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LOW 1101tNING ULU =MI i• 1 Y•TTIR Ran, OF kermar Cl4law nal your peals, Slreot memory bells, pou the lease of lope ago, pleasure blarawas all aglow - p• through the put-laud with Ita sheen I.t beauty, *ad a Joy *crepe- , Ivaugla the abaft with shadows that, • • ....it rout materna memory hemp. low. out your peals, Nweet memory belie, ..r daya of childhood tied away Var frntice nil the new 020.11 hoe-- or bubtling laughter toll of glee For all the young heart's jubgica, n two, like the low, (nn bud and Ito• rr irs• •yr ret• how ors hour I= •••1 memory lo Or .•t gra.... au I .11-11•pattg 1.-at • IL. and L. t ‘,l her .1111. .1 'wryer in ',hag tn...rtal I h.. 1.. . le.l hetn41.....1 quiet brr•Yl i wtst vi. tot 1.. ever lardirrg r. .t Sob ou t • our yeah, Weld ux story bellu, ,-Iwri.bed Is• V.* ..entterra o'er a ma of toe , burit4 buix,l and tad lantrea., T...l"ut )..ur r aid uutaiung tuella ..r 111,Ideu grief., toil •lur 111,11 11 I. bear 111 I U bileuoir Jr.op 11 , ■hp Tail ou )r. bell. .Ik. -t memory bell,. 1\ iIS I.l+lllll %Wee, •b.I • Thu• floating up fr...uo lout ag., rt.« ntrub..r, IV.ttllti the. chaplets 1.4 the , . 11.1 rt • I Wine, lor .441 y MeAll •, ¢nr(m unJrrtuo. TH E VOLUNTEER. I=l ear bright and pleasant evening in the r part of I huoher, although the air was some al .1 l•,rn nod frosty, now that the autumnal -oh 1.1,1 lo.t it, mid day power t • vv, re already clad in their gayest ~,,rgeous hues, though the willows, by th. 1. ~t the clear Schuylkill, retained their hr _Lt umul.,r verdure while the red cedars, high. r up the .loping fields, showed like pyra. 111 id, of nue ha rigi d greenery. Ah , .tii a tulle above the dam, which supplies 111 , i Fiirmouut works with water from the beau r. -tands a neat (hough humble soh Small porch in front, a large a, p at the ea,tern end, and a pretty lull of late ft,wering phloxes, chrysan ih,lllo/4-,, and eniha actors, descending to the of the clear current, in a succession of traces Th, suu was shining bnlliantly on the rtt .1 wt t of tht. humble dwelling, and giving it of quiet and chastened cheerful uo•- •:•h was not perhaps at variance with the t.iuper ~ 1 its dwellers %lt..u , a -wail ruuud table, not so far removed tr 111 HIV Yr ii/dI)W, Lut that all the gay lights • u.err) souuth , , which passed along the road ..; I ..u:, night be .et. aud heard by those fut. t g mr .1, was tubhd a happy group, though tLur bappitu bete was oothiag that savor• t utirth ~r butet...rotte glee. group euub.ated of three preirearras :—the whom was a delicate, gentle looking also, Rt.l. truU•t "Dee i.r.%e beet' extsemely pret t) roh..ur thrrty yr ars Time had, however, - t.. tuo dr..trt geutly with the rt Net-% tug his hardtr sod wore cruel a at, ut t• r harder mud wore eoduriug uatures; Jrr thrrilug Ivor vtokuee of his assaults, I th. • xlobittou .4 his plitlens pow. rs , to the -kir r,t rr rrirpth•Cd to WWI pube brow was ail Wudirliikkd ; the 4 ;. t r rrrAII ununarhoi by a tough, hu e o f httic .y, uudiumed by the y, 4 11.. ; the r,..11. stialitr, I hrrUgh ehaat , lib tf,ket =I MI ' tug nod, r.l Iht re Pas that told, or stew. f, t 1,41. i-hips undergone, and borrows p..r11..p. to, pas. away, though form tint, and the sense of duty had hindered the suf TIT t, u, gi%lli)g away be/nada their burt beu. Si w aii), ?hough plainly dressed, and i., hu-sly ou anaie expensive article I tamale ampule', ste talktd joyously and hope luny t., the twee ltihdreu, who composed the ,zramp taihund the tato, ( lite of these, a cad, slender girl, of perhaps I. ten 3, ar , .ild, bore so strong a resemblance to young lookuusi, si,ndtr mother, whom she pearly , quailed in height, that it would not be ,i.tlieuit for a stranger to mistake the two for an , 11t r and y. unger ai,L,r, rather than fur closer aid mote Ihilmate relations The girl, like her ei r, was busy with let needle ; but the work wliii h she was employed, though fine, and re quiring neat and delicate Lingers, was less (wetly tha u that on which her parent was engaged I t wa.. iolcut at a glance, that those two small lustrutneuts of steel, wielded by those rider white tiogcrr, were the bread winners of h., bold And fortunate, indeed, did Mar) Ark %Fright deem hermit' when she saw so many of her sex, toiling from peep of day till luiduight with the needle, and be scarce able to provide the merest necessaries of life for them, selves alone, that she, through a degree of skill, whieh she had acquired In younger and happier day s, anti which sbe bad imparted in a degree to her eldest daughter, could maintain not only her .elf but her little family, in decency and comfort. And, in truth, there use something more than m re c.mafort in the aspect, of the small room, with its white, lately scoured floor, covered in il l , ( pp et by 'a patch of carpet; which, if it r.• a !hat humble kind woven of rags, was gay, „ warm, and soft under the foot. The bright, brazen andirons, on the cleanly swept hearth, PLiirpirted a blazing brand or two, which the coolnei.s of the autumnal evening rendered grate• tut clea it copper tea kettle, as bright as gold, hung singing, and snorting from its nose long st ea m, tram the crane above the fire. And ou 1.1.. mantle piece a range of candlesticks and hut.• culinary implements of the same material all bore wit rleS4 to the tidiness of the gentle usewife There was a btueau of mahogany, with a few book shelves above it,' spread with a, clean, white fringed ()over, on which stood a work hex, cud a prettily inlaid tea chest, with $ China vase lull of artificial flowers. There was -a large mahogany tea table, with the tea t hings arranged ready for übe, the bright Britannia metal tea pot glittering like silver, the pretty China cups and saucers, the large brown .oaf and rich yellow butter, not merely neatly, but tastefully prepared, so that they might have tenipftd even the pampered appetite of the lain. mut , rich man. A few good eogratings on the walls, is plain tratnes of black walnut, a rocking chair covered with crimson plush, sod a rose wood work table, tio touch ret•embled the relies of better days, that, when taken to combination with the quiet gen tility anti modest refinement of the mistress of the house, they led to the irresistable conclusipo that .Le who posseased such mates Must at one tune have held a higher station it, this fleeting :rausitury Pccoe than that which falls to the lot of the needle woman. Tbe third person of the party erase 11110011140.. ,y b. y, *Lout two years yoverr Ikea his sister, whir Nisi at Mille table lOU the workers, por iug 111 hiiebec over a volume, which lay epee be furs biro, sad wbiekt--4or we my peep or hie cheddar *kiwis idfiewle, sad satasiise his stud ille as be resds—wea oo other Aso the History of Rowe There was yet a flora inmate of the room, in the shape of a little 'curly beaded, blue eyed fairy, not more than four years old, who bad been for some timeplaying on the hearth with a pet eat and two or three kittens, whist' were barking and purring in the warmth of the cheerful blase; but who now, tired of her dumb playfellows, rose from the floor and toddled away to a large chair, standisc in the mess of one of the windows.— Into this she had °limbered unobserved, and stood gazing out into the street at the passing carriages and equestrians, with large round eyes of wonder. In the meantime, the boy, who had turned many pages since we have been employed in the description of the 'picture, looked soddenly up from the chapter, which had apparently so deeply interested him, and Axing - his earnest eyes on his mother's tranquil face, said eager ly— "Mother, what a . Freat man that Hannibal, the Carthagenian, was • "Was he, my dear ?" said the mother, quietly. "A great warrior, I knew he was. But I tbo't he was cruel, and treseherous, and a breaker of his word. It is a long time, however, since I read about him, Vhszles, and I know, that io his tory, as in all other things, there have bees many new discoveries, and =say pest improvements of late Am I wrong, ten, *bout your hero T or do you think that to be a great warrior, is to be a great man, without other virtues ?" "No, mother, I do not think that, lam sure. For I suppose that to be really a great man, he should be a very good one. Yet the world does not always seem so to judge us either—for Na• poleun was sot, I think, a very good man." "No, indeed, was he sot," replied the mother, trial a half sigh ; "bat the splendor of his woo. dertul genius has dassled the eyes-of his admit rem, so that they cannot mark his defects any more than you can din:Dern the spots in the sun. But tell me, was your Hannibal a better man than Napoleon, Charles ?" "I think so, mother, " answered the bojl quickly "My Hanniba, is you sell him, seems to have oo passion bat true love to hisoonotry— Napol4on had, I think, nosebag love for himself. Yet, surely, it is a very fine and glorious thing to be a mighty warrior." "A very perilous and very awful thing, Charles I trust you have so desire to become one?" "Not such>as the Duke of Weßiagio., moth or, or greater yet, as our own immortal Wash ington." You have named two good emnipkw, my eon," said the gentle mother, smiling, "for I think that both of these great men—the former of whom is not, by the by, a great favorite—have one great point in ocuramon, that both were aotua• ted by a common motive—a strong, stern sense of duty. Both fought not to conquer other countries, but to defend their own; both, after vanquishing all foes opposed to them, returned willingly to the rank of common chimes, when both might, perchance have been kings; and both remained °octant with legitimate rewardo— this with his sovereign's', that with his people's ap probation--and both with the tempt their native country. There isa diitimetion .hellteen them, however,snd that dittinntiothissi glad to say,is in the favor of our hero; thak erbileWeilisgton fought with the certainty of retraces and glory if viotori. ous, our Washington threw by the hope of eith. er, with the certainty of infamy mod base death, if vanquished But to'aostrer your question, I would say no.' not even mob a warrioras Wash. ingtoo." "And why uut, tutitherr "Did you ever bear, Charles, what one of your favori I VA, W ogr ou, said, after true of his great est vietlries— "that the saddest thing on earth ezoept a battle lost, was a battle woo?" Did )ou ever reflect that. every battle woo must be e battle lu.t, likewise? Did you ever oonsider how wavy mum, ut sod happy men must die, that rue way live to become a great warrior?" "But they die nobly, and their deaths are glorious, mother." "So as; the newspapers, my boy. But what thick you the wretched widows, and the misers. ble orptkans say? Do you believe they feel this nobleness, or are toweled by this barren glory?" "I do think so, mother—yes, I ko think so," cried the enthusiastic boy. "I do think you had rather see me—yes, even you, who bate so much —dead, fighitog manly in a good muse, with all my countrymen praising and glorying in me, than have me alive, a poor, worthless, drunken tags—." "Hush! Charles, dear—oh, hush!" whispered his sister, imploringly. The boy flushed fire red, and dropped his e)e.4 to silence to the page he bad been reading. But Mary Arkartight made a great effort, and forced duo a convutsiee rising of her throat, and strove to mower calmly. -But is not—is not putting the—the quest— But she could not command herself, but drop ped her work, and burying her lam in her bands burst into a bitter fit of weeping. Truly, indeed, had Charles spoken when be said that she hated war—and of truth, good cause she had to bate it—had she not, gentle reader? Her father had bore arms through the strug gle with the mother country in the earlier part of this country, had distinguished himself oa the Canada frontier under a gallant soldier who was then tiunderiog at the gates of Mesita). In that struggle he had lost as arm and gained the oom mission of a captain. Years of peace followed; the army was not popular; its services were no longer needed; uid --acid—Republics are not grateful. Years of pesos followed, and at the end of these the sad inglorious, toilsonie bloody war of Florida. This left the fath er: of oar heroine minus an. other limb, and with a broken constitution, at length a Major. • The pest year the Major died, tearing a wid ow unprovided for, and Mary, his daughter, a full, graceful girl, well educated, and brought up to all the eleganeies and refinements of a lady. Another year saw Mary doubly orphaned, but pettily consoled, it not reconciled to her second loss, by being the newly° wedded bride of Charles A.wright, handsome, upri well-bred, and if not rich, at least of _a competence, cod engaged in a business which gave him every prospect of swam and ultimate wealth. For a apses nothing could be happier than the young couple: bet morass came not, nor wealth either, in proportion to the industry and ala lion. Weary effort to support an increasing Tamil, —weary effort, waziag every day weaker 11114 i more weary, anxiety became hope lease's, sad hopelessness despair; then of de / . spur at home eagle love of society abroad—ant that begot loose habita—end* these Aisikes nese was bora. Niue years had pessedwith a wifi at bones, asd foe: as loesly i ehildres as ever called a soau "father," Charles Arkw4ht was a edt arable, broken wretch, a lost, habitual droller& living oa the wages of tie aahappy wife's labor, sad "wasting thee bi The war with Masks° broke oat, sad between rookies:masa sad h4s; Charles Arteries' vol• eateered is the 614 levies, skid weal 'forth from his home, and had bees so sore beard of, at the time this, my little sketch, onowesees. ' la die •saasiga s *tap as ►.r an MOONY fa 50 A YEAR, flu ADVANCE. ERIE, SATIJRDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 2,1858. teithiat. rad the limbos and immii . ho "gm° of s bioaa, beamed, Mary =hi bad *Wee, • • au holiest, true. h , upright woman, sad moms bad this time fireweed her efforts. Her humble home wee blessed with ouoteut , meet; her bumble board spread with modest plenty. Her &Wren were well clad, well•fed well educated. Verde winsome roses is a pearl of great napshe was not—how tank' s h e b e When se knew sot where, or bow situated was the lost husband of her bosom—living or dead, reclaimed or reprobate—Do tidings, "see be de• parted, had been heard of the wanderer. Suddenly, while her bead was buried in her hands, the little one at the window set up a shrill, quick cry— "Ka, sissy, ma! come and see po.,r old man —poor old man with only one hand!" The elder daughter and the boy started to their feet, they scarce know wherefore; but the mother, shaken by what liad , sit motion. lees ji tears, not oomprehentirorgthat was said. The children reached lbe window-Imi there, gazing sorrowfully, wistfully, into the free of the babe, stood ju s t witbout..the garsietiin wretched, wan, tattered, ose•arteed man—scarcely could ho be ealled man, so bearded and emaciated, war worn, sod travel•worn, and weary. The elder girl knew him on the instant, and 'hqknew her. "There was a sharp cry, and a burst of Sean. "Posher, Mother dear,,it is father! father!" She started wildly from her place, rushed to the window, to the door—it was he! But even when be saw her, be stood aloof, with downcast eyes--abashed—daring not to meet her ge=e--afraid to ester his own house. "Charles!--Charlesl—yon have come back to suet-my own, own Charles!" Her arms were abdut his neat, her kisses oo his lips. "Can you forgive- me, Mary?" "Forgive you Charles! God he praised that I see you once again." "And, if a poor man, still en altered man, Mary. A sadder, wiser, better, man!" "Come in—come in, Charles! Annie, Char. lit, this is father. See father, you would hot have known baby." More words are needless The volunteer had returned home a veteran. Battles, marches, fatigue, and hospital—Mexican lance acid sabre, burning sands Lad scanty rations, and above all, the dread fiend, Yellow jock all endured, all for. gotten. Thenceforth all went well with that bumble home, and Mary batedika war less, that it had, if naught else, reclaiurd her Volunteer Ifiew Ewe Ann fcliusing statement is made in a report on Amite Missions recently submitted to the hiassachnsetta Gerwral Association:— "From reliable stationer, it appears that in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont anti Mas.• , at °humus not more than one quarter of the whole pnpalatins are in the babitpl atitottios church! These see ease htiltdied tneusatid people is New Enghatal, who so far, as attt ti ling church is concerned, are, practically, like tt.c heathen. There are twenty-64 towns to ilia State wbioh have no evangelical preach . ' " The New York (*truer remarks, that if the shove statements are oornet, they ought to pro. dune *whore steralinfgaliset than anstartitquakt ; but it is iodised to think that there must lit r• tp Mistake in the matter. After 1.01114. per.tu , ut remarks on the subject; the Uherrevr cone odes by saying:— "It occurs to vas to suggest, though it may uot be well received, that with such a reproof as this before the churches of Massachusetts, it is far more important to consider the destitute and suf. feting condition of these perishing hundrt Is of thou.ands at their own door, than to be aiordis nately disturbed by the neglect of the Atneriesu Tract Society to publish 00 the melject of Asve , ty. The "heathens" at .mir own doors are the subjects of ow. first concerti and if we provide not for our own we are worse than infidels " A CHICAGO TILANSACTION —lllustrativ,- of a Chicago life, we can vouch for the following ti true in every partibular A produce operator from Watertown, N. Y , watching the gigue of the times, and arguing that when wheat was down to GO oents, and corn 36 to 40 cents in Chicago, they could not get mach lower, went to the grain 'icy r.& invested his pile, sonic $30,000, all in "etubtail" corn. The corn is last year's Illinois growth, arid is called "stubtail" because about one third of tt ie-rotteu, fit f nothing but to make rot-gat whisky. He Tao': it at a very low figure and bed it all pat into one pile in a large warehouse where it was to wait a "rise"—several days eirptett and there was no in quiry for "stub tall." 11. played billiards, rode around the city and occasionally took a "eight r" by way of keeping his courage up At length be was informed that his corn was beating Ile examined the pile and found it "hot as Hades " Supposing it was all up with hint, he went off on • "bender" and for thirty days he did not know atubteil from No. 1 corn. At length he blc.wed out, cooled off, and upon examining his corn again found that it bad cooled off also, without damaging it a whit. lie opened his eyes to the market report and found his corn had so risen iu price that be found no difficulty in selling it at a good mood profit of eleven thousand eight hoodred dollars. Had be remained sober he probably would have sold it at a sacrifice So mush for a Chicago epee Fu wonder with such luck that the operators in that fast town should emulous'', imbibe --Cleveland Pia ;Ideate r HAVI PIIVD rNTO Tor AND YE HAVI NOT DANCXD.—Tbe Leavenworth (Kansas) cor respondent of the Cincinnati Times closes a let_ ter of September Bth by saying. "A paper is now in areal/moo for the signi tures of all who are opposed to applying for the admission of Kassas-durieg the next five jean. I have not beard of a single individual who has objected to signing the paper. • It is the lutes'• Lion to hold a meeting sod devise &plea by which the desire of the people may be expressed upon this question. present appearances there are sot a thousand people in the Territory in favor of applying for admission during the next Congress, at That is distressing news for the colond Olpos Ditioo. fill they do if the mired Kew apia will sot dual thafiddle tO earnestly? Can't somebody do smiiihtng - to WO* Kansas? Forney and Greeley are freezing for: some "aid nemfort" from that tinarter.—Esq._ Hi DIP.INKB.—How ominous that sentence falls Bow we pause fo conversation and ejse slate, "It's a pity." Row his mother hopes •be will not wiles he mows older; how fib Refers persuade themselves that it is only a few - wild Wm be is sowing And yet the old men shake their beads sad feel 00=4: What they thluk about it. !wag men just cenimeneing ftk t buoyant with hope, don't drink. " You are freighted with a melon Infto: The hopes! of Your 614 Pares% of your sisters, of you'r a' your skildres—all are .1441 dowt.4l oo n...Pß. In yew the aged lire over again their young ,rp, through you osj eon that weary,' one you love obtain a window littordety, and from the level ja which you plase Ansa list your claim. VI Into tie gnat mg* st =',W - n7M""f 771=n"711 BY VIIKI.UtIA Y. TOW NBlllll " Loaning on him. mho, with moment moolummo His own, thy will, and with atremrtla from him, shall thy Our witaimma 14.. tag WWI" "We 1, suatlsther, what did be say?" "Yue, do teU us, w hat did he 'ay " . Cousin Alias Lake echoed eagerl y my words, u our aunt oanie•isto the sitting moss where we were lonogiag away the pleasant summer after noon. I see her now, though half a score of years hut the grave dust hidden that face front the eyes that loved it, as awl Game through the door, with her soft, slow step; with her lilatecolored silk shawl, and her Leghorn bonnet, trimmed with white satin:ribbon. Aunt Esther Lee was our father's only sister, and she had been a childless widow for many years, the latter half of which she had passed at our home. Cousin Alice Lake was pasting the vacation with us. There was not a year's difference in oui ages, and we had been schoolmates from early childhood, and I be. here sisters seldom !wrench other as we di.l. That afternoon mit Esther bad started oat on a visit,to Farmer Pike's, the rich old widower, whose great yellow brown house, stood on the turnpike, half a mile from our house. Farmer Pike was a strange, hard man ; you would have felt this, with one glance at his strong, rugged features, his iron gray hair, and his large, muscular person that bad not burred itself with the weight of three score years. - He lived with his housekeeper, and his hired men, in the great yellow brown house, an honest and industrious man, but without a single affee tion, or social sympathy iu the world ;—with a life as cold, and stark, and barren, as a desert over whose bosom no running spring winds its necklace of jewels; is whose dryfikati heart no sweet dower tipple its soft lips io the sunshine.- Yet Farmer Pike's life had its tragedy, so I believe all lives have, if we wth( only unlock the hidden cabinets, where they are laid sway from every eye but God's. Many year. ago, Farmer Pike had married a woman much younger than himself. A woman with one of those gentle, shrinking, mimosa us tem, that seemed to have few points of sympa thy with his coarse, rugged character. However, I believe they got on well together, and it is probable the gentle, tremnletie wife cal. led out whatsoever of tendeess there was in the coarser soul of her husband At last, a son was born to them, and the delicate mother fell into a decline, and before her boy's life had env. cred its third year, the grass had laid its green covering over the mother's head Nlra. - Pike and aunt Either Lee were school , mates, and had alwa)s been friends; no the farmer placed Joseph under her care, and h, eon, tinned to reside _with her, until at my mother's death, which occurred - - sevcial years later, my aunt rune to us, and the boy went hoche to his father Joseph was a warm-hearted but a terribly self willed boy. My Mint bad more initneriee over hint than any other person, fA. she loved him as though be were Ler own chill I believ'e, too, Fanner Pike was very f.,HJ of Lis bright, handsome buy, but be Was is DOLT, undetw . .naieu five wan, and he and Joseph never gut ou well Loge thee. As the tuy grew older his father determined upon unlig bid _u fanner, but Juseph'ii acetic, energetic nature revolted at ibis life; ho was bent• upon g..;:,4 out into the world, an! trying 1.14 fortune there I know th, old yellow brown house witnessed some terrible uoutests between the fathir's will and the sun's determination, there were harsh threats on one side, awl sullen resistance on the other, until worn out with these things, Joseph made up his mind to "run away, sat go to Sta.." lie did this with his usual rash impulsiveness, and then farmer Pike in his wrath, lifted up his hand, and swore solemnly that Joseph should DUI inherit a dollar of his property ; that be would never see or speak to him again to the day of his death. And he kept his word. Be lived in the yellow brown house, a lonely child less old man, broadening his mires every ear, and broadening too, by his oold, selfish, unpro ductive life, the gulf between hint and the king' dose of !leaven. One day in the late spring, however, an old man and a little golden haired child stopped at our house sod asked for aunt Esther Gray. Then fur the first time in all lime years, we heard of Joseph Pike. Life had been with him 'env dance of roses," but a long, sharp struggle He had married y .ung, and his children had been taken from him, and at last his young wife had been laid besid.• him, leaving him only the goldenstmired buy that stood before us. Joseph inherited the delicate constitution of his moth, r, and his health bad failed under all these trials. Tie had wandered from place to place with his motherless buy, in search of new strength Bt be failed rapidly, and at last him self gaffe up all hope of recovery. Then he wrote to my runt, tne mother of his boyhood, as he called her, at.d bequeathed to her tenderness his only child, scarcely four years old. And the old man who brought him to us, was one who Joseph had once rescued from drowning, and who romaioed with Van, out of gratitude,, to the last hour of his lifts. Aunt Esther bowed her head abate those gold. en curia, and said, while her tears dripped fast on the bright face that was so like its father's--- "I will take the child." "I've made up my mind," said aunt Esther, euddeuiy, one day just after dit.ner, and she folded up her knitting, and looked off a moment on the dusty road that wound like a dingy red ribbon through the pastures of Woodside. "What have you made up your mind to do, aunty ?" asked Cousin Alice Lake and 1, taneously, as we looked up from the ma we were reading: "That I'll take Weston, Joseph's child, go *weighs over to farmer Pike's this afterntory= He'll be jut over his after-dinner nap why** get there. It's very well tor him to talk sate does, so long as be don't see the child emus to that, believe, be more bear." We believed is too, when we saw the fat little creature waddling out of the trout gate by aunty's side, although wbseo the neighbors bad informed farmer Pike that Joseph was dead, and be bad bequeathed his only child to ay anal, he had sternly replied--" Let her keep him, then. } As for me, I will never see bias, never bare anything to do with hint." It was not to be wondered at that Alioe and I awaited our anat's return with , eager curiosity, or that tharnquiries with which my story women. oes, reefed- her entranee. • Bbe did not reply at oneeothe took spa painpleaf fan that lay o the table, seated kaki/N in the arm Asir, while her features wetted 'Painfully. $4l never had anything come across one ao," Ake exclaimed at Met, more to herself than wit And then the-tears rolled over her cheeks.- Af. ter awhile - she grew calmer, and told her story to Cousin Alice and me, sitting in her large reeking chair, fanning herself with her pslot4eal fan .„e Oros see farmer Pike had just rises from his afternoon asp, and was going out the bank door .as got reined ity tla rassols. is Mot of home. I spied hiss deed hurded sad there. jut se he got up to the well. • tt lissjyt a ham Pike e I ski t is a free, weighborTy bet of avoy, ai I ems up to his, gimlet you Lit this whila hairs drink of water, he's bad a Wig walk, sad get may sigh tuckered oat." "The old man was eompletely taken aback. I could see that by the 'way he looked at me, and I looked bad . at him as cool sad innoeent sr a hush. Then, he &need at the AK and I saw bemumble rosnd tight month Our a little, but be didn't say a wad; be took sp the du eup that stood on the "spout and Ned it from the bucket, and held it out to me, but lake great hand shook mo the water spilled over the top; but of Conroe I didn't notice that, I jest kept on talking in the most Weal way you weld imagine, about the A6B weather and the good crops we were like to get. "Now say, thank you, grandpa," I said as I flung out the water after Weston had done drinking. "Thank you, grandpa,"- mane out the soft, small tones of the little Child, and I knew they went away down in that stout old man's heart like a sharp cutting sword. "Who's that are child r' be asked in .a low, gruff r 3 olee, at if be didn't dare treat it to spesk louder. "Well, now, farmer Pike," mays I, "to hear you ask that questtion. If you can't tell the color o' them eyes, you mast be struck stone blind, and did you ever see a forehead that was just the shape o' that one, and a little round bead that was never still but Ways kept ehakia' Led diddle' round like a leaf on a silver tree, and if you don't know that, you can't fbrpt that heap o' golden curls, just the color o' rye when the sun strikes on it. I never see earls lite them except on one head, and that's ander the grass a long way from here now." "The old man sat down on the stoop, and saw it was because his great limbs shook se her couldn't stand." "I sat down too." "'Ti. rather warm, farm er," I went on, "subdue in the son to day, though teere's a good breeze from the west. Speaking about Wokuue through, I-don't think be has his father's month, though Joseph had a way of wain' down tight sad grim, just like yours, farmer, 'speally when his mind was made up on any subject." 'But if yea look you'll see that mouth was out just after the petioles o' eves to the dimple in the left wiser. I ddsclera, it takes me right back to the time when Mary and I used to go to school through the pastitte. What a merry, fun-lovins weeny she was. I used al ways to think hersosseited a good deal more cheery than the rob in the bushes ae we west along." - "Don't, Esther, don't !" said fanner Pike, and he put up his band as though it was more than he could bear, and his face was white as the tomb-stone. He bedn't called me 'Esther' dice for more than twisty years. "I saw now was the time to strike," , eutd says I-: "Yes, I s'pose it's tryin' to your feelin',far mer, to talk about theis times, but it's comorts in' to think you've got your wife and son, all made oat like a plater there. Weston, you ear boy," I called out to him as be was Mantis' but terflies on the grass, mid be Mime triads' up to ni, "now go and my, 'grasps, won't yon kiss me P"' - • "And the little fellow went up sad lifted his woet, baby thee to the aid ass, sad lisped, oat o pretty, 'Won't you ties me, grandpa?'" "The old man reached out his arms, sod pith• cred up the child in such a quick, baugry sort of a way, that I was almost scared, mid thee he groaned out, 'Oh Mary ! oh Joseph r le a way that made my heart, stand still, and be bugged up the boy so tight to his broad bosom, that I knew he never . would let him go fres:tit 'Ow" At this point in her story, aunt Esther paused and cried, and so did oousin Allee; and I, though we laughed at each other all the time. "Well, what happened next, Aunty?" I asked, its soon as I could.. "r didn't stay another minute, child. I couldn't I just slipped round the corner of the house, and hurried off home, but I beard a deep sob u I opened the gate softly, and !Anew it came up Iran a heart that hod% shed a tear for more than forty years. But it comforted me all the way back to think 'that it Mary in heaven knows when I've been deli' to-day, she'll thank me for it.' " "But we shan't ?We WOIIIOII With us any mote now. Row • shall wa along without him ?"' I exclaimed, suddenly, for all our hearts had grown to the sweet child. "Yes, we shall base him," answered aunt Es ther, quietly out) tog the wrings of her leghorn bonnet "Farmer Pike mid more that twenty years ■go be wouldn't trust nay woman in the village but me to bring up a child, and be ain't goia" to think less of me for this day'. work." Aunt Esther was right. Jest at evening, farmer Pike came round to our house, leading Weston by the hand. "Miss Lee," be said, "I ain't got anybody at home I quite like to trust him with, but if you'll take the child, we wont say anything about the price, only I'll see you don't lose by it." And aunt Esther took him. But every tooraiag sad evening Farmer Pike eame up to see his little grandson, t 4 was never tired of bringitg him fruits sad teys,vanul the little one learned to watch eagerly for his grand father's coming. That little golden bead somehow completely revolutionized the old man. The harsh Hoes around his face grew softer, and be would sit for hours and wateb it at its play, or devise with aunt Esther some sew pleasure for it. I• short, the farmer's life seemed bound up ia his grand son's, for the angel had stnsek the granite rock, and to ! the vitiate leaped out. As Iseitmar.—A touehiog cue wu present -. yesterday to the 000sideratiou and charity of oe of the Good Samaritans who wow take care of the sick, reheat" the destitute, mid feed the starving. A boy was discovered is the morning, lyiog in the grass of qiaibonte serest, evidently Loriiiiiti:ltelUgsat, het siek. A man who • p of kindness Moog!, developed, we a ant, shook bia by , the shoulder, and ed hiss what he was doily; there. "Waiting for God to some foe me," said he. "What do you mean?" said the gastlemes, tosehed by the pathetic tone of the same sad the. condition of the boy, in wham eye amillushed fats be saw the evidences of the finer. "God seat feriae/Jo er, and father, sad little brother ," said he, and took thee elm to hie hose, up is the sky; ind mother told me, when she was sink, that God would take ease of me. I have so home, DOW' to give me at:spikier, sad so I ease oat here, and have been looking so bag up is the sky for God to Collie and take sere of ms, as mother said be would. He will mate, won't be? Mother sever told se a liar "Yee sy lad," aid the man, overstate with cantina i "he has sent ipe to take cite et yea.'!: Tea BMW ham amain oyes feels, sod the soonest triumph bank mar his thee, us M said, "Mother aeversid as a Del sir bat you've bees so hag ea dm way." What . a leans of trust, sad hew this headset, shows the effect. of sever gimlets' shakes with- idle Masi As the peorisotber supeeted, wins she tekl jar son "Elod would take can of him" • he. did; by touching the hest of this beseveleat , lass with vesposios said low to the little nudger.—Nets Orkin*. Das. M=E! M B. F:SLOAN, EDITOR. A. NUMBER S Aa incident which red frit - more - thea the average there of intentsLpertaidep t to ronsatioe • of the present day, ksi hionght m amine/ at two/ Spencer House, in Cincinnati, a short time since. The particulars are given by the Cincinnati ice• yeirer as follows: Some months ago, a youth, sot more than eighteen, residing in Louisville, Ky., "fell in love" with a fair girl of "sweet sixteen," temi porarlly sojourning there, hat resident of New York. Ardent and enth usiastic, bid believing however mach pure philosophy ma) , combat the' idea that matrimony is the proper end of man, be wished to make the fair "Julia? ftle wife; without the consent of her relations or his owl She wished to wait a few months at least, bat "Harry" was importunate. tad heving access to Julia daily, they bathed one other in the oat_ gnehings of their passion in seek showers of 49..1 . 1 7 • der tears, that the little Julia was melted &Weis and, after the manner of the heroines of the sent , timental novels, she east herself upon her ,buy. lover's breast, sal murmured: "Lest sty -heed follow where my heart has gone: lett the Wee• sows of our youthful love grow immettiful cogs/lie er, moistened •as they may be, by ..the gentima dews of Heaven I" Harry having obtained's'. sum of money from his eider brother.-his pars dian sad protector until his majority—.by soma plausible excuse, he concocted a plan to runaway with Julia and live—Heaven knows howl after the silken knot was tied, in some Arcedis of big own imagining. Kverythisig was. prepared far the elopement, and Harry was about to leave his room one midnight, when he foetid himself lock ed in. Get out he could not by any meson, se he was compelled to remain between the frowns ing`walle, and feel the hour of appointmewego palatally by. Hie brother ageing heard, through a servant, of Harry's intention, had trusted to the virtues. • key; god the next day Julia, the dear darling, was sent home to her parents. Harry was dis• oonsolate at first, dud thought of dying, When it vectored to him that living was in his ease 'toady preferable, and therefore he lived. He reoeived patiently the reprimand of his fraternal relative —beyond the age, as the boy lover thought, when the soul sympathizes with the poetry of earlY years—but determined, though baffled, not to tie overcome. All over his horoscope the name Of his 4, Ju1i0, " was written in living light, and yet be would snatch her from the opposing arms 6f Fate! The elder brother entertained no doubt the youth bad surrendered, if not forgotten the foolish attaehuient;, and therefore gave Harry bie consent to pay a visit to Chicago to a nettled sister residing theta. Not to the North, but to the East, did Harry fly as fast as steam could cart' him, where he knew Julia, with whom As had been io correspondence, was awaiting Wyk with longieg eyes and anxious arms. They me! in New York at the house of her parents, suspected nothing of the intimacy of the "oltiL dren," as they termed the twain, aupposieg x. ry, whose family they knew well, a mere bin* of their pretty and petted daughter. The . 14 ehil-, dren" lost no time it} making arrangements to conclude sneeessfwlly in tintless& what they bad undertaken unsuccessfully in the.flooth, sad the morning after the evening of Herq's .trairak_ they were married. half ea . hoar . ape eighteen •yeer•eld husband Lis ea kissrdare home alone: One hasty kiss, together -Elba& titveling satchel, and he-was pew Inlyonglijee sight of - Jo lea teem His toot har r in time, bad - learned of flarryle istens,end puma him the day heitift Lenievitie..- Ammo, femmeti the lovers ; tbey were married -et tee u'eleekt _ Harry left at five in the afteenomr; Um brother arrived at I.•n rn the Pattie evening. Harry reached Cincir.nati in doe time, sad paused frem the excitement sad fatigue of travel at the Spew. err House; and while at dinner revelled a tele gram from his brother, requesting him to wait here until the latter's arrival 'Mel:mother are rived, and Trait, attended him in hisroom, stout ie the faith that he had done well in annexing to himself big other soul - The blee.eyeti beauty, golden carted, Each tress of whom was worth a worTJ, as her lover had rhymned to her in school boy verse He expected a stern rebuke, togollipotal advice, and a disinheritance frem his btOther i li. estate, upon which be 1116 dependent.. He eilF• tcred the mom , rattier sorrowful, butlrm s sad, be barely opened the door when be heard Julia exclaim, "Harry :" and the next nitneswiels , her little heart beating in &tumultuously agginet bis own. Harry was bewildered ;. be .thouilitt he wis in the purple clende of a delicious deem% but all was real, be know, when Julia's soft.lipa trembled in perfeet matey own his OWL The sequel, in brief, was this: bis brother bad seem Julia's parents. and learned sbe was ilarry'sv. wife , and seen, too, that she WWI us .17140 prettiest, sweetest, sod moat immune& mammon, in the world—and, what weighed so litile.witit bis prisetieal nature, the possessor, in he r ... opal right, of a eosee./4 rabie forAusse.. The adtonYires of Harry ended happily as a Franck coaaply_cor, a rose colored novel The young couple last._ fined themselvee blesetd indeed in each odor'. society, cud as the youthful husband stolid lky. Julia's side, be whispered to her: "It is usue, darling : faint heart ne'er won a fair lady yet-- it is my experience." =IE7II A bliNtlTtleB WALK AND CoNvizanztow, The editor rf the North Carolina Presbyterial, who is at the Virginia Springs, ham bawd stood story of Speaker Orr and the Rev Dr. Wof Leziegtou. Not long since, the story goes, they were both at the Warm Springs, and met iii tbo public room of the hotel. They had been sitting, with other company, and after a while the Doctor rose and walked across the room, with the nansl limp of him gait. Mr. Orr itemediatet ream' oised him, and salted him if be was sot t h e Clap lain at the University of Virginia at snob a time, naming the year. The Doctor replied diem was. "I was there," said Mr. Ort, "a student at tie University, and I knew you by your Hop" "Well," said the Doctor, "it seems ay lisp ing made • deeper impression on you thaw my preaebieg." The joke placed Mr. Orr in an awkward pre. dimmest, and most men would have been unable to entrieete themselves, but he replied with ready wit--- "Ab, Doctor, it is the highest eompliment can pay a minister to say that he is kaolin by his walk rather than by hie conversation." FAT.—The lata Dews about the Paris "fah ions" is somewhat startling. Fat is the . rage.— Ladies wildcats it. They are devoineg . vast qnsntities of butter, mashed ram leares,ped lab like. The Empress is gaits oorpuleut,. which accounts for the style. The fashion wild %Kt Ilit• before long. We hail it. with 1030 A new era 4s dawning. Our girls will atop eating elite pencils and chalk, and commence pertain; Ali I orally of roast beef and baked buss. They will rise with the lark. They will exercise. They 'will try on the wash-tab perhaps. sor We saw two pieces of Iron yeetardey, says the Unsti Gazette, which had hen vent only a few weeks in pumping still Awned wore to bvAly eaten by the acids as -to regain Jo be replaeed by new pieces. This, we axe Wormed is the en , m result. If sash is 60 Allffolo 00 iron, what must it be on the human Astroaah. 111 EINE