-BY D. A. dc.#3.. H. BUBBLER L.VOLU M E XX:VI•1 GENERAL INVORIVI ATION. , • .. Post ORlce itivilat ions. Ritter of lbstage : Postoge'on all letters of qmeihalf ounce. wellth4 or 1 1ndort . 3 , cents Pro - ! raid, (except to California and Oregon, which ta .19 cents pre-paid.) , • Postageon "1:11E STAR AND BANNER".7with dotuity, free. Within the State, l3cents per year. To any' part of the United States, 26 cents: • Postage on all . transient papers under ounces in weight, 1 cent pre-paid, or 2 cents unpaid. ' Advertisedietters to be clArged with the cost of advertising. • • TAi Mails : Coaches,. with mails to Balti more and Philadelphia ) (and intervening points,) leave at. 5 o'clock, A. M., daily, ex cept Sundays. •To . Harrishurg, on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, at 5, A. M. , To. Hagerstown, on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, at 7; A. M. To Chatnbersburg, 5, A. 1.1., daily. Emmittsburg, 3, P. M., " Mail to Beadersvillo, 51kIdletown, Mammas burg, Cet;tre Milli, Arendt.stown, on Wedne.s day and Saturday, 7 A. id. To 'Hunterdown, Tdesdity, Thursday and i Saturday, 7 A. M. To Now Chester, and Hampton, on Tuesday of each week, 7 A. M. • Officers of the United Staten. Prest.leul : b'rgstik ha Pierce. Veen Jexsu 1). Bright. tircrcbu•y of Slut( : %Van. L. Nlarey. S•rret gry ul fo , ..rhr : I{o art IfeCiellautL Secretary o/• Tolvotry : Jnwes I;uthrie. Nrereinty 0t Mgr : .lelforAon Davis. &a•dury gl . Soggy: James C. Dubbin. POW .1/ogler Grog , ' gil : Jewell Campbell. .Itiorne!, G,girral : Caleb Cushing. Juolier gy'the : R. 13. Taney. State Officerts. tf:urernor inn's Pollock. &weary ty . : AndNw (1. Curtin. - 1) PIN try ': John M. S illiviin. .tittrrtyta Getier s d: J. Polier Brualev. It sulitor litntral : Ephraim hunks. T/rMiiret : Eli Slifer. : S—iitek, E. LoWin; W: B. LoWrii, G. W. Woodward, J. C. Rio .I.h.ittay Superiamtdrnl et/ Cumnion Schools : Henry C. Hickok. Couuty °Music Congress: David F. Robiaon. Siwite : Moinger. slssemb/y : Isaac Robiasom. Preaident Judge: li.cohert, J. Fisher. alsnoriatex : Sane' R. Itte>sell. Jua MCG illly. -Martel Attorney : JIN. G. Reed. Sberif: Ilenry Thomas. Caruner : .1. W. lleadrix. Prothonotary : Jo iii Picking. R.:jitter it liesurder: Win. F. Walter. Clerk tithe Courts : .1. 3. Baldwin. l'orrniy Teen.rorer : 3. L. Schick. County Surm-yor : Geo. B. liewit. Is fp,tor n'e r iyidv and Mea.aires: Franklin Gardner. Jas. .1. Wills George ilyers, !teary A. Picking ; Clerk—j. Aughinbaugb) Coons,!— I /livid Wills. -.Dierelara -fg . the I'uter Joseph Baily, John Horner, Garret Ilrinkerlaill'; Clerk-11.°h%. S. Pn.uan ; Treasurer—Alexiiiider Cobean ; •Steward—John Scott ; Physician—Das-id Horner. Ati , litort : Eihnunil P. Shorb, Abel T. Wright, Jahn Ilatiptinnit. Mere.itaile Appraiver : J1Lool) A ithizaliattgli G'wtiity eittivrinerlithiel; David Wills. Borough Officerti. liffrgemg: John Culp. -niel< Council: A. Thompson, Hugh Ihmuhlthe, SOMIIOI R. Russell. S. S. Me- Cre:sry, Nendlehart, John Uiihurt. R. 6.2'Croary, Clerk mid Treasurer. Josiires of do. Pcore ; George E. 13ringumn, Joel R. Ihinner. 'Cu/trio/de : John L. Burns. Places of Worship iPretkafrriaii : Belt. and High street—at pros , etit withinita Pastor. ,Jtuinoo Catholic West High street. Pastor ltuv Mt. De Necker. 'Oeranott,Reformed: High and Stratton streets. Nu:tor—lto% Jacob Ziegler. irelhotlist Ejli4coiml : Eas,t !diddle street.— Pastors—Revs. J. W. Ilosh, Wni. Earnsbaw. ,Asswirde Ilrjhrined: West High street. Pas. tor—Rev. - Mr. Werner. laitheran - : Christ Church, Phatabersburg street; Pastor—Rev. Pr. Krunth. St. James, York and Foratton streets ; Pas lor—Rev. Reuben Hill. Apisoclat lonN T. D. 0. F.—Gettys L ge meets on Tuesday evening of each week S. of T Adams l)ivis at meets on Monday evening of each we Temperance Benefipia. Association meets on third Saturday evening of each month. Gettysburg Beneficial Association meets first Saturday evening of each month. : Young Men's Lyceum, meets on Thursday evening : ofeach week. Yerk Springs Lodge meets on 'Mirada) , even ing 'of each istek. 'Berlin Beneficial Assoeintion meets on the first Fritley evening of each month. Sauk of Gettysburg. President : George Swope. Cashier John B. McPherson. • Clerk : John H. McClellan. ,Dwactors, , ; . George ~Swepa D. Kendlehart, Alexander, D. Mitnes, Win: Gardner, Henry - Wirt, Win. Douglas, David Wills,- George Yottitgi Tohn Snope Win. A. Stewart, 'Joshua •Motteri Josbph L. Short . ), John ;K. Longwell. . • Adams CountyMul ai Fire 'Weil • • ranee' .Preiteleal i George Swope. • V.'Presictent: Samuel R. Russell. Secretary :• David A. Buehler: ..11xotitnn,...; David, ht'Creary, . I Akccutivc coniraitiec IrCurily,indiew Jacetiling. • .Ifaliagers:'o63.'Sirojad, D. A.Ruchlir, R. Curdi,l:' Rink A: Ireintieltaaii. Itus -1%41, DirM'Creary; J'l.). Noel, A. B. Ktirts, 8. .•Fahneatook R. 0' WOreary,. J.-J. Kerr; T. A. Marshall / M. Eiclielberger, J, Aughin • bomb,A., Picking, D.. hi,Ton. au h 200 1 ? :Wm B. 4c) e Execitive Cenimittee Meet "on 'the ThesdaY • month at th 4 office ,ofAhe Enixretiry. - ' - - A birniater , obterved:lto , a learntaj broth eotto, that therwatiring of:;lmiskerti am unpr9feasioaal... ritight. teapond- aid ,hie f tend, "a latFyernaanot be 'WiNitittruct Suage.--A Vennoot iiiikemriomid , inE amnion about 1t0 , 6 - ,kituOrita "Itiebp' on wheat straw. with one 14 PhtiOrtill oaks Inlaid to the otteinfittied 'sheep dai,"ind 4h4 are ibittiglf hut Ibis V Ought itieta.fr, =ME , . . "Abide with tx.P9 ,• . , [The 'followink beautiful ftoern is from 'the Kniekerhoekerfor July.l. - 4 "Tarry with met 0 my . :Savior I For the day IS Rrovilng 1 6, I See,.the shades of evening gather And the' night ikdritielog nigh,. ' Tarry with me I term with me I • Pass me not unheeded by. "Many'friends were gathered round Me, • In the bright:days of the past ; But the grey°, bail eloped above them, And I linger hero the , last ; I am toilet) , ; tarry with me ; Till the dreary night is past. "Dimmed for nie is early beauty Yet the' spirrit's eye would fain Rest upon TIIY lovely features; Shall I seek dear Lord in vain ? Tarry with me, 0 my SAVIOR Let me see thy smile again, "Dull my ear to multi-born musk t Speak Thor,Lord, in words of Clear, Feeble, pottering mrfimtsteps, Sinks my heart with sudden fear ; Cast Tuitte arms, dear Lord I around me, Let'me feel Titr presence near. "Faithful memory paints before me, Every deed and thought of sin ; ' Open 'Non the blood•filled fountain, Cleanse my guilty soul within ; Tarry. Titan tbrOring SAVIOUR I• • Wash me wholly from my sin. "Deeper, deeper grow the shadows,. , Paler now the glowing west; Swift the night of death adimnees— Shall it hethe night of rest ? Tarry with me, 0 my Samuel Lay my head upon TRY breast I "Feeble, trembling, fainting, lying, Lord, I cast myself on THEE ; Tarry with me, through the darkness ; While I sleep, still watch by me Till the morning, than awake me, Dearest Lord, to dwell with Tilka: From the Child's Paper. Thanksgiving Day In the Ilea&t. Alice Tracy was a bright pretty girl of . thengi she often attracted attracted the attention, of strangers, roam no favorite among " her companions ; they never wanted her to join their plays or walks. Alice often felt angry ut this ne glect, for she did not see clearly, why she was treated so. Oue day at recess, while a group of the girls were in the entry talking about Thanksgiving; altoo went to wash her slate ut a little shelf behind the school-room door.. "We always have such good" times at grandpa's," said one of her cousins ; "or we should have," Auid another cousin, "if it were not for Alice Tracy ; she is such a little fitebratkod, she spoils all our fun." -"Yes, that she is !" cried all the other girls, joining in. It is said, listeners never hear any good of themselves, but Alice could not help hearing, and what she heard was anything but gas] of herself. "A firebrand, am I?" thought Alice, her little person swelling with auger and _mortification ; "I'll never speak to those girls again ;" and she went. back to her seat in a very unfit state to finish hersutns. "A firebrand I" she kept saving to her self, "a firebrand I I wish I could born them all up !" and with such wicked thoughts the little girl spent the remain der of the afternoon. When school was done, she ran home with; ut looking or speaking to any item—. Nobody seemed to be at home ; she rang -ed the rooms, hoping to find somebody, and vet,hoping not to : what if her own brothers and sisters thought her a fire brand too ? At last she saw her mother looking over the round yellow pumpkins in the wood-house chamber. "Alice, is that you ?" said her mother. Her mother's friendly tone sounded very sweetly Co the child's camas with a burst ing heart she flung herself on the rude bench by her mother's side, end hid her face in her hip. "What is the matter ?" asked Mrs. Tracy ; "you have been run ning ; how very hot your heed is." "I Elm a firebrand," cried Alice ; "the girls say I am." "How is that ?" asked her mother, and presently Alice related what had happened : "Yes,. mother, they have treated tae like one for a great while, and I will never play with them again." "Do not make any rash promises," said Mrs. Tracy, "lug us first see if there is any just ground for what they say. I suppose every little girl has a reputation aiming her companions, and that repute thin is pretty much what she is ; is it not se ?" "IVhat is reputation,. mother ?" asked Alice. , A good or a bad name." answered her mother ; "that is, if a child has a goad or a bad name at achool 6 she generally deFerving of it? think a while." Alice thought "The girls think Fanny Blake is a good sehhlar, And she is; .and they thick Emily Cowden is - mean, ,and she to; and they think"—Aiice was going on with her estimate . of character when her mother asked-- ' ' ' "And what do tboy think of ,Alice Tracy..'.,' . The 'ohild . blushed. Her mother waited se`ribiory Un in ansWer. "They thiak," at last Alice said, "she is it 'firebrand I" - 4 , That is," added )her bother, "they think she hems quick, fiery temper, which blOws up on) the smallest occasions, and spoils everything pleasant. And is not this my little daughter's besetting sin ? Has it uot often grieved her mother, kin dled,quarrels among her brothers and sis ters, and tilepleased hor Saviour, in Whine eight a 'meek and quiet spirit' is of treat price ?" Alice beeti',iold all this before, but how she felt it, and she suddenly saw heir eelf!a Ws glass, dnloved and unlottely, in consequence of! violent temper which she had been it little pains to restrain or sub. due. It)wasa sad hour for poor Alice, ' and her mother improved the opportunity of making a deep, and as she hoped, a list: jug impression upon,the child; ,for, if our aultashut us out of the society of ,our friends here, how much more. will they shit( us from the society of holy, beingeb "0, mottei," said will itriproVe ; I yen"wilt.help'ate. and•Jtatte will help teesitfidll will help myself , . • , G'iTtY0,611G,',..F.4., FRIDAY . 8 . ,..yEN1t0, • 141.0 ir EIRE ji: 30; :1.8.55: d 'trying, will try an try, ano never give op Mother, am Ito iorry." Children often say thdy 'are sorry, but it is more apt td be for the 'consequences of limit faults than for, the faults .tliona solves, which unfit hent,to the children of God. If any ott'e . iti really sorry fir her sins,'slie will ask God to foreve her,' and pray that all disposition to am may be ta ken away from hor heart, and she will be no tba lookout to bar , her heart against any temptation gottiug in and leading her' astray again. Baer littie.Alice Was in earned as We ' shall see. Itt a few weeks Thanksgiving. day came, thaigreat family holiday when a score of cuestas and ;',their mothers and fathers and uncles atUI itunts met at grand father's, not only to eat' (urkey and mince pie'and crack nutir, hullo recount the goodness of God, and thank him for the mercies which crown'the' year. I cannot tell you nbout the plentiful Thanksgiving= ' , dinner at grandfather Tracy's; or 'hoW ma ny turkeys he sent around to the poor for their Thanktgiiing, or bow many pies 1 his wife baked to go with them,. or all the pleasant words that *ere spoken. But in the afternoon it was the fashion for the grandehildron to recite Utile poems, and this year Alice was old enough to say one, and she had spent much time to commit to memory one which her mother had se ! !clued for liar. Four or five of the coo sins had said theirs, when Alice's turn, came, She was abashed, but began well,l and finished the first verse, when she bleudered sod stammered : some of her con-; sins langlied and tittered, which confused 0 her more and more. Mk was unkind and vexing, but Alice kept her temper ; she turned to grandfather, who was master of • ceremonies, and said,— "Please, sir, excuse me ; the others can do a great deal better than I, grandpa;" and she stepped humbly aside and bid herself in grandfather's arms, which were e stretched out to receive. her. Au'd he was content to have .the speaking go en without her. After it was over, Ned ask ed her to excuse his laughing, for it was very rude. "Yes, indeed," she answered sweetly; "I nun sure you did not mean to trouble me." "0, mother," she whispered, after they got home that evening, "I have had a real Thanksgiving-day in my heart." "I suppoto grandmother's pies tasted better than over," said her father smiling. "Not that, not that," cried Alice ; awl putting herrnsy lips almost into her moth er's ear. ..the firebrand is almost ofd," site whispered; for the tittle one had begun to learn that God hal in store choicer lies.- sings for thie soul for which to be thankful, than anything which lie bestows upon the body ; and that day Ole felt the joy of her first viototy ovor a besetting sin. No won der it was . a thanksgiving day to her.— Flow many children who ,rend this, have enjoyed a thanksgiving4ay in thebeart, us Alien did 7 At first ;he had resnivoa to play with her cousins and companions no wore ; but on second thought she saw it was better to get rid of her faults than to be rid of her friends. Front the New York Quarterly. A Teetotal Monkey. Dr. Guthrie relates an amusing anec dote of a reasonable monkey. which we Most present : "Jack, as he was called, seeing his master and companions drink ing, with those imitative p.iwers from which his .epecies is remarkable, finding hall a glass of whiskey left, took it up and drunk it off. It flew, 01 course, to his head. Amid their loud roars of laughter, he be.' gen to skio, hop and dance—Jack was drunk. Next day, when they went, with the intention of repeating the Inn, to take the poor monkey from his box, he was not to be seen. Looking-inside, there lie lay crouched in a corner. •Came out !' said his master. :Afikid to disobey. he came walking op three legs—the forepaw that was laid oft' hie forehead saying, as plant as words could do, that hehad a headache. t'llabing left him some days to get. well and resume his gayety, they at length car ried him off 10 the old scene of revel. • On entering. he eyed the glasses with toglli test terror, skulking behind the chair: and on his toaster ordering him to drink, he bolted, and he was on the Imam-top in a twinkling. The called him down. He would not come. His master shook his whip at him. Jack, astride on the ridge. pole. ghtuted defiance. A gun. of winch he was always inlich afraid, ,was, pointed I at this disciple oE temperance: he Auck ed his head and slipped over the back of ' the house ; upon which, seeing , his predic einem, and less afraid apparently of the fire than fire -water, the monkey leaped at a bound on the chimney top, and get ting down into a flue, held on by his.fore paws. He would rather he stored than drink. He, triumphed, and although. his master kept Ilion for twelve years alter, he never could. persuade the monkey to drink another. ,drop of whiskey." • Front that admirable work, .‘!lllustrik. lions of Instinct," we take the following : monkey tied•to a,stake. was ,robbed by the Johnny Crows, (inthe Westlndies) of his food, sod he' conceived the'follciw ing plan of punishing' the thieves. He feigned death, and lay.perfeetly motionless Ott the ground; near to his oaks. The birds approached by degrees and got near enough to steal .his food, which he allowed them to do., This he repeated several times, till they elute so bold-as to Come within-reach of his claws. , • He cal whited his distil nee, and laid.hold of one Of thorn'. Death was not his plait of puo ishment ; he . efell.M9fl3, reflood lie cru elty.,, He phicked every:leather out,of : the bird, and then • let hits go, and show. hint aelf to-his companiona.'. He made, a„ntatt of, him,,-,aceortiing to the, ancient .defini tion of a ibiped _without leathers." TUE VALUE OF A GOOD Wirit.—Tbe old Northumberland song lays Ai r men may spare, r. . 44 yet be bare, . . If iii,:wife'be nowght, if hie wife,be tqwght. ' But a ma n may spdnd i And ' have'liidtfay to lend, , , viri44iire be 'ought, if his'wife be'ewitit: "FEARLESS A►ND FREE." Ow old Grairdamillher. '"I find the marks of my shortest steps beside those dory beloved mother. which were measured by my, own," says Alexan der Dumas, and so conjures up one of the sweetest images in the siorld. He was re visiting the home orbit infancy; he was retracing the little paths "around it in which he had once walked; and strange dowers could not efface,, an I rank grass could not conceal, sod cruel ploughs could not obliterate, his 'shortest footsteps" and his mother's beside them, 'meowed by his own. And who needs to be . tad whim ,foot steps they wera that thus kept time with the feeble patteriug' of childhood's little! feet 2 It was no - tnothef behind whom Aseanins waked '"with equal steps" in Virgirs line, been strong. stern num, who could have borne him and.. mot been _burs dened ; folded him In his 'arms from all danger minoe been wearied; everything. indeed, be could hava done for hint, but' just what be needed most--could not sym pathise with him,; be wield not be a child again. Ah! a rare tat is that. fort indeed tt is an art, to set back the great ; old clack of time, and be a boy once more!! itlan'e imagination' mat easily seethe child a man ; but how hardit is for it. to see the man a child; and he who had learn ed to glide look into that rosy time, when ; he did nut know that thorns were under the roses, or that clouds would ever return after the rain ; when be thought a tear could stain a cheek no more than a dmp of rain a 'lower ; when he fancied shut lieu had no disguise and hope no blight at all, has come as near as anybody can j to diseoveriug the northwest passage to Paradise. And it is perhaps for this 'reason that it! is so much easier for a mother to cuter the kingdom of Heaven than it is for the mast ot the world. She fancied she is bedding bee children._wilen....afier_sll,the._,thildren i are leading her; and they keep her indeed where the river is the narrowest and the air is the clearest; and the beckoning of a radiant band is ro plainly seen from the other side, that it is no weeder she so often lats go her clasp upon the little fingers she is holding, and gees over to the neighbors, and the children follow like lambs to the fold, for we think hi - ought' somewhere to be written, "Where the mother. is there the children will be also." But it was not of the mother we began to think. but of the desi old-fashioned grandmother, whose thread of love, spun "by band" on life% little wheel, was longer and stronger than they make it now, was woued alend and .about the children she raw playing in the childom's arms, in a true love knot that nothing but the shear; of Atropos could Sever ; foe do we not re • rgrine the lambs sometimes. whew eon'- , e'er days are over, and stashes aiiitda are blowing, as they come bleating from' the' yellow fields, by the crimson -thread we j wound about their necks in April or May, and so undo the gate and let the wander ers in ? Blued be the children who have an old-fashioned grandmother. As titer hope for length of dais let them live and honor her, her we can tell them they will never find another. There ise large old kitchen somewhere in the past, end an old-fashioned fire-place therein, with its smooth old jambs of stone, smooth with many knives that had been sharpened there, smooth with many little fingers that had clung there. There are andirons. too ; the old andimps, with rings on the top. wherein many' temples of flame have been lbuilded. with spires and turrets of crimson_ There ha a broad worn hearth bmad enough for three gen eraiions.to cluster on ; worn by feet that have been torn and bleeding by the way, or made '"heautiful." and walked upot: floors of tessellated gold. There are tongs iu the canter wherewith we gra sped a coal , and "blowing for a little life. lighted our first candle ; there is a shovel, wherewith were drawn forth the glairieg embers. in which we saw our first fancies and dreamed our first dreams : the shovel. with which we stirred the 'sleepy logs, till the sparks rushed up the chimney as if the forge were in blast below, and wiftbed we had so many lambs, or no many marbler, or so maany somethings that we coveted ; and wit was we wished Our first wishes. There is a chair—a low rash-bottomed chair; there is a little wheel in the corner, a big wheel in the garret, a loom in the chamber. There are chests full of linen and parr, and quilts of rare pattern, and "samplers!' in frames. And everywhere and always the dear old wrinkled face of her whose firm, elastic step *inks the feeble Igllliver of her chil dren's chit& co—the old-fashioned grand mother ,of twenty years ago. Slie, the very Providence of the old hnnieAtead ; she. who loved ns all, and said she wished them were more of ns to love, and took all the school in the hollow for grand children beside. A.greq expensive bean washers. beneath that woollen gown. or that More stately bombazine. or that sole herr-Vain of silken texture. We can see her, to-day. those:Mild. blue eyes. with more of beauty M them than time could touch or death do more than hide—those eyes that held both an.iles and tears within the faintest-dl of every one of us. and .soft reproof, that •emned, not passion but regret. A white tress has es eaped from beneath lhersnowy cap ; she his just restored a wandering lands le its mo ther ; she lengthened the tether of a vine dud was straying over a wituldle, as she tame in. and placed a four-leaf elover'for Ellen. She sits down by the little Wheel —a tress is ronnirg theingb her fingers from the dieters dishevelled bead when a small voice cries "Grandma" from the old red cradle. and "Grautbsta" foamy shOuts from the top of the stain- Gently she lets go the thread, for her . patience is al most as beautiful as her charity, and ale touches the little red bark a moment, till the young voyager is in a dream again, and then directs Tommy's unavailling at tonpts to harness the cat- The tick of the dock runs fiat and low. and she o- peon tbe mysterious door, and, proceeds to wand it npp. We are all on tiptoe. and we be in a breath to be lifted ara onaib3r one, and look in the hundredth time utton . ,the tin casts Of the weights , and .the peoillibe ly pendulum. Which goes !o 'and fro brits little dim window, and never comes Out hi the world, and our petitions are :011,grant ed, and we are lifted up, and we. all, touch with a finger the wonderful !eights, and tho music of the little Wheel is reenthed. Was 'Warr to he niarried, or Jane to be wrapped in a shroud,l Scr meekly did she fold;the white hands of the one. upou her t ill bosom, that ; there seemed to be prayer in them there . ; and so 'sweetly did she Wreath the White roseein the hair'of the other, - lhat : dne would not have Wondered had More roses' budded for company. dlowehe stood between Its and appre hended harm ; bow the rudest ?fin soften ed beeetithlho gentle pressure' of that fa.. dad - and tretimions handl Front eiamt-• oleos pookei that' band was ever withdrawn closed, only to'bi" openedin our eivn,,witiv. the nuts she had gathered, the elletriep, she, had plucked, the little egg she lituffoutul, the "turn-over" SIM had balted."-the trinket , she had ptirehased ref eis as the' produCt of her spinniug,.the blessing she had' stored . for :us--the offspring el her heart. What treasures °Eatery fell, rom these old lips ; of good ftiries and , evil; of the old' times when she was a girl ; and 't`ve'wen. dered if ever—but 'then, 'she coo Itlutt ' be handsoiner or dearer—but that -she evert was "little."; And then, when ; we, begged, her to sing, "Sing us one of the old songs you used to siug mother, grandma." "Children, I can't sing," alter always said; and mother used to lay her knit;Mig soltly down, and the kitten stopped playing with th pun upon the floor, and the cloud ticked lower in the corner, and the tire died down to a glow, like an old heart ildit is neither chilled nor dead, and grandmother sang. To be sure; it wouldn't do for the parlor and the concert room now-a•days ; but then, it was the old kitchen and old-; fashioned.grandmother.aud-tbe old ballad, in the dear old times; and we can hiftdly I eel to write fur the memory of them, though it is a hand's breadth to the sunset. Well, she sang. Her voice was feeble and wavering, like a fountain just ready to fall, but then no* sweet toned it was ; and it became deeper and stronger;• bui it couldn't grow sweeter. , What ley of grier it was to sit there arena(' the fire, ull of us, except June, that elasped a pray er to her bosom. auditor we thought we saw, when the hall door MN opened a Me went by the wind ; lint then we: w'ete 'not afraid, for wasn't Utile old suiile she wore? —to sit there around the , fire. and weep o• ver the woes of the "Babes in tile Wmids," who lay down side by side iu the solemn shadows ; and how strangely glad we felt when the robin red-breast covered them with leaves, uud last ofall when the angels took them out of the night into,day over. lasting..--. • • We may thiuk what we will of it now, but the song and the story' heard arouud the kitchen fire have colored Ole lives and thoughts of most of us •; have gtceo with° germs of whatever poetry hire? our !marts; whatever of memory blooms' in our yester. days. Attribute whatever we may to the school and the schoolmaster, the rays which mica that litter's day we call life; radiate' from the G-ol..swept circles of the hearthstone. Then she sings an old lullaby she sangg . to mother—;•her mother sang to her ; but she does not slug it thro,' cud talors mil ' 'tis done. She rests her. head upon her hands, and is silent in the old kttehort.—. Something glitters down between her .on. gars it, the firelight, and it looks like vain iu the soft sunshine. The old grandinoth 7 er is thinking When she first Heard . the song, and the voice that wain it ;, wiled. - a light haired .and light-hearted girl, :she hung around that "thother'a chair, nor saw the shadows of the years to come. 0 ! the days that are no more I What' spell can'we weave to bring them back again ? What wordri unsay, what deeds nude; inset back. just chi 4 mice. thi4 anoieut clock of Limo ? So all otir hands were fore verelitig. ing to her garments and staying her. as it from dying, fur roliga!ro she had been dohm living for herself , ninflived abide in us.—, But ihp old kitchen wants a preacuoo to- dny, and the rush-bottomed chair is ten- How she used to weleinno us'when wo wore grown And tame buck once more to the homestead. ' , . We thought we were wen and wanton but we were children' there. The old-fash- lotted geatnitoether, was blind in the eyes, but she saw with her fieart,n :she ultrity's thd. We threw our long shadows throuib the open doer, and she, felt then], us they .fell over her feral; and she looked dimly ups4nd saw toll Shapesju the door-way, audrshe says, 'Edward rknow, en 4 Lucy's voice I can bear, but whose is that other. It roust bo Jane's for sbe bad ohnost for. gotten thu folded, hur.do. 'Oh, no, not Jatm, for she--let me see—she is waiting for, me, isn't she 2', and the old, gratltuoth er wandered and wept. • "It is another daughier;giandainther, that Edward has brought," says some one, "for your blessing." . "Has she blue eSei , my "r 11.; Pin her band in mine., for, the is, my latest httrn. the child of my old age. Shall.l sing you a song, caildren'M • Her hand is in her pooket'as of old ; she is idly ttimbling for a toY. swelconte.gift for the children that come again. , . One of,us, men tut, we thought we wero. - is weeping; she heirs the half-suPpressed sob; she says, as shey•extetids her feeble hand, , ffere my poor child. frost :upon your:grand mother'lS shoulder; she will pro tee! you from all harm. "Coin% children, sit- around the fire a gain. Shalt I sing you a song;" .or tell you a story? Stir the fire. foi it is cold ; the.nights are growing colder I The clock in the corner struck nine, the bed-time of those old days. The song 'of. life was indeed sung, the Story told ;" it was bed-time at last. Good night to thee.. grandmother t The old•fashioned grand , mother was no more, ana kve miss her for-- ever, But we will set . up a tablet in' the midst of the memory, iu the fll i c t e t, of the heart, and write on it only tine : "Sacral to thJ, tamp* Qf oil' fashioned Graiichiligher=eod &le s uhtijinvor.", Dow. Jr.. on Pork. you know that it ie for want of stirring,op' [This clelebrated preacher has strayed that causes times to settle into obtltiraqy. out to California. We find the following But more especially are you like porker** sermon in a late number of the Golden because you refuse to be driven. Yon's-. Era.] I gree together wittily enough:: to abstain, "My discoune for to•day, will bear I from work. and close year alarms on the chiefly upon hogs. You may find my text Christian Sabbath ; but whim [does law In Thompron'e'Castle of Intioleuce. makers undertake to drive you into,yoer "The filthy beastethat never chewed the cud, Pella with a b ig stick. all your doggish , Still grunt and sq ueak , and sing their trout) r tributes manifest themselves in open deft ' lous song.' lance. '!'hat's . natural ; end what LI aS., The hog, my hearers, is hereditarily a! tore, to right. Why. my friends,,there filly beast,i teeteriling to my text. • Mud, i more concentrated strength and virtue lot peck and mire claim a legitimate affinity? fashion. moral suasion and popular, opio.- with the animal. In his early pighood he.! ion, that in, the syrup of all the arbitrary • looks clean, phre and spotleos as virtue rt laws of knation boiled down to a gallon.. self; his swinish propensitiee don't ritick • You are readily governed by the forming out, much, and they : are but latently bud `i but to the hitter you make asetiffaed fetr • Cling within him. = Ile Iriske round a brier.; real a bow as if encased in Malvinas * bush with the nimbleness of 11, rabbit, and , copper waistcoat, and sheet-iron crass(-•, turns oven a potatoes paring with all the So mute it be. , dtlit;acY Of a youn g Chesterfield. • But un c on i a ,,, drunia. • , . • nerelet im—take' hint gently as you may, t+ talking of conundrum a , o taad Old' and you get a 'spied' sharp enough a nn Hurricane, rechtng tuel oler fidetal pierce the, heart of awhile oak,:crack a Halt a n d vuttlliie out tine of thae ed g il y fr ii yingpeu. and choke die Hareems syetem, pain, Havana smoke which Had givja° crob.epple ~fletter him hi :n his name. "Talkihg of Contiiid nn alai " iti; drop before lime maternal' ancestor inquires can ani you tell when Viltipi innt`the ;row. ' or thrsemoonreafterl • s • aid to be in ince Wards behold flak 'l'llere he is— , cun can," chapped opt city the. hpg,perfected I—.l-taking h I - nu. -" • 4, 1 tie Turtle. ' adietfelie` Trams to , mud bole and grunting utesaimfartine at . .1 • .- the 111 1 11 "'" e ' s •" f tub' hug ' alustinieseil It s ," qtioth linii; nothing a enthodi b y a m i t a . Trt i• sin ; . 'who ' . p eaks'e greedineee.rtud contrary opiiiioried in all f irm vo J I bra internimrses. , He 14 nei to beltersua, „ wa uneale" world /led, reasoned with. tier driven. The no. when'she want, a m ' !'ikaY get l' 1 " 1 °P'a.r"ad 1 1,, aa '" 1 "/".1. "Mit edema," replied hurrican e . "rho' to epee him down it ; then he bai t( go up .l quctition s it i owl tvea. t.. . =though he ecare your hat khnek „m ien e itc . e tt , ship ni treaty ke ,„„ not your UnderpinntnE in it" l' e "ft re v e * — lisigha;) prophunde'dMilindtith" Wnv, friend., even.harriteeing hepaq.t v. , Patine has Pita little inure '"'"warYnelF 1 4. vWhen ehis s it lender lo a Mart d e f its composition {llan is contained in vitali.., gild the Chlditel regarding thd zed pork ! • hie rich in hie hoots. " Now, thy deer friends, is I can find no merit in : tLe hug _ while--alive , t ; but correctx. ut i rrieane. *huffier ha is to be apPretelated, like a ' P c ' 'she's struck aback by harry et, after herds-dead turned to pork— swell suggtssted Starlight. It 1181 , been said that a sure cure for love it, I "No; es yet," saittflorridane. itCo'ne, "titled perk," taken in rtonjeuetion with a I hurry along! " ' hoe handle At medicine, then a•I "iirtien she makes mirth of split oda, be allowed tile eifittled "th°'ll " er a s; " a 1 lee." cried ' , Sibitilpipes. ' it must•he fatten in hoineitalti(l diVe's, and Here there Was a great great, eta st l Tt°l7 b " aea • ° ' fatal c "" ent i snme7J ' en ' a r. Sintithitimis 'was throne out fife *in . = enque. I once knew ' 10 3"'"• 11 4 "I ke e me " . Whenpeace was resioitid `Old 1/e telenap.who tried the remednhotgeing Hurriedne wp'ropelled" again. ' ' the w h ole 113 eame near k i ckin g " ff Yon 'might have 's 'when she huge the mortal "ctiverild ; anti Pridlah/Y wou ld the wind,' or ‘when she runs dollen 'for have mad° a die of 11 ' 41 "" t abasat e n " smack,' or sw lien efie is after a ebnibit s .' etl the pork and taken a vrow.. , (lore air aolnet fling of that cort. Hut his , collieasten I ' I have beeinrht The real solMion l• • ii fiSoroutituo l i I+oll teats von pig capper I trawls whenehe'rhatiachtel to a buo . O.' pat mina Hammack is pit fun of • oph a v a 1,. i s it s it i ash „t riett, who Und out in minekleep, lard ter tifel I Beim:tints, , . r .rx , Und kicks ardor pad 'clothes and growls : ; TY" ', u7L u 118," Now "014 vat shall pe tun for. , ts boor man like me, Vat fer do I lest such a life 7 alone of you tell Me when a ship la bets , 'hived t " • ' it'il wn i e tilts Min rll d d e rt4 l 'll'a ll nlai d ln l e dr a- 9nh wl ti re ° s ll!Yrz 1 W, hot the ttailten P lel re aid eller." •' , n w• t ho windda , 1 quoth Meister Karl.. eSmashpipee :yon• A wise choice .'any ma', nines ' fi nd th e cigare." prefer a wife a at any time; might to A rid •sa a i biiii . ine Drought nut me , tom bo"shut up in a hog-pen every night at sun- l of Ihigalitut. and behold there camegreat down. Let epicures t i ee•whal the ll d ea"" s cloud over sod.' mai. r about the, beauty iti roast pig it is nothing • but thseat(e-breeding pork in its insipid ie. t A child when asked why'a certain, tree sipielicy, Lisiee to iiitivaitegyrie 01 a pig grew crooked, replied : •Sotnehodyltred smitten country editor. end ea) , it the fel- upon ii. I suppose, when• it was: a little low is safe tietrode the Walls of a mail lellow.' t house : rotating 1-=.-he is How painfully 'suggestive im thins* , an pa.lahre as he twists (tempi& the airing Giver.! Hew many, with selling Omens. that he dtlClllB, to be ,enjoying .refreshing can remember the doye n ( th e i e thodh ea d, warmth—he weepe nut the pretty, eye., Heil whe n • they w ere • t h e o f, l i a di aart , at they aemn to be radiant jellies. Now he-, repression, rather than the happy,eubjesne hold Min in the dish,liie teboht! ,cradle,: ot'eoote'kind.direction and coltute. The how still he Roth ! • How lueky he,isliot effects of 'ouch misguided 'discipline have posecosed of that 'grossness whieh so often bans apparent itc their: history Ind chariot itecomeelliee Inalurer hums!' nature, uteri- ter, and by no process of Ilumanidellitting lewd !--ite,•could not then have repea t ed m sem the I wrong he rectified. greed the diet', but would have been a glutton, error of their edueation continud bans iintllowiug in ell 'Memoir of filth, I ardent of arde of rigid restraints ; without earn*. . Which now, be is happily snatched away— pending efforts to develop and. dultiVate, . . "Bre sin could blight; ur tiori•ore fade , i and•trainin a right attraction. • -• Death coma with ustesi-Y care T.AiispoWiric*,..—vvlia} itte i At tJ. now hue rneniftrV i i s tii ‘! e d t it o r in ifi t: C e ° ll li tlaTf . B b utc li,ee and a. .9. 43 °erjor I.lle!l9ltner k tq uress, the Haile rojeeteth the ran atm cea I , a , km . tolieth t:iin in reeking etatisagett—hut he t is the difference betireell Dr. %nth a few se ptillthre 111 the grateful stn. nrandreth and a bill ',ticker The' inach of a Ititilewas e fa cure * ' :' 'F r is a.pill-boaster the Mho' Charlet? Lamb's ethender:' but i n uN t • ;, ta , • • • ti ink inside more orlamb 2si . ,‘ • , I Ray t hat it v h e! le the difference i restweera Inning thi 'dal' 'all your ehildreu "down with,,lke mein; l'oucli nut pork, qty,hrethren, telt ye • well . Ti er hil me stuff never 1 "" a ex ec u te d cc 'a n 'a r , l b‘,‘ be defile" ' se ° • met ie a sick faintly and the other at, foe. wits aecipiable in the sight' ` of Heaver.— •. . 1 - • • ,• • I don't believd it WWI ever tofteret as a• ' • granary . . •I , d h be , limn is i the,ouaretYnetween a man s sacrifice, and .1.. t eve. s..t u ' granny anu ? Answer—One sure it would be rejeeted he the ,etteele t t • I a . ~, wee itt and the other hia, i entm,bin. with, uptureed,eneee. , J.tii`inah R I Q4'I4 an ' '—ExCellent °nines! into, the ark, lie must have intended it for , ylig T EN . OM some Chines market ; for throe days. C MANDUSPITIII—T4IfRik the tooth of eivilizatiou Inver ventured to t o w i ngi .p eet i e !ere," of 'p e De ca l, wet penetrate, a piece of pork. ' San Francisco ,' l i s oe ofi e nbe en printed, bi l l ca nnot be plait. haviug a serfeit [Lion, to 110 W really to itetlio6 often " •,• walk tete one bod 3" 6 63611°4 that ' P. ree e n ' a Have t Lou no other gods but me • itself, well cov e red with fat. lhope and Unto no itnagebow day knee what. my friende.• that pork for the poet Take not the name of God par, t has hid dealt •in the , innuntains.-4-• Do uutthe Sabbath day Profane, • There let it lie and rot in oblivion), or be Ilonorthe fitther At. t ntid . mother loo t devoured by, greasers , • bud see that thou no murder,do t . .rote From vile adultiry keep thee Meant yen you iron-nerved, leather-pauitaied mi- Andsteal not. tho' thy statelitsmese tier. biveepon it exclusively I r' not ti- " e a - oath; no fulso witness--shun 'thin blot and you will file.' emir backbone convey . - t l,Vhst is thy neighbor's, covet not., led into volcanio chain of mountains- 7 - Write these thy laws, Lord, fumy hone. with a Yesuvius s between Your ehotilders. And let me not from them depart,. 'll Heels at your hip, and Y Commix upon [Richard ,Chrictiaa, your nose.. Eat much of %And you are sick; eat less and'you are better; eat none et all, and you get well.. ant down up on. pork in simmer hote, with forty par son preasure. It is neither fit for the old, the young, nor the athletic---the major. the miner, nor the digger. The hotlence is rank, and smells; to heaven." . this . . - ' that the , eintroort crop in to2loo la Noe As to Bulging a troublous tong, my , -, . ~ ugally Jorge., Si) far we have bed quitika friend Theinipsotesinurieal' discrimination must' he've been yeti' nice it he could dia., mild fall--Predertek (Va.) Weiiikl: ' cent any kill of song whatever in a nog. t , -h plain and unschooled matte :AO bad As well mignt a donkey try ici stag. " vll ' 4l I received' his education principally. bensoith fairy like music,", as lor one of Inc par. ' the open sky. in the field or, tbe - ,fastiaN eine species to attempt to breathe out tnel i and who had wielded the. axe• awro,lbita ody in any shape.. I shall give the beasts. ,a pelt. while speaking of children r resatk credit for no song—good, bad and trouble. '!ed with true and besotiful simplieitv i ATI* eortia,nothing bdt his, everlasting wooh /, little ohipi are nearest the heiiri, • waugh ! interferes with, my serenity of ' ~. - ....,„_ l , It ~ mind, perpetuity of patience and evenueas 4ll Love you, Mary.--490 hireavely of teinper. Im, My brethren. : in some respects yon i Alen( and smeeia--oh, say tbat yt, 49 7 him .a ,similarity : to bop.: You. twit two it 1" 4ittUr.etit,;Charlay L,, iff 'more iislusr. than you con' ifit ,or make !pot 1, .,:, ths-so Ifiti!Pa • i 11 i4," 4 , - • use of. `...When you are too fat and hay `to kand,notc Va'al l gal it, b, VII , ' , 4 "root," you want sbout hard tittitiv-raud,noo; fax rifßinih7 . ; ~„4 a t41#0,',":- TWO DOLL OW Pitt 'ANNITIG INUMBEK 38. Partazmainv Canr AND TNII WIx T 711;die eetTle believe., that,s persinirnon crop is a sore siktrof a “driadfulty` ebid" winter: I,elltis free, than look comening winter —Lett ready I 'pleatifal s'uj jilt oriiiicid; and enal as bed tilethes. for . we ire Revered ,by.• (rioted MERIT