! m r 1 1 c : 0 1 J STAR . .: t . 17. U. JACOB!, Proprietor. : : ; ; ; Truth and Right -God and our Couiitry. Two Dollars per Annua. VOLUMH 13. 13LOOMSI3URG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, FA., WEDNESDAY OCTOEER 30, 1861. NUMBER 43. 'STAR OF THE NORTH t ; ) PUBLISHED XTXRT WDIfX3DlT BT'. ' ' . . ' jn. jai'obt, . 'Office on SIclB St., Ir'tf Square DeluwiarKet. , - TERMS: Two Dollars per annum if paid within fix months from the time "of 6nbscri bing : two dollars and fifty cents if not paid I -VFilhir. th TPar Nn anhLirintihn Ml'on f.Vr. a leas period than six months; no disco rt t tinnances permitted until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the editor. The let ms of advertising Moill be as follows: .One square, twelve lines, three times, $1 00 Every subsequent insertion, . 25' One square, three months, . . . -. ... 3 00 ;Oneyear, .. . . 8 00 HOIST ID CITIES AXD STRIFES. Hoist the Stars and Stripes! t ' ' March as ye unfold 1 , , i A projder banner ne'er could float,. . Were it made of gold. Hoist the Stars and Stripes T Let it take the wind ; .-.. Slumbering in their musty fuliTs Colors grow bedimm'd. . . Hoist the Stars and Stripes ! Does there live the man, Who born beneath the silver shide, Would not lead its van J -Hoist the Stars and Sir i pes !.',-' Make the tyraui kneel ! Kneeling make him own the shame, His burning soul must feel. f Hoist. the Star and Stripes!. Powers irom above Sanction it, meet emblem of ' Life, Liberty and Love. Growing White in a Siasle MgM. At the late meeting of the British Asso ciation at Manchester, Dr. J. Davy read a paper 'On the Question whether the Hair is or is not subject to Change in Color." It is thus abridged and reported . . The popular notion is decidedly in favor of the afiirncative, and many naturalists and "physiologists have come to the same con clusion. They adduce instances , of the change of the hair to white or gray, in the case of perrons under strong emotions of 'grief or terror. Halter, in his 'Elementa Physiologice," refers lb eight authorities for - examples ot such changes; but all that 'he seems to admit for himself is that under the influence of impaired health such a change hiay take place slowly. Marie Antoinette was cited by favors of the popular notion a"s a striking and well authenticated instarice ; but when fairly -considered, the 'case came under the condition admitted by Haller. Had it teen possible for .mental emotion' whether ot terror or of grief, to render hair 'suddenly gray; surely in the Qneen's case - the change should have been witnessed at an eatlier period than that of the arrest ot thet Royal Family in their attempt to leave France., If such a sudden change could be presumed, might we not expect to witness it in soldiers engaged in an active campaign amidst all the dangers and horrors of war ? He had himself examined thaasan Ji of sol diers, men prematurely worn out in various cliraaiesndcoccenied 'in! many; hard fought battle many' of them grievously wounded but he never' met with an in stance of the kind. The case of a rebel 1 Sepoy is stated by Dr.Laycock, in the April ! number of the "British and Foreign Medico Chirurgical Review," on the authoriiy of Surgeon Parry, it being said that the man's hair changed from black to gray in half an hour. He was undoubtedly under the be lief that he would be condemned to death. Might not this be the explanation? The rnan was hurried,' in,' profusely perspiring ; tie was naked, and cooling and drying rap Ully, his hair, previously gray, being dark ened by moisture, resumed its natural color. The effect of war in intensifying color is well known, and a further circumstance in aid of the explanation given tnay be found in the fact that the natives of Bengal are in the habit of staining their hair." The '-Transactions' of the- Royal Society,' extending over 200 years, do not contain an instance of such change in the color of the hair, a circumstance opposed' to ; tb.9 conclusion that it ever took place, forbad it ever been undoubtedly witnessed, it is not likely that it would have remained undescribed. The author is not aware that, Irrespective of recorded evidence, anything in support of the popular notion can be adduced on physiological grounds Human haircannot be injected. Using coloring fluids such as a solution of nitrate of silver and a solution of iodine, the author has not observed any change ef color, except in the portions ac tually immersed. 'Whether "it" owes its col or "to a fixed ,oit,;to a peculiar arrangement of its constitutional molecules, or to both, it resists decay in a remarkable ' manner; it resists the action of acids and alkalies, ex- - cept the strongest, which dissolve it. . It re sists maceration, and even boiling water, except continued lor a long time, under pressure, when it suffers disintegration and decomposition.'. Exposure to the sun will bleach hair.bot this will not account for any Very sudden change of color. Supporters of the popular opinion relet to changes ia the plumage'of birds, such as the ptarmi gan, and in the hair pi certain ; quadrupeds, each, as the mountain f bare and ermine which become white towards' winter, and of adarker hue ivben'ia th' winter is pass ed. The belief is rested on, that this is not caused ty .faoulting, or a chasge Of coats, , but that if takes place ia.the exi&ting feath er and hatr. But there" is no 'satisfactory, evidence of such changes and considering 13 qs iV.'Aes of toth,; they; seem most im. probable Tnere is good proof that ia - the ptarmigan the change is decidedly connect ed with moaUin'j atlaasttueh is ita eu lhor' .dedd impression from inspecting the numerous specimens, shot at -different "season's, belonging'1 io Mr. Gould which 'eminent ornithologist says that the "ptar migan is always moulting," the changes being firm brown in the -summer to speck- eld in the autumn, and white in the winter. e speckled leather?, few and large, over lap the white ; and as soon as those are shed, the bird appears in its white dress. The similar change amongst quadrupeds most probably arises from the same cause ; and example., less striking than those amongst wild animals, can be observed in cases of the horse and the cow. Prof. Kol lesion, of Oxford, had given to the author a portion of the hair of a pony which has been observed to change its coat from taw ny to nearly white in winter. )Ir. Erasmus Wilson, whoadvocater the popular doctrine, refers to the case of a lemming in support of his views; but Mr Blyth, a naturalist, says he examined a lemming killed during its autumnal change, and satisfied 'himself that "the white hairs were all new, and not he brown changed in 'color." There are reaoons why it might 'be expected that the summer coat and plumage should be dark er than thoe of the winter. The author concludes that "whether we consider One side of the question or the oth er the 'human evidence so questionable, the physiological so much more reliable the idea cf fallacy is unavoidable, as to the hair being Subject to sodden change of col or from 'mental iropres'sion. 1he attempt made to explain such a change by physio logists are allowed to be complete failures ; and phenomenon dn 'other grounds than those of fallacy. The author, when on for eign service, knew" an assistant whom he visited a fortnight or three weeks subse quently. The patient hair, before brown, had became grey ; but w'hen he called at tention to the fact, the regime ntkl surgeon simply said, "Yofcr surprise will cease, when you know that has. since he has been afflicted with his malady, discontinued dyeing his hair." When we consider'how prone the hair of serine perons is to turn gray at an early age, 'even wiihodt accora panying or proceeding bodily ailment, and bow many would wish to conceal this blem ish, and so have recourse to chemical means, it is easy to imagine that this source of error. may not be unirequect. Nor should it be overlooked that there is a disposition in some to make statements merely for the sake of exciting momentary surprise, or of acquiring ephemeral notoriety. If we con sult the records of imposition and delusion, we shall find many a thing attested, and for a time believed, of a marvellous a kind as the sudden Whitening 'Of the human hair. Has not witchcraft liad its defenders Have act tabletorning, clairvoyance, and spirit rapping had believers? Have there not been even physiologists who have given their credence to spontaneous combussion of the human body, and to equivocal gener ation ? '. The Headless Horse. Bt THE OLD 'CN. ', During the occupation of Boston by Brit ish troops, the military regulations enforced by the British commander were, it is well "known, very revere. The inhabitants were not permitted to be aboard after 9 o'clock in the evening without a special permit, and at that hour all lights were required to be extinguished. The streets were patrol led to see that the order bad been obeyed, the sentinels were posted, and then, as there were no street lamps, darnkness reign ed through the town, broken occasionally When a shell traversed the air in a parabol ic curve, shedding its baleful radiance like a meteor on a murky night. The armed occupants of Boston were by no means easy In thetr 'quarters the patri ots were gathering around them, and pro visions became 'extremely scarce.. After Lexington, and Concord, and Bunker Hill, the high spirits of the British army Were broken,' and though Burgojne wrote farces, and his staff enacted them in Faneuil Hall, there wa nothing farcical in their position. When British officers promenading on Bea con Hill fancied they heard bullets from air guns whizzing around their ears, and took to their heels in a panic terror, the common soldier might well be pardoned lor being ia a state of tonstabt perturbation. Tbey were almost as much afraid of invisible en em ies as the Puritans were of un een spirits of "evil. They lived in a land of witchcraft, and be&an to believe that the old colonial superstitions had their foundation in jact. One night a squad of patrol under the command of a non-commissioned Hessian officer, were marching through .Common Street,' on their way to their quarters on Fox. Hill, on the Common.' ' It was a hazy star light night, and the dark houses and trees were fused in a mass' of shadb. Sud denly a white object was observed moving toward thera in tha street. , ' "Halt! who goes there V1 cried the Hes sian. ' ' There was bo reply. "Ready--men; present 1" cried the officer-, but his parched throat a.nd trembling lips refused to frame the word "fire V for mov ing past hirh noiselessly 'and awfully, be beheld n' headles, .horfe, , hi , long tail streaming in the night air. ' Did "yba see it l'he' .whispered id his men. Vea they, all saw-it and the way .the squad scrambled to camp- was a caution. They said not a word of theit adventure; but they all felt lhat the .vision- portended evil perhaps daath to thi.bshb!JerV ' : Acliht or two tfterwirJi asothe party saw the same apparition. This time the headless horse was galloping furiously thro' the street, but though he seemed a heavy animal full '"fijleeri hinds 'high, 'his hoofs made no noise upon the ground and struck no'fire from the flints. The 'spectre was seen by sotae'bf 'the inhabitants, too, aid now nothing was "talked of but the headless horse. And ridw the apparition appeared nightly anil always at the same hour. It whs for n ally reported to General Gage. "The foul fiend has got into the heads of bur TeU'oWi!" he exclaimed angrily. "Every one seems tb have lost their benses. Th re is a spell in thi rebel air. I don't know whO'ihvented thi story, but I'm determined to silt it to the bottom." That very evening, wrapped in his clonk, the General took post not far from wlmre the Park Street Church 'now stands. He had not:beeh waiting lorig,'when a white object came gliding rapidly towards him He advanced into the street, to get a nea-er vieiy-'and to bis astonishment beheld a headless white horse gliding slowly past him. A strange erriotton took possess on of him; he thought of the pale horse in R sv .elalions, and ha wondered no longer tiat his soldiers had been frighteneJ. Recover ing his presence of mind, he cocked t.ud fired his 'pistol at the retreating object Though he covered it well, the animal vn ished unharmed. The discharge cf the pistol created an alarm, which, howe er, was soon quieted; and life general rte ver assigned the real reason for 'hi s'fi ring. .In due time the British evacuated Bo on, and the American army under Gen. Wash ington entered and took possession. One night a group of soldiers and citizens were assembled in the bar room of the Green Dragon, discussing the plans of the campa'gft. "Say what you will,'' paid one, the British troops have got pluck that you j can'tdeny." j 'Pshaw!" said a '6rie:eyed man wi h a ! quizzical expression of countenance, "ho j had hitherto taken no'part in the discourse, I "I wouldn't give much for their pluck. I j know its easy to ekeer 'em without tr-ing : very hard either. During the blockade, I me arid Bill Sage played 'em a trick that ! made some talk if riot more. I've get an ; old white horse that! keep in a staol on 1 the Neck and BNl lives up on Copp' hill, i Well, we o.ed to take the hoss to Bill sin ih dav time never fed him there mini 'Bout nine o'cloclc me osed to put his l ead ! in a black bag, tie felt on his hoofs-he didn't have no shoes and start him out. j Ol course the critter nosed his way strr-'ght home to his fodder. Hang me if the scgers didn't think ho was a headless horsj a right down ghost! skeered 'em enyraost to i do, require more tpace than my limits will j would then be as beneficial as it is now too death. Bimeby they got to firin' hosa pis- ! allow ; for I am convinced lhat most of the J often mischievous-ranting clergymen would tola at him, and I was feared iheyM hit him kinds of fish which inhabit the tropical seas devote themselves to their proper vocation so I took him off the track, t expect Gen. ; can be found there. The sun-fish, saw-fish, j 'of the care of souls, instead of bewildering Washington thinks it was his blteri"s on ' star-fish, white shark, ground shark, blue j themselves and others In politics and thus Dorchester Heights that druv the redroats ' or shovel-nose shark, were olten seen. j public sentiment and public conduct might out of town, tut if the truth Was knowd, it ; There were also fish "which resembled be essentially enlightened, raised and re would lurn out that they was druv off t y an j plants, and remained as fixed in their posi-1 fined. old whire boss with his bead in a lack j tiou as a shrub. The only power they J k 'j Inn.MMP.I r mWn and shut when in I As Indian Romance. Among the Sikh Whether history is wrong or right upon this point, the "oldeBt inhabitants" asiured me that such was the true history f the Headless Horse of the days of the bloc tade. Flog of our Union. Discovery of a Long-lost nusl'anJ. The recent visit of the British Channel Fleet to tie Clyde, it is said to have ;ed to the following singular discovery : Among the visitors to one of the flag bbips was a respectable lady of middl j age, who made the circuit of the sights on board with the usual feeling of wonder ai d de light. On passing hurriedly along the tiain deck she was much struck at encountering a look from a man, One of tha hands of the noble ship, whose face was familiar t her, so much so, indeed, that she was 01 the point of speaking to him even belor hav ing time to think who he might be, lint he suddenly slunk away as if to avoid recog nition. A tew moments reflection convinc ed her that the man she had seen was no other than one who, nearly twenty years before, had been her sweetheart, though she afterwards had married another. Hap pening to mention the circumsiarw e to a friend on returning home, it came oat that the man in question had sailed from Green ock some fifteen years ago, leaving behind him a wile and two children, and had no: since been heard of, and, in fact, hal been mourned a dead. The supposed idow had struggled successfully with p tverty, bringing her son and daughter up ii. hum ble respectability; and being still in town, it was resolved to acquaint her of hv.r hus band's whereabouts, and accordingly she was called upon with this object. At first she regarded the statement as a f.cti n, but began 10 think it might be true, and accord ingly she lost no time in hastening on board the ship, taking along With i er, her son and daughter, and credentials of her marriage. She explained her misuon to some bf the officers, who directed but what course to pursue, and, true enough, the dis covered her long lost husband in on of the crew of the ship. There was a distention at first, oo bit part, to, preserve an ini ognito, but it was of no avail, and he &oon admit ted bis relationship; and the affair resulted, we are told, in the commander otd'eMn i per month to be paid t in future t? t ie wife out Of her husband's earnings,1 together with a portion of prize money, .which tras due to him, an arrangement which now contin ues In force. It appears that the a an had been in the' nary for the last ten years, but i HOW ue cazno k - auauuwu aim ian nj ou 1 ool been explained. j Bottom of the Ocean. Mr. Gredr.e, the famous diver tells singu lar stories of his adventures, when making search in the deep Waters of the ocean. He gives some sketches of what lis saw on the Silver Banks riear'Hayti : "The banks of coral on which' my divings j were made, are about forty miles in length, and from ten to twenty in breadth. On i!i:s bank of coral is presented to the diver one of the most beautilul and sublime scenes the eye ever beheld. The water varies from ten to one hundred feet in depth, and is so clear that the diver can see from two to three hundred feet, when sub merged, with little obstruction to the sight, j The bottom of the ocean, in many places on these banks, is as smooth as a Marble floor, in others it is studded with coral col umns, from ten to one hundred leel in height and from one to eighty feet diameter. The top of those more lofty support a myriad of pyramidal pendants, each forming a myriad more, giving the realily to the imaginary abode bf some water nymph: In other pla ces the pendants form arch after arch, and as the diver stands on the bottom of the occean, and gazes through these into the deep winding avenue, he feels that they fill him with as Bacred an awe as "if he were in some old cathedral, which had long been buriecl beneath "old ocean's wave." Mere and there, the coral extend even to the sur face of the water, as if those loltier columns were towers belonging to the stately tern p!e. now in ruins There were countless varieties of 'diminutive trees, shrutis and plants, in every crevice of the corals where the water had deposited the least earth. Yhey were all of a faint hue, owing to the pale light they received, although of every shade, and entirely dirTerei.t from plants I am familiar with, that vegetate upon dry land. One in particular attrac.ed my atten tion ; it refembled a sea-fan of immense tiize. variegated colors, and of the rno.-t bril liant litis. The fih which inhabited those silver banks, I found as different in kind, as the scenery was varied. They were of all forms, colors and size from the symmet rical goby, to the globe like sunfish ; from those ol the dullest hue, to the changeable dolphin ; from ihe spots of the leopard to the hues of the sunbeam ; from the harm less minnow to ihe voracious shark. Some had heads like squirrels, others like cats and g8 "c ol !u,rt" lAO - ii -: , .'.. I boll terrier. Some darted through the water ,ike "hile otheis could scarcely be Been to move- To enumerate all the various Vinds of fth I beheld while diving on ihese banks, would, were I enough of a naturalist solo , danger. Some Of them resembled the rose j in full bloom, and were of all hues. There were ribbon fish, from four to five inches, to three feet in length. Their eyes were very Urge, protrude like those of the frog. Anothar fish was spotted like the leopard, from three to ten feet in length. They build their houses like the beaver, in which they spawn, and 'he male or female watch es the ova till it hatches. I saw many spe- i cimeiu of the green turtle, some five leel Ions, which I should think would wei"h from four to five hundred pounds. Thk Climatk In the Southwest. No Christian, and established a mission on his more delightful season of the year could be : own estate. Sweeping away, at a stroke, selected lor a campaign than the latter part the prejudices of a thousand years, he in ot October and the whole of November. ! troduced his wife into society, and allowed With rare exceptions, the air is balmy but her to appear in public and the officials, hazy; there is little or now snow, and very j fop,once heartily cordial to a native, threw litlle rain. Even the nights are not often as ! asi.'e prejudices as rooted as his own, and cold as they are in Philadelphia Indian recommended that the Rajah should receive summer lasts full twenty days longer in ! officially, precedence in Oude. The Gov- Middle and Southern Ken ncky, in Southern Missouri, in Eastern Virginia, and the ; whole of Tennessee and North Carolina, t than it doej in Pennsylvania. If there is poetry in those regions, it is when "the melancho'y days have come " and when the serene breezes float amid the "sere and yellow foliage" ol those regions. The people themselves have poetized it by 'calling it "Iialy transferred." The chest expands under the. air, the lungs inhale it with the profoundest satisfaction, until the whole being seems renewed and reinvigor ated. Should, however, the campaign be pro tracted into late December or into January, it will become a most fear.'ul task to move men in bodies or transport munitions of war to any extent beyond the immediate line of turnpikes and railroads. The mere country roads in all those Stales named above, with the exception of North Carolina, (and lhat exception is caused by the sandy nature of the oil,) are most infamous. Their bad ness is occasioned by the utter Want of sys tem in keeping them ir. repair and by the light, loamy, spongy character of the soil. Rain will penetrate and saturate it for weeks during the . wittier. In the summer it is particularly ' dry. Thi' characteristic does not hold good in all the States, but it will be found to be very generally, true, and will be found worthy of consideration ere long. What i the difference between a school master and au engine driver i One trains Abolitionists and Fort Lafayette. We respect to a suggestion that such in cendiary persons as Reverends Cheever and Beecher should be eent to Fort Lafayette, and such incendiary -journals as the Boston Liberator, the New York Tribuiij, the Ni-liotiiilAiti-Slaieiy Stat'iliird,ihe Chicago Tii Lutie and the New York Independent should be suppressed by the Government, the Bos ton Courier offers some practical remarks Surely these newspapers and reverend persons, with their confederates, stand on the very outer edge of flat rebellion itself; indeed, they are as inveterate foes of any thing possible to be called a Union of States as the rnobt inveterate Secessionists, be- cause they openly declare they will have no Union except on their own terms, which are out' of the question. It is evident that the time must come when something must be done with them but the question is, vhen and how 1 In our judgement nothing would tender so much to the public welfare, by the settle ment of public opinion, as the prosecution of those pestilent newspapers and parsons. We desire to see neither mob law, nor any arbitrary proceeding applied to them by the Government. We are firmly for freedom of speech and of the press, according to the fundamental provisions of the Constitution, and because any thing 6hort of this is total ly inconsistent with the whole theory and practice of public and private liberty. But in order that this liberty of speech and of writing shall not become licentious, it is necessary to define it and teep it within the bounds of justice and reason. In a free country, of all others, this is most necessary. Where there is the greatest temptation to licentiousness and opportunity for it, there it is most necessary that the ill disposed should be most held under wholesome re strain!. We have suffered amazingly in this coun try for want ol a sounder public sentiment on this subject. Nothing could regulate this so well as solemn and formal judicial pro ceedings. We propose, iherelore, that the parties in question be properly indicted and . , . . - I . I r . I ' . . t ; 1 urougnno iria.,ener.ur u.e.r as disturbers of 'he oubltc peace ana saletv. ! -- 4 -s By thorough investigation of the true prin ciple of Republican institutions at the bar, and by the solemn adjudication of a learned bench, let the case of these culprits be de termined. As the result, if found guilty, let a sufficient fine and suitable imprisonment be awarded enough to stop them effectu ally, and to check Others inclined in like manner to offend. We should Itijs soon put men of more discretion and of a higher lone in the management of the press, which ! Cobles who, at the outset of the mutiny I staked thir heads on the British side, was i the Kajah ot Kupoorthuita. tie was not a . very great man, but he haa influence, ana no Englishman could have risked his status, purse, and person, with more hearty and unquestioning loyalty, lie helped to yuard the Northern Delhi road, ihen the key of our position: and when had beer, restored the Governor General, casting aside the old policy of meagre rewards, raised him by a sin!e gift of land to the wealth of a yreat English noble. Tha Rajah married an East India girl, became, under her influence, a ! enmr General consented, and at the apex of the new social system of UuJe stands a na tive Christian noble, and ihe only woman in India for whom the Guards turn out in the British Provinces, is the Christian 'Lady of Kupoorthulla ' London Pupcr. Coffee Beaten id a Mortar. It is not generally known that coffee which has been beaten is better than that which has been ground. Such however,is the fact ; and in his brief article on the subject, Savant! ives wiiat he considers the rea sons lor the difference. As he remarks, a more decoction ol green coffee is a rnosi in sipid drink, but carbonisation develops the aroma, and an oil, which ia the peculiarity of the coffee we drink Hi agrees with other writers, lhat the Turks excel in this. They employ no mills, bet beat the berry with wooden pestles in mortars. When long used, these pestles become precious; and bring great prices. He determined by actual experiment which of the twO rneth od was the best- He burned carefully a pound of good Mocha, and separated it into two equal portions. The one was passed through the mill the other beaten after the Turkish fashion in a mortar- He made cof fee .of each. Taking equal weights of each, and pouring on an equal weight of boiling water, he treated them both precisely alike. He tasted the coffee himself, and caused other competent judges to do so. The unan imous opinion was, that coffee beaten in a mortal was fat better than that gronnd in a . Cheap Food. .... ... . . In these times especially, some lessons of economy ma)', or should be learned by all. At the usual market prices, beans "are rela tively cheaper than any other article of diet, corn excepted, perhaps. Beans combine the nourishment of both grain and meat, and they should enter more largely'inio 'consumption. Good housekeepers should learn how too cook them palatably. Any method is defective, that leaves the beans unbroken. Whether boiled or baked, or baked, or both, they should be o thorough ly cookedis io fall to pieces. Usually they are prepared lor the table to dry. But ail the beans raised this year, will propably be needed for army use, and command good prices. Com should therefore b9 more largely resorted to. A bushel of ccrn yields nearly a much nourishment as a bushel of wheat, while the latter will sell for two or three times as much ready money. But there is a prejudice against corn, or corn meal, arising mainly irom want of skill in preparing it. . We have published many methods, and will continue to give others from lime to time. What we now suggest is, that housekeepers who are disposed to be economical (and who are not?) should overhaul their receipe books, and the back numbers of ilia Jgncallurist and other jour nals they may have preserved, a::d try the various methods of cooking com and com meal. When they hit upon any prepara-r lion that appears to give general satisfac tion, make a note of it, and there will soon be found a variety cf methods that may pretty nearly fill np a week, and still afford a daily change that will be agreeable. Let it be understood 'hat your are studying econ omy, and many diahesthat would be reject ed in ordinary times will become accepta ble to the heads of the family. We believe in ihe doctrine that children should be taught to always eat what their parents do, or rather what is set before them, without questioning or wrinkling bf the face. This pa.npering of the appetite, and allowing children to express their likes and dislikes, and be gratified in their whims, is the worst possible training and the sure way to make lhem unhappy afterward. A child may be taught to always be happy, and to enjoy any meal that circumstances may place before him in all his future life. We forget to name dried peas among the cheap foods. Though not quite as nourish ing as beans, they are very good and pala table when rightly cooked, and they afford good nutriment more cheaply than meat or wheat flour They need to be soaked in cold water until quite soft, and can then be treat ed art when green ; the addition of a little sugar will improve them, and give a taste more nearly like the green vegetable. Pea sonp is quite palatable, and is made by boiling the soaked peas in sufficient water for the quanty of soup required, then mash about one third of them and stir them iti the broth. Add butler anJ salt and pepper to suit the taste. Ameiican Agriculturist. Things That 1 Have Scen. I have seen a farmer build a house so large and fine that the sheriff turned him out of doors. I have seen a young man sell a goo. I farm, turn merchant, break and die ia an insans hospital. I have seen a fanner travel about so much th.it Hit re was nothing at home worth looking after. I have seen a rich man's son begin where his father off wea'thy ; and eud where his father bea:i penniless. 1 hae seen a wrr hy farmer's son idle away years of the prime of his life, in dissi pation, and end his career in tha poor house. I have seen the disobeaience of a son "brins ilowa the grey hairs of his father lo tho grave." A certatt highly rheiciful Judge had con clude! the trial of a man for murder, by sen tencing him to be hung lhat veryday. A pe tition 'vas immediately signed by the bar, Jury and people, praying lhat longer lima mijht be granted the puur pruuner. no repl ed to the peli:ion lhat "the man had been found guilty ; that the jail wis very unsafe, and besides, it was so very uncom fortable he did not think that any man ought to be required lo stay in it longer than was necessary." And his honor's ideas of hu manity were promptly carried out. liShall I have the pleasure of your com pany for the next set V' asked a young gen tleman of a party, but not well educated young woman, at a bill. "What is to be the dance, sir V " Ditto," said the young man, referring to his programme. .. "Oh you must excuse rhe, then," said she, I can't dance ditto V A milkman was awakened by a wag in the hUht with the announcement lhat his best cow was choking. He forthwith jumped up lo save the life of Brummie, when, Io! he found a turnip stuck in the mouth of the pump. If your sister, while engaged with her sweetheart, ask you to bring a glass of water from an adjoining room, start on the errand but you need not return. You will not be missed. Don't forget this little children. Happiness' must arise from our own tem per and actions, and not immediately from any external conditions. ; - '' i ' : Friendship which flows from-t'ue hart cannot be frozen by adversity, as the water t h atj? QVf'iJxQrruk ?.dt! tJ UaO"9 T3dJjawiPAln tJ 3Lm or tcio W " The Attitude of tbe Democratic Party. Time always vindicates the wisdom of the policy of the Democratic party and of its administration. It has done so in con nection with recent events, with more than usual emphasis. For years and years it warned the country lhat this eternal agitation of the slavery question if not stopped, would bring the greatest calamities upon us; that it would lead to aldsvided Union" and civil war between the sections ;to national and individual bankruptcy ; to personal and po litical ruin. . It plead 'With its 'political op ponents Njrth, with the man-fanatics of the South, to torbear, to stay their hands, to stop what they called their ' irrepressible con flici," for the good cf ih eir country. Their appeals -ere spurned. Their warnings were disregarded. We were told by the Republican Statesmen that the . agitation should go on, that it did not endanger Ihe Union ; that a sectional triumph would do no mischief, that in case they were success ful, all would go on as gaily as a "marriage bell." The'people for once listened to their syren-soothing voice, and installed them in power. We would like to have seen the Desnocrtic predictions proven false we had a million time rather lhat they would have had the name of false prophets, than to have seen our country in its present lamenta ble condition. But all the worst fears of the Democrats, all their worst predictions, have been morethan realized. Look at the con dition of the country look at the present survey its future. For all the evils, present and prospective, the Democratic party i guiltless, as it lifted up its voice and warned the people of them. Had the Democratic policy not been departed from, and it w'ise counsels been listened lo, we should have been to day a happy and united people, and prosperity would have smiled upon the land. The Democrats advised that the sla very question be let alone ; that the com promises of the Constitution in favor of the institution be adhered to with strict fidelity. " lis strong common sense enabled it to per ceive that this grea,t country could only be saved by a compromise and conciliation of all the vinous interests, and that as long as nearly one half of the States were slave holding, it was egregious folly to suppose lhat our tederat Government could pursue an anti-slavery course, without the greatest troubles and disasters to the whole social fabric. Oar opponents believe otherwise. We give them credit, at least the masses, for honesty ; but, oh ! how "terribly have they been misled by demagogues and political idiots to the brink of destruction ! The old, stereotyped charge of corruption was also instrumental in causing the people to vote down Democratic men and Dem ocratic policy. What have we seen ? Why in less than three month it is an admitted fact lhat those purists who support the ad minstratiori of Lincoln have stolen more from the Government, from the brave sol diers, than all the money that has been ab stracted from the Treasurey for half a cen turey. Since the 4th of March Republi can papers themselves being the witnesses there has been a regular carnival of cor ruption, that puts to shame everything we have seen ih lhat line. The conduct of the Democrats in the war is also another evi dence of their warm and ardent patriotism, that has extorted praise from even their po litical opponents. While dpposnigthe policy which has led io ir, believing it unnecessary and injudicious, they were the first td re spond lo the call to arms, w hen they were left no other recourse. A large majority of the others and soldiers who are now in the front of the enemy are Democrats, while those who have instigated the war, preferred that way of settling our difficulties to a peaceful compromise, remain comfortably at home, assailing other Democrats and Union men who have ever been and are now for their country ,as traitors. These lines, drawn from the great book of the past, in dicate the policy to be pursued by the people in the future; Turn out the politi cians of the Lincoln stripe as quicx as possi- I bte. Tbey have Baown themselves incorn peie.it to covern the country. Turn them out at the elections as fast as you have the opportunity, ar.d restore to power that or ganization which would have, if it had been permitted, averted all our present evil,' and whose policy yet can alleviate and mitigate therh Cincinnati Inquirer. (Douglas.) A good story is toli of a "iell" on the Abolitionists of Galesburg. The town h made up of Abolitionists, and of course they are the last men to volunteer to meet on the battle field the men they have traduced lor years. Galesburg has se nt few if any sol diers te the war, and those who bave gone are not of the class of whom we speak. Well, the other day, the railroad conductor, when his train arrived at Galesburg, told the people that the U. S. officers were drafting in Peoria, and would be there next 'Jay to draft them. into the service. It i said that next day there wasn't a man in Galesbnrg who was between the ages of 13 and ib years, unless he was a cripple or sick Rock L land Argut, III. A Western clergyman, in presenting 4 revolver to one of the volunteers aid : "If you get into a tight place and have lime to -use it, ask God's blessing if you have lime, , but be sure and not let the enemy get the start oi you. Yon cart say amen after yo shoot." . A little girl, hearing her mother speak of going into half mourning, Mid, '-Why are