BY JAS. CLARK. SNARE'S STEAM LINE ir:r7 l a f t t ' .ZA Ahead of all others with New Clothing! THE undersigned have just receive(' and are now opening the largest and most splendid ansortmentof FALL AND WINTER CLOTH. INC; ever brought to Huntingdon. Our new stock consists of black, blue, green and brown Frock and Dress Coats, from $0 to $l2, worth more money ; black, brown, drab and blue Over Coats and Sack Coats, l'rom $2,50 to $l2, worth SP; a line assortment of Business Coats, Pea Jackets, black Satin and Figured Vests, cassi. mere and cassinet Pants, Shirts, Suspenders, Gloves, Stocks, Trunks and Carpet Bags, all of which will be sold at auction prices. Also, the latest styles of Nl'.W YORK HATS and BOSTON BOOTS, the superior quality and low prices of which have astonished the world, dumb founded Queen Victoria, and brought Kings off their Thrones to purchase from us.— Purchasers should BEWARE OF IMPOSTERS who itk Mitt prices for their clothing, and who allow themselves to be beat down to two prices. Such a system is certainly not in accordance with fair dealing, and will not be practised at the Hall of Fashion, as long as purchasers nre opposed to the "live price" system. The HALL of FASItION has, after an existence of three years, won a character for selling good and fashionable clothing cuss,, and it will en deavor to keep op that character, by selling at TURTITKR REDUCED PRICES. Sept. .3, 1850.-3 m. B. &W. SNARE. LIST OF LETTERS, 'IDEMAINING in the Post Office, at Hunting- Jul don, October Ist, 1850. A Ayres Miss J. B. Ayres Miss Silo Artist Daguerrean Burnside Col. Jas. Bond Mrs. Ann M. Bogg Elizabeth Balo Washington Bullock Jacob Brady Miss Amy 2 Birekhead Saml. J. Baum Jug. Lott Mrs Nancy Loydd Miss Mary A M Mahoney John 2 Matthew Geowi Montgomery M'Cuc John 3 M'Cnhc Win M'Corkcll Alex Mundorf Win Morningstar Adam M'Cuc Adam Moyer Mr M'ltonnell James Montgomery Hem, I, Marshall NV,lcy Miller Miss Alii;sy A !Alialip Hobert Macraken Joseph M'Miller Joseph Martin Josephs Myton Wet Miller H E 111 P Norton N A Pierce J A Q R Quin Edward 2 Roark 'William Elm & Campbell C Cowden Chas. 2 Corbin Jim. Crowin Juo. Conlon Jesse Campbell Robert E. Comb Mr. D. Connoy Mary Jane Chappel .John Calebs Corbit Michael Cox Mr. Coleburn Wm. Conway Win. tpxenport Wm. E,q. Donne' 'C. W. 0. Denniston John T Duffy James Duff Col n 2 Dougherty John Dunne Thomas Dooley Thomas Shepherd John Sankey .Tunes Schwier 3 , llargret Stern Jacob Shedeker E G F Storohntin Louisa Fetterly Jacob Sower C G 2 Faireheld Hey Edward Smith Pntriek Farrell Bryan, Smith Lieut Adam Foster James - Smith Sandy J /Intel Henry Stiteer Win 3 Flynn John Stewart Alex Shenefelt Abraham Stiles Miss Frances E Spanoglo S L• Stewart John Stewart Mary Smiley John Stonlkr lance Scofield Nathan ITurtitiOnt IVfn Waspy Margaret I Gill John 1) Green John A Maw. B Good - James S Grainy Patrick Glaspy Elizabeth Goodlin E B Snyder Louis Hoist John Hight Mrs Mary Hodges John Hampshire N Hammel James 2 Harris Eli Hawn Michael Harris Wellington 2 Haan Frazer Capt Hutchison James Harper John L Hurter Frederick liirOs Mini Mary Haley John I Irvin James --- Savage Catharine Stonebrakor Wm. Scott licorge Scott .1 11 Starks Miss Margaret Wits R Swetzer JAM. SeaUay.llymartl Sidra Miss Mary Jane Sterns Samuel Stitt Alexander Thomas \VW' Thompson John Tisilalo Charles Taylor Isaac Trerer Mrs, Ann Thomas J L Town John Jane Jackson Mrs Jane Jones Jesse Johnston Dun J Kirts Josiah 'Krug Michael Kingman II .1 Keyser John S Kinney John It Kemp Miss Mary 2 Kelly Jautes Keller John Kurt. Jacob Kepler at Stiver Vandyke Henry W Werdner Michael Wolverton Chas Vali+ Rev J White Mies Ellen M Walls John 2 Wou 1)r Francis Williams Corlett IVahers Ilarvey Wood It W When Jncob L Warfel Harriet Legrever Jacob Wall ltubeeea 41,ightuerJ G Wittniag.J G Persons enquiring for letters oh the above list, will pleaio.say they are advertised: ifg'Two cents in addition to the regular post age charged on advertised letters. PETER C. SWOOPS, P. M. Oct.. 15, 1850.-3 t. SCOTT THIUMPIL&SiT QPLENDI 1) stock of WATCHES, CLOCKS, and JEWELRY, nt Pliihtdelphis prices. Just received at cull's Chug? .Igl,l 7 eby ,s . tors, throe dvcrii i ?s'esi of T. Head & Son's store. The public are itspeeVnlly solicited to al and See. B. M. GILDEA, SURGEON DENTIST AND JEWELER PECERISBURG, HUNTINGDON Coorenr. August 121, untimbon "WOMAN BEHOLD THY SOL,' HARRIET BEECHER BTOWE. The golden rays of a.suinmer afternoon were streaming through the wlndons of a quiet apart ment where every thing was the picture of order ly icpose. .Gentle and noiselessly it glides, the glossy old chairs, polished by years of care; fluttering with flickering gleam on the boob cases, by the fire and the Antique China vases on the mantel, and even eoqueting with sparkles of ibuci ful gaiety aver the titre of the perpendicular sem •bre old clock, which though at times apparently coaxed almost to the verge of a smile, still continu ed its inevitable tick as for a century before. On the hearth rag lay outstretched a great lazy looking Maltese cat evidently enjoying the golden beam that fell upon his sober aides and sleepily opening and Aiming his greet green eyes as if lost in luxurious contemplation. But the, most characteristic figure in the whole picture, was that of an aged women, who sat qui etly rocking to and fro, in g great chair by the side of a large round table covered with books.— There was a quiet beauty in that placid thee—that silvery hair brushed neatly snider the snowy border of the cap. Every line in that furrowed fime,,told some tale of sorrow, long assuaged and passions hushed to rest; as on the (Win ocean shore the golden furrowed sends show traces of storms and fluctuations long past. Ou the round green covered , table besides her lay the quiet companion of her age, the large bible whose pages like the gates of the celestial city, were not shut all day; a few old standard books, and the pleasant rippling, knitting, whose dreamy irresponsible monotony is the best music of age. A tier girlish form was seated by the table—the dress bonnet had fallen back ou her shoulders,. the soft checks were suffused end earnest,_ the long lashes and the veiled eyes were eloquent of subdued feeling as she read aloud from the letter in her band. It was front 'our harry'—a name to both of them comprising all that was dear and valued on earth, for he was 'the only son dills mother, and she was a widow'—yet has he not been always an only one; flower after flower on the tree of her life had bloomed and died, and gradually as waters cut off from many channels, the streams of love had centered deeper in this last and only one. • And in truth Barry Sergeant Was allthat a mo ther might deSire or be proud of. Generous, high winded, witty and talented, and with a strong and noble phygical development, he seemed born to command the love of women. The only 'trouble with him sus in common parlance that he was too clever a fellow—he was too social; too impressible too versatile, too attractive, and too much in de mand for his own good. Ile always drew compa ny about him a's honey draws flies, and was indis-: pensable every where, and to every body, and it needs a steady head and flint nerves for such an one to escape ruin. • I Larry's course in college, tho' brilliant in schol arship had been critical and perilous., I - Ia was a decided favorite with the faculty and students, it yet required a great deal of hard winking and adroit management on the part of his instructors to bring him through without any infringtuent of college laws, and proprieties, not .that he ever meant the least harm in his life, but that some extra gener ous impulse, some Quixotic generosity was alWays tumbling him neck and heels into somebody's scraps, and making hint part and parcel in every piece of mischief that was going'on. With all this premised, there is' no need to say that Hurry was a special favorite with the ladies ; in truth, it was a confessed fact aunong his acquaint , tutees, that whereas dozens of creditable, respee table, well to do young men, might besiege female hearts wills every proper formality, waiting at the gates, and watching at the posts of the doors in vain yet before' hint all gates and passages' seemed to fly open of their own accord; nevertheless, there was in his native village one quiet maiden, who only held in her hand the key that could unlock Iris heart in return, and carried silently in her heart the spell that could fetter that brilliant restless spirit; tutd she it wasof the thoughtful brow and down-east eyes whom we saw in our picture ben ding over the letter with his mother. That mother IlinTy loved to idolatry. Site was to his mind an impersonation of till that was love ly, in womanhood, hallowed and sainted by age, by wisdom, by sorrow, and his love for her was a beautiful union of protective tenderness, with Veil ' oration ' and to his Ellen it seemed the Lest and most sacred evidence of the nobleness of his na tore, and of the worth of the heart which he had pledged to her. Nevertheless, there was a danger overhanging the heads of three; a little cloud, no bigger than a man's hand rising in the horizon of their hopes, yet destined to burst upon them dark and dreadful in a future day. In those scenes of college hilarity where Harry had been so indispensable, the bright poetic wine cup had freely circulated, and often amid the flush of conversation and the genial excitement ofthe hour, he had drank freer anddeeper than was best. Ho said, it is true, that he cured nothing for It, that it was nothing to him, that it never affected him, and all those things that young men always say, when the cup of Circe is beginning its work with them. .Friends were annoyed, became anx ious, remonstrated,' but he laughed at their fears, • and insisted on knowinghimeelf best. At lastwith • n sudden start and shiver of his moral nature, he 'was awoke to a dreadful perception of his danger, and resolved on decided and determinate resistance. During this period Ito came to Cincinnati to estab- Halt himself in Mediums, and as at this time the temperance veformation was in full tide of SUCCC. there, he found everything to strengthen his reso lution temperance meetings and speeclic, were HUNTINGDON, PA., all the mode—young men of the first. its patrons and supporters; wine was quite vocative and seemed really in danger of being vo ted out of society. In such a turn of affairs, to seize a temperance pledge and keep it became an easy thing.; temptation was scarce presented or felt, he was offered the glass in no social circle, tact its attraction nowhere, and flattered himself that he had escaped so great a danger so easily and so completely. His usual fortune of social popularity followed him and his visiting circle became full as large and impertant as a young man with any thing else to do need desire. He was diligent in his appli cation to business, began to he mentionedwith np,- probation I,y the magnates as a rising young man, and had prospects daily nearing of competence and home, and all that man desires; visions alas, nev er to be realized. For after a while, the tide that had risen' so high began imperceptibly, to decline. Men that lied made eloquent speeches on temperance had now other things to look to; 'fastidious persons thought that matters had been carried too far, and ladies declared that it was old and threadbare, and getting to be cant and stuff, and the ever ready wine cop was gliding back into Many a circle, as if on sober second thoughts, the community was convinced that it was a friend:unjustly belied. There is no point' in the history of reform, either in communities or individuals so dangerous us that where danger seems entirely past. As long as man thinks his health failing, he watches, he diets, and will undergo the most heroic self denial; but let him once set himself down . as cured, and how readily does lie fall hack 'to one soft indulgent loth-' it after another, all tending torah' everything that he has before done. So in communities; let intemperance rage and young men go to ruin by dozens, and the very evil inspires the remedy; but when the trumpet has been sounded and the battle set in array, and the victory only said and sung in speeches and news paper paragraphs, and temperance odes and pro cessions, then conies the return wave ; people cry enough, the community vastly satisfied, lay down to sleep, on its laurels, and then collies the boupof, danger. But let not the man, who has once been swept down the stream ofiotemperate excitement almost to the verge of ruin, dream of any point of secu rity forilim. Be is like one who has awakened in the rapids of Niagara, and with straining oar aml mild prayers to heaven, forced his boat upward into smoother water, where the draft of the consent seems to cease and the banks smile mid all looks beautiful, and weary from rowing, lays by his oar to rest and dream; he knows not that under that smooth water still glides a current, that while he dreams, is imperceptibly but surely hurrying bins back whence there is no return. Harry WaS just in this perilous point ;.he view ed danger as long past, his self-confidence was ful ly restored, and in his security, he began to neg lect those lighter out-works of caution which he must still guard who dues not mean, at last to sur render the citadel. PART 11. 'Now girls and boys,' said Mrs. G. to her Boris and danghters, who were sitting round a centre ta ble covered with notes of invitations, all the on ihninarret dotalra of a party—'whut shall we have on . Friday night—tea--colli,—lenamade—wine of course not.' 'And why not wine, - mamma 7 said the young la dies.--`the people are beginning to have .itr—they bud wine at Mrs. A's. and Mrs. (Ps.' 'Well your papa thinks it won't de..—the boys are members of the temperance.society, and I don't think, girls, it will do myself:. There are ninny good sort of people by the by . who always few moral questions in this'Atyle of phraseology—not what is right, but what will 'do. The girls made an appropriate reply to this view of the subject by showing that Mrs. A. and Mts. B. had done the thing and nobody seemed to make any talk. 'The boys,' who thus far in the conversation hail been thoughtfully nipping their boots with their. canes, now interposed and said that they Would rather not hate wine if it wouldn't look shabby. 'But it will look shabby,' said Wes 'Fanny. 'Lemons you know are scarce to lie got for any price, and as for lemonade made of Ow, it's pos itively vulgar and detestable. It tastes just like cream of tartar and spirits of turpentine.' 'For my part, said Emma, never did see the harm of wine, even when people were making the most fuss about it—to he sure rum and brandy and all that are bad, but wine—' 'And so convenient to get,' said Fanny, and no decent you 4 min ever gets drunk at parties, so it can't do any harm ; besides one must have some thing, and as I said it will look shabby not to have it.' Now there is no imputation that young men are so much afraid of, especially, tYom the lips of la dies, as that of shabbiness, and as it happened in this case as most others that the young ladies were the most efficient talkers, the question. was finally carried on their side. Mrs. G. Wits a mild sod motile' the one fitted to inspire young men and that home fooling which all men somewhere, I for houso was a freer social, for most of the young people, ttmce, and Harry was a favorite demo tor. During the height of the tempo] halters and brothers had given it' decided support, and Mrs. G. alwa• tcil for tii3:;.;',,,xiinoyeinetit t synip in their. endeavors. The great limit often incident iu the gentloness of of self reliant print-irk. lice virtu, nose she'loved gre‘• cold towards a good cause, tlMy found no sustain ing power in her, and those who were relying on her judgment and opinions insensibly controlled them. Notwithstanding she a woman that al ways acquired a great influence over young men, and Harry had loved and revered her with some thing of the same sentiment that he cherished to wards his mother. It was the most brilliant party of the season. Everything was got up in faultless taste, end Mrs. G. was in the very spirit of it. The girls were looking beautifully, the rooms were splendid, there was enough and not too much of light,.and warmth, and every hotly was' doing their best to please and be cheerful.' Harry was more brilliant titan anal, and in fact outdid himself; wit and mind wore the spirit of the boor. 'Just taste this tokey,' said one of the sisters to him, 'it has just been seat us from Europe, and is said to be a genuine article.' • 'You know not in that line,' said Harry laughing and rolbring. 'Why not ?' said another young lady, taking a glass. 'Oh the temperance pledge .you know—l um one (.f the pillars of the order, u very apostle, it will never do for me: Tshaw I those temperance pledges ore like the proverb, 'something musty,' FRid a gay' girl. 'Well, hut• you said you had a headache the lie ginning of'thc evening, and you really•look pato ; you certainly need it as it medicine said Fanny. 'l'll leave it to linunal, end she turned to Mrs. G. who stood gaily entertaining a group•of young people. . 'Nothing more likely replied she [oily. • I think Hurry you have looked pale lately, a glass orwine might do you good.' Mad Mrs. G--,--known all of Harry's past his tory and temptations, and .Lund she not bean in just the inconsiderate state that very good ladies sometimes get into at a party, she would sooner have sacrificed her right hand than to have thrown, this observation into the Hales, but she did, mid they turned the, balance for him. 'You shall. ho my, doctor,' be said laughing. and coloring he drank .the ,glass and where was the harm? . One glass of wine kills aohody, and yet if a man fells and knows that in that glass he sacrifices princi ple and conscience, .every drop may ,be poison to the soul and body. Harry felt at that very time that agreat internal barrier had. given way, nor was that glass the wily eye that evening, another and another and maul, er followed, his spirit rose with the mild and fe . vcrish gaiety incident to his excitable tempera- I molt, and what had been began its society of la sties was completed late at night iu the gentle man's saloon. Nobody ever knew .or thought, or recognized, that one party had forever undone young man, and yet so it was. Front that night his struggle of moral resistance 1.5 rittally impcicrd, 114,( that he yielded at once and without deeper to etlints anitstruggks, gradnally each. struggle grew weaker, each reform Aorter, each rt,ohn he, knoso inefficient, yet at the close of the evening all thy, friends, mother, brother, and-sister, flattered the,. selves that everything 1,01 gone cot t, wcll that the next week .lira. 11. thought that it tv,add give wino at the party heenn, Mr, (1. had done it last week, and no hunt had come of it. In about a year ailor the legal to and Impala the luthits of 'their p. , ung fvh.nd, and all con,eiou,ly W won Car how such a lieu oung luau shuuld '6O led aStlei. Ham' wassif t Ilecitlud aml desperate nature, hi, atlections and his laurol,ensa IVZIgCIi IL tierce war with the terrible tyrant. The.tutulness had pos sessed him, and when at lea! all hope died out he .determined ic avoid the anguish and sham.: of a drunkard's lite by a suicide', demi. Then. came to the tretnidily. heart-stricken mother and beloved one, a mild ineoherolt letter of threwell, and he disappeared from among the In the samequiet Parlor, where the sunrise still streams through flickering biaves, it now rested en the polished sides and glittering plate Mitt coffin; there at last lay the wearrat rest, the soft shining gray hair was still gleaming so Wane,- but deeper furrows on the worn, cheek and'a .weary heavy langour over the pale peaceful face told that Ow, grey hairs had been brought down in sorrow to the grave. Sadder still was the store on the cloud less check and lip: of the young creature bending in quiet despair over her ;poor Ellen k her Ws thread woven with those two beloved ones! w L is broken ! And may all tliis happen? nay does it not hap pen? just such things happen to young men among us every day, and do they not lead in a thousand ways to sorrows just like those? And is there not a responsibility on all that say they ought to be guardians of the safety and pu rity of the other aex, to avoid setting before them the temptation to which so often and so fatally manhood has yielded ! What is a paltry consider ation of fashion, compared to the safety of sons, r / 26', 1850. le of her um 11 Your Mother.--To You dl know the divine comnamil—"l toner thy father and thy twitlicr." An undutiful chibl is an odious character, yet but fewcoma_ , people show the respect and obedienee to their parents that is hemming and hcantithl. yOu ever sit nnd re count the days and nights orate; tail, anti neitiety you cost yourle6thetl l iAd l j.hrt ever try to mealt ime dm love tha4 lantMactlyoar infancy and guided your youth 1 Did you ever think about how much inure you noon your mother than you will be able to repay? . If so, did you ever vex o• disobey her If you did it is main outs common magnitude, :ind a shame which should entice you burn every time you think of it. It is a sin that is sure to bring its reward in this world. I never knew an undutiful daughter muke a happy wife or mother. The reel ing that prompts any tine to tin makind to at mother will make her who indulges it, wretched fir If you should love your. mother, you little dream 11.0 W the memory every unkind look, or unduti ful word, every ncvlert of• her wishes, will haunt yon. 1 could never tell you how I sometimes 11,0, 1 1 in remembering imtanceit,of neglect to my mother Mill yet thanks to her care, Iliad the name aiming a vial eldld. She told me, shortly before she died that I had never vexed her by any act of disobe dience, stint I would not resign the memory of her approbation fin• the plaudits of a world, even though I knew it was her love that hid the faults, and ming- Mika all that was' good. I know; many things I ' might have done to add to her happiness and repay her care that I did not do; but the grave has cut oil' all import.itc to rectify mistakes or atone for neglects. Never, never lay up for yourself the memory tit an unkiudness to your mother. If she 'is afflicted, how can you possibly get tired of wai ting upon her ? Iluw mu you trust any cane else to take your place ;liana her ? No one could have filled her plac•c to your peevish billowy and troub lesome childhood. When she is in her usual health, remember she is not so young and active as she once was. Wait upon her. If she tenets anything, bring it to her, not bemuse she could not get it herself, but to show that 'you are think ing about lacy, and love to wait on her. No teat to how active and healthy she may he, or holy much she tiny love to wait, she will love to have you do any little thing thaetvill show yon are think ing of her. One thing awed, never call either of your par ents "old mail," or "old WLT11:111." This is rude and undutithl. There' should hue something sacred, something peculiar, in the word that desipates pcu•cnts. The tone of voice in whilehtlley nrend, dres'se,l, should He affectionate tind'ittsilettftd.— A slant slaty at:wormnu a child 'to a parent,falls very harshly on the ear aanyperson who has any idea of filial duty.' Be sure; girls, that you cacti win for yourselves the none of a dutititl daughter. It is much• easier ti, bd ti good daughter than a goad rvifb br, :Maher, litM she who fails in this , first most simple relation, need neverhopo to tin tutoth cr'u•cll. Make her y,,,ll,olltident the seem t yoa Clare not till her is It dangerous secret,' and one that likely to I vim; pan smvow. The hdnrs you spend with her, will not liring you regret,Und volt should love her' so well that it WOUI . IIIIOVbe kit n in t nisinn,nt to give up the happieSt tarty to remain with her. nit unloved and ludo viva you will live and die; if you do not lore and honor your father and moth er,— Lcqatat Childtpa's laya:4,, A 5EN.:,11,2 pito r t SE:C:3OI . LE 1).11t- I: E t a meeting recetitlyrifthe colored people, ill rclutiim to the fugitive elate how, nfter the ex-, citetuctit Lad hceit wrought up to the highest pitch ,thd overt uir i c vrncyetuly to . g o out utpl cut the' throat, of all the white j c ploin tile city, roge"nittl said " :Nfy rvientl , , I 11,16 1 : we 'are ;:wine u little, ton fast in tlis mutter. We talk about arming our -60 Yeti Itlitl late, Itht it 14 - Wear, to ate, MX Itretlerlit' (lac de la,. ti:: ,an do Would Li• to tile a thild fitgitive to get out aide way of tient slave catchers. For, now suppose, my bretlerite; &it we had tt tirst rate tight, anti get OW] Of }kit: iilgiliVCS clear, Wald I . tat: 00 or get killed in tie 'ml,, now in toy o pinion dat'woulti he it game. It' pears to me now (Lit ;tint exactly ale way to save niggars n3Ottenv." We pdincide with • tlli3 aal,.ed • gen tiotuan.— llombn Mail.' Tar CIIOLAU IN Janstc.t.---We have intelli gence frofn Kingston, Junto, fo the 29th ult. The eholora.wasecimmitting.fearftil ravages, ',arming off whole fitmiliciti and basinciss of nil kinds was auspeMied. In Port 'Royal, fully one-sixth of the population have fallen victims. In Kingston, the deaths have exceeded 360 by the official report made every morning by the Board of Health ; bat this return it is generally beleived does not contain one-half the number which baa Wien victims to the sad distemper. In St. Catharines, the mor tality has been awful, and the deaths average a bout forty to fifty ti tlay. ' Sharp Shooting. The clerk or a steamboat oflieemunseil himself greatly at the expanse of a Catholic priest, whose prof ssion be pretended not to know. Among a number or impudent questions, he stoked the fol lowing very simple one t Old yeti tell Me thaditiercuee lmtween u. Cath olic .priest and a jaekl". • "No, sir," replied the priest. • is ,lavevy alws cliSt.oltll polite sock and let (WC /till:l'S 1111111 j. CaligC Of their .2.1 ill thought their lull giy. sun!' , P Well," said the elork,"I'llttll you. Thu one wears tthe cross on the breast, the other on. his • 4 ‘ Vary well," replied the priest, cooly; 'ienn volt tell me the dillerence r•bettroetrtt stettutl+tt elerk will the ionweitred adult:a of IvliielLyott have jut been speaking P • No, sir ; 'whet is it ?" down South. een Ilefhied a 11114 i uP , it+ • " I cnn ,liscovvr untie at till." fulthetl tltc irtic,t. VOL. XV.--NO. 46. • . floe pleasant a thing it is to have one friend to cL nn min go and unbosom- one feelings when. ill, world is liarsh'aith us; and darkness has set tled ole tlw litirface of nature. A t.stal a tinie, heart to counsel' and advise with us—that,,wilir manifest feellagnral - nympathy..—is.. nboven price. The ontgasliiugs of hive end tenderness reeire and cheer its—drive away sadness front the hosoleh and brighten the heavens again. • ado who.has ono to whom he can. go in the hour of tulversity, can tegv..i er be wholly east down, can never be driven to. despair. ! The world, dark as it may sontetimes he, will always contain.onebright.spiA—heaugful spot—it will gro.vlrighter, and brighter, stricken heart partakes of the fullness of joy end is (n,( down no . more forever. Cost of War. Give me the money . that has beco lent in war, and I will purchase every foot of mod upon th,e• globe. I will clothe wear In:in, woman and child in an attire of whichqueeuxwould betT ;womb I. will baihl a school house on, every hill side, and in every valley over the whole earth.; . l will build an aeittlemy in every town, and endow' it; a college in every State, and fill it with able . professor::; I will crolVII every hill with a pltMe of Avon , l , ip, consecrated to the promulgation of the' Gospel of peace ; 1 will .support in every pulpit an 'able tocher of righteousness, so that on every Sabbath morning, the ,chime on one hill shoulil answer to the chime on tinOtlmr, round the earth's wide circumference; and the voice of prayer, and the song of praise, slmuld ascend like a universal holuegast to llcuvem—RVits llurtnrrioN ,or A Y.IF Ji.33. —As the Yankees, are coating no little excitement, in the, -mauler cid, political, and military world,.. I hope niy defi nition of a real genuine node litokee may _not be 'considered a false A real gesaviae Yankee is fail of animatipn chuck, ed by inealeratlen, guiard lic cletenniaatiau taut sapperted by education. lie Lois vonoratiou correuteil by toleration, with a love of approbation und emulation; and when reduced to a state of aggrayation, can 1139T111110 the most profound ilissinmintion tar the purpose of en-, illation, always eninitine.l, if possible with spec ulatton. A reallive ;Yankee, just atught, will be found not iu: the fulluwing lunlitjc, : He is sell-denying, self-relying, always trying, awl into everything He is aluver of piety, propr:ety, neforirty toot the temperatice• society, lle is a -tlenggiug,gaggin, hloggieg„ striving, swopping, jostling; hustling, wrestling, tuueical, fostrononiletil, poetical, philosophical nod eotnieal eort uf.charucter, whose nuinifest destine is to;spreatl eiviltsution to the reututest corner of the, earth, with au always on the lookout fur the main cluatee.. and nature's Clod smite propitiously upon the union that is sweetened' Ity love and sanctified, 4• the law. 'The sphere of our affeetiotts)e 'enlarged, and our plensures take ici derrange. Wu become more important and re , speetettatoong tutu and existence itself is &Mb; lv enjoyed with our softer self. Islisfortune loses Writs anguish beneath the soothing influence of her smiles, and triumph is inore. triumphant when shaved wills her. • Without her, what would be man? A roving and restless hieing, driven et pleasure by romantic - speculation, owl cheated in to misery by futile hopes; thempktictim to Inte rned passion, and the disappoi n ted pursue, .of fruitless joys. Bin with het he awakens to a hew life. •Be ibliews a path wider and nobler than the mirror: road to self aggrandisementhat is emit tered with more fragant flowers aud illuminated with a clesttwr light: .ANyKWA.IO , .-A fellow the other eveniti,c, , , Of Sas temper:um:in, g•screwcd his coinage to the sticking point," as Shakspear says, and actually dared to "pop the question" to a young holy, who in iteeoriliince With custom, of course, immediate ly fainted. In his hurry and agitation, lie seized a bottle of ink, mistaking it fur 0 ,logre, and dash ed its contents in her face and over her mots -white dress. Of course she immediately ••came to," and the aWliwnril fellow 100 l the felicity 'of being kick ed out of the !muse by her Pig brother: "There's many a slip 'twist the cup and the lip."' Ktss COTI LIM NS. --1110 'editor •or the "Whultor Journal"—n very obstinate sort of a ltebeloe-- learns that "Professors oCDancine in New York have recently introduced a new style oCcotillun. called the "Kiss cotillon," the peculiar feature of which is that you kiss the lady as you swing cor tiers. The editor is a crusty' sort of person, who , never danecs,,hot says he )vuuld not mind waiving his objectiOns to the must:molt so far as to "swing corners," now aud then, in this coti lion ! gel fiat scampi : • • WA lady NshAiit C,Artastc:C the vocabulary of names for her nutucrous daughters, named the last "Aim-so-1 4 011W' - } —Di,. e ast s..mew•hgro, the times .are, SO hard that till) . 4110Wii" cannot cyan 'tag, their ad dresses tho"gals.'? CiT' , .Wheii 1 tin a man," is the poetry of child hood ; "Idler I WM young," is the poetry of old egei T' Tont Ili d sttys the more Seotchnten,lhat are horn, the sooner lye will he without lierrings. GRA18811011•IIic • IN W111,A1..-111C Fieti6ll.lts ham (Va.) 'Reporter learns front an Vmpetjrneeti farina on kittnottlianoel, Elroy, that the grogokinii pens lucre attneked the wheat er..ti in thurotimitigity, t ind etttett'it to the avuml in inane 11 ',~ HIT ~~