A. K. RIIEE3I, Editor Si reoprietor MI VOL. Gt. TERMS OF PUBLIC AT lON The CARLISLE HERALD Is published weekly on a large sheet containing twenty igbt colums and furnished to subscribbreffit $1,50 if paid strictly In advance, $1,75 if paid within the year; or $2 In all cases when pay anent is delayed until alter the expiration o: the year No subscriptions received for a luau period than six months, and none discontinued until all the arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. Papers sent to eubscribers living out of Cumberland county moat be paid for In advance. or ho payment assumed by some responsible person living le Cumhe,land county. These terms wall be rigidly adhered to in all cases, ADVERTISERIENTS Advertisements will be charged 1.00 per square of twelve lines for three insertions, and 25 cents for each übsequent insertion. All advertisements of less than twelve lines considered as a square. Advertisements in forted before Marriages and deaths 9 cents per line for first insertion, and 4 cents per line for subsequent insertions. Communications on subjects of limited of Individual interest will he charged 5 cents per lino. The Proprietor will not lie responsible in damages for errors In advertisements. Obituary notices or Marriages not exceoding live lines, will be inserted without charge. JOB PRINTING The Carlisle Herald JOB PRINTING OFFICE is the largest and most complete establlhement In the county. Four good Presses, and a general variety of materials suited for plain and Fancy work of every kind enables us to do Job Printing •.at the shortest notice and on the most reasonable terms. Persons in want of Bills, Blanks or anything in the Jobbing line, will find It to their Interest to give us a call. BALTIDIORB LOOK HOSPITAL. ESTABLISHED AS A REFUGE FROM QUACKERY THE ONLY PLACE WHERE A CURE CAN BE OBTIIVED 'TAR. JOHNSTON has discovered the /most certain, speedy and only effertual remedy in the World for all private diseases, weakness of the hack or limbs, strictudes, affections of the kidneys and blad• dor, Involuntary discharges, impotency, eeneral debili• ty, nervousness dyspepsy. languor, low spirits. confu sion of ideas, palpitation of th., heart, timidity, trem blings, dimness of sight or giddiness, disease of the head, throat, nose or skin, affections nrtbe liver, lungs, stomach or bowels—those terrible disorders arising tram the solitary habits of youth—those secret and solitary practices more fatal to their victims than the song of Syrons to the Illarinors of Ulys,s, blighting their most brilliant hopes or anticipations, rendering marriage, he., Impossible. YOUNG MEN itnpecially, who have become the victims of solitary vice, that dreadful and destructive habit which annu ally sweeps to au'untimely grave thousands of Young Men of the roost exalted talents and brilliant Intellect, who might otherwise have entranced listening Senates with the thunders of eloquence or waked to ecstasy the living lyre, may call with full confidence. IYEA.RIIIILGE Married persons, or young men contemplating mar riage, being awes° of physical weakness, organic.debil ity, deformities, speedily cured. lie who places himself under the care of Dr. J. may religiously confide In his honor as u gentleman, and confidently rely upon his skill as a physician. ORQANIO IXTZAENESS Immediately cured, and.full vigor restored. This dis tressing affection—which renders life miserable and marriage impossible—is the penalty paid by the victims of improper indulgences. Young persons are too apt to commit excesses from not being aware of the dreadful consequences that may ensue Now, who that under stands the subject will pretend to deny that the power of procreation is loot sooner by those falling into im proper habits than by them udent? Besides being de prived the pleasures of healthy' ffspring, the most serious-and destructive-symptoms to both body and mind arise, The system becomes deranged. the physi cal and mental functions vteateuen. loss of procreative power. nervous Irritability, dyspepsia, palpitation oi the heart, indigestion, constitutional debility, a wast ing of the frame, cough, consumption, decay and death 40E.10.13 NO BO UT FREDERICE STEET. Left hand side going from Baltimore street, a few doors from the corner. Fail not to observe name and number Letters must be paid and-contain a stamp. The Doc tor's Diplomas hang In his-ollice: A CURE WARRANTED IN TWO DRYS• - - - • •No Mercury or NausemnrThillgglir.`Tohnlttini:nfern' her of the Royal College of Surgeons, London, II rad uate from one of the most eminent Colleges In the United States, and the greater part of whose life has been spent in the hospitals of London, Paris, Philadelphia and elsewhere, .ints-effeeted_ somool-the-most.astonishing cures that were over known; many troubled with ring ing in the heed and ears when asleep. great nervous. nese, being alarmed at sudden sun tide, bashfulness, with frequent blushing, attended sometimes with de rangement of mind, were ciAked immediately. TAKE PARTICULAR NOTICE. Dr..T. addresses all those who have injured themselves by improper indulgence and solitary habits, whicteruin both body and mind, unfitting them for either bus mess, study, society or marriage. These are sonme• of the sad and melancholy effects produced by early habits of youth, viz: Niilleakness of the back and limbs, pains in the hohd, dimness of sight, loss of muscular power, palpitation of the heart, dyspep sy, nervous irritability, derangement of the digestive functions, general debility, symptoms of ^onsumption. AUNT/am—The foarlul effects on the mind are much to be dreaded—loss of memory, confusion of ideas, de pression of spirits, evil forebodings, aversion to society, self distrust, loVe of solitude, timidity, be., are somif of the evils produced. Thousands of persons of all ages can now judge what is the cause of their declining health, losing their vig or, becoming weak, pale, nervous and emaciated, having a singular appearance about the eyes, cough and symp toms of consumptionr YOUNG MIEN • Who have injured themselves by a certain practice indulged in when alone, a habit frequently learned from evil companions, or et ...hoe], tile efforts of which are nightly felt, even when asleep, and if not cured renders marriage impossible, and destroys both mind and body, should apply immedlattly. What a pity that a young man, the hope of his court try, the darling of his parents, should be snatched from all prospects arid enjoyments of life, by the consequence of deviating fmm the path of nature. and Indulging in a certain secret habit. Such persons must before con templating MARRIAGE reflect that a sound mind and body are the most no eeasary requisites to promote connubial happiness Indeed, without these, the journey through life becomes a weary pilgrimage; the prospect hourly darkens to - the view; the mind Lenience shadowed with despair and tilled with the melancholy rehection that the happiness of another becomes blighted with our own. • DISEASE OF xrarnumismE. When the misguided-and imprudent votary of plea sure finds that he has imbibed the seeds of this painful disease, it too often happens that an ill timed settee of shame, or dread of discolvery, deters him from applying to.thoae who, from education and respectability, can alone befilend him, delaying till the constitutional symptoms of this horrid disease wake their uppearancol much as ulcerated sore throat, diseased nose, nocturne, pains In the head and limbs, dimness of sight, deafness, nodes on the shin bones and arms, blotches , 6ll the head, fate and extremities, progressing with frightful rapidity, till at last the palate of the mouth or the hones of the nose fall In, and the victim of this a wild disease becomes a horrid object of commiseration, till death puts a period to his dreadful suffering., by send ing him to that Undiscovered Country front whence no traveller returns." It is a melancholy fart that thousands fall victims to this terrible disease, owing to the unskillfulness of ig. norant pretenders, who, by the use of that deadly poi. eon, Mercury, ruin the constitution and make the m ulatto of life miserable. S'PRAN(AERS Trust not your lives, or health, to the care of the many unlearned and worthless pretenders, destitute of knowledge, name or character, who copy Dr. Johnston's alvertisements, or style themselves. In the newspapers, regularly educated physicians, incapable of curing, they keep yeu trilling month after month taking their filthy, and Poisollollll compounds, or as long as the smallest feu can be °ht.:titled, and in despair, leave you wills ruined health to sigh over your galling disappointment. Dr. Johnston is the only_ Physician advertising. - Hie credentials or dipldmos always hang in his office. Ate remedies or tnruttnent are unknown to anthem prepared from a life spent in the great hospitals of Eu rope, the first In the country and a more extensive private practice than any other physician In the world. iNDORSEM ENT OF THEPRESS The many thousands cured at this institution year fun year, and. the numerous important Bhrgical Opo• intione perforined by Dr. Johnston, witnessed by the rsportors of the "Bun," "Clipper," and many other opera, notices of which have appeared again and again bolero the public, besides 1110 at:totting as a gantlenian of character and responsibility, isa sufficient guarantee ea thif afflicted: SKIN DISEASES SPEEDILY CURItID. Persons writing sbould bo particular In directing theft. Jotters to this Institution, In am following man ner: JOHN M. JOHNSTON, M. D., Of the Baltimore Lock Hospital, Baltimore, Md. May 2, 1802—ly NEW SPRING GOODS. • • T amnow • mewing a large assortment of Lnew and : elegant Spring goods, to which I respect. fully call the attention or ,nv old friends• and - gusto. Mors, and all in want of handsome and eheap.goods. Particulars In nest wllehs paper. I will sell as cheap as any store in the Iter4 - gh. '-, CRAB. OGILI3Y Trustee. April 4, 1062. UDI BFLTt Or 1 . lut Just received a large assortment of all elzes—. Quin pelting, Gunillose, Gum •Patkingp&e., , and -for wad oltoa ~p at the Hardware Store of Juas.' 11. SAXTON' .• Wogtq. THE SOLDIER'S LETTER. flow Sweet when night her tnysty veil Around the weary soldier thrown, And twilight's golden skies grow pale, And wooing wind. invite repose, To sit beside tho watchflre's blaze, Where friendly comrades nightly coma, To sing the songs of other days, And talk of things we love at home— Of those we love, who list and wait, Beneath the sumo benignant moon, Thu postman's stop behind the gate, With tidings from an Absent one; And beaming smiles their thoughts reveal And love is mirrored In their eyes, As eagerly they break the seal, Elate with joy and glad surprise. But dearoO yet the shout that rings In exultatlon;loud acid clear, To hail the messenger who brings. Letters from home and kindred door; And 'neath the pale moon's smiling light The soldier roads his treasure o'er, And through the hours of silent night, In dreams he visits home once more, In dreams he sits beside the hearth, Afar from camps and traitor's wiles, And dooms the dearest spot nu earth Where loving wife and mother smiles ; And many a face almost forgot, And many a word so fondly spoken, Come flitting around the soldiers cot, 'fill the sweet dream, at morn, Is broken 0, ye who love the soldier well— Bid him be hopeful, brave and goy; Better he knows than you ran toll, The perils that :Alen 1 his way. Borne word of hope in battle's beer. While striving with h vengeful foe, lies nerved the soldier's arm with power. To strike oi:ward the impending blow. The soldier brave is often prone 'Po doom hilaGOif forgotten guile, A wand.rer on 6rirth alone, iiThen Mend.: at home neglect to write, Then cheer him oft with words l'ke these, And thus your deep affection prove; Let every keel that ploughs the gene Bear him some metaage full of love. c gilliofrlinatrxwo , • • [From Templo Bar.) MY PHILIP There was a quick, sharp rap of the postman at the door: Our village had but one, and everybody knew him, though, in the United States of America, "the letter-taTfier," as he is called, has no distinctive mark or blidge of office. Our postman always seemed to sympathize with his bundle of letters; .and he knew us all so well, that he knew the contents or subjects of our letters almost as well as if he had been a clairvoyant. I was expecting my brother on that, day; and, instead of him, there came a letter. "Good news from William, I don't doubt," said the postman, us he gave me change for. Si XPellee,..talang ii6prinCe 7 f6t; his fee for deliverinff ' the letter. (We have not yet Come to the English fashion of a free delivery of letters ) "Mete generally is good news from brother," said I, smiling. "William is a fine fellow," said he, tightenin". r' the string on his bundle of letters, and then he went on his way. I remember thinking, what if he should lose one or those precious letters? What if he had lost mine? Why did ho not carry them in a bag? How could he risk such precious things? But they all risk losing letters just the same way, ("or-to letter-carrier in city or village ever uses any security for his parcel of letters but a string, while he is distributing them to their many owners I went to read my news from brother, whatever it might be. My mother was in the large front room that looked to ward the south; with my invalid father, and I would not disturb him even with my treasure. t'o I stopped in the room which was dining-room, sitting room, and library, in our cottage. I opened my letter eagerly. I had not then learnt to wait patiently, and least of all where let• ters were concerned. I turned blind and faint, when 1 saw where the letter was dated. "MEDWAY JAIL." For some moments I in vain essayed to read. My head swam, and darkness veiled my eyes. At length l recovered, and read: "My DEAR SISTER.—You will be sur prised when you see where my letter is dated. Since I last wrote you, I have had fair success in collecting the debts due to father; and I began to be en couraged, and to think I saw daylight for us Three days ago I called on Mix, wh'o keeps the tavern by the steamboat landing. You will remember that his was the largest debt owing to father here. At first he said he could not pay me anything. Then he said he supposed the night's receipts would be pretty good, as the night-train on the railroad would bring a good many fur the morning bout; and they must stay with him, t'or the other house was bad at best, and was being painted now. Ile said he would_ give me something on the debt in the morn ing. I had intended to be at home on the twenty-first, and it was hard to be detained; but I stayed. In the morn ing he gave me one hundred dollars, in five twenty dollar notes. I made my cal culations, and found that by giving up my stoppages at two other place 3, I could still be at home on the twenty-first. I was 'so glad of the prospect of so soon seeing.--you - mother,- and—our-dear helpless-father, that I trembled with joy. I trembled so much, when l was shaving that I out my chin. After I was again on my way, the blood came oozing, and I, stopped- at ,tin apothecary's to get a piece of court-plaster. It was near the station, where I was to take the cars, and a mile from Mix's tavern. I had-bought the court-plaster, when I saw some stir• gial instruments lying on the )counter. They pleased me very 'much; , Ind as father had told ;me I should have teiet for collecting,. as soon as I -received a hundred dollars, I bought them." "I had a sort of misgiving,about the money I bad got of Mist I did not be- PaPINE rola isonm i4A,MHILIT GERG&M, Hove that it was bad, but I wished to be better satisfied than I was about it. 1 asked the price'of the instruments. They were sold. There was a turnkey and a lancet, valued at three dollars, that I could have. I bought them, and ten dered one of my twenty dollar notes in payment. It was taken without ques tion. I put the change and my instru ments in my pocket, very glad to be set at rest about the , money. I then went over to the station; the cars started in an hour, I was told, and I sat down to wait as patiently as I could. Before half an hour had elapsed, I was arrested for pas sing counterfeit money. I was searched, and eighty dollars, of the same kind I had passed, were found upon me. At first Fyn's horrified; but I sent immedi ately for Mix, Scarcely doubting that he would say he. had paid me tho money. IHe refused to come, declaring that he I had paid me no money; hitt saying that I had paid him a bad twenty dollar note for my night's lodging, supper and breakfast; thus cheating him out of eighteen dol lars good money. He said he would meet me at the right time • and place; that I was in good bands now; and that he was busy. "I am in prison, sister dear, and I don't know what will be my fate. All my money was taken from me by the officer who arrested me, and I can do nothing but let you know the facts. If father were not helpless, he would be able to help me; as it is, lie can think; and some kind soul, I trust, will be able to carry out his suggestions. Keep up your courage, Clara.dear; and tell father anli mother that I am cheerful in my afflietion. Write at once, and tell me what father says. "Your loving brother, "WILLIAm BENTLEY." I-waited for my father to finish his din tier, and then I called mother and showed her the letter. Grieved and alarmed as she was, she endured all, till my lather bad slept his usual hour after his dinner. Before I tell my readers what my father said to the letter, 1 must say some. thing of our condition. My father had been a merchant in :Medway for many years. lie was ruined by the credit system that prevailed in our country. After losing almost everything, ho came to the village of Rosalba, where we now lived. He bought the cottage in which my mother was born. He paid one-half its value and depended on collecting the debts due to him in Medway and the vi cinity to pay the other half. My brother wished to' study to be a' physician, and our uncle was considered the best medi cal man in Rosalba, and in our poverty he could very greatly assist us, by help ing my brother in his education. We. had lived two years in the cottage. The first year we rented, the second we bought We had le(the garden belonging to the cottage for half its produce, and I had taught school in sumingr;_and_tkus With a very little money that my father had collected, we were supported. We lived in a hard, grudging economy, that no one knew of, not even my uncle. He was doing what he could for my brother; more than we would have been willing to accept from any ot:set. The spectres always before us was thO half-payment for our cottage, which remained to be made. And we lost all if we did not pay the remainder at a time specified, and which was drawing near. We looked to the success of my brother's efforts in this collecting tour, to secure us the shel ter of our cottae,),l9lne: Food we trusted would come. The ravens are fed; and we hoped; and looked forward to the time when my brother should be a suc cessful physician, as our uncle was now. What a terrible blow had fallen on our devoted heads! Our solo hope, our idol ized William, was in prison, accused of a crime, that if not disproved, might con sign him to a penitentiary for years, and blast his prospects forever. My mother and I were wild with grief. My father was quiet, but very sad. His disease, which was palsy of the lower limbs, caused by a fall from his horse, had left his mind clear as when ho was in health. P "We must do what we can," said he, "and be comforted that we know -Wil liam is innocent. Now, Clara, you must go to Judge Bixby. I will write a note to him. lie will come here, and consult with me, or he will advise me in.some way. I have notes again 4 Mix for three hundred dollars, beside the oue William had with him, which was for two hun dred and fifty. These notes are so many probabilities against him. We moot have some person to go to Medway." I wanted to say that Philip Melwin would go, but 1 dared not speak his name. lie was a student, reading law with Judge Bixby. He had paid' me the attentions of a lover till my parents forbade me to receive them. 11.1 y yarents were proud of ancestry,--a pride that Americans disclaim, but which They new cherish They were proud of forther position, and prouder than all of the Puritan principles and practices of their progenitors. Now, Philip Melvin was disgramid from his birth. He was an illegitituate child. Mis mother was a simple country girl, who had died of a broken heart soon after his birth, and she had never revealed the name of Philip's father. She had ,died in an alrnshoutae, and there her boy re.,. mained until he was Eleven- years old. A' lady visited the house when he had just reached his t 3 evunth birthday,-and asked for Philip. -She wept bitterly, it was said over the beautiful child, and then she went to Judge Bixby, and from that time ho became as one of_the 'children of the good and wise judge: Philip proved .worthy of all the care and education which were bestowed on him with liberal ps well as paternal kindness; but notivith• standing ally he was regarded as one Who before his birth had "Fallon Into a pit of Ink From which- the wide eea could not wash-him chum again." • I believe I loved Philip all-the.better CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY; OCTOBER 17, 1862. because everybody seemed to keep the bitter fact of his birth in their 'memory. He was nearly twentp_one yearS old.. I was seventeen. I had never disobeyed my parents, and I regarded my mother as a superior being. I was retpired to. treat Philip as a stranger; midi could give him no explanation without wound ing him more than I could ever bear to wound him. Poor fellow! ri did not doubt that he regarded his birth as the mark of Cain upon him. Ho* could I ever allude to the terrible fact? le saved me from my troubld by a manly frank ness, which greatly increased my respect and ove for him. One day I . met him in a lonely road, in the neighborhood of the village: He stoppod me: ‘s,Glara,l' said he, "I have a word to say to you " The blood rushed to my face iu a burn ing flood. "You have said that you laved me," said he. "I have," I whispered, hardly so as to be heard. "Have you changed?" said he. "NO," said I, aloud, and with energy. "Do you shun me of youi own free will?" "No, Philip." "Your parents require it of you, and-- your brother also wishes you' to shun me?" "Yes," I said, bravely, and yet with trembling. "Because— words Ile looked at me appealingly. I an swered his thought. - "Yes, Philip, but 1 love you better for your great sorrow. I love yoto better for all the affliction Providence has - permit ., ted to oorrie upon you." "I thank you," said he, solemnly;— "Clara, if we arc faithful to our love, our ,time will come. We shall be:` happy to gether some day." I was sileat. "Do you not believe it?" "I hope for it," I replied. "Do not go yet," said he, a s I was about to pass on; "do not go till you have protuked me to be faithful to this love." "I can be faithful only to my parents," said I, bursting into tears; "but I will never love any one but you, Philip, un less you forgot me. Now let me go. "Our time will come," Bald be; and I went on my way. • . _ I never saw him again., to speak to him, till the day I went to Judge Bixby with my father's note. I met him on the way, and I stopped and told him our great sorrow. 1 could not do otherwise, for-my heart turned to him with the hope of help. "Go to the judge," 4 'l . will be there by the time he harread and considexed_your father's note.' Judge BlibY read - the note, and was very much d'sturbed-by it. "This is very bad," said he. We must.send-some-orre at -once-to-Medway:- William must be released; Philip will go to him. There he is now," said he, as he saw him through the window. Philip came in presently. "Melvin, will you go to Medway to night?" "Certainly, if you wish it," said Philip. Judge Bixby took his pen and, wrote for sonic minutes; then he folded and ad dreised his letter without sealing it. Then he turned to Philip, saying, -t "You will go to Mr. Bently and get the notes which he has against Mix. Show this letter to him,' which I have written to a- legal friend of mine in Med way. If Mr. Bentley thinks of anything mare that he wishes me to write, you can return to me; otherwise, you had better go on to Medway to-night. I think-you will do well to stay at Mix's tavern, and when you pay your bill'offer him this note." He took a fifty-dollar note -from his .pooket and handed it to Philip. "Ile lias been so successful of late, ho may give you one of those twenty dollar notes in change for this, if you appear to be a stranger merely passing over the road. Rascals are very often fools," Philip and I Went out together At the door ho said, "I wilt bid you goodbye and hasten to your father. You can come at your leisure. You may be sure I shall do my best and you know for whose sake I do it." His words comforted me in my great sorrow. I went home slowly, not wish ing to arrive till Philip was gone. I met him at the door. He took my hand, pressed it in silence and went away. My parents said little, and did not allude to the fact that Philip had gone to Med way. I retired early, but spent the night in sleepless agony. I prayed for my poor brother in prison, and for all other prie ()pers. I felt sure that Philip would do William good. I was glad to, find in tho morning that my father hopetPlict much good would result from hielefforta. was Tuesday evening when: Philip, left, He would arrive in Medway at two o'cleck the next nwrning. ,By Friday we ought to hear from him. The , day came,: but no letter. I was indescribably miserable,. and my father and mother wer& very anxious. I could not speak freely,to - my parents. The night previous 1 had passed through an experience strange tOmiany, but the like of it had happoned:toJne several times. I could not::'speak of it at home, arid my'hefirtiicenietliffellibik ing that I could not. Fittaiy; deter mined to go to Judge -1/4y - witOny. secret. As thero was no pews froa, my brother, I asked leaveto go.cdthe Judge, ostensibly to make inquitioK ' • • Judge Bixby seemed td Tity nie very much, when I, came into his office. "Have you _heard anything_ row my brother?" said I. ‘,'Yes,. dear," ...said, be;: and then le seemed sorry he bad made the admission "The fact Miss Clara; we have. been quite put back in our proceedings, but we hope to have good news for you by Mon., day or Tuesday,—certainly by-Wednes day." - " " ho could not utter tho I wished so much to tell him,my expe rience, but I feared he would think me crazed, or untruthful. But the necessity to unburden my heart to some one con strained me, and I said, "I want to tell you Judge, what I saw last night. As I lap in my bed, looking into the dark ness, I saw Philip. I shut my eyes and put my hands over them; but still I saw Philip Melvin. He was in a large room, in a kind of hotel; there was no lock on the door, and he tried to fasten the door with his knife; but 1 saw he failed to do it effectually. The knife-blade brolr'b nearly off, but the handle did not fall away. He could not see this, but 1 saw it. And I saw through the door, and saw a man on the outside of the door, in the hall. It was half-past two in the morning, as I saw by Philip's watch. He took off his coat and hung it beside a chair, and then lay down in his clothes. Pre.4"ently he fell into a heavy sleep. I felt perfectly sure that a cup of coffee he bad taken when' be camkin had some kind of sleep ing powder in it. As he slept, I saw a bad-looking man come into the room; he had a complexion almost like a mulatto, and only one eye. It was perfectly dark in the room, and yet I saw him come in as plainly as I had seen Philip before he put out his light. He took Philip's coat and examined the pockets; he took out the pocket book, laid the coat again across the chair, and then went out. 'Ali!' thought I, 'my poor brother is ruined now; for I anew that your letter was in that pocket book, and I - supposed the notes given to my father by Mix were there also. .i. was in despair, but I followed the man from the room; Ile had left his light out side the door. Ile took up the light and went to a distant room, and locked himself in; I saw him take that fifty dollar note from the pocket book; I read ',Merrimac Bank' on it with perfect ease; then ho , tott your letter to that lawyer in Med way, and read it, and then, holding it in the candle, he burned it; he took out sev eral other papers, but I did not clearly see what they were. All this may seem false and foolish to you, Judge, but I am sure it all really happened. Something with in me assures we that it is all true; that it has happened to Philip Melvin, and if you ever see him, -I believe he will tell you so." The Judge was reputed a sceptic in re- Jigion, - and I feared very much I should ,get only his contempt for my relation. When I had finished he said very kindly, "All this is very strange and curious. Mix has but one eye, and he has had the fever and ague till he looks like a mulat to. Young Melvin was here yesterday; he had lost his pocket book containing my letter to-my legal friend, also he had lost the fifty-dollar bank note, which was on the Merrimac Bank. Fortunately ho .bad..ROf Mix!o-notes,.and some memoran— da, in the lining of his hat. He came back for another letter and farther in structions. .He did not see any one in Medway but ---- thre — citieTereir faVe rn' 'keeper and a servant. He took the morning train back, and I expect to hear from him:* Tuesday. I had marked the bank note, so it is probable the miserable man has stolen a rope to hang himself, in taking it. "Now, my little girl," said the Judge, pleasantly, "if you see any more wonders to-night, I hope they Wi I be pleasant ones, I have had abundant evidence of the truth of the facts claimed for clairvoyance, even to the breaking of Philip's knife, which I happen to know was broken as you said. Tell your father that I have heard from Melvin; that there is some unavoidable delay; but that I shall expect to hear good news by Tuesday." It WaS not again clairoyaut ; but on Wednesday evening my brother and Phil ip Melvin came. We were all overjoyed; but my joy was greatest, I am sure, for Philip had brought him. Brother asked Philip to stay to supper and my father and mother begged him to do so, but ho said cherfully, that he must go directly to the judge, and give an account of him self; and he left William to tell his 'own story. My brother said, " Mix would have given us much trouble; for he gave out _that the notes against him were forged. But the rascal had stolen Philip's pocket book. It had a marked bank-note , in it for fifty dollars. Our lawyer set on© of Mix's creditors to dun him very sharply, and at last ho told him that he would take fifty dollars for a debt of a hundred. This drew forth the marked note, and Mix is now shut up in my place. Search has been made in his house, and in a false back to his writing desk some thou sands, in bills of the same kind that he gave me, have been found." Our great trouble was past; my broth er had been honorably restored to i. 1 4- But poverty was upon us like an speed man. The little money that William had been able to collect would do very little toward paying for our home ; and besides we were obliged to take it for our pres ent. support. It seemed sure that we mitSt loss our cottage, which we had, named " Sunny Home." My parents and William were greatly afflicted, but I had ki_presentituent of coming help. Only the day , before our home must be paid for, or lost, Judge Bixby came to see my father. ' g/ I have been,very sorry, Mr.-Bently," said he, " that no one has been, able to loan you thst money. to_save your place.— It is hard to be poor, and have all one's friends poor:- I ton happy to tell - you[ now, at the eleventh hour, that one has come forward to advance you the mon9y." .My father uttered an exclamation of surprise; my mothersaid, " Thank Ciod I" fervently. "But who will do this, judge f" asked -my father. ." Onr young friend Philip Melvin, who has just come ,into possession of his father's property.- When Philip was tiev":.,, len years old, his father died; On his deathbed he told his mother of Philip, and willed his.large property, to hire ;. I was appointed the boy's- guardian; and, as Philip was.twenty-one yesterday, .I deg livered •up my trust. Philip will be ad. 4 mitted to the . bar soon. He has fine abili ty, an irreproachable character, and a larger property than any one in Rosalba. If I had a daughter'to give in marriage," said the judge, regardless of my blushes, "I would sooner give her to Philip Mel vin than any man I know." A spasm of mental pain passed over my father's countenance. " Thank Heav en, we are saved !" he said, " and only at the expense of a false and wicked pride. Judge Bixby, will you ask Philip to call here ?" " I will," said our friend. That evening Philip came, and sat alone with my father for awhile. Then my mother was admitted to the confer ence. " They both asked me to forgive them for their pride," said Philip to me. " I have always regarded them more in pity than in anger. I have borne my lot as patiently as I could and Providence has been kind to me at last. Our time has come, darling Clara " "Thank Heaven !" said I. ," You have loved me for myself, Clara ; and we shall be happy. Your brother has treated me like his own brother since the day we met in Medway Jail ; but he has often said to me, ' Only mich afflic tion can ever conquer my parents' pride of family, and prejudices about birth.'— And then William said, ' As if an infant were to be cursed for the sin of those who gave it life.' I repligd, 'to far as such a prejudice can be made a preventive of crime, it is just, and I bow to it for the sake'of the intiocent.'—Now, Clara, since we can leave your parents comfortable, and in William's care, I wish to go where no man will ever ask who were my pa rents." I respected his sorrow.; and I.said, " I will go to the end of the world with you, my Philip." And thus it is that our graves will be far from those of our kindred. MUSIC AT Host E.--7-What shall the amuse ments of the home be? When there is the ability and taste, I regard music, combin ing in happiest proportions instruction and pleasure, as strnding at the head of the home evening enjoyments. What a nevez.failing resource have those homes which God has blessed with this gift ! How many pleasant family circles gathet nightly about the piano! how many dhome is vocal with the'voice of song! The piano is a great and universal boon and comfort - : - One' pauses and blesses it, as he hears it through the open farm-house window, or detects its sweetness stealing out amid •the noise of the town—an angel's benison upon a Nyilderness of discord, soothing the weary brain, lifting the• troubled spirit, pouring fresh strength into the tired body, waking to worship, lulling to rest. Touched by the hand we love h mother; sister,. wife.-.say,-is it not a-winisttatit•of love to child, to man—a househould deity, now meeting our moods, answering to our needs, sinking to depths we cannot failcOm, rising to heights we cannot reach, leading, guiding, great and grand and good, and now stooping to our lower wants, our souls reverberating from its keys? The home that has a piano, what capacity for evening pleasure and profit has it! Alas ! that so many wives and mothers should speak of their ability to play as a mere accomplishment of tho past and that children should grow up looking on the piano as a thing unwisely kept for com pany and show!—J. F. 11'• Ware. CAN A MAN MARRY HIMSELF?—The Dublin courts have lately been presented with a sin gular question for adjudication, via : " Can a minister marry himself t" Their decision was in the. negative. The allirma• five contestant should emigrate to New York, where not only a minister, but any man who can bring two witnesses to the ceremony, pos sesses that privilege as thoroughly as Adam and Eve. England also seems to have been agitated by the same query. A, short time ago a young parson, who had become strangely enamored of a Dulcineajust twice his age, and so far from prepossessing that none of his clerical friends would consent to do him the unkindness of tying the knot, went to his bishop, in Bangor (Great Britain), and asked if it were lawful for him to marry himself. " Discribe the lady," said the prelate, who is somewhat famous for an Abernethy curtness in his manner. The youth confessed who his inamorata was, and repeated, " Can r marry myself?" Sir:" said the bishop, in a sepul chral tone—" can you burry yourself?" The inamorata departed and let the matter drop. Use AND CHOOSING OF SPECTACLES. —The Scientific American gives the following rules to know when spectacles are needed, and how they should be selected: 1. They are needed when we are obliged to remove small objects to , distance to see them distinctly. , 2. If we find it necessary to get more light than usual. 3. If objects become confused, or there is a kind .of mist. . 4. When the letters of a book run together or appear double. 5. If the eyes are easily fatigued. o. Injudicious use of glasses will prove inju rious. In Woofing glasses let a small, clear print, be used, and choose those that will allow you to road with ease, as in the natural state. No parson can well select glasses for soother. Select those in preference that are too young, rather than those too old. In testing glasses, observe wehther the eyes are mites ; some times they require a different force glass. See that the glasses be free from veins or watches, the frames or bows light and elastic, 'and' that they are set straight, before the eyes, not down, on the noise. ' WH LEAIIN that George N. Saunders was en abled to convince the Marshal at, Suspension Bridge that ho was a " Cornish miner," when he attempted to pass into Canada, by allow-_ ing - that official to his breath. The Marshal had no difficulty in believing that he was Corn-ish in fact, that he was habitually corned. SPICAKING•pf the exploits of a - celebrated danoer at, a recent managerial testimonial, Quitaboh, who has just returned from his summer- wandering in setate of insanity, says, regardless of grammar'and propriety, that " the. fdatc she ---- dlipliiYid - were — not onljs extraordinaiy; but the legs ditto." . ..OISE 148 r " ehami l e - orbase," whieh some people are stupidenough (9,e - wielder s 7 defeat, is eoneiderect by °fliers io`. he s, great_ a d va i,,,.. tags gaped by the Protestanteosk though it 4emoostrates.bettee than ever that the Pope sang make blimders as well as' bulls; it, also proves that hs is not *Oblate. 81 50 per annum In advance $2 00 If not paid In advance —__ • Sir Isaac Newton and his Cata. A human being, weighing a general principle, must call up before his mind all that is to ho said for and against it, as well as say whether the weightiest rea sons make for or against. And he may quite overlook some important reason, on one side or other. He may quite forget something so obvious and familiar, that a child might have remembered it. Or he may fail to discern that some considera tion which mainly decides his judgement, is open to a fatal objection, which every one can see is fatal the instant it is sta ted. Was it not sir Isaac, Newton who had a pet cat and kitten ? And did not these animals annoy him while busy in his study, by frequently expressing their desire to be let out land in ? The happy thought struck him that he might save hiniselfthe trouble of often rising to open his study door for their passage by provi ding a way that should always be practi cable for their exit or entrance. And accordingly the great man cut . in his door a large hole for the cat to go out and in, and a small hole for the kitten. He failed to remember what the stupidest bumpkin would have remembered, that the large hole through which the cat passed might be made use of by the kit ten too. And the illustrious philosopher discerned the error into which he had fallen, and the fatal objection to the prin ciple on which he bad acted, only when taught it by the logic of facts. Having provided_ the holes already mentioned, he waited with pride to see the creatures pass through them for the first. time. And as they arose from the rug befOre the fire where they had been lying, and evin ced a disposition to roam to other scenes, the great mind stopped in some sublime calculation; the pen was laid down ; and all but the greatest man watched them intently. They approached the door and discerned the provision made" for their comfort. The cat went through the door by. the large hole provided for her; and in stantly the kitten followed her through the s'ime hole: How the great man must have felt, his error ! There was no resis ting the objection to the course he had pursued, that was brought forward by the act of the kitten. And it appears almost certain that if Newton, before committing himself by action, had argued the case; if he had stated the arguments in favor of the two holes, and if he, had heard_the rhousemaid on - the other side, the error would have been averted.—Good Words. Its_The Ellsworth (Maine) American tells of a recruit from an adjacent town, who was importuned by hie friends to give up the idea of going into the service, and offered money to leave and get a substi tute. He replied, "that he wouldn't take a hundred—dollars for his,e,hange,,,'!„aud_. wer lie Would: VMS . is the kind of soldiers that will be invincible. One such man is worth a regiment of the cowardly sneaks who skedaddled- to -the- British Provinces - to avoid being drafted. A lad who lately went to service, hav ing had salad served up every day for a week, ran away because, said" 4,"They made me eat grass in the summer, and I was afraid they'd . make me eat hay in winter, so 1 was off." A portly young friend of ours the other day contemplated for some minutes the ponderous dimensions of a bystander's feet, and then, in a tone of utter wonder, said as he surveyed the man 's,upper works: "You'd have been a mighty tall man if they hadn't bent you offs() far up." A lady refused her lover's request that she would give him her portait. "AM it matters not," he replied—"when blessed with the original, who cares for the copy?" The lady, both ignorant and indignant— "l don't think myself more original than anybody else." nei..A man who owned a farm in ,Sao ramento, California, during the late floods, went to see if his fenoe was washed away. He found that he had lost his fence, but bad caught a fine two story house, which made him a good deal better off than he was before. *Digby is of the opinion that the time will shortly come when the rebels won't bo so short of salt as they are at present. They'll find plenty at the head of "Salt River," where they are bound to fetch up to a dead certainty. A drunken Scotchman returning from a fair sleep by the roadside, when a pig found him and began licking his mouth. Sawney roared, "Wha'S kissing me two? Ye see what it is to be weal likot amang the lasses!" If any of our States or cities or coun ties raise more than their quota of vol unteers for this war, the surplus will be credited to them by the Lord for the eternal war against the devil, says the Louisville Journal. tus.Our custom and habits are, like the ruts in - roads. The wheels of life settle into them; and we jog along through the mire, because it is too much trouble to get out_of them. .The wild boar is one of the most dreadful animals in nature—except the tame one, whose name is differently spell ed and whose tongue does more damage than the tusks of the other: , Many men endure misfortune without daring to look it in the faco—like cowards Who - Suffei; - themselves to te murdered without resistance, by stabs fr'om behind. „ The man who is always buying merely because be can bay at low rates, had bet. ter commit suicide if ho happens to bid poiion cheap. • Always boquhath to your wife as much money as you can, her second, husband; coorfellow, - znay - not have a - cent in his pocket. . , M.Douglas Jerrold said—giTreason ie like ,diamonds —there is nothing to be made in it by small trade." • , . , 09)..The young lady who took tho.gon knnan'a fanoy hasreturned;-it with Lanka. _ NO 42,