VOL. 18. TERMS : The wiltrwrrNorioN JOURNAL" it published at the following rot.: If paid hi advance • $1,50 If paid within six montlit after the time of 1,75 If paid nt tho owl of tun year 2,00 And two dollars and lift] cents if not paid till Sifter the expiration of the year. No subscription will he taken for a less ',cried than six months, end no paper will be discontinued, except at the bption of the Editor, until all arrearages are paid. iilbscribers living in distant counties.or in other Ntates, will be required to pay invariably in ad vono, 0-- The above terms will be rigidly adhered to itt all ~..ases. RATES OF ADVERTISING. One ay unreof 10 lines or less For 1 insertion $0,50, For 1 month, $1,23 is 3 ~ 0,73, " 3 " 2,75 v., 3 .i 1,00, " 0 " 5,00 PROEHSSIDEAL CARDS, not exceeding 10 lines, 'and not changed during the year $4,00 CARD and Joun'sAL in advance 5,00 Bunions. CARDS of the same length, not 'changed . - • • $3,00 CARD and JOURNAL, in advance 4,00 sir Short transient advertisements will he ad mitted into our editorial columns at treble the usual rates. On longer adrertlimment3, whether yearly or - transient, a reationablo deduction will ho made Air prompt payment. cyAvinalb. TO MARY. BY GEORGE D. PRENTICE. It is my love's last lay—and soon Its echoes will have died, And thou will hear its low, wild tones, No more pale victim-bride ; I would not, lovely one, that thou Shouldst wrong the heart that deems thee now, Its glory and its pride. I would not thou sliouldst dim with,tears, The vision of ite better years. And yet I love thee I 'Memory's voice Cornea o'er me like the tone Of blossoms; when the dewy leaves In autumn's night-winds moan I love thee still I—that look of thine, Deep in my spirit hath its shrine, And beautiful and lone— And there it glows—that holy form— The rainbow of life's evening storm. Ah, dear ono, when I gaze on thee, So pallid, sweet and frail, And muse upon that cheek, I well Can read its mournful tale. I know the dews ofmemory oft • Are falling, beautiful and soft Upon love's blossom pale; I know that tears thou fain wouldst hide, Ara on thy lids, sweet victim•bride. I, too, have wept. Ton moon's pale light Has round my pillow strayed, While I was mourning o'er the dreams That bloomed not to fade The memory of each holy eve, To which our burning spirits cleave, Seems like some stars sweet shade, That once shone bright and pure on high; But now has parted from the sky. Immortal visions of the heart! Again, again, farewell I will not listen to the tone!, That in wild music, swell From that dim past. Those tones now fade, And leave me nothing but the shade The cypress and the knell Adieu—adieu I—my task is done! And now—God bless thee, gentle one. g321313LWN IirE2DLITM. The Wonder of Books. " No volume ever commanded such a profu sion of readers, or was translated into so many languages; such is the universality of its spirit that no book loses less by translation, none has been so frequently copied in manuscript, and none so often printed. King and noble, peas ant and pauper, are delighted students of its pages; philosophers have humbly gleaned from it; and legislation has been thankfully indebted to it. Its stories charm the child, its hopes spirit the aged, and its promises soothe the bed of death. The maiden is wedded under its sanction, and the grave is closed under its com forting assurances. Its lessons arc the essence of religion, the seminal truths of theology, the first principles of morals, and the guiding ax ioms of political economy. Martyrs have often bled, and been burnt for attachment to it. It is the theme of universal appeal; in the entire range of literature no book is so frequently quoted or referred to. The majority of all books ever published have been in connection with it. The Fathers commented upon it, and the subtle divines of the Middle Ages refined upon its doctrines. It sustained Origeu's scholarship and Chrysostom's rhetoric; it whet ted the penetration of Abelard, and exercised the keen ingenuity of Aquinas. It gave life to the revival of lettere, and Dante and Petrarch reveled in its pages and imagery. It augment ed the erudition of Erasmus, and roused avid blessed the intrepidity of Luther. Its temples are the finest specimens of architecture, and the brightest triumphs of music are associated with its poetry. The text of no ancient author has summoned into operation such an amount of labor and learning; and it has furnished oc casion for the most masterly examples of criti cism and comment, grammatical investigation and logical analysis. It has inspired the En glish muse with her loftiest strains; its beams gladdened Milton in his darkness, and cheered the song of Cowper in his sadness. It was she star which guided Columbus to the discovery of a new world. It furnishes the panoply of Puritan valor which shivered tyranny in days gone by. It is the Magna Charta of the world's regeneration and liberties. Such benefactors as Neff, Franck°, Schwartz a id Howard, the departed Chalmers and the living Shaftesbury, are cast in the mould of the Bible. The re cords of Use religion, front the Koran to the Book of Mormon, have owned its superiority, and surreptitiously purloined its jewels. Among the Christian classics, it loaded the treasures of Owen, charged the fullness of Hooker, barbed the point of Baxter, gave colors to the Follette and sweep to the pencil of Bunyan, enriched the fragrant fancy of Taylor, sustained the lof tiness of Howe, and strung the plummet of bdwards. In short, this collection of artless lives sad letters has changed the face of the f , , y., 4 :r.• ?.,, ' ';', ' ~ ' , t*. I I ; ..z. , ' ';,, .:.4, :.,;,. , A . 1 ~ 1. . ':, ' --"..-- ----"*--- " I SEE NO STAR ABOVE VIE HORIZON, PROMISING MORT TO GUIDE lIS, BUT THE INTELLIGENT, PATRIOTIC, UNITED WIIIG PARTY Or TILE UNITED STATES."- tWEBSTER: world, and ennobled myriads of its population. Finally, and to show the contrast, while mil lions hid it welcome, the mere idea of its circu lation causes the Popo to tremble on his throne, and brings fearful curses to his quivering lips!'—Scolch Journal. And this is the book which the moral phil anthropists and Popish incendiaries are expel ling from our schools, colleges, and from our family firesides. The Pope and the Devil, the Priest and False Prophet, the Monk and the Jesuit, the Confessor and the Cardinal, the Kings of the East and the Emperor of France —a motley group—onward they march; six abreast, while Death on the • Pale Horse is, prancing in their train, and all Hell follow af ter. They have set themselves against the Lori and against his Word, and they will pre vail for a'seation, for the battle of Armagudden is yet to be fought. I think it was in 1805 or '6 we received the news that Bonaparte, in one of his triumphal entries, had carried the-Pope a captive into captivity, and lodged bins in some jail or cas tle by the way-side. Next night, at a social meeting—Dr. Mason being present and service being ended—the news just arrived was the topic of conversation. A canny auld Scotch man remarked, "Now we may rejoice, for Ba bylon the Great is fallen, never more to rise. We'll see now if lie can open the lock on the prison door with the keys of St. Peter jingling in his pouch! lam pure, if he can't open that door, nobody will believe he can either shut bell or open heaven." Dr. Mason remarked, "I am quite of your opinion. The Beast has received a severe wound, but this wound will be healed. My opinion is that the Church has yet to see her worst days. Popish darkness will cover the earth, and gross darknese the people, our own included, before the great and terrible day of the Lord shall cense." A mem ber remarked that he thought our institutions would repel everything like Pripish supremacy. The Doctor replied, "I think it is just these in stitutions which will open the sluice-gates, and Popery will come in like a flood, overwhelming every opponent. Our leaders, all aspiring to supremacy, will court the rabble; and I much fear that, before the close of the 19th century, the name of a republic will be known only in history." I thought last year, when each of the aspi rants for the Presidency was courting favor from the Catholic voters that Dr. Mason was a prophet, and more than a prophet. I have thought every week since the first of January, 1851, when I saw the hordes of wild, ignorant, sarage.looking Catholics from the shambles of Europe vomited on our shores from the holds of our packets—l say, when I viewed this great sight, thinks I to myself, before the year 1888, the Pope, the Devil, .d the Ghost of Tom Paine, will ride rough-shod over all the Bibles in America. GRANT THORDURN. ©~3'~~3~~71737M3y From Goday's Lady's Book. Three Scenes in the Life of a Worlding. BY T. S. ARTIWIt. SCENE FIRST. "It is vain to urge me, brother Robert. Out into the world I most go. The impulse is on me. I should die of inaction here." "You need not be inactive. There is work to do. I shall never be idle." "And such work I Delving in and grovel. ling close to the very ground. And for what? Oh no, Robert. My ambition soars beyond `your quiet cottage in a sheltered vale.' My appetite craves something more than simple herbs and water from the brook. I have set my heart on attaining wealth; and where there is a will, there is always a way." "Contentment is better than wealth," "A proverb for drones." "No, William; it is a proverb for the wise." "Be it for the wise or simple as commonly understood, it is no proverb for me. As a poor plodder along the way of life, it were impossi ble for me to know content. So urge me no fahher, Robert. lam going out into the world a wealth.seeker, and not until wealth is gained do I propose to return." "What of Ellen, William?" The young man turned quickly towards his brother, visibly disturbed, and fixed his eyes upon him with an earnest expression. "I love her as my life," he said; with a strong emphasis on his words," "Do you love wealth more than life, Wil liam?" "Robert!" "If you love Ellen as your life, and leave her for the sake of getting 4ches ; then you must love money more than life." "Don't talk to me after this fashion. I can not bear it. I love Ellen tenderly and truly. lam going forth as well for her sake as my own. In all the good fortune that comes as the meed of effort, she will be a sharer." "You will see her before you leave us?" "No. I will neither pain her nor myself by a parting interview. Send her this letter and this ring." A few hours later, and the brothers stood with tightly grasped hands, gazing into each other's faces. "Farewell, Robert." "Farewell, William. Think of the old home stead as still your home. Though it is mine, -in the division of our patrimony, let your heart come back to it as yours. Think of it as home; and should fortune cheat you with the apples of Sodom, return to it again. Its doors will over be open, and its hearth•fire bright for you at of old. Farewell." And they turned from each other, one going oat into the restless world; an eager seeker for its wealth and honors; the other to linger among the pleasant places dear to him by every association of childhood, there to fill up the measure of his days—not idly, for he was no drone in the social hire. Ou the avening of that day two inttidone sat HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1853. alone, each in the sanctuary of her own cham ber. There was n warm glow 'on the cheeks of one, and a glad light in her eyes. Pale was the other's face, and wet her drooping lashes. And she that sorrowed held an open letter in her hand. It was full of tender wordS; but the writer loved wealth more than the maiden, and had gone forth to seek the mistress of his soul. He would 'come back," but when? Ah, what a veil of uncertainty was upon the future?— Poor stricken hearth The other maiden—she of the glowing cheeks and dancing eyes—held also a letter in her hand. It was from 'the brother of the wealth-maker; and it was also full of loving words; and it is said that, on the morrow, be Would come to bear her as a bride to his pleasant home. Happy maiden I SCENE SECOND, Ten years have passed. And what of' the wealth-seeker? Has he won the the glittering prize? What of the pale.fliced maiden ho left in tears? Has he returned to her? Does she share now his wealth and honor? Not since the day ho went forth from the home of child hood has a word of intelligence from the wan derer been received, and to those he left be hind him, he is now as ono who has passed the final bourne. Yet ho still dwells among the living. In a tar away, sunny clime, stands a .stately mansion. We will not linger to describe the elegant.exterior, to hold up before the reader's imagination a picture of rural beauty, exqui sitely heightened by art, but enter its spacious hall, and pass up to one of its most luxurious chambers. How hushed and solemn the perva ding atmosphere! The inmates, few in num ber, are grouped around ono on whose white forehead Time's trembling finger has written the word "Death." Over her bends a manly form. There—his face is towards you. Ali! You recognize the wanderer—the wealth-seek er. What does he here? What to him is the dying one? His wife! And has he, then, for gotten the maiden whose dark lashes lay wet on her pale cheeks for ninny hours after she read his parting words? Ho has not forgotten, but been false to her. Eagerly sought he the prize, to contend for which he went forth.— Years camo and departed; yet still hope mock ed him with her attractive and bright illusions. To-day, he stood with his hand just ready to seize the object of his wishes, to-morrow a shadow mocked him. At last in an evil hour, be bowed down his manhood prostrate even to the dust in mammon worship, and took to him self a bride, rich in golden attractions, but poorer as a woman than ever the beggar at her father's gate. What a thorn in his side she proved! A thorn ever sharp and ever piercing. The closer he attempted to draw her to his bo som, the deeper went the points into his own, until, in the anguish of his soul, again and again ho flung her passionately from him. Five years of such a life! Oh, what is there of earthly good to compensate therefore? But, in this last desperate throw, did the worldling gain the wealth, station, and honor be coveted? He had wedded the only child of a man whose treasures might be counted by hundreds of thousands; but, in doing so, ho had failed to se cure the father's approval or confidence. The stern old man regarded him as a mercenary in terloper and ever treated him as such. For five years therefore ho fretted and chafed in the narrow prison whose gilded bars his own hands had forged. How often, during that time, had his heart wandered back to the dear old home, and the beloved ones with whom he had passed his early years? And eh! how many, many times came between him and the almost hated countenance of his wife the gen tle, loving face of that one to whom he had been false! How often her soft blue eyes res ted on his own! How often Ito started and looked up suddenly, as if her sweet voice came floating on the airl And so the years moved on, the chain gol fing more deeply, and a bitter sense of humili ation as well as bondage robbed him of all pleasures in life. Thus it is with him when, after ten years, we find him waiting in the chamber of death, for the stroke that is to break the fetters that so long have bound him. It has &lien. He is free again. In dying, the sufferer made no sign. Suddenly she plunged into the dark profound, so impenetrable to mortal eyes, and as the turbid waves closed, sighing over her, he who had called her wife turned from the couch on which her frail body remained, with an inward "thank God! I am a man again !" One more bitter Greg yet remained for his cup. Not a week had gone by, ere the father of his dead wife spoke to him these cutting words— You were nothing to me while my daughter lived—you are less than nothing now. It was my wealth, not my child that you loved. She has passed away. What affection would have given her, dislike will never bestow on you.— Henceforth we are strangers." When next the sun went down on that Mate ly mansion, which the wealth-seeker had cov eted, he was a wanderer again—poor humili ated, broken in spirit. How bitter had been the mockery of all his early hopes How terrible the punishment ho had suffered. SCENE THIRD, Ono more eager, almost fierce struggle with alluring fortune, in which the wedding came near steeping his soul in crime, and thou fruit less ambition died in his bosom. "NI y brother said well," be murmured, an a ray of light fell suddenly on the darkness of his spirit; "contentracut is better than wealth. Dear brother! Dear old home! Sweet Ellen ! Ah, why did I leave you ? Too late! too late I A cup, full of the wine of life, was at my lips ; but I turned my head away. asking fur a more fiery and exciting draught. How vividly comes before me now that parting scene! I am looking into my brother's face. I feel the tight grasp of his hand. His voice is in my ear,. Peer brother! And his parting work., I hear them now, even more earnestly than when they were first spiken. ( Should fortune cheat you with the apples of Sodom, return to your home again. Its doors will ever be open, and its hearth fires bright for you as Of old' Ah, do the fres still burn ? How many years have passed since I went forth I And Ellen ? But I dare not think of her. It is too late.— Even if she be living and unchanged in her af feetions, I can never lay this false heart ut her feet. Her look of love would smite me as with a whip of scorpions.', The step of time had fallen so lightly on the flowry petit of those to whom contentment was n higher &ton than wealth, that few foot marks were visible. Yet there had been chan ges in the old homestead. As the smiling years went by, .each, as it looked in at the cot tage window, saw the home eke% widening, or new beauty crowning the angel brows of happy children. No thorn in his side • had Robert's gentle wife proved. As time passed on, closer and closer was she drawn to his be. som ; yet never a point had pierced him. Their home was a type of paradise. It is near the close of a summer day. 'the evening meal is spread, and they are about gathering around the table, when a stranger enters. His words are vague and brief, his manner singular, his air slightly mysterious.— Furtive, yet eager glances go from face to face. "Arc all these your children 7" ho asks, sur• prise and admiration mingling in his tones. "All ours. And, thank God I the little flock is vet unbroken." The stranger averts his face. He is disturbed by emotions that it is impossiiile to conceal. "Contentment is better than wealth," ho mur• murs. "Oh that I bad early comprehended this truth." The words were not meant for others; but the utterance has been too distinct. They have reached the ears of Robert, who instantly recognizes in the stranger his long wandering, long mourned brother. "William I" How the stranger starts and trembles. Ile had seen, in the quiet maiden moving among and ministering to the children so unobtrusive. ly, the one he had parted from years before— the ono to whom he had been so false. But her voice has startled his ears with the familiar tones of yesterday. "Ellen !" Hero is an instant oblivion of all the intervening years. He has leaped back over the gloomy gulf, and stands now as he stood ere ambition and lust for gold lured him away from the aide of his first and only love,— It is well both for him and the faithful maiden that he can soon forget the past as to take her in his arms and clasp her almost wildly to his heart. But for this, conscious slum% would have betrayed his deeply repented perfidy. And here welenve them, reader. "Content ment is better than wealth." So the worlding proved, after a bitter experience, which may you be spared ! It is far better to realize a truth perceptively and thence make it a rule of action, than to prove its variety in a life of sharp agony. But how few are able to rise into such a realization! A Swimming Excursion, A somewhat novel affair occurred at the bathing establishment of Dr. Rob, at Hartford, Connecticut, on the 13th ultimo. The Hart ford Times states about two thousand persons, male and female, were present, and that the river for a long distance was filled with boats, giving to the whole scene quite a Venitian ap pearance: "Seventeen swimmers entered the lists—nine Americans and eight Germans. Owing to the late hour at which the bands of music arrived, the sport did not begin in time to introduce the "floating supper tables," as had been announ ced. The swimmers started from the railroad bridge, at the signal of a discharge of a pistol, and swam down to a point opposite the bathing establishment—distance nearly a mile. They came down the river in floe style, displaying a strength and grace of action in the water that would have honored the most adroit of tho amphibious natives of the Polynesian islands." "The party started, we believe with no inten tion of a race, but the cheering and urging of the people its the boats led them on to a trail of their speed, and they dashed through the water at a fast rate. We did not learn the precise time made, but it must lave been very good.— Mr. Ulrich Moll a German, came in ahead.— He was followed next in order by a Yankee; whose name we did eel learn. Joseph R. Hawley, Esq., was third in the race, having started behind several ant passed many others. The fourth best swimmer appeared to be Her mann Maerchlem, one of cur German citizens. l%e rest all came in in good style, having per formed the long distance it a very short time. A prize will be presented to Mr. Moll. Cure fur Yellov Fever. The newspapers of Britisi Guiana contain accounts of the discovery ofa remedy for that scourge of tropical America, the yellow fever. The discovery was made at Angostura, in Ven cznela, or, as the city is nos• called, Cindad Bolivar. The remedy is the plant vervain or verbena, which grows abundantly in that region. The expressed juice of the leave,, given in small doses three times a day, whiten enema of the same every two hours, is stated to be a perfect cure for the yellow fever and black vomit, even in their most threatening stakes. All the phy. sicians of Angostura have niopted this treat ment of the disease, and the , state that hardly any deaths occur under its itfluence. This in formation is furnished by Jr. Mathison, the British Vice Consul at the shove place. The varieties of the verbena, groniug in the warm and temperate regions of the Western World, are numerous. The partictlar species referred to above, is that known to botanists by the name of verbena jamaieensit. It is a native of the West India islands, a, well as of the con tinent. There are two kints of it--the male and the female; abe latter is the one used as above. Dan Rice and the Hoosier. Like all other celebrities, Dan has some fun ny tales afloat about him. Among others is the following: Connected with his hippodrome he has two comic trained mules, whose perfor 'notices are the . source Of a great deal ofamuse• ment to the visitors of his show. One of these animals, both of which are very small and active, Dan has trained to throw all who mount him, and it is his usual practice to Invite some of the audience to show their eques trian abilities by riding the donkey, sometimes offering a reward to any who will attempt it— which generally ends in an amusing scene to', the audience, and results by the adventurous Individuals being thrown, which is of course the climax of the joke. None enjoy the whole pro ceedings more than the great clown himself.— Bat once in a while the mule meets with a hard customer, on which occasion Dan becomes a little excited. On the occasion we are about to mention, the mules were brought in as an after-piece.— Among the audience was a tall, lank, and awk ward looking individual, who, by reason of sundry imbibings of spiritual comfort, had be come a little joyful and up to fun, and after ono or two boys had been thrown, concluded he would try his chance with the mule. So be stepped into the ring, and asked Dan's permis sion to mount: he received it, and mounted, and 'mid the laughter of the audience rode round the ring. Suddenly the mule paused in his mad career, and our adventurer found himself on the ground, where he had been safely land ed, he could not exactly tell how. Nothing daunted, however, he wished to try again, and being somewhat spunky pulled out his pocket book, and offered to bet 525 that the mule couldn't throw him a second time. Yielding to the cries of the audience, and his own love of fun, Dan accepted the wager, and the money was staked. The hoosier was once more seat ed, and this time wound his legs beneath the belly of the animal, and off he started around the ring. • • • Contrary, however, to all expectation, he re sisted every effort of the mule to dismount him. Dan became excited. The mule turned and twisted, jumped, ran at full speed, stopped suddenly, jerked, and did everything he could to throw his rider; but like an incubus he stuck to him. Dan was completely at fault, stopped his efforts, and scratching his head, looked first at his mule and then at his rider, the mule seeming to strive to convey to Ids master the idea that this time they had caught a Tartar. At a signal from Dan, the mule suddenly drop. ped on the ground, and rolling over and over strove to rid himself of his tormentor. But like the old man in Synbad the Sailor, ho clung to hini: At last the mule gave it up for a bad !job, and rising to his feet doggedly refused to make another effort, while the hosier very composedly put the tip of his thumb to the end of his nose, and working his digits, while with the other hand he performed sundry hand organ gyrations in the air, mumbled out, "you can't come it old boss, so hand over the flim sies." Dan, with a most comical lugubrious coup• tenance, in which vexation and good nature struggled for the mnstery, acknowledged him self beaten, and giving the money to the win ner, shook hands with him and invited him to his bout after the performance. With loud huzzns for Dan Rice and his mule, of which the hosier came in for a share, the audience departed, and the last was seen of the jester and his new friend, they were arm in arm, searching fur a place where they could procure something to drinlc a better acquaintance.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Seven Ancient Wonders. These were the first. The brass:Colossus of Rhodes, 120 ft. high, built by Cares, A. D., 288, occupying 12 years in making, It stood across the harbor ofßhodes 66 years, and was thrown down by an earthquake. It was bought by a Jew from the Siracons, who loaded 900 camels with the brass. 2d. The pyramids of Egypt.— The laigest one engaged 360,000 workmen 30 years. 3d. Tho Aqueducts of Rome, invented by Appius Claudia. 4th. The Labyrinth of Psalmetiehus, on the banks of the Nilo, contain ing within ono wall 1000 houses, and 12 royal palaces, all covered with marble, and having only ono entrance. The building was said to contain 300 chambers, and a hall built of mar. ble, adorned with the statutes of the gods. sth. The Pharos of Alexandria, a tower built by or der of Ptolemy Philatielphus, in the year 282, B. C. It was erected as a light house, and con taining magnificent galleries ern; arble—a large lantern at the top of which was seen near one' s 100 miles off; mirrors of enormous sizes were fixed round the galleries, reflecting everything on the sea. A common tower is now erected in its place. 6th. The walls of Babylon, built by order of Semiramis, or Nebuchadnezzar, and finished in one year by 200,000 men.— They were of immense thickness. 7th. The temple, of Diana, at Ephesus, completed in the reign of Servius, the 6th King of Rome. It was 440 feet long, 200 broad, and supported by 120 marble pillars, 70 feet high. Tho beams and doors were of Cedar, the rest of the timber of Cyprus. It was destroyed by fire B. C. 365. An Appeal to the Young. A young man has lately been convicted in Virginia of robbing the mail, and has been sentenced to the Penitentiary. There is an affecting and melancholy incident connected with this young man's criminal history, which goes to exhibit the strength of parental affec tion. When the father heard that his son had been arrested on the charge of robbing the mail, ho exclaimed, "Have my gray hairs come to this I" and then fell. Hewes taken to his bed and died in a few days of a broken heart. If the young would not bring the gray hairs of their parents to the grave in sorrow, let them avoid the very firtt enticement to sin. Once on the downward path, they know not where Ilry will stop. Don't Stand on the Track. "The train," says n Railroad Gazette, "may steal suddenly upon you, and then a little trepi• dation, a slight mistep, a slip of the foot, and we shudder to think of your Crushed and bleed• ing body." So it is in the journey of life; per ils are around you on every hand. But don't stand in their path and disregard them. Per haps you now and then take a little intoxica ting drink. My friend, if so, "you are standing on the track" while the cars of retribution come thundering on—moving in right line—ap proaching with steady and rapid wheels. Will it not bear down and crush you ? Perhaps you spend an occasional evening with a party of friends, amusing yourself with cards or dice; staking small sums to make the game interest ing. My friend, "you are standing on the track." Thousands have stood there and per ished. Don't wait to hear the rattling of the rushing wheels, but fly from the track. At a safe distance stand and view the wreck, which the ponderous train will spread before you.— Look well to the ground on which you plant your feet, and forget not for these many days our parting words, "Don't stand on the track." Secret of Happiness. An Italian Bishop, who had struggled tbrog'h many difficulties without repining, and had been much oppoSed without manifesting imps. tience, being asked by a friend to communicate the secret of his being always so happy, replied: "It consists in a single thing, and that is, ma king a right use of my eyes. In whatsoever state I am,sl first of all look up to haven, and remember that my great business is to get there. I then look down upon the ca7th, and call to mind how short a space I shall soon fill in it. I then look abroad in the world and see what multitudes are, in all respects, less hap. py than myself. And then 1 learn where true happiness is placed, where all my cares moat end, and how little reason I ever had to mur mur or be otherwise than thankful. And to live in this spirit," said the old Bishop, "is to bo always happy." Begin Right If you are about to do a piece of work, you will ho careful to begin right; otherwise, you will have to take it in pieces, and.do it over again. If you are going on a journey, you will be careful, at first, to get into the right road; for, if you start wrong, you will • be continually going farther and farther out of the way. Now, you are starting in life, and life is a journey. If you start wrong, as I said you will bo all the time going out of the way. You have a life work to do; but if TM begin it wrong, all your labor will be lost. Not only will you have to do it all over again, but to un do what you have already done. A Wall Around the Heart. The habit of obedience or submission to rightful authority, is the foundationstone of the character of the good boy. To obey is the first lesson to be impressed upon the child, and long before he reaches his tenth year, the habit of obedience should be a part of his very nature. Nearly all the other virtues and graces of char acter depend upon the existence of this habit: and if it is wanting, the heart is thrown open to a rude train of vices, which seldom fail to take possession of the citidel. Obedience is a wall around the heart. So long as it stands, all is safe; but let even a small breach be made, and the enemy will begin to pour in. The True Wife. He cannot be nn unhappy man who has the love and smile of a woman to accompany him in every department of life. The world may look sad and cheerless, enemies may gather in his path, but when ho returns to the fireside and sees the lender love of a woman, ho for gets his cares and troubles, and is comparative ly a happy man. He is not prepared for the journey of life who is without a companion, who will forsake him in no emergency—who will divide his sorrows—increase his joys— lift the veil from his heart, and throw sunshine amid the darkest scenes. No man can be mis erable who has such a companion, be ho ever so poor, despised, and trodden upon by the world. A Beautiful Compliment. Steels paid the finest compliment to a wo man that perhaps was ever offered. Of one woman, whom Congreve had also admired and celebrated, ho says that "to kayo loved her was a liberal education." "How often,' ho says, dedicating a volume to his wife, has your ten• derness removed pain from my sick head—how often anguish from my afflicted heart. If there are such things as guardian angels, they are thus employed. I cannot believe one of them to be better in inclination, or more charming in form than my witb:' His breast seems to warm and his eyes to kindle when he mecti with a good and beautiful woman, and it is with his heart as well as with his hat that he salutes her. Fox TOT a TYP of my existence, give me an }," said a printer to his sweetheart. She immediately mado a planted her pique between his ll's, nearly put. ting a to his existence. "Such an outrage," was tho l of Faust, looking if at her, is prob• ably without a 0 in this lf. " lof country, and is a good subject for a Jer re character, manner, and style, the supreme excellency is simplicity. 1 The future destiny of a child is always the work of the mother.—BONAPARTIL Bee We cannot be too zealous in promoting a good cause. tel. If you wish to make yourself a favorite with your neighbors, buy a dog and tie him up in the relar or yard at night. They won't sleep any all that night, thinking of you. VS-The best definition of removal from office is given us by a Whig friend, who says he 'has reeeiTed an utlimited lea , e of absence." NO, 35. wEizamlolgg. *hoes your Hoes, Somo years singe when the State.of Missou ri was considered "Far West," there lived on the hanks of the river of the seine game of the State, a substantial farmer ;'who, by years of toil, had accumulated a tolerably pretty pile of casting, owing, as he said, principally to the fact that he didn't raise much taters and un nns, hut rite unhurt corn. This &ruler, hear ing that good land was much cheaper further South, concluded to move there. ,Accortling ly. he provided'his eldest son with a good horse, and a sufficiency of the needful to defray his travelling and contingent expenses, and instuc ted him to purchase two hundred acres of good land, at the lowest possible price, and return immediately home. The next day Teems star ted for Arkansas, and after an absence of some six weeks, returned home. .Teems," said the old man, '*how'd you find land in Arkansaw ?" 'Tolerably cheap, dad.' 'You didn't buy 'open two hundred acres, did you, Jeems ?, 'No, dad, over two hundred, /reckon' 'How:much money hey yu got left?' 'Nory red cent, dud; cleaned rite out!' 'Why, I had no idea trayelin' was so 'spun sire in them parts,' Jeems.' 'Wel; just try won'st an' you'll find out; reckon' 'Wal, ne-rer mind that; let's hear 'bout the an—but war's your how 'Why, you see, dad, I was a gain' along one day—' 'But war's your boss ?' 'You hole on, dad, and I'll tell you all about it. You see, I was agoin' along, one day, and I met tufeller as said he was gone my Way Cu.' 'But war's your Ness?' '•Dod-darn my hide, if you don't shut up, dad I'll never git to the hoes. Wall, as we was both goin' the same way, me an' this feller jined company, au' about noon we hitched our crit ters •aud set down aside or a branch, and went to eatin' a smack. Arter we'd got through, this feller set to me, 'Try a drap or this ere red eye, stranger." Wall, I don't mind,' sea I-" "But war's your boss?" "Kumin' to him bime-by, dad. So me and this feller sot thar, sorter torkin' and drinkin' an' he set, 'Stranger, let's play a little game uv seven np,' a takin' out uv his pocket a rreasv roun'coruered deck Sr cards. 'Don't kber if I du,' set I. Sn we sot up side uv a stump. and commene'd to bet a quarter up, and I was slayin' hint orful ?" ',But war's your hors?" • ‘ l lCumin' tibial, dad. Bletnby luck chang ed, and ho got to winnin,' and pretty soon I hadn't nary quarter. Then sez he„ Strang,r, I'll give you a chance to git even, and play you one more game.' Wel, we both played rite tile that game, I aware, an' we was both six nn' six, an'=—".. ‘. War's 'your hoss." "Kumin to him, dad. 'Co was six an' six, an"twas his deal-" "IVIII you tell me war's your loss:" said the old man, gelling riled. '•\Ve was six and six. I leeld all four aces and begged, daddy, and he turned up the Jack I" "But war's your boss ?" 'Why the Stranger won him a turnite up that Jack!" A Hopeful Youth. Last wool( the Swampecot Dorcas Sewing Society hold their annual meeting, and on mo tion it was resolved, That our parson wait on Tony Jones, and see if nothing can bo done to correct the manners of young Tony. The next day the parson waited on Tony senior, and informed him respecting the object of his visit. Tony listened patiently, and then replied. . _ ."Parson, I'd let Tony go to meetin' every Sunday, if I only knowed you was goin' to preach, but parson, there ain't a body in the city of Swampscot what's got more manners than my Tone, and I can convince you of that in just a minit. You see Tony out there skin. in'them nifferar The parson nodded assent. "Now see, I'll call." And raising his voice to the highest pitch, he shouted— 'Tony." The response was quick and loud, "Sir." "Don't you hear that, parson ?" said the old man. "Don't You call that manners?" "That is all very well," sail "as Sir ns it goes." '•What do yon mean by as far as it goes?-- That boy, sir, always speaks respectfully to me when / call him," then raising his voice he again enlled— "Tony." The response "Sir," was equally loud and prompt. Again the old man called— 'Tony." The boy dropped a half-dressed fish, and shaking his fist at his sire yelled out : "You miserable, black, old, drunken snob, I'll come in there in two minutes, and maul you like blazes!" The parson was astonished, the old man was disconcerted for a moment, but instantly re covering himself, he tapped the parson on the shoulder, saying, _ _ , "You see, parson, my boy has zot "grit" as well as manners. That' chap will he an orna• went to your society ono of these days." I need not add that Futon incontinently mizzled. The Toll of an Ass. When the Lord Kaimes went to Aberdeer, BA judge upon the circuit, he took up his quar ters at a good tavern; and being fatigued and pensive alter dinner, he inquired of the land lord if there were any learned men in the neighborhood who would favor him with their company over a glass of wine. The landlord informed him that the pmfessor of mathema tics lived close by; and the Lord of Sessions sent his eompliMent3. The professor was not, Only eminent in science, but of various and lively conversation, though he had the defect of La Fontaine and Thompson, both great poets —that of a stupid and dull appearance, before it became enlivened by wino and company.— After a respectful bow, he took his seat and looked et the lire, quite immersed in some pro.' Went he had left. Two glasses of wine were filled and drank in complete silence. Lord Kaimes, to begin the conversation, said—, have just passed your new bridge, wholly constructed of white granite. What may have been the cost?" "Can't say," was the dry answer of the math ematican, who still looked nt the fire. My lord, surprised, piqued, said, "T ease a board put up of all the tolls to be paid by car riages and animals; will you be so good as to inform me what is the toll &an ass?" The professor. as if awakenel - erm a dream quickly retorted-- "I do not pretend to kunw; hut when your lordship repasses, the toll walleye cannot fail to inform you." Onr learnedjudge starting up' and . taking him by the hand exclaimed— " You are my man I" And they then began and had a long and an. imated conversation. Tbiamaketoutthecoluppn