i r W, U. JACOBY, Proprleior. Truth and Right Cod and our Country. Two Dollars per Annua. VOLUME 13. !BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY MAY 1, 1861. NUMBER 17. t . ' : : , . : - : - -r- t" n -w ii u n tt Will), 1 U.ii.0 5 ; V 1 " STA It OF THE .NORTH PCSLISHd'BVKBY VftDSKSPAT ST- JWM. fl. J1C0BY, . 'crncc'cn Main St.,5rJ Square beloH? Market, .TERMS : Two Dollars per annum if paid 'Vithin six mouths from the time of subscri pting : two dollars and fifty cents it not paid : 'within,' the yeir. No subscription taken for a less period than six mounts; ' no" 'disco n 'tinuances pehriit'ted until all arrearages are " paid, unless at trie option oi trie editor. 'The let ms tj adverUsing'voill be as fallows : 'One sqtfare, twelvelines, three times, SI 00 Every subsequent insertion, . ..... 25 One square, three months, . . . . . ."3 .00 One year, . 8 00 Choice y oetrn. SPRfNQ. A flash of green is on the bough , A warm breath panteth in the air, .' And in the earth a heart-pulse there Throbs underneath her breast of 6uow. - Lii'e is astir among the woods, And by the moor, and by the stream, The year, as from a torpid dream, Wakes' in the'euhohin'e on the buds. Wake? op in mosic as the song Of wood bird wild, and looonl rill More Irequent from the windy hili 'Comes greening forest aisle along. Wake op io beauty as the sheen Of woodland pool the gleam receives Thro' bright flowers, overbraidej laaves 'Of broken sunlight?, golden-greeu. 'She sees the outlaw'd winter stay , Awhile, to gather after htm -Sjiow robes, Irost cryatilFd diadem, 'And then in soft showers pass away. fShe could not love rongh winter well, Yet cannot choose bot mourn htm now ; , So swears awhile on her young brow 'His gift a gleaming icicle. Then turns her, loving, to the sun Upheaves her bosom's swell to his, , And, in the joy of-his first Forgets for aye that sterner one. 'Old winder's pledge from her he reaves That i-y-cold, though glittering par And zones her with a green cy mar, Aud girdles round her brow with leaves. The primrose and the woo.l vifctet He tangles in her chining hair, 'And teaches elfin breezes fair To ting her some sweet canzonet. All promising long samroer hours, When she in his embrace shall lie, Utder the broad dome of bright ssy, "Oa uios.ey couches starred with flowers. Till she smiles back again to him The beauty beaming from his face ; -And, robed ift light, glows with the grace Ol Eden placed cherubim. O, earth, thy glowing loveliness Around onr very hearts has thrown An aiidimr.ed joyance all its own, And suon'd u o'er with bappines. The list Days of ChaiB II. 01 Spain. The prince on whom to much depended was the most miserable of human beings. In old lime he would have been exposed ! as soon av he came into the world, and t expose him would have been a kindness From his birth a blight was on his body, and on his mind. With difficulty his al most Imperceptible spark of life had been screened and fanned into ; a dim and flick ering flame. His chddhooJ, except when he could be rocked and . snqg into sickly s eep, was one long piteous wail.' Till he was ten yar o!d his day were passed on the laps of women, and he was never once buffered to stand or his rickety legs. None ofhose tawny little urchins, clad in rags stolen from scarecrow?, whom Murillo loved to paint begging or roltfn in the sand, oweJ less to education than this despotic ruler of 30.-000,000 of - subjects. The most important events in the history of his king dom, tho very names of province and cit ies which were among his most valuable possessessions, were unknown to him. . it may well be doubted whether he was aware that Sicily was an island, that Christopher "Columbus had discoved America, or that the English were not Mohammedans. In his' youth, however, "though too imbecile for study or business, he was not incapable "of being amused ., . He shot, . hawked and banted. ; He enjoyed with the delight of a tree Spaniard two delighful spectacle : a lior?e with its bowels gored out and. a 5eir wriihingin the fire. The time cara'o when the mightiest of instincts ordinarily, wakens Trom iia repose, it was hoped that the young ting would not prove invincible to female attractions, and.ihat he would leave u Prince of AstaHas to succeed him. A fcoasort was-found "for him 1 in the : royal family of France and her beauty and grace igave him alangaiJ pleasure lie liked tb uJorn, her with jewels, id see her dance, iand 10 tall h'e'r what sport he had had with iiis.dogs and falcons. But it was soon whiS erei that the was a wifs only In name. he died, and her place was 'supplied by a German princess nearly allied to the im perial hosse. Bal the second marriage, like the first proved barren, and long be fors the king had passed the prime of life all the politicians of Europe had began to A fake' it for granted in all their calculations ihat hs woa'J be the last descendant In the fcii'.s iir. 3 cf Charles V. Meanwhile- a Snl laa sad &V.cl melancholy took possession tf bU czi. Tii diversions which had been tha asrhra eaploj-mont of his youth be tana dkta:ifd to hita." lis ceased to find j-lsiuzre in LU 1:213 and boar spears, in thS tzci--;: a.J tha brllflit. Sometimes he t'r.ci L.:.:?e'ij' cp in an inner chamber from lbs t s ,ce :rt Jlitce-s he set, in life did 'not waste id listless indolence were di vided between childish sports and childish devotions. He delighted in rare animals, 'and'still more 'in dwarfs. : When neither slrange beasts nor little men could dispel th black thoughts which gathered in his mind, he repeated Aves and Credos; he walked in processions; sometimes hestarv ed himself; sometimes he whipped him self. At length a complication of maladies completed the ruin of all bis faculties. His stomach failed '; nor was this strange, for in him the malformation of the jaw, characteristic o! his family, was'so serious that he could not masticate his . food, and he was in the habit of swallowing ollas and sweetmeats in the state in which they were set before him. While suffering from in digestion he was attacked by ague. Every third 'day his convnUive tremblings, his dejection, his fits of wandering, seemed to indicate the approach of dissolution. His misery was increased by the knowledge that everybody was calculating how long he had to live, and wondering what would become of his kingdom when he should be dead. The stately dignitaries 6f his house hold, the physicians who ministered to his diseased body, the divines whose business it waa to soothe his not less diseased mind, the very wife who shonld have been intent on those gentl'n offices by which female tenderness can alleviate even the misery of hopeless decay, were all thinking of the new world which was to commence with his death, and would have been perfectly willing to see him in the bands of the em balmer, if they could -have been certain that his successor would be the prince whose interest the espdosed. " ' In a very short time the king's malady took a'riewfortn. That he was too weak to lift his food to bis misshapen mouth; that at thirty-seven he had the bald head and wrinkled face of a man ofseventy ; that his complexion was turning from yellow to re?n ; that he frequently fell down in fits, and remained long insensible these were no longer the worst symptoms of his mala dy. He had always been afraid 'of ghosts and demons, and it bad long been necessa ry that IhTee friar should watch every night "by his restless bed as a guard against hob goblins. Bat now he was firmly convinced "that he was bewitched, that he was possess ed, that there was a devil within him, that there were devils all around him. He was exercised according to the forms of his i church, hut this ceremony, instead of qui- enng him, scared him oat of almost all the I little reason that nature had given him. In his misery and despair he was induced to resort to irregular modes of relief! His confessor brought to court impostors who pretend that tbey could interrogate the powers of darkness. The devil was called 5 op, sworn and examined. This strange j deponent made oath, as in the presence of. , God, that his Catholic majesty was under a ppejj , which had been laid on him many I yearB before, for the purpose of preventing tne continuation of the royal line. A drug 1 1 had been compounded out of the brains and j Sidneys of a human corpse, and had been j administered in a cup of chocolate. This portion had dried op all the sources of life, j and the best remedy to which the patiertt j could now resort would be to swallow a bowl of consecrated oil every morning be fore breakfast." Unhappily, the authors of thi ory fell into contradictions which they could excuse only by throwing the blame 01 Sa'an,.who the said, w&s an unwilling witness, and a liar from the beginning. In the midst of their conjuring the inquisition came down upon them. It must be admitted that if the holy office had reserved all its tenors for such cases, tt would not have been remem bered as the most hateful judicature that was ever known among civilized men. The subaltern imposters were thrown into dungeons. But the chief criminal contin ed to be master "of the king and of the king dom. Meanwhile, in the distempered mind of Cbarlen one mania succeeded another. A longing lid pry into' those- mysteries of the grave from which human beings avert their thoughts had long been , hereditary In his hopse. Joana, from whom the mental j constitution of her posterityseems to have derived a morbid taint, had sat, year after year, by the bed on which lay the ghastly remains of her husband,' apparreled in the rich embroidery and jewels which he had been wont to wear while living; Her son Charles found an eccentric pleasure in cel ebrating his own obsequies, in tatting on his shrond, placing himself in the coffin, covering himself with the pall, and lying as one dead till the requiem had been song and the mourners had departed, leaving him alone in the tomb. Philip 11. fonnd a similar pleasure in , gazing on the huge chest of bronze in which his remains were 1 to be laid, and especially on the skull which encircled with the crown of Spain, grinned at hi hi fro rh the cOver. Philip IV., too, hankered after be rials and burial places, gratified his cariosity by gazing oh ihe re mains bf hit great grandfather, theem per br, and sbmet:mes stretched himself out'at full length, like a .corpse; in the niche which he had selected for himself In the royal cemetry.. -In that cemetry his son was hoMf attracted by a strange fascination. Europe could bhoir no inore magnificent place of sepulchre. A staircase intrusted wkh jasper led down ' frOm the stately chore'; cf the EsccHal Into an octagon situ ated jjst beneath the high aliar. The fault inpervioni to the sun, was rica with gold On the right and on the left reposed, each 1 . in a massy sarcophagus, the departed kings and queens ofSpain. Into this mausoleum the king descended with a Jong, train of courtiers, and ordered the coffins to be un- closed. His mother had been embalmed with such consuma'.e skill that she appear- ed as she had appeared on her deathbed. The body of his grandfather, too, seemed J entire, but crumbled into dust at the first touch. From Charles neither the remains of his mother'rior those of his grandfather could draw any "signs of sensibillity. But when tHe gentle and graceful Louise, of Orleans, the miserable man's first wife, she who lighted op his dark existence with one short and pale gleam of happiness, present ed herself, after the lapse of ten years, to his, eyes, his sullen apathy gave way. 'She is in 'heaven," he cried, "and 1 shall soon be'lhere with her ;" and, with all the speed of which his limbs were capable, he tottered back ro'the upper air. The Dnty'df Democrats. We can cordially endorse the following articles from the Chambsrsburg Valley Sphil. We feel that as Democrats we had no part nor lot in bringing on this war, and that if our efforts to restore peace had been' met by a proper spirit on the other side, it might have been avoided ; but the war is here and must be fought through Let ns give a generous and hearty support to all measures to preserve our government and restore peace to'our distracted country -and and settle political differences aflerwardo. This is the only course the true patriot can pursue. The.Dott of Democ8ts. In the 'present awful condition of affairs in our beloved country it becomes the duty of every man to assume that position best calculated to allay excitement, and restore tranquility tb the nation, at the earliest possible period. Every hour of civil war in the land is one of ruin and horror. It behooves every man then, in these fearful times, to drop the partisan and become the patriot that a spee dy peace may be conquered. We need hardly admonish members of the Demo cratic party to give up for the time beirfE their party predilections and stand by the government under which they live, and which it is their bounden duty to support. This loyal position the Democratic party has ever maintained, and it will not now prove recreant to all its former devotion to the country by abandoning It. In assuming this attitude it requires no surrender of our political principles, no acknowledgement ot the rights of a sectional party in the North to invade the Constitutional rights of the South it requires no sacrifice of this j imprisonment at labor, not exceeding ten sort, it requires us simply to do our duty by ! yeers, and be fined in a sum not exceeding our Government. Let . us not imitate the five inousand dollars, or both, at the dis "bad example of the Republican party, cr ' crelion of the Court. the material out of which that party is com- j posed, by arraying ourselves against the I A Strange Delusion. A respectable la government in lime of war. They were ' dY of Albany applied, a few days since, to opposed to tha war of 1812, and denounced a physician, and staled to him the singular the government all through the Mexican circumstances of her caso. The lady in war, with a bitterness that knew no bounds, They voted against furnishing supplies to our soldiers, and hoped that our gallant soldiers might meet with 'hospitable graves.' There canno't be found a Democrat to utter as wicked a wish as this no not one. And yet this is the party that talk so fierce- ly of 'traitors' to the country in time of war. For consistency sake they had better rer - rait their patriotism become full-fledged j before they attempt such loyal flights. j Let us prove now, as the Democratic : party hai ever done, that we are better patriots than ihe Republicans. Let us j stand op for the government in pOwer and i not be found giving 'aid and comfort' to ' the enemy in time of war. Had this war occurred under a Democratic administra tion, as it might readily have done had it not been for the wise policy pursued by iir. tsucnanan, we wouia nave expec.ea the Republicans lo sustain the government. They can ask and expect nothing more and nothlno- less of us. If we are divided . among ourselves, and arrayed against 11 R government, it Will only create bad blood in me commamiy aim u mo eusci 01 . . i ' j i a i a a t prolonging the war and adding lo all its horrors. We want a short war, now that it his begun, and hope negotiations for peace on a basis satisfactory to all sections, may be speedily commenced and definitely de cided. It were belter to settle our difficul ty by diplomacy than the bayonet at all times and under all circumstances. This course it was hoped the present adminis tration would adopt and not plunge the conhtry into civil war, the most horrible, cruel and relentless of all wars. Il has, however, seen fit to accept the dreadful al ternative of war war against our own countrymen. This every lover of his coon try, and ol humanity, will regret ; but while he may deplore it, at the same time impo ses a duty upon him, from which it would be traitorous to shrink he must sustain the government under hhich he lives. It is the motto of all true patriots ray country, may it always be right, but right dr wrong, thy country. ' : ; I'rayer. ; ! bften say my prayers, ' " But do lever pray? Or do the wishes of my heart Suggest the words 1 say ! J may as well kneel down, 7 . And worship Gods of stone. As offer to the Living God, A prayet of words alone. - - i m m 0 m , A . C' " So far so good," as the boy said! Doom of Home Traitors. Xhe ronowin imnortant bill, "fixing e. : Tere penalties to the enlistment of men and the fining out of privateers to assist the f Secessionists,' was passed by both Houses our Legislature at Harnsburg and signed ' hy ,he Governor on Saturday, and is now a ''faw : An act supplementary to an act to con solidate, revise and amend the penal laws ' this Commonwealth, approved the thirty first day of March, Anno Domini one thou sand eight hundred and sixty. Section 1. Be it enacted &c , That If any person or persons belonging to or residing within this Ssate and under the protection of its laws shall fa"ke a commission or com missions from any person, State or States, or other enemies of this Stale or of the United States of America, or who shall levy war against this Siate'or Government thereof or knowingly and willingly shall aid or as sist any enemies'in open war against this Stale or the United Stales, by joining the armies, or by enlisting, or procuring 'or persuading others to enlist for that purpose or by furnishing such enemies with arms or ammunition, or any other articles for their aid and comfort, or by carrying on a traitor ous correspondence with them, or shall form or be in any wise concerned in form ing any combination or plot or conspiracy for betraying this Slate or the Uniietl Slates of America into the hands or power of any foreign 'enemy, or any organized or preten ded government engaged in resisting ihe laws of the United States, or shall give or send any intelligence to the enemies of this or of Ihe United States of America for that purpose, every person so offending and be ing legally convicted thereof, shall be guilty of a high misdemeanor, and shall be sen tenced to undergo an imprisonment for a I term not exceeding ten years, and be fined in a sum not exceeding five thousand dol lars, or both at the discretion of the Court. Provided, That this Act shall not prohibit any citizen from taking or receiving civil commissions for the acknowledgment of deeds and other instruments of writing. Sectiom.2. That if any person or persons within this Commonwealth shall build, con struct, altar or fit out, or shall aid or aseist in building, constructing, altering or fitting out any vessel or vessels for the purpose of making war, or privateering, or other pur pose, to be used in the service of any per son or parties whatsoever to make war on the United States of America, or to resist by force the execution of the laws of ihe United States, snch person or persons shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and on convic tion thereof, shall be sentenced to undergo question has lor many years been atflicied wilh an irresistible penchant for dnplica- ting everything she may have lo do. If he desires to go out, she does so, and then 88 carefully unrobes, folds her clothes and deposits them, in the place from whence they were kon after which, she can ; "dre8 acd proceed wherever inclination or 1 Business may lean ner. Having reached the termination of her walk, whether it be to the house of a friend, or the store, to make a purchase, she finishes her call or transacts her business, and returns home the same as any other person would do , but here, however, the synonym terminates; for no sooner does she reach home than the must im medially retrace her steps no matter whether the weather be fair or stormy, cold or warm. But this lime she is with .imply going to the door of , r ----- j " ! aSain return home, with the conviction lhat ' tha" ne haR done her du, or Pe'frmed ,he involuntary penance which some invis- -li.: . r ' . . I IDie power lias imposed upon uer. a:IBI I oamasi, ainner or supper, sue can exer ir . . l t l'ipc iiu f uiiuuii ui uei un 1. uiitii biics iidn . . . ' repeated, in pantomime, eacn uisiinci in pantomime, meal. If she steps to the door to answer j God bade me let go my hold, 1 was in des the bell, to witness some passing pageant f pair. But the Bank of Heaven had 1101 fail- or other display in the street, she must re turn to her room, sit down in the same position she has previously occupied, and again go the door in ihe same manner as he has done at first. If, in raising a cop of tear or coffee to her lips, by some acci dent it should fall from her hand the casu alty, slight as it is, mast be immediately repeated. Forty years once seemed a long and weary pilgrimage to tread, i: now seems bill a step. And yet along the way are broken shrines where a thousand hopes have wasted into ashes; foot prints sacred dnder their drifting dust; green mounds, whose grass is fresh with the watering of tears ; shadows even, which we would not forget We will garner the sunshines of those years, and with chastened step and Hopes, push on towards evening whose sig nal lights will soon be seen swinging where the waters are still, and the storms never beat. T. IV. Bro&n. fSTlt is said lhat "Old Abe" euchered the Baltemoreans. This is not so, bnt the facts are, that he saw their "hand" and merely said " Pan." The Baltlmorearts then gave him the "deal." CHusbahd: Mary.' roy ' loTe, .this Rock at The Bottom., - When my Willie was sixteen he acci dentally dropped a valuable watch into the well. His father was absent from home; and without consulting me, he resolved to j recover the treasure. 'Providing himself a j long handled rake, he gave it in charge to j his sister Jennie, iwo years younger, and bid her lower il to him when he called, he j stepped into the bucket and, holding fast . by the rope, commenced his dehcent. The bucket descended more rapidly thot Willie expected, and struck heavily against the j side bf the well ; the rope broke, and he J was thrown into the water. I "Mother, I shall be drowned !" was his ' despairing cry, which Jennie re-echoed coming day. All, all seemed to rest ; not a with a wail of anguish. . But I knew the gOU seemed to stir. Bnt did all rest 1 Oh depth ol the water, and .houted to him as n0 j There was one who slumbered not, camly as I could. "Stand upon your feet, j Biepl nol ; but ere long would sleep ne'er Willie ; the water isn't over four feet deep." ( again to wake until the trump cf the Arc'h "But 1 shall sink in the mud," said the , angel should wake the dead in earth and poor boy, still striving to keep himself sea, and bid them rise to meet the mighty afloat by clinging desperately to the slip- ' ju'die. Racked with'pain. and weakened pery stones. j Let go the stones and stand up." The assurance of a hard foundation, and the impossibility of holding much longer io , last, and sheltered him from the slorm of the slimy surface of the stone wall, gave terror, which often overwhelms, ere death him confidence. He felt for the rocky bot- j makes 6ure its victim. He died, and soon torn, placed his feet firmly upon it, and lo the grass will wave above his grave ; and his great joy fonnd (hat ihe water scarcely that silent mound, and ihose two marble reached to his shoulders. I sent Jennie to 'stones, placed there to mark his la?t rest the 'houe for a new strong rope, and fast- ing place will be all to tell us that once he ening one end of it securely I lowered the lived, and now reposes there beneath that other to him to be tied into ihe bucket, and sod. Oh! the silent but mighty eloquence we drew him safely up. j of the grave stones, what a sol men lesson "O mother !" said the dear boy when he : they teach us of the frailty of man, what a was rescued, "those were precious words deep sense of our own nothingness -per- to me "there t rock at Ike bottom J I shall , never forget them." Two years after, in a commercial panic. my husband's property was swept away, 1 and we were reduced to poverty. At first I bore bravely up. I did not prize wealth , and luxury for my own ake, neither did I ; covet it for my children. I chifly mourned i for my husband's disappointment as his crushed hooes, and strove Vv unflagging j cheerfulness to cha.e away the gloom which settled so heavily upon him. 1 en deavored to assist him, not only by the ut most economy in household expenses, but by devising plans for the future. Willie and Jennie were old enough to tarn their own support, and even to aasist in the edu cation of the younger children. I succeed ed in putting them in the way to do this. I felt strong and brave, and almost wondered el my husband's despondency. But new reveres. The baric in which Jennie had deposited her quarier's salary, which might partially meet our necessities, suddenly failed, and her money was lost. I could bear this too; she would sooi be able lo replace it. Next, the school in which she taught was dif banded, and Jen- niehad to 'take much lower wages ; but she still earned a little, and I said cheer- fully, "We will not murmur; half a loaf i better than no bread." Next Willie's hand was disabled by an accident, and he lost his situation. My courage began to give way; but rallying myself for one more ef- ! fort, I resolved 10 brave the reproaches of friends and ihe world's dread laugh, and seek remunerative employment for myself, It sorely tried my womanly delicacy, yet it brought the needful aid, and I battled with my wounded sensitiveness, and aa'n screwed up my failing courage. But the , laM blow came ; sickness suddenly .laid me 1 prostrate. "1 shall give up now ; we must all sink together !" was the language of my despairing soul. ''Dear mother," said Willie, when he heard my lamentation, "do you remember what you said to me when I was at ihe bot tom of the well ? I have often thought of it of late. I know we are in deep waters, but God has promised thai they shall not ,-v..... , - j foundation ! Let us plant our feet upon j bis promises, and stand firmly. We cannot i sink, for 'there's rock at the bottom.'" I u 1 .-!.. I I . ... L . uearu aim tuus. iue ieauu iu my uean. II .i..tujv i : . l . i : - ; aw mai i nau ueeu ci.ngmg 10 uie up : yci v riuiica ui iiuuiaii ciicwxiu ami pchuo" . , , , ,1 i penaence ; ana so, wnen ine proviaence oi ed ; God was able to redeem his promises ; and though I stood in deep water it should not overwhelm me, neither should 1 cink, for "there's rock at the bottom." So Irorh ihe chamber where pain and illness still hold me prisoner, I send to each burdened and weary child o? God, who is tempted to feel lhat all is lost, the key-note of my new and greatful psalm, whatever your sorrow br strait my be, plant your feet trustingly upon the Rock of ages, and with me, ' thank God and take courage." Amer ican Messenger. Politkwess. Politeness is a redeeming part, in a persons character. It is the most beautiful illustration ol the refining power which a higher development of humanity always exerts upon our race. - By polite ness is meant that behavior of man towards man that he would ask for himself It is but a part of the mode of carrying out the great Christian precept which lies at the base bf order and harmony among men. ''Do unto others as you would that others as shonld do unto you." Do what we may in life, the wheels of society car. never move smoothly and well., where the spirit of politeness does nol actuate the thoughts and deeds of man in his intercourse with lints on the Death of W. A. Scott. 'by a jriend. The day had e'or.e The bright sun, that great luminary that shines so brightly and so sweetly down upon ns, that warms and enlivens the earth, that cheers the heart of man in 'his'pilgrimage 'through life, and makes the earth a pleasant dwelling-place for him, had slowly sunk behind the clouds that obscured the western horizon. The night came on apace, and darkness veiled the land. All nature seemed at'rest, Man wearied with the toils of the day had "joy fully hailed the return of night, and early J retireil toffil hi8 body for the labors of the i to utter helplessness, ho lay on the borders eternity, the grave would soon close o'er him, he feared it not ;the Rock upon which his hopes were founded stood firm to the vades our frames, as we gaze upon the in scriptions which they bear; they tell as perhaps of one stricken down in the vigor of youth, as was my friend, cut off by the hand of death, when promises of a long and happy life were set before him, but he is gone; freed from the toils, trial, and troubles of earn. We trust he is in Heaven, where sufferings never enter and where sorrow is unknown 'Tis hard 10 die, he said, 'Tis hard to leave my friends, But soon in Heaven, I'll see The joy that never ends. Dot to Avoid a Bad ffasband. Never marry a man for wealth. A wo man's life consintelh not in the things she poceseeth. Never marry a fop, or one who struts about dai:dy.like in his silk gloves and ruf fles, with a silver headed cane and rings on his fingers. Beware ! there is a trap. Never marry a niggard, a close fisted, wretch, who saves ever penny, or spends it grudgingly. Take care lest he stint you to death. Never marry a stranger whose character : " nol Known or tested, aome leraa.es j jamf ri8hl inl ths fire wilh ,heir ei68 open. Nevr marry a mope or a drone one ! who and draggles through life, one foot after another, and let things take their own course. Never marry a mar. who treats his moth er or sister unkindly or indifferently. Such j treatment is a mre indication of a mean and wicked man. Never on any account, marry a gambler or a profane person, one who in the least speaks lightly of God or religion. Such a ! ma" canever make a good husband Never marry a sloven, a man who is negligent of his person or his dress, and is fiiihy in his habits. The external appear ance is an index to the heart. Shun the rake as as snake, a viper, a very demon. ' "c C1 J - ; l ' & breath is polluted;and.hoise vitals are be ing gnawed out by alcohol. A Nobik Horse Grant Thornburn says: "1 once saw a horse in the neighborhood ot New Vork drawing a load of coal, twelve hn,UI In r9n. Th Un. wc . - - very narrow, the driver, some distance behind, was conversing with a neighbor The horses, on a slow walk came up to a child sitting on his hi:id quarters in the middle of the road, gathering up dust with his hands, and making mountains out of mole hills. The horse stopped he smell ed bf the child there was no room to turn off. With his thick lips he ga'hered the frock between his teeth, lifted the child and laid him gently on the outside of the wheel track and "went on his way rejoicing." And well might he rejoice he had done a noble deed." Provisions Plenty. At ihe beginning of operations at Camp Curtin, Harrisburg, the commissariat was somewhat confused and defective. The people of Berks county hearing this, yesterday forwarded fifteen tons of provisions for the soldiers from lhat region. We are gratified to learn that the Commissary Department is now on a good footing. Several hundred tons of haras, beans and crackers have arrived, the gro ceries and warehouses have an abundance of flour, and the butchers are receiving cattle by the car load from the West. EF"The boy who undertook to snck an egg-plant and was choked by the yolk, has recovered. American Fall Scenery, There can be nothing more beautiful in nature than an American scenery when it begins to show the effects of the gentle touch of autumn, or of the fall a- we prefer to call it in spite of Englieh loxicographers, for the sake cf the tender associations em bodied in the idea of the fall of the leaf England has her dowy spring. "When birds be merry and shawes the . green," t but the glorious of our ( American autumn are unrivalled, incomparable. Visit fhe couutry upon some bright morning in Oc ,uu"' J"cro uern a ni ,roM rfady' antl !he B,ubb,e fie,d bare down tober. There has been a slight frost al- on their suit of sober brown. Alons the lands we discover a thousand touching and lovely indications that autumn has alreadjr begun to irail 'her garments among as stately, but most wealthy and rewarding qneen. She has plucked the leaves of the grapes, and has here and there touched the leaves of the maples with her wiue-stained fing ers. The cock quail calls up. his mates at evening through the tall weeds to ihe mat ted 'purple brambles, and down swoops tb keen-eyed hawk, like Satin, "seeking whom he may devour." The maize fields topped and stripped, assume a dull, dead yellow, touched here and there with mil dew, and giving no token of the wealth and plenty that bear down their faithful stalks. Apples shine bright and rosy in k the orch ards, hall hidden among the green leave?, jike the blushe..5of merry damsels that the would conceal behind their veils, or among their dancing curls. The woodcock dips his long bill into ihe mud of the swamps', levying taxes upon worm-nature, the plo ver jifts his shrill 'plaintive voice at morn and even ; the kildee sails erratic by, and flashes on your dazzled eye the snowy white of his bosom. Heavy and green hang the chesuut burs, touching already with gold, but waiting for a black frost to practice its obstetric arts nponjlhem. Mes sieurs Squirrels have deserted the corn fields, and are new exceedingly busy lay ing by their winter -tores, filling np their poachy cheeks, and skarrying. to the right and left froraj every hickory tree. On the rivers, the wild ducks begin to make their appearance, and the pulpy medasae sink down out of sight till the waters shall grow warmer again. The buc-bes i:i the woods are all full of sloes ard baws red and waxy. Many flowers are gone, the queens and lords cf the floral realm have passed away, but some very dear ones still lend ns their hues and fragments. Every garden is beautiful with autumn crocus hangs out her yeflow flag ; the wild mine flowers and. ihe wild thyme furnishes eager bets with, dainty flavoring essences from their drain ing bells. The harebells sway with each breeze, "In the maiden meditation,;fancy free.,", and the brown'sod emulates the ripe gram fields of July. Still reigns the dahlia, lord of the garden though some of the petals may be black -tipped with Jrost marks sunflowers droop their sun-drunken faces over the hedges, like broad visaged farmer's boys of a Sunday, loaning over a gate hollyhocks lend their rich luxuriance of color here and there to enliven the scenes and everywhere chrysanthemums rear themselves, proud at once ot iheir beauty and their hardihood. And, oh ! the glories, the various, rich, picturesque glories of the kingly forests Gaze upon them at mid day, when the air is mild and melting ; when a faint bluo veil of baze settles around the horizon, an gives a languid, soft, south-' ern dreaminess to the landscape, out cf which the woods come of your eyes, steal ing out in all their gorgeousness of color, as Cieopatra might have aroused herself from the noontide "slumber, and come forth to bless her Anthony with ripe frnity kisses. The birches meet you with gifts of yellow gold, glowing in ihe quivering air, with diaphancons, amber like, splendor the oak's dark green in spots has put on a fa ded, dreary yel!ow that ofWta finely &e ' pine tree's sombre green, and elm's tall and Abronqnin solemnity. Crimson and green berries deck the thick undergrowth, white the ground itself, brown and yellow with drying leaves, is ali decked out with ten thousand fungi, of every hue, from milky white to all shades of crimson, lo chocolate brown, and tumeric gaudy yellow and varnish striking blue old dame Na ture's gewgaws, these, which she puts on to conceal the ravages of age. , And the ashes all dripping wilh crimson dyes, ana hang about them like gouts ot blood; and the red flecked dogwood, once so pearly white in spring, and, oh ! the maples, the gorgeous maples bf the lowlands, glowing: at noonday, flaming at sunset as if they had stolen the very Promethian fire, and would, rival ihe sun himself in painting let( tho eye revel npon these mingled and sweetly painted splendors, talcing in at. once th artistic perfectness of harmony 'twixt hill and valley, field and forest, plain and up land, land and sky, and it cannot fail to feel, with entranced rxstbetic consciousness! that the autumn, the perfect American au tumn, il is the loveliest time of the yeari (FA great poet say lhat "the moun tains stand fixen forever." We know, however, lhat it is no uncommon thing for them to 4 slope." . CF'What is the difference lietween a Per sian and a Turk ! One worships the sun and the other the daughter. -. rr