u m IK 41 Uf 111 THE BLESSINGS OF GOVEBSMEXT, LIKE THE DET8 OP HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALIKE UPON THE HIGH AKD THE LOW, THE BICH ANI THE POOR. JE1T SERIES. EBEKSBliRG. PI. WEDNESDAY, JULY 31 1861. VOL. 8 AO. 34 J S,iittif -4 IjL HJ T E R 31 S: t'T-EMOCRAT & SENTINEL' IS PUB LI lish?d every Wednesday Morning at v3 Dollar and Fifty Cents per annum, nble i'i advance; One Dollab and Seventy rtCesTS if not paid within six months, and so Dollars if not paid until the termination ;i year. N'j subscription will be taken for a shortei -1 th ah six months, and no subscriber will be liberty to discontinue his paper until all ar inies are paid, except at the option of the .Va? person subscribing for six months will be i.-iod OS e dollar, unless the money is paid Advertising Rates. Oie insertn. Two do. Three do ?.pire. 12 lines $ 50 $ 75 $1 00 24 lines J ' 1 00 1 00 2 On n:cs, lures, 36 lines . 1 50 2 00 3 00 3 months. 6 do. 12 do $1 50 $3 00 $5 00 2 50 4 50 9 00 or lessv . ;rare, 12 lines! i-iires, 24 lines 4 00 7 00 12 00 6 00 9 00 14 00 30 00 12 00 20 00 15 00 22 00 35 00 s tares, 36 lines ii column, hiran. k x'd advertisements must be marked with tT -.-'-? r of insertions desired, or they will be . Cl; :ri until forbid, and charged accordingly THE LAW OF NEWSPAPERS. T. Suheriders who do not give express notice i : Mitrary, are considered as wishing to con- t'i-ir subscription. t It" subscribers order the discontinuance of x-pipors, the publisher may ccntiuue to send until all arrearages are paid. .. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their :rs from the office to which they are directed, -v are held responsible until they have settled r bills and ordered them discontinued. 1. If subscribers remove to other places with : informing the publisher, and the ne-wspapets ent to tha former direction, they are held :nsible. The courts have also repeatedly decided that a-Tnat-jr who neglects to perform his duty of -.-ng reasonable iv-tii-e as required by the regu , i .ns or the Pest Office Department, of the ; e t of a person to take from the office news-i :ers adbressed to him. renders the Postmaster . !e 1 1 the piib'isher fir the suhscrption. ftlul 5orfrij. From the Home Journal. A FAXCiri'L 31QRCE.tr. TY F.LEAN B C. DOXXFXLY. ; "s fin! Kind fates, I thank ye much r r giiMing me to where this roiie lay, h :"'"m the contact of her rosy touch, h?r lit s' pure impress and her breath's warm j'lay. rtapr finders trifled with these plumes, Her dark, shy lashes drooped behind this screen, i f!fi'js blushed these painted Eastern i'"0:ns, "';.eje"er she blushed, like evening's sky serene ; ;::-r. sw;t fan, grow sentient, breathe and tren;ble. t:..--e a voice which s-lutli mv love's resemble. .t'" a;i airy '.vi.isjn-r. and unfild w.it, light iiothit g which her lips have ,;:!. .. siuikiug o'er her brow her veil of gold,) thy plume she bent l.er graceful head ; -l v. cie.tr laugh which left her mouth e in it.- rosy quietude. i:.k her breath, as fragrant as the south, n j-iigrim winds among its bowers intrude rr. sweet fin, and, in return, receive thee' ?:itie meysnfe whic-h my lips may give tl.ee. . tk .u mirror, limpid, pure, pf Kit, -t. like a dew-drop, in this rose-bud frame; ' ti.y surface, in a transport sweet, nre, blight face which last across thee c irr.e : - 1 tli? wor.drous eyes, the brow Sapphic, f r which banded tresses Mowed away,) 'i -tp'iug mouth, the bloom-enamored cheek, se f rni as fragile as a summer fay. p:k, mute glas, yet misty with her breath- "T-.,e dear sake this tender rhyme is wreath- - i '. rtis her step advancing lo ! she comes ir -n out the glamour of the twilight bowers, - ever.ip.jr wind her loosened tresses combs, lads them with the fragrance of the flowers ; rn this velvet cushion, where it fell, Tiy brilliant fan, sweet lady, I restore. ' f-ngs. Ah ! fate it is a golden bell VLkh chimes my curfew through the open ioocr. T" r, ilear fan, lie lightly on ber bodice, ' breathe mv messaee to the smiling goddess. THE BLIND MAN'S WREATH. A ET0B.Y OF DOMESTIC LIFE. ""My boy, my poor blind -y !" Hiis sorrowful exclamatio- broke from the IipS ilre. Owen, as she lay upon the couch to ich a long and wasting illnes3 bad confined ., and whence she well knew she was never re to rise. . Her son, the only child of her widowed heart, sole object of her cares and affections, knelt de her, his face bowed upon ber pillow for only, in a moment of solemn communion :'h his mother, had she revealed the fatal 'K and told him she must die. He had :hed, and hoped, and trembled for many w,7 months, but never yet had he admitted to lf the rossibility of losing her. Her fading -ek and sunken eve could not reveal to him ' progress of decay, and so long as the loved J' maintained Its music to his ear and cheered with promise of improvement, so long as Ttaml still clasped his, h had hoped she would "v.-r. He .had been blind since he was three years old ; stricken by lightning, he had totally lost his sight. A dim remembrance of his widowed mother's face, her smoothly braided hair and and flowing white dress, was one of the few re collections entwined with the period before al! became dark to him. The boy grew up, tall, slender, delicate, with, dark, pensive eyes, which bore no trace of the calamity that had destroyed their powers of vi sion ; grave, though not sad ; dreamy, enthusi astic, aud requiting his mother's care with the deepest veneration and tenderness. In the first years of his chijdhood, and also wherever his education did not take them to Loudon and else where, they had resided near a town on the sea-coast, iu one cf the prettiest parts of Eng land. Independently of the natural kindness which very rarely fails to be shown towards any person who is blind, there was that about both the wid ow and her son which invariably rendered them acceptable guests ; for their intellectual resources and powers of conversation were equally diversi fied and uncommon. Mrs. Oowen had studied much in order to teach her son, and thus, by im proving her natural abilities, had become a per-t-on of no common sttmp her intellectuality, however, being always subservient to, and fitly shadowed by, the superior feminine attributes of love, gentleness and sympathy ; for heaven help the woman in whom these gifts are not pre dominant over any mental endowments whatso ever When they walked out together, his mother took his arm. He was proud of that, fur he liked to fancy lie was some support to her ; aud many pitying eyes u.-ed latterly to follow the figure of the widow in the black elress she constantly wore, and the tall, pale son on whom tbe leaned confi dingly as if striving with a sweet deception to convince him that he was indeed the staff of her declining strength. But gradually the mother's form grew bent, her steps dragged wearily along, aud the ex pres.-ion of her face indicated increas ing weakness. The walks were at an end ; and before long t-he was too feeble to leave her bed, except to be carried to a summer parlor, where she lay upon a sofa beside an open window, with flowers twining round the casement, and the warm sunshine filling all things with joy, save her fore-boding heart and the anxious son who incessantly hovered over ber. Friends often came to visit them, and turned away with a deep sad ness as they noted the progress of her malady, and heard the blind man ask each time whether they did not think her better oh surely a little tetfer than when they had last beheld her. Amcng all these, no friend was so welcome cr ' brought such solace to the sick room as Mary Parker, a j yous girl of nineteen, one of the beau- I ties c-f the county, and the admiration and de light of all who kuew her. Mr. Owen had danced Mary upon her knee, and Edward used to weave j baske ts and make garlands for her, when be was ! a l-oy of twelve, arid she a little fairy of six years old or thercalxmts, stood beside him, pra is- j ing his skil'j and wondering how he could man- j age so cleverly, though blind. None of his childish companions ever led him so carefully as Mar-, or seemed so much impressed with his mental superiority. She would leave those games of her playmates in w hich his blindness prevent ed him from joining, and would listen for bours to the stories with which his memory was well store 1, or which his own imagination enabled him to invent. As she grew up, there was no change in the frank and confiding nature of their intercourse. Mary still made him the recipient ot her girlish secrets, and plans, aixl dreams, just as she had done of her little griefs and joys in childhood ; asked him to quote his favorite passages of poe try, or stationed herself near him at the piano, suggesting subjects for him to play, which he extemporised at her bidding. Bright and bloom ing as Mary was, the life of every party, beam ing with animation ind enjoyment, no attention was capable of rendering her unmindful of him ; and she was often known to sit out several danees in an evening, to talk to dear Kdward Owen, who would be sad if he thought himself neglected. And now she daily visited the invalid her buoyant spirits tempered by sympathy for her increasing sufferings, but still diffusing such an atmosphere of sunshine and hope around her, that gloom and despondency seemed to vanish at her presence. Edward's sightless eyes were al ways raised to her bright face, as if he felt the magic influence it imparted. His mother had noticed all this with a mother's watchfulness; and, on that day, when, strong in her love, she bad undertaken to break to him the fact which all others shrank from communicat ing, she spoke likewise of Mary, and of the vague wild hope she had always cherished of one day seeing her his wife. "No, mother, no !" exclaimed the blind man 'Dearest mother, in' this you are not true to yourself! What! Would you wish to see her in her spring-time of youth and beauty sacrificed to such a one as I ? to see Mary, as you have described her to me, as my soul tells me she is, tied down to be-the guide, and leader, and sup port of one who could not make one step in her defence ; whose helplessness alone, would be his means of sheltering and protecting her! Would you hear her pitied our bright Mary pitied as a blind man's wife, mother?" "But Edward if she loves you, as I am sure she does " "Love me, mother ! Yes, as angels love mor tals, as a sister loves a brother, as you'love me ! And for this benignant love, this tender sympa thy, I could kneel and kiss the ground she treads uHn ; but beyond this were you to eutreat her to marry your blind and politary s n. and she in pity answered 'Yes' would I accept her on such terms, and rivet the chains she had consented to assume 1 Oh, mother, mother, I have not studied yeu in vain your life has been one long se'f sacrifice to me ; its silent teaching shall bear fruit. Do not grieve sC bitterly for me. Gotl was very merciful to me in giving me such a mother ; let lis trust Him for the future." Ah, poor tortured heart, : peaking so bravely forth, striving to cheer the mother's failing spirit, when all to him was dark, dark, dark! She raised herself upon her pillow and wound her weak arms around his neck, and listened to the expressions of Ineffable love, and faith, and consolation, which her son found strength to utter, to sustain her soul. Yea, in that hour her recompense had begun. In loneliness, in secret tears, with Christian patience and endeavor, with an exalted and faithful spirit, had she sown ; and in death she reaped her high reward. They had been silent for some minutes, and she lay back exhausted, but composed, while he sat beside her, holding her hand in his, fancying she slept, and anxiously listened to her breath ing, which seemeel more than usually oppressed. A rustling was heard amid he flowers at the window, and a bright young face looked in. t-llush!" said Eel ward, recognizing the step "Hush, Mary, she is asleep !" The color ami the fmiles alike passed from Mary's face when she glided into the room. "Oh ! Edward, Edward, she is not asleep she is verj-, very ill !" "Mary, darling Mary !" said the dying lady, without difficulty arousing herself ; "I have had such a pleasant dream ; but I have slept too long. It is night. Let them bring candles. Edward, I cannot see you now." Night, and the sun so brightly shining! The shadows of the grave were stealing fast upon her. Other steps now sounded in the room, and many faces gathered lound the couch ; but the blind man heard nothing was conscious of no thing save the painful labored respiration, the tremulous hand that fluttered in his own, the broken sentences. "Edward, my clearest, take comfort. I have hope. Gotl is indeed merciful." "Oh, Ed ward, do not grieve so sadly. It breaks my heart to see you cry. For 7er sake be calm for my sake, too!" Mary knelt dewn beside him. and endeavored to soothe the voiceless an guish which it terriSed her to witness. Another interval, when no sound broke the stillne-s that prevailed ; and again Mrs. Owen opened ber eyes, and saw Mary kneeling by Ed ward's side. They were associated with the pre vious current of her thoughts, and a smile lighted up her fjce. "As I wished, as I prayed, to diel My chil dren both. Kiss me. Mar', my l-les-sing, my consoler! E lward, nearer, nearer ! Child of so many hopes aud prayers all answered now!" j And with her bri- ht vision unalloyed, her re joicing soul took v;ing, and knew sorrow nnd teats no more. o o o o o o Four months had passed since Mrs. Owen's death, ami her son was still ? a) irg at Wocd lands, the residence of Mark's lather. Colonel Parker, at about two miles distance from Ed ward Owen's solitary home. Hither had he been prevailed upon to remove, after t lie first Bhock of his grief had subsided. Col. and Mrs. Parker were kind hearted peo ple, and the peeul iar situation of Edward Owen appealed to their best feelings so they made no opposition to their children devoting themselves unceasingly to him, and striving by every inno cent device to render his afHiction less poignant ani oppressive. But kind as all the family were, still all the family were as nothing compared to j Mary, who was always anxious to accompany ! him in his walks, seemed jealous of her privilege J as his favorite reader, and claimetl to be his silent watchful companion, when, too sad even to take an interest in what she read, he leaned back wearily in his chair, and felt the soothing influ ence of her presence. As time wore on, and some of his old pursuits resumed their attractions for him, she used to listen for hours as he played upon the piano. She would sit near him with her work, proposing subjects for bis skill, as her old custom had been; cr she would beg of him to give her a lesson in executing a difficult pas sage, and rendering it with due feeling and ex pression. In the same way, in their readings, which gradually were carried on with more re gularity and interest, she appeared to look upon herself as being the person obliged, appealed to bis judgment, and deferred to his opinion, with out any consciousness of fatigue she underwent, or the service she was rendering. One day, as they were sitting in the library, after she had been for some time pursuing her self Li) posed task, and Edward, fearing she would be tired, repeatedly entreated her to desist, she answered gaily : "Let me alone, Edward. It is so pleasant to go through a book with you. You make such reflections, and point out the finest passages, and explain the difficult parts so clearly, that it does me more good than a dozen readings by myself. I shall grow quite clever now we have began our literary studies." "Dear Mary, say rather ended ; for yon know this cannot always go on so. I must return to my own house next week, I have trespassed on your father's hospitality, indulgence and forbear ance too long." "Leave us, Edward!" and the color tleepened in her cheeks and tears stood in her bright eyes. "Not yet." concluded next week To rob a man of Lis money is to wound him in the chest WAR FEVER IN BALDINSVILLE. BY ARTE MLS WARD. As soon as I'd recooperated my physikill sys tem, I went over to the tillage. The peasantry was glad to see me. The schoolmaster sed it was cheeiin to see that gigantic intelleck among 'em onct mere. That's what he called me. I like the schoolmaster, and altars send him tobaccer when I'm ofEon a travelin campane. Such men must be encouraged. They don't git news very fast in BuldinsvilJe, as ncthin I.t a plank road runs in there twice a week, and that's very much out of repair. So my nabors wasn't much posted up in regard to the wars. Squire Baxter sed he'd voted the dimicratic ticket for goin on forty years, and the war was a dam black republican lie. Jo Stack pole, who kills hogs for the 'Squire, and has got a powerful muscle into his arms, sed hel bet $5 he could lick the Crisis in a fair stand up fight if he wouldn't draw a knife on him. So it went sum was for war and sum was for peace. The schoolmaster, however, sed that the Slave Oligar- ky must cower at the feet of the North ere a year i had passed by, or pass over his dead corpse. " Esta perpetua ! " be added, and "sine qua non also" sed I, sternly, wishing to make a im pression onto the villagers. " Ilequiescat in pace!" sed the schoolmaster. "Too troo, too troo," I ansered, "it's a scanderius fact !" The newspapers got along at last, chuck full of Baldinsville. 'Squire Baxter sed he didn't be lieve in coercion, not one of 'cm, and could prove by a file of Kngles of Liberty in his garrit, that it was all a Whig lie, got up to raise the price of whisky and destroy our other liberties, but the old 'Squire got 'putty riley when he heerd how the rebels was cuttin up, and he sed he reckoned he should skour up his old musket and do a little square fitin for the Old Flag, which nad allers bin on the ticket he'd voted, and he was too old to bolt now. The 'Squire is all right at heart, but it takes longer for hirn to fill his venerable biler with steam than it used to when he was young and frisky. As I prevUIy informed you, I am Captin of Ihe Baldinsville Company. I riz gradooally but majesticly from drummer's secre tary to my present position. But I found the ranks wasn't full by no means, and commenced for to recroot. Ilavin not is t a general desire on the part of youog mcu who are into the Crisis to wear eppylits, I iletarmined to have my compa ny comjiosed tscloosively of offissers, everybody to rank as Brigadeer-Ginral. The follerin was among the varis questions which I put to re-' croots : Do you know a masked battery f'ora a hunk of gingerbread ? Do you know a eppylit from a piece of chalk ? It I trust j-ou with a real gun, how many men of vour own company do you speck you can man- age to kill curing the war t ' Ilav you ever heard of Ginral Price of Mis souri, and can j'ou avoid similar accidents in case of a battle 1 Ilav you ever had the measles, and if so, how many 1 How are you now ? Show ms your tongu, tS'c., &c. Some of the questions were sarcusstical. The company filled up, rapid, and last Sunday we went to the meetin house iu full uniform. I had a scris time gettin into my military harness, as it was bilt foi me many years ago; but I fi nally got inside of it, though it fitted me putty clost. Howsoever, onct into it I lookt fine in fact, aw-inspirin. " Do you know me, Mrs. Ward V sed I, walkiu into the kitchin. " Know you, you old fool. Of course I do." I taw at once that she did. I started for the meetin house, and I'm afraid I tried to walk too strate, for I cum verj near faliin over backards ; and in attemptin to recover myself, my sword got mixed up with mv legs, and I fell in among a choice collection of young ladies, who was standin near the church tloor, a seein the soger bnj-s come up. My ockt hat fell off, and somehow my coat-tales got tw isted round my neck. The young ladies put their handker chiefs to their mouths aud remarked : Te be." while my ancient female single friend, Sary Peal sey, bust out into a loud larf. She exercised her mouth so violently that her new false teeth fill out onto the ground. " Miss Pealsey," sed I, gittin up and dustin myself, " you must be more careful with them store teeth o your'n, or you'll have to gum it agin !'' Methinks I had her. I'd bin to work hard all the week, and I felt rather snoozy. I'm afraid I did get half asleep, for on hearing the minister ask, ' why was a man made to mourn ?" I sed, " I give it up," havin a vague idee that it was a conundrum. It was a unfortuuit remark, for the whole meetin house lookt at me with mingled surprise aud iu dignation. I was about risin to a piut of order, .when it suddenly occurred to me whare I was, and I kept my seat, blushing like the red red rose k to s peak. The next morning I rose with the lark. (N. B. I don't sleep with the laik, though. A goak.) My little dawter was execootin ballids, accom panying herself with the hand orgin, and she wisht me to linger and hear her sing : " Hark, I hear a angel sin gin, a angel now is onto the wing." Let him fly, my child!" sed I a bucklin on my armcr, " I must forth to my Biz." We are progressin pretty well with our drill. As all are commaadin offissers, there ain't no jel usy ; and as we are all exceediu smart, it ain't worth while to try to outstrip each other. The idee of a company com posed excloosively of Gjm-mandcrs-in-Cliiefs orriggernated, spose I scurcely need say, in these branes. Considered as a idee. I flatter myself it is patty hefty. We've got all the tackticks at our tong's ends, but what we particly excel in is restin muskiis. We can rest nmskits with anybody. Our corpse will do its dooty. We go to the aid of Oolumby we fight for the stars ! We'll bo chopt into sassige meat before we'll exhibit our coat-tales to the foe. We'll fight till there's nothmz left f ns but our little toes, and even they shall defiantly wig. "Ever of thee," -ft.. Ward. From the Home Jocrnal.J MATRIMONIAL INFELICITIES. BT AX IKRITABLfe JlAX. Early in Oie Morning. " There must be uiCerent regulations in this house, my dear," I said, re-arranging my pillow, J after a vain attempt to ga:n a short nap, " fur I j won't endure anj- longer having the children wake j me so early in the morning. If they will get up before daylight, they must remain in the nursery, and not come into our room with their laughter and shouts of ' good morning.' The fact is, if j there be one thing I dislike more than another.it J is to be aroused from my slumbers with cries of ! good morning for it is anything but good to be thus disturbed." " But you must allow, my dear," rejoined my wife, " that it is very pretty in the children to do this. Then that little three year e-ld one, who always aids to her goo J morning a ' wish you merry Christmas' cr n anything be more child like and beautiful ?" " Oh. it's all well enough," I said ; " but I elon't see the use of it so early in the mornin: If she would say It at night, when the goes to bed, I could better appreciate it. It has always been a matter of wonderment to me why children will wake with the birds." " The reason is very -imple," my wife answer ed, 4 ' it is because they go to bed with them. No sooner do you come home in the afternoon, than you begin to tell the children it is time for them to prepare for bed ; and. even when you are in the best of humor, you don't r-eem contented un til they are safely ensconced in their cribs. Now if you were to go to bed at six or seven o'clock, as they do, I think you would also wake up as early in the morning." " Perhaps so." I replied ; ' but what would be the object for me to go to bed so early ?" " Why, as you tell the children," my wife said, maliciously, " to make you grow." Now, I am rather short ; but I think my age warrants me in presuming I shall never be an- taller, so that when my wife answered as she did. it provoked me. Although naturally an irritable man, I have the faculty of controlling my temper when I think it is desirable to do so, and, on the present occasion, I contented myself with silently wishing my amiable spouse in Jericho. Seeing I made no answer, my wife continued : " If it weie not that the children woke you, you wouldn't get up till ten o'clock. Notwith standing they wake you thus early, you don't rise until the Lcll is rung for breakfast, and then I have to call you, over and over again, until my breath is almost gone, and I haven't strength left to serve the cofll-e." " I should not think it required a greit Jeal of strength to ojen the faucet of the coffee-urn . cs- Iecial'y as I have heard you complain that it often .elrops of its own accord, and allows the coffee to run at will." " Oh, well, make as much sport of me as you like; but don't complain if, when you go to breakfast this morning, everything on the table, including the coffee, 1? cold ; for. positively, I will not call you. If you won't get up when the bell rings, why you cai lie a!-d and eat a cold break fast after the others have finished." " Veiy well, my elear," I said. " have it your own wr.y, though if I caa't have in this bouse my breakfast, and a hot one at that, any hour I may wish it, why, I can get it at Delia onico's when I g down town. On the whole, I think 1 should prefer, for a change, to do so. I should not have to wait on the children, carving tough steaks, nor will you have to tu rn out coffee for me." " Well, d you know" said my wife, "I really believe you would like t do that. I think yeu would actually enjoy taking your meals away from your family. You wouldn't mind anything about the expense of iuch proceedings, so long as it was f.r your own gratification; but if I sho'd do so, you would declare it the height of f oolish ness. Why, if I stop at Mendes' and get a cup of chocolate Force day when I am wearied cut, with shopping for you and the chil iren, you think it extravagant, and I never, indeed, hear the last of it." " Well, but chocolate is such abominable stuff," I si id, "it slicks up one's mustache so. I cannot imagine bow any one can like it." " Fortunately," my wife raid. ' I have no mustache to be soiled with it, and, besides, I like chocolate." " Very well, if you 'ike it," I said, " I am sure I have no ebjections to your drinking it; but don't, for gracious' sake, be recommending it to me, for if there be one thing I dislike more than another, it is chocolate." " But I have not recommended it," my wife replied, " though I think it would be belter for you than the strong coffee you now use. Coffee makes jou nervous and irritable." " I am net irritable," I said, " and I doubt if a more even-tempered and amiable man decs, cr ever did, or ever will exist, than I am." " My father," Wgau my wife : but I interrup ted her with deel iring that I didn't wisdi to hear a word about her father, or his amiability. My wife put l.er handkerchief to her eyes. No!" she exclaimed, " you never will permit me to say a v ord about my dear father. If he had known, when he resigned me to you, that you would have treated harsh manner in which you do, he never would have given his consent for you to marry me." "Then ours would have been a runaway match my dear, that is certain ; for you were so deeply in love with me that all the fathers in Christen- dom couldn't bare kept you away from mo." " Oh, yes, you may say that." my wife said, smiling in spite of he-self; "but if you think such light talk is going to make me forget your unkind expressions in regard to my father, yea are much mistaken. I only wish I had known as much when I married you as I do now." " I really wish you hid," I replied, " for then I should not experience the annoyances which your lack of bouse keeping knowledge has brought upon me. If, wheu we were first married, you bad known a much of cooking as you cow Co, Lev.- n'nch better I might have lived. What delicate light biscuits I should have eaten, in stead of the heavy ones I have been obliged to devour ! What j'j'cj meat I might Lave carved in place of the overdone joints I have had to dissect! What" " Never mind' interrupted my wifo, ' go:n any f.trthcr into the subject, for the knowledge I regret not to have possessed, has no reference to any housekeeping accomplishments. I refer to your irritable disposition, which, if I had. been aware yoa possessed, would have deterred me from ever marrying jou' " Good gracious! my dear," exclaimed, "yon don't say so ! How glad I am that you didn't find it out. "Just to think that if you had known as much about me nine years ago as you do now, we would not have been married ! What a nar row escape I bad cf bein a bachelor!" " There it is again ; make as much fun about what I say as you like," said my wife ; i sneer at me as much as you please ; but I guess that one of these days you'll find I am iu earnest." ' Well, my dear, all I can say is that I should be very sorry to believe it. If I am irritable, as you declare I am, perhaps there are some acts of yours which serve to make me so: at all events yon must endeavor to bear with my humors, and I will endure yours. But don't'ynu thick we had both better get up, for it must be nearly t ight o'clock, and at this season of the year I don't care to lie abed any later." And, rising, I left my amiable spouse to Ler re flections. TliC I'ovrer or Music. One stormy night a few weeks since, (says tha Albany Knickerbocker.) we were wending our way homeward near midnight. The stcrm raged violently, and the streets were almost deserted Occupied with cur thoughts, we plodded on, when the sound of music from a brilliantly illuminated mansion for a moment arrestwi our fxtsteps. A voice of surpassing swet tness and brilliancy com menced a well-known air. We listened to a feW strains, and were turning away, when a roughly dressed, miserable lookDg man brushed rudely past us. But as the music reached bis ears, he stopped and listened intently, as if drinking in the melody, and as the last sound died away, burst into tears. We inquired the cause of bis grief. For a moment emotion forbade utterance, when he said : " Thirty years ago, my mother sang me to sleep with that song she has long been dead and I, once innocent and happy, am an out cast a drunkaril " " " I know it is unmanly be continued, after a pause, in which be endeavored to wipe away with his sleeve the fastly gathering tears, I know it is unmanly thus to give way, but that sweet tune brought back vividly the thought of childhood. Her form seemed once more lfore. I I I can't fctand it I " And bef re we could stop him, be rushed on, and entered a tavern ne-ar by to drown remem brance in the intoxicating bowl. While filled with sorrow for the unfortunate man, we could not help reflecting upon the won elerful power ol music. That simple strain, com ing perchance from some gay and thoughtless girl, and sung to others equally as thoughtless, still had its gentle mission, for it stirred deep feelings in an outcast's heart, bringing back happy hours !or.g gone by. A Beautifh. riCTur.E. The man who stands njou his own soil, who feels that by the land in which he lives, by the laws of civilized nations, he is the l ightfid and exclusive owner of the land he till, is by the constitution of cur nature tin der a wbolsomc influence not easily imbibed from any other source. He feels other things being equal mors strongly than any other, the char acter of a maa as the lord of an inanimate world. Of this great and wondeiful sphere which fashioned by the hand t'f Ged, and upheld by his iower, is rolling through the world, a part is bis bis from the centre to the sky. It is the space on which the generations before moved in its round of duties, and be feels himsel connected by a link with those who follow, and to whom he i s to t ransmit a home. Perhaps his farm has ceme down to him from his father. They have gone to their last home; but he can trace their footsteps over the scenes of his daily labors. The roof which shelters him was reared by those to whom he owes his being. Some in teresting tradition is connected with every inclo" sure. The favorite fruit was planted by Lis fa ther's hand. He sported in boyhood leside the brook which still winds through the meadow. Through the field lies the path to the village school of earlier days. He still bears from the window the veice tf the Sabbath Kll which called his father to the house of God ; and near at hand is the ?jot where his parents laid down to rest, and where, when his time Las come, he shall be laid by bis children. These are the feel'ngs f the owner of the soil. Words cannot paint tliem ; they flow out of the deepest fountains of the heart ; they are the lifo spring of a fresh, healthy and generous national character. I Edward Everett. The ladies of Maytville, Kentucky, recently presented a pair of pantaloons to Miss Lucy Stone, in Cue form. Miss Lucy accepted ti a pants, but says she would have done so with a mnch better will if they only had had a man in i thee:.