. . i r . f7!iF":T ST AS OF THE iwiil ML - - - - ' ' . . ' T . - . '" . . ' " ' Two Dollars per Anuura. " ' .fl.V - Truth and Right God and our Country. W-'JI. JACOBY, Prepnetor.l - , - -- VOLUME' 14. BLOOMS BURG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY MAY l4, 1862. NUMBER 19. STAR OF THE NORTH HTBLISBKI) TBY WEDirSlAT BT WJI. II. JACOB F, an extensive practice, forgot all about my obstinate old farmer. About two years af terwaid, however, a person, an utter stran- i oor tn me. called on me with a few hairs The Farmer is King. "Cotton is king," said a Senator. said another, "Gold is King." we. the Farmer U King! A "Nay," Nay, say monarch is Wfice Oil 3IalDSt., 3rd Square bdOW Earfett, j 8creWed up in a piece of paper which ha j pre'pa-ed for hU lhrono by careful ecuca- TKKMS: Two Dollars rwr annum n uaiu asked me to examine ana report on within six months Irom tne time w uu tying; two dollars and fifty cents if not paid within the year. .No subscription taken for less period than six months ; no discon tinnar.ee permitted until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the editor. - Ihelermt or iravenvsmg vnu J .i - .as t l i One uare, twelve lines three times, 31 00 Ever? subsequent insertion, ..... "i"uu" , ' ... , . . ... ine square, Three months, ....... 3 00 j solve; and ,1 you will do ,,, I will , rt.. CDrigitxoi lloetrn llSsToTIIS BEATfl Of SAUY R. HflLHES. BT D. D We saw her breathing faint and rfow, At midiiishl still we wa'ched her. The saddened voice spoke laml and low, Ol the loved oue that was dying. At early Spring she was called away. To leave this world of sin Amoiu the Ansel now sue'll stay, The loved one that was dying. Twas Sabbath morn at break of day, When lovely Angels came To take the prize ot death away The loved oue that was dying. Weep nt for me" she said ' I 11 go And join my Iriends in Heaven, My Mother dear. I leave below, Bui rejoice that I am. dying Mourn not of me Oh! weep no mora For I ha1d happy be, At God righi hand, ihat happy shore, Will be the oue that's dyiu " Fit with disease that laid tier low, For weeks"ai.d month- he lay Think you that she would lon to go here there'll be no more dying! Yet death to4ier brought on no fear, She whs prepared to i;o, Nor wifhed e Mil the ti ne more near I o eae the thought ot dying. Submissive at Hi. will she bowed, To wait slow death's approach JSor did she cease lo spen al. d, Until 'twas aid she dying. Her friends around .h- dea'-h bed tlooJ '1 o catch ibe djiiip -rd AI1V wrl I iiieidiie o un the gooJ, Our Mary who w is tljiug. Fkigcrefk. 3ly IwkVll FITTED TO A HAIR I Is this another murder case?" I enquir. ed ; "for, if so, I will have nothing to do with it. I've had enough of that Bort of work." "No, no," said he, "It's nothing of the kind. It's only a matter of enriosity, which would ill call or 00 .Ami far tha result of vour examination in a j few day's time." Having received this as i surance I undertook the investigation. "When he was gone and I had leisure, I put the hairs under the microscope, and soon discovered that they were taken from the back of a Norway tat. Two or three days afterwards, as I was sitting in my consulting rcom, an old far mer looking man wa ushered in. ' "Well," said he, "has thee looked at them hairs!"' Yes," I answered, "and I find that they are from the back of a Norway rat " "Well." exclaimed he, "so they are. Thou has forgotten me; but I have not forgotten thee. Does thee recollect tne trial for mur- jer al l assizes! I said I would prove thee ; and so I haveTor them hairs came from the back of a rat's skin my eon sent me Lorn NoTWay." So the old gentleman .was quite satisfied with the proof to which he had put me, and I, as you may suppose, was well pleased that ray skill and sagacity had stood such a queer proof as this, and more convinced me than ever of the value of the microcope." Here the doctor ended his story, which 1 have given as nearly as possible in his own word, and onon which I believe that a thorough dependence may be placed. Useful Receipts. Frozen Custard. Slice a Vanilla bean and boil it slowly in half a pint of milk, 'till !l ih Breii!ith is extracted and tbe milk ! highly flavored with the Vanilla, then strain ii and set it a.ide. Mix a quart of cream ajul a pint of milk, or, if you can procure ' cream, take three (3) pints of rich milk, and put them into a skillet or sauce pan ; set it j on hot coals and boil it. When it has come a boil, mix a table spoonful of flour in three (3) table spoonfuls of milk and stir it j into ihe boiling.' Afterwards add two (2) ! eggs, wh ch have been beaten up wi;h (2) j taMe poontuls ol milk, pouring them slow i ly iitlo the mixture. Take care to Mir it all the time u is boiling, five minutes alter, tion. But who is nurtured v with, such an education as a farmer ! He is nursed in the strong embrace of prolific, many ha Jed Nature. Our mother Nature keeps the wis est school, Great Nature rude, yet gentle ; stern, yet kindly ; terrible, yet loving ; fru gal, yet beautiful. We almost believe that no men can be God's great men, ojless nurtured in the strong embrace of our real mother on the bosom of the earth. All men should some time in their lives, live in the midst of nature and till tbe soil. He whb has been born and reared and who lives in a cily, debarred the privilege of communing with Nature, is most unfort?- i.ate. He can never be a whole man. He lacks the stern poetic teachings of this ,jreat school. Nothing can compensate lor it. "An undevout astronomer is mad I . ex claimed a wise man. An undevout ; far mer is a monster! we exclaim. What lean the husbandman receive his food t irect from Heaven its rains, and dews, and suushine; it smiles over him in the blue and spangled vault, sun and moon and stars lit; all around him in the wavy gras and grain, the many tinted flowers ; in the voic es of the wind and the bending trees ; un derneath him, in profile, fresh turned toil and still be a monster, out of tune wit! out er and inner Nature! Who lives s far from temptation ? Who lives so nigh his Creator, enwrapped all about it witli his arras fed from his dazzling muni icent hand. He sleeps between the leavss of God's picture book the Universe. "He loved husbandry," is the encoiium that inspiration pays to one of the best Kingf of Israel, and who had one of the longest and most prosperous reigns. "Uz- zah the King," says the sacred writer, "dig ged many well,4br he had much cattle j hus bandmen also, and vine-dressers in Democracy and the Enion. As much as the Democratic party desire to see an end put to this horrible and un natural war, and peace again restored to the country, it would not have our Govern ment humble itself before an aimed rebel lion, or accede to terms that would be dis honorable, or in contravention to the Coii stiiution upon which our institutions are founded, merely for the sake of peace. W e waul no peace short of a restoration of the Union. Our flag mast again float over every inch of our former territory, and be honored and respected as in days past, be fore the war can end. Let the war Je pushed vigorously forward to attain that end, and when that is accomplished, and the friendship of the Union men of the South regained and their confidence in the Government reassured, the. war ought to terminate and life and rroperty be spared. Our Government should leave nothing un done to reassure the Union men ol the South that their rights under the Constitu tion will not be trampled upon, Tor to them it must look for aid in re-establishing the Union and maintaining and administering the laws when the war ends. We see how well this is working iu Tennessee under Hon. Andrew Johnson, and the tame good results are manifesting themselves every day, under the lead of Southren Union men in other parts of the rebel States. Nobly have the Union men of the South stood side by side with the Democracy of the North and batiled all through these trying times for the Union, the whole Union and dAscin' thk Pokkr." Well, thar wasto nothing but the Uniou. The Southern Union e a pcrly ai Squire Jones anJ as me an aien have risked all suffered all lo show galy Thomas wur invited, (Sally is my! to ihe world that they were honest in the Sweetheart, but dont tell nobody, caie ! principles they professed ol being as much ehe won't like it ) I concluded to ri' op my opposed lo a sectional party South, as they Sunday go-to-meetins, and see Sal thru j were to a sectional party North, it matters Well, the oile cum, and Mam and Aur.l j not whether that party take the name of janQ they greased my hair, and tied mj Secession or abolition, or is marshalled un- creevat, and rubbedwe powertul fine, and der the leadership of Jefl. Davis in the south very eoon rne an Sail wur thar in all our or Abraham Lincoln in the north, its aim is Oofy ati ef I say it myself, thar waru't a BY AND BY. Thete's a little mischief maker, That is stealing half our bli?s, Sketching pictures in a dreamland, Which are never seen in this; Dashing from our lips the pleasure Of the present while we sigh You mav know this mischief-maker, For bis name is "By and by." He is sitting by our hearth-stones, With his sly bewitching glance. Whispering of the coming morrow, As the social hours advance ; Loitering 'mid our calm reflections, Hiding lorms of beauty nigh, He's a smooth deceitful fellow, This enchanter, "By and by." You may know him by his mincing, By his careless, sportive air, By his sly obtrusive presence That is straying everywhere ; By the trophies which he gathers. Where his cheated victims lie For a bold determined fellow, Is the conquerer, ,:By and by." When the calls of duty haunt us, And ihe present seems to be All of time that ever mortals Snatch from long eternity ; Then a fairy hand seems painting Pictures on a d'stant sky, For a cunning little artist, Is the fairy, "By and by." "By and by." the wind is singing By snd by," the heart replies, But ihe phantom ju6t before us, Kre we grasp it, ever flies, Lift not to the idle charmer. Scorn the very specious lie ; Only in the lancy liveth This deceiver, ' By and by." the mountains, and Carmeal, for he loved bus Kun4r If ihia could have been said o uanu i v -' - disunion and its fruits civil war, but while ! the Democratic parly is true to itself its hell- r ish purposes can never be consummated. larksnrv Raid i ne u nion rausi auu shall nicer pair ol ioiks hi iae mum. .. had been to a daiisin' school fur sum time, an told me she wur goin to danse the po ker that nite. an I must do it too. Well, The First Step Towards Amalgamation. Reconciled in Death. Any one who walks the streets of Harris- j It is related that at the battle of Shiloh a burg may eee at almost every corner, a ' Federal Volunteer and a rebel soldier were promiscuous crowd of white and black boys j found dead, with hands clasped It was playing together, wrangling together and i supposed that they fell side by side. mor practically carrying out the abolition doc- tally wounded, and making friends, died in trine of perfect equality between the races . peace. How touching it roust have been It riot unfrequently happens that, in these J for tbe "details" oui looked for dead and assemblages, fights occur, in which white wounded, to have come upon this picure. What a contrast lo the spectacle atoond I Here were trees almost torn to pieces by the two days' storm ol shot and shell There were groopn ot dead men, lyine in every altitude of combat and agony. Pcols of blood crimsoned the ground, growin' deeoer from the wounds of the yet. onten- ted soldiers who had been manled in thd fight. Muskets, caanon, knappAttt-, blau kets, torn tents, fragments of army wagons, wheels, commissary stores, broken swords, all dashed on the earth in the tumult of the trife, cumbered the ravines, while Thete lay the steed with his nostras ail wide. Though tbrongh it there rushed not the breath of h:s pride." With his huge bulk crushing the cores of hi rider. 1 he une ngure ot me poei ni been much admired,' when speaking in the person of one dear friead to aaoiher he said z "A dew shall rest upon our tomb Of snoh a quality, That fuhtinj armies hither come Shall reconciled be " But what must have been the power of the feelings 'hat induced that reconciliation amid the bolts and thunders of batde ; amid its infuriate passion, in the heart of its mas- terless commotion ! What visions of the spiritual world, opening bfure the dyi.ig eyes of ihe solder ; what convictions that for them the honors and the strifes of earth were over, and that when next their souls 6hou!d awake to life it would be in a more august assembly, where paia and sorrow, the raptors of the strife" and it equally inevitable agony, should be forgotten, as a dream that is fled. Some lime ago, in company with a med- j jal man, whom I will cail Dr. R . we ; .it .--.I mi. ihi tiHt ot the mi i roScope, in the management of which he j ! -tir in gradually haJ a pound of powdered was a., adept. "Now," -aid he "I w.;l tell ! h-al f"gar, and then the decoct.on of Vanil you a stor of what happened to myself- i - surreu ua.u j cue which I think well idu.tra.es me i.u Jake it ofl the fire, and set it to cool. When, ot this iiirumeat to ociei,, ; m i , , of hj9 foe8ibut they are the a vamp yoa would ice cream, lor wincn mrequeui- - .,- th vprv is rower to seek to increase . ... monarch increase in DOwer. it is in words the growth of tyranny. Not w the T- T? . til., tv.annvf lm n.0r h, T TP fl ness. neuwie, iu re.Tard for the constitutional rights of groans; but it is witn abundance. ne brings his enemies to tbe fagot anl the slake ; but they are thistle, the daisy and the briar. Hd overruns and subdues the be preserved," and his woads will ever find yoa 6ee I didn't ki ow no more about the a response in the heart ol every true Dem- poker lnan 1 did about pleedin law, but sez ocrat. 1, I'm as smart ai sum other folkes, an ef The Democratic party has heartily sup- Sal wants me to, I'll try ef I bust; so you ported the administration, as the represeu- see arlera wh're the poker wurlo be dansed . . r i ri ;n -.11 ltd ... t rt . r I ii rrl ' ' talive head ot ine ooverumem, " an sal. sez sne, reie, now f wu an You may flavor it with a tea spoonful of nortaiire though I wa out in a very unple.tsara pi c a - t i .t,x nu.-i,.t iii niv a'cuiiaintauce wilh it. " passes . l hi- a vou know, tfiven a good deal ; ,f,um to comparative anatomy, es strong oil ol lemon, stirred in pecially to the structure ol the hair as it ap- you lake it fmrn the fire, or with a quarter pears under the micro-cope. To the unas of a pound of shelled almonds, blanched ,sted e)e, indeed, all hairs appear very pounded in a mortar with a little water, and much alike, except that it is 1-utg or Phort, er. poh u in . dark or fair, straight or curly, fine or coarse his successor, the Jews had not partec and scattered, as at this day, among the nations. As long as it can be said of the sever eigns of these States, 'they loved husbandry,' the Republic is safe. Small farms grow true patriots. The wealth of the Republic must be a common weaiiu. it is tne nno ,ha hllmn and ... i. ...i i .!nn.l out on the itself ' Vben Jusl e myui wun iuai, uo u u,vi r-- bold i re-esiauusn iue nupictuowj noor. over the eutire country. Jt Knows no oiu-( gui lookin as sweet as bhugar canu w ,ui er issue than the restoratioa of the Union j,er rej coeQ otl an a pattin her foot, like and a race nag waitin fur the drum to tap; a for it .:....:Ann .;nktD nf I . a r i i l . I I . !-. mv hpari lipfll a regaru ior me t-oiiniui.ioui nguio u miJ i jen ramer sneoicu mj w-.. --r- South as well as the North. That is the Up a ra;,y ihumpin agin my ribs, an 1 fell sole object for which ihe Democratic party baJ generally. Thinks I, I'm in fur it now is pouring out its best blood on our battle an bust my biter if 1 don't go thru, shu'e fields. To fight to establish negro equality, '0t Vhe old nigger fiddler at last got thru or to back op the Administration in its Ab- wjln pokin at his fiddle 6trings, giv a long olitioa schemes, is no part ol the pro- pau otl his bo, and we was off. The first . -r i K a. nomnrjKV in lliA nrKkPnl e .. I n.o in m k A A D&SS at me i k.,. , ,l,Uv mA ar a. the Sting- ; 6"""" " ' " - - i.mS v. just before J . ' . . . - i war, nor can it ins insect, ana me iaugeu uu r"uuv"" ' boys get unmercifully whipped by the blacks, who ute not slow to avail them selves of their superior size and strength, and who carry out the natural law which gives right lo might. Now, what can you expect from a white boy who is in the habit ot free and equal in tercourse wilh black boys, whose home and street education every one of our citizens understands. Can the while boy who has been kicked and cuffed by a negro entertain the self-re-specl and senbe of shame calculated to re strain him Iron low and immoral hab its! The aphorism that evil communications corrupt good manners was nevermore fully um nlifid than ii the Dresent cae. We : - wonder that parents do not interposa to correct an evil so demoralizing to the rising generation, and which, unlortunately, is oue of the bit'.erebt Iruits of ihe turbid Biream of Abolition speeches, essays and tracts sown broad cant over the laud by fana ics whoe morbid sympathy lor the blacks prepares the degradation of the whites? How long wid the people suffer ic their midst l!iee howling dervishes whose sole ol.;?ct "turns to be to pull down Ihe whites ;o i;.e lo '.el ol the blacks ! Whose can't is, 'ihe diinf.y of white labor, and whose practice if the degradation of thai labor, by the introduction iu our midst of thousands of runaw ay slaves, who will enter into com petition wilh our white laborers, re duce their wages, and degrade their occu nation The white boy who is now seen cheek by iowl with a negro may probably be Eeen in after life mating with a colored wench, .u- .:n: :n,..nn,.,,inr and mus oecome uie wiiunj inimiuvu.-. practical amalgamation. The city of Harrisburg now presents a few such shameful examples. The jave nile admixture ol black and whites of which we now complain may hereafter in crease them to such a degree as to disgrace ihe community and deterioate our race. Parents, look to your children and re member th;it "iust a the twia is teni the Ha nlnwi ii n the very MtlU IUC v t . w . w f - B7 foundation of the stronghold of hisdtstroy- The earth is his slave ; but it is l countable for in the auy way ecormous be held ac taxation im- the .l-:- corruptions and pay the expenses of ihe qui sideways, fust one h' prvaits to ! plunderings aud extravagance of this Ad- olher, and a laying back like, while her Under the microscope, however, the case is different ; the negro's oval ; the mou&e s appaiamly jointed ; the bars jagged ; and so on. Indeed, every animal has a hair of peculiar character, and, what ia more, ; this character varies acco'diug to the part of ihe body from which it is taken an important circumstance, as will appear from my sto ry, wbiih is this : I once received a letter by post, contain ing a lew hairs, with a reqnest that I should examine them, and addiog that they would be called for in a few days. Accordingly I ubmi'ted the bair to the microscope, when I discovered they were from a human eye trow and bruised I made a note to this .effect, and folded it with tbe hairs in an en velope, ready for the person who had sent them. In a few days a stranger called and inquired whether I bad made ihe investiga tion. "Oh, ye," I said, "there they are, and yon will find them and their descrip tion in tQis envelope," banding it to him zl the fame time. He expressed himself as being much obliged, and offered me a fee, which, however, I declined, telling him thai I could not think of taking anything for bo small a matter. -li turned out. however, of more conse quence than I bad imagined, for within a week I was served wilh a subpoena, to at tend as a witness on a It ial for murder. This svas very disagreeable, as I have said ; but Ihee was no help for it now. The case was this- A roan had been kilted by a tlow on the eyebrow, and the hairs seut to tne for examination bad been taken from a hammer in the possession of the suspected mur&exer. I was pot into the witness box and wy testimony, 'that the hairs were from the human eyebrow and had been ... bruwed," was just the link in the chain of evidence which sufficed to convict the pris oner. The jury, however, was not easily saiisei thai ray statement was worth any thiug ; and it required the solemn assarance of the judge that such a conclusion was in the reach of science to coaviuca them that I hey mijrht act opoa it. "One juryman ia particular an old far mer was hard to satisfy.. "Does thee mean to say," said he, "that thee can lell any Latr of an animal T 1 vor is extracted Ice Ckeam Split into pieces a Vanilla bean, and boil it in a very little milk till the flavor is well extracted, then strain it. Mix two (?) table spoonsfuls of arrow root pow- j der, or the samequantity of fine powdered scire b, with just sufficient cold milk to make it a thin paste ; rubbing it till quite smooth. i . ' " Posed upon the people to cover up t d a r r r r in w s nr 11 until s.iiu u u nuuiv i - alio oiovci j wi "wv .w. before him, and tbe trees rr ;nv fnr him. He chains his servants to ivi A J ,u - do his will ; but they are the elemenis, the huge and wi ling ox, and the majestic horse impatient to do his bidding and champing for the word that bids b'un go. When the monarch Farmer raisei him self on high andstretchs his sceptre abroad, cities spring up under its shadow. The sound of the pindle, the loom, the anvil, like she wur goin to run rite thru me, i dodged aud made a pass at her, she dodged and cum at me wilh a sorter jigger, throin fool and then the Boil together a pint of cream and a pint of on. foundrv and mil are rich milk, and while bolting stir in the prep--, of he indostrious rauhi- aration ol arrow-root and ihe milk in wh,ch : ,odes cocning up iike the voice 01 many the Vanilla has been boiled. When it ha. , wbiU).wio d 8hips fly over ihe un boiled hard, take it off, slir rn a half pound : main men cagt a8iJe lhe;r h(t and r i e Jlftaa ma w a t ot powuerea ioai sugar, anu iei n iuiuo i a boil again Then strain it, put it into a freezer, placed in a tub that has a hole in bottom to let out the water, and surround it, on all sides, wilh ice broken fine, and mix ed with coarse salt; turning the freezer con- Daccin-. In Dr. Brown's late racy and valuable work on 4,Healtb," he thus refers to the "sin" of dancing : Dancing is just the music for tha feet, lb gladness of the young legs, and is well call ed ihe poetry of motion. 1 remember a sto ry of a good old Anti burgher minister- It was in the days when dancing was held .o be a great sin and to deal with by the Ses sion. Jessie, a comely, and good and blithe a great lavorue nu iuo tree's inclined. Let it not be forgotten, that ,r.i.,;m n,nnlp and i yOUO Woman, . - . i i 1 minister, had been guilty of daucing at ihnt all intprm xture with inferior races de-i n""ieic, "a" ucc . . n,n,lPin moilev rabble friends wedding. l aiitn uui j'ivu.v...8 j unlit for self government, as we see exem pi i lied in distiacted Mexico. Rules for home Education. The following are worthy of being print ed in letters of gold, and placed ia a con spicuous position in your household : 1. From your children's earliest infancy, inculcate the necessity of infant obedience. She was summoned be fore the Session to be dealt with the grim old fellows sternly concentrating their eyes upon her as she" stood trembling in her sniped short gown and her pretty bare feet. The doctor, who was one of the divinity, and a deep thinker, greatly pitying ber, "Jessie, my woman, were ye danciu' !" "Yes," sobbed Jessie. "Ye maun e'en promise never to dance again Jessie." "I wull, sir ; I wull promise," with a cur- ministration. The Democratic party will never endorse the sentiments avowed by President Lin coln, or approve all the acts ot his admin istration, but so far as carrying on the war hoops (darn the things) wur a whirltn rouu like a big balloon, she then hitched on to me and cavorted roun two or three times, me going round like a lop all ihe lime; fii'- ,iiv hiranoe how strong in the arms V" j, 2. Unite firmness wilh gentleness. Let1 your children alwaj s uuderstaad that joutry. mean exactly what you say. "Now, what were ye thinkin' o' Jessie 3 Never promise anyhing unless you , when je were dancin' ! tell us truly ! sai l, are sure you can give them what you prom-' an old elder, who.had been a preacher in i bis youth. "Nae ill, sir," sobbed out tha ir .. t.il . AilJ imlaanvthins. show 1 dear Iiltle woman. -men. jhms, my few in accordance w ith ihe reauirements of the naU U well, Sal, she next fotch Constitution, he can rely lully upon its sup- short billy gote jumps, and then hopped up . '. I wnman. are dance." Cried th delighted . mm now io uo u, auu see mai n uuue. , -j - I a 1,1 m.n,h vour children for wil- : doctor. An J so say I, to the extent that so , w. ..... j I j ' fully disobeying jou, but never punish in a . fig leaves and are clothed in imperii j gar ments, and women are arrayed in abrics as fine as gossamer and many tinted as the sunset cloud. Penury, pestilence apd fam ine he keeps bound in his prison house. Labor stands in the floor of his magiztnes, tinually for twenty minutes, men let is rest. , fitaiwart hand he holds the scales occasionally taking off the cover and 6Cra' of human iIe, and weighs out the a ipplies p-ng down with a Jong spoon the cream i q and anJ ani8ts and arrai; DI that sticks to ihe aides. When it is well j anJ church and 8tate . (00d aid rai- frozen transfer it to a mould, surround raentf abQndaoce and luxury. He di als out with fresh salt and ice, and then freeze it j p'rogre89 0f harnan kind. Ihe Farmer over again If yon wish to flavor it with lemon in is Kmc the Monarch of men. stead of Vanilla, take a large lump of sugar, before yoo powder it, and rub it on the out side of a large lemoa till all the yellow is rubbed off upon the sugar ; then when the sugar ia all powdered mix with it the juice. For strawberry ice cream, the juice of a quart of ripe atrawberriea squeezed through a linen bag. Pbu Cork Bread Riceipb. The prize of $10 offered by Orange Judd, the publish er of the American Agriculturalitt, for the corn bread loaf, was awarded to Mr. James O'Brien, of Carrick, Penna- The receipe for making the bread is as follows : To two qnarts of meal add one pint of bread sponge; water eufficient'to wet the whole ; add half a pint of flour and a table spoonful of salt ; let it rise ; then knead well for the i;ma onrt nlac the douzh in tbe KWUU I - a i oven, and allow it to bake an hour ana a half. t ,mm,t GiblsI -There are two kinds of girls. One is the kind that appears the best abroad the girls that are good for parlies, ndes, visits, balls, &.c , and whose chief delight is in such things. The other m the kind eo-v... ""J that appears best at home tne gins i answered that 1 , afQ 08ejai and cheerful ia the dinning room, I onrror port. The enormous debt now increasing and down like a turKey on a uoi ...i g Never let them perceive that they can ! at the rate of nearly three millions a day an rue all the lime a uoin iaj 1 Tex 0r make you loe your self-com . j r i i hoi i nun nr- at last tue must also he paid, ana no goou uemutiai use i nwu mand. whatever may be his view iu regard lo the clinched me Bg.n. and shutiled tust oue siue i ? q pelubnce and policy of commencing the war and the then the other, till I Ditcnea my uun. ' j leraper wail Ull they are calm, and then . ..... i i. i i ,ir. Tin nil the fore nart ol i ' ... . manner in wnicu u nas oeeu tuuuuu.a muri uut .ui.r,..n- - . ! oentlv reason with them on ttie iraprapneiy r . - . f U . . hrtnnu IX IT lavtii c - will demur at the payment oi nis pon.ou ner coai, anu iwo o. c. , of ,heir conduct. of taxes to defray the necessary expenses aboul on the ilore. of the war. To save the Union, the De- j You oiter heered Bill Harris an aara an ;. roa.te- m make anv sacrifice panl an the bovs holler; Bll kin out Hotter ' long as our young girls think "nae ill" they j mav dance their feet's fill. And so on with all the round of the sunshine aud flowers J God has thrown on and along the path of His children. Reading. Of all the amusements ihat can possibly be imagined for a hard working man, after .. his jiantr in nr i ri nun laio. itiwiu - 8. Remember that a little present pun- -j - - - ; ihmiil. w hen the occasion arises, is much , - i mnrrt pfrectual than the threatening ot a eupyvs nothing like reading an interesting booK, a t . . r 2 Jm mg mm io nave a iasie ior n am. bear any burden of taxation and do any anybody an he wur doiu his best. Here 8 j oreater payment should ihe fault be re- ' suppling him to have the book to read. amount of hard fighting,, but it decidedly ' lhe devil to pay, ses I, but I can't he p n, ; ewpJ r j It call for no bodily exertion, of which be moiesta against being oppressed and and with tha: I iried lo edge along side by; children anvthing ' has already had enough, or perhaps, too slaughtered to save the platform of a sec- ! Sal, to beg pardon, but I tell you Sal was j lhjjy cfy ,of a tional party. Everything for the Union but hot. "Never mind Mr. Sporum,' ses she t 10 0n no account allow them to do at nothing for sectionalism North or bourn. Vulley SpiriL Fashionable Women. w . f would not take upon myself to assert posi- the siuk room, and ail the precincts oinomo. tirely that I could do so, although I belie. ! They differ widely in character. , Una, is u ?. . .,, . i often a torment at home : the other is a ed Icoald. "Weil," said De, i u prova . moth. consuming every- inee.' "The priicnsr, as J said, was cpavicted , ted I weal hcae, and, ia lb busy 'lib cf Emancipation in Jamaca In a work on ibe ordeal of Free Libor by Sewell. we find the following description of the result of emancipation a'. K:ngst n There is not a house in decent rejair, not a wharf in good order, no pavemmt, no sidewalk, no drainages, and scanty water, no light there is nothing like work lone. Wreck and ruin, destitution and iegieci. The inhabitants, taken en masse, ar.i steep ed to eyelids in immorality. The jopula tion shows unnatural decrease. Illegitimacy exceeds legitimacy. Nothing is laplaced that time destroys. If a brick turob ea from a house to the street, it remains there. If a spout is loosened by the wind, it hangs by a thread till it fails, ii furniture is acci dentally broken, the idea of having it mend ed is not entertained. . A godforsaken place, without life or en-,r-gy, old, dilapidated, sickly, filthy.es st away irom the anchorage of sound motility, of reason and common sense. Yet this wretch ed hulk is the capital of an island the most fertile in the word. It is blessed with a cli mate the most glorious, it lies rotting in tbe khadow of mountains that can be cultivated Irom the summit to the bae win every product of tropic and temperate regions. It . t i. -i. . kin , f hnna.. is the mistress oi uiuu wuo.w,.. - thin mspiun way, Fashion kills more women than toil or sorrow. Obedience to fashion is a greater transgression to the laws of woman's na ture, a greater injury to her physical and mental constitution, than the hardships ol poverty and neglect. The Blave .woman at her task will live and grow old, and see two or three generations of her mistress ea nniv. The washerwoman, with KiM.hi a nr n i nonts iu cucci uci uv. toils, will live to see her fashionable sisiers ... all die around her, and the kitchen maid is hearty and strong when the lady has to be nursed like a sick baby. It is a sad truth that lashioo pampered women are al most worthless for all the great ends of hu man life. They live for no great purpose in life, they accomplish no worthy ends They write no books, they set no rich ex amples of virtue and womanly life. If they rear children servants and nurses do it all, save to conceive aud give them birth. And when reared what are they! What do they ever amount to bnt weaker scions of th aid stock ! Who ever heard of fashion able women exhibiting any power of mind for which it became eminent! Read the biographies of our men and women. Not one of them bad a fashionable mother. Thev nearlv all had sprang from plain, - . .ii . i strong-minded women who aaa auoui Mj much. It releaves his home ot its dullness "Nevermind Mr. Sporum," ses she do al ; and Fameness. It transport, him into a (,he alw ays called me Pete afore that) "you '. anolher tirne ! livelier, and gayer, and more diversified and never mind, I'll not trouble you ag.u soo' m)Jer lhe 8arne circunisUace, Lave forbid- interesting scene; and while he enjoy, wkh mv company." 1 was floored, an all , himself there: he may forget the evils ol because them internal hoops wouldn't stay j . Bure anJ , lhe preSent moment, fu'ly as much as if he in lhe rite place. Well it iuk me a good . q be , munth to rpate u up wun ca, uu, . Arrn,..,.n .hem io make their little re- citais ir. perfect truth. 3. Never allow tale bearing. 11. T.ach then: that self-denial, not self-ii:du!,-e;;ce, t the appointed and sure meth oJ of securing happiness. it, an I swore ef I ever dansed the poker i hr.r.a.1 ihfl fool killer would cum aa I u aloug an nock me in ihe head I say so y"' Re- rT The other Evening a humorous publican member ol the New York Leis- ! lature. wrote a note to anolher lleputhcr.u member from an extreme -vestern county, saying that s, lady in lhe gallery had been attracted by the fine appearut.ee of aid member and would like to m-jet him. If the desire was mutual, lhe Hady" wished ihe gentleman from C io ho d a newspaper in each hand, so that she could see the signal. The note Laving been dis patched to the member, the wicked author posted all those around him, and soon half the chamber awaited developements. The unfortunate legislator read the note, cast a sentimental glance at the ladies' gallery, seized two Tribunes and held them alol1 wilh all due energy. A load laugh from those around him followed. He is yet look ing for "that woman." Who first introduced salt provision into the navy ! Noah, for he had Haiu in the ark. 3 about her ; the other is asunoeam d Uqq of baUle 6bip8 caa irix35 life and gladce&s along her pain- F cll0r -.-- "I'll take lhe responsibility," as Jenkins ride aifely at lmle to do witk fashions as with changing Baid when, he held out his arms lor we the clouds. baby. Tu.uMxj a Gus. The operation ol firing o. board ttie Weitern gunboats is inieres t.ng. L:ke all men-of-war, the crew, 5-10 in all, are divided into watches of four hours each with a freoh lot for every watch. The guns on board are numbered, and each gunnr belongs to a certain number and fills a certain function. There is one who brings the powder fom the magazine, another the shoi, another io hand them to the person whose duty it is to charge the gun, another to sight, still another to ram to sponge to depress or elevate, and an of ficer to direct the firing. The gun being loaded at a iven signal it is fired, and the gun bounds on its carriage wilh smoke, almost to suffocation, and the process is re newed. Everything move like clock-work the old rule being rigidly followed, 4,a place lor everything, and everything in it place." Matters are arranged with neatueES a::d or der on board, and w hat is cheering to relate there is no extraordiuary bustle, but in ihe heat of action every one is quietly attentive to his gun. w ere ever so drvnk. with the great advan tage of finding himself lhe flext day with his money in his pocket, or at least, laid out ir. real necessaries and comforts for him self and his family and without a head ache. Nay, it accompanies him to his next day's work ; and if the book he has been reading be anything above the very idlest and lightest, gives him something to think of, besides the mere mechanical drudgery of his every-day occupation something he can enjoy while absent, and look forward with pleasure to. If I were to pray for taste which should stand me in stead under every variety of circumstance, and be a source of happiness and cheerful, ness to roe through life, and shield against its ills, however things might go amis, and the world frown upon me, it wou'd bp, a taste for reading Sir. J. Het sihd. Forney,, who is aboul as black.a Repub lican as we know of, writes from Washing ton to hit paper in Philadelphia: "If by some inexorable command, which could not safely be resisted, certain of our publio teachers were dircted to turn their faces in stead of their backs upon their records, and forced to re-read and re-digest these rec ords, we Bhould have some most pi: eons and piiUble protestation " We do not know whom thi coat would bo well fit as Forney hiaielf. Chkago Time.