Truth and Right Cod and our Country. $2 00 In Adrascr, per Aunnrs. VOLUME 17. JBLOOMSBURG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 221865. NUMBER 5. w.n. JAcosr, ruMisiier. y 7 r THE STAR OF THE NORTH '. . , 18 PUBLISHED KVERt WEDNKM3AT B? fFM.'II. JJ1COBY, Cffice on Sain St., 3rd Square below Market. TERMS : Two Dollars and Fifty Cents in advance. If iot paid till. ihe end of '.ha year, Three Dollars will be charged. No subscriptions taken for a period less than six months ; no discontinuance permit ted until all arrearages are paid unless at the option of the editor. RATES OF ADVERTISING : .TEN LINKS CONSTITUTE A SQUARE. ' One Square, one or three insertions, SI 5o Every sobsequentinsertion, less than J3, 50 One column -one year, 50 00 Administrators' and Executors' riOtices,3 00 Transient advertising payab'e in advance, all other due after the first insertion. The Seashore. The wide pea si retches beneath "the sky, . In the golden light of day, And the wide waves come vt ilh their snowy plumes, . Tbat glitter, and glance. anJ play ; And on they come, and on they come, . With the lofty pomp of power, To scatter their beauty on shiny weeds, And die on the briny shore. , The wild waves glitter and glance and play, To break on the briny shore, But each is bearing its tribute on, To add to earth's bright store. Some may bring us the little shell, Aod some the store of gold, And some the sailor's shipwrecked form, All ghastly, and stern, arid cold. And the wild wavesmurmarin sadness round Or thunder with martial roar, As each roll tip with its given freight, . And dies on the briny hore. There's a wide, wide sea, a changing sea, The shadowy sea of life, Where the lofty billows rie and fall, In net ei-ceasing strife. And en, and on, and ever on. Pe-sed by resistless power, They bear their joy or their curse to earth, And die on the sandy shore. And on they come, and on they come, Till night sweeps o'er the wene, And the dun ootids float o'er the gloomy sky And the stars look out between Till far away in the orient The son comes forth in power, A"d the secret burden lie all revealed Upon the briny shore. Colorado for White Men. Young Colorado has fired the first gen against negro equality. The returns from there show that the State Constitution has been adopted by a large majority, except the clause sanctioning negro suffrage, which i defeated by a very decintd vole. The white men in tbat growing State will not consent ' to link their destiny who that of the .negro, to have the elective franchise polluted, and legislation degraded by negro i(.flnence. They are for white met ruling Colorado, and white men alone. After this example, can it be possible that Pennsylvania will endorse tie negro-equaliiy programme pre- : sented by the Abolition party? This State j lias crown to her nrenent siainre under ', white men. This class of merz have made and a me ode d her Const itation, framed her laws, dee1oped her internal resources, per fected her school system ; and is it neces sary now to call in the aid of negroes to assist in this kind of intellectual labor ? M,kn Who CasnoT Mak.s Spicthes. One of the most singular developements of the times is ihe appearance in American pub lic life oi a class of men who cannot make .speeches. Thus, we have a Lieutenant General who, when he is fairly cornered bj the admiring.crowd, will make two or three polite bows, but will not let a word out . of bis mouth any more than he would Pam berton oat of Yicksborg, or Lee oat of Rich mond. Gen. Sherman, on' similar occasions, attempts bot the most meagre replies, al though he is ready and pungent enough with bis pen. Gen. Thomas returns thanks, and that is all ; while the gallant Sheridan imply says: "Excuse me boys, you know I never make speeches." Boston Journal. - Once in a chnrch, a young man. who car ried the Collecting' plate, before starting to collect, pot his band in his -pocket as osual and put a shilling, as he supposed, on the plate, and then passed it around among the congregation; which numbered many young and pretty girls. The girls as jhej looked t the 'plate, al seemed astonished and amused;. .and the yoong man, taking a glance at the plate, found that, in stead of a chilling, be bad pot a conversational lozenge - pn tba plate; with the words "Will yon rnarrjr-oe?" in red letters, staring every body in the face... None of the young ladies however, closed with the. offer. : Johm Adams-, Mr. Webster viniied Mr. Adams a short lima before his death, and found him reclining on a sofa, evidently in feeble -health; He -remarked to Mr.' Adams: - "I am glad to see you,sir, and I hope yon are getting along pretty well.' - Mr. A. replied in the following figurative language; ' , . , "Ah, sir, quite the contrary.- I End I am a poor tenant, occupying a hooae much shattered by limeJt sways and trembles with every wind, and what is worse, sir, the landlord, as near as I can ad put, don't in tend to make any re pairs." A nra in Meadville, - Pa.,.- on the 3d inst. made thirty fiiuillas homeless, and destroy ed property izionr.uzg to nearly 3100,000. For the Star of (he North. " Education. Let os first investigate the meaning of the word Education. Paley says : i"Edocatioo in the most extensive sense of the word may comprehend every preparation tbat is made in our youth for the sequel of our. lives." Therefore, Education consists in everything that pertains to gathering information, and everything thet enlightens and instructs the intellectual faculties; also teaches man the duties he owes to God and his' fellow be ings, as well as the necessity of his taking sufficient gymnastic exercise, lhat he may preserve athleticsoundness and "Vigor of constitution ; because it is a fact of every day's observation, th&an unhealthy body cannot contain a healiny and vigorous mini;' (as a general thing 1 have known a few exceptions where the body was prostrated by disease, but the mind still retained its usual soundness) and those who have not a strong mind cannot secure strong and heal thy mental . action ; therefore, Education consists in developing all the -powers of man. Next we will show some of the-advantages and effects of Education. Go with us (in imagination) to some of the barbarous nations, and ask, what makes them, hea thens and ns civilized; and will not the answer suggest itself at once to the mind"br every thinking person, and say, because we are educated and they are unedocated ? Why did the ancients view a comet, the northern lights and like phenomena wiih so much awe and terror.jis a token of war, carnage and bloodshed 1 Simply, because they did not know ihe cause of these phe nomena, and therefore, looked upon their appearance as a token from God that some thing terrible was going to happen them.. But let us examine the advantages of having an education, that will enable a man to enter into, and be a successful competi tor in business;" What sajs Dr. Franklin : "An Education, withoot any capital, is worth more to a young man jnst entering life, than thousand of do liar $ and no educa tion" ; therefore according to one amongst the wisest, and may we not sav the wisest man of his and even our day ? there can be no belter way for a yoong man to invest his capital, or earnings, than in giving him self an Education. But where there is no Education, there is no civilization, and where intellectual dark ness raigns there can be nothing expected, but that superstition will be the governing element in all their doings, as they hare rone cf the advantages of education to teach them the canses of natural occur rences. But let os draw the veil of heathen ish darkness aside, and allow the sun of science, or even of a good eflglih educa tion to shine in its stead ; and superstition ! must vanish before its rays, and what was once looked upon with horror, is now view- j ed wiih pleasure as the beauties of the At- i mighty's Universe; and the Creator is' adorned in the created. As we are now living in an age when,1 and country where Education is appreciate ard propagated, I will only say, if we are living in such an age and country, let us not be behind the age in which we are liv- ing ; but cultivate and foster any deire in the rising generation for knowledge by tell- ing, showing and placing within their reach i facilities for gaining knowledge. I And lastly we will notice, when the de- sire for ' knowledge first manifests itself in j I man. wnen cnnuren erst are ante to tod dle about, we may discover the desire form- j ed in them lor knowledge. We have, in ; all probability, noticed a little child clamber, out of its couch, and turn the clothes up- . side down, and perhaps, out upon the floor, ; and did you never think that that child was in search of knowledge ? And from one pace to another we find that child as faith ful at work searching into sequestered j places, and doing its little missions of mis- I chief (as the mothers denominate them) ! by displacing things and rumaging closet, j pantry and bedroom, as when they have ' rown to riper years and become students; j but in search of knowledge (we believe) as j much in the former case as in the latter.! But when they bave grown somewhat older, j they will bring the object cf their search, ; and ask its pame, where it is made, and perhaps many other questions. If this has been the case with any of us, did we tell the child, and thereby foster the desire in that child for knowledge 1 or did we drive it from our present as a peat ? If the lat ter, did we not see disappointment depict ed in that child's eye ? bot if the former, we probably noticed witb what animation, earnestness and attention, the child listened to catch every word, and gain all the in struction it could. But let as follow them to a still more mature age, and see them come running in after the sun has been set ting, and say : "I have been watching the son go down, and I would like if yon would leH me where be goes in the evening and comes from in the morning"? "How large is be"? "Is there more sons than one"? "Where are they"?' I might multiply il lustrations, bnt we think these sufficient to show that the desire for knowledge does not commence in manhood, or boyhood ; bnt we may almost say, in the earliest pe riod of infancy.' "' FlLO. . OrangevUle, Kov. 11, 1S65. A clergyman once posted the following notice on the gate of his chnrch: "Found, two bats in my strawberry bed. The owners1 can bave them by - proving property." We don't believe the owners will call for them. The 2Iaa who wont pay t!ic Printer, i May he be shod with lightning and be compelled to wander over guppowder. May he have sore eyes and a chestnut bur for an eye stone. May every day of bis life be more des- i potic than the Dey of Algiers. May be never be permited to kiss a handsome woman. May he be bored to death with hording school Misses,practicing the first lessons in music without the privilege of seeing his tor mooters. May 543$ night mares trot qua'rter races over his stomach every night. May his boots leak, his gun hang firej and his fishing Ikies break. . May his coflee be sweetened with fleas and his sauce seasoned with spiders. - May he never strike oil, and be continu ally blessed "with nothing. May his friends run off with his wife, and his childre'n take the whooping cough. May his cattle die of murrain, and bis pigs dsstroy his garden. May a troop of printers devils, lean, lank and hungry, dog his heels each day, and a regiment of cats- caterwaul under his win dow each night. May the famine stricken ghost of an ed itor's baby haunt his slumbers, aDd hiss murder in his dreaming ears. May bis cows give sour milk, and churn rancid butter ; in short, may his daughter marry a one eyed editor, his business go to ruin, and he to the Legislature. Thb Root or all Evil. A letter from Montgomery tells this story: Last night the hospitable host brought in to the table at my boarding house a weary, lean and squalid Confederate soldier, on his way home from prison to Columbus, Geor gia. He Lad been sent around outside to New Orleans, and thence to Mobile. From Mobile, however, to this place, nnable to procure transportation, the peor, desolate creature, feeble as he was, had been oblig ed to walk, and, clumsy with weakness, on his way bad fallen through a bridge and sprained his arm, which be was wearing in a sling. "Couldn't yon ride V asked I. "No ; the Provost Marshal at Mobile said he had no authority." "But the railroad companies in Georgia" "Don't say noihin' agin Georgie ; that's my State." 'No ; I wa about to say the railroads in Georgia are carrying returned Confederates and refugees free, charging the transporta tion to ihe State ; I should think they might do the same in Alabama." "Railroad companies don't keer, for poor folks. Been fightin' tor 'em, bat they don't keer. All they think of is to make money for themselves an' have a good time. The Bible say 'money and whWkey is the toot of all evil."' ., "The first part of that," here interposed the host, ''is correct, but the last part about the whtekey, I don't think is in the Bible." - i'Waal i: is," iasisted the Georgia "crack er." "If you'll jist look in the Bible you '1 find it. Money and whiskey is the root of all evil, for I've hearn it read." - Fast Yooko Lad:.. In order to be a fast young lady, it is necessary to lay aside all reserve and refinement everything that sa vors of womanly weakness ; to have no troublesome scruples, but to be ready to ac cord an appreciating smile to the broadest joke. There must be no feeling of depen dence on the stronger sex ; but by adopt ing, as far as decency permits, masculine attire, masculine habits, and masculine modes of expression, accompanied by a fluency in using it, these ladies show them selves to be above all narrow minded prej udices. There must be no thinking about other people's feelings; if peoples will be thin skinned, let them keep ont of their way at all events. Should "mamma" rise her voice in a feeble remonstrance, the fast young lady impresses npon her that "she i3 no judge of these matters. In her old school days, everything and every one were slow ; but it is quite changed now.' In short, to sum np, to be a fast young lady, modesty, delicacy, refinement, respect for superiors, consideration for the aged, must all be set aside ; boldness, independence, irreverence, brusqenees, and, we fear, too often beartlessness must take their place. Fbom doctor's pills and western chills, and other ills deliver ns. From want of gold, and wives th&t scold, and maidens old, and sharpers bold, deliver os. From stingish flies, and greenish eyes, and baker's pies, a ad babies' cries, a man that lies, and clondy skies, and love that dies, fickle ties, and gaudy dyes deliver os. From bearded females, and strong minded women, (tbat don't jingle) female lecturers, aud all other masculine she males, deliver us. From creaking doors, a wife that snores, confounded bores, deliver os. From, modest girls, with waving carls and teeth of pearls oh! never mind. A yoong lady, on acoun't of her weight, objected to a negro carrying ber across a mud hole. "Lore, misse," said Sambo, imploringly, "I'se carried whole barrels of sugar." . A married gentleman present at a rapping circle, being in formes tbat the power depen ded wholly on the will, begged that his wife might try it, a&e had never seen anything resiit her will. Swearing ilocc. A gentleman onceheard a laboring man swearing dreadfully in the presence of com panions. He told him it was a cowardly thing to swear in company with others, when he daie not do it by himself. The man said he was not afraid to swear at any time or in any place. "I'll give you ten dollars," said the gen tleman, if yon will go to the village grave yard at twelve o'clock to night, and swear the oaths you have uttered here, when you are alone with God." "Agreed," said the man, "it's an easy way of earning ten dollar?." "Well you come to me to-morrow, and say that you have done it, and the money is yours." The time passed on. Midnight came. The man went to trre graveyard. It was a night of pitchy darkness. An he entered the graveyard, not a sound was heard. All was still as death. Then the gentleman's worde, "alone with God," came over him with wonderful power. The thought cf the wickedness of what he had been doing, and what be had come to do, darted across bin mind like a flash of lightning. Ha trembled at Lis folly. Afraid to take another step, he fell upou his knees, and instead of the dreadful oath he had came to utter, the earnest cry went upj"God be merciful to me a sinner." The next day be went to the gentleman and thanked him lor what he had done, and said he had resolved' not lo swear another oath as long a he lived. 1 Great Curiosity. The Jacksonville (Oregon) Sentinel, gives the following particulars of the discovery of a great sunken Lake : "Several of our citizens returned last week from a visit to the Great Sunken Lake, situated in the Cascade Mountains, about seventy-five mile6 northeast of Jackson ville. This lake rivals the famous valley, of Sinbad the sailor. It is thought to aver age two thousand feet down lo the water all around. The walls are almost perpendic ular, running down into the water and leav ing no beach. The depth of the -wator is unknown, and the surface is smooth and unrufled, as it lies far below tha mountain that the air currents do not affact it. Its length is estimated at twe'vo mi!e, and its width at len miles. There is an island in its centre, having Trees epen it. No living man ever has, and never will bo able Jo reach the water's edge. It lies silent, Mill and mysterious, in the bosom of the "ever lasting hills," like a huge well scooped oui by the hands of the giant genii of the mountains, in the unknown ages gone by, and around it the primeval forest watch and ward are keeping. "The viiiiiijr rartr fired a rifle eeveral times into the waer, at an angle of forty- j five degrees, and were"4!e to note several , seconds of time from the rsport of Ihe gun j until the ball struck the water. Such seems incredible, bnt it is vouched for by some of j ocr most reliable citizens. The lake is cer- , tainly a most remarkable curiosity of na tore." Thk Newspaper. Without my ctwspa per, life would narrow itself to the smallest of my personal experience, and humanity be compressed into the ten or fiflteen peo ple 1 mix with. Now I refuse to accept j this. I bave not a sixpence in conso!s,but ' I want to know how they stand. I was J never nor in all likelihood shall be in : Japan; but I have an intense curiosity to j know what our troops did at Yokohoma. I j deplore the people who suffered by that j railroad smash; and I sympathize with the j newly married couple so beautifully depict- j ed in the Illustrated, and one old gent in the : hall-door waving them a lat adieu. I like the letters of our conespondenls, with their little grievances about onpunctual trains, or some unwarrantable omissions in the Iithur gy. I even like the people who chronicle the rainfall, and record little facts about the mildness of the season. As for advertise ments I regard them as the glas and mirror of the age. Show me but one page of the "wants" of the country, and I engage to give a sketch of the current civilization of the period. What gUmpes of rare interi ors do we gain by these brief paragraphs! How full of suggestion and story are ihey 1 A farmer went with his son into the wheat field to see if it was ready to harvest. "See, father," exc lairaed the boy "how straight these stems hold up therr heaJs, Tbey must be the best ones, Those that hang their beads down, I am sure are not good for much." The father plucked a stalk of each kind, and said, "See here, foolish child ! This stalk that stood so straight and high is light beaded and almost good for nothing, whi)6 ibis bung its bead so modestly Ms full of the most beautifuf grain. If a man holds his head very high, yon may be pretty sure that it is empty." A Preacher whose text had led him'to speak of thejprophet Jonah, among other things, said : "I am of the opinion Jonah was an old man, neither smoking nor chew ing, from the fact that the fish retained him so locg in his stomach. If the fish had swallowed the house we are worshiping in, he would no doubt vomited himself- to death." Most men who complain that they have nothing to do, are jast aboat equal to the task. x A IV AUTI731X EYC.MXG. In scattered plumes the floating clouds Went drilling down the west, Like barks that in their haven soon Would moor and be at rest, The day sank down a monarch red Upon night's sable breasj. The wind was all but hushed asleep, Yet now and then it stirred A great tree's top, and whispering Awoke a slumbering bird, Who, half aroused, but only chirped A song of just a word. And in the wet a rocy light Spread out a thousand arms, Each with a torch, whose crimpon fire Stretched o'er the peaceful farms, And o'er the yellow corn, that lay Unconcious of ail harms. Then changed into a waste of blue A desert tract of air, Where no red clouds, like Indian flowers, Bore blossom bright and fair ; And over all a sense of want, Ar;d something lost was there. A Stumter roa Stuart Mill. In an ar ticle in Harper's Magazine for November, we find the following anecdote of John Stuart Mill's recent canvass for parliament. The occasion was after Mr. Mill had con cluded his speech at St James' Hall: When Mr. Mill had concluded his aJ dress. it was announced that he would an swer any questions as to his opinions which persons in the audience might put to him. It reaHy seemed'as if no voice could have the courage to follow that eloquent one lhat had just ceased, aud truly i; would have re quired a very "high question to be in keep ing with the impression left upon us. Nev ertheless a man rose to put a question, and his gravity of manners caused a general hush in the room. The question pot by the man was in these words, which were given in a stentorian voiced "I wish to ask Mr. Mill what is his opin ion as to the question of marriage with a deceased wife's sister?" Never was there a mora precipitous da scent from the sublime to the ridiculous. After the first roaring surge of laughter had swept over the crowd some said that the man had teen sent there by the enemy to turn the meeting into a farce. But no; there he stood, solemn and imperturable, awaiting the answer to his qcestion. This added to the grotesqneness of the whole offair, and it seemed for awhile lhat the crowd would never be abla to recover its gravity. Mr. Mill who saw at once that he was dealing with a man's hobby, answered, when quiet was restored, in a manner that did much credit to his heart. He rather shielded the man from the laughter of the crowd by the respectful tone with which he said: "Without having considered all the outs and ins of the question proposed, yet on the principle that liberty should be allowed except when reasm to the contrary-can. be shown, and as I know of none against marriage with a deceased wife's sister, I should be in favor of freedom in that respect.'-' Let Ins Ciiildrea Sleep. We earnestly advise that all who think a great deal, who have to work hard, to take all the sleep they can get without medical means. We canlion parents, particularly, not to allow their children to be waked up of morn ings lei nature wake them np,she will not do it prematurely; but bave a care that they go to bed at an early hour; let it be early, until it be found tbat they wake up themselves in full time to dress lor break fast. Being waked up early, and allowed to en gage in difficult or any studies late, and just before retiring has given many a beautiful and promising child the brain fever, or de termined ordinary ailments to the produc tion of water on the brain. Let parents make every possible effort to have their children go to sleep in a pleasant humor. Never scold or give lectures, or in any way wound a child's fseiing as it goes to bed. Let all banish business and every worldly care al bed-time, and let sleep come to a mind at peace with God and all the world. Those who imagine that the Democratic party is dead are hugging a delusive phan tom to their bosoms. It it as imperishable as the everlasting hills. Its principles are ihe principles of ihe Constitution, and it can never die while there is a free govern ment to save. Already the seeds of dissolu tion in the Republican ranks are plainly visible. All the Democracy have to do is to stsnd firm and the hour of our triumph xill surely come. Let the sentiment of the party everywhere; be : "Defeated but not dismayed." An Irish lawyer in a neighboring county, recently addressed rhe court as "gentlemen" instead of "your honors." Arter he had concluded, a brother of the bar reminded blm of bis error. He immediately rose to apologise thus: 'May it please the court in the hate of debate I called yonr honors, gentlemen. I mad3 a mistake your honors." The gentleman sat down, and we hope the court was satisfied with the explanation. Briggs bas a faculty for getting things cheap. The other day he had a beantifal set of teeth inserted for next to nothing. He kicked a dog. The Antipodes. Japan is a coontry of paradoxes and an-' oroalies. Thsy write from top to bottom, from right to left, in perpendicular instead of horizon'al lines. Their bonks begin where ours end. Their locks turn" from left to right. Their da7 Is our night. Shops eo to customers. Toople sit upon their heels. Horses' heads are where their' tails would be in an English stable, facing the entrance, the food hong from the roof in a basket. Their old men fly kites, while the children look gravely on ; the carpenler uses bis plane by drawing it to him ; their tailors stitch from them ; they mount their horses from the ofT siJe ; the tells lo their harness are always a'tacheJ to their hind quarters instead of the front; ladies black their teeth instead of keeping them white; their hair is turned back from their face, which is elaborately painted and powdered, and their anti-crinoline tendencies are carri ed to the point of interfering wi:h net only therrace of movement, but with all loco motion, so tightly are the lower limbs, from the waist downward, girt round with their garments. Top-spinning is followed as a profession. They indulge in frequent and loud exultations, as evidence of a good meal. Their pocket is their sleeve. They wipe the face with a nice square piece of paper, and carefully fold the envelope into the sleeve, or give it lo an attendant to throw away. Their music is without melo dy ; their landscape without perspective, light or shaffe ; their figures without draw ing, -mere crude colors and grotesque forms dar.cing in mid-air, without ground to rest on. They have bank notes of the value of a farthing. They have long per fectly understood the utilization of sewer age, and the manulacture of paper, not from rugs, but from the bark of trees, of which they have sixty-seven different kinds, all with different uses. They use no milk or animal food ; horses and oxen and cows are employed for purposes of draught only ; they have no sheep or pigs ; the flowers have no scent, ihe birds no song, and their fruits and vegetables have no flavor. "Do it With Tkt Might." Fortune, success, fame, position. are never gained but by piously, determinedly, brav ely striking, growing, living, in a thing till it is fairly accomplished. In short, you must carry a thing through if you want to be anybody or anything. Np matter if it does cost yon the pleasure, the society, tie thousand pearly gratificatinns of life No matter lor theee. Stick to Ihe thing and carry it through. Believe you were made for the matter, and that no one else can do it. Pet forth yonr whole energies. Stir, wake, electrify your self, and go forth to the task. Only once learn to carry through in all its complete ness and proportion, and you will become a hero. Yon will think better of yourself ethers will think tetter of yoa. Of course they will. The world in its very heart admires the stern, determined doer. It sees in him its best sight, its brightest object, its richeit treasure. Drive riht along, then in wha'ever you undertake. Consider your self sufficient for the deed. You'll be suc cessful. Never fear. Stealing Dowjt Socth. The La Crosse Democrctl has an article ehowing np a "loy al" thief, whe stole a printing establishment at Columbia, Tennessee, during the war, and removed it to For.d dn Lac, Wiscon sin, where be is now publishing an Ab olition paper, using the stolen material for that purpose. There is said to be a pros pect of bringing the "loyal" cenfiscationist to grief, on account of this printing office theft. There was any amount of stealing done in the South, in the name of "loyalty," by "loyal" camp followers, during the war, who might very properly be looked after now. Printing offices, public and private libraries, pianos, household goods, ladies' dresses, Lc, &c, were among the spoils sent North by these "shoddies," and dis tributed among their friends. The close of the war put a stop lo this thing, and the "loyal" confiscationists have manifested great sorrow ever since. rcT Them Through. We rejoice to see that the penile are bringing to justice, in a number of counties, those abolition" election officers, who violated the law, in refusing to allow so-calied deserters and ekedadd'ers to vote, at the recent State election. The Constitution and laws of this State define the duties of election officers, and we hope to see every board in this State that vio lated these laws, punished to the fullest ex tent. We have permitted much illegal interference with the rights of the people for the past four years, tbat the adherents of the party in power seem to think that there are. no laws in existence to punish outlawry. It is time ihey were taught bet ter a few years service in the penitentiary, will tend to mend their manners vastly. A doling mother of a waggish boy having bottled a lol of nice preserves, labeled them, "Put up by Mrs. D ." Johnny, having discovered the goodies, 600a ate the con tents of one bottle, and wrote cn the label, "Pot down by JohnnyD- John asked Julia if she would have hitn. "No," said she, "I will not have yoa," bet before John could recover from the shock, she archly put in, "bet you may have me !" "Bob.'did yoa let off that gon?" exclaim ed an enraged schoolmaster. "YeB, master." "Well what da yoa think I will do with you?" "Why, let mo ofl." Signs cf Character. "Trifles make up the sum of human things," and it is surprising how readily an experienced eye can read chsrscter from " the slightest and mot insignificant tfar"a. Don't yon believe it reader J Jost allow us to give yon a few whispers on the subject - a peep, through onr own special opera glass, at ihe world around us. When you meet a young man with plen ty of bad cologne in hi pocket handker chief and a stale odor of cigar smoke in his hair, you may be sure that hp was bold enough to contrnct a very bad habit, and and not bold enough to take the consequen ces of it. In cigar vs. cologne the plaintiff has the best of it. When you see a woman with her shawl , fastened all awry, and onmended fractures in her gloves, it i a pretty sure index that she reads novels and lies in bed late of a morning. If .yon happen to be wife hunt ing, don't be mis.'id by her bright eyes and cherry cheeks. A girl who cannot spend time to keep herself looking neat, ought not to be trusted with the care of shirt buttons and cravats ends, to say notftir.g of the hus band appended lo these articles! When a gentleman hands up your fare in ' a stajje as politely as that of your gorgeous ly dressed neigbor, wiihout reference to the fact that you wear calico, and cotton ghjve rest assured that he is lacking in no cour- lesies to his own wife at home. And if a lady no, a woman accepts his politeness as a mere matter of course, with no "Thank you nor acknowledging smile, then you may conclude that she has entered into so ciety on the bubbles of Petroleum not on any merits of her own. - - When a lady no, once again a female goes to a grocery in a resiling silk dress, and does her morning shopping in dia monds rings and a cashmere shawl, it is a sign of 6ne ef two things: either she does not know any better, or she has no other place in which to display her finery. When the "nice young man" who is paying you particular attention, speaks shortly to his mother, or omits to pay bis sisters the little attentions that come so gracefully from man to woman, it is apt in be a sign lhat his wife must put np with tho same system of snubbing and neglect as foon as the first gloss of the wedding suit is gone. When a lady finds "Macauley.s History" a dreadful bcre, and tkips the historical part of Scott.s novels, it is not an unfair in ference that her train is not very fully fur nished. When a gentleman cannot talk fluently on the great fcutjects of ancient and modern interest, bet polkas "charmingly" we may safely conclude "that his brains such as Ihey are have all settled down into his agile heels. Now we do not disapprove of dancing, yet we confess to a prefsrence lor havit.g the brains a Utile higher op. When a girl entertains you with spicy rid icule of her gentleman friends, "showing cp" their imperfections and weaknesses, lake jour hat and go. If yon need any comfort, there will be sufficient in the fact that you will undoubtedly furnish your 6hare of amusement lothe next arrival ! Tut not your faith (speaking from a fem inine stacd-point) in gentleman that wear diamond scarf pins, and spend their leisure time on hotel steps, for it is more than pro bable they belonc to the extensive class of l society for whom Satan is popularly sup- posed "to find some mischief still" to keep their "idle .hands" in occupation. Better lavish your smiles on the sturdy young car penter in shirt sleeves and blue overalls, who works by the day ; it will be more profitable in the long run. When a woman finds Sunday "the longest day in the week," it is a sign that there l was some woeful deficiency in her early re ligious training. When a man speaks irreverently of sa cred things, let it suffice as a warning to trust him in no sinyle matter. No matter 5 how brilliant may be his talents, how fair , his professions, there is a false ring to his metal. Don't trust him ! Rk tub Lie an tbinciplej. In a nutshell the ) tendencies ofRepuMicau principles are. j High prices of coal and provisions, j Paper money, worth sixty cents to the j dollar. High taxes, and hordes of officerf to col lect them. A national debt greater than that of Eng land. Scores of officeholders paid to make po litical speeches. Imprisonment for political opinions. Negro suffrage, universal, by the adop tion of the Constitutional amendment. A delegation of Baltimore ladies on Mon- .1 JL day waited on the President with a petition V signed by 3,500 of their countrymen, for the mm? f 1T r:. nr : r r j ' informed them that arrangements had been made for an early trial of Davis "according to the laws of the land." The material in the box which exploded at tho Wyoming Hotel, New York, is be lieved to bave been a newly discovered explosive compound of glycerine and nitric acid. W. C. Barney, a clerk in the New York Custom House, was arrested on Monday on a charge of defrauding the government ef S40.0CO. In the next New Jersey Legislature the Republicans will bave a majority ot from 12 to 16 on joint ballot