in,:t..aruntinopri, ~t.i.irri,l2'..,i, BY WM, BREWSTER. TERMS The ‘llt,N•rixonox JOURNAL" is published at he following rates t If paid in advance $1,50 If paid within six months after tho 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 t fret. the expiration of the year. No subscription will be taken for a less period titan six months, and nopaper will be discontinued, except at the hption or the Editor, until all arrearages are paid. Subscribers living in distant counties,or in other States, will be required to pay invariably in advance. o f: d ' i rl , i , e n zli g ove terms will be rigidly adhered ADVERTISEMENTS Will be charged at the following rotes 1 insertion. 2 do. 3 do. Bio lines or less $ 25 $ 37i $ 50 One square, (06 lines,) 50 75 100 Two " (32 " ) 100 150 2'oo Three " (48 " ) 150 225 300 Business men advertising by the Quarter, Ilnll Year or Year, will be charged the following rates: 3mo. G mo. 12 mu. One square, $3 00 $5 00 $8 00 Two squares, 5 00 8 00 12 00 Three squares, 750 10 00 15 00 rum. squares, 900 14 00 23 00 Five squares, 15 00 25 00 38 00 Ten minims, 21 00 40 00 GO 00 'Business Cards not exceeding six lines, one year, $4.00. JOB WORK : /sheet limning, 30 copies or less, 46 6 46 16 ili.ssins,foo!seep or less, per single guy°, ! 50 " 4 . or more quires, per I 0 0 tier Extra charges will be made far heavy .. • p AU letters on business must be POST PAID o secure attention...o The Law of Newspapers. 1. Subscribers who do not give express notice to She contring,are considered as icishing to continue their .I,P :option. 2. 1.1 subscribers order the discontinuance of their .newspapers, the publish, 111,111 continue to send than until all arrearages are paid. 3. subscribers Healed or reface to take their nrimangwesAnn the dices to which they are direc ted, they are held responsible mail they hare settled their bills and ordered them discontinued. 4. If subscribers remove In ether places without infiirming the publisher, and the newspaers are sent do the thriller direction, they are held responsible. 5. Persons who continue to reeeire or tale the rape r . faini the office, are to be considered as sub .scribers and 11.4 soch„fgually responsible for subscrip tion, on if they had ordered their names entered upon the publishers books. 6. The Courts hate also repeatedly decided that a Post Muster who neglects to perfiinn his duty of , t i ring reasonable notice as required by the regula tinns of the Post Vice Departinad, of the neg lag of a person to take from the otlice, newspapers addressed to him, renders,the Post Master liable to She pohlorher for the subscription price. Bee. POSTNI ASTERS are required by law In notify publidiers by letter when their publi cations are refused or not culled for by persons to whom they are sent, and to give the reason .of such refusal, if known. It in also their duty to frank all such letters. We will thank post masters to keep us posted up in relation to this matter. *dui Vottro. NOW-A-DAYS. Alftd hhoyr everything Vas ehanged Since I was sweet sixteen, When all the girls wore homespun frocks, And aprons nice and clean ; 'hen bonnets made of braided straw, That tied beneath the chin, The shawl lay neatly on the neck, And fastened with a pin. I recolleSt the time when I Bode father's horse to mill, Across the meadows, rock and field, And up and down the hill And when our folks Were out at work, (As sure us I'm a sinner,) 1 jumped upon a horse bare bark, And carried them their dinner. Dear me! young ladies, now-a:days, Would almost faint away To think of riding all alone In wagon, chaise or sleigh; .And as fur giving "pa" his 'multi, Or helping " ma" to bake, Oh, saints! %would " spoil her lilly hands," Though sometimes they make " cake I" :When winter came, the maiden's heart Began to beat and flutter; ...Each Beau would take kis sweetheart out Sleighing iu a cutter ; 'Or if tl storm woo bleak nod cold, The girls and bean together, 'Would meet and have most glorious fun, And never mind the weather. Mut now, indeed, it grieves me much, The circumstance to mention, liowever kind the young man's heart, And honest his intention, Mc never asks the girls to ride But such II war is waged! .And if ha sees her once a week, Why, surely, "they're engaged I" gbliotiount By J. A. Bali, ESSAY, Read by A. W. Dram; Eq., Wore the lion. fingdon County 21 , achers' Institute, December 22, 1861.: Subject—Law OF Success. Every thing has its iaw of being. In all the material world certain and never changing law controls material existence. Whether it be in the grosser matter of in animate creation or in the active and sym metrical beauty of man, who has beets inaile only it little lower than the angels. Whether its the monstrous and frightful " I SEE NO STAR ABOVE THE HORIZON, PROMISING LIGHT TO GUIDE US, BUT THE INTELLIGENT, PATRIOTIC, UNITED WHIG PARTY OP THE UNITED STATES."-[ WEBSTER. creatures of irrational life, or in the ethe real emanations of deity, which sparkle in the light of rational truth and love.— Every where there is a law which speaks into being, and impels on •in progress to perfection. Law, says the great commentator is n rule of action. I purpose no treatise upon law in the narrow and sharp sense of the word—a dry abstract and obstruse science only interesting to the plodding student,— the matured barrister and judge, and the anxious appellant to its forum for justice ; and it may bo interesting to the Quirks, Gammons and Snaps, who seek to draw into the entangling meshes of their (not the laws) net, some unsuspecting fly of a client, whose first step is one of danger, which makes its last one of death, more certain. Yet, I doubt not a thought or word will not be thrown away, though I make law my subject for to-night. - If Law be a rule of action, then actions are but the workings of certain rules. This is a self evident proposition, that hardly needs illustration. A stone cast into the air must come down—a stone coming down must haw, been cast up. In truth it is but another way to declare that effects are but the result of causes. It may be laid down as an axiom that fixed and unal terable law has produced all results. $1 25 1 50 2 50 4 01) Let me direct the teacher and the taught to this truth, and inquire, if instuc- Lion may not be gathered, for us all. There is a law of intellectual life, that "as iron sharpeneth iron so man sharpen. eth the countenance of his friend." In obedience to that law of the allwise Law Giver, are we here assembled in this insti tute to sharpen our wits, and enlarge our wisdom by the genial reflection from the presence of our fellows. ‘1 hat are the impressive teachings of that law and what great lesson of light and life should we all learn from its proverbial worth. Each of you in your hours of toil, when exhausted patience and wearisome and plodding zeal, have wasted strength and energy; when dull stupidity or restless ness, and active mischief, oppress man and mind, and excite temper, by their and your fruitless efforts at progress, should remember this law, or you may leave sear red into the mind so dull, so stupid, sn restless, so thoughtless, or even mischie vous, some error in thought or action which it may be the rough friction of the world will deepen, and which nothing but divine truth can wear away. The true purpose of mind will leave its image daguerreotyped upon the prepared and susceptible minds of its associates.— This is strangely true, when the matured and fully developed intellect finds compan ionship with its equals. [Tow ?flitch more marked is its truth where the might uf supo riot mind and will asserts its power over the confiding and admiring spirit of the trust. ing and hoping child. flow carefully should we weigh every word and calcul ate the force of every action, fearful lest this law would produce effects that would be fatal to good. How certainly do we impart to those around us the spirit which directs or con trols us. There is. a law of contagion which seems to pervade social life in every sphere. Our sallies, our tears come alike unbidden to mingle with those who weep. and those who rejoice, though we be no party to their joys or sorrows. This law of sympathy moves us by its mysterious will to do its subtle bidding. It is a law of life, the earnest, faithful protecting love begets an abiding desire in its recipient to return the affection in Lind. It is the witching tenderness of a mother's love and faithfulness that begets in her offspring that holy sympathy known as filial piety. The seed cast into the earth does not store surely spring up and with its bud add blade and blossom bring forth its kind than do all these special laws produce their ripened harvest. The little school rooms are but the nur series and flower gardens of intellectual culture. It is the teacher, you and your compeers, throughout our broad land who are planting and transplanting, and graft. ing and budding and pruning and training the scions of immortality, that they !nay finally take their place in the broad pater sea of our beloved laud and win a brighter destiny, when the .‘ last deer beating of the heart shall be stilled in death. They are the little family circles, where endearing love, faithful zeal, patient per severance and watchful guardianship, if shining for in all the truthfulness of a ruethees.love must win to busy and active toil, the throng of young immortals, who gather around , the maternal man with that food which shall..nourislx into maturity and strength the glory or the sliaine.of our country. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1855. And here must be made so apparent the purpose of will, that with that irresistible force which is the law of will, is attracted and drawn forth, and led onward with submissive ohvdience, that throng, thus associated with, and which lives in the at mosphere of that law ; and upon which the shadows and images, whegter of the teacher's temper or morals or love of right or dislike of wrong; or earnest and absor bing devotion to the present pleasure, and prospective success and usefulness, are left and reflected back upon the world. The mind of a child is not unlike the ca. users obscura. The light is let in through some small opening, unobservable to the outride passer by, yet inside are seen dan cing upon its walls the dim it may be, yet the certain reflex outline of the external world ; and thus upon the chambers of the child's soul are seen the shadows of the rights and wrongs before and around it. They differ only in this,—in the obscura the light and its reflected image fade to gether while on the canvass oldie child's being thgy become the fixed realities of life. There is a law of success. In the thou sands of schemes and projects, and pur: poses and designs of human being there are certain determinate laws of action, obeyed, the desired end is surely attained neglected and disregarded disaster defeat and disgrace as assuredly follow. [CONCLUDED NEXT WEEK.] Utisc - titantous. DR. FRANKLIN AND HIS MOTHER. It was an idea of Dr. Franklin's, if not asettled opinion, that a mother might by a kind of instinct of natural affection, re cognize her children, even though she had lost the recollection of their features. And on a visit to his native town of Bos ton, after an absence of many years, he determined to ascertain by experiment whether his theory was correct or not. On a bleak and chilly day in the month of January, the Doctor, late in the after noon, knocked on the door of his mother's house and asked to •speak with Mrs. Franklin. Ile found the old lady knit ting before the parlor fire. lie introduced himself and observing that ho understood she entertained travellers, requested lodg ings for the night. She eyed him with that cold look of re probation which most people assume who imagine themselves insulted by being sup posed to exercise an employment which they deem a degree below their real oc cupation in life. She assured him he had been misinformed—she did not keep a tavern, nor did she keep a house to enter tain strangers. It was true, she added, that to oblige some members of the Legis lature, she took a small number of them into her family during the session ; that she had four members of the Council and six of the 'Tense of Representatives; who then ',ponied with her—and that all her beds were full. Having said this she resumed her knit ting with that intense application which said as forcibly as action could—if you have concluded your business the sooner you leave the house the better. But on the Doctor's wrapping his cloak about him, affecting to shiver, and observing that the weather was very cold, she poin ted to a chair and gave him leave to warm himself• The entrance of boarders prevented all further conversation. Coffee was soon served, and he partook with the family. To the coffee, according to the good old custom of the times, succeeded a plate of pippins, pies, and a paper of tobacco when the whole company formed a cheerful smoking semi circle before the fire. Perhaps nd man ever possessed collo quial powers in a more fascinating degree than Dr. Franklin ; and never was there occasion on which he displayed them to better advantage than the present one.— He drew the attention of the company by the solidity of his modest remarks, instruc ting them by the varied, new anti striking lights in which he placed his subjects, and delighted them with apt illustrations and amusing anecdotes. Thus employed, the hours passed mer rily along until supper was announced.— Mrs. Fraiikliu,laisied with her household affairs, supposed the intruding stranger had left the house immediately after cof fee, and it was with difficulty she saw him seat himself at the table with the freedom of a member of the family. Immediately after supper, she called an elderly gentleman, a member of the Coun cil, in whom she was accustomed to con fide, to another ,room, complained bitterly et the rudeness of thii stranger, told the manner of his introduction to her house, observed that he seemed like an outland ish sort of a man. She thought he had something very suspicious in his appear ance, and she concluded by soliciting her friends advice as to the way in which she could most easily rid herself of his pre sence. The old gentleman assured her that the stranger was surely a young man of good education, and to all appearances, a gentleman—that, perhaps, being in agreeable company, he paid no attention to the lateness of the hour. He advised her to call the stranger aside and repeat her inability to lodge him. She accord. ingly sent her maid to him, and with as much complacency as she could command, she recapitulated the situation of her fam ily, observed that it grew late, and mildly intimated that he would do well to seek lodgings. The Doctor replied that he would by no means incommode her family, but with her leave he would smoke one more_ pipe with her boarders, and then retire. Ule returned to the company, filled his pipe, and with the first whiff his conver sational powers returned with double force. He recounted the hardships endured by their ancestors; he extolled their piety, virtue, and devotion to religious freedom. The subjtlct of the day's debate in the House of Representatives was mentioned by one of the members. A bill had been introduced to extend the prerogatives of the royal governor. The Doctor immedi ately joined in the discussion, supported the collonial rights with new and forcible arguments, was familiar with the names of the influential men in the House when Dudley was governor, recited their speech es, and applauded their noble defence of the charter of rights. During a discourse so appropriately in teresting to the delighted company, no wonder the clock struck eleven unperceiv ed by them. Nor was it a wonder that the patience of Mrsi. Franklin became ex hausted. She now entered the room and addressed the Door -before the whole company, with a. warmth glowing with a determination to be her own protectress. She told. him plainly that she thought her self imposed on, but that she had friends who would defend her, and insisted that he should immediately leave the house. The Doctor made a slight apology and deliberately put on his great coat and hat; took leave of the company and approach ed the street door attended by the mistress and lighted by the maid. While the Doctor and his companions had been enjoying themselves within, a most tremendous storm of wind and rain had occurred without, and no sooner had the maid lifted the latch than a roaring northeaster forced open the door, extin guishing the light, and almost filled the entry with drifted snow and hail. As soot, as the candle was relighted, the doc tpr cast a woful look at the door, and thus addressed his mother: " My dear madam, can you turn me out in this storm ? I am a stranger in this town, and will perish in the street. You look like a charitable lady—l should not think you could turn a dog from your house this cold and stormy night." "Pont' talk of charity," replied his mother, ' , charity begins at home." It is your own fault, not mine, that you have tarried so long. bo plain with you, sir, I do not like either your looks or your conduct, and fear you havo.some bad de sign in thus intruding yourself into my fancily. The warmth of this parley had drawU the company from the parlor, and by their united interference the stranger was per mitted to lodge in the. house; and as no bed could be had, he consented to rest in the easy chair before the parlor fire. Though the boarders appeared to con fide in the stranger's honesty, it was not so with Mrs. Franklin. With suspicious caution she collected her silver spoons, pepper box and porringer from her closet, and after securing her parlor door by sticking a fork over the latch, carried the valuables to her chamber, charging the negro man to sleep with has clothes on, to take the great cleaver to bed with him, and to waken and seize the vagrant at the first noise he should make in attempting to plunder. Mrs. Fraatche rose before the sun, rous ed her domestics, and was quite agreeably surprised to find her terrific guest quietly sleeping in the chair. She awoke him with a cheerful good morning; , inquired how ?wrested and invited hunts partake of her breakfast, which was always served previous to that or her hoarders. "And pray, sir," said Mrs. Franklin, 'as you appear to be a stranger in Boston, to what distant country do you belong 1" "I belong, madam, to the Colony of Pennsylvania, and reside in Philadelphia." At the mention of Philadelphia, the Doctor declared he for the first time per ceived something like emotion in her. "Philadelphia," said she, while the earnest anxiety of a mother suffused her eye; "why, if you live in Philadelphia, perhaps you know my Ben t" • " Who madam ?" " Ben Franklin, my dear Ben—oh, how would give the world to see him ! He is the dearest son that ever blessed a moth- !! What ! is Ben Franklin, the printer, your son? Why he is my most intimate friend. He and I work together and lodge in the same room. . 1 0h ! heaven forgive me !" exclaimed the lady, raising her tearful eyes, "and have I suffered a friend of my own Ben to sleep upon this chair, while I myself rested upon a soft bed !" Mrs. Franklin then told her unknown guest that though he had been absent from hor ever since he was a child, she could not fail to know him among a thousand strange faces; fot there was a natural fee ling in the breast of every mother, which she knew would enable her, without the possibility of a mistake, to recognize her son in any disguise he might assume. Frankiain doubted, and took leave to dispute his mother's proposition on the power of natural feeling. He said he had tried this "natural feeling" in his own mother, and found it deficient in the pow er she ascribed to it. "And did your mother," inquired she, "not know you lor if she did not seem to know you, was there not, in her kindness to you, an evidence that she saw someting in your appearance which was dear to her so that she could not resist treating you with particular tenderness and affection 1" "No,-indeed," replied Franklain : "she neither knew me, nor did she treat me, with the least symtoms of knindness. She stould have turned me out of doors but for the interposition of strangers. She could hardly be persuaded to allow me to sit at her table, I knew I was in my mother's house, and had a claim upon her hospitality; and, therefore, you may suppose when site peremptorily command ed me to leave the house, I was in no hur ry to obey." "Surely," interrupted his mother, "she could not have treated you so unmotherly without some cause." "I gave her none," replied the Doctor. "She Could tell you herself I had always been a dutifu son--that she cleated upon me, and that when I came to ber house as a stranger, my behaviour was scrupu lously correct and respectful. It was a stormy night, and I had been absent so long that I had become a stranger in the place. I told illy mother this, and yet so little was ►ho influenced by that "natural heeling, of which you speak, that she abso lutely refused me a bed, and would hardly suffer what she called my presumption its taking a seat at the table. But this was not the worst. But no sooner was the sup per ended than my good mother told me, with an air of solemn earnestness, that I must leave her house." Franklin then proceeded to descridu the scene at the front door—the snow drift that came so opportunely into the entry--his appeal to her "natural feel ing" of mother—her unnatural and un feeling rejection of his prayer—and final. ly, her very reluctant compliance with the solicitationsof other persons in his behalf —that he was permitted to sleep on a Mate. Every word in this touching recital went home to the heart of Mrs. Frank lin, who could not fail to perceive that it was a true narrative of the events of the preceeding night in her own house; and, while she endeavored to escape from the self-reproach that she had acted the part of an unfeeling mother, she could not ea sily resist the conviction that the stranger, who became more and more interesting to her,as he proceeded in his discourse, was indeed her own son—But when she observed the tender expressivenees of his eyes as he feelingly recapitulated the cir cumstances under which she attempted to tura 'him shelterless into the street, her material conviction overcame all remain. ing doubt, and she threw herself into his arms, exclaiming. .(t must be—it must be my dearßen !" 1.1111 - Socrates being asked by a young man %Itether bo woald marry :replied : 4 .31 y eon, if you marry you will repent it Lif you do not marry you will be sorry ; whichever you do you will regret." oir Every ooe ihall nap of that winch they sow. "There's Nothing True but Heaven." When we first heawl these words, we are inclined to think, there must be, in the world, some lasting good besides that which is denied from above. But upon more reflection we will be led to conclude that every thing of an earthly nature, will soon fade away and forever pass from our view. Wealth, with all the attractions atten dant upon it, may for a short time, appear to promise to us true enjoyment; but in a moment all our fondest hopes may be turn, ed to the bitterest disappointments, and we feel that .. There's nothing true but Heaven." We may trust confidently in those whom we fondly hoped were our friends; Put when affliction comes, or when we most need their sympathy, some of those whom we thought were the most faithful, have entirely forsaken us. And the re sistless hand of death, may take from our midst, those-few, who still remain unchan ged, and thus we are led to think, that true and lusting friendship is not to be found on earth. The fair and the beautiful, may picture to themselves bright scenes of pleasure, which they soon hope to realize, but how often are they disappointed, how often do all their pleasures fly away just as they are about to enjoy them, and when it is tuo late, they know "Thero's nothing true but Heaven." IVhen our life is almost gone, and we see the wisdom, pleasure, wealth and happiness of this world rapidly pass from our sight, and our spirits are about to wing their flight to another world, then can we fully realize "There's nothing true but Heaven." Beautiful. It cannot be that earth is man's abiding place. It cannot 'be that our life is cast up by the ocean of eternity to float upon its waves and sink into nothingness.. Else why is it that the glorious aspirations which leap like angels from the temple of our hearts are forever wanderingabout un satisfied ? Why is it that the rainbow and the clouds come over with a beauty that is not of earth, and pass off to leave us to muse on their faded loveliness? Why is it that the stars who hold festival around the midnight throne aro set above the grasp of our limited faculties forever mocking us with their unapproachable glory I And, finally, why is it that the bright forms of human beauty are presen ted to our view and then taken from us, leaving the thousand streams of our affec tions to flow back 'in Alpine torrents ?--- We are born for a higher destiny than that of earth. There is a realm where rain bows never fade, where the stars will be out before us like islets that slumber on the ocean, and where the beings that pass before us like shadows will stay in our possesSion forever. To Keep Mutton Sweet. As soon as your mutton is dressed place it in some situation where it will freeze. When thoroughly frozen, remove it to an outbuilding, or somo other convenient place, where it will be in no danger from dogs or other animals, and having packed it in a close and compact heap, cover it carefully with the pelts. Secured in this way, mutton, or other fresh meats may be preserved perfectly sweet, and in posses sion of its juiciness, till late in the spring. We have known it kept so front Novem ber till the first of April. The pelts be ing a non-conductor, prevent its thawing. [Germantown Telegraph. BerA young lady recently returned from a boarding school, being asked at Ufa table if she would take some more cabbage replied : ..11y no means, madam—gas tronomical satiety aaMonishes me that I have arrived at the ultimate of culinary deglutination consistent with the code of Esculapina." RECIPE FOR WASRINO.-Put two table spoonfulls of turpentine to ono of soft soap, and use the same as common soap. It will reduce the labor cre-third and the soap will go farther. It has been tested here to the satisfaction of those who base tried it.—Rural New Yorker. • Bar" Recollect, sir," said a tavern keeper to acoach passenger who had only a glassof water, and not remembering the waiter—. Recollect, sir, if you lose your purse, you didn't WU, out here.," DlV" , fin Irishman in recommending a cow said she would girc milk year after year, without having caives, , . Because " d he “it runs in the brade for she came of a cow that nirer had a calf." BirThe man who made the shoe for the foot of a mountain, is now engaged on a hat for the bead of a dissmurse. VOL 20. NO. 9. It illy Oinnotir. VIE DOESTICK LETTERS-CONTINUED. FIRST COMPLETE COLLECTION. Original Views of Men and Things. HUMOROUS ASPECTS OF AMERICAS LIFE. IV. —Doesticks Describes himself in verse. The Buffalo Eaprnes asks us, in such a "powerful," winning way, to tell "who is Doisticks," that wo really must reply. First, in his own words, he is a your; man, lineally descended from "A genuine poetical mother, Ditto father, ditto big brother." Who also says: "Though Ivo written for work in tho office all day, I will still keep writing for pastime and play." Again : I'm out of my cradle, I'm safe through my teens, I guess I'm "some pumpkins," and think I know beans; Ifeneeforth Pin to battle, with banner unfurled, And carve my way through a thundering rough world:' From the following we judge him to be 6 a limb of the law." "-hereafter, when Fin expounding the laws, And gulling the people, in trying their cause, You shall record my triumphs professional, Or "set up" my speech, under the head "Con• gressional:" That 'he has been a devil, or some oth er equally dignified fixture of a printing. office, appears fro:nth° following, wherein he talks to his printer-brother : You know I once hat.' "Mechanics," and thou Considered them loss , than professional men ; But time has changed my opinion, and made Me more courteous to those who learn a trade. And so, since I look on these things more be. I am happy to hear you are dOing so finely. But you'll tire of the life, are ten years you'vo led it, or, Perhaps, get promoted, and rise to an Editor— And then Heaven save me from being your creditor. (Don't get mad about that, twos therhymo that I said it for) Dot I don't Think runalog, in debt e'er will "bust" you, 'KIM) why r' Don't think any one ever will trust you. But keep at it old buy, if you think yen will like a Publisher's fortune—and stick to your "pica," "Pearl," , diamond," and "agate," "brevier," . and "long printer i" Put over the fire your "roller,' to simmer, (A compound, I think, of glue and molasses, With a smell, like the stable of forty jack•ass tta:o With "mallet," and "shooting stick" work at the "chases," And "lock up" the "matter," in iron "m" "bra ces." Print hundreds of lies, full of hatred and ma lice, And toil, like an old Roman slave, at the "gal leys:" Work hard, for two hours, the "platen" to level, And throw the "sheep's foot" twenty times at the "devil," .And call him a "skulk," a "soger," a "dead head." And wish ho was sunk in the ocean, well "load• ed"— Swear at the jeers, aad swear, at the prentices— Swear at the molter, which "non est invent." Swear at your paper, each hour in the day— _ . Swear it's a humbug, and swear it won't pay— Swear you're a bankrupt—and then run away! With the pen of n prophet, and eye . an seer, I hare thus shadowed forth your future career—, Yon may think yourself lucky, too, if you should fait, At the end of the year, to be locked np in jail, Then, bat two things are left to q fellow, d'yo A razor—and verdict of Vilo de se" Your destiny may not be quite no forlorn, But the road to wealth you've begun, 'in a I hope you will never have canoe to repent of Anil *lover come out of the littlest end of it. What an Editor does not Like. To pay postage on a letter ordering a discontinuance of a paper, when perhaps the subscriber is in arrears. 2. To pay postage on communications perhaps not more than ten lines in length, where none but the writer's interest is concerned. 3. To be in debt without the means to pay, because his subscribers will not pay. 4. To sand a paper six months or a year to one who is dead or moved away, and postmaster or some else one taking them out and reading them and then after ail receive a letter from the postmaster, say ing, "Stop your paper sent to Mr.--, •he is dead, , ' or 'moved away' . but not a word about pay. . . 5. To luivt; a tout to take the paper until he is indebt eight or nine dollars, and then air► off to parts• unknown, without raying; leaving the post-master to give notice of the elide, to the editor.