VOL XXXIL GREAT CLICARIEG OUT SALM TO MARS ROOM FOR THII NSW TOWN HALL, to be eroded ea the corner of Winn fir Nobel Ow. L. T. SUMPLE.9B Now ollWe for Cub or Reedy Pay— niesco al IN Si. SLACK ALPACAS at OS sod NI sta. AMER IVAN AINIRINOKI et 40 ete. 1101/1111D rf)1 1 1.1191 tCA et,. worth PO rte. ALL THIC ABUVE. from I S so 110 per WM. below she roplor pea& CALMAR from 9 etc for Mel. 11114CHTi& BROWN INUSLIN69 to HI etc best GOOD bloorboll'end brown Noolloo it Mk. All wool Ceirlwores st 1111.09t011199 k 11.75. /loop chime, Cornets. & notion@ low down! NATI, 0 CAP* at burials*. 110411 di IMO= for Men. Women. & Children at greatly redoeed prices. lOr lot Goiter, 4 Pim% r oar chisel, at it W. worth OM. Line lot Ladies' Olove.bad Ilaloswolo sod 'ashore et VAL wort& VA& '(.'ogees, Teas, Sugars and Syrups. 'VW balance of our Noels contorts's/ all hinds of 'LIoODS,CARNITII he., at preportioosbly low pricer. Conon, produce wasted. Comb paid Ihr bettor and lido. More on Nolo Streit below Market. Jimmy 111118.-91. Ail BOLLEDER'B ROOT AND SHOE STORE, pewits Tne sruicerAL cuvacci, On Main Street, Bloontebluryg. llip subscriber takes pleamme la anaminelng to Its WPM 01l plownsharil, and vicinity. that he has on baud a Imp mid gut, asoottmeed of 1100T8 AND SHOES, 1 111 • I.dle. and gentlemen's WOlll. to wit all Mach% Dig My work le of the best quality, and lees its noel reliable mansfuturers ; hi Wag a practkal mu and a mood Judge of tRTEI O 2I.)4I:BLEts hp I. not likely to be imposed epos by receiviag inortblees material badly made op. I b. es desiring anything in his lies would do well la phi him a call, before purchasing elsewhere. Ile fil 4 GOOD ARTICLE , Ritd at prices to pelt perehuers. All persons who desire light or busy work made 14 order can be accommodated at his establishment. 0 Also, repairing will be dons walk neatness and &Ao ep och. slew% areortment of Ladies Spring and Plum in.st *boss Pa hand. A. 15ULI.EDS11,. Almil 3. Ind?. Ij. BROWER, (Cor. Malts & ben sec) In now Writing to the FaWe too STOCK OF SPRING GOODS •rosWig lo part of • roll lime of INGRAIN, WOOL a RAG CAIIIPETS. Vino elute' red riftalerpre for Ladles' emit'. teedsoin• Urea Mends of all Fettered andqualities. htiMitill end Prints of varier • if ualitier end priers, lOW bad awl Brawn Marilee, Ladies France Verret. end BALMORAL SHIRTS. 0 r n d aseoriment or Ladies •ad children.' Oilier. mud Boots, It reel Groceries and Spices. New assortmeat er Cass sal Qateaswars. = 'Row if tio Was to sate poor oeloctlooo, so 1 am ottoriwg goods It vary low ru Woo and nor !untie la “If /adios to all, and oat to be tioderoold by any. J. J. CROW CR, Mronsberg, April 30, W 67 FIVINII ARRIVAL OF FAMILY GROCERIES, AT JOHN L GIRTON'S STORE, 111001115111/RO B PERNA, 'OW labeeriber Ma Joel returned from the tamer. Moe with a lam sod choice stock of first Case Groceries and Dry-Goods, which he offers to the Misses of Olooinsberg and •teisity as low as can be hod of toy dueler b this oreeleo of the County. Ls sloth eonsiste of the beet verietles of corrals, 1110LAINIES, ilt7U AN, Y TI A, Flan (of Inc gesiiii.) OPIUM, DII RH MEATS (so their season.) soerrom, AND eYrurat camatuita, 80AP do CANULOB, Ike., he., CHSEBO, COALYW.rSIEDOILA. a leo a nice assoriettet of Dry Goods and Hosiery. and a fell variety of good, of the anov• class, and 01 other bind,. In addition to which he has recently added to hie stock a One aseortessat of CEDAR WARE AND WILLOW WARE ; fn Ivrhiclt variety of goodie be bas several new ortisies of modern inventing, antensi•elly used when. keow•, and which must cowo into au bare De ales has a doe 'apply of French Moroccoeu ; be aloe of Morocco Linings fot tibriemaker's work , arid a good enactment of Queensware. to- Coll and ezawles. 3011/1 R.OIRTox. S. R. Corner of Main and Iron Streets. Mom/burg. Nov. SO, NEW BAKERY AND COINFEC TIONERY 738ioCticattaaGDLICLUMIcioCiatt ON TRIM) STREET, BRLOW MARKET. BLOOMSBURG, PA. J. P. FOX, Proptietnrof this establisbisailti would rempeethilly inform hie old and new easter:ere, than he has everything fitted up at hie now wand In en able bile in farniell tbena with AHEAD, CAKES, AND CAINPECTIONDAINA. a• hereitnlore. rr Hereafter all persons. who have been furcieb dni with Ale, Lager Seer, and Porter, by the *hide, Belt, or quarter barrel, will call upon WILLIAM IiILMOHN, at his Daiwa to Phives' Block, Mein Street, "'be bee beta autborised by tbe uaderatieed to sett %he nue. Ile ileilleon wittily have a supply no bud, Wild will be mild at the luvress marital r-tei. Mr, r. bu is 41011Rie o tett!' tile Mk- y as/ Coe. siottery., Otte) r Use isle 01 ICE CitE4lsl, to all whin way flew him with their COMM Re le Ilea prepared I. retake lee ()filial in ligge quaatl tie' for perinea, piWle or social 'mho Hags. as the ease may he. 12verythieg pertalolng to hie floe el hotline's will VIVO'. ean.fial aid doll/eat attention. 7 - He is thankful to his customer. far past fa •ers, and wool cordially sulltiLe a continuance of the ONAWI. J. P. PDX. April 2, 1167. NEW RESTAURAN'T, In Man', trildhis. on Mrl■ amt. WM, GILMORE, IlararsB MI shaman of Bloomsburg sad 818184 taw 641 Y6B opened a Now RENTAVIRANT, of this phi*, where he intetril is *id friends sad eirWewere to tall and partake of Ms rafrisbassals.— Is is MI lassalloa to Lily the best LAGER BEER AND ALL,' 'wassail ma hand ; A Perot. Waresparalla. •rel taw tameoades, anspberty and tArn iwillyraps, ea* always ha had at his Ilsolaaram. In the sails,/ Ilse ha preasais ~„4 sussiasaad l this plate ; Pickled Oysten Claws, hardly's*. a Fish. Ihistmessed Chicken. Pleatai 'rrtps aid Ms( Toniyas. he.. ha. Hs also has a goat orto Is or Cigar* and Owing Tobncen f mairternert (17' a hla PI cull. Itlovnisburg, Pine 13, Ten • t • rim BL I. • ♦ loontsburg fflemocrat PUBLIIIIIED EVERY WEDNIDIPAT IN ELOOMSHORG, PA.I or WILLIAMSON U. JACOIIT. Ttlibla.-01 00 la advance. If aM held entble 112 MONTHS. be caste add's' awl *III be • anted. Narropor. Olecoatlaued until art err orates aro paid except et the optic,. of the *alter. nArrm OP ADVERTISING. IU LIMP COOPTITOTII 1100/1111. One opiate Pao or three Insertions ...RI SO Every salrecitseat Insertion lees 1%013.. 110 /141011. IL 2a. hi. the. 11. One immure. 0.80 300 400 Two ignores, 3.00 3.00 GM Tbripo .. 5,00 7,00 0.30 Pour squares. 0,110 CM 10,90 Ilolf roltnn, 1 10,00 19.01 14.00 Ono column. I 13,00 18.00 911,40 YT ~ Bseetstar". sad Administrator's Nonce. 301 Auditor's Notice it sp 01Mir advirtisemeats imeerted setordind to special 00111111111. enslners notices, 'Obeid advertisement, twisty. teas pet line. Transient advertisements payable la imitate" all ether. due after the Arq tetsrtlon. Printed in dare's Black Main Street by SMIBRACE TOUR MOTHER. Love tby Mother, little one, Kim and chap her neck again; Hereafter she may have a eon Will kilo and elmp her neck in vain. Love t y Mother, little one. Gaze upon her loveing eyes, And mirror bnek her love for thee; Hereafter thou may'st shuder sighs To meet them when they cannot see Gaze upon her loving eyes. Press her lips the while they glow With love that they have often told; Hereafter thou way'st press in woe, And kiss them till thine own are cold. Press her lips the while they glow. • revere her raven hair, Although it be not silver gray; Too early death, led on by care, May snatch save one dark lock, away. 0 revere her raven hair. Pray for her at eve ind morn, That Heaven may long the stroke defer ; For thou may'st live the hour forlorn, When thou wilt ask to die with her. Pray for her at eve and morn. The whole population of the neighbor hood resort to it with regularity—all the loungers, all the idlers, all who have done up their weary day's work, all the town gads and gossips in trowsers, as well as those who go for molasses in jugs, for nails, tobacco, and raisins—loiter, and talk, and listen in this most convenient place of public recep. Lion. And if store and post office chance to be combined, the flocking of the sover eigns, with wives and offspring, fairly puts one out in any attempt at description. Be sides the sugar, nails, tea, codfish, soap and brooms, their lie all the letters that are ad dressed personally to the men and women of the tow. Truly, an item to be thought of. The sum total of all their correspondence with their strayedgmay cousins, nieces, nephews and children. Therefore at this little hive the swarm collects. Therefore do they come hither, evening after evening, picking up waifs of news, and watching like paid de tectives the post master's distribution of the letters. Therefore do they hustle and bus tle around that funetionery's person when the mail-bag is fetched from the coach, and proffer their atristanee in assorting the miscellaneous newspapers which he:empties over the counter. Offering advice, when it is needed and when isn't. Submitting corn menta—origional and assorted--on all class es of topics, with such sly foot-notes as one may not at first understand. Then a country store is a strangely quiet place of an afternoon, whether in summer or winter. Save when, perhaps, some little girl patters in to exchange a skein of thread, the flies and the rural merchant have it en tirely to themselves. If the place is in charge of a spruce young clerk, in lieu of the mas ter, he employs himself with the brush and oils at the little cracked mirror behind the high desk, and lets the flies sun themselves in sleepy knots over the floor. It is not less a realm of doziness either in planting time, and through the sweaty spell of haying. In the former season, the men are about their gardens and off over their farms, and a fox might leisurely take a trot through the town street without attracting the eye of master or hound. Perhaps an enterprising peddler, atop of a bright red wagon, trundles up to the doorstep, and from his canopied box, "passes the time of day" with the prompt clerk, asks for the latest news, and offers essence at the very lowest "rigger." Or a stray cow comes tearing off the suoculent grans like silk near the door, perhaps with a bell strapped about her neck and putting the town more com pletely to sleep with its somnolent melo dies. This is the store in the country town, or the village. It sometimes stands, however away by itself at the crossing of two roads, with the proprietor's dwelling in close pro pinquity ; its entire front proteeted from burglars by an ancient swing shutter, and barricaded with boxes and buckets, half filled with beans dried apples and oats, that are tilted on a board shelf just under the window ; I do not believe a lonelier spot can be found in the whole range of Puritan New England; a mill-pond in a faded De cember afternoon is the play of resort by oompsrison—a hemlock thicket at sunset is noisy in oontrast with its sepulchral deso lateness. But when farming does not drive and leisure is to be bad in solid junks by all who want it, the store is not altogether so bare of interest to the casual observer. Ilud ,lled, as the talking population love to be found, their portraits, or full•length ,, , may FRANK R. SNYDER. The Country Store. BLOOMSBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 20,1868. then be readily taken. The men and the boys perched on barrels or the counters, either swing their feet and gossip, or swing their feet anOpit. If it is winter, they bud. die up to tho dull box-stove, and polish the long pipe with their hard palms es coolly as if they were salamanders. They are stowed in unseen corners, too—the young fellows in particular—where they work over colorless, but sometimes rank, Jokes in half whispers, and snicker in nasal unison over their old confidences about the girls. The small boys drink in what falls, pinning bashfully while the larger ones laugh ; they are taking their early lessons faithfully and well. o.uo iu co I 00 0100 3400 .00 0, 14 140 30 00 Of winter evenings, the stove, crammed with seasoned sticks, roared like any me• nagerie lion. No January winds without can drown its growling sound. The long era are gathered in a great open circle, each with a hand erect for a screen. There it is the affairs of a nation are sifted; there each town sovereign closes and grapples with his dissenting neighbor, and finds his own personal niche among those occupied by the local worthies. The minister's last ser mon comes up for analysis at this rustic round table ; when the astonishing fact is revealed that they are all not less profound theologians than marvellous masters of State craft and civil polity. To the store flock the farmers, in earnest with their spring work, after seeds and ma nures and agricultural implements. Boys run there on errands for their mothers, their sisters, and themselves. Thrifty house. wives drive up before the door et an early forenoon hour in the summer time, and go in to make barter of eggs, and cheese, and stocking yarn, for cotton cloth, or calico, or new shoes with a proper "power" to squeak in them. The girls flock, with red blushes burning on their cheeks, to see if' anything lies over for them in the mail, or to exchange a few words with the sleek haired clerk, or to finger for the twentieth time the limited stock of bareges, prints and muslin delainea which he ever stands ready to spread about the counter. You will see a whole carivan of old fam ily cows about the premises, some with bob tails and some with switch, holding down their heads and drowsing away the hours as if they had cropped poppy-heads, instead of green clover, for their Summer morning repast. And elderly females are visible, too, climbing friskily into and out of their open wagons, the day's successful barter giving them the nerve required to keep them from falling. As politicians, the men who gather stated. ly at the country store strain the limits of COI4IIIOII comprehension. On city rostrums it is thought the political notorieties some times give a start to the public pulse; but at the store, the work is personal nod strik ing and thorough beyond example. They make it their grand point here to corner a man ; after which operation it is thought be is not worth putting forth much strength upon. It is held to be the ooronal feature of argumentative skill and power, to get an opponent "where he can't get away." And so it is, according to Socrates himself, who had an awful teasing way of putting ques tions—or agreeably to Father Aristotle, who led by the nose the rest of the dialecticians of his day, and impressed his system on all the schools of Europe after him. To "ar gue the point" is esteemed one of the di vine rights of man ; and no government or authority shall dare to take it out of his hands. YOUTIIFUL INVLUINCL-M en are accus tomed to look upon the excesses of youth 33 something that belongs to that time. Men say that of course the young, like colts unbridled, will disport themselves. There is no harm in colts disporting themselves, but a colt never gets drunk. Ido not ob• jest to any amount of gayety or vivacit that lies within bounds of reason or of health, but 1 do object and abhor, as worthy to be stigmatised as dishonorable and unmanly, every such course in youth as takes away strength, vigor and purity from old age. I do not believe any man should take the can dle of his old age and light it by the vices of his youth. Every man that transcends natures laws in youth is taking beforehand those treasures that are stored up for his old age ; it is taking the food that should have been his sustainance in old age and ex hausting it in riotous living in his youth.— Becclrtv. low To SToP Tus FLOW 01+ BLOOD.— Howekeepers, monhanies and others, in handling knives, tools and other sharp in struments, frequently receive severe cute, from which blood flows prothsely, and often endangers life itself. Dr. Keyser tugs that blood may be made to cease an follows : Take the fine dust of tea and bind it close to the wound—at all times ac:oessible and easy to be obtained. After the blood has ceased to flow, laudanum is advantageously applied to the wound. Due regard to these instructions would Ave agitation of mind and running for a surgeon, who probably would make no bettor prescription if he wore pretent. EX-PILESIDENT hi:Annan oompleted the lieventyeerenth year of his age on the 23rd of April. We are mare that it will gratify his friends to hear that the 77 anniversary of his birthday found him in elOO lieu health. TWo boys fought out a quarrel the other day, and the bigger proved the "beet man." "Darn yo," said No. 2, when he found be was used up—"darn ye, if I can't lick ye, I'll make mouths at your sister." Judge W..dw*M•s While our government was administered by honest agents, its machinery seemed to be perfect in all its departments, because it always worked well. Governmental oppres sion and individual wrongs were unheard of, and not until the political buzzards who have for seven years past, controlled its aft faire was it ever dreamed that both the Constitution and the laws made in accord ance therewith failed to accomplish their legitimate purposes. When, unfortunately, the President and the infamour Congress assumed belligerent positions and warted upon each other, it was discovered that there was no law upon the statute books to control them and keep them within legiti mate bounds, hence Judge Woodward has introduced the following bill, which will in the future settle such miserable conduct as we have beheld at Washington for the past two years. Had such a law been in exist ence, the whole of the present difficulties at Washington would have besslobviated, and the conflict, which is distracting the entire nation, stagnating business, destroying eon• Odor° undermining the whole structure of our Government, and threatening its over throw, would have been avoided. It is to be hoped that Judge Woodward's bill will receive at the hands of Congress the atten tion it deserves, and:that, instead of depriv ing the Supreme Court of its constitutional functions, Congress will enlarge its jurisdic tion, and thus Ptremetheu this grestbulwatk of our national liberties; Sac. I. Be it enacted by the Senate and [louse of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That whenever any sot of Congress shall hereafter be voted by the President on the ground of the :unconstitutionality of any o its provisions, and shall afterwards be en acted into a law by a vote of two-thirds of both houses,:Uotwithstanding the executive veto, it shall be lawful for the President to order the Attorney General to draw up:sod fle on reord in the Supreme Court of the United States a feigned issue, with snob pleadings as shall be necessary and proper to raise the constitutional questions suggest ed in the veto message of the President, and to test the constitutionality of sneh parts of said enactments es were specially objected to by him on constitutional grounds, but which issue and pleadings shall be so drawn as to put in issue no other questions what soever. Sts'. 2. And be it further enacted, That immediately on filling said issue and: plead ings of record in the Supreme Court, a certified copy thereof shall be served by the Attorney General or by some person appointed by him, upon the Speaker of the House of Representatives for the time be. ing whose duty thereupon it.shall be to ap pear on record by himself or enamel, to de fend the constitutionality of said enactment, and thereupon the Court shall, on applica tion of counsel, make all necessary orders for advancing said issue to argument and for hearing argument thereon at the earliest practicable period of their session in bane, and upon entering judgment in said issue the Court shall file their written opinion upon every constitutional question therein raised and each and every enactment of said act of Congress which shall be adjudg ed unconstitutional shall thenceforth be held and taken to be null and void ; but until such judgement is pronounced, the same shall be deemed constitutional and valid. Su'. 3. And be it further enacted ; That it shall be lawful for the Attorney General in preparing said issue, to use the names of real parties, if any such have an interest in the questions to be hied and decided, or fictitious names at his discretion ; and all costs, free and charges attending said pro ceeding, including those of the Speaker of the House of Representatives or Ma coun sel, after being duly audited at the Treas ury Department, shall be paid upon war rants of proper officers out`,.of any moneys in the Treasury of the United States not otherwise appropriated by law. lili:C=M1=1:1 Brazilian Colt.. Brazil has also had her peaceful triumphs. In the great exposition held at Paris, ki 1867, Brazil attracted much attention by the display of her meterial resources. She suc ceeded in obtaining a number of prises• To the uninitiated it may seem strange that from all the oountrieu—Arabia, Java, Ceylon Venezuela, toe West Indies and Central Ameaiea—contesting for the production of the best coffee, Brazil bore away the palm. But it has long been known to dealers that toffs does not depend upon where it grows, but upon the length of time it remains up on the tree upon the manner of its curing. The southern and the eouthwestoren states became acquainted with coffee imported from Rio de Janeiro, fifty years ago, at a time when Boasilians did not know how to cure coffee ; but the taste of the South and West has alone kept up the demand for the green, poorly owed coffee known in (km memo as "Rio." The Brazilian. themselves never use "Rio," and althonh threes !berths of all the ooffeesimported Into the United States come from Brazil, yet much 01 it it sold as Mocha and Java, or under any ask. er aim than "Rio." The English, Amni ons sad Germans make the peered drink ooffeein the world, while the Latin nations, who never boil their coffee, make the bed beverage. IN order to get dear of his creditors, a Detroit man transferred all his property to hia with. Tho latter has now died, leaving a will which leaves the poor man penoilee unless he marries bin ecrvant girl. The Volley of Dose 6 A correspondent of the Philadelphia Press, with Gen. Palmer's engineer eorps of the Keane Nilo Railroad, writing from Camp Cody, on the Mohave river, California, gives the following description of a remarkable valley in that region ; Eighty miles northwest of this map is the well-known sad muchalreaded "Death Valley." It is said to be lower than the level of the sea, and wholly doodles of wa ter. Mr. Spears, our intelligent guide, who visited this temarkable valley several times, gave me the following account of it, with the reason for its terrible names The val ley is some fifty miles long by 30 in breadth, and save at two points, it is wholly encir cled by mountains, up whose steep sides it is impossible for any but expert climbers to ascend. It is devoid of vegetation, and the shadow of bird or wild beast never darkened its white, glaring sand In the early days, trains of emigrants bound for California passed, under the direction of guides!, to the south of Death Valley, by what is now known as the "old Mormon road." In the year 1860, a large train, with some 300 emigrants, mostly from Illi nois and Missouri, came south from Salt Lake, mided by a Mormon. When near Death Valley, a dissent broke out in a part of the train, and twenty-one families came to the conclusion that the Mormon knew nothing about the merry, so they appoint ed one of their number a leader, and broke off from the main party. This leader de termined to turn duo west; so with the peo ple and wagons and flocks be travelled for three days. and decended into the broad valley, whose treacherous mirage promised water. They reached the centre, but only the white glaring sand, bouodod by the scorched peaks, met their gage on every hand. Around the valley they wandered, and one by one the men died, and the pant ing flocks stretched themselves in death un der the hot sun. Ti en the children, crying for water, died at their mothers' breast, and with swollen tongues and burning vitals the mothers' followed. Wagon after wagon was abandoned, and strong men tottered, and raved, and died. After a week's wan dering, a dozen survivors found some water in the hollow of a rock in the mountains. It lasted but a short time, than all perished. but two, who, through some miraculous means, got out of the valley and followed the trail of their former companions. Eighty-seven persons; with hundreds of animals, perished in this fearful place, and since then the name of Death Valley has been applied to it. Mr. Spears says that when be visited it last winter, after the lapse of eighteen years, he found the wagons still complete, the iron work and tires bright, and the shriveled skeletons lying in many places side by aide, I=l The Armies of the World. At the present day the standing armies of the world are larger than they have been since the great wars of the first Napoleon. The army of the United States now num bers 50,000 men in all. The cost of our army is 1100,000,000 or nearly 62,000,000 per 1,000 men'. The army of France has been fixed at 750,000 men in the "active army," and 5r.0,- 000 in the "passive," the latter being nam ed the National Guard Mobile. Total, 1,- 300,000 men available for war. A contin gent of 1,000,000 men is:annually available to recruit the army. The British army numbers about 200,000 men. The bulk of this army is at home.— Ireland is absorbing about 25,000 good troops. Of the colonies or foreign possessions, India takes the largest body of troops, the Domin ion of Canada next, Australia next. The Prussian army numbers about 600, 000 men. The Italian army now , numbers 215,000 men, and is a very effective one. In one of its arms, the berwaglieri, or rifle batallions, it excels oven the French army, whose Zou ayes were supposed to be the first light in. fantryjn the world. The Austrian' army numbers about 700,- 000 men ; its cavalry is said to be very fine. The government breeds its own horses, and thus secures good mounts. The Russian army numbers about 800,- 000 men ; it could be quickly increased to 1,200,000 in time of war. It is spread all over the empire, from the Baltic to the Cau casus. Tho Spanish army is small, not exceeding 80,000 men ; but it is very well clothed and disciplined. It is also receiving breech- loaders. The number of men maintained in the standing armies of civilised nation is not less than 3,600,000. All these vast numbers are snatched away from useful industries, and condemned to idleness and a vicious life, while the laboring people are taxed for their support, and the costly armaments they re quire. Is it not too large a police force? Would it not be cheaper to dethrone a few rogues? A QUAXIM ANZCDOTL —When the Erie Canal was first stated, the suWeot of Invest ing in it was discussed in a Quaker tonnas meeting of the men. It was opposed by an influential member—no other than Ellis Hicks--on the ground of its being a speon lation. Among other objections, be went on to say—" When God created the world, if he bad wished canals, he would have made them." Thereupon " a weighty Friend" (one of their terms) rose up, and said slowly in the stoning ♦oioo in which they always speak in mooting, And Jacob disled a wall, and sat down. ♦ Terrlbl• Iburtlaqsake. Saw FILASOIIII2IO, May B—The bark Com et from the Sandwieh Islands, brings so count of a terrible volcano eruption of Manes Los, which began demonstrations on March 27th. On the 28th, over one hundred earthquake shocks were felt at Nilima, during the two weeks following to April 80th ; two thousand earthquake shocks mewed at Waist China. The earth opened in many places add the tidal wave roes sixty feet Dish, °retooling sows tress fora quarter of a mile inland, sweep ing human beings, homes and everything moveable. Hefbre it came a terrible shock prostra ted churches and homes, killing many. In all one hundred lives were lost, besides thousands of horses and oat& The ten vomited Ire, reeks sod Wm. A dyer of red hot lava dee fbr eix miles long lowed to the Pea at the rate of ten miles an hoer, destroying everything before It, had f b rm• log an Wand in the sea• A new aster, two miles wide has open ed and throws rooks and streams of lire a thousand feet high. Streams of lava rolled to the sea at one time, illuminating it, and extended filly miles at night. The lava was pushed out from shore one mile at Wasshina, three miles from the shore. At Conical Island it rose suddenly emitting a column of steam and smoke, while the Kono packet was passing, spattering mud on the vessel. The greatest shook ocenned April the second. Prior to the eruption there was a great shower of ashes and pumice. During the great shock the swaying motion of the earth was dreadful. No person could stand in the midst of this tremendous shook. An eruption of red earth poured from the mountain, rushing across the plane three miles in three minutes and then ceased, and then came the great tidal wave,! and then the streams of lava. The villages on the shore were all destroyed by this wave. The earth opened under the :sea and reddened the water. The earth eruption swallowed thirty persons, and the sea many morel; great suffering and terror prevailed and the whole region was affected. Tole WILLOW Wolorm—The pleasant spring:weather we are now enjoying, will set . the sap to circulating, and prepare the chest nut and willow fisrwhistler. Theboye will soon be at it, and we shall have the shrill sound piercing our eat from every direction. We love to'tbink of those things by which we beguiled many an hour in happy child hood sport. Ilolmcs,:in the Atlantic/ Al manac, says : "Who does not love to make a willow whistle, ortto'see one made? Can you not recall your Arts lesson in the art— the cutting of the flexible bough, the choos ing a smooth part, passing the knife around it, above and below, pounding it judiciously, ringing it earnestly, and feeling the hollow cylinder of bark at last slipping on the sap py, ivory white, fragrant wood? The little plaything grew, with growth of art and civ ilisation, to be the great organ which thun dered at Harlem or in Boston. Respect the willow whistle." " TIMITA." —Tight pantaloons are to be all the go the present summer. We have had a eight of them already—and such a sight ! It really makes us nervous to think of it. Our young men actually seem to have no "visible means of support." For goodness' sake let them wear false calves. How they expect:to become anything in the world on such diminutive props, we are un able to comprehend. And how do they manage to get into them ? Their legs look as if they had been melted and poured in, and somehow or other the big end of the material seems to have run down into the boots. MoNrr.—Men• work for it, beg for it, steal for it, starve for it, and die for it, and all the while, from the cradle to the grave, God and nature thundering in our ears the solemn question, 'What shall it profit a man to gain the whale world and lose his own soul?' The madness for money is the strongest and lowest of passions, for it is the insatiate Molloeh of the human heart, before whose remorseless altar all the finer attributes of humanity are sacrifioed. It makes merchandise of all that is sacred in the human affections, and even traffics in the awful solemnitie of the eternal. MR. CLARANO.II LOOAN, of Philadelphia, just returned from Savannah, having obser ved the election there, has made a statement that in one ward in that city several negroes were 'supplied by a wag with labels of "Cos tar's rat and roach exterminator," and vo ted them as ballots. Some of the very in elligent suffragans noticing a cut of a rat on the supposed ballots,asked what it meant. They wore told it stood for the "oar-idea tion of the constitution." They wondered, believed, and voted. After thin, who prates about educating voters, and who doubts that the oolored troops fought nobly ? A TOTING lady of Richmond was so fortu nate as to have two admirers. She was un fortunate in her choice, ihr him whom she married deserted her and she has lived in seclusion ever since. Bat the other day she received notice hem the administrator of the rejected lever, who had died in New Orleans, that his whole estate had been be queathed to her. She is now moderately happy AM OLD Indian who had whammed tba effect of whiskey for many years, said a barrel of whiskey =Paned a thousand tongs and fifty fights. NUMBER 13. aeon of Thomism None but the iftteinknible are apprehee• sive of contempt. Quarrels would never last long if the fault were on one side only. Love receives its death•wound from die• gust and is buried by oblivion. We are too apt to regard every one's life much more uncertain than our own. Every man magnifies *lurks he has re• salved and lose= them ho has indicted. It is never more diMonit to speak well than when we are ashamed of our silence. It is more difficult to conceal the sem time we have than to feign those we have not. In making our Iliningeniente to live we should not Angst that we have abo te die. If we had no faults ourselves we would net take pleasure in observing those of others. All the widow make us tom& Gude., but love makes us guilt i of the most ridicu lous ones. Women exceed the generality of men in love, but men hue the advantage in friend- The best societg end conversation is that in which the heart bas greater share than the head. Those who apply themselves too much to little things commonly become incapable of great ones. The shortest way to become rich le not by enlarging our MAUS, but by sontssotingaur desires. Falsehood is often rooked by truth but she soon outgrows her cradle and disouds her nurse. To bo able to bear provocation is an Err went of great reason, and to forgive it, of a great mind. Ceremony was always the companion of weak minds; it is Is plant that will never grow in a strong soil. Prudenoe and love are not Made for each other; in proportion as love increases pru dence diminishes. The shortest and be way to make your fortune is to convince people k is their in terest to serve you. Prejudice and eeltsafficioncy naturally proceed from inexperience of the world and ignorance of mankind. AT A publie school exhibition in a Mich igan village, one of the visitors made a brief address to tho pupils, on the necessi ty of obeying their watchers and growing up loyal and useful. citizens. To give empha. sis to his remarks, he pointed to a large na tional flag, spread on one side of the room, and inquired, "Boys, what is that flag for ?" A little urchin promptly answered, "To cover up the dirt, sir." literTtNEss.—The oontemplation of hu man affairs will lead us to this concleaion, that among the different conditions and ranks of men, the ballance of happiness is preserved in a great measure equal, and that the high and the low, the.cich and the poor approach, in point of real enjoyment, much nearer to each other than is commonly imagined. A MORT littlegirl, night or nine years old, who had heard much talk about the subject, came home from meeting one day and asked, in a somewhat indignant tone, "Mamma, what makes the minister always say Amen ? Why don't he OM say A Ivo man ?" Wrrrr.—"Ms," Rid the! pride of the family, who had seen some summers, "do you know why our torn cat is like a poet?" Ma did'ot know. "Why," said the prooodious pot, "(lomat ho go out nights and invoke the mews?" "Do YOU know what I am thinking about ?" said a customer to a barber. " No, sir, not exactly ; but I an sea what is running in your head." TRIM is a young lady in illtoklYn so re fined in her language that she never uses the word " blackguard," but substitutes " APrioan sentinel." A BLLTPTOWN, 0., lady has bad four boys at a birth. Her husband is doing as well as oould be expected, but thinks she is very overbearing. THE young lady who was frosen with hors ror, and was subsequently melted into tears, wiu carried out, and consigned to a watery gm's. Ir usually fall out that those who seek others' destruction find their own. No hint to certain editors not distant from here. A lux who claims au extraordinary amount of veneration, says that he respeota old me in everything ezoept chickens for dinner. A DIGBPONDZIIT editor =arks that if the country grows much worse, he shall publish the births under the head of disasters. A rearm asks, why are a fashionable young lady's brains like a trout? Bemuse they love to sport under a waterfall. A Yonwo lady gives her reason* for ne• ing a parmol in them words, " 1 raise my parasol , to parry Sal's rays ." Mu. Partin ton humus to the oonelu sion that there is no use trying to Web soft water when it rains so hard. WRY Is a lawyer like a wryer ? Beorkuma whatever way be :DOM down mot LUMP the dust. AR you etnn' hr yolir bride when ANI are married, Au stun(' by her forevci altatwird., 111111=11111 AN ertragefi mm tear• him itsly ; wotunn tom hor hwheini'o.