fillip If If W W w u BY S. J. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., "WEDNESDAY," APRIL 10, 1861. YOL. 7.-KO. 32. - AN INDEPENDENT FARMER. Let sailors sing of the windy deep, Let soldiers praise the armor. But in my heirt this toast I'll keep, The Independent Farmer; "When first the rose, in robe of green, Unfolds its crimson lining, And 'round bisc-ottago porch is seen The honeysuckle twining. When banks of bloom their sweotness yield To bees that gather honey, J Ie drives his team across tho fiold, Where skies areoft and balmy. Tho black-bird clucks behind his plow, The quail pipes loud and cleaily, Yon orchard hides behind its bough The home he loves so dearly ; The grey old barn whose doors unfold His ample-store in measure, Wore rich than heaps of hoarded gold, A precious, blessed treasure ; But yonder in the porch there staada His wife, the lovely charmer. The sweetest rose on all the lands The Independent Farmer. To bim the Spring conies dancingly, To him the Summer blushes, The Autumn smiles with mellow ray, He sleeps Old Winter bushes ; Jli cares not how the world may move, No doubts nor fears confound him ; His little flock are liked in love, And household angels round him ; lie trusts in God. he loves his wife, Nor grief, nor ill may harm her lie's nature's nobleman in life The Independent Farmer. A STOEY FOE THE LITTLE FOLKS. THE WONDERFUL INKSTAXD. "This was a long and difficult piece of work. said Edward Muller tho copyist as he folded up nearly thirty full sheets of manuscript. "It lias takeu me many hours,-and I have written as neatly as I could; so I hope the Govern ment Sectctary will pay me well for it. ought to have at least four dollars for my la bor. But he lives near our house and I will ioon find out my remuneration." "Oh," replied Gertrude, his wife, "I dohope ne win pay you oeiierman lie uas been doing. You know it is very hard for us to get along, though it must b- confessed we have no chil dren to support." "Take courage, my dear wife, we have nev ci hh5m;u a single meat, arm you ana i are well provided with clothing for the winter The wages I shall get for this piece of copying will no doubt be enougli to buy a cord of wood and a half gallon of lamp oil. And we don't owe a penny to any person. Really we have no reason to complain : many people are much worse off than we are." So saying Edward made ready to call with his manuscript at the house of the Secretary. Ashe took lowr. his hat, he saw the thumb worn volume of his favorite rfuthor, Thomas a Kenipis; and opening it at one of. the best chapters, he placed it upon his wife's lap that fche might rtad it in his abseuce. These were the first words her eyes fell upon : "There are many people who are impatient; vexed if mat ters do not occur according to their wish. It is not always in our power to make our way smooth; it is God's to give when he will, to whom he will, and as much as he will aud uo more." Gertrude was much encouraged, and a new light seemed to have sprung up in her soul. She could read no more : it was enough to think about that day, that tee human beings have no right to meddle, with God's business. Edward had not gone two blacks before he met a messenger with a large letter addressed to him. The charge on it was a dollar, and he paid it, though he had but twenty-seven cents left. Important news was there for that poor man's benefit. His rich uncle who lived in Prague was dead. He had stinted himself to a?iass wealth, and had no nearer relatire than Edward .Muller, and leaving no will, the copyist fell heir to all his estate. He was no- tinea to come to Prague within a week and lake possession of the inheritance. "A rich man ! A rich man ! these are very eirange words tor me to utter of myself. But what shall I do with this writing that I have been commissioned to do ? 1 will go and take it to Secretary Shutz, as he appointed the time for me to call. I would prefer to iro jiuuic urji anu leu uertrude about our unex pected lortune ; but then i would be later with my business than I promised. Duty first aud lileasnre aftenvards." When he reached the Secretaiy's house a uisiressing scene presented itself. There lay the Secretary dead and cold and his little girl was playing on the floor. The weeping wid ow was almost bewildered with grief, and the city magistrates were there to take possession of what property was left, in view of the ten thousand dollars which they suid the deceased secretary had defrauded lrom the government. In vain did the disconsolate Madame Shutz declare her husband's innocence ; in vain did ucF'ai mem 10 mat child which must not oniy be impoverished but disgraced, bv such alienious charge. Edward saw her distress and extremity, and he thanked God he could assist her. So he gave his bond on the spot for the entire sum, and the officers departed. He was to pay the deficit just thirty days hence. ''Jlay God bless you ! may God bless you !" exclaimed the widow when she witnessed his noble generosity. "The time will come when dear husband's innocence will be proven "id the money shall be returned:" Both the officers and Madame Shutz were astounded that poor Edward Muller could give Ms bond for the smallest sum of mouey. Ev erybody knew how indigent he was and that jie could barely do enough copying to support is wife. Still nothing was said, but he had ground for his beneficence. It was the hap piest day of his life when he found it in his power to do a good act toward a suffering fel-ow-Deing. May all who read this narrative "e as kind a h..i i. !,...! i i it i i u fort f the he fe,t ln filing his good K,"1I!e Gertrude when he returned to his han T e 1 That can b6 imagined, per Wh my pen has 110 Power t0 describe it. fJrt t,le pleasure quieted down a little, and din r herself had thanked God for provi tin , vlhem 80 bountifully, the great ques ' t0 be settled was, "How should Edward hithnfy toPay hs expenses to Prange, r e n,Qst 6 to take possession of his great wealth ?" toll! I'rw that was a hard word for them lars m 11 mast bo done es thirty do1" forth &tbe borroweJ. .It was easily raised, ttodm re Was Dot a man ia the whole city who uia not trust Edward Moller for anv amount uinnoa 1 .. ... - . i himself' --vj.. ai lne entl of three dava he founds "i-uie Mlut Star Hotel at Prague, Having rested and taken some refreshments, he commenced the search of his uncle's dwel ling, several hours passed by before he could fiud it. At last he found it in a very dirty and obscure alley. The door was ajar and no body in the house. Truly it did not look like a rich mau's house, but I have intimated that its owner was a miser and that explains all. Every article of tho homely, broken furniture was covered with thick dirt. I do not think the floor had been swept for a year. Loose papers and old rags were scattered about eve rywhere. But not a sign of money could be found save a few coppers in an old vest. Ev ery coiner was searched and nothing was vis ible that was worth taking away.' Four days did Edward continue the search, and finally he had to give up his task without success. The last day he was there a neighbor called in aud told bim that bis uncle sold all his houses and lands the previous year, and having put the money lor them in a large chest, he set out for Egypt; he only returned the other day ana tne fever was on him of which he died no Drought nothing back with him except tnese out rags and papers you see scattered about. I hat was melancholy news for Ed ward, but it was vain lor him to remain longer No one can tell how heavy his heart was when he went home again and had to tell Gertrude that all their hopes were blighted. "And did you bring nothing lrom your un cle's house 7" she asked m a tone of sadness ".Nothing save this inkstand, though it is hardly worth its weight in oak leaves. thought I would bring it home as a memento of our rich relative. It is of very thick glass and is hard ebony wood. Gertrude, isn't this widow bhutz's daughter?" "Ah, yes, Edward. Her poor mother died ot a broken heart while you were at Prague, and no one would take her child, owing her father's defrauding the government. So I went and brought her here. I think we cau manage to support her." "A noble act, Gertrude; it repays me for my disappointment. We have stern duties to meet. The ten thousand dollar bond I can never pay ; the thirty dollars 1 borrowed can not be returned immediately. What we shall do our Heavenly Father only knows. May he help us to bear whatever fate awaits us r i i ...... jMiwara ana ins wne curtailed their expen ses to their real necessities. They resolved to drink no more tea or coffee, and only eat meat twice a week. They both worked night and day to supply their wants. But the time was at hand when the bond must be paid. Where w ill the money come from ? That was a question of hourly conversation and medi tation. They could think of but little else, and dreamed about it every night. Still they believed God would deliver them and preserve their littlo home to them. Finally the dread ful day came and three officers presented them selves at tho poor man's cottage. Edward in vited them in and told them all that happened, lie implored their mercy another month, an other week ; but all to no avail. They said it was not in their power to show any leniency, they were servants of the law and had to obev its commands. So they commenced to pack up fhe various articles of furniture preparatory to taking them to the auction room. Gretchea, tiie little adopted girl, became frightened at the officers, and in running by the table knocked otf the inkstand that Ed ward had brought from Prague. The ink flew all over her clothes and the inkstand was bro ken by its fail. The sun was shining brightly through the window, and amid the fragments there shone the most beautiful object that any one there had ever seen. It was a magnifi cent diamond! , It told its own story. Tho wealth lLat Edward Muller's rich uncle had taken away was exchanged by him for that diamond, and he had concealed it in the ink stand between the glass and the wood. Its possessor was now the richest man in the kingdom. The chief officer interrupted the egal proceedings and beckoned to his com panions that it was time for them to leave. The family were alone. lhenrst thing done in that household was the singing of Martin Luther's grand hymn, "A sure fortress in our God." They each kneeled in prayer, and littlo Gretchen al ways lovelier because she was the instrument of deliverance folde1 her hands as directed and tried to speak her prayer. But she could not, and the falling tears catching in her brown curls looked like dew-drops on tho flow ers of Spring. Sho ras in reference to the things of this life, what many a little child can be in regard to the more important mai mers of eternity, The lngel of Salvation. A Terrible Romance. In the year 17CG, a young girl of very prepossessing appearance from one of the interior provinces of France, was placed at Paris in the service of a man depraved by all the vices of that corrupt me tropolis. Smitten with her charms, he at tempted her ruin, but ivaa unsuccessful. In censed at his defeat, he determined on re venge, and, in furtherance of his design, se cretly placed in her trunk articles belonging to him, and marked with his name. He then denounced her to a magistrate, who cansed her to be arrested, and tho missing articles being found in her possession, she was brought to trial. In her defence she could only assert her ignorance of the manner in which the property came into her trunk, and protested her innocence. She was found guilty, and the sentence of death was pronounced upon her. The hangman's office was inefficiently performed, it being the first attempt of the executioner's son. The body was delivered into the hands of a surgeon, by whom it had been purchased, lie immediately conveyed it home, and was proceeding to dissect it, when he perceived a slight warmth about the heart. By the prompt use of proper remedies he restored the suspended animation. In the mean time ho had aeut for a trustworthy priest, and when the unfortunate girl opened her eyes she supposed herself in another world, and addressing the 'priest (who was a man of marked and majestic countenance,) exclaim ed : "Eternal Father, you know my innocence; have pity on me !" ln her simplicity believ ing she beheld her Jlalier, she continued to sue for mercy, and it was some time before she realized she was still in the land of the liv ing. The surgeon and priest, being fully con vinced of her innocence, she retired to a vil lage far distaul fioia the scene of her unjut punishment. The community subsequently became acquainted with Ler story, and tile au thor of her misery became an object of re proach and contempt, though it doos not ap pear that any attempt was raado to bring bim to justice. SUGAR IN LOUISIANNA : The introduction of the sugar culture into Louisianna affords another illustration of tho successful migration of the world's great sta ples from one locality to another. Two ves sels on their way to that colony with troops, stopped at Uispaniola in 1751. The Jesuits of that island obtained premission to put on board of these ships, and to send to the Jesu its of Louisiana, some sugar canes, and some negroes familiar with the cultivation of the plant. The canes were planted on ground which is now a densely populated portion of .New-Orleans, where they grew and flourished for many j'ears, but no effort was made to ex tend the cultivation, or to produce sugar in a large way. Tho canes were retailed in the markets as an article of luxury. Here the' attracted the notice of Dubreuil, one of the wealthiest planters in the colony, who culti vated them to some extent, built a mill for grinding them, and attempted to make sugar, but failed entirely. This failure confirmed the general impression tiiat sugar could not be produced in Louisianna, and no further ef fort was made on a large scale, until 1794, when the wide-spread destitution of the colony drove the people to the introduction of some new agricultural staple. Up to this period, the result of agriculture among the colonists bad been very insignigcant, notwithstanding the extraordinary fertility of the soil. Rice and corn were raised in quantity sufficient for home consumption, but none for export ; and the supplies of produce of other kinds which decended the Mississippi constituted tho great dependance for food. Indigo, then a staple production of all Southern America, had been suddenly attacked by an insect which devour ed the leaves with incredible rapidity, and left nothing standing but tho naked stem of the plant. In 17'J3 and '91 the ravages of this insect were so general and complete, that the whole province was thrown into a state of con sternation and despair, uotton was then un known as a commercial stnple, as the gin had not been invented. It was evident that some new article of production must bo discovered, The sugar-cane had been extensively cultiva ted near New-Orleans only on a single planta tion, where, also, every attempt to produce sugar had failed. In this emergency, Etienne de Bore undertook anew the hazardous enter prise. I hough pt moderate means, and past middle life, ancf though warned by wife and friends of the dsnger ot becoming impoverish ed, the strong resolve of his energetic mind could not be shaken. He planted canes, built mills, and in 1795 his first extensive trial of the sugar culture reached a demonstration. His neighbors, both far and near, had visited him and watched his progress and preparations with the keenest interest. Every discourage ment had been set afloat, because all doubted his success. When the grinding of the cane was to begin, the inhabitants gathered around the sugar-house in crowds, to be present at the failure or success of the experiment. They waited with impatience for the moment when the man who watched the coction of the juice should determine whether it was ready to granulate. When that moment arrived, the excited spectators hold their breath, apparent ly conscious that it was a question of ruin or prosperity for them all. The sugar-maker suddenly announced that granulation had ta ken place, when each one of the impatient by standers pressed in to witness for himself the long doubted but anxiously desired fact. The most perfect granulation had taken place, and the great problem had been successfully solv ed. Bore was overwhelmed with congratula tions, and the sugar culture of Louisiana es tablished as a staple which immediately revo- tioniztd her pecuniary condition. This hist crop ot sugar liore sold lor !t.lz,uuu, a large sum in those days. Such is the narrative giv en by Gayarre, a decendant of Bore. Other accounts allege that sugar had been previously produced in considerable quantity. But it is certain that only eight years after Bore's great experiment no less than eighty-one sugar e states were in operation on the delta alone, and tuut the export from New-Or!eaus had grown in 1834 to 100,000 hogsheads,"' worth $0,000,000, all of which, as the tables inform us, went to ports within the Union. It would thus seem that to Bore is duo the honor of showing that the ereat West India staple could be profitably domesticated in Louisiana. Our acquisition of that region undoubtedly gave enormous and rapid expansion to the business. In 1858 and '59, Louisiana receiv ed $29,000,000 tor her sugar crop. The fact of this great staple being thus permantly do mesticated among us affords additional evi dence that human energies will ultimately triumph when directed to provide for human wants that no region can maintain the world in bondage to it lor its production and that the cultivation even of cotton will in a lew years become so diffused over free-labor countries that those who now produce it by expensive slave labor must in the great con test be driven to the wall. Had Hist There. Judge C , a member of one of our best families, and himself occupy ing a high position at the bar, as well as soci ally, was going up the river last fall on a slow steamboat; and of course entered into all tho familiar compauionship common to travellers thrown together for a week with nothing to do. There was one man aboard who, learning the Judge's nam ; announced tiiat it was the same as his own. and instantly claimed kin with him. The Judge thought differently ; but with per fect good nature answered the innumerable genealogical inquiries propounded to him, while at each reply the bore would exclaim, "Why, sir, we're kin as sure as I'm alive !" At length the fellow bacame unendurable with his pertinacity and questioning ; and lo sing all patience, at last Judge C turned up on his tormento with the abrupt remark : - "Well, perhaps we are relations. Aro you a white man ?" ; "White man!" shouted tho bore, leaping from his chair ;' , I'd like to see the man who would say I wasn't!" "Ah !" continued the Judge, very quietly, "well, my father was a mulatto !" ' You may rest assured that Judge C was tormented no more on that trip, nor even re cognized by the man who was so lately claim ing relationship with him, while the other passengers enjoyed the joke immensely. ; The congregation of a church in Youngstown were recently edified by a discourse against the sinking ot oil wells, on the ground that God intended these oil deposits for some great general conflagration, which was being inter fered with by the well borers." ; i-.U i AN INCIDENT IN THE REVOLUTION A surgeon in the American army relates this story : A simple girl was instrumental in saving the life of Washington. I can speak of n now, as it can do no harm. It was about the middle of June, 177S, and while the General was at New 1 ork, waiting the approach of the British troops, that the girl came to Francis, ner present husband, whome she considered in the light of a royalist, and informed him as a secret she had overheard, that there was a plan in operation among the government men to destroy the rebel leader as she termed the commander-in-chief by poison, which was to bo. plentifully mingled with grean peas, a fa vorite vegetable of his, on the following day, ai j&icnmona Jim, tne headquarters, where he was to dine1. Francis went immediately to Washington, aud acquainted him with the danger that threatened him. The General, Laving listened with careful attention, said : ; "My friend, I thank you ; your fidelity has saved my life to what reserve the Almighty only knows. But, now, for your own safety. I charge you to return to your house, and let not a word of what you have related to me pass J'our lips; it would Involve you in certain ru in ; aud Heaven forbid that your life should be forfeited or endangered by your faith to me. I w ill take the necessary steps to prevent, and at the same time discover the instrument of this wicked device." The next day, about two hours before din ner, he sent for his guard, told him of the plot, and requested that he would disguise himself as a female, and go to the kitchen there to keep a strict watch on the peas until they should be served for the table. The young man carfully observed the directions he had received, and had not long been upon his post before the unfortunate T. II., another of the General's guards, came to his door, looked anxiously In and then went away. In a few minutes after he returned, and approached the hearth where tho peas stood, and was about to mingle the deadly substance, when he sudden ly shrunk back as though lrom the sting of the forked tongued adder, his color changing to the pale hue of death, and his lirnbs quivering apparently with fear, evidently horror-strick en with his own purpose but soon, however, the operation of the more powerful Incitement urged forward his hand, that tremblingly strewed the odious bane, and be left the kitch en overwhelmed with conflicting passions, re morse, and confusion. "Harold sleeps no more the cry hath reach ed his heart ere the deed be accomplished," said the youth on duty, in a voice not devoid of pity, as he looked after the wretch. "What ! T. II. ?" said the General, sorrow fully, upon receiving the information, "Can it As possiblet-so young, so fair, so gentle, lie would have been the last upon whom a suspi cion of that nature could have fallen by right of countenance. You have done well," said he to the youth before him. Go join your com rades, and be secret," The young man went accordingly, and Wash ington letuined to the piazza, where several general officers were assembled, among whom was the heio of Saratoga, who was waiting for further instructions from Congress before he departed for Canada. In a few minutes dinner was announced, and the party was ushered in to a handsome room, where a sumptuous board was spread, covered with all the delicacies of the season. Washington took his scat, and placed General Wooster on his left. When the remainder of the officers and company were seated and eager to commence the duties of the table the General said very impressively : "Gentlemen, I must request you to suspend your meal a moment. Let theguard attend to me." All was silence and amazement. The guard entered and formed a little toward the upper end ot the apartment. Washington, having put upon his plate a spoonful of peas, fixed nis eye on I . II. "Shall I eat this vegetable " he asked. The youth turned pale, and became dread fully agitated, while he faintly uttered : "I don't know !" Here II. raised his hand, as if by an involnn tary impulse, to prevent their being tast-ed A chicken was then brought in, that a conclu sive experiment might be made in the presence of all those witnesses. The chicken eat of the peasand immediately died, and the wretched T. H.4 overcome with horror and remorse, fell lamting, and was borue from the apartment. I he IIeabt. Let any one, w hile sitting down, place the left leg over the knee of the right one. and permit it to hang freely, aban doning all muscular power over it. Speedily it may be observed to sway forward and back through a limited space at regular intervals. Counting the number of those motions for any given time, they will bo found to agree exactly wiin tne Dealings ot tne pulse. Jvery one knows, that at a fire, when the water from the engine is forced .through bent hose, the ten dency is to straighten the hose;-nd if the bend be a .sharp.' one, considerable force is necessary to overcome the tendency. Just so it is in the case of the human body. Tho ar teries are but a system of hose through which the blood is forced by the heart. When the leg is bent, all the arteries within it are bent, too, and every time the heart contracts, the blood rushing through the arteries tends to straighten them ; and it is the effort which produces the motion of the leg alluded to. u unout sncn occular demonstration, it is difficult to conceive the power exerted by that exquisite mechanism, the normal pulsations of which are never percei ved by him whose very fife they are. i oor J'ellow! it is not an . uncommon thing to hear city-bred exquisites say they do not , like the country. They ; cac endure Nature for a week or so ; but after that she is a bore. They find rural life so fearfully dull no theatre, no restaurants, .no politics, no small talk, nobody to admire the well-cultiva ted moustache and latest novelty in tailpring, no hotel porticos to review the pretty girls from, no fashionable churches and sensation preachers, no soul to make a little private bet with, no cards, no billards, no clubs, no chan ces for a "lark," no coquettes framed in win dows over the way to make dumb love to, no anything, In short, but woods and fields and waters, and other natural trumpery. Now don't sneer at these people. They are really very much to be pitied. Just as much so as if they lacked the usual complement of limbs or senses. Indeed, they are more to be com miserated than if thus physically afBicted, for it is better to go about the world with a crip pled" body than a half-paralyzed aouL'. ' WAKING UP FB0M WINTER SLEEP. Hybernation, or winter sleep, is a condition beautifully devised by the Creator to idemni fy certain animals for the loss of their neces sary food during tho winter time. Nutrition being arrested, all the other vital functions are either suspended, or are carried on at low steam preasure, so to speak. This is tho case with respiration and the accompanying evolu tion of animal heat. Animals may be likened to furnaces in more than a figurative sense. Food furnishes fuel, and the breath supplies oxygen for the support of combustion. Du ring ordinary sleep, the combustivc function is notably lowered. The human system is so delicately organized, that it cannot sink into the deep torpor of cold, and be afterwards re vived ; but the long w inter sleep of some ani mals is no more extraordinary to them thau the few hours' nightly rest to each of us. Let us take some examples. The bat lives upon insects and nothing else. Where were the insects in winter? Either dead or torpid nyoernatiug too hidden away in minut holes and corners, whither the bat could not follow them even if he were about and stiring so what more sensible thing could the bat d than go to sleep also, and remain sleeping un in springtime comes again, inetrog is an iuFect-feeder too, which he, no more than the bat can obtain in winter; so the frog goes to sleep. In the north of France and Germany there are pretty little frogs of green color and which live on trees. Many attempts have been made to naturalize these pretty things in England, but without much success. The very mildness of insular winter kills them The degrees of cold we experiunce is usually not enougn to send mem into deep winte sleep. The economy of their furnace combus tion is not brought down sufficiently low to do without food entirely; and, on the other hand food they cannot obtain. So the result is that the pretty tree-frogs die. As frogs eat in sects, so m their turn do snakes eat frogs and the latter not being complaisant enough to hop about in winter-trmc, what more sensi ble thing could a snake do than go to sleep too i tor a similar reason the spiny hedge hog sleeps soundly too ; as people who have found him in his w inter-quarters can testify. One of the most curious of foreign hyberna tors is the little .North American animal call ed the "prairie dog." Prairie dogs congegate in immense heard ; and whilst summer-time lasts, they are active enough. As winter ap proaches, however, and before cold weather actually sets in, the prairie dogs build them selves housts, and getting under shelter o the same, fasten up the doors securely, aud take their long winter-nap. In late winter, or very early spring, whilst suow is yet on the ground, and the prairie land is tormented by icy, howling winds, the prairie-dogs may be noticed, in the morning of some bitter cold day, opening their doors, poking out their noses, and not apparently finding things as pleasant as they might have wished, retiring once more. Again they close their mansion door, and go to sleep. The time had not ar rived for comming out, indeed, but the little prairie dogs will not be deceived. Some in dication of a good time coming they precei ved. lheir instinct led them not astray. The Indi an and the backwoodsman, noticing the sign, are able to predict that fair weather is near at hand, having trusted to the sure instinct of the prairie dogs Hybernation must only be accepted as a relative term, w hilst some animals admit of being frozen outright, and thawed again with out damage to their constitutions, others are by no means so tolerant of lowered tempera ture. A human individual, having sunk into the sleep of cold, is generally frost-bitten at once, in some prominont and exposed part. 1 he rose is the most likely organ to sutler after which come the fingers and the toes If the sleeper be aroused at once, incipient frost-bites may frequently be cured by jndi cius friction, with ice or snow at first ; the ob ject being to supply warmth by degrees. But if the first frost-bite touch any internal organ, the seal of death is impressed. Instances have been known of tho congelation of fijh bodily, 'in the ice of a pond, the creatures having been restored to motion, without dam age, by judicious thawing. Stranger, still examples are on record of the freezing of in sects into a block of ice, which latter beinj laid Doiore a lire and thawed, the insects buzzed away. Between these extreme cases, and intolerence of cold experienced by hu man beings, comes hybernation, properly so called hven amongst hybernators, there is a great difference. Our pretty little friend, the squir rel, furnishes us with an example of what may be termed modified hybernation. The squir rel is a good economist, as is well known. He keeps a bright look-out at the commisa riat stores. In autumn, when the hazel-nuts have ripened, the little fellow may be seen busily carrying tho tawny treasures, one by one, m his mouth, and depositing them iu some mysterious' hole. In that hole is a com fortable, nest furnished with great care, and si capacious larder besides it. In this larder he hides the nuts, to be nipped at frugally in winter-time, when the sun shines more bright ly than usual, and ha .rouses to see what is doing in the world. A tame squirrel, living in a warm room, hybernates slightly, or not at all. A sleepy fellow he will perhaps seem, not quite so lively as in the summer, but that is all. . . . . To rouse a hybernati ig animal from its winter sleep is a very dangerous operation. Hedge-bogs are particularly iutolerant of this treatment; in fact, the rough-looking hedge hog is a very delicate fellow. Thus dealt with, the animal generally dies, furnishing one of the many examples of the beautifully poised relations of vitality to external circumstances, as determined, for beneficent purposes, by Al mighty wilL : - A man who bad won a fat turkey at a raffle, and whose pious wife was very inquisitive a- bout bis method of obtaining the poultry, sat isfied her scruples at last, by way of the witty remark that "the shakers gave it to him." An English lady of rank recently tied her legs together and jumped from the tower of a church near the gambling ppa of Hamburg. Her injuries were fatal. . Desperate-losses at roulette inspired the act. - A pegging machine is iu use in Now Eng land, with which a woman's shoe is pegged in ten seconds, and the stoutest brogans, with double rows of pegs, in thirty seconds. - The wors is well done, too. . , . t ; OUR ATTACHMENT TO LIFE. The young man, till thirty, never feels prac tically that be is mortal. He knows it, in deed, and, if need were, he could preach a homily on the fragility of life ; but he brings it not home to himself any more than in a hot June we can appropriate to our imagination the freezing days of December. But now shall I conless a truth? I feel these audits but too powerfully. I begin to count the prob abilities of my duration, and to grudge at the expenditures of moments aud shortest periods like misers' farthings. In proportion as the years both lessen and shorten, I set more count upon their periods, and would fain lay my inef fectual finger on the spoke of the great wheel. I am not content to pass away "like a weaver's shuttle." Those metaphors solace me not, nor sweeten the unpalatable draught of mortality. I care not to be carried with the tide that smoothly bears human life to eternity, and re luctant at the inevitable course of destiny. I am in love with this green earth the face or town and country the unspeakable rural sol itude and tho sweet security of streets. I would set up my tabernacle here. I am con tent to stand still at the age at which I am ar rived to be no younger, no richer, no hand somei. I do not want to be weaned by age, or drop, like mellow fruit, as they say. iuto the grave! Any alteration on this earth of mine, in diet or lodging, puzzles and discom' poses me. My household gods plant a terribly fixed foot, and are not rooted up without blood. They do not willngly seek Lavinian shores. A new state of being staggers me. Sun and sky, and breeze and solitary walks, and sum mer holidays, and the greenness of fields, and the juices of meats and fishes, and society, and the cheerful glass, and candle light, aud fire side conversations, and jests, and Irony do not these things go out with life 7 Can a ghost laugh, or shake his gaunt sides, when you are pleasant with him Life and Remains of Charles Lamb. Drive Ox. The best advice to the yonng man just setting out in the world, is to "drive on." In other words, live energetically. Whatever you undertake, do it with a will. And do it well. Do it, as far as possible, in the completest manner. In this way alone can an efficient, useful and successful career be ac complished. "Drive on." But not reckless ly. We suppose that whoever gives this short article a perusal, will understand that it is ad dressed to young men who think before they act; who are, in short, possessed of a little common sense, such as every young man should strive to obtain, and without which he will be poor, indeed. Davy, or David, which iu all the same, as of old, was a shrewd fellow once said, "Be sure you are right, then go ahead." WThether or not Crockett gave utter ance to the saying, it contains a great truth and the wisest of counsel. It means simply this study aad know w hat is best, what right, what honorable, what useful, what profitable in life, and then drive on, neither to the right or left. Why so many young men fail in life ? Why they look upon the retrospect with so lit tle to rejoice over and so much to regret, is to be found in the fact that they have not started right, and driven on as they ought. Their en ergies have been spent in the wrong direction, and have proved fruitless or good. They have failed either to comprehend the true purposes and ends of life, or have allowed themselves to cowardly evade them. "Drive on" should be the motto of all vounnr men. Let them. know themselves, know what they purpose iu life, and they will have none but themselves th blame if they do not succeed. Frost " Music . I was once belated in Canada on a fine winter day, and was riding over the hard snow on the margin of a wide lake, when the most faint and mournful wail that could break a solemn silence seemed to pass thro' me like a dream. I stopped my horse and listened. For some time I could not satisfv myself whether the music was in the air or in my own brain. I thought of the pi je forest which was not far ofF; but the tone was not harp-like, and there w as not a breath of wind. Then it swelled and approached ; and then it seemed to be miles away in a moment ; and again it moaned, as if under my very feet. It was in fact, almost under my feet. It was the voice of the winds imprisoned under the pall of ice suddenly cast over them by the peremp tory power ot the frost. Nobody there had made air boles for the place was a wilderness : and there was no escape lor the winds, which must moan on till the spring warmth should release them. They were fastened down in silence ; but they would come out with an ex plosion, when, in some still night, atter a warm spring day, the ice would blow up, and make a crash and a racket from shore to shore. So I was told at my host's that evening, where arrived with something of the sensation of a haunted man. It had been some time before the true idea struck me, and meanwhile the rising and falling moan made my very heart thrill again. Leavixo noME. We can conceive of no picture more interesting than one which might- bo drawn from a young man leaving his home, he scene of all his earthly associations, to try his fortune in a distant country, setting out a lone for the "forest." A father on the de cline, the downhill of life, gives his parting blessing, involing the best gifts of Heaven to rest on his beloved offspring, to crown all his effort with complete success ; tears gnsh from his eyes, and words are forbid utterance. A kind, most affectionate mother, calling after him as he is departing from the parental abode and with all the dangers to which he is to bo exposed rushins into and nressinff un'on . her mind, she says, "Go my son remember Cre is a right and a wrong way." Her advice is brief. Language Is inadequate to the exprea- ion of the feelings that then crowd on the mind of a virtuous child. Every reader has a case of this kind, and may have been the bud- ject of one in some respects similar. Here may ba found eloquence more toucning to whom it is delivered than eveq the orations of Cicero or Demosthenes?. Tl e -Nashville" (Tenn,) Patriot, pnblishc the Montgomery Constitution, and makes this brief but comprehensive editorial comment:. 'The affair appears to have been gotton up f or the purpose ot conferring "life-memberships" on hungry office seekers. "Jenny," said a Scotch minister,, stooping from the pulpit,- "bare ye got a preen about ye "Yes, rpinieter." "Then sick it into. that sleeping brute by your side." .