ILii tifl THE BLESSIKGS OF GOYERXMEST, llKE THE DEWS OP HEAVEN, SHOULD BS bfSTItiBUTfc ALIKE CPOS THK HIGH AKD THE 10W, THE RICH AND THE POOR. 5Eff SERIES. BBURQ, Pi, . uEBXESDAY, APRIL 13, 18-59. VOL. 6--N0. 2k cnjis: JLf lished every Wednesday Morning at vi- Doilab akd r ifti UBST8 per aiiimm, tieCESTsif not paid within six months, and - f ; .1 in 1 1 x : Tjo DOLLARS U qos Paiu- uul lerxniuauuu if tin year.. , v wioJ than six months, and no subscriber will bo .XX 1UI Cft ClIV'l lVl f : pwtr to discontinue nis paper until an ar- .r,rp ire raid, except at the option oi the "'" ' - i t.-,? a i.riwson subscribing for iix months will be :nrgei ose pollab. unless the money is paid mvYrtislnff Kates. One imert'n. Two do. Three do 12 lineal $ 50 1 '00 1 50 3 months. $1 50 2 50 4 'CO 6 00 1000 rs -eo $ 75 1 '00 2 eo 6 do. $3 00 4 50 7 00 9 00 12 00 22 00 $1 0 2 Oo S'OC 12 do J5 00 9 00 12 00 14 00 20 00 35 X30 1 iquares, "S quires, f24 lines! 36 lines j gl'meior less. iqsare, 1 1- lines l 1 quires, 24 lines 3iniiares,86 lines E.f column, w column. - All advertisements must be marked v hf aunber of insertions desired, or they will ith ill be (fiiicued untP. forbid. -and charged accordingly. Select fJocttji, The l' nbrok.cn dumber. Yes, I shall rest some coming day, Then blossoms in the wind are dancing, lz& children in their mirthful play Heed not the mournful crowxl advancing. I'p through the long and busy street Thejli bear me to my last retreat, Cr e!ie it matters nzt may rave The storms and blasts of wintry weather, Abcve the narrow, new-mada grave, VI ere care and I lie down tcgitler, Enough that I should know it not, Within that Jr.tk and narrow spot. For I shall sleep! As sweet a sleep As ever graced a child reposing. Awaits me in the cell so deep, Where I my weary ey:lid3 closing, At length bhall lay me down to rest, Heedlcs of cbda bove Tny breast. Anlcepl IIow deep will be the rest, I'ree from life'd turmoil wildly, Thai when the past is earth's unrest; . Its bosoiu shall receive me mildly; Tur not on dream of earth may come i traka the slumber of that home: it, deep repose? Oh, tl umber blest! Oh, sight of peace! K storm, no sorrow, heavy stirring in my rest, To meet another weary morrow! It shall heed neither night nor dawn, Eu still with fulded arms sleep on! Avl yet, metuinks. if steps of those I'd known and loved on earth were round me Vi break the riht of my repose. Shiver the ice cords that bound me Sre that 1 know this cannot be, Lr death disowns all sympathy. Thf.r. mourn not, friends, when ye shall lay The clods of earth above my ashes; TLink what a rest awaits my clay, AlJ smooth the mound with tearless lashes that the resting form within &a dune with sorrow, care and sin. Thiiik tht with me tire strife is ocr, Life's stormy, struling battle ended; Uejoire that I have gained that shore To which my faltering footsteps tended. Breathe the blest hope above the sod, And have me to my rest with God. miscellaneous. BftOTUCR JACK. A A XI I. A TORXSUIRK TRAGEDY. Ee had always been harsh with ns, and wc W Vim I don't know whv my father appointed him cy guardian. No two men could have been tore unlike, nor had they associated much vther. One, a high-spirited, open-heart-'i. improvident squire ; tho other a hard. vMcoate, sullen nan, whose dogged eeii- 'J seldom deferred to the opinions or feei- of o'.hers. Little sympathy could have utei between them, I believe, too, that Y1S ftvorca in mv foflior'a nninn with ills r. trronhMtinrr that she would live to ltmarryinff mad Jack Holderness. That la ..J . .. ... -vuriamuv name. It is a neht xorknire wd has been known in those parts any taew five hundred vear3. Only the ter day found it in Chaucer. " m did not repent, however. My father '?at ride and drink hard, as most Yorkshire fibres did in his day, but he was always i to her and her children. And if the turned inside out bv a partv of boozy Hunters, its ordinarv aspect presented a ordinary aspect presented rful contrast to tbe crcat, sum, cold Jri in the dull country town, wherein her M'J jears had been passed. that house I if. she could but have . -a what would occur within it I 1 GiT" riPxrH V Att. ft am cnAalr. 6 aow Cf my ulcIc with whom I set out,) 4 IttOrnev BhA hsnomo 'ttorney, who became rich by tho . i. " yruietsMoo, ana mat ue uro v r son in fKo i,....: rM -toiev Rvlnnlm iia I, : !j ? brnes8 leaving his money to be equal- betwixt his flon and daughter. He ob5l De to do, and was of too sullen, Uco U overb4ring a disposition ever I v me Popular. 'orVT at my grandfather, who died ii M born, bequeathed his money in fportWDB to hve ms and daughter, He did this literally ; in the latter case tying it upon my mother and her issue, exclusive of her husband' control. Not that he enter tained any ill-will towards my father-; but, being a shrewd, sharp man, he thought that his son-in-law might have made ducks and drakes of it. I never beard of toy fathei re seTrtroff this : Probablv he -acknowledged ita prudence, wmcu -was abundantly manliest . . . . - - , wo, nucu my mumer uieu. Her death bad a great and disastrous effect upon him, Arwavs a careless man. and i- ii , rather a free liver, ha rode harder and drank deeper, kept open house for very promiscuous guet-ta, squandered Ms meney, nd, in short, let things go to rack and ruin . He might have got married asain perhaps it would have been better for ts if be had 'for he was j still young and handsome : bet, I belioVe bis affection for bis dead wife restrained bim from giving "s a stepmother. Meantime, we ran wild about tho house, sad were brought up anyhow, I have remarked in Kfe that men who bave never known a mother's care are often harder n&tured than their bappier fellows ; deficient in tenderness, pity, forbearance. Perhaps it is not unnatural that they should be so. Jack and I, in our boy days, promised to bo no exception to this rale if I may so call it. We were, I fancy, as hot-tempered, wrong headed, ill-disciplined, and to use a word which ought not to have become antiquated, as masterfnl a couple of lads as any in York shire, which is a pretty bold assertion, teo. We often quarrelled, and sometimes fought savagely. Our father never interfered with as, and nobody else dared to do so. Stop, though, I am wrong there. One uncle did. He never came to the house (not that he came often since bis eister's death, or imleea, cetera, J without saying souictmng harsb to, oi' of tis soiiietbing that set boys' breasts rankling against bim. We were no cowards, and often gave him as good as he brought. Our father would laugh at such altercations. I fancy I see him now, with his handsome flushed face, red coat, and top boots, as he came in one day, all splashed, from hunting, and found Jack shaking with passion at a speech of my uncle's. My broth er hai just been fished out of the mill-stream and my uncle had applied an equivocal pro verb iu bis favor. Let the lads bide, Miles,' be 5d, laugh ing, or they'll be too uracil fur 'ee someday. Do thou look after thy own little wench at home ' That reminds me that I have nut yet spo ken of her. My uncle bad got married, very unexpected! j, about two years after bis sis ter's death, to a handsome widow with one child, a little girl His choico surprised ev erybody, for she waa a gay, pleasure-looking woman, without fortune, and had lived in i'ork and London. I believe she -carae of Irish lineage. Anything more contrary to his sullen, self-willed, local Yorkshire nature could scarcely be iinagiwd. They did not live happily together, and be would have puitred him if his passionate temper had not beaten down all opposition My aunt was rather a favorite with us, being a cooJ -humored, though frivolous woman. Her little girl was one of the most beautiful creatures in the world, I do believe. We were shy of her : conscious, wuen in her presence, of a boyhh awkwardness and want of breeding that never troubled us else where. She knew this .veil enough, for.baby coquette as she was, all her mother's nature promioed to re-appear in her. I bave looked covertly into her eyes, woodtring at their exceeding beauty and fascination, bciug dim ly and uneasily cognizant at the same time that it would be unsafe to trust them, and apprehensive that she might lo"k up and at once divine my thoughts, as she always could. Jack cared more about her than I at that time, and she knew it, and treated him worse. I don't think he was jealous of me in those days. My father liked to have ber at tbe Hall, and would bave kept her permanently, if my uncle had permitted. He used to call her bis little sweetheart, humored all hor little whims, and did his best to spoil her, as he did us and all children. When tho cholera came mto our part of the country, (it ravaged ail Xjugianu mai year,j aim sue auu ner mother were attacked by it, he dro'te over to town every day to inquire about them, lvaty that was her name recovered, but her sunt died. Her daughter had not then at tained her twelfth birthday. Just a year afterwards, almost to a day, my father got a bad fall while hunting, uis spine sustaining such severe injury that he only lived long enough to appoint my Uncle our guardian, and to take Ins leave of us, I ., 1 If J M. .1.-1. wnn many woras oi anecuon sou rerei mat he had not proved a more prudent he could not nave oeen a Kinaer parent, ins anairs j t j a i a .tL : were so et&oarrassea, mat auwiuer ma months must bave produced bankruptcy. He had mortgaged the estate in itself much deteriorated in value to the fullest extent ; and, in abort, when all his debts were paid, nothing remained to us but our mother's leg- acy, of which we should come into possession at tbe ages of one-and-twenty I was then ten Jack thirteen We went home with our uncle to the great, grim, cold boiuse in the dull country town. Katy was sorry on our account, glad on her own, for since her mother's death her life had been monotonous. I don't think ruy uncle was harsh to her. though he cevor showed much kindness or consideration to i waras anyooay. xei, cnua an sue was, sub . t . i : .i:.l. I i. t u l. uJ l,or had she been his own daughter. But what- ever expectations of company and immature coquetries our arrival excited to Katy's bo- gom, were doomed to disappointment at I bat time, for our uncle Boon announced hia inteu- tion of sending us to boarding-school. Our ignorance justified him iu this, if his dislike did no. I iay hii dislike, for I knew ho always hated "fas, sad, from the day he became our guardian, had promised himself the grat ification of subduing as, breaking us into hhr humors, and, as he once said, flogging the rebellions devfl out "of ns How be succeeded in this will be Been. Hitherto we had had. literally, no educa- tion. I or when oar father sent ttsto ectjooJ, p as bs once did, epon the first atttnfpt at the iutliction of punishment we had made a fight for it, subsequently escaping and returning home to be half laughed at, half commended not ordered back. Bat now there was no disputing the will of my uncle, even if we bad been- inclined to attempt it. - To boarding-school we went accordingly. Yorkshire schools have, of late years, ob- laiocd a mo6t unenviable notoriety. In my dav all schooling was conducted on severer principles than the more fortunate youth of this generation bave any idea of. Punish ment by blows and starvation formed an or dinary part of it. I do not know that tbe school selected by my uncle had a savager master or a crueller disciple than many oth ers, but I am sure that a more direct method for the perversion of every honest and manly quality could not have been devised than tbe grinding tyranny whicn, fender the name of an education, wc endured for two years. Strong boys it transformed into bullies ; weak boys into "cowards and liars. We experienced enough of it and to spare. I am not going into detail suffice it to say, that we were not conquered easily. One thiag war school discipline taught us to bear, per haps to inflict, pain. We never went home for the holidays, or saw our uncle's face, until the expiration of two years. He paid the schoolmaster's bills regularly, nd received reports of U3 from birn The word came for us to return. We had had all the schooling considered necessa ry. All we were destined to have, a3 it proved. Katy was more beautiful, and more con scious of it, taau ever, when we taw her again. Often as w had talked of her Jack w3 especially prone this, and once tried his hand at a schoolboy letter to her, which the schoolmaster confiscated, flogging him for writing it wo had never pictured to ourselves such loveliness as two years had developed in her whom we always regarded as our cousin. I am not good at description, or I would attempt to convey some idea of Katy's fasc. Though I don't think words alone could do it. I eee it in my dreams sometimes dreams that it id dreadful to wake from but shall never meet its similitude again" unless iu Heaven. The struggle between us and our uncle commenced immediately. He never made any pretence of liking us. always addressing us rather as dogs than human beings. I think the spirit with which we nret and re sented this treatment presented some sort of infernal satisfaction to bim. The day after our return, enraged at a defiint answer of Jack's, hs took a horsewhip, and, in spite of a furious resistance, flogged him mercilessly. My turn came soon enough, and after that it wjs all oaths, curses and blows on one side, and desperate but ineffectual struggles on the other. We should not have remained in the bonse three days bat for one reason Katy. Ve were both m love with ber. You may smile at the idea of tbe passions entertained by boys of twelve and fifteen for girl of thirteen, lint I am sure that nothing I have since experienced was more real or all engrossing. The trivial incidents conpected with it reuiaiu indellibly impressed upon Jiiy memory, while thousauds of more important events which bave transpired since, are for gotten. I recollect tbe color of ribons iu her hair, the look and scent of flowers she wore, the precise aspect of the rooms in which she sat and worked or moved about, even in the iiiiuutcst detail. Sometimes this retrospec tion is misery to me. I lovvd be r with my whole boyish soul Tha sound of her girlish voice, lha very rus tle of her dres, aifectcd me with a delicious pleasure which was half pain. I have woke np at night from a delirious dream to sob out her name and call passionitly u;-on her. I knew, at the same tint?, that my passion was irrational and absurd, and that she was not worthy of it. Belief in the object is not necessary to love. A man shall bts wull con vinced in his heart that no good can come of his success, that peace and happiness do not lie there -nay. shall he sure of the moral perversity of her he worships yet shall bo ready to risk life and bouI to get her. My brother's passion was equally Vehement and he became savagely jealous of me. 1 think he had greater faith in her than I showed his feelings with less disguise, and was therefore more cruelly sported with. In woiog a coquette aud Katy was born a co quette be who feels or betrays least euiotioa will have most chance of success, for be could avoid UDpleasing manifestations while hia ri val is morbidly sensitive to every look, word and action, at once axactiug, slavish and re belious. Katy car-id for neither of us, but her fickle favors were sometimes bestowed upon me I was considered the handsomest, though ab ways with an air seniority 'which in her one year's difference in ago rendered equally la dicrious and exaggerating. Tormented by her caprice I found a cruel pleasure in augmenting Jack's sufferings. Very soon he hated me with all the strength of his fierce, ungovernable nature. 5be knew it, aud un concious of the depth aud danger of the feel ings excited triumph in it. Of course we made no confidents. I can not tell how my uuele became enlightened as to the existing state oi affairs. When that happened his scorn of what he considered our juvinue louy seemed to intensity uis uruiau ty. Coarse jibes aud stinging jeers, alterna ted with blows and. ill-usage, were stiil har der to bear, for boys are always sensitive in the extreme to ridicule, especially on that tonio. He taunted us to our fewi before strangers, coupled every reproach addressed to us with some sneering allusion to Katy, grinding at our presumed. jealousy of onean other and, in a word, made our lives unen durable. He Was a strong man, or he might have come off with mortal injury in some of the furious struggles i which ensued. After one ot tuese, lvaty, weeping with rase and vexation, vowed that she would never ppeaK to us again. That pleased him for a time. I think the devil put it into his bead to ill-uso her, as he did afterwards. Or it might have been mere ly to spite us, I bave said that ho was more considfirattTtorards her than, others r Now he began to cbido, to strike her. -"Shall I ever forget witnessing the first blow? I did not wait for the Eecod. I remember going to her that evening with some wild project of flight which my brother was to share. (He manifested such frenzied rage daring her chastisement that my uncle locked bim in an empty room, imprisoning him for some days.) She cried, but seemed to think much lighter of the matter than I its influence had already faded from her vari able temperament. Henceforth, however, t i.i t i . - sue suareu uer uncles Drutaaty witn us. What would have come of this how far we should have been able to endure it do uot t I J 1. . 1 t -r Know, naa ne rcir&iueu rrotn one act. in a lit of sheer malignancy, he one day, took a pair of scissors and cut off a quantity of Kates hair It was long, and beautiful, and bhe had been excessively proud of it. That night when we had been ordered off to bed, there wad an expression in Jack's face which frightened me. lie had been unusu ally taciturn all day we never talked much together of late, but this day fewer words than ever passed between us I tried to draw bim into conversation, but without success. And I noticed that he trembled very much when he lay dawn beside me. It was my un cle's custom to lock us in, but this night, of aU nights ia the year, he omitted to do so. Unable to sleep for a long time, I lay list ening to the wind without. It was a wild blusterous night, such a one as had always exerted an cuquict influence upon me; such a one as I shall now never coutemplate but with horror, to my dying day. (Sometimes I faucy that day will be its counterpart.) No moon was visable as I looked out of our cur taiuloss casement, and a rack of heavy clouds moved rapidly and continuously athwart, the face of the heaven.. The wind made a dis mal clamor among tho chimney pots, and now and then a herce uash of ram drov6 against the" wiridow panes. ' Fearing to speak to my brothcrj and I was as sacred and troubled iu miud as though some evil influence were abroad. Was there not? I lay listening, until, from shear weariness, I tumbled, as from a precipice, into the arms of deep. That brought no relief My dreacja par took of my mental disquiet. At first t:iey were contused, formless, chaotically horrible. I was harrassed by an overpowering, name less -dresd, hauuted by an ever-changing phantasm, which nothing could 'Xorci?c, and the presence of which iiiflicted unimagiuable misery and apprehension. This horror grew like oue of the evil geni in Arnbrian Nights, until it filled up my entire imagination, and then abrsbtly ended. I still lept, laborious ly, painfully, as oppressed byNa heavy night mare; yet, by a strange clairvoyance, 1 be came conscious of the existence of the exter nal objects I saw the black shadows on the floor, tha impenetrable darkness brooding in the cirners of the room, and heard 1'ue wind raging without. More tbau that, thoujh my brother lay with his back towards mo, and bis face to the wall, saw his face distinctly as if it were fronting mine in nooivlay And (I do not protend to explain these phenome na, and cau hardly expect to obtain credence though it was so.) I knew his thoughts. Oh tho mortal agony that it was to know them and be unable to stir hand or foot to prevent their execution. Gently and cautiously bo' put the bed clothes aside; gently and cautiously he step pod over me, I lay watching him through an awful medium, which dispensed light with ordinary means. One long look at the troub led midnight ky, another at tbe mirror what dreadful attraction was there in his iwn face, then, 1 wonder: and he stole across tho darkened fb.or and out of the room. My preternatural vision followed bun. Up tn e Diac etaircasev lo my uncles room. I he blood surged and throbbed in my brain. Thre was a dazzling flash aof pol ished steel before my eyes, and then a creat darkness. With a cry of horror I awoke. my hair bristiliog. My brother's place was vacant. I slipped from the bed, and stole afterhitn; a mortal terror in my neart, my Mood cou- gealirg to ice, my knees knocking toother . In the midnight blackness, his outstretched hands met mine wet with what I knew U:ust bo blood! Why should write more? Boy as he was be died on tbe gallows, myself barely esca ping tbe same fate. Katy, waking up to that night of horror, never closed her eyes in the sweet sleep of health or sanity again My life his been passed in gelf-banishmcnt from my ntive land, I am a lonely obi man the last of my rac. Aid my story is told. WfiF- A cabin boy cn board a ship, the captain of which was a religious mau, was called up to be whipped for some misdemean or.' Little Jack went crying and trembling, and said to the captain "Pray, sir, will you wait till I say my prayers?" "Yes." waa the stern reply Well, then," rep'ied Jack looking up, and smiling tnumphautly. "1 11 say them whn I get ashore." XiF" ' Will you have it rare or well done?" said a landlord to au Irishman, a few days aro, as he was cutting a piece of roast beef. 't love it 'ell dona ever since I am in this country for it wo tire enough we uped to ate it in Ireland. The Fate of a Bachelor Wlio1?reit j Skatlngr with Mary. WUO MAUY IS. - Mary is as pretty a piece of bun anity in the shape of a womtn a's you coeld fiud this side of Heaven. Such eyes! such hair I pucb tertb ! And ber hand 1 Well now, there ! I think it was just the smallest, tbe whitest why, ivory is slow to it. Aud &er foot was like a little rose bud, its snowy leaves, just showing enough to set ofT tbe treat covering that concealed tbe rest from profane eyes It did not iseem a foot, as one saw it reposing in its tiny kid slipper, like a Canary bird in its nest, - MART HAS THE SEATING JETES. Well sir. this Mary caught the skating fever, which is now raging so fearfully. x I heard her express a wish for a pair of skates, and the next day she had the best pair that could be found iu the city, and nobody knew who seut them to her but, bless me, bow my blood boils at tkc tboaght of the conse quences. HARY rCTS DER TOOT ISIT. We went down to tha ice, and there that little witch of a Mary, just sat quietely down, and ordered me on my knees, and quietly placed that foot, the foot, the poetic myth, in my lap, and oid me put on uer sKate. oir, had Venus dropped down from Heaven, nd bid me rub her down with rottoo stoue and oil, it could uot . have astonished me more than when that daviae foot was placed in my unworthy lap. I felt very faint out lbucs tied on the skates, and stood up, with Mary by my side. THE BACHELOR' IIKAD SWIMS. Have you ever taught a woman to fckate? No, well., let me tellyna. You've been in a room lined with mirrors, havevt you? You have -seen a kaleidoscope, with a fow old bits of glass. &c, in a tin tube, and turning it have seen aH sorts of figures. Just imagine a kaleidoscope, and in place of beads and uioucn gias9. please substitute blua eyes, curving eyelashes, lips, ivory, wavy hair, crinoline, gaiter boots, zephyr worsted Cu pids, hearts, darts, a clap of thunder, a flash of ligtniog, and 'auli Nick." Irnagiue yourself the center of a system with all these things revolving rouud you, and a violet bauk breathing sighs on you all the while, and you have Mary and her victim in thr Grst skating lesson. But let me try to describe ourpTformao- ces .Mary and A start sue on ci7 le:t rm. U sqare , . Jord have mercy cn my poor puzzfied brain white I try to unravel tat stirred and mixed raiubjw of friths and tcn- tiuieiit. r iftt, Alsrv s dear iiiim gaiter boots present tbcnu-clves to my astonished vission. and cctore I have tt.tso to wondoi how th'jy came up before me, feel them p;es- ing their Hissed beauty, with emphasi into the pit cf my stomach. MAUY riTCULS INTO IIIM GENERALLY. Next scene wavy hair, with thirty dollar bor.U'-t and a divine head, comes pitching tit inv wli.v with Knrr (nrci? that I .v. the button against my spine. Next Man gazes up Irom between my jack boots, ami anon her blessed httle nose is thrust into un bosom of my shirt. Ah ! my friend, all rc- my search and study on the mysterious surjeei of woman has been comparatively iu vain, tiil this eventful year of lso'J, the fashion i f skating has opjued new varied soarces of in formation MARY trBDCES IIIM. .. Dear Mary I I offered mvself to her every time the turned or came rouud. I am hers; but I wish to enter my solemn protest before the world that she alone could have conquer ed me. But who could hold out. wheu sur rounded me. But who could hold out, when surrounded bv an armv of Marys on skates? L aai hers ! but I'm awful s?re ! Ah I I have learned something. Cupid makes bchelors tender, as cook a do touih stakes, by hammer ing and pounding. A Hearty Laugh. After all what a capi tal, honest, jolly, glorious thine a good laugh is I What a tonic ! What a digester ! What a febrifuge ! What an exoreiser of evil pir- its 1 Better than a walu before brcaxla?t or a nap a tier dinner iiuuei. nun ii oiriu wit hjouvu he brow of kindness I Whether How it shuts the mouth and opens it discovers the gums of age, or the grinders j of folly, cr the beauty whether it rack the j sids and deforms the countenances of vnl-! garity, or dimples the visage, or moistens the rye of refinement ; in all phases, and on all faces, contorting, relaxing, over whs! miog, convulsing, throwing the human counren'aue into womethiug appropriate to Billy Burtou's transformation ; under every circumstance, aud everywhere a glorious thing. Lik "a thing of beauty," "a joy forevur." Thore. is no remorse iu it. It leaves no sting, ex cept in the ide, and that goas ofF. L'ven a einglo unparticipated laugh is a great adair to witness. But it is seldom single. It is more infectious than scarlet fever You can not gravely contemplate a Iangh. If there is one laughter, and one witness, thtre are forthwith, twn laugiit'.rs AU'i soon. i lie convulsion is prooa?et-d l.ke s"u?ni. What a thiog it is when it become an epidemic ' 3T An exchange published two lines the great epio upon General Jackson, written -I 1 T. by a est em bard : "When yon see tho eyes glisten, then, my men fire !" Were the lat dying words of A. Jackson, Esquire." . "Bubby, why dou't you go home and have your mother sew up that hole id your trowsere?" "dh, g i along, old woman; our folks are economising, and a hele will last lonrer than a patch !" Why are your lips always at variance? Because words are frequently panirg between th'ta. X Cood Reproof". A late reverend clergyman, who was as well kuown for eccentricity as his talents, ona day sent bis son, a lazy bid, about twelve .- . , i rrL - i years ol age-; to catch nts norse. a no ooy went saunterin sr alone, with an ear of corn. in one band, and tbe bridle in another, draw ing the reins alonz tbe ground. "Thomas'." said hia lather, calling alter him in a very solemn manner "come here, Thomas, I want to aay a word to you before you co." The lad returned, and the parson prooeed-ed-----. - -. 'You know, Thomas, that I bave gives you a-great deal of censsel. . You Jcoow that I have taught y&fc befcrre clcrleg yeur cya, to say "Now I lay me down to sleep," fce Besides a good many other things a tha way of explanation aud advice. But this is the last opportunity I may bave of speaking to you. 1 could Uot let it pass without giy- t ing my parting charge Be a good bey, Thomas, and always say that pretty prayer before going lo sleep. I fear I shall ncvr see you again." As be said this in a very sad and solemn manner, the pfeor boy bogao to be frightened and burst into tears with the exclamation: "You'll never see mo again, pa?" "No for I shall probably dit lefore you he Lach tcitk ihtt !terscT" That quickened lazy Thomas iJeas; and gathering up tbe lridi reins, be ran and caught the horse quicker than he ever hai done before. The I-ast Iloop Story. A Newcastle tEuglisb) paper states thai a fashionable -conversation tecettlv held at tha Music Ilali So that icrty, a mischievous wag. shortly after the opening of the entertainment put in circulation a story to too enect that an experienced electrician had managed to con ceal a powerful magnet in each of the six beautiful chandalics by means of which tha hr 11 is lighted, and that the effect of this ar rangement would be such that any lady with steel spring skirts passing them, would bay the said skirts instantly inverted by the pow erful attraction. Tbere Was a great many ladies present, and tho consternation created by this mischievous story can more readily be imagined than expressed- There was of course, for a time, a considerable shyness ia approaching the chandaliers. and some of tha fair ones became so alarmed they immediate ly scooted. The fellow ought to have btsn. ducked in the Tree. Frightful Seer:. At Wheeling, a yoUnf man who was woikii:g at acbituLoy on a roof lost his bold oii the wet roof and slid slowly down towards the eaves. The two cr three persons who witnessed tho accidrl turned away sit-k with terror. Although the man made every effort to get a bold.whkh the fear of certain dcfth would naturally prompt, he moved slowly down, and was only checked from failing to the pavement below by a water spout, against which his feet came in contact. lut for this frail obstruction fee must have been dashed into a thapeles man. Without utt-riug a cry for hdp. the young man kicked oil his fhoes and proceeded to ascend, which he succeded in doing, aud went to work at the chimney again, apparently taking little account of an accident which had made thd eye-witnesses heart-sick and dumb with ter ror. Wonder what he would sell his set cf ntrves for7 7?utsitr in Jcssestutn nf tUe Garden of Eden. Biblical geographers poiut to the Lake Ian, iu northern Armenia, and now a Busman possession, as the spot where once wa3 situated the paradise lost by the fault of A Jam and Kv. I.i Jo European theorists lo cate the primitive Eden in northern Asia. It occupied all the present western and part of the eastern Siberia, exten ling from 40 ties, to 53 deg latitude, and troui 60 dcg. to 1 00 dec. longitul;. Th Arctic ocean, at that time a pleasant as tha Mediterranean, wih the Ural mountains as inlands, waa tha Ciiiuese Blue or OtL'stial mountain ; on tha south of ParopamiftU. or Hindoo Koosh ; oa the west ihi Caucasus and Anrat. Boih the Eiens are cw ll isian posses sions Besides, Russian inflasuco is preoon- , r , 1.1 derattair m Jerusalem ;anj thesaot in Roma nssiirned by archaiologists aS the one where was liars! by a she-woif, is ilus sian property, caving r-.een Dougnt oy .mc no- las for the sake ot excavations. By s curious coincidence, Russia owns in this way the placts most sacred in the hislcry of our race. Young men. Ju.-t starting for Piko Peik may be interested ia ka iwing the mo Jot oper audi of obtaining the pure gold. An ex change, whose editor has been thar, gtvei it as follows: - T'uo method, however is con fined exclusively to tho Peak. "A man takes a frama-work of heavy tim bers, built like a toce boat, the bottom of which is cmnpiscd of heavy iron ra?ps. This frame work is hoisted up to the top of tha Peak, and tho man gets on and silica down the side of the mountain. As he gcs swiftly down, the rasp n bottom ofthe frama work scraps off the jpli in immense shivins curl upon the machine, and by tha tirue the man 2ets lo the bot tom, neatly a ton an gets lo the bottom, neatly ;fj cf ol 1 is folfowiaz him. This is tk corn- ' ..t luoa manner ef gathering it. X-iT" The iu st it)usa ug instance of a mau's regard for his word, was recautly given by a mau wh- killed his vfe. whom ha did uot like. When he was asked why he did not leave uer, ae repueu. vvsostiy. mat "na t i t-i i .i ... laa promissu. wu t wa iuiog uay, to lira , -1 11? 1- . 1 - w;h her u itil death sh u l piut th-im, aai that he was no, th ? mm b h:3 wrd. W "You w Jul I be vrv pretty in las!. nd a goutleman patrooixln to a yon is Uiy "if your eyes were only a little larger." My eyeB may b very ioaall, sir, but rjoi pjcpS you don't 11 t'ofm" nnr o o