BY WM. BREWSTER. TERMS : The "lllmrixonort JOURNAL" is published at the following rates 2 If paid in advance $1,50 If paid within six months after the time of subscribing 1,75 If paid at the end of the year 2,00 And two dollars and fifty cents if not paid till after the expiration of the year. No subscription will be taken for a less period than six months, and nopnper will ho discontinued, except at the option of the Editor, until all arrearoges are paid. Subscribers living in distant counties,or in other States ; will be required to pay invariably in advance. W. The 'there terms will be rigidly adhered to in all cases. ADVERTISEMENTS Will be charged at the following rates: I insertion. 2 do. 3 ilo. Six lines or less, $ 25 $ 37} $ 50 One square, (IC lines,) 50 75 1 00 Two " (32 " ) 100 150 200 Three " (48 ) 150 200 250 Business men advertising by the Quarter, Half Year or Year, will be charged the following rates: 3 mo. 6 mo. 12 mo. Ono square, $3 00 $5 00 $8 00 Two squares, 5 00 8 00 12 00 Three squares, 750 10 00 15 00 Four squares, 900 14 00 20 00 ri vo squares, 15 00 25 00 38 00 Ten squares, 25 00 40 00 60 00 Business Curds not exceeding six lines, one year, $4 00. JOB WORK : rlest handbills, 30 copies or less, I CI CI CI II 1 IC it 4 00 BLAMES, foolscap or less, per single quire, 1 50 4or more quires, per " 1 00 GT Extra charges will be 'made for heavy composition. Cr All letters on business must be POST PAID to secure attention. JEO [l3®29xnal. THE BURSTING OF THE BUD, Spring is coming—Spring is coming t With her sunshine and her shower I /leaven is ringing with the singing Of the birds in brake and bower; Buds are filling, leaves are swelling, Flowers on field, and bloom on tree; O'er the earth, and air, and ocean, Nature holdii her jubilee. Soft then stealing comes a feeling O'er my bosom tenderly; Sweet I ponder as I wander, For my musings are of thee. Spring is corning—Spring is coming! With her mornings fresh and light ; With her noon of chequered glory, Sky of blue and clouds of white, Calm and gray night falls, when light falls For the star•bespangled sky, While the splendor, pale and tender, Of the young moon gleams on high, Still, at morn, at noon, and even, Spring is full of joy for me, For I ponder, as I wander, And my musings are of thee. Still on thee my thoughts are dwelling, Whatsoe'er thy name may ben Beautiful beyond words telling, Is thy prei'enee unto me. Morning's breaking finds the waking, Wandering in the breeze's light; Noontide's glory mantles o'er thee, In a shower of sunny light; Daylight dying, leaves thee lying In the silvery twilight ray; Stars look brightly on thee nightly Till the coming of the day. Everywhere and every minute Feel I near thee, lovely one ; In the lark and in the linnet I can hear thy joyous tone. Bud and blooming, mark the coming Of thy feet o'er vale and hill; And thy presence, with life's essence Makes the forest's heart to fill. Low before thee, I adore thee, Love creative, thee I sing; Now I meet thee, and I greet then By the holy name of Spring. W2Eri l l [br-W-lAWE , c 4 .I 0 The Invalid Wife. BY FANNY FERN'. "Every wife needs a good stock of love to be gin with." Don't she ? You are upon a sick bed; a lit tle, feeble thing lies on your arm, that you might crush with one band. You take those little velvet fingers in yours, close your eyes and turn your head languidly to the pillow. Little brothers and sisters—Carry and Henry, and Fanny, and Frank, and Willie, and Mary, and Bitty—half a score—come tiptoeing into the scorn "to see the new baby." It is quite an old story to "nurse," who sits like an automaton, while they give vent to enthusiastic admiration of its wee toes and fingers, and make profound inquiries, which nobody thinks best to hear.— You look on with a languid smile, and they pass out, asking, "why they can't stay with dear mamma, and why they musn't play puss in the corner," as usual. You wonder if your little croupy boy tied his tippet on when he went to school, and whether Betty will see that your husband's flannel is aired, and if Peggy has cleaned the silver, and washed off the front door steps, and what your blessed husband is about that he don't come home to dinner. There sits old nurse keeping up that dread ful treadmill trotting "to quiet the baby," till you could fly through the keyhole in despera• tion. The odor of dinner begins to creep up stairs. You wonder if your husband's pudding will be made right, and if Betty will remember to put wine in the sauce, as lie likes it; and then the perspiration starts on your forehead as you hear a thumping on the stairs, and a child's suppressed scream; and nurse snatches the baby up in a flannel to the tip of its nose dumps it down on an easy chair, and tells you to have the family to her and go to sleep.— By and by she comes in—after staying long enough to get a refreshing cup of coffee, and walks up to the bedside with a bowl of gruel, :tasting it, and then putting the spoon into the rbowl. In the first place you bate gruel; in the next, you couldn't eat it if she had a pistol to your head, after the spoon had been in her :mouth so you meekly suggested that it be sot ,on the table hoping by some providential inter position, it might get tipped over. Well,' she moves round the room with a pair of creaking alms and bran new gingham gown, that rattles tz';l le in Li 1 / 4 ,1 at. " I SEE NO STAR ABOVE THE HORIZON, PROMISINO LIGHT TO GUIDE US, BUT TITE INTELLIGENT, PATRIOTIC, UNITED WHIG PARTY OF TUE UNITED STATES."-EWPDSTEIL like a paper window curtain at every step; and smooths her hair with your nice little brush, and opens a drawer by mistake, (?) "thinking it was the baby's drawer." Then you hear lit tle nails scratching on the door, and Charley whispers through the key-hole, "mamma, Char ley's tired; please let Charley come in." Nurse scowls, and says no; but you intercede —poor Charley he's only a baby himself. Well, ho leans his head against the pillow, and looks suspiciously at that little moving bundle of flannel in nurse's lap. Its clear he had a hard time of it, with team and molasses! The little shining curls you have so often rolled over your fingers, are a tangled mass; and you long to take him and make him comfortable, and cor set him a little, and then baby cries again and you turn your head on the pillow with a moth ered sigh. Nurse hears it and Charley is taken struggling from the room. You take your watch from under your pillow to see if your husband won't be home soon, and then look at nurse, who takes a pinch of snuff over your gruel and sits down nodding drowsily, with the baby in an alarming proximity to the fire.— Now you hear a dear step on the stairs. It's your Charley! How bright he looks and what nice fresh air he brings with him out of doors ! He parts the bed curtains and looks in, and pats you on the cheek. You just want to lay your head on his shoulder, and have such a splendid cry! but there sits that old Gorgon of a nurse—she don't believe in husbands, she don't! You make Charley a free mason sign, to send her down stairs for something. He says—right out loud—men arc stupid I "What did you say dear ?" Of course you protest you didn't say a word—never thought of such a thing! and cuddle your head down to your ruf fled pillow, and cry because you are weak, weary, and full of care for your family, and don't want to see anybody but 'Thorley I" Nurse says "she will have you sick," and tells your husband, "be had better go down and let you go to sleep." Off he goes, wondering what on earth ails you to cry! wishing he had noth ing to do but to lie still.and be waited upon. After dinner he comes to bid you good-bye before . he goes to his office—whistles "Nelly Bly" loud enough to wake up the baby, whom 31 25 1 50 2 50 he calls a comical little concern, and then puts his dear thoughtless head down to your pillow, at a signal from you, to hear what you have to say. Well there's no help for it, you cry again, and say, "Dear Charley!" and he laughs and settles his dickey, and says you are a "nervous little puss," and gives you a kiss, lights his ci gar at the fire, half strangles the new baby with the first whiff, and takes your heart off with him down the street. You lie there and cat that gruel and pick the fuzz off the blankets, and snake faces at the nurse, under the sheet, and wish Eve had nev• er ate the apple—Genesis iii. 16—or that you were "Able to Cain" her for doing it I Sketch by Fanny Fern, "An elderly gentleman, formerly a well-known merchant, wishes a situation; ho will engage in any respectable employment not too laborious." I don't know the old man. I never saw him on 'change, in a flue suit of broadcloth, leaning on his gold-headed cane; while brokers, and Insurance officers, and Presidents of Banks, raised their hats deferentially, and the crowd respectfully made way for him. I never kept account of the enormous taxes he annually paid the city, or saw his gallant ship ploughing the blue ocean, with their costly freight to for eign ports. I never saw him in his luxurious home, taking Isis quiet siesta, lulled by the li quid voice of his fairy daughter. No; nor did I hear the auctioneer's hammer in that prince ly home, nor see the red flag floating like a signal of distress, before the door. I didn't read the letter that recalled his only boy from college, or see the bumble family, as they pass ed, shrinking over the threshold into poor lodg ings whose landlord coarsely stipulated for "a week's rent in advance." "Any occupation not too laborious." how mournfully the old man's words full upon the ear I Life to commence anew, with the silver head, and bent form, and faltering step and palsied hand of age! With the first ray of morning-light, that hoary head must be lifted from an unquiet pillow, to encounter the drenching rain, and driving sleet, and piercing cold. No reprieve for the throbbing brow and dimmed eye, from the wearisome ledger.— Beardless clerks make a jest of the "old boy;" superciliously repeating in his insensitive ear, their mutual master's orders. With them he meekly receives his weekly pittance; sighing, as he counts it over, to think of the few com forts it will bring to the drooping hearts at home. Foot-weary he travels through the crowded streets; his threadbare coat, and nap- less hat, and dejected face, all unnoticed by the thriving young merchant, whom the old man helped to his present prosperous position.— The birth-days of his delicate daughter come and go, all unmarked by the joy-bestowing gift. With. trouble and exposure, sickness comes at last; then, the tardy foot, and careless, proles- - sional touch of the callous Dispensary Doctor; then the poor man's hearse stands before the door; then winds unheeded through the busy streets, to the "Potter's field," while his former cotemporaries take up the daily paper and sip ping their wine say carelessly, as if they had a quit-claim from sorrow, Well, Old Smith, the broken down millionaire, is dead. Alt, there are tragedies of which editors and printers little dream, woven in their daily ad vertising sheets; the office boy feeds the fire with many a tear-blotted manuscript, penned by trembling fingers, all unused to toil. Iffar "Stolen fruit is the sweetest," and we are inclined to think that stolen knives are the sharpest; for the more we Mel them, the better they cut. may' It is absurd to gall "old maids," vino gar•faced, inasmuch as thus is uo mother about them. iriMT,'!?,ITILATA'rDr.) Frederic the Great, FREDERIC of Prussia was a tyrant, without doubt; but an enlightened one, and, in many respects, a liberal one. He had the sentiment of justice somewhat strongly developed, al though he would commit, now and then, very arbitary and cruel actions—witness his treat ment of Baron Trenek, which, let the provoca tion—never clearly understood—have been what it might, could not have justified the at rocious, systematic, and unintermitting perse cution to which he was subjected. But allow ances ought to be made for Frederic, if they are to be made for anybody, possessed of so much power, and so wholly irresponsible for the use of it. It is surprising that the son of suck a father as his could have had nny vir tues at all—any feeling, or honor, or justice— and then he was an absolute monarch—a posi- tion but little calculated to foster and tumour. age virtuous propensities. He was greatly su p'erior to the crowned heads of his day—and the affix of Great, accorded to him by his co- temporaries, was very appropriate then, and the judgment of posterity has confirmed it.— Napoleon, though little addicted to saying flat tering things of other majesties, admired Fred eric, visited his tomb, fillibustered his sword, and said of him that it was a pity so great a man should ever die. Had Fritz, as his sold iers called him, lived and reigned in our times, it is likely that he would have been as much superior to his crowned "brothers . ' and "sis ters" of the year 1834 as lie was to those who flourished seventy or eighty years ago. He had the elements of greatness in him—and, had be lived in better and more favorable times, they would have been more signally de veloped, it is likely. Voltaire, who professed to hold atheists in great contempt—though but little better than one himself—and who, as Cowper says of him, "Built Coda church, and laughed his word to scorn," regarded the king as an atheist, when he was in a bad humor with him. He was tolerant, however, and enforced toleration throughout his dominions—which no other monarch of his time did fully, we believe. This at that day, was much. Frederic has had no equal, probably, in some respects—in fortitude and tencity of purpose. Here Napoleon was his inferior. He never lost heart, never desponded, never despaired, even when ho carried poison in his pocket as the derider resort, if fortune should declare against him finally. Napoleon did the same. Such a war as ho carried on against more than half of Europe no other man could have car ried on then; and it is doubtful, we think, whether.either Napoleon or iVellington could have done so much, with such small means, comparatively. We have been led to make these few remarks about Frederic in consequence of finding, in the London Times, a letter of his to his Minister, Finnkerstein, published recently at Berlin, dated January 10 1657. This was a very gloomy period of the war, and he tells his Minister what ho must do in case the French and Russians should be • successful against him at certain points, and in it is the following remarkable passage: "Should Ibe killed, affairs are to be man aged as if nothing had happened, without the slightest alteration, and without seeming to be in other hands. Should Ibe made a prisoner by the enemy, I positively order that my per son is not to be at all considered, nor the least N. Y. Daily Paper. attention paid to any thing I may write while a prisoner. Should such a misfortune happen to me, I intend to sacrifice myself for the State: and obedience must them be paid to my brother, [the heir presumptive,' for which he, and the Ministers and Generals, shall answer to one with their heads, that no ransom shall be offered for me, and the war shall ho contin ued precisely as if I had never existed." In this there is nothing dramatic, no affecta tion of a patriotism and resolution simulated and not felt. Tho posture of the king's affairs was a very critical one, and from the manner in which he exposed himself in the battle he fought, it was very likely that he might be kill . .. ed, or taken prisoner, against either of which contingencies he bad made most heroic provi sion. His brother and his Ministers and Gen erals, knew him too well to attempt any depar ture from his orders. About a question of a political or military obedience he inherited the ideas of his father, in a great degree. What he says about their heads was no flourish, no brutare fulmen, and that they knew, and would have implicitly obeyed him with respect to all ho said about himself, not from indifference to his fate but from respect to his wishes, and from fear of bis vengeance, if they did not obey. - . . But few letters have been written by kings and potentates, we imagine, under similar cir cumstances that can compare with this, for self-sacrificing patriotism and disinterested ness. The king bad plunged his country, very unnecessarily into a war, but being in it, he bore himself in a manner that endeared him greatly to his countrymen and subjects. Had ho lived later, he would probably have been a greater man, and a better one; his ideas would have been more expanded and liberal. But, tried by the standard of his times, the oomph. mentary epithet added to his name is not mis applied, for he was—as the word was then, and is now used—Great.—Daily Globe. BM. An editor out west, in ,peaking of his domestic increase, gives the following: Sound the stage horn—blast the trumpet, That the waiting world may know; Publish it through all our borders, Even unto Mexico. Sieze the pen, Ohl dreaming poet! And in numbers smooth as may be, Spread afar the joyful tidings! Belsy'd got another baby! IS- Question fur philosophers—Which is the worst, to contract debts, or enlargu them? HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1854. There is talk, at present, over a revival of the ancient arts for making the eye bright. A lady writes to a correspondent of the London Leader on the subject, who thus gives her ques- tion, and his reply: "Is it true that women stand over the fumes of charcoal to make their eyes more bright?— Arabella doubts it, but has beard it gravely stated; Vivian has not heard it stated, but he gravely doubts. Opium gives an unusual dis tension to the pupil of the eye; but the effect is not permanent, and after repeating that dan gerous experiment a few times, the effect cea ses altogether. Rouge gives lustre to the eye —but unappily rouge itself is discernible, and its moral effect on the beholder is dangerous." There is also a rage for long eyebrows and eyelashes—for which Roseland gives a recipe: "In Cireassia, Georgia, Persia and India, one of the mother's earliest cares is to promote the growth of her children's eyelashes, by tip. ping and removing the fine gossamer-like points with a pair of scissors _when they are asleep.— By repeating this every month or six weeks, they become, in time, long, close, finely curved and of a silky gloss. The practice never fails to produce the desired effect, and it is particu larly useful, when, owing to inflamation of the eyes, the lashes have been thinned or stunted." But beauty is so rare, after all, in any very astounding degree, its to be a phenomenon— an exception—with which the laws and succes ses of society have little to do. In Paris, at any rate, the superiority is given altogether to distinction of look—to the distingue woman of fashion. In our country, (thank Heaven!) it is given to the superior woman in all respects —temper, education, character and grace. But let us quote once more from the French writer whose notions on the subject (translated for the Albion) we made extracts from, a week or two ago: "I have sought to prove, both by theory and illustration, that in the matter of beauty there are only tastes and fashions. But should there be those who, after criticising all, declare them selves of a different opinion from every one— who, when they see men to whom we owe the most brilliant theories of beauty, take to their arms and their hearts the most cynical and frightful, and revolting refuse, are, in view of such an anomaly, led to believe not only that there is no type of the beautofid, but even . that within certain limits there is neither individu• ality in perception of the beautiful, nor individ uality in a sense of what is ugly; that there are only sentiments and sensations, sympathies and antipathies, that attraction comprehends everything; in short, that we have only love and lovers—if, I say, them be those who fall into such conclusions, I ant not one of them. I have my creed. I have my enthusiasm, my adored type. I have my own idea of the beau tiful. "Brought into comparison with the distin guee woman, what becomes of others, half dei fied in their day? We make models for artists, from them; such and so great is the difference. No; that alone is beautiful which has the pow er of exciting agreeable emotions. Such is the opinion of Plato, St. Augustin, Wolfe and Vol taire—and they are right. "In place of so much insipid perfeetion,how greatly do I prefer all those pretty defects which captivate us! Can anything., be more seductive than our distingvees women? Can anything be more charning than these slight creatures, swaying, sparkling and ethereal, like the flame of punch/ Al:! even if they are what was said of than by llesiod ninehun dred years before Christ—when be indignantly stigmatized them as yule puyoslolos, that is to say, women addicted to flesh. If their mind be a problem, and their heart a myth, what matters it? They are irresistible- Who could remain insensible to emir witchery? They have every sort of refinement, every manner of charming weakness; they gather around them all the silks, all the lace:, all the exquisite per fumes of modern civiization, and then— and to crown all. I do believe I am giving into the je use eats gust. It is in truth a little in the style of the girdle of Venus. Ho mer, after exhausting hmself in enumerating the gifts of the talisman after specifying "all the charms of beauty and grace," makes an awkward pause and winls up with this, which is likewise our eonclution :—'Coupled with a secret and mysterious charm which baffles speech.' With us this tarot charm is, Fash ion." But let us wind up wth the following advo cacy of plain women, vhich we find floating about as an extract fres an American writer: "Most ladies think it's the summit of mis fortune to bo ugly. Ths is a mistake, quite frequently. The chanes are, as the world goes, that homely wonen are altogether the best at heart, head and soul. A pretty face often presides over I false heart and a weak head, with the smallest shadow of a soul."—Home Journal. ,'Where is your louse?" asked a tray. eler in the depths of me of the "old solemr wildernesses" of the Gnat West. "House ?—I ain't gotno house." "Well, where do you ire ?" "I live in the woods—sleep on the Greni Government Purchase, eat raw bear and will turkey, and drink out o the Mississippi I" And he added: is getting too tick with folks about here. You're the secold man I've seen with in the last month, and[ hear there's a whole family come in about fity miles down the river I'm going to putout ira the woods again!" M. "All things tirWsossible," said a coun try parson, more distinplished for his immense ly large mouth; than le the eloquence that proceeded from it. "l'o," replied a darkey hearer, "not possible t• make your mouf any bigger widout settin' ear cars filmier back." Cial- A man in attoupting to seine a favor• able opportunity, 1611 bid on the borne of a dilemma. Woman's Beauty. Sohn Milton the chief of poets, held the post of Latin Secretary under Cromwell. At the restoration, he was of course dismissed from his office. He was now poor and blind, and to these afflictions, Charles 11, added political persecutions:—he fined him, and doomed his writings on liberty to be publicly burned•— Nrothing more daunted by these fierce nod multiplied trinls, the great poet retired into private life, invoked his mighty genius, and produced "Paradise Lest !" But after he had endured the ills of poverty several years, Charles feeling the need of his matchless tall. ents, invited him to resume his former post, with all its honors and emoluments and court favors. But Milton knew that the price of his honor must be silence on the great question of human liberty. Therefore, ho did not hesitate a moment. It was a strong temptation—the bribe was splendid. By merely keeping si lence he could have honor, in abundance, and high position, in exchange for poverty, perse cution and neglect. But this could not be.— The poet loved truth too well; his soul was too noble, too sincere, too firm in its allegiance to God and liberty; to barter away its right to condemn tyranny for place or gold. Iknce, he spurned the royal offer, clung to his princi ples and his poverty, until death called his free soul to cuter its congenial heaven. And so gentle was the:summons; so sweetly calm was his unruffled spirit in the hour of dissolution, that his friends knew not' the precise moment of his dead,. how sublimely beautiful the grand old poet stand out before the mind in this fact! liar reused, tired, aged, and blind; having the pow er to turn the enmity of n royal dispositism in to favor, by simply refraining to speak and write on the liberties of mankind, he grows majestic in his poverty, as he nobly spurns the bribe in obedience to the voice of duty. For the truth's sake he holds fast to poverty and obscurity. To maintain the right of free speech, ho sacrifices himself, and defies the power of the king. Noble Milton ! As the author of "Paradise Lost," seated in his study, surrounded by the sublime creation of his ge nius, lie wears an aspect of sublimity; but in that act of fidelity to God and liberty, his atti tude is far more grand, sublime and beautiful. As the first of poets, he shines resplendent with intellectual lustre; as the scorner of the royal bribe, ho exhibits the moral granduer of a faithful man—he wills our ideal of the man of faith, stauding defiant and unawed by human power, because upheld by an immovable trust, and by an unconquerable allegiance to his in visible God. Well did the ancient heathen ex claim, in similar circumstances See a sight worthy of God l"—Zion . s 11,t7,1. A B pectacle of Moral Grandner. Happiness. There is implanted in the mind a desire for happiness, whirls all are endeavoring by every possible means to gratify; some in one pursuit and some in another; but however various the pursuits may be, all are aiming at the same re sult. All seem to be seeking it as the great object of life; and I think this is perfectly jus tifiable, if the right course is pursued. But why do so many seek in vain ? It is because happiness is not attainable in this life? It is true that perfect happiness is not the growth of a terrestrial soil; but earthly happiness is comparative, and if rightly pursued may be arrived at. Yet many, very many seek for this gem of earthly good,all to no purpose; and this is because they take the wrong course; for unless sought in something besides sinful plea sures and trifling pursuits, the so much covet ed prize will never be obtained. There may be a momentary pleasure attending such scenes which might for the time being be mistaken for happiness; and even this consists more its anticipation than reality; but this will soon van ish and leave an aching void in the heart.— Happiness is more equally divided and also more easily obtained than many may suppose; but it will not be found in the trifling bubbles of life, nor is it confined to the halls of wealth as ninny suppose; but dwells with those of a contented mind and quiet conscience; those who employ their time and talents in useful ness, and in endeavoring to promote the happi ness of others. Wills such there will be the consciousness of pure motives and right con duct, which is of itself a well-spring of happi ness, and which those who are pursuing an op posite course, will never gain. But happiness is equally in the power of all. All that will, may secure the prize, fin• it is the good alone, who are truly happy.---Pear/ Gatherer. Facts in Human Life. The number of languages spoken in the world amounts to 3000-587 in Europe, 896 in Asin, 276 in Africa, and 12GG in America.— The inhabitants of the globe profess snore than 1000 different religions. The number of men are about equal to that of the women. Life's average is 28 years. Ono quarter die previous to the ago of 17; and those who pass this age enjoy a facility refused to ono half of the hu. man species. To every 1000 persons, only one reaches 100 years of life; to every 100, only six reach the ago of 95; and not more than one in 500 lives to 80 years of age. There are on earth 1,000,000,000 inhabitants; and of these 33,333,333 die every year; 91,334 every day; 3780 every hour; and GO every minute, or one every second. These losses are about balanced by an equal ',tuber of births. The married are longer lived than the single, and above all, those who observe a sober and industrious con duct. Tall men live longer than short ones.— Women have more chances of life in their fa vor previous to being fifty years of age, than men have, but fewer afterwards. The number of marriages is in proportion of 75 to every 1000 individuals. Marriages are snore frequent after the equnioxes; that is dosing the months of Juno and December. Those born in the spring are generally more robust than others. Births and deaths are more frequent by night than by day.. The number of men capable of bearing arms is calculated at one.fourth of the population. Another New Territory. A letter to the N. Y. Herald, dated Carson Valley, Utah territory, February 3d, says: "We have applied to Congress to be separa ted from Utah into a territory of our own, to be pounded on the East by the Goose Creek Mountains, North by Oregon, South and West by California. A few snore voters are wanted in Congress to 'preserve the balance of power.' We will come in due time to demand a scat there." The area included within the limits thus de scribed is about one-third of the territory of Utah, of which it is the western part. It is re mote from the Mormon settlement and adja cent to California, by emigrants from which the valley of Carson River Las been settled.— These people are not Mormons, nor have they any affinity to that strange collection of polyga mists. They are industrious Americans, who have occupied their present position because of the beauty and fertility of the valley. Find ing themselves beyond the pale of "the Eureka State," it is quite natural they should feel res tive at being under Mormon rule, and it would seem no more than proper float their petition for a separate territorial government should receive consideration. But right in the path way of their movement stands Senator Doug las' slavery-agitation, obstructing all progress towards providing governments for our at pre sent uncared for territories. The object of these and other settlers on the Pacific is plainly avowed, for they honestly tell us that they want to increase their numerical strength in Congress. They think that if all the new States on the Pacific slope of the con tinent are made as large as California, the in terests of that division must inevitably suffer-- in which idea we cannot think they err. The States of the Mississippi valley are already ex orbitant in their demands, and even refuse the old original thirteen of the Atlantic seaboard an equal participation in the favors of the na tional government. The Pacific settlers can hope fur no favors at their hands unless by the force of munbers they can compel them.— They arc right, therefore, in endeavoring to build up such a power as by its array must command respect at the national capitol. The efforts which are now in progress to erect a new territory out of the northern pert of Cali fornia and the southern part of Oregon, are a part of this policy. Ultimately some of these plans must prove successful, however they may be postponed or defeated fur a time. For as soon as the seaboard States of the Atlantic come to understand the true position of affairs, they will perceive that it is to their interest to create these new territories on the Pacific side, in order to raise op an ally against the grasp ing disposition of the States of the interior. The Hand that Saves us. Two painters were employed to fresco the walls of a magnificent cathedral; both stood on a rude scaffolding constructed for the purpose, some forty feet from the floor. Ono of them was so intent upon his work, that ho became wholly absorbed, and in admiration stood from the picture, gazing at it with intense delight. Forgetting where he was, ho moved back slow. ly, surveying critically the work of his pencil, till he had neared the edge of the plank upon which ho stood. At this critical moment his companion turned quickly, and, almost frozen with horror, beheld his imminent peril; anoth er instant, and the enthusiast would be precip itated upon the pavement beneath. If he spoke to him it was certain death; if lie held his peace, death was equally sure. Suddenly he regain ed his presence of mind, and seizing a wet brush flung it against the wall, splattering the beautiful picture with unsightly blotches of col oring. The painter flew forward, and turned upon his friend with fierce upbraiding; but, startled at his ghastly face, ho listened to his recital of danger, looked shudderingly over the dread space below, and with tears of gratitude doubly blessed the hand that saved him. Just so we sometimes get absorbed upon the pictures of the world, and, in contemplating them, step backward, unconscious of our peril, when the Almighty, in mercy, dashes out the beautiful images, and draws us, at the time we are com plaining of his dealings, into his outstretched arms of compassion and love. ' Raising Poulry, As raising poultry is becoming a matter of considerable interest, I send you a few remarks on my experience, and some caThulations which I have made, thinking they might be interes ting to those, who, like myself, have had an at tack of the chicken fever: I have often heard it said that it was more profitable to sell eggs than to raise chickens. I did not think so; but to prove the matter, I kept an account the past season of every egg set and hatched. The following is the result: Eggs set, 701 Chickens hatched, 457 " raised, 109 I consider that I had very "bad luck" in raising so few. It was not entirely owing to bad management, although I now see where I made several mistakes. I had so many diffi culties to contend with—the hawks, crows, hogs, rats, &e.,—each and all took a large share, and yet had the eggs been sold, the average price would not have been more than 14 cents per dozen which would have amount ed to $8,21 cents, whereas, I have sold 88 chickens, used in the family and given away 45, and have 36 left. No accout was kept of the feed, because those used in the family would considerably more than have paid for that, had the "al mighty dollar" been the entire object. Chick ens pick up a great deal that would otherwise bo wasted on a farm, and ono living in the country knows what a satisfactio • it is to have plenty of chickens and eggs of their own rais ing.—Country Gentleman. Ur A rather suspicious looking fellow was seen, the other day, skinning the lost sheep of Israel. VOL. 19. NO. 16 Sleigh Riding with a Widow. snow had fallen; the young of the village got up a grand sleighing party to a country tav ern at some distance; and the interesting Wid ow Lambkin sat in the same slegh, under the same buffalo as myself. "Oh I oh! don't' she exclaimed, as we came up to the first bridge, catching me by the arm, and turning her veil. ed face towards me while her eyes twinklial in the moonlight. "Don't what?" I salted; "1 ant not doing anything. "Well, but I thought you were going to take toll!" replied Mrs. Lambkin. I rejoined, "what's that?" "How!" exclaimed the wid ow, her clear laugh ringing out above the mu sic of the bells, "Dr. Meadows pretends he don't know what toll is" "Indeed, I don't then," I said, laughing in turn. "Don't you know that gentlemen, when they go on a sleighing party claim a kiss as toll, when they cross a bridge Well, I never!'' When next we earns to a bridge and claimed toll, the struggles of the widow to hold the yell were not sufficient to tear it, and somehow when the veil was re moved her face turned directly towards my own, end in the glittering of the moonlight the horse trotted on himself; toll was taken for the first time in his life by Dr. Meadows. Soon we came to a long bridge, but the widow said it was no use to resist, and she paid up as we reached it without a struggle. "But you won't. take toll for every arch, will you doctor?" sho asked. To which the only reply was a practi. de affirmative to the question. Did you ever, reader, sleigh-ride with a widow, and take toll at the bridge? Hibernian Simplicity. An amusing instance of Hibernian simplici ty is afforded by the following little story, told us by a friend, in whose words we give it. "Molly, our housemaid, is a model one, who handles the broomstick like a sceptre, and who has an abhorrence for dirt and a sympathy for soapsuds, that amounts to a passion. She is a bustling, busy, rosy-checked, bright-eyed, blundering Hibernian, who hovers about our book-shelve 6; makes war upon our love papers, in the shape of undusted and unrighted con ners. "One day she entered our library in a oon• fused and uncertain manner, quite different from her usual bustling way. She stood nt the door with a letter between her thumb and fin ger, which she held at arm's length, ns if she had n gunpowder plot in her grasp. In an swer to our inquiries as to her business, she answered: "An' it plate yer honor, I'm a poor girl, and host much larnin,' and ye sees, phase yer hon. or Paddy O'Reilly, and the betther than bins doesn't broths in ould Ireland, has been writ in' of me a litther—a love letther, plate yer honor; an'—an'—" "We guessed at her embarrassment, and of freed to relieve it, by reading the letter to her. Still she hesitated, while she twisted a bit of row cotton in her fingers. "Shore,' she resumed, "an' that's jist what I want, but it isn't a gentleman like yearself that would be likin' to know ov the secrets between us, and so (here she twisted the cotton quite nervously) if it 'ill only phase yer honor, while yer racking it, so that ye may not hear it per self, if y'll jist put this bit of cotton in per ears an' slap up per hermit', an' thin the secrets be unbeknown to pc!" "We hadn't the heart to refuse her, and with the gravest face possible, complied with her request; but often since, we have laughed hear- tily as we have related the incident." "Go it, Old Sorrel!" "In my boyhood days," said the narrator, 6 1 used to reside with an old aunt, in the country, who was strictly pions, went to church regular. ly, and made me also follow the same Christian practice. Among those who attended the church regularly, was a man known among all the villagers by the appellation of "Old Joe." Old Joe, in addition to being a strict church. gocr and devout Christian, (ho passed fur the latter,) was something of a sporting character —delighted in frequently indulging in horse racing. His favorite nag he called "Old Sor rel," and be would at any time put up his 'pile' on "um Sorrel' against any other animated home-flesh in the neighborhood. Well, as I said before,Old Joe attend churched frequently, and occasionally, like many others, used to in dulge in a 'nap' during the sermon. While thus luxuriating one Sunday—the divine put ting in the big licks—spreading himself aston ishingly—and just at that moment the latter was indulging in one of his loftiest flights, Old Joe, doubtless dreaming that he was on the track, and participating in an animated race, sung out, in aloud voics—"Go it, old Sorrel I Go it, old Sorrel I" It is needless to say that Joe's unconscious exclamation brought the house down. Sober countenances, that had never indulged in a smile, were distorted with laughter; old women "snickered," and young girls with cambrics up to their pretty faces, in dulged in suppressed giggles. What added a zest to the incident, was the fact that the min ister had a most brilliant vermilion-tinted head of hair. "Old Sorrel" wasn't bad, and the crowd took the force of it."—N. Y. Monthly Magazine. _ _ _ EFFECT or THE RUSSIAN WAR.--WOILISII— "A three forties candle, if you please." Chan• dler—"They're a penny apiece now!" Woman —"Why how's that I" Chandler—"lt's on ac• count of the Russian war." Woman—" Don't mean to tell me they're fightin' by candlelight?' 1%4'. There is a man "down east," so tall that he has to use a ten.foot pole to pick his teeth with. There is another so fat that he has to set his shadow up edge ,ways. Another so lean that his neighbors have to shut one eye to see him. "What's whisky bringing V' inquired a dealer in that article. 'Bringing men to the gallows, was the reply,