnrl Irani mil , f , , . k . . ho5t b,ack. , . h k ,g BJ, with ' want of light ; that palpable gloom which reems to beat like a roomful ot palpitations of the heart around you, above you, about you, everywhere; that visible nothing, which holds the tables, the chairs, the por '.rails you are familiar with, yet hides them in its black veil from your view ; that empty fullness through which yon thrust out your groping arms, then shrink back, oppressed with a presence you can nei her hear, see nor feel. Milly,' I said to my little maid, 'run somewhere and get me a light.' She ran to the grocer's wife, and came back with a penny dip in a brass candle stick. As she placed it on my table, went out and shut the door, the little boy in bronze on my mantle raised his hammer and struck the figure of Time twelve ringing blows on the heart. It was midnight. The candle burned clearlv. I renmed the old vo'ume of German legends I was j reading, and as 1 laid my finger on a para graph, and paused to ponder on the possi bility of ppirits returning to earth to wreak vengeance on foes, or work weal to friends, I heard a deep figh at my elbow. I lurned and beheld the ghost of my grandmolner. j I knew her from her resemblance to her portrait. She wore the same white cap with its wide border plaited round her face the same prim dress with which I had grown familiar in the picture. She died twenty years ago. I was named for her. I drew np the rocking chair for the ahot. She sat down . in it. A pillow conld not have sank there more noiselessly than she did. She kept ner tiam)s In ltie same jiosl- j tion on her breast, that somebody tied them t twenty years ago. She fixed her keei black eyes upon me beautiful eyes, which I had always ad mired in the portrait. None of her de scendants had such eyes. 'I could not come,' she s ai !, in deep sepulchral tones, 'in ga light. Ghosts and ' gas-light are at war ahvays. As for kero j sene oil, we groan in spiri: at its use. How , mortal noses can, night aher night, inhale the odor it omits, is a wonder. It is worse i than brimstone. We have put our cold lips under your chimneys, and blown our ! ghastly breaths into the flame. We have peen the chimneys blacken with smoke, Utl aprr:mnts 'fill Jwith disgusting fri grance People only said the lamp is in a draught. .They moved it and bore with it We shall have to yield. Kerosene is a Ghrtsts are oUI fashion- modern discovery. d. To be out of date is to be out of mind. Your tallow candle pleases me. We ghosts like the light of other days around us. We ahvays, in the body, burned taliovv can dle The fine eyes of my grandmother gazed at uiy penny dip steadlaMly lor a moment, She seemed to see visions and dream dreams. My dear,' she said, yon are the first of the family thai has returned to candies since the innovation of gas You are in- i tietied to your dip for my presence How . hollow 1 would have looked under a clian- delier how (bloodless, how white ! As it is, I think I am looking very natural, am I not?' She glanced up at her portrait and waited my rply. A little pale, grandmother,7 I said, 'but tell me, dear madam, if your pursuits in the other world are of such a nature that they admit of your returning to this at any time?' By no means. 1 am permitted to ap- pear in this sphere but seldom. My influ- ence I can make felt oftener. I have not j been seen before 6ince my coffin lid was . .1. - i closed. I come to ten you mere more a yell in Pandemonium. I looked in to pee whence it came. I found the great cham- ber assigned to little children, and which is always full of little ones of all sizes and ages, the scene of great commotion. In fants were crawling into corners; three year old toddlers were tottering out of the way. Older ones were hastily finding seats, and all faces wore a listening expres sion. A small voice was saying : 'It was no fault of mine that brought me here. I, who am now but five years old, might have lived to be fifty. Nature, un fortunately, gave n.e a very fine physical development. My chest was round and full, my skin clear, my limbs finely mould ed. Mv birthplace was in a cold climate. My tender mother, proud of her offspring, bared my neck and arms in the chid winters, when her rose bushes and vines were packed in warm straw and thoroughly protected from every blast. I was brought down to be viewed by company, and ex posed to different temperatures as I went from room to room. My mother, wrapped in eolt velvet and comfortable tilks, did not suffer. I became a great trouble in the house. My beauty faded. I lingered on from monili to rnonlh, and died at last, at five Years old. of consumption. , My mother cried over my iittiW'golfin: 1 knew. batJifJXe-- 'I was trotted to death,' cried a more pi ping voice, as the first speaker sat down 'A woman was hired expressly to take care of me, and she took care that 1 should not want for exercise. Her days and nights were spent in keeping me going up. up, tippy,' and 'down, down, downy.' That unknown wonder, perpetud motion, was to be found in my nurse's knees Every bone in my poor little body wa racked, every ounce of flesh was sore My fond went down milk and came upcheeso. If I cried, I was trotted ; if 1 screamed, I was trotted ; if I was still. I was tro'ted I became little better than a human churn, from which the butter had be-n taken and the sour milk left standing. My brains turned to bruises, my blood to whey, my bones grw so sharp they almost pierced the knees which trotted them. As I began to cut teeth, my tongue was constantly jolted between my jaws, and nf Ijeini? hit olT. 1 tiared not ' . . - o whine, lot I knew ihe penalty ; I began at lal to calculate how long the tor'.ure could possibly continue. Warm weather was coming on, and t thought one or the other of us must soon give up the ghost ; and as my nurse's exertions were almost super- j human, I imagined that perhaps I might outlast her. One unlucky day, however, my mother entering the room unexpectedly I smiled at her. I had never done bo ue fore 'The daring!' cried my parent, 'see. it knows me.' 'Poor thing, rather,' snid the nnrse, 'it has wind on its stomach !' Forthwith she proceeded to trot it out. Every thump of her foot on the floor was, I knew, a nail in my coffin I felt I should never smile again. My laithful nurse con tinued her efforts, and I was trotted out of existence upon the poor old woman's knee.' As the speaker ceased, one of the older occupants ol the room descried me, said mv grand mother. 'He at once made room for rr.e to enter, and begged me to remain awhile and hear the remarks. I confuted, and took a seal r.ear the entrance 4. , . , h'.tle fellow, risMni; Irom Jn . .nit ii . i ... . . i seat, witli lus iiie eyes an ihuuiimhh, .mu hi curls matted together, 'died of delirium tremens. At the age of six months, I was a confirmed drunkard. I had not been a very quiet baby, and every time I was un easy, a little liquor was administered lo do me good. I did not waM wine but waier. was naturally a very thirty clu'd, and everything that was put between my speechless hps increased my thirst. My mother milk was sweet, the panada given me was swe-t, and if now and then I was blessed with a draught of goat or cow's milk, it was warmed and sweetened first, to make it as much like my mother's as possible. I used lo crj , No other way do we poor babies have of expressing our feelings, and the cha.ices are ten to one that we will be misuiuler.-tood To stop j n,y crying, was put to the breast; this, at I B)Cj, times would indignantly refuse. T.eil there would be a commotion. 'Nurse, j rny ,noI,er would say, 'what shall we do i w j, juin y The nurse was a stout, hearty, old woman, who always maie a pracun; wi taMin" whatever was provided for her , . ..i ! charge. Her sovereign remedy was liquor j I was taken, and a spoonful administered j at a time. At first I rebelled I strangled, kicked and coughed. The firm hand held ; the spoon to my little tongue, and down j e..t its contents in p..e ... . little the dose was increased, i soon hkc .1.!.. f.. ofl.r u IpiV it. II was given me icauuj, moments or wild glee, I fell into a drunken i .-,.1 i ni.2 rnnnv stupor, which gae mj j opportunities of enjoying themselves, as my sleep was sure to be long af;d sound. 'At length muiii-a potu assailed me. During my whole life no one had ever thought of -riving me a single spoonful of i j j haJ craved the cooling, cheer - i. r ....ir' Nrw. 1 no in", reiresnmg uiuj " -i longer cared for it. In rny wildest frenzies I was accused of having the colic ; down, na went the fiery drink, until finally j wa3 literally burnt out. 1 was notinng a cinder within, a she'd withont My ! sl0mach was cooked to a crisp, my intes- j ,ines were shrivelled my lungs no longer l I f,,l, nt.li' , niied witn pure air, oeicueu ium. j rj. fumes that had consumed me. I j jied was good for nothing. I hope whatever form my dut is destined lo take on earth, it will not be watered, a wuea i inhabited it, with alcohol.' As this, speaker ceased, there arose a wail ol sympathy, 6uch as had at first attracted me to the pandemoniac chamber; as it subsided, another little figure had taken the stand 'My legs,' he said, 'brought me out ol the world. My mother labored under the strange delusion that her child was born a Highland laddie of American parents in America I was dressed, or left undressed rather, in short plaid slocking, reaching to the calf of my leg, and an elegant kilt reach ing just to the knee. My limbs were moulded in cherubic forms, and when ex posed in the nursery were pretty. But the nursery was too narrow a field in which to display my beauty. On bitter cold days 1 was walked out over the icy streets, the keen wind chapping my flesh and chilling my blood till my knees looked like twin nutmeg -raters painted purpe. l used to look at my mothers long comfortable skirt and thick leggins drawn up over warm hose, and wondered if she could survive a fahion such as I wore if adopted by her .0.M.1.I I . s victim was a sacrifice to a fashion farted since my day. 1 know that your father was dressed in such a ridiculous style when a little boy, for with my own hands I knit his warm woolen stockings and saw that hi" comfortable little trousers came well over the instep of his little calfskin shoes. The r.ext speaker was a dream faced little girl, who trembled as she rose and said : 'I am an opium eater. My death war rant was written on the label of the first bottle of Godfrey's cordial brought into my mother's house. A few drops at firs-t sufficed to hush my feeble cries. Then Godfrey's cordial would not do. A few J drop of mere laudanum were administered. Soon 1 would not go lo sleeo without it. Then my nurse would give me a small opium pill in my hands. Of course I was but i little trouble. I was a deep sleeper, but my digestion became impaired; too much sleep weakened me, and I knew no natural slum ber. My eyes became Mice those of a sleep walker, full of dreams when wide awake I lot my appetite ; my head srew full of pain ; my baby heart was always achi-ig. 1 closed my eyes one day forever on the home where I felt I could be litt'e loved when my low walls were never permitted to appeal to those aronnd me, but were hushed at c nee ; where my blue eyes were scarcely ever permitted to look around in the world ir. which they had been opened, and where, instead of proper care and food and eercie. the baleful pill and ener vating sleop were all that were offered me. There are many parents who seem to think children must pass their childhood out of the way, and only cet in the way when they have become, in spite of all sorts of ill-treatment, useful or ornamental mem ber of society. ''I his chi'd was still speaking' said mv grandmother, 'when I rnhed ont. I had been a mother once, and I could not listen lo ihee innocents in that fearlul waning rhamber. recapitulating the woes that had sent them there, any longer. 'I felt impellei to revisit earth. I came In no light could I make myself visible to you until your tallow candle was brought in. 'My 'ear, remember what I have told you. Some of these days you may be a ! mother. Ie more than careful of the ?a cred charge of little children. Think far them feel for them. Do nor, ease your cares, sink them into unnatural slumbers or give them over to selfish nurses. Upon you hangs their live- in a great measure the r happinessf l oth here and hereafter I beg you will give--' Just at this moment the cock crew loudly. The voice a: my elbow was still. I looked aronnd the rocking chair was empty, the ghost had vanished. Bl ickirnoiVs t'agozmt. AN EMBLEM. A lit tl. brown seed, Very ugly indeed, Lay as'eep in th col. I wet ground j And the bleak wind- blew, And the dead leaves fie To earth with a rustling sound. And all winter long The tempet i. song. Sounded dismally o'er i's bed, But t'ie sliiuib'ring seed fJave it no more hefd Than it it were utterly dead. But th April came, And the winds grew tame ; The heavens nude love to the earth : One stny sunbeam Br ke thro' the drearn Of the seed, iu it lonely dearth. Is started at firt, 1 hen rinaily burst Its fetters in grateful glee ; And upward grew, Ti;l it saw the blue Of heaven's immensity. I am like that seed A ugly, indeed. Unable lo feel or to see : Life's bleak wind blow, It clouds hang low, But Thou 01 the tun to me ! A drunkard, on hearing that the earth was round, said that accounted for his roll ing off so often. The easiest and best way to expand the cnesi is ;o nave a goon large ueaii iu u , i saves the cost of gymnastics. A writer asks if any one can inform a poor man the best way lo start a nursery ? Certainly. Get married. A Story w riter says, "he will climb the starry ladder of ambition, and drive his ene mies back into a sheet of darkness." Bather flighty that. A yoi'ng lady in our town is so refined in her language, that she never uses the word 'blackguard,' but substitules 'African senti nel.' A toukg lad recently ran away from home and went to a tavern, where he was found by a friend, with a cigar in his mouth. "Why did you leave home?" asked his friend. "Oh, confound it," said he, "lamer and mother were so saucy 1 couldn't stand il any longer, and I quit 'em." Cukb for Colds. Punch gives the follow ing excellent cure for a cold : , 'Put your feet in hot water, As high as yonr thighs ; Wrap your head round with flannel As low as your eye "Dixie's land.". The most popular tune, since the pnbli catiou of 'Old Folks at Home,' in the Uni led State, is the plantation negro melody of Dixie's Land.' Throughout the Eastern S'a'es it is creating a perfect furore. It is pl-yed and sung everywhere l7 bras -bands, string bands, orchestras and reni ders is whistled by ragged urchins in tb streets and by caliopes on steamboats, and forms on of the chief attractions in the tria ble al soirees of parlor. During the visit of the Prince of Wales lo the St. Louis Fair, it was alternated with 'God Save the Queen.' 'Yankee Doodle 'Hail to the Chief,' 'Hail Columbia,' and other national airs of the two countries.! At the late Douglas demonstration, at Indian apolis, there were eight brass bands present. vieing with each other in performance of this 'taking' melody. An amusing ai.ecdote is tolii in regarJ trt it which happened lately at the St Louie theatre. The orchestra played it, when the curain rose and the play began. The cry Dixie' run through the house from pit to gallery, completely drowning the voice of the actor. He made several ineffectual at tempts to be herd, and left ihe stage. The old manager appeared, flushed with anger, and, in at excited voice, ex claimed : 'Gentlemen, what means all this ill mannered confusion ? W hat do you wantl' Immediately a hundred voices cried oat 'Dixie.' 'Well, yon can't have it. You've had 'Dixie' once :o night, and you'll have 'Dixie no more.' He retired to the green room, and th ac'or again appeared. But it Tas no use. A dealening shout for 'Dixie' met him from the audience, and after stammering and stutiering for a few minutes, he left the stage. The certain dropped, the orchestra plajed 'Dixie,' and the play progressed without further interruption. KlSSfXC THE 1 1 AN D-O.M ICS T GrBLS. A di- tinguirdied candidate for an office of high trust in a certain State, who is 'up to a thing or two," and has a keen appreciation of life beauty, when aboct to set off on an electioneering tour recently, said to his wife, who was to accompany him for prudential reasons: My dear, inasmuch as this election is complicated, and the canvass will be close, I am anxious to leave nothing undone that would promote my popularity, and so I have thought it would be a good plan for rne to kiss a number of the handsomest giiU in every place where I may be honor ed with a public reception. Don't yoa think il would be a good idea V 'Capital !' exclaimed the devoted wife, and to make your election a sure thing, while you are kissing ihe handsomest girls. I will kis an equal number of the hand somest young men !' The distinguished candidate, believe, has not since referred to this pleasing means o popularity. A witness called to give testimony in a town court, about a shirt, came to the poiut very abrjpily as follows : 'Mother said that Sal said that Polly said tht Bob told her that he had seen a ma that seen a boy that seen a feller that run through the street with a red striped flannel shirt of a white color all checker, and our gals won't lie ! for the old woman has licked 'em a hundred times for lyin'.' We, de pnderscribed darkies, bein' a kurner juray ob disgust, to eit on de body ob the nigger Sambo now dead and gone before us, had been sittin on de said nig ger aforesaid, did on de night ob da four teenth ob November come to his fate by fallin' from de said ribber, whar we find he was drowned, and afterward was washed on de said ribcr 6ide, whar we spoae h froze to deff." Tiik fol owing classic speech was made at a meeting in one of the lower wards of Troy. With such argumen's to back him, there cannot be the thaddow ol a doub. that the "smart man" will be elected : " Fellow-citizens !"' When ca:s in the dead hour of the night howl round your houses and butchers charge the enormous sum of twelve cents a pound for ' nech" then feller ciizens it is time to elect a ma for constable. A i.ittlk fellow, eight years old, who was without a relative in the whole world, was asked by a lady if he did not have fears as to whether he would get along in life The child looked up with perplexed and inquiring eye, as if uncertain ol her mean ing, and troubled with a new docbt. 'Why,' said he- 'don't you think God will take care of a feller, if he pots his trust in Htm, and does the best he can ?' A goose thai sees another drink will do the same, though he is not thirsty. Th custom of drinking for company, when drinking is dispenab!e and prejudicial, seem to be a case of the same kind, aud to a man, feathers only excepted, upon a loot ing with a goose. Soms wag took a drunken tellow, placed him in a coffin, with the lid to that he could raise it, placed it in a graveyard, and waited to see the effect. After a short time) the fumes of the liquor left himandjut