"ill 1I ' 1 i; ' ' nt ... 55'a g (i . vfgKj&r ,l0gMM,'Ml"B,' JaiU-MiraBrTalTrrTlglTTTCnrMBI iiiii.mjw-L-Ljljii.j-ij i ' ' " ' ' . .- V 'T " " " w wjMWBWwjjjlij :- u.ii-. i., r. .ist, ,,T',Jt " 7"" : 1 I . : f : : , ; : : 1 I 7 - j" v' i -t 'u-t . ;..;: ,;i a), f f ' ' ' 1 TlIE'WHOLE ART OK GOVERNMENT CONSISTS IN" THE ART OF BEING HONEST. JelTerSOIL ...... ' . ' i VOL t. - PRINTED AWIWBLISHET) BY TERMS Two dollars per annum In advance Two dollars nl a quarter, half yearly and if not paid before the end of ,,e vwr, Two dollars and a half. Those who receive their rinersoyuKui' iunycu uy uic proprie- Vn amers continued until all arrearages a i T 1r"fltrTI-l at the option lonne bailors ut';iri' n:iifi nrinr a , , TjA h crtiseineiits not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) .hi h in.ertctl Iliroe weeks for one Hollar: twentv-'fivn nWnfc 1 r oerr suDsequennusen on : larger onrs m-proportion. A, jrAll iciicrastiuM;u io m .uuors must De post paid. To all Concerned. We would call the auemioii of some, of our fiiliscriher,- aiid especia!lycertain-xRoslas-; ,9rs, to ihq. following rcasoiiabltjand well sei- ae.il rules in lyuw ju reiauon 10 puonsiiers, to ibe palrons of newspapers. TH& LAW OF 'NEWSPAPERS. J. Subscribers who do not gie express, no Uceo the contrary, are considered as wishing ioor.iinue their subscriptions. 2. If subscnberor.di;r the discontinuance of I'ucir papers, the publishers may continue to send them till all arrearages are paid. 3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take ikir papers from the, offices to which they are I (lirecteil, they are held responsible till ihey j.8re settled their bill, and ordered their papers tfiscnniinucd. 4. If subscribers remove to other places with-- iwi informing ..the publishers, and their paper is teai io tne tormer airccuou, tney are neiu re fp,inilIe. 5. Ibe courts have decided that relustng to take a newspaper, or periodical from the office, r removing and leaving it uncalled for, is "pri- ria facie" evidence of intentional fraud. Winter and Age. BY MRS. LTDIA H. SIGOURNEV. Gret Winter loveth silence. He is old, inO liketh not the sporting of the lambs, . Xnr the shrill song of birds. It irketh hirn Tofcear the-forest melodies; though still He giveth license to the ruffian winds, Thai, with black foreheads and distended cheeks. Mutter hoarse thunders on their wretched path. Helayshis finger on the lip of streams, And rbey are ire, and stays the merry foot Of the slight runlet, as it leapeth down, Terrace by terrace, from t he-mountain's head. He silenceih the purling of the brook, That told his tale in gentle Summer's ear, ' All the day long reproachless, and doth bid . Sharp frosts chastise and chain it, till it shrink: Abash'd away. r He sits , with wrinkled facp. Like some old grand-ire, ill at eae, who -huts! The rioisy trooping of the children out, And, drawing nearer to the pleasant fire, Doth settle on his head the velvet cap, And bless his stars for quiet, once again. Siern Winter drives the truant fountain back Tothe-dark caverns of the imprisoning earth2,' And uVad'neth, with his drifted snows, the sound Of wheel and foot-tramj). Thus it is, with man, "When the chill winter of hts life draws oh. The ear doth loathe the sounds that erst it loved, Or, like 60tne. moody hermit, bar the door,. Though sweetest tones solicit it in vain. The eyebrows weary of the tarjtishedjcenes -WJ old,wind-shaken4apestries of time, While all the languid senses antedate The Sabbath of the tomb. The echoing round Of giddy pleasures, where his heart in ydutH Disported eagerly the. rushing tread Of the great, gorgeous world, are naught to him, Who, as he journeyethto a clime unknown, Would to the skirts of holy silence cling, And let all sounds and symphonies of earth Fall hke a faded vestment, from the soul. From the Ladies' National Magazine. The Ifevv Years Hark! from the bare and ghastly treeB A wailing voice comes sad and low The old year ;in' the jWbod liesydead, His sepulchre the icy snow Hut morning dawns, and o'er the 'hills' jM A golden bursi of light is spread Look out for lo !ihe New Year comes A halo -glittering round his head.. b..f. t. On being Slaudercd. Not all they ay or tlo can mako, . Myhead,-Mooth-or finger ache;- ;; Nor mar myhape. nor scar my lace? Nor put one feature out of "placeV " Nor will1 ten' thousand, thousand, lies, . jMiike-jne-less virtuous, learned-or-wise The most, effectual xway to baulk . . . . . I ' STjlOUDSBURG, xMONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 1846. .; , From the. Ladies National Magazine. Woman's Iiaflncnce. UY ELLEN AShTON "TDear. Earnest, do lay aside your law pa pers. 1 dee'laro I shall not suffer you," con tinued his wife playfully, "to be devotee! to any thing but myeli." Her'h'usband looked up from the huge brief; with the wearied look of one almost worn out by incessant menial labor, but a smile instantly came over his face as he met the eye of his sweet wife. a Then you' will break your promise, Belle," he said, "for you know I told you, when wc married, that the law would be thereafter my mistress, almost' as much as yourself." ' So you did: But you aie ruining your healih by this clo.ie application, and, a,s I made no contract for that, you must gie up these pa pers, for to-night. You toil too hard: I did not think of this when we married, or I would not have been so ellih," she said with a sigh. 44 Nay, nay, J3elle," replied her husband, pushing back his chair from the table, and af fectionately taking the hand of his wifo between both of his; 4,there is no need to reproach your self. If I work hard it is because I am ambi tious. For your sake I am resolved io win a foremost place at the bar, and with it opulence; but instead of repining at the toil that lies be fore me, 1 bless God that you have been the means to force it on me. What would I have been but the idle spendthrift I was fast becom ing, if I had remained my uncle's heir and mar ried Helen Weston 1 li was my love for you, which procured my disinheritance, made me what 1 am I" " Ah, had 1 but known it in lime had you only told me that you sacrificed fortune for me " 44 You would have refused me. You have said the same a dozen times before, Belle, "and 1 know you too well to doubt your word. It was for that very reason I did not tell you Had I informed you that my uncle would cut me off without a shilling if 1 married you, a mista ken pride would have led you to cancel our en gagement. And what would have been the consequence! Neither of us would have bepn happy ; for ours was not the love of children, but of adults, an affection founded on a knowl- euge ' eacn o.ners cuaracer auu ..... u .UUj- i i i . i islt and girlish caprice. wtten uoa nas mus joined -us together, in spirit,, let no man put asunder; and we should have been acting crim inally had we broken our plight to gratify the unreasonable and tyrannical whim of my uncle." 44 But he was your nearest relative " f .VQranted. But had he been my father, it would have been the same. No one goes fur ther than I do in upholding the rights of pa rents; and, as a general rule, their commands, even on the subject of marriage, should be im plicitly followed. Yet, in this case, there was no, possible objection to you except your pov erty. Now, as L look at the matter, this was affair. If I choose to toil hard with you fnr mv wife, instead of living a rich drone as Helen Weston's husbandt it was my business and that of no other person whatever. Besides I .knew she was not m lor a wtle, at least lor me; vain, haughty, and ill-tempered, life with her, would, have been a constant scene of bick ering. Nay, do not try. to defend her 1 know your good-nature would make the best of every one I. will, if it please you, say no more of her;. but J 4 hank heaven that you and-not Helen is my wife." 44 Ah ! Earnest, how shall 1 ever repay you for all you have sacrificed V By saying nothing of it. Why, my dear, I have sacrificed nothing for you. On the con- trary, you. all I have of fame or lortune, 1 owe to When I first won your love I was an idle man of fas hton, the heir expectant of tlious- auds a year : 1 spent my time at Hie theatre, the billiard .rooms or the race-courso. wtth out' being actually depraved, j was last becom ing o. -Ji is rt" 1 nad ,aMe r,r ,ow llHsi" pation, but i .was idle, find liitte hea- il mv hands. I sought aniueuieni iiny anu every wher.C Bel,veno, e.pa.h ol a rich L .Sp, .l.ik with temotam.n. 1 waj, lrHadv acauirinji a. passion for play when vhanra.-threw mo U jhc .circle where yu "rowas a passing whim,4 theu.though. nioved bTlT-oJ believe h was a dtr fnrfereuce oh the part or Providence, who will not suffer a sparrow to fall without taking account of it. I saw you and loved you. At first my gay companions tried, to laugh me out of my pas sion; but every day showed me more and more of your amiability, modesty and correct princi ples. You know the rest. I chose, wisely in abandoning a fortune that would have made me a sloth, and might have been my ruin." 44 But it pains tne when see you toiling thus. You will injure your health by over-application. Let us be contented with less." 44 Calm your. fears, dearest: My "health sus tains no injury, and it is only for the past week that my application has been so severe. This mass -of papers belongs to a very complicated and important case which: I was anxious to master, for it. .will be; the reputation of any one man thoroughly to understand it, and 1. consid er myself fortunate in being retained. It shows that my fame is extending and that I am no lon ger a drone in society, but an honored and use ful citizen. We should all do some good; we owe it to our fellow creatures; and I feel far happier since I have been able,' by "means of my profession to redress injuiies and right the wronged. 1 know you sometimes think I over work myself, and that I do it for your sake; but it is not wholly so: I toil now from a sense of duty, and enjoy a supreme pleasure in doing so. -I have done enough, however, for to-night 1 think I thoroughly comprehend the case so we will lay aside the papers. But next week 1 shall expect you to be very proud of me, for I intend to win this, .my first great cause, in the teeth of the opinion expressed by our old est lawyers : and if I do so, it will restore an estate to a widow and her children, wlio have been defrauded of it hy a miserly old man, who does not hesitate to say he has the letter of the will in his favor, and cares nothing for its spir it. But wc shall see. If I win this cause, my fortune will be assured, and then you need have no more fears, as I see you now have." Earnest Ormond has told his own story, so well that we have nothing to add lo it. Three years, had now elapsed since his union with Isa bel Rowe.aud during, that period he had risen to considerable eminence in his profession, sur prising his friend by the facility with which the idle man of fashion had been transformed into the studious and business-like lawyer.; But there had been a fund of latent energy hidden under the gay exterior of Earnest, and whenj his uncle disinherited htm, he applied himself at once to the study of the law, supporting himself out of a small legacy to which he was entitled in his own right. Early and late he was at h:s books; and, when the time came for his examination, he was admitted to the 'bar with the highest honors. His energetic appli cation to his .laborious profession soon brought . him clients. Gifted with great natural talents, which hitherto had been allowed to. rust from disuse, he speedily became distinguished: suits of importance began to find their way to him; and at .length, by the advice of one of the.oldest and most sagacious members of tho bar; who had been applied to but could not undettako it in consequence of other business, ho was en trnsted ,.wnh a case, considered well nigh des perate, but one involving an immense amount of property, and enlisting all the best feelings of the heart in its favor. It was this caso to which he had allude'd in the foregoing conver sation with Ins wife. ' '4 Well,' Ormond, do you think you will be able to do i-tlything to-day ?" said one of the op posing lawyers ratlier snderingly, when he came into court. 44 Y'ou tnighi as well own the weak ness of your case and save us the trouble of pleading:" 44 'Faint heart never won fair lady,' " retorted Earnest, and bowing to the court, he said, 44 if your htfn'or pleases, I will go on." tie hail 'not spoken for mora than half an hour," before 'he triumphant looks of the oppo sing paity became changed to those of alarm ; for 'So the astonishment .f all, he boldly assert . - - - ted that the case which they so relied on as a precedent, wasj.selfjbad lawn ..Ka,dozen . instances in. the bop was itself bad law, aud'eontra'dicted bppks. He pro ceeded to enforce this assertion. .whh such an array of authority and loenjarge qn l.he.abstird tty.of the irecj:diij wjih such cogency .of rea- exchanged bet wectyh la w.yera? forhedefen- dant, and notes were hurriedly written and sent for books which were wanted for the purpose of examination. The judge, who had shook his head when Earnest announced his position, now began to be all attention, and seemed pro foundedly struck by the force of what the plead er said. The news of the impression that Ear nest was making soon spread abroad ; tha law yers hurried in from their offices and from the other courts, and the space both tnside and out side tho bar became speedily crowded. The subject was well calculated also for the display of natural eloquence, and Earnest, in inveigh ing against the hardship of the pretended rule of law, by which a widow and her children were reduced to beggary, in contradiction of the plain meaning of the will, drew tears to ma ny an eye. He sat down amid murmurs of ap plause. 44 Well, gentlemen," said ?the judge, turning to the opposite side, 44 what have you to say ? I confess I think the case is sifted 'to the bot tom 'and that, we have been all wrong. Unless you can overturn Mr. Ormond's authorities I shall instruct the jury to give a verdict in his favor. - He knows more law than'all of us put together." The opposing attornies attempted to make a defence, but they spoke, all the while, with a consciousness that they were in the wrong. As the judge said, Earnest had sifted the whole mailer to the bottom. The result was a charge from the bench in his favor, and a verdict from the jury who did not leave the bos:. So distinguished a triumph exceeded any thing which had occurred in the memory of the bar, and at once elevated Ormond to the front rank of his profession. Before he left the court-house, he. had been retained as consulting counsel in a dozen cases of importance. From the congratulations of his friends he broke loose as soon as possible and hurried home. His wife was waiting for him in their little parlor, eager to hear the result, ye.t almost dreading to ask it, for she had not her husband's confidence of success. 44 1 have won. Give me joy, Belle. Did I not say 1 would succeed V The wife flung herself into his arms, and burst into glad tears of joy. 44 Nay, weeping," said Earnest, 44 but I see they are tears of joy," he continued, as his wife smiled up into his face. And then, as the cheers of the crowd, who had followed htm in triumph home, broke on his ears he added, 4,see what you have made of me ! I shall almost be gin to think I' am a great man." 44 Ah! Earnest you know I have not made you this." 44 But you have dearest. You it was that woke me from my spell of indolence the ne cessiiy of struggling to provide you a home worthy of you, first taught me my own abilities and wjthout your love to cheer me, in hours of depression caused by hard study, I might have given out long ago. But the goal is now won. Dear Belle, your sex little knows the influence it exerts. It has saved many a man beside me, even though he has not had such an angel of a wife." Earnest fulfilled the promise he held out in his first great case, and rose to be the leading attorney of his native city, a member of Con gress, a senator, a judge, and an ambassador abroad. But he never ceased, whenever the conversation diverged on his early struggles, to turn to his wife with' a loving smile, and say 'that all he had, of fame or fortune, he owed to he'i influence. A Climax. 44 What are you doing my son?" said a farmer to his boy Billy. 44 Smoking a sweet fern cigar; I made it." 44 Throw it away this minute : don't vou know that a boy who smokes fern will sfn'oke tobacco, and if he smokes tobacco he will drink rum, and if lie drinks rum he will lie, and if he lies ho will steal, and if he steals he will murder, and if he murders he will be acquitted?" N. Y. Organ. It is very common in the city' for lawyers-and htiiera. -when Ipavinir their office for a short ' O " lime, id ta"ck a notice, 44 back in fifteen minules -igone to the P. 0." or 44 return at 3 o'clock gouo io the court-house," &c. A certain' law yer in New York a few days ago,.got in a muss and some wag tacked a label on his office door " gone to the lonibs ! back Mil JU, Uaya.w 30. Kicking a Yankee. ; Under this caption we sometimes since, gavo, a story, 'illustrating the impossibility of-kicking, a Yankee. The veteran Noah says: That ther is no case on record of a Yankee having , been kicked, nor, until ihe history of the last year of the world's duration is written, will such a feat be recorded. We remember (says the 44 Veteran") a shtrp, fellow named Doolittle, a Connecticut "exotic," who was .transplanted from Harvard University to one of the Southern Stales, for the purpose of assuming the editorial control of a violent party paper, where no ono had ever , labored with advantage for the party, simply because an infinite quantity of pistols, and a multiplicity of bowie knives, prevented the strenuous advocacy of certain principles, and fettered the freedom'of speech in an elegant style of efficiency.' Doo little was highly educated was impetuous brave ; yet, with the characteristic cunning of his tribe, careful of his own interests. He took" hold of the paper with the determination' to make it serviceable 44 to the cause, and ser viceable he did make It. The opposing candi date was a bad fellow a duelist,. dram drinker, a lover of 44 poker," and a decided votary of Ve nus. Doolitile'did what no other editor dared to do he said so. The day on which his ar ticle appeared, the candidate" entered the' edito rial chamber. 44 You are Doolittle the editor of "this pa per .".holding a copy of the sheet in his hand. 44 1 am." ' 44 Yoti have libelled and insulted me, and" drawing a large knife 41 1 have come for your ears." 44 1 beg your pardon," said Doolittle 44 1 am a stranger to your customs, and perhaps Have laken a course' which in this part of the coun try is inexcusable. Such is, 1 think the tact. Suppose we compromise the matter." 44 Very well," said the bluff Southerner; "Vl'll kick you, and you shall makea full retraction." 44 You'll whail" said Doolittle, quietly v ., 44 Kick you." i " 44 You insist upon that little privilege ?" 44 1 am unalterably fixed in my determination." 44 So am i," said Doolittle, firing a horse pis tol as big as a blunderbuss, and shattering tho Southerner's right leg 44 not to be kicked." He held his situation six months was stab bed twice, shot three times, belabored with a bludgeon once, thrown into a pond once, but never kicked. During his six months' experi ence he killed two of his adversaries. An ab solute fact. TIie-IIeaviestArgiiuieiit. The excitement caused by tho Presidential contest in 1840, is well remembered. Both Whigs and Democrats strained every nerve to elect their candidates-; and some of the' argu ments at that time made use of to sway the minds of voters were of the most substantial kind. In the town of , in this state, was one of those straight-faced fellows, ever ready for a joke, but whose principles lie at the bot tom of his pocket in heart a Whig, but inva riably voted a democratic ticket, which he found nailed upon the head of a barrel of flour oect dentally placed, upon his front stoop the night previous to election. Contrary to all usage.and the expectations of his friends, Joe S , on the first-day of election, walked up to the polls and deliberately deposited his ballot for. Gen. Harrison. Here was something unheard, of, and great was the consternation thereat in the ranks of the 4 democracy.' A deputation .soon called upon him to know the meaning of his conduct, and tosascertaiu 'the cause of his sud- Fde'n desertion. 1 i How could you leave your old friends-at this time?' said the interrogator, 4 you know -how certainly we counted on. your vo'c- DTd you not find your barrel of flour upon your stoop ihi morning ?' 4 Yes, to be sure I didsaid-Joe, with a know ing wink ; 'but I found two barrels on myack stoop .'' htorris Jerseymani Many strangers are visiting Nauvoo, to pur chase the property of the Mormons, who intend to emigrate lo Oregon in the spring. f ;A-man :w&s whipping his horse jnj.ouisville, iKy.ilately, when the animal, fell onihimjiand crushed him to death. No. JLiWjBalicc,i---:to lettinemuaiK. j