~ 2" potivq. 164* H Gentle Ella thou bast left ne t ', Bright-thy stir, too 000 n it set; Still lie spirit light and liingere-warta-on, . , . . . Joyir of earth thou host .but taitod, -- • Earthly sorrows lightly kill:4n,- [---- Lie, to thee was rosy motaing,, , F a ding while .the:flush as on. . liappftherviho-dle-in- Freefrom guile and pure from ein ; - Speed thim on to heavenly mansione, , Hear the welcome enter ins We most leave the storm and tempest Storms again -shall toulli7thee never. -We must strive witb sin,nnd sorrow— , -They have passed to thee forbver:.. ' Ella, dolt thou 'never wander " - Erma the spirit realms above, And with sister angels hover O'er thy of earthly level - When the morn with roey.fmgers . Doet thou never renal] us, linger . In somelolely eunsetlay -* , In the sombre shades of . even, In the.hushed and silent night,' , Oft' mra_feel thy__presenee near -us, See thee point to. realms of light— - We will heed thy earnest pleading, Agonize for heaven's bright 'crown, Washed in blood oNliy Redeemer. We will meet.thee at hie. throne: .iirtflanetatg A writerln the Democratic Quarterly Re view, sketching life 'at Baden-Baden, records the following incident ' puss the seamen at Ba den, aoompanied by his daughter Helen.— Viing, beautiful and . charming, - and heiress _to animmenee_fortine - left her by her mother; the young winless seen &mud herself stir- rounded , by a host of admirers. Adorers o all kinds,were not, poor; noble 'and,oh . soure, _tender end passionate; grate and gay., .'lt•wae a perpetual tourna znent, of which she Was queen, where the as pirants contended for her band by exhibiting their address, grace and eeduotixo- qualities. When she entered her _carriage, ten cayaliere _ . refire in saddle oarnooling around her eakche At the ball the most elegant dancers ~a►e 3tp devoted to her. They had neither carte, at tentias nor sighs, but for her, whereat many , beautiful Nromen—Frenoll,.English and Rue- sian—were particularly mortified. Among theso pressing suitors Helen solected . the most worthless. The Chevalier Gaetin was, it is true, a charming fellow, pale and delicate, with•fine blue, eyes and wavy hair.— In the place of true passion, he had eloquence, __of-loek_and word ; short _he _dressed_ with taste, danc - id marMously, and sang like itu bini. But unhappily, these advantages were contrasted with great vices., k' dissipated gtimbler and unprincipled, the Chevalier Gee tan bad quitted Naples in consequence of,somel i scatidaltlue advepturbe in which ho , had been impliOated. The count after-havinginformed . himself of these facts, desired, but too late, to put _Ma daugliter_on Au! guard against a dangerous affection. Helen listened neither ,to the advice, the prayers, nor the orders of her father. , The man for whom he endeavor- ed to destroy her esteem,was already - the - Master of .bar heart, and she__ obstinately re fihred to believe in.the disgraceful antecedents of the young Italian. . - lartetan tad \ had 'to do - with a fatherwho laoked energy, perhaps ' he. Would . have become the happy husband of the young countess, and the peaceful posse - ger of the immense fortune with which he was leo frantiOally in love. But the count knew how to carry his point either by management , or . force. He was an old 1i0n. 7 - Halted preseri ed all the-vigor of youth and •all, the rude firmness-4)f no indomitable charactef, which nothing but paternal tenderness had softened. Self willeckinllis resolutions, stern in his Mx. ecution of them, he oast about for mearia.,_to -put hora ducombat , this .carpet ltnigbt, who' had dared to undertake to become'his eon-in law in sPite'd. himothen docident threw into his his hands Lletter which Gaetan had writ ten to Helendz Tica' Chevalier, impatient to attain th e goal 'of his desires; proposed, in direct teinsit to 'the young Countess, an elope: moat, anti PrOPotted aclandestine meeting, ,at, the Ihnu_rwhpu the,o,ouit was,in the 'habit 'of, going out to iplay whist -* *lthl:OcUna geode men of lig io , itiOoa4oe of the ConversatiOn House. ~ .„ ' A roseliliteed in yoga!! belt 'vita to be :the Signal otooneent.- ,„ . ' s The young girt fair' net read 'the ii , adloitly 'intercepted note. • ' 1 ,, Put this getter in your , bolt,!'. said. the 66unt_to hee, offering her a rose, a and . -come with nib." • ME MI MeD, Bolen smilingly °Nutt!, Amt,loolt,shor ftitk er's arm. '.ln'the course `i4 their wttl they ; , - met Daotatt, whci seeing the .rose _lras—over, 'J '4e-count: conditoted difughtei \to 'fife . . 'reside)* of one of • their acquaintances, and .._.requesteir.her:to_lenit until he... Came : fcir -her.. . ~ `That done be returned to ths_little_honse_k -7- which he lived at theentskirtn of *den,. .on • the..Lichtentbal'road. - ,He had went away; his servants, and was Alone. • At: thti aypointe_d Lour Onetaw arrived a(ehe rendezvess, letipo(f: —lightly over the wall of 'the garden; and 'find itrthCdrAir--Slttit;eiiteretzl—ihThi—tueii.throttgh. oae of the low windows. . Then mounting the stairs_filled,with, pleasing emotions u he direo ed his steps tawarile the apartment of Helen. _There_instead-Of-the-dnughfer.'.he foizad—the father armed With'-a brace 'of plefule. The oount closed the door and paid to / the wretCh ed Gnetan trembling with-terror.: " I could kill you ; -I haven righfio do eo. You have entered, my house at' night; you have broken into' it., • could treat you like a • felon; 'nothing could be more natural:" air," replied Gaetan, almost inand bly, not a robber." "And what are you glen ? You have come _to steal my daughter--to steal an heiross. to steal' a fortune. Here is your letter. which —unveiled to the your — criminal. inientioSs. I shall show-you no mdroy. -But to take your life, I had no need of this .trap. Y s au know , the skill of my sight atm; a dinkiould, have long rid me of you. To . avoid scandal I did not wish a -duel, and sew I will slay you only at the lailt 'extreeratif you refuse to obey 1110. " What is your will, sir ry "You mubt leave Baden, not in a feW days not tomorrow, but this very instant. You must - pat two, hundred lopgues between, it and y u. Never-again come into thn' presence of hiy daughter or myself. As the prise of your obeilienee,aiato pet yolfr travelling expen ces, I will give you twenty thousand francs." The Chivalier wishid to speak. - " t.ri_vvord.l l _cried_the_sount,_ in_a_voice_ of thunder. ." You know me, uriderstand ! '1 — hold - your - life at - tormercyi---and--a-' -moment's'- . hesitation will-be punished with death." -- "I obey, " stammered the chevalier,_- "In_gond time-1 Your twenty thousand lianas_ are in thatsecretary; fake them!" " Permit me to, decline your offer," "An imperious gestate over.the false mod. esty which tile chevalier expressed feebly, and like a man who'declinea for form's sake. "But," said he,'" the secretary is looked." "Open it." • _ " These ism° key in It." " Break the lock then." . . " What 1 you wish me to=-..?" - • "Break the lock or •I'll shoot you!" The pistol was again presented as an, argu meat which admitted no reply. ,'Geatau obey ed. • It is well," - said the count., " Take• that package of bank notes ;. they are yours. Have you a pocket book ?" • "Yee." - " What does it contain ?" " Some papers—letters addressed tome." " LeLy_our_pocketflook_fall of_the secretary you have broken open." • . " What ?" • U I mast have proof which will convio you. ,, ~~ llut-~-" 4, But, sir,,l mewl to hate all the evidence of a bUrglary. 'mean that a robber shalt be known. Robbery, or death ! ,Choose 1 ,Ah youroboice is made.. pure you' would be reasonable. Ido not quit you until 'you are a league from Baden. 'For the rest, make yourself easy. I will 'return late, and 'enter no complaint until to-morrow. You may easily escape 'pursuit,-and.pro tection becomes / necesssry, reckon- on me.-- Begone 1" ' , After this adfontur4-,which made a great noise, Helen could no longer doubt. Haetin was-banished-from her heart, • and shu•--mar ried one of her. cousins, Captain in a' regiment of cavalry in the aervloo.cie -the Emperor of , Austria. ' LOOO7OOO MArtmis.--These useful house . hold conveniences were first it4oduced to the public in 1880. An excliAle, in a discourse upon,the match trade, says A. 0. Philips, of Springfield MaBo., was the fi rst p erson who took out'a patent for their manafacture.. Tito composition is a preparation of 'chalk,' phos phorous and glue, and made as follows; An ounce of glue is dissolved in warm Witter ; to,this tuided,four ounces of fine pulverised chalk, and stirred until , it _forms into thick . paste, One ounce of phosphorus is then ad. dedi -- tind 'the whole , a littlr.warm and welVatirred, until the whole are well inoorpo-• .rated - together. into this the ends of :match. es.,—whiob havrbeen previously coated With sulphlir end_ drie:dL sre 'dipped, and then l lai4 in rows on slips of paper; out .wide enough to layover the ends of the matches. One of .the largest Joao-fait) match faetories In this 610 try'is toasted in Troy. It tasked about sl,ooo' worth a week,' When loco-fOOO matches were first invented, they Bold OF, els:cents a box: They now sell tor twenty.fivo cents a gross. ~.--fAvii. .c.. §trctlO,4 • :43i4 Ward lioipher . on *iv.' - Ward -- 13eeettiik — preaonkitirt - Ili96ltiy!,-L on .84 n oiy,%poriling; , ; 9th- Igarck' o n lioney and its '-XlseS.' AA nectar, "liiatitlience was veri4arge, and. the atteu tioti "throughotit prciford • earnest. - laid that z ours woxld_has_liud its age Of war, its age . of art, its age of ChiyalrY, and its age when Political economy was the Oontroling idea, but ours is the, age of conitnerce. Money is the werid's • ower to-day. It roles the state • and settle!, political.q It isliironteiT than _reli ,gion—stronger tharcritii principle of morality or political economy.strongef than -all .com'- 4tined. For,money, the world'B spirit, would adopt any -government-or , any-religion, - - - If the pope of Rome could convince the worldthat hls religionwas a money-making religion; •he could send his golden bulls from, pole to pole ; and there - is not a native, that would - libi - oittirth - OHLT - If. - the Czar of - Roads oould convince the world, that czarism was the governceent most profitable;•ezarism'would be the world's government; and there is no . power on earth 'that could pretreat it; • For, money, the world's spirit would crucify. Christ in whatsoever forth he might appear.' There is no sucti'meeting this desire for money , in _ a successful conflict. It would.be a thankless' and unsucceesful task, to urge neon the world any principle which it believed to.:be oppotied Wits peouniary_intereuts ;1 and they who do thas stand out are few, and theii „task, a hard one. „Bat pify, there is no occasion for warring with a desire for wealth. - The desire tikbe . rioh is not evil of itself, It is nonsense _ for a man to stand up_ and disclaim the desire ftr wealth, and urgo upon the world the idea that.it 'about& bo poor.-- Money is - neither an. evil nor a good of itsolf; t ha's not a moral character. It ie simply an agent, and_ whether Whaigocd orevil, depends upon the maner in which is Used: It is ' Tike a sword.. Whether' a sw.orci bo in the llatids-of• Benedict Arnold,latlied in histoun try's-bloed-or-in-the-hands—of—Washington;' weilded for justice and liberty, it sword and lunructircharacter;---4hitther-it-be an instrument for good or evil, depends upon the . eharnoter of him Who-holds , the-hiltiand' not upon the sword itself. So it is,with mon ey.. it is an agent; a gigantic motive - power that thunders around the world: - . •If the - Devil stands engineer, it thunderi on:. freighted with, untold 'mischief, scattering oppression and wrong. BUt if is guided by the spirit -of lore -and truth, it is like the eon, shedding light and summer upon the world.. It: is 'an angtdef m - eroy and love, when directed by the spirit of Christ. , It is theduty of the pulpit,. then, to direct and instruct in the use. of wealth, an/ net preach against it. It has grown to be a great power in the church, and it mat be preached to. He doubted whether, in this city, an equal amount of wealth could be found among any other equal number of men 'an 'among our church members. Attila= has joitpid the church, but he is not converted; and'it duty of the pulpit to urge upon the church the true - uses • of - `wealth; - ' - In - primitive - days . men's usefulness ,wastnegisure . dby,.their Char acter and their . 'piety., Now unfortunately, piety' hits become fashionable, and we are, more accustomed to measure their usefulness • by - the amount of their money. -Suppbse, said he, that twenty poor, but very pious and good men, were to . coine here, and should apply to our examining committee for admission to this church. The committee would tell into otr members; und.they, would say, Oh well ; that is very well, we are glad OK." Suppose that were fo -hear, that twenty men, worth half 'a eaeb, had been to all theUongregations in•-the •city,- and had concluded . to loin tide one. " Oh" (said the speaker, putting' his thumbs behind - his vest, and aisuminia moskpompous attitude,) " oh, we are•deliphted to'hear We should allexamincourselvecto _keg_ itwe have not more or ; lees of this spirit. If a minister re. eeives a call from an obscitro village, and. one frotna great city, is he net very likely, per', hapauerceitieleusly, to think ho can do more'' good. where the large church and - salary are 9catedl.: A 13ZAUTIPUL bOhireelTlol4 BY G/121. JACK-, ann.—The following beautiful 'inscription is 'engraved on the tombstone of themife of Gen. Jackson, erected over ber Olive in Tennessee. It was written by the.brave.old deneral him , self, and 'for tersenes 'and'llievity of exPros• Ilion his seldom been xceeded by any similar. monumental - record re' lie' the 'remains of Rachel 'Jackson, lie' of President' Jackson 'whe died on the 22day of - December; aged 61. years.- Her face wag fair, her person pleasing, her temper amiable/ and her' heart kixtd. ; She delighted In relieving the wants of her felloiv•creaturee,' and' onitivated that diiirie pleasure by the cat' liberal and 'unpfefending methods. ' Vithe oar She - was a benefactress; to tbe rich she was example; to the tvretolii cc! iceOptfo - rter ; 'to the prosPirous‘:an cirtM4. most. ; Her pity went hand in •Withhir benevelenco: and she thanked her creator. fOr being permitted to do good. '1 I 1 . ' ko'litrOxict E Tout 3herhjah wad*ARV sho;ting it(e'cr !Ityllfioo,tlill,, ,, ' 4 . 0 or lirb,el,lii;.itleado'its4sti: itiraiioefollOiiing an Irilhlaborer. It was, restored. to Sheridan, who remarked..tO the' ..iatiorer that d!the dog 40031 ed very: fainiiiir witlyhim."_ _The ansier . - ifaiirl'insilrfoltawrsturatribiertirdirtia 'this- rat drew forth 'whet is now to be told. Lord Howth, having dissipated his property, retired Su very_ low spirits two lonely' chateau - on the seaweed. -One-stormy-night—a—vessel- wesJoben-•_to_ - down and next morning •a' raft was beheld fiQattng leWards the ehore. As it approached, the bystanders were `'surprised to findthat ' it -was'.,gyided by.a lady, who presently 'stepped .upon the beach. She was exquisitely beautio ful4.,,but they were _unable, to' discover who or what:she was, .for she spoke - iii7an unknown ,tongue.. Lord Howth was struck with great pity_ for...thislair stranger, and conducted. her to his chateau: There she remained for a On! sWerable time, 'When he beetime violently en amored of her, and at last asked her ._ . to be come his wife.: She (having now learned the English language.) thanked him for the honor be bad intended her, but declared in the most positive terms that she could never bi) hie She then earnestly advised him ,to marry 'certain lady of a-neighboring county.; Be - fol. lowed her advice.; paid his addresses to the ledi,and was accepted. Before the marriage, the beautiful strejiger - took a - ribbonfrom her hair;:iiiiirbinding it round p'ie .oricird Movrthi L mtid Your 'happiness •depends en your never.rrhiitieg with this ribbon." He assured her , thatit should remain con stantly on his wrist. She then disappeared, and was novel. seen again. The marriage took . place. The:rlhbon was a matter of much won der.and "curiosity to the ; bride ; and one night, when Lordilowth was asleep . ; she removed it from hie :w'riet and carried it to the fire, in or eep that. she might read the chgraoters scribed upon it. . Aoiceuta y lly she let the flame reach it; Lipid it was consumed. Seine_ time after, Lord. Howth was giving a &Lad ban- /net in his tall, when the ocany were Bud,' deuly- disturbed . - by the barking of, dogs. Thie s the hervapts said, was occasioned by a rat which the dogs were pursuing. Presently the rat; followed by. the dogs, entered the hall. It mounted on—the- table, and running,up to 'Lora Hoeth,stared al L hip ea7estly with its bright,'"black • eyes.*:: lie saved its life;_ and from diet moment it never, quitted him; wher ever, he was, alone or with his friends, there was a rat. • At list the society of the rat becatie very disagreable to Lord Howthl l and his bretber urged him to leave Ireland fora time, that be might get- rid of if. He did so, and proceeded to4darseilles, accompa nied by his brother. They bad just arrived at that place, and wore sitting in the room of 1 a hotel, when the door opened, and in Game the rat. It was dripping wet, and went traight to•tififire to dry itself. Lord Howth's' brother, greatly , enraged at the intrusion, seized the poker, and dashed out its brains. • "Yqnhave murdered me, 4 cried Lard Howth, sad Instantly expired. —__ Female Fttoes. I know , a woman who might have beenlhe ancestress of all the rabits in all the hutches of England. A soft, downy-looking, fairopla old woman, with long hair, looping like ears, "an innocent face of mingled timidity and stir. Oise. /Ate is a Sweet tempered thins,. always eating or slceping—who breathes 4116 she goes up stairs, and Who has as few brains in 'Forking order tul s human being can get on with. ' She just is snob a human rabbit. and nothing more.-and she -looks like one. — *e all know the setter woman—de best pftypes —gratteffil; animated, well formed intelligent, with large eyes and wavy hair, and who can 'turn her band to - anything. The true setter woman is_ alWays married ; !she- is -the- real woman of the world. Then there is the hien- , heim who Covers tip her "faCc in bor ringlets, pd holds her head down When she• talks; and who Is shy and timid. And there is the grey hound woman, with lantern jaws and braided hair, and large ,knuckles • generally ptber d listorted. There is the cat ••woman ; too, el .. sent, stealthy, clever, caressing, who walks Without noise, and is great in the way of en dearMent. No ,limbs are so sn-ple . tuo . hers, no baekbone so. yonderfully pliant, no Voice so Sweet, no manner ock,enduring. She.: extracts your secrets from,you before . wou, know you •have spoken , aod.haff an hour's conversation , with that graceful, purring Women hasrevenl ed to her every moat daogerous . (net, It:_ l as been your life's study tobide. 'The oot.wom• an is a dangerous animal. She has,olaws hid den in 'that velvet 'paw, and he cnin,:driw'r blood when stir in rithS , Ohm. - : the n is ti e cow faded 410141i111 generally - of phlegm& lo'disPosltiOrn, givorrto book t e pod"teto-, tallantt; Aid there is r the lurcher.,..womanc the, `stroll-Minded 4inaio,vho wears, rough °oat! , with' all tuerk"a popkets apd , ltirge berie.buttons, Ord Whoso.tonneuilling aipiteful defiance at! both' beauty and fashion. • 1 bnve nevOr seen a true lion-hearted wom- ISE excepting 4'4 331 f4 rtai'tian figure,` Whig with . lier hands on her •kneee, and grin; ni gritniy on the zetteetini etie, t • lion-hearted godifeei ot" the • • CAN. PELEGIL. - In a Illustrated 4u , tp=thet r folltiwing 'stem from the Amerioan.en P a sitenco O , M onsieur • - Liked 'd'Atinbertin% Wholut i Ttotir-ed this_" country throngh, qof course publi cid his ideini about it to the world atlarge ' ,l Far away from the greit cities, half ( len in the foliagooraithn modest lOg hitt of man,:halt trapper, halfSsharman, and more N than half savage.' Of course _his _118131(! WNI Smith. Hewes marries; and he and his *fit, _ in thin oaf littio-chaminota tie-happiest- of existences : for on an' Occasion she would not object to go twenty.miles to - hear the Baptlitt minister preach. One- evening at Sundown they were both together in their little cabin, she knitting stockings fcr_thainext, winter - '- snows, he cleaning the barrel'of bis fowling pleas—all the parts of which were lying die' mounted about him - --both bus'y and neither uttered a syllable. 'By degrees a dull bus regular sound breaks upon the Silence' of the wilderness. The_steamer is ascending the river, making the. beet of , its • way against - the stream. But neither Smith ner his wife pay _ _ any attention he goefon-eleaning his gun, , one knitting her stocking. The air, howt#eri darkens; a think_ rises upon every side; ' _ , formidable eiploeion is suddenly heard.; one wouhl have said it was the discharge of sev oral cannon at once. The boiler had burst; ' the vessel ' was sunk; 'everything was destroy- • 'Smith and his wife. did not look up : he went on cleaning his^ gun, she' knitting her stocking, ferbaplosions - of steatneri are eo common. But this, was one which was to br , tereat them mere nearly, for_pearcely.had, the explosionded, before theroof split iiiltinand something heavy descended through the aperture. This something was a man_who_d.ropped between_the_pairnithout,-1-- however, disturbing either—he still cleaning .hia.gun—sheittilLknitting_kerittoektug. But the traveller---so rudely . ititroducedseenoed rather astounded at hie descent. After-a-few- - minutes ; -however, he resumed= his - Vocal - Pisa, • and began to look about hiin-78xing his at tention, ,at last, upon the. hole through whiCh_ le just arrived. s' Ah I my sm9d," said he a lingth, addressing Smith, acwbat's the " dam age 1" . On this, Smith, who had not given op work, put aside his rifle;and looking up to estimate his lose, answered - utter some Mho don: ". . Ten dollars." ,* You be hanged ! exclaimed the traveller. “Last week, in the explosion I happened to be in with another steamer, I fell through three flights'in a new house and they, only charged me five dollars. No. no-4 know whit's the thing in such matters. Here's ft couple of diillart; and if that•'won't de go and sue me and be hanged l" A Wilma: FAMILY . nv Hativis.—The nilitentpasssage is from the pen of Al bert Barnes : " A whole, family in Heaven) Who can picture or describe the everlasting joy. No orie is absent. ,Nor father, nor mother, nor son, nor den/Met...Are away:_ the world below they are united in faith and, lovq, and peaae, and joy. • In the morning of . I • the resurreolion they ascend together. . Be fore the throne they ben together in united 'admiration: On the bankof the River of Life, they walk band in band, and as a family they have ooMmenced a career of glory shall be everlasting. There is hereafter to be no separation in that family. 110 one is to o lbi dowu - ort a bed of pain. No one to wander_in _ temptation. No one to sink into the arms crf, death. Never in Heaven is that , familY to move along in the slow procession, clad *the habiliments of woe, to cokisip one of its mem- - bers-to-the-tomb.----God-grant that in - nit° meroy every family may bit thus united. A young white girl, named Olive Oat. -- min; aged 16 yeah; *woe father and mother, -• , together with four of her'eisters and brother?, from-iowa, had been mnesacredln 1851, while on route, to Califoraiii, was retiouea from the Mohave Indians afterbelugfour 3rrn in cap -Bbe hat almost entirely forgotten her ' native tongue, being only able to spea i lc two or three words. Being , asked in the, Indian lan guage her name, she, olplied 4 ! Olive Oatman;" is tatooed on the chin, and bears the marks of hard'elavery. ,8110 was' rescued through the efforts of the 17, 8. Army olßeere at Fort Yu: 7l whoriaid a ransom for her.:--.A younger :stster,,captaied at Om' llama „died ; ma,„'Neatoess may bb clamed to excestr. - , Mr.l3lasber.is devoted -to . whitewash. On ta:, king a house in the country he - iiehitewasbed ' the trunksof all_the trees, affirming that it gave them" a ulcer appeartice. Ile - was next , proceeding to improve the hollyhocks in the same style; viten Mrs. S. dragged him away by tho coat tail, declaring that she had borne. a good deal but she could'nt stand that.