; i ft 4 i ! j . JS V0L.-1. OLEARFIELD, -.WEDNESDAY; NOVEMBER 22. 1854. i -. " NO. 21. ". '..'.'"'.."'l 'V : V ,"'.'tI," - '-' - - ' ' V,' " " " . ; COME AND TAKE ME. pcriTirn. ; '-'' . .? .: v.- : -.: ..- ;. . . . : 'i,- j!; . . :":.:r"' 5 " RAFTSMAN'S JOUR.VAL.' h .'.'. :s , Bas. JVwes, Pnbliaher : Per. annum. (payaM in advance.) -j t $1 60 . If paid within lh year, 2 00 . . No paper discontinued -until all arrearages are paii. . . - .-.; .'. A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expi ration of the term subscribed for, will be consider ed anew engagement. '-"'"' ' ABSENCE. Lo! on the Susquehanna's gentle tide, - . , . The twilight linpjy-. on the billow's breast," It fondly hangs and fondly is caressed ; And weeps and blushes like a parting bride. Mark, how the gay and gladdened rirer glows ! . Now bank and ware and fondly bossemed idle Grow bright and beauteous in that glorious smile; And now 'tis past! The stream in darkness flows. to sets the smile of lore upon the tide , - Of a lone spirit: though its banks bs gay, And many a bright scene woos it from its way, That smile is it knows no joy besida . And flows iu sadness on. So let it flow', ' Until that gentle smile again awake its glow ! ; ;cDriginnI:Horal;nIf. BR1TTFA FOR TUE JCR!CAL. Tin: Ml1 3? W COPYRIGHT SKCtJEB. " ' " '. . CHAPTER IX. : Valens looked a moment at his pale, excited, trembling wife The blood rececded from his broad, red checks; and passing out of the door, he hurried into the grounds back of his dwelling, his first thought being, as the even ing was line, and the air balmy and pleasant, that they had gone out to enjoy the bright star-light, and the fragrance of the moist, dewy flowers. He . passed rapidly along the walks, and through the thiok,clustering vines; but see ing nothing of them, he returned again to-ihe hall, endeavoring to conceal, as far as possi ble, his increasing anxiety. Jv.sl as he entered, however, the sound of feet ascending the marble steps, caught his ear; and, turning round, he hastened to the door and opened it, followed by Valencia. It was Valdinus and Vcrtitia. "Where's Fiducia ?" inquired Valencia, quickly. t We left here, with her child, an hour ago," replied Valdinus. . What! left-her alout said Valens, sharp ly.' Yes; we were out on a matter of Vertita's," said be, entering the hall, and throwing him f?If carelessly on a seat in the corner. It appeared, they had been to one of the numerous Heathen Temples, to present an of fering to a certain Goddess. As to tho ob ject of this offering, it must suffice to say, that it was not wholly unconnected with the affair of Marcus. - The truth, at length, flashed like lightening n the mind of Valens, and he could no longer conceal his apprehensions. His dear Fiducia had been seized and carried off, and possibly, by that time, her body had been committed to the flames ; but how she had fallen into the hands of their barbarous persecutors, he could not conjecture. Nor was there any one to tell..- Valdinus and Vertitia had left her alone with her child an hour before, and that was all they knew. The circumstances, therefore, of her arrest and abdnction was a profound mys tery, and for aught he could see, must remain 60. - ----- . . . . - . Then, knowing as he did : the strength of Fiducia's principles, and her resolute purpose, as often expressed to himself, never to deny her faith, even at the cost of her life, led him to believe, that, if in the power of their ene mies, her fate, would soon be sealed. .., , And Iicrc, it may as well be stated, that this was Fidncia's natural character, firm and un compromising, especially in matters of faith and duty. Neither threats, nor tortures, nor flatteries could shake her resolution,' when once advisedly formed. This . feature had al ways been one of the' niost noticeable in her life, even from- her childhood ; and it had fchown itself with marked prominence in her character as a Christian," ..''"' , " " At the same time, however, it had always been united with an , uncommonly easy, mild, docile disposition ; and Fiducia" had always been one of the most kind, loving, and obedi ent daughters. With j little tto say,- and less disposed to join in , the frivolous gayities of of tlie;wirld, her ornament was indecd.that of a "meek andiuiei Ppirit.", , e And then, r uni versally esteemed, she had gained a hold upon i the hcartf Cher parent, well nigh amounting te idolatry. Hence, 'wc can readily conceive Tiow stun ning the stiock-kow; like some great convul sion, their present - apprehensions would toss nd upheave their' louls into tho-wildest drs rrder, and break up" the deepest fountains of their sorrows'"-61' 't & '-;- l iu--' An4 15aef was aTieJntf lingering - hope. The humap nind never readilyf.yiflda.to desr . t f ill shoot forth i" tV tinsel ray b through , the thickest 4glopn , Hence, J after the first paroxyuuf hUiejf. nd 8 subsided, . Valens. resolved once more, to visit his tgronnds;" "in. arch of his missing daughter 'I - The search was accordingly made, but in vain. The bright star-light was tailing silent- ly through the opening vines, and tho moist, dewy flowers were pouring fourth their sweet- e.t fragrance into the air, and the mild, balmy zephyrs where whinperiiig through the leaf1 branches of the verdant trees. But that was all. No bright, crce tine countenance carno forth to meet the sorrowing man, to roll the great, cumbrous burdeu;frora his heart; and he walked into an adjoining street. , . Here he stood for a few moments, scarcely knowing where he was, or what he did. His eyes, however, were raised to heaven, and a few broken, but fervent - petitions ; went forth audibly from his lips. "O, Fiducia! my dearest Fiducia!" said he, involuntarily, as be turned to re-enter the grounds. "Fiducia ! who's that V said a gruff, hoarse voice. ; j Valens was startled, aud, looking round, ob served au old man crouched in a dark cornor, a few yards from where he stood. He was one of those queer, miserable beings, great num bers of whom strolled about, the . streets of Rome, subsisting by' fortune-telling, necro mancy, and other similar arts ; and passing the night in the streets and alleys, or wherever convenient. "Fiducia's my daughter," said Valens, stow ly approaching the old man; as he spokel "Ha ! ha ! Christians," I guess,' said the old man, in the same gruff voice; and raising his long, bare, shrivelled arm, he; pointed to the red light in the sky "If thou knowest aught of my ' daughter, speak," said Valens, imploringly. ; : 1 The old man shook his grey, shaggy locks, and taking up a small rod or wand that lay at his side, began- figuring with it in : the air. muttering, at the same time, a jargon of fool ish, unmeaning words. ... "Ha! ha! Christians, I guess,", again said the old man, in a wild, guttural voice, that alarmed Valens, aud he turned to hasten away. "Ha ! ha ! do I know aught of your daugh ter," cried the old man: "Is there any thing a wizard dont know ? : 0 1 Vare ! Vare ! m v sweet Vare ! nipt to-night my set cars' as the Emperor's dogs snarled, and dragged a whin ing female down yonder glistening marble. Ha! ha! is there any thing a wizard dont know ?" and the old man began figuring again with his wand, and muttering as before. v alens had stopped. His heart sickened. His blood ran cold. His fears were confirmed. Vare was the name of Fiducia's child, aud he knew his daughter's fate. He hurriedly re-entered his dwelling, and throwing himself on a seat, burried his face in his hands. What a mystery is the future ! What hu man eye can penetrate its dark, misty depths 1 An hour, or even a few moments walk along life's sad journey, brings man into a maze of darkness, where the nicest and keenest pow ers of vision are wholly useless. In fact, each successive step in life is taken at a venture, and where it may plunge him, or what new scene it may reveal to his view,no man know- eth. The darkmysterious night, indeed re cedes, but then it only receds, step by step, as man thus advances upoa life's journey ; and it is true, that man can only read his own, or the history of his fellow mortals from the rev elations of each successive hour or moment, which, together, make up the sum-total of life!' " ' . , ,: The reader has only to look into the great halt, to see a painful confirmation of this truth. . A family, in a moment, is overwhelm ed with inconsolable grief."- A fond, loving mother has laid her bleeping bab . upon her couch ; and having impressed a kiss upon its guileless hps, ana gazed proudly upon its m hi. s unincnn? ieamres .sno ipnri it -ih i fU 1 , - f . . " I . , a .,,,. . a heart tun oi great, joyous emotions, to re- I scat herselfat the, curious marble stand, and 1 resume her devotional meditations. . But lust I as she takes her scat, the door is burst open, auu a ..u"imi,j oi ruue, miunaiea soldiers stand before her. She falls back In her seat, J f J . - f . '. I paie, tremming ana anngtitcd. Her last as .... iUUUg.,J4r ui Her sleeping par; ana araggea out ana nurnea down the marble steps, she has only time to give vent to the sudden anguish of her soul, in the words ; "O, Vare', Vare! my sweet Vare." ' ; 3 ', While this sad, heart-rending scene Is act- i..B, c - V w"ous- la Vl A (.(.Aif K 4Vk nimi 1 . n n X V. T !ll I atuug iiit juctin. iiivii uicasu iiea nig wiin emotions of bliss. ' fn a few moments, the are expecting to greet the fond idol of their hearts with their wonted .embrace and, set ting down j to tell her of their-joys, of their sn'cet.commnpion-with: the j Savior in (he em blems of; his dying lovp,', andj ' if possible, to impart to her soul .some, of that rapturous joy with which their own Js filled.' j But,' alas I .Kar fAnnrfTDA.mA ' tVinr - t frrntj nAna I . o- - greet thera. ; Fiducia was gone-gone, at the 11 r 1 : l ivj 4 A v a wiyi .''.y- t'!. and her snirit to God." And thev went." . I . Was iCnot .itWweepr'ls' not 'be warrn.'VfuU fountain in We . breast , thcrej to' beT" unsealfd," and ,'shed 1 Can the strong tie that binds together the hear'ts'ofipa'- reins ana ineir cruiaren. ne rudeiv uunaerea. i and no keen pain or ajigiiish "be felt'.' ' shall ' , : i - - ' i T - r - t ...... man tanks' sensitive to'he offspring, than theVcasts7 c destruction his of the fleTa or the fowls, of the air? 'No! J The harp of man's nature is, strangely strung I and attuned to a variety of melodies: At one time,. to give forth its sweet notes of joy at another, its deep, plaintive notes of sadness and hencethe great drama of human life is intcrludedTwith" the music of sorrow ' or joy just as occurrences chance to tonch the- attun I ed-strings.' r. Valens is still seated, with his face burried in his hands, while the great, boiling waves of sorrow are whirling and" dashing through his soul. Valencia, with little Vare clasped to her breast, is pacing the hall in an agony of grief. Valindus, unused to thinking or caring much about anything, at length, has raised his hand to wipe away the tears which have found vent in despite of his efforts to keep them back while Vertitia, at last, roused to a full sense of the overwhelming calamity, has thrown herself back in her seat, pale and death-like and is wringing her hands, the very picture o grief and despair.' h r '. '. "Ah !" said Valens, at length, haying in a measure recovered from the first sad effects of the shock ; "ah ! are there no rays of light penciled in the darkened skies ? Is there no comiorr, no nope in tms dark, trownmg provi dence ? ?Is thero no loud, nieaninz voice in it?" - , ;. -. . . . i. ... - "It's more, I think, than I can bear," soled Valencia, clasping, at the same time, little Vare tighter in ; her arms, and pressing ; her warm, scalding cheeks to his. : - - ,"And mc, too,' quickly, rejoined Vertitia ; "I wont bear it ; I'll go and die with her." ., Foor V ertitia ! I or the first time in her life, perhaps, she had experienced the pangs of an honest, heart-felt grief. Young,- gay, and thoughtless, and immersed in the pleasures of the ; world, her life's journey had glided along smoothly, uninterrupted by any of its sad, sudden checks. - And she had all her tears yet to shed ; yet to le3rn the great lesson of the world's regrets and sorrows. 1 v - '- At length, however, the call came; and she is obliged to enter the Bchool of experience, and, with all others, learn how few and full of trouble are the da-.s of our appointed tTrueon earth. How hard is the lesson ! How bitter is the first sip from the full, overflowing cup ! So t often is. When the long-gathering cloud at last breaks, it is with the force of the whirling, dashing tornado bending, breaking, and pros trating all before it. Then, her untamed nature refuses to submit -to bear the load that has been . laid upon it. It is too grievous. It stings, torments, crush es the soul ; and throws it inso a wild, mad, furious frenzy. It rebels, and like the vic tim around which the seapent has coiled its huge folds, it writhes and tortnres, plunges and struggles, to relieve itself. But in vain. . Even Valencia, though fortified by the prin ciples of a great and glojious faith, finds sub mission difficult. In their best estate, the children of light are encompassed with infirm ity ; and that which is weak gets the better of that which, is strong ; and the soul ; for the time being, is swallowed up in the depth and intensity of its sorrows, and sees nothing but itsown misery. Valens, however, at lust, looks up from the depths; and sees the dark, frowning skies streaked with the light of an advancing day ; sees the bright star of hope and promise rise over the gloomy hills; and hears, most of all, i tliis sad, afflicti-re providence, the entreaty -Cilia T r oTba rftnr ' ' "If Fiducia lives, I will see her face again, at the peril of my life," said Valens. To be continued. " " ... Church Music - . The following briliant passage is by; Wash ington Irvine, on hearine the choir in West minster Abbev . c-.j j n . . outiaeniy inc notes oi tnc aeep lauorinir or- gan hurst upon the ear, falling with double and redoubled intensity, and rolline- ax it. k;u, r tt. j their volume and . trrandeur accord with ti.u mighty building! with what pomp do they 8weU through its vast vaults, and breathe their awfui harmony through the caves of death, and make the silent sepulchre vocal! And now they rise in triumphant acclamation heaving higher and higher ' their accordant notes, and piling sound on sound. ; And how they" pausej and the soft voices of the choir break out in to sweet gushes of melody; they soar aloft and warbie along the roof, and seem to play about ' ' . .. ' ' ' - these lofty walls like the pure airs of heaven." Again the pealing organ heaves its thrilling, thunders, compressing air into music; and rol ling it forth upon the sonl., What long drawn cadences! what solemn sweeping concords -r-It grows more and more dense aud powerful; it fills tha. - vast pile, t and seems to jar the very walls; thenar is stunned,- the senses are over whelmed." And -now it is windine un in fnll i , ., ..... ijtioueef it.is rising irora: earth to heaven; the verv soul seeTOSrapt away and floated upward I . . on the swelling tide of harmonvU ! i T .. : ;Lifve A masked, baU,.whereiti struggling through':the.rowd, :and,trying to penetrate the .disguise of our .neighbor, we are apt to forget urown part, until .thewjaning Rights "v v A. 1J-"Mother,,v said a little square-built ! ur chin 'about1 five"- vears bo nrf years oldwhy; d6n? my fter.makc me monitor ' sometimes.l can every boy in mr cinss but one?' ' 0 ! ' '"" teacher lick istorirai. THE PURITANS. . rnoic n'cAtrLAY. We . would first speak .of the Puritans the most remarkable body of men, . perhaps which the world has ever produced. .The odi ous and rc;diculous parts of their character lie on tne suriace. lie that runs may read them nor have there been wanting attentive and ma licious observers to point them out. For ma ny years after the Restoration, they were the theme of unmeasured invective and derision They were exposed to the utmost licentious ncss of the press and of the stage, at the time when the press and the stage were most licen tious. They were not men of letters; they were as a body unpopular ; they could not de fend themselves; and the public would not take them under its protection. They were there fore abandoned, without reserve, to the tender tnercics .of the satirists .uid dmniatists. The Ostentatious simplicity, of their dress, their sour aspect, their nasal twang, their stiff pos ture, their ong gracqs, their Ilebrew names the Scriptural phrases which theyr introduced on everyjccasipn, theirj contempt of human learning, their detestation of polite amuse ments, were indeed fair game for the laughers. But it is not from the luughers alone that the philosophy of historyjs to be learnt. And he who approaches this subject should carefully guard against the influence of, that potent ridicule, which lias already misled so many excellent writers. ......... Those who roused the people to resistan who directed their measures through a long series of eventful years who formed out of the most unpromising materials, the fincts army that Europe had -ever seen who trampled downKing, Church, and Aristocracy who, in the short intervals of domestic sedition and relellion, made the name of England. terrible to every nation on the face of the earth, were no vulgar fanitics. Most of. their, absurdities were mere external badges, like the signs of free-masonry, or the dresses of friars. We re gret that these badges were not more attrac tive. t We regret that a body, to whose cour age and talents mankind has owed inestimable obligations, had not the lofty elegance which distinguished some of the adherents of Charles I., or the easy good-breeding for which the court of Charles II. was celebrated. . But, if we must take our choice, we shall, like Bassa nio in the play, turn from the spacious caskets, which contain only the Death's head and the Fool's head, and fix our choice on the plain leaden chest which conceals tho treasure. The Puritans were men whose minds had de rived a peculiar character, from the daily con templation of superior beings and eternal in terests. Not content with acknowledging, in general terms, an overruling Providence, they habitually ascribed every event to the will of the Great Being, for whose power nothing was too vast, for whose inspection nothing was too minute. . To know him, to serve him, to enjoy him, was with them the great end of existence. They rejected with contempt the ceremonious homage which other sects substituted for the pure worship of the soul. . Instead of catching occasional glimpses of tho Deity, through an obscuring veil, they aspired to gaze full on the intolerable brightness, and to commune with him face to face. : Hence. originated theircon- tempt for tcrrestial distinctions, the differ ence between the greatest and meanest of man kind seemed to vanish, when compared with the boundless interval .which separated, the whole race from him on whom their own eyes were constantly fixed. They recognized no title to superiority but his favor; and confident of that favor, they despised all the accomplish ments and all the dignities of the world. If they were unacquainted with works of philos ophers and poets, they were deeply read in the oracles of God. If their names were not found in the registers of heralds, they felt assured that they were recorded in the Book of Life. If their steps were not accompanied by asplen. did train of menials, legions of ministering an gels had charge over them. . Their palaces were nouses not made witn hand:, their dia dems crowns of glory which should never fade away! - On the rich and the ' eloquent, on no bles and priests, they looked down with con tempt: for they esteemed themselves rich in a more precious treasure, and eloquent in a more sublime language nobles by the right of an a'rlier creation," and priests by the imposition of a mightier hand.. The very meanest of them was -a being to whose :fate a mysterious and terrible importance, belonged rou whose slightest. action the Spirits of light and dark- mess looked with anxious interest who had been destined, before neaven and eartu were created, to enjoy a fccility which should con tinue" when heaven and earth should have pass ed; away. (1 Events which sho-t-sighted. politi cians ascribed to earthly causes had, been or dained on his account. For his sake empires had risen and flourished, and decayed". For bid sake' the Almighty had proclaimed his fcill by. the pen of the evangelist,: and the harp of the prophet.. , He had been rescued bj nocom-r ' mon. deliverer from the grasp of tno common i foe."' He had been" i ransomed by the ' sweat of jinovalgar- agonybytbeL-WOodof too. earthly. -"ed F dead had arisen? that H nature" bad shudder-, cd at the sufferings of her expiring God ! sacrifice, it was lorhim that jne sua had peeq jftliHrdlanrotis. THIEVING ACTBESS. . BT JULES JAKIN. ' If you love contrasts, this I am going tonar ratc, and which I have not sought, is terrible! At the very hour "nenriette Sontag died, at the hour when a nation in mourning bore the remains of the great artiste under the funeral vaults of the Church of the Professor, to the plaintive accents of the Requiem, srnig by Sal vt, Marini, ttovere and Salviati, an obscure vessel, more like a slave ship than a Christian vessel, bore to California a woman who had as pired, too,' to all the glories of the theatre ! Eh! la maUieurtsute! she had fatten (she was scarcely above thirty) to the rank of the rrpri de justice ! When she made her debut in the first parts of tlio tragedy there was nothing more leatiful than this woman, and it was the unaninous praise of her beauty to compare' her to Mademoiselle George herself. She wore the diadem like a queen: she held the sceptre like the greatest beauties of this our earth; she hid the- voice, the accent, the lightning, the majesty of her part, and it required nothing loss than the sudden appearance of Mademoi selle Kachael to make that woman understand at least that she was destined to play the second parts. Then she became the pny of ennui, and anger mingled with it; she concealed her self near the ceiling of the theatre, and hid there: she hissed her, she called her rival ! They were obliged to use force and to throw her out of the house of Moliere.' Then she fled into the provinces, where she reigned alone and without rivals, subduing all opposi tion by her boldness and her leauty. More courageous and more patient, this woman would have found her vocation, she would been the Athalic and Mcrope. She had their proud bearing. - Suddenly she began to filch pieces of linncn and silver spoons in the inns. This Queen of the East had scarcelv taken off the crown and the purple, when she played the disgraceful part of the thieving magpie. "She had a fork under her Roman attire ; she envel oped her diadem in a napkin stained with the gravy of the last meat pie. It was horrible to hear the inventory of the Police for the prose cuting attorney, and when the judges saw this queen,thcy could not understand how she could, from the height of her throne, thus stoop to these stains. ' Mark well that she twice stole this inn's silver, was condemned to the pine infamate. f) misery! They twice cut her beau ful hair, the finest ornament of her insolent head, ishe was twice thrown m the midst of those nameless female thieves, and in the midst of the refuse of Parasian prostitution, but no thing could cure this incorrigible mania. At the last, tired' justice determined to send this unfortunate woman to the mines of the Sacra mento, and it ' was on board of the ship which bore her to her last destination that Helena Gaussin died, abandoned to all her vi ces, and sullied with all her crimes. Tastes Din'er. In a lecture on what he has seen abroad, Wendell Phillips observes - In Italy, you will see a man breaking up' his land with two cows and the root of a tree for a plough, while he is dressed in skins with the hair on. . -. . In Rome, Vienna, and Dresden, if you hire a man to saw wood he docs not bring a horse along. He puts one end of the saw on the ground, and the other ii his breast, and ta king the wood in his hand, rubs against the Saw. . ' O -v. - r '. L It is a solemn fact, that in Florence, a citv filled with the triumph of art, there . is not a single auger, aikL if a carpenter .would bore a hole, he does it with a red hot poker!, j This results not from the want of industry, but .of sagacity of thought.- : , ,, -v The people are by no means idle. . They toil early and late, men, women, and children, with an industry ; that shames labor-saving Yankees. Thus he raafces laboi,that thenoor must live. ,,:.-.. : ... : r , ? . In Borne,-charcoal is principally used, for, fuel; and you will see a string of twenty, mules, bringing little sacks of it on their backs, when one mule could draw all of it in a cart. , But the charcoal vender never had a cart, and so he keeps his mules and feeds them. This is ; from no want of industry, but there is no com petition. A Yankee always looks haggard ' and ner- i vous, as though he were chasing a dollar. With us, money is everything; and when we go abroad, we !are surprised to find that the dollar has ceased to be almighty'. '-r -v! 1 If a Yankee refuses to do a job for fifty cents, he will probably do it for a ddllar, and will certainly do it for five ', But1 one yf ftift ' lazaroni of Naples, when he' has earned two cents, and eaten theni, will work no more that day; if you offer him ever so large a ' sum He has earned enongk for the day, and -wants' no more.'"- So there' is "no' eagerness for- ma ! king money, no motive for itj'afid everybody moves slowly; 5 How late la it I?Look ;at boss; And see! -he's drunk yet'f if h Isn't, it cant be much 'after" eleven. 'Does be keep such good time ?' -'Splendid ! "they v regnlat fhe town clock'by his nos'e.f ;,!t :i' "s r'" Ortr ia e Various Jlants. Every gentleman farmer" ought to be sorap. whatacquaintcd with the origin and history of all ordinary plants tni. . trees, so aa to know their . nature, country and condition. Such kuowledge,j besides being, a groat ; source of pleasure, and very desirable, will often enable; him to explain phenomena in the habits of. many plants that otherwise would appear in explicable. , . - Wheat, although considered by some as a native of Sicily," originally came from the cen tral table-land of Thibet, where it yet exists aa a grass, with small mealy seeds." . Eye exists wild in Siberia. ' Barley exists wild in the mountains of Him- alaya. a.- , :.- - ' -.''.' Oats were brought from Xorth Africa. ' Millet, one Fpecies,";j a native of India, an other Egypt and Abysinnia.' ; ' " ' ' Ma-ze, Iudi vn corn, is of native growth in Amciica. ' "-'- ' ' .. - . Bice was brought from South Africa, whence it was taken to India, and thence to Europe' and America. ' : Peas are of unknown origin. ' ' ' ' :- Vetches arc natives of Germany.1 -' 1 ' Buckwheat corne originally from Siberia and Tart.iry. ': ;' - - -' - ' The Garden Bean from the East Indies, '' Cabbage grows wild in Sicily and Naples. ' " The poppy was brought from the East. "" The sunflowcr'from Peru." Hops come to perfection as a wild flowc in Germany. - ' - Saffron came from Egypt, ' ' ' ' ' The onion is also a native of Egypt. Horseradish is from SouthEuropc. , , . Tobacco is a native of Virginia, Tobago, and California. Another species has also been found wild in Asia. ' The grasses are mostly native plants, and so" are the clovers, except Lucerne, which is a native of Sicily. ' The gourd is an Eastern plant. . The potato is a well known native (of . Peru and Mexico. " Coriander grows wild near ' the' Mediterrk' ", nean. - ' Anise was brought from the Grecian Archi pelago. - . . Had a WiNMXG ; way with Her. A way ward son of the . Emerald Itle lef the bed aud " board" which he and Margaret had occupied for a long while, and spent his time around " rum shops, where he was always on hand to count himself in, whenever anybody should ' 'stand treat.' Margaret was dissatisfied with tliis state of things, and endeavored to get her : husband back again.' We shall see how she succeeded: ' Now, Patrick, m'c honov, il von come back?' - ' 'No, Margaret, I won't ct.nie bavk.' ' ' Ah' won't ye comc"back for the love of the . children' , - . . -" 'Not for thejove of the children, Margaret.' Will ye come back for the love of mtself?' ' 'Niver, at all. ?W.!y"wid yes.' 'An' Patrick Avont the love of the church bring j-e back?' 'The church to the divit, and then I wont ' come back.' Margaret thouglit she would fry one other inducement. Taking a pint bottle of whiskey from her pocket, and holding it up to her truant husband, she said 'Will ye come for .' the drap of whiskey!' 'Ah, me darlint,' answered Patrick, unable to withstand such a temptation, 'it's yersetf that'll always bring me home again ye ha "' such a icinnivg way xrid ye, I'll come home .! Margaret!'. Margaret declares that Patrick was reclaim ed by moral suasion ! ' . ' ! " , ""'" Facing the Misic Some years ago in the New Hampshire House' of -llepresentatives, one of the members of that body, an old stick from South Hampton, when the yeas and hays were, taken on an important question, did not:i answer to his name: After" the foil Wasflnlsh--" ed, he rose and addressed the prtsiding officer in the following pithy. language: I rise to let you know: that I did not mean to dodge tho" 7 question. I only squatted a little, in order to 1 take a better view of the whole subject ; and " I now say No' to that critter.1 ; - "j, . t ii. , . . .; ; j. ,t . A SUOWEE OF COMPLIHEXTS. "How forhl- nate I am in meeting a rain beau in this stona,H i said a young lady, who was caught in a shower- the other day, to her'fceatt of promise;" wh -happened along with an umbrella. . n. ' - - J : "And 1,' slid he gallantly, "am as much - i rejoiced as the poor Laplander, - when he haf i caught a rain-deer J' i - ' - . "a s.i "7 Those are the benu ideal of wt-t weather 'com- pliments." V' i --., ! rl vt.a t- v ,' I fi-'-o ; 1 .! ?i vju.;!- "5ay, Cea&ar. Agustus, whyris yourlega. like an organ grinderl;,,. -. j -i; - -ri ;cn "Guvs It up, Mr. Peabody,"why is dal'V. , . "Cause da carry a nioakftjtabouide streets" ; AbrickgjazcdrtheluatdQfMi-2E.:nst'as hia ears passed the corner' m'j 1,. ts-.zi :: c fl ' f "" . ! 1 . 1 . 'i j i . n .... s f . An orator holding forth jn favor of "Fornau. .,: arrd)yney cbpiudes tjius: V'i ,l.""f I '.Cjb. my The'arers, 'depend upoq it; .nothing . 7 beaUVood'wife. '.'. '. X-' V., . . ; -- (fl "beg your pardon," replied one Qfthe'au ditorsj "a bad husband does." , it ft 1 Hi'.' n A. u i r ii , Si ,'l h;