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One square of 16 lines or less For 1 insertion $0,50, For 1 month, $1,25 IC 2 4t 0,75, " 3 " 2,75 " 3 " 1,00, I. 6 " 5,00 , PROEVISMEAL CAnne,notoxceeding 10 lines, mid not changed daring the year $4,00 CARD and JOURNAL in advance 5 200 BUSINESS CARDS of the aurae, length, not *hanged • ••• $3,00 fLtan and JounNAL, in advance 4,00 Cr Short transient advertisements will be ad mitted hits our editorial columns at treble the usual rates. On Inier advertisements, whether yearly or transient, a reasonable deduction will . he made for prompt payment. P@Wirtal. Trne Freedom, and How to Gain It. BY CHARLES MACKAY. We wont no flag, or flauntinerag, For LIBERTY to fight; We want no blaze of murderous guns, To struggle for the right. Our spears and swords are printed words, 'The mind our battle plain; We've won such victories before, AND SO WE SHALL AGAIN. We love no triumphs sprung or force— They stain her brightest cause; 'Tii not in blood that liberty Inscribes her civil laws. She writes them on the people's heart In language clear and plain; True thoughts have moved the world before, AND so TOOT SHALL AGAIN, We yield to none in earnest love Of freedom's cause sublime: We join the cry "FnAntawaryl" We keep the march of Time. And yet we grasp, nor pike, nor spear, Our victories to obtain; We've won without their aid before, AND so WO SHALL AGAIN. We want no aid of barricado To shown front of wrong; We havo a citadel in truth, Moro durable and strong. Cairn words, great thoughts, unflinching faith, Have never striv'n in vain: They've won our I.ttles many n time, AND SO THEY SHALL Pence, progress. knowledge. brotherhood— The ignorant may sneer, The bad deny, but we rely To see their triumph near. • No widow's groans shall load our cause, No blood of brethern slain: We've won without such aid before, AND $O WE nituLL AGAIN. The Death of Innocence. She bloomed in beauty like the rose, The fairest of earth's diadem; ~ ,.?he faded 'mid the winter's snows, And died upon the parent stem. As pales the star upon the brow Of summer's eve she passed away; nee brilliant eye is sunless now, Iler roseate check is cold as clay. No more that voice of melody Shall echo's.sBetest sounds prolong; No more that laugh of sinless glee Shall ring amid that happy throng. The vacant chair beside the hearth Proclaims her loss at evening hour; And they who knew her sterling worth, In silence mourn the faded flower. She diet as sinks the weary anti Upon a mother's breast to sleep, And in her latest dream she smiled; Oh ! who o'er such a death could weep 1 As fells the leaf in autumn's glen, When whisp'ring winds in music play, She died ! and mortals knew not when Her joyous spirit passed away. The Wheel of DT MRS. Z. D. RAYMOND. It was a cold, stormy day in the month of January, that a poor, pale-faced, thinly-clad boy entered the counting-room of a wealthy merchant, and handed hind a note. The boy shivered with the cold, while his looks plainly told how impatiently ho waited for an answer. The merchant glanced. at the nate, and then in an angry tone said to the hey: "Too "Toa may tell your mother that she must either pay me the money, or. vacate the house this week, for I will wait no longer:" "My mother is sick, Mr. Bently, and I wish von would be kind enough to wait one week longer." "I have w lied long enough," said the hard hearted mer ant, "and it she (Ines not pay the rent, she will compelled to leave the house." With tears in his eyes, the little fellow left the place, and regardless of the storm, he her- tied on towards a clothing establishment, where lie was employed as an errand boy; and just as he was about to setter the shop, a hand was laid upon his arm, and as he turned roiled he re cognized a young man whom he had seen sit ting in Mr. Bentley's counting-house. "Are you the boy that just left Mr. Bentley's counting-room P' "I am, air." "What. are you doing here?" "Mr. Martin pays me fire dollars per month for doing chores about the shop." "What kind of work does your mother do?" _"My mother and sister make shirts for a six pence. n piece. When mother in well, we all Can earn enough to. purchase fuel and provi sions sufficient for oar comfort." "But how did you pay the rent before your mother was taken siek 9" _ •'My father was a nuthon by trade, and be done a job of work for Mr. Bentley, and in lien of money, he took a receipt for ais months' rent." 7--- "ighere is your father nu r 11,1 }As! ar at. Huntimbln Tionnall, " I SEE NO STAR ABOVE TUE lIORIZON, PROMISING LIGHT TO GUIDE US, BUT' VIE INTELLIGENT, PATRIOTIC, UNITED WHIG PARTY OP TIIE UNITED STATES.". rived in New York; he had been in this country eighteen months, and last spring he sent home to London for mother and ns children—having the rooms we now occupy furnished for our re ception when we arrived." "Is five dollars all your mother owes Mr. Bentley 7" "It is, sir." "Here, my boy, take this money, and gn to the counting-room and pay your rent. Tell Mr. Bentley it was loaned you by a friend, with. out saying who I am or where you have seen me; and if you are as good a boy as I think you are, you shall know me better hereafter." Before the boy had time to express hisheart. felt gratitude, the stranger was gone; and with a light heart he retraced his steps to the count. ing-room, and took a receipt forth° money.— Then he bounded away towards home to relate his good fortune to'his mother and sister. They all thanked God, and blest the stranger over and over again, before they seated them selves at the table to partake of the scanty meal Lucy had prepared for them. Scarcely had they finished eating when a loud tap was heard et the door, and in a moment more the stranger stood before them. "iiother this is the gentleman who gave me the money to pay the rent," said Henry, at the cam,, time handing him a chair. "Thank you," said the stranger, "I have no time to sit; I merely called to know if your cis• ter would hem a half dozen handkerchiefs for file?" "Most certainly," said Mrs. Willard, "we will do everything in our power to recompense you fur the kindness you have shown us. May I ask your name—and where shall we send the work when it is done ?" _ _ "My name is of little consequence, and when the handkerchiefs are done, I will call here and get them—good night, my friend. I hope to find your health much improved when I call again. Every day for two weeks, a small basket of provisions was brought to the door, directed to Mrs. Willard—and when she questioned the boy that brought them, his only answer was— "they're given you by a friend." Three weeks had passed, and their dream of wonder was broken by the entrance of the stranger. When Lucy handed him the band kerchiefs, he gave her a dollar. "We cannot take this money," said Mrs. Willard, "you have been so kind to us." "Take it, my good woman—it will 'pay your week's rent; and I have some shirts that I would like you to make if you are able." On the following day he brought the shirts, and from that time forth.be became a frequent visitor. He would often spend a whole even ing in teaching Henry and Lucy lessons in ar ithmetic and grammar, which they had not previously a chance to learn. "My dear children," said Mrs. Willard, one evening after the stranger bad left them, "I not sorry that so much of your happiness de pends upon the visits of one we do not know; it is strange that we cannot learn his name— and I sometimes fear that his intentions are not as hottest as we have imagined." "Do not misjudge him, mother," said Lner, "for I am pleased with his company, and be lieve be is a christioo." "Mother is afraid he will run off wills our lit tle hearty." said Henry, laughing. "No, I do not believe that Lucy would in. tentionntly do anything weepy, but Satan is transformed into an angel of light; therefore we should ever be on our guard lest we are deceiv ed by shining colors. It is now nearly a year since our first acquaintance with him, and yet his name and history is a perfect riddle." Another evening came, and the young man was again seated with the little (*.unify engaged in conversation, when the landlord entered the house to collect his rent. When ho received his money he inquired if his son had been there that evening. "Ho has•not—l never saw your son to my lthowledge " said Mrs. Willard. "A friendl told me not five minutes since that he was in this house." "I am here," said the voting man, stepping to the door, "but Mrs. Willard was not aware that my name is Bentley. He wished her good night, saying he would see her again soo. "You will not see her again," said the enra ged father, "and Mrs. Willard can look out for another house as soon as convenient." The father and the son left the place, and walked home in silence; when they were seated in their own sitting room, the old man, trem bling with rage, demanded an explanation of his son's conduct. . ..... "Charles, I am told that you intend to de grade yourself and family by marrying that foreign pauper." "I do intend to marry Lucy Willard wits her consent," said Charles. 'You will not marry her unless you forfeit your claim on my property, for my house shall no longer afford a home to a disobedient child." think I am capable of being myown judge —and while I have my health and my hands to work, I will never have a heartless woman for a few paltry dollars." "If you persist in marrying that girl, you will leave my house forever." He did leave the house that night, and went to a friend, where he engaged a comfortable tenement for Mrs. Willard, and as everything else was settled to their satisfaction, Charles and Lucy were married, and Charles obtained a situation in a wholesale establishment, where he spent eighteen months without ever having passed a word with his father or any of the fil thily. One morning, a clerk informed him that - a gentleman in the counting-room wished to see him; when ho opened the door he was surprised to see his father bowed down with grief and sorrow. "Charles yon are my only son, and I know of no one more worthy my confidence. I came hero to ask your advice; my creditors have seized everything 1 possess, even the furniture its toy house, and I know not what to do or where to go." "Be composed father, I will do all I can for your comfort, and the restoration of your pro perly. Co home with me and get some dinner, and I will see what I can do for yen." When they entered the house. Lucy and her mother cordially welcomed Mr. Bentley to their home, and Charles amused the baby while the women prepared dinner. Scarcely were they seated at the table, when Henry walked into the coons with a letter in his band. "Coed news this morning:, Charles I" "What is it, Henry?" "Our old Uncle Ford, the miser, has died, and left a hundred thousand pounds in the Bank of England, to be diVided between Lucy and myself." "Good news, indeed," said Lucy. She then related Mr. Bentley's misfortunes to her brother, and Henry assured him that they would do all in their power towards the restoration of his property—nnd five months later, Mr. Bentley willingly gave his (laughter to him whom ho would have turned into the street, three years previously, because his mother was sick, and he could not pay him five dollars for house rent. The wheel of fortune had turned. Those thnt were rich became poor, while those that wore poor wore toads rich. tl A r k HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1853. THE SEAMSTRESS, Or, the Value of Labor. • Mrs. 5- was left a widow with several small children. She could think of no way of getting a living for them but by her needle; and as she was a neat sewer, she hoped to get work, and earn food and scant clothing at least. She applied to several, and was still without means of earning a dollar, when the last one was spent. Just at this sad moment, the fact of her destitution becoming known, Mrs. T sent for her. After she is seated the following conversa tion ensues: "Can you do plain sewing?" "Yes, ma'am, as well as most persons." "What is your price for fine shirts?' "I haven't set any price yet, but I will work as low as any one." “But you know that to get work you will have to do it a little lower than ordinary.” "Well, ma'am. I am in want, and will work at almost any price." "I suppose you will make a fine shirt for a quarter?" "Yes, ma'am." "Anil calico dresses for the same?" "Yes, ma'am." "Well that's reasonable." "Boy's common shirts you will not charge' over eleven pence for ?" "No, ma'am." "That's reasonable, and I'll do all I can for you. It gives me pleasure to help the poor.— Come down to-morrow, and I'll have some work ready for you." The widow departed. "Well, wife," said Mr. T—, when he saw the woman depart, "at what price will mho work?" "At just half what Miss It-. charges." "Well, that's something like. It gives me pleasure to befriend any one who is willing to work at a reasonable price. Why this will save us almost a dollar a week, the whole year round. "Yes, if you want it." "Well, I'll do my best. It is shameful what some of those seamstresses charge." Boy's shirts, at 12. cents, were her first pie ces of work. Two of these by hard work she managed to get done in a day. Next morning she was up early, thouodt her head ached badly, and she was faint and weak from baying sat so steadily through the whole preceding day. Her children were taken up, washed and dressed, her rooms cleaned, and a scanty meal of mush and milk prepared for the little ones; and rt cup of ten for herself. Her own stomach refused the food of which her children partook with keen appetites, and she could only swallow a few mouthfuls of dry stale bread. It was nearly 10 o'clock when she got fitirly down to work, her head still aching and almost blinding her. Some how or other she could not get on at all first, and it was long past the usual dinnenhour before she had finished the first garment. After dinner Mrs. S- worked hard, and in touch bodily pain and misery, to finish the other shirt in which the last stick was taken at 9 o'clock at night. Soon after breakfast the next day, she took the shirts home to Mrs. T-, her thoughts mostly occupied with the comfortable food she was to buy hor children with the half dollar she had earned. For it was a sad truth that she load laid out the last half dollar for the meal with which she was making mush for her little ones. After examining every scam, every hem, and every line of stitching,' Mrs. T- expressed approbation of the work, and handed the poor woman a couple of tine shirts for Mr. T and a calico dress for herself. She did not of fer to pay her for the work she had done. At . - ter lingering a few moments. Mrs. 5- ven tured to hint that she would like to have a part of whet she had earned. "Oh, dear, I never pay my seamstresses un til their bills amount to five dollars. It is so troublesome to keep account of small sums.— When you have made five dollars, I will pay you. Mrs. - S— retired, but with a heart that seemed like lead in her bosom. "When shall I earn five dollars—not cor a whole month, at this rate," were the words that formed them selves in her thought. From this state n'igloominesJ she was roused by a knock nt the door, and a pleasant looking lady, somewhat gaily dressed, came in with a small bundle in her hand. She introduced herself by saying that she had just seen tome pretty shirts at Mr. and that she was so much pleased with the work that she hail inquired for the maker. "And having found you," said she, "I want you to make and fit this calico dress for me, if you do such work. "I shall be glad to do it for von," said Mrs. 5-, encouraged by the kind feeling of the lady. dAnd what will you charge?" Mrs. S- hesitated a moment, and then said, "Mrs. T- gives me a quarter of a dol lar.,' There was a bright spot for a moment, on the cheek of the lady. "Then I will give yon three:' said she with warmth. Mrs. S- burst into tears, and could not help it. "Are you in need?" inquired the strange In. dy hesitatingly, but with an air that could not be mistaken. For a moment the widow paused, but the sight of her children conquered the rising em otion of her pride. "I have nothing but a little corn meal in the house, and have no money.'!- A tear glistened in the stranger's eye; her breast heaved with strong emotion, then again all was still. "I will pay you for this dress beforehand, then, and I want it done very nice, and I will pay you a dollar for making it. Can I have it day after to•morrow1" "Certainly ma'am to-morrow evening, if you want it." The dollar was paid down ; and the angel of mercy departed. More than one heart was glad that morning. Cool Operation, The Boston Herald say.; that last Monday night two thieves entered the hotel of A. M. Fuller, No. 36 Portland St., by prying the cel lar deer from its hinges, 101011 they proceeded to the har, took the money drawer hdo the street, sat down on the sidewalk, divided the changed and pocketed the same. Fuller at this time awoke and thrust his head out of the window and asked • 'What are you doing there?' 'None of your business 'Have you been into my bar ?' asked Fuller. 'Yes,' was the reply. • 'Stole all my change, eh?, 'Yes.' 'iV;il just bring it back, and 11l give you bills for it.' 'No, we can't stop now, we are in a Larry to go to bed.' 'Very well,' respondel Fuller, 'l'm rather sleepy myself.' About tWF t,w the roxace !cfl n,r....ctialnit The Twilight of the Heart. "There is an Evening Twilight of the Soul." Yes, the heart hath its twilight—a time when the shadows fall, and the light is dim—a time when retrospection is nwernfully pleasant, and tears, like the evening dewdrops, gently distill. The sunlight may be flashing glorious. ly, or the quiet stars be twinkling in the mid. night sky, but the heart can have its twilight alike in the morning's glow or the midnight gloom. Let the soul but be hushed to silence, and Memory and imagination's busy train fixed on the past, and in its shadowy vistas let terms onceloved appear, and voices long wake again echoes in the heart—let the joys of life's sinless hours. pass before ns, refreshing the mind, by the remembrance of their purity and innocence—let all the aspirators of hope and the bright dreams of youthful ambition be re called, and softened, and mellowed by distance, they will seem brighter than aught the future may promise; and at such moments you will feel that the shadows .of the heart's twilight have fallen upon your spirit. At such mo ments commune with thine own heart and he still—let meditation ply her holy task, and thy reveries, in the sombre light in which thou art shrouded, may waken purer feelings and nobler resolves than all pens, save that of in. spiration—than the lyre of the poet, or the tongue of the eloquent orator. Art thou a lover of wisdom ? Seek it, at such moments, in the pages which the past has written on thy memory. There thou wilt find records which thine own hearts may know; there are springs, at which others may strive to drink, but in vain. Drink, then, copious draughts, and thou wilt confess, when thou at. tainest to self-knowledge, that thou hest not drank in vain. Welcome then, thrice welcome, thou hallow ed twilight I dearer thou art than the closing sluvles of summer's eve to wanderers under whispering boughs near murmuring streams; for in thy dim, mysterious light, we behold forms which meet but the eye of the spirit, and with our own hearts we become strangely famil iar. Such seasons come to all, but not to all do they bring the same blessedness. From the mists of the solemn twilight angels may beckon or demoni frown. To some they may he the harbingers of nights of pence and mornings of sunlight glory; to others of nights of darkness and mornings of storm. Art thou of these to whom such seasons bring no joy ?—a joy in whirls smiles and tears are strangely blended. In the sparkle of the wine-cup, and the mazes of the dance, dost thou flee those hours of thought which are wont to force themselves up on thee? Do the phantoms of the past affright thee Bost thou call oblivion thy friend, and eagerly seek for forgetfulness? Beware! thou art fleeing from that which would befriend thee, and wasting moments infinitely more precious than the pearls dissolved in the goblet of the Egyptian queen. True they may tell of way wardness, nod perchance of rrirne; but like the whispers of angels, they would call thee back from thy wanderings, and point to a destiny in unison with thy noble nature, and the cravings of that spirit whose very desires prove its im• mortality. But thou art of those whom virtue blushes not to own ? If so. thy heart's twilight is not a starless one. Thou shalt. be re-united with the mist•robed forms which seem gliding be fore thee, and thy . tongue shall join in the same anthem with the voices which seem falling on thy spirit's ear. Lo ! even now the stars come forth to the gaze of thy soul—stars brighter than those which look down on earth; they are the stars of hope and promise whirls gem the heaven of God's revelation—they tell of a land of light, where the trees of life ever bloom, and the flowers are unwithcring—where the waters of life's river, flossing from beneath the throne, flash brightly its the beams of an unsetting sun, and twilight gives place to a ceaseless day. An Autumnal Retrospect. These autumn days beget in one's mind re flections. at once sad and attractive. In this season the emereld of forest and field fades by imperceptible degrees into russet brown.— Tluorgh crevice and corner the wind sighs in modnful cadences, as if singing the solemn requiem of the departing year. The naked boughs of trees peep out front their variegated drapery, and the crisp and fallen leaf toys gracefully with the zephyrs—the chilly air creeps stealthily over and among the rustling foilage, and brook and rivulet dashes joyously onward, "making music with the enamelled stones." We have arrived at the end of a season, marked in a peculiar manner, by the visita tions of an angry Providence. Draw-bridges have yawned in the path of steam engines.— The monstrous motor of civilization, scorning the efforts of man to bind it down with steel and iron, has scattered to the winds great ships, and marked the scene of its victories with hecatombs of ghastly corpses. The great lines of comtnunication and travel are red all over, with the blond of martyrs. Opposing trains, in mighty madness, have rushed to each other's embrace, and scarcely can there be found a burial place, in all our land, that is not the resting place of some murdered victim of "disastrous accident." There are vacant places at many a board and desolation at many a hearth-stone, where sorrow was unknown, when the spring flowers blossomed in our northern homes. Yonder in a beautiful Southern city, strong man and maiden have gone down before the breath of the pestilence. No sound disturbs the noiseless monotony of its streets, save the slow rumbling of a funeral cortege, that winds towards "the cities of the dead." Plague stricken and dismayed, tho dying population have carried with them the mtasma of death to sister States, and the valley of tho great "Father of Waters" is a Golgotha, as bane ful as the Upas tree—death-dealing like the Sirocco. No sprinkling of the door post or lintel, stops the entrance of the destroying Angel. It takes the millionaire from the palace, and the sot from the hovel. It scorns the barriers of rank and social position. It counts among its victims , the beauty of the hareem and the painted prostitute—the high and the low—the master and the slave. the vehicles of trade are freighted with tho k—thecmain air comes to us tainted with fever.— root fear is abroad in the land. At the ex. lenge board and the council chamber, at the church door and in the parlor—it drives out cverp topic. Knots of men standing ut the street corners `Whisper with while lips—it comes I it comes Anxious friends read the daily lists of the dead, trembling lest the name or the loved one is there. Charity has flowed into the devoted city in plenteous streams, Communities robust with health, have held out their hands to aid the distresses of brethren, and jealous sections have forgotten the heats of party strife, in a generoui rivalry of alms•giving. Such is the fearful - retrospect. It has been a year clouded with gloomy memories. Death, the great reaper, has gone 'into the harvest, and has,come back loaded with spoils. Front the Pretldential mansion to the rudest hamlet on oar western frontier, he has selected, with unsparing band, his countless victims. We doubt if another year, so deeply dyed with gore can I, c,r . !,!4tnr , .. .PiVrt R. Decision of Character. Decision of character is that firmness and activity of mind by which . we are enabled to decide and act; and to overcome the diffusulties and resist the temptations of life. There is no trait of character more noble or more to be ad. mired than this: nothing noble or valuable can lie accomplished without decision of character, With it the Most ardent aspirant to honor, wealth, or fame, need not despair. 4111 As an example of decision of character and its importance, I will take two young men, similar in all respects, except that the one possesses decision of character, and the other does not. The one you see prompt and ready to act. If obstacles present themselves be at once sets himself nobly and boldly to work, nor does ho desist until he has surmounted them. If temptation is held out to him he turns from it with disdain. The other you be hold always undecided and inactive. "And like a man to double business hound He stands in pause where he shall first begin; And both neglects." Thus ho spends more time in• making up his mind than it would take to accomplish the ob ject about which he is cogitating; and he finally gives up in despair without one noble and man ly struggle. If temptations assail his erring feet he cannot resist, but becomes a miserable victim to its power. When such a person has entered into temptation, destruction is inevita• ble. The situation which men occupy in life is in a great measure owing to their decision of character. Decision was one of the distinguishing and brightest features in the life and character of the immortal Washington. It was, and is ad mired and praised by all. In him was display ed true decision of character which is to decide and act. The SUM,. with which lie resisted foreign oppression and vindicated his country's rights, may he attributed principally tothat admirable trait on his character. And the success of Bonaparte, and all great men, may be attribn• ted to the same cause. The happiness of person possessing decision of character is much greater than the happiness of him who does not possess it. The former on reviewing his life, perceives that time has been improved and that his priv ileges have not passed unnoticed. The latter reviews his misspent time and unimproved opportunities with the keenest remorse. And the peculiar privileges which presented them selves to him werelost, because he had not de cision enough to embrace an opportunity. The Beautiful. There is more true poetry in the follttwing, than some writers get into a hundred stanzas of faultless rhymes: Who loves not a little child's appreciation of the beautiful? Its innocent eyes see what our long trained, always fail to notice, the loveli ness and perfectness of humble things. We, grown, full of learning and tricked out with fashion. think that to see grand sight we must go to Europe, gaze on Alps towering over Alps, ambitions for the nearer smile of Heaven.— Muse in the midst of sombre splendor that haunts dim cloisters in old cathedrals. Watch the sunbeams braiding their light into wreaths of gorgeous dyes, and hanging, them over the grand brow of some mountain iceberg. Pity we could not borrow the spirit of the little child, and feel that everything made by the Father, whether it kiss the ground, or gem the sky, is well worth seeing, and beautiful of its kind. Pity we had not the faith of "one of those little ones," to read a miracle in the changing dew-drop.. . Go where ye will, the broad earth bears the beautiful; it springs like hope from sorrow over the ashes of the dead. It lies nestling upon the bosom of the mother. It is with no when we open our eves to the morning, and the cur tain of the night shuts its visions in our hearts. It springs like the flower frffin the bud, not of a happy thought. It fonts down like Eli mantle, and angels fold it about us when we kneel nt the shrine of prover, . _ Oh ! tell us where the brautifel in not ? Nay l we re-call the aspiration. We should have the beautiful forever in our sight, as was the pillar of fire by night and cloud by day, to the heaven-led lerwlites. And when we come to the lost• hour; we would have no gloomy fears about our dying bed, but beams, many and bright., falling from Eternity upon us, malting at the last even death beautiful.—Olire Rranrh: Horrible Phenomena. It is not generally known, says the Chocks ton Courier, that in Barbadoes there is a mys terious vault, in which so one dares to deposit the dead. It is in a church-card near the sea shore. In 1807, the first coffin that was depo sited in it was that of a Mr. Goddard; in 1808, a Miss A. M. Chase was placed in it. and in 1812, Miss B. Chase. In the end of 1812, the vault was opened for the body of lion. T. Chase; but the three first coffins were found in a con fused state, hissing been apparently tossed from their places. Again was the vault opened to receive the body of an infant, and the four ed. tins, all of lend, and very heavy, were found much 'disturbed. In 1810, a Mr. Brewster's body was placed in the vault, and again great disorder was apparent among the coffins. In 1819, a Mr. Clarke was placed in the vault, and, as before, the coffins were in confusion. Each time that the vault was opened, the coffins were replaced in their proper situations —that is, three on the ground, side hs' side, and the others laid on them. The vault was then regularly closed; the door (a massive stone, which required six or seven meta to move) was cemented by masons, and though the floor was of sand, there was no marks of footsteps or wat er. Again the vault was opened in 1819. Lord Combermere was then present, and the Coffins were found thrown confusedly about the vault—some with the heads down. and others np. "What could have occasioned this pheno menon? In no other vault in the island, had this ever occurred. Was it an earthquake that occasioned it, or the effects of an inundation in the vault 4' These were the questions asked by a Barbadocs journal at the time, and no one could afford a solution. The matter gradually died sway, until the presient year, when, on the 16th of February, the vault was again opened, and all the coffins were again thrown about ns confusedly as be fore. A. strict investigation took place, and no cause could be dise&Fered. Wns it, after all. that the sudden bursting forth of noxious gas from one of the coffins could have produced this phenomena? If so, it is against all former experience. The vault has been hermetically sealed again—when to be re-opened we cannot tell. In England there was a parallel occurrence to this, some years ago, at Houton, in Suffolk. It is stated that on opening a vault there, sev eral leaden coffins, with wooden cases, which had been fixed on biers, were found displaced, to the great consternation of the villagers. The coffins were agnin placed as before, and the vault was properly closed, when tignin, another of the family dying, they were again found dis placed; and two years after that, they were not only found all off their biers, hut one coffin (so heavy as to require eight men to raise it,) was forma on the fourth step which led &p.m to the vault; and it seemed perfect; certa!r. that no had en. '-[WEBSTER. Driving off the Fog. On a late trip of the steamer Express round from Nashville, she was detained several hours by fog. Capt. McComas, anxious to get along, did not stop his boat,hut kept her cautiously mo ving forward, having both eyes wide open for any obstacle. Passing to the stern of the boat to take an observation, he was met by a pas senger, who said to him— "Captain, why don't you drive off the fog?" "Just the thing I should like to have you tell me how to do." "Come down into the cabin, and I'll tell yon how an old German friend of mine once did In a few minutes afterwards they were com fortably seated in the cabin, when the passen ger commenced by saying— "l shall expect you will believe it, and of course try the experiment." In a rich valley of the Mohawk, there is a quiet little village called Spraker's Basin.— Not many years ago, and before there was such a thing as a railroad in the State of New- York. the veritable Mr. Spraker, the patriarch and founder of Spraker's Basin. was keeping a tavern a mile or so from the village, upon the thoroughfare known as Johnstown road. Spra ker's, as it is generally called, was in early times the great rendezvous for the Mohawk far. mere while journeying to Albany with their wheat, and of the Jefferson and. Lewis county drovers. Now and then a New York merchant on his trip to the northern settlements, was to he seen before the great wood fire in Spraker's tavern. This class of travellers were held in much respect by old Spraker and the honest Dutch farmers on the river. One of this class accosted the old man on the porch one foggy mooning with— " Mr. Spraker do you have much of this sort of weather down here in this valley?" "Olt, yees, put we tout mind it, Mr. Stewart, I lins n way of triving it off. 'lsh no matter at all .nl. . "How's .- that Mr. Speaker, I should like to know the proeess of driving off a fog." "Well, I will tell you. I takes in tram, and goes out and feeds te pigs, and if to fog ton't go orr putty soon, I takes anoder train, and den I goes out and forlders te cattle, and if te fig aint gone py tis time, I takes anoder tram. and den I goes out and chops wood like tinier, and if to fog tont go py tis time, I takes anoder tram, and so on Mr. Stewart, I keeps a doin' till to fbg all goes away." “Well upon my word, Mr. Speaker, this is a novel mode of getting clear of n fog. How many drams did you ever take of a morning before you succeeded in driving off the fog 1" "Let me see, about two years ago, I tink I had 'o take about twenty drains, but it was a tam foggy MO.ling." The Lady's Man. Ile is described as follows in the New Or, leans Delta: his face is eternally wreathed with un meaning smiles, and when he addresses a lady, it is always in such a strain ofabsurd nonsense that we have often been surprised that a lady armed with a fan and so address ed; did not brain the animal on the spot.— If the lady's man does, by any possibility, possess the least degree of common sense, he takes especial pains to conceal it, for some how or other he has taken it into his wise head that empty sentimentality and ab surd nothings are the only offerings fit for the female mind. In order to be true to what ho conceives to be the entertainment and amusement of the ladies, he turns trai tor to manhood, and so becomes epicene himself without a just claim to be classed with the male or female sex. Ilis best qualities aro those which ho possesses in common with certain kinds of dogs—to fetch and carry. Ladies who laugh in their sleeves at the fool, may not object to 1 the attentions of the servant, and so out of mere commiseration allow him to carry a fan or escort them to the opera, when the MEN of their acquaintance are not accessible.— The lady's limn is sufficiently rewarded for attending them through a whole evening's entertainment, if they will only drop a smile into the poor fellow's hat at parting With this substantial blessing he is encourtted to future exertions in this wide field of mascu line ambition. If a man's duty to a lady consisted in pick ing up dropped pocket handkerchiefs and fans, or twirling her round to the point of giddiness and exhaustion in the waltz, we should, perhaps, not envy the accomplish ments of the mere lady's mat?. Beautiful Effect of Pain. One of the most boautiftl effects of pain is its tendency to develops kindly feelings between man and man—to excite a friendly sympathy on the part of others towards the person immediately afflicted. No sooner is a person attacked with illness, than a cor responding degree of interest is excited in his behalf. Expressions of solicitude for his welfare are put forward, offers of assis tance are made, old friendships are revived, and new ones developed —all this, it is to be remembered, is essentially connected with the sufferings of sickness. Were it not for this, there would be no occasion for this sympathy, and there would be nb mani festation of it. Every man would be left to battle with the attacks of illness as ho could, and no voice would be raised to cheer him in his hours of solitary gloom—no ten der hands put forth in offices of kindness —no midnight watchers volunteer to at tend his bedside. In contemplating the uses of pain that a gracious God has at tached to our covitution as a necessary part of our existenTe, is there any one that culls lender for admiration than this, which unites the whole family of Adam into ono universal brotherhood —which gives exer cise to the noblest charities of our stature, and which is the means of securing to us, at the very moment when we must see their value, the tenderest assistance of the best and kindest feelings of our nature. tiek.. An exchange paper illustrates the ad vantage of a ‘divison of labor' by the following anecdote. A certain preacher was holding forth to a sontowhat wearied congregation, when he 'lift. ed up his eyes' to the gallery, and beheld a youngster pelting the people below with ohm nuts. Dominic was about to administer ex cathedra u sharp and Mringent reprimand for this flagrant net of impiety and disrespect, but the youth, anticipating him bawlcd out at the top of his voice— 'nit mini tour y reachin;, sad r:1 NO. 44. John Pounds. Probably not one in ten of onr readers evee before saw this name in print. Yet if the his• tory of this century shall ever be truly written', that name will be mentioned in honor. It was John Pounds, a poor, old, lame shoemaker of Portsmouth, who first conceived the idea of Ragged Schools, and who carried it into sue• cessful practice. A brief account of him is siv en in a recent English work, entitled "The Philosophy of Ragged Schools." That account is 28 follows : "He worked on at the trade he had taken to, and not only maintained himself, but was able to adopt and bring up a nephew. who was, like himself a cripple. It was thinking over the best mode of educating this boy, that the thought struck him that the companionship of another child would render learning easier and pleasanter to him than if lie had to study alone; he accordingly found a companion for his ne phew, in the son of a poor woman, his neigh bor. The experiment was so successful, that in a short time two or three others were added to the class. After a time, he added to its num ber till it consisted of forty scholars, including twelve little girls. The pupils he taught were the dettitnte and neglected—"the little black g,tutrds," as he called them—and many a time he has been known to go out upon the public quay and tempt such as these by the offer of a roasted potatoe, or some such simple thing, to enter his school. There is something in the voice and manner of nn earnest truthful man, which is irresistible; it is an appeal made to the Divine image, of which thereto some trace still left. even in the most corrupted heart; and it was reldom,therefore, that the summons of John Pounds passed unheeded; and, when once at the school, his scholars seldom needed urging to come a second time; for their master taught them not only "book learning," as he called it, but his trade: if they were hungry, he gave them food if ragged. he clothed them as well as he could; and, added to all this he joined in their sports. What wonder that they loved him, or that when he died—and his death was sudden, at the age of 72—the poor children who then formed his class wept, and some of them fain ted at hearing the news." This good old man died in A:19; hut his idea lives, and will live, as long as there remains on earth one neglected, untaught child. Thrice honoured be his memory. Singular Case. We remember to have read somewhere an account of a most exemplary instance of con• jugnl fidelity and devotion, which if not apoe• ryphal, is certainly withouta parallel. A young nobleman of Genoa, who held large estates in Corsica whither he used to repaii every few years to regulate his offitirs, had married a beautiful creature named Monimia. enitalian. They lived for some years in undtninished feli city, lill—alas for the mutations of tins, l—the devoted husband wag compelled to defer no longer a visit to the land of his possessions. During Lis absence, the island being at the time in a state of insurrection, a report reach• ed the ears of the anxious spouse, that he bad fallen a victim to the popular furor and revolt. About the same time as he was passing along the harbor, he overheard coins sailors, who had just arrived, talking of the death of a Ge. noose nobleman's wife, then absent from the republic. The name of his beloved was at length mentioned, when all suspicion yielding to the painful conviction that it was indeed. her of whom they spoke. he became so over powered with grief that he swooned away. On his recovery hb determined to lose no time is repairing to his home, in order to ascertain the certainty of the report. Strange as it may appear, simultaneonslv with this, the equally distressed wife resolved upon a similar procedure. They took ship— one for Corsica, the other for Genoa; a violent storm overtook both vessels, and each was shipwrecked on the Mediterranean. Marimi's ship first mode land, and the disconsolated widower, wishing to indulge his grief, wan dered into the embowered recesses of n neigh• boring womb Soon afterwards the Genoese ship landed Monimia, with one of her molds; actuated by similar emotions, she bent her sor • rowing steps to the same retreat. They each heard the other complaining of their bitter fate; when, moved by n mutual curiosity to see their eompanions in grief—judge of their amazement and rapturous surprise, they in. ,atantly recognized in each other the dear ob. ,jest of their ardent solicitude and affection.— One long, straining, and passionate embrace, and they immediately expired ! Their re• mains were conveyed to Italy, and repose in their dreamless sleep under n magnificent mansoleum.—Salod for the Solitary. Immortality of Man. Who in it that the rainbow and the cloud come over us, with a beauty that is not ofearth, and then pass away and leave us to muse on their faded loveliness? Why is it that the stars which hold their festival around their midnight throne, are set above the grasp of our limited faculties, furever mocking us with unapproacba• ble glory ? And why is it that forms of human beauty nre presented to our view and taken front us, leaving the thousand streams of atfec• tion to flow back in Alpine torrents upon our heart? We are born for a higherdestiny than that of earth. There is a realm where the rainbow never fades, where the stars will set out before us like Islands that slumber on the ocean, and, where the beautiful being that now passes before us like the meteor, will stay in our, presence forever. lam` A certain Sunday school teacher was in the practice of taking up a collection in his ju venile class for missionary objects every Sun day; and his box received scores of pennies which might otherwise have found their war to the drawers of the confectioner and toy man.— a° was not a little surprised,howeyer, one Sun day, to find a bank bill crushed in among the weight of copper. He was not long in finding wit to be a broken bank: and on asking the class who pot it there, the donor was soon pointed •ut to him by his classmates, who had seen him deposit it, and thought it a very benevo tent gilt. "Didn't you know that this bill was good for nothing?" said the teacher. "Yes," answered the boy. "Then what did you put it in the box?" "I didn't 'spose the litfle hacilten would now the difference, and so it would be -just as good fur 110` An Aubutu paper thus describes a trav eling circus. The circus was in town lust week. Its grand entry was a grand fizzle. The gorgeous dra gon chariot looked like a mud scow with a zinc tail. The immense procession was a min. ute and a halt in passing. The elephant swung his tail delightfully. A rolling stone gathers no moss," is a very doubtful adage. We have Just seen, in a country paper, the marriage of Peleg Bowling• stone, to Miss Ophelia Morse. ekr A learned doctor has given it as his opin ion that tight lacing is a public benefit, as Is kills. all the foolish 6..15, and leaves the wiser onset° bo women. Trust him little who praiaea all; him leas who censure, all; sui h, n :eau ie indiffae a:!