4. ,411;„, s 4;14 4 / . t. a °. Olt 10 . p • 11 , 161 , t . • WILLIAM BREWSTE RP} EDITORS. SAM. G. WHITTAKER, Viactrg. MINI SLEEPING DEAD. BY B. W. LONGFELLOW. When the hours of day are numbered, And the voices of the night Wake the better saul that slumbered, • Ton holy, calm delight ; lire the eviMing lamps are lighted, And, like phantoms grim and tall, ahadow•s from the fitful firelight Dance upon the parlor wall ; Then the forms of the departed Enter at the open door ; The beloved, the true•hearted, Come to visit me once more, He, the young and strong, who cherished, Noble longings for the strife, By the roadside fell and perished, Weary with the march of life! They, the bole ones and weakly, Who the cross of suffering bore, Folded their paie hands so meekly, Spoke with us on earth no more I And with theta, the being beauteous, Who unto my youth was given, More than all things else that love me, And is now a saint in Heaven. With a slow and noiseless footstep, Comes that messenger divine,— • Takes the vacant chair beside me, Lays her gentle hand in mine. And she site nod gazes at me, With those deep and tender eyes; Like the stare so still and - saint•like, Looking downward from the skies. Uttered not, yet comprehended, le the spirit's voiceless prayer, tbsft rebukes in blessings ended, Breathing from her lips of air. tih ! %lung!) oft depresmd and lonely, All my fears are laid niide, LEI but remember only Such as these have lived and died! eftrt *tor». ^ d ICS '` ) J 1:J f My uncle Beagly, whocointneticTullis I tommereatt career very early 'hi tits: inca• ant century as n bagman, will tell stories..!' Among them, be tells his single Ghost Sto ry so often. that I am heartily tired of it. i In self defence, therefore, I publish the ode in order that when next the good,, I lad old gentloton n offers to Lore us with it, everybody may say they know it. I remember every word of it. One fine autumn evening, about forty ; years ago, I was traveling on horseback from echrewsbury to Chester. I felt tol erably tired, and beginning to look out for some snug way side inn, where I might pass the night, when it sudden and violent thunder storm carne on. My horse, terri fied by the lightning, fairly ook the bridle between his teeth, and started oil with mo ; at, full gallop through the lanes and cross rends, until at length I managed to pull Lim up just near the door of a neat look. ing country ion. ''Well," thought Ito soyself "there was wit in your !tininess, I old boy, since it brought us to this comfort able refuge." Arid alighting, I gave him in charge to the farmer boy, who acted us ostler. '1 he inn-kitchen which was also the guest room was large, clean neat and comfortable very like the pleasant hostlery described by Isaac Walton. There were several travelers already in the room—probably like myself, driven there for shelter—and they were all warming themselves by the blazing. fire while waiting for supper. I joined the party, Presently, being sum.' morel by the hostess, we all sat down twelve in number, to a smoking repast . of bacon and eggs, corned beef and carrots, and stewed hare. The conversation naturally turned on the mishaps occasioned by the storm, of which every one seemed to have his full share. One had been thrown off his horse; anoth. or, driving in a gig, had been upset in a muddy dyke ; all had got a thorough wet ting and agreed unanimously that it was dreadful weather —a regular witches' Sab. bath. .Witches and ghosts prefer for their Sab- bath a fine Moonlight night to such weather as this!' These words were uttered with a solemn tone, and with strange emphasis by one of company. He was a dark-looking man; and 1 had set him down in my mind as a travelling merchant or pedlar. My next was a gay well looking fashionable young man, who bursting into a peal of laughter, said : 'You must know the manners and cue• toms of ghosts very well, to be able to tell that they dislike getting wet or mud dy.' The lint speaker, giving him a dark, tierce look said : 'Young man speak not so lightly of things above your comprehension.' 'Do you mean to imply that there are such things as•ghosts?' 'Perhaps there aro, if you had the cour age to look at them.' The young man stood up, flushed with ' anger. But presently resuming his seat, he said calmly : 'That taunt should cost you dear, if it were not a foolish one.' 'A foolish one !' exclaimed the merchant throwing on the table a heavy leather purse: 'There are fifty guineas. lam content to lose them, if, before the hour is ended, I do not succeed in showing you, who are so obstinately prejudiced, the I form of my one of your deceased friends; and after you have recognized him you allow him to kiss your lips.' We all looked at each other but my young neighbor, still in the same mocking manner, replied : 'You will do that, will you ?' 'Yes,' said the other--4 will stake these fifty guineas, on condition, that you i will pay a similar aunt if you lose." After a short silence, the young man said, gaily 'Fifty guineas, my worthy sorcerer, are snore than a poor collage sizar ever pos sessed; but here are five, which, if you are satisfied, I shall be most willing to wa ger.' The other took up his purse' saying in' a contemptuous tone . 'Young gentleman ; you wish to draw back ?' I draw back!' exclained the student.— 'Well if I had sixty guinea, you should see whether I wish to draw buck !' •Elere:' said I, 'are four guineas, which I will stake on your wager." No sooner had I made this proposition than the rest of the company Lammed by the singularity of the aflitir came forward to lay down their money; and in a min ute or two the fifty guineas were subscri bed. .I'be merchant appeared so sure of winning. that he placed all the mat 0., in the student's hands and prepared for his • „, far the Dui a small summerhouse in the . garden. per fectly insolated, and having no means of exit but a window and a door, which we carefully fasted, after placing the young man within. We put writing materials on a table in the summer house, and took away the candles. We remained outside with the pedlar among us. In a low sol emn voice he began to chant the following lines : "nut riseth slow from the ocean caves And the stormy surf? Thu phanton pale seta his blackened foot On the fresh greenqurf." Then raising his voice solemnly, he said : 'You asked to eoe your friend Francis Villiers, who was drowned three years ago ofl the coast of South America—what do you see ?' see,' replied the student, 'a white light raising near the window ; but it has no form ; it is like an uncertain cloud.' We—the spectators--remained pro foundly silent. "Are you afraid; asked the merchant in a loud voice. am not,' replied the student firmly. After a moniont's silence, the pedlar stamped three times on the ground and sang: "And the phantom white, whose cold clay face Was once so fair Dries with his shroud his clinging vest And his eea tossed hair.' Once more the solemn question : 'You, who would see revealed the mys teries of the tomb—what do you see now ?' Then student answered in a calm voice, hut like that of a man describing things as they passed before hint : see the cloud taking the form of a long veil—it stands still ! "Are you afraid ?' • am not!' We looked at each other in horror-strick en silence, while the merchant, raising his arms above his head, chanted in a sepul chral voice 'And the phantom said, as ho rose from the wave, ._ • . ---• He shall know me in his Booth I I will go to my friend, gay smiling and fond; As in our first youth l' 'What do you see 1' said he, 'I see the phantom advance; he lifts his veil—'tis Francis Vi Iliers„ he ap- proaches the table, ho writes his sig• nature , Are you afraid 1' A fearful tnomtut of silence; then the student replied, but in an altered voice : I am With strong and frantic gestures the merchant then sung : And the phantom said to the mocking 'Jeer, I come from the South Put thy hand on; my hand—thy heart ou my heart-- Thy mouth ou my mouth' " LIBERTY AND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE. " } - 117 e NTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 1857. - w -- ~.,, .What do you see V , He comes—he approaches me—h, pursues me—he is stretching out his arms .—he will have me ! Help ! help! Save me!' 'Are you afraid now!' asked the mer chant in a mocking voice. A piereing cry and then a stifled groan were the only reply of this terrible ques tion. 'Help that rash youth,' said the mer chant, bitterly, 'I have, I think, won the wager; but it is sufficient for me to have given h,m a lesson. Let him keep his money and be wiser for the !were.' He walked quietly away. We opened the door of the house, and found the stu• dent in convulsions. A paper signed 'Francis Villiers,' was on the table As scion as the student's senses were restored he asked vehemently where was the vile sorcerer who had submentally subject ed him to such horrible ordeal—he would kill him ! lie sought him throughout the inn in vain; then, with the speed of a madman, he dashed off across the fields in pursuit of him—and we never saw either of them again, That children is my Ghost story ! 'And how is it, uncle, that after that, you don't believe .n ghosts ?' said I the first time I heard it. 'Because, my boy,' replied my uncle neither the student nor the merchant ever returned; and the forty•five guineas, bo. longing to tne and the travelers, continued equally Invisible. Those two swindlers car ried them otl, after having acted a farce, which we, like ntntries believed to be real.' ç na.l+ For the Iluntingtlon Journal. Essns. EDITORS In looking over the Globe of the 17th, I atm tin article to lien from the Now York Day 8....di, the editor of which has depict. ed his portr..i, tire it the huPs of - deep darn nation's dark domain. Ili• is but a "stool rigettn" for the S.,art, i.t.. • o‘...harn filS words are like the fallowing . 'Do you believe that the great God nod father of its all, is weer to day than he was six thou• sand years ago ?" 1 answer that he in the same God to day, he was front the Crentmn and foundation of the world. Again the demon of the South says, "Do you believe that God did not pronounce the g rent . pidg- mem upon Ilain and his descendants, that it 'servant of servants shall thy seed be on the earth forever 1'" Now you will find in the Holy Book of God, in the IX chap • of Genesis. these words :.. , And the sons of Noah that went forth nut of the ark, were Slum, [ . lam and Jnpheth ;" mark ye, 'and Ham is the father of Canaan.' And Noah began to be a husbandman and plan ' ted a vineyard, and drank of the wine, and was drunken, and was uncovered with• in his tent. And Ham, the father of Ca• naan, saw the nakedness of his rather, and told his two brethren without. And them and Japheth took a garment and laid it upon both their shoulders, and went back ward and covered the nakedness of their father. And their faces were backward and they saw not their father's nakedness And Noah awoke (torn his dtunkenness and knew what his younger son had done unto him and he said, .curse 1 be Casaaa, a servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren." Now this is the soul driver's hold. For God did not put the curse on Ham. No ; the curse was put upon Ham by his father, Noah, and I ask, can you prove Hain to be red, black or white Can any one prove by Scripture that we ars the nation that bears the curse of Canaan? Prove it. And again, the demon of the South says in his paper, 'Do you know that the law in every Southern State pun ishes any white man with death who inur• ders a slave ? Oh ! what an untruth I ask how many poor slaves, who are whipt to death, die at your feet It has not been but very little over eight months ago. when at or ou the top of one of your ball,a-boxes, in the State of North Carolina, at the town In America the cry is 'we have ..he ; Africans among us. and how can we get rid of them!' Alas! we have tulerated the crime and I:ow can we cease to sin in this direction. May we not say we have • the whites !Wrong us, and shall tve get rid of them ? We have submitted to bondag e , and how shall we regain our freedom.? I ask the South, have you any better claim to the air or the soil of America. than the Africans? Or, have you a charter from , God, which secures it to the exclusion of others of a different complexion or of dif ferent featutes ? Are the Africans and the whites of different families 1 Did Christ come into the world as a Savior of a part or of all Did he cover with his wing the white and delicate slave-holder, and exclude the poor dark and toil-worn slave? Are those not damned, past all re demption, who have not the particular col or? Is there any more resemblance be tween him and a bloated, inflated, proud, overbearing nod rioting slave-holder, than between him and a poor persecuted slave? "A day, an hour of virtuous liberty, Is worth a whale eternity of bondage." W ben a nation is at peace, that one man, or a body of men in that nation, she'd hold another in slavery, by plundering him of his rights, and exercising an un controlled authority over him, is the great est tyranny that a man can exercise, the grratest crime against uuture, the greatest. of Curritimk, when on going to •sello. ' outrage against Gad. It is a tyranny that young married woman the age of 22 years no sophistry can palliate—an outrage that with an infant on her breast, the blood- no reason can justify—a crime which no thirsty brutes began . examining her limbs necessity can absolve. Every individual (naked) and becaase her owner, who .of the whole human family, of Whatever was her lather, could not do as he wished form or complexion, in whatever cliMe ht's with her, cut her until her bowels fell up- lot may be cast front the poles to the equa on the earih, and her babe was trampled tor, is born with certain and equal rights; under their feel and expired in a few sec- springing and necessarily arising out of owls. %A ell, what was done with him? ditties, and with certain and equal privtle- Taken before the Court arid pronounced ges to exercise. Those rights is order to drunk and excited mail he did not know answer the Ind for which lie was created. what he was doing. Thu Court dischar- .111 men 'were created pursue their own ged him ! Bone of his bone, and flesh of happiness. Slavery counteracts this par. his flesh; his own dear child ! Like cer- SOIL All men were created free agents. taro ones in tins town if we will only look Slavery destroys free agency, by making back to their ancestors, they will find that it the fated machine of a usurped and tin. some of the sable-colored ones are connec. natural power. On free agency depends ted with their blood; and this is the, class the whole doctrine of rewards and punish that despittes our race the most. I thank inents. Is not Slavery a direct rebellion God that lam one of the descendants of against the decrees of Heaven,' The an• Ethiopia. • gel of purity and innocence will plead the I ask the question did not God, the same cause of the oppressed, and those in the ! God, (there is but one God, the father of bundage of tyrants and slave.holders, us all,) did Le not make the black man us trumpet-tongued. at the bar of Eternal well as the white? Is he not a rational Justice ; thi-re mill be a judgment, just, ! being? I answer yes. All we want is a though awful, to rioters on human privile chance, and we, as a people, will come up ges. and the pirates of human rights. and be men (or man. "To stroke the prickly grievance, and to hang, The slave driver says again. "Do you Ills thorns with streamers of eternal pause.' , lam sorry to say that this Government ! not believe that the 400,000 eAslaves at the South are more happy, better civilized. has become more subtle, but little impro ved. It is gilded with show on its back—' better fed, and better clad than any 400,000 it has a musical rattle on its tail, but an en of their race inhabiting the earth ? I an venomed hag in its mouth. It will s:ing steer no. is one of Satan's lies ? with Slavery, while it rattles Liberty. I Who ever heard of the like Their feed• have known the time when editors would ing consists of three pints of corn meal pee have scorned at such low and filthy slang day, meat once a day, and very little then, as e Globe published, taken from the scmetimes a bowl of milk, but :nostly wa. New York Day Book. It is well known ter. Now, as to their civilization. What ! that there were not three words of truth is a being without education ? What kind , in the whole. Abase lie from beginning of beings are they? To you I speak. to end. It is anxiously hoped that truth They may be compared to the four•looted, will triumph over error, and that true re- long tailed animals that roam over the : ligion and universal liberty will walls Laud To manacle the sons and daughters band in hand over all the regions of the of Ethiopia! You Southern people know earth. With this hope beatingin my breast that it is a very heavy penalty for any close on slavery. person to be caught instructing or clothing.. Truth divine fereverstunds secure, one of your staves. I know your feelings. Its head as guarded as its base is sure, _ . The Southerner, (I mean the demon,) Fixed on the Hood of endless years, sap, ‘•Do you not believe there is suiii• ;1 pillar ol'the etcraul plan appears, [1 : e " cient work for philanthropy among the Built by that Architect who built the skies." outcasts of New York city, and those nig- ! Yours, very truly, gers of Canada, without going mad about T. V. CHAPLIN, colored persons so Jar from home ?" ! Huntingdon, July 8., 1857. Oh! the w•on Canada ! That God• blesi - ed country where the friends of hu inanity open their doors. The word Ca. l o,cfh ; how sweet it sounds to my oar. ask the South, do you love that word Ca nada ? And oh ! the underground rail road ! what a pleasant road; all strewed with flowers! where the poor toil worn' slave rides at his ease. The locomotive • blows, and no he blues the words are heard to echo Lack in the wafiltig wind, “b'ree, free, fr..einan.': I ask the South, how do is e tuffs tlreW it is sure and strathi. Ber . ties are made of solid jock, and her rails never break. 'l'he locomotive's motto is , Onward."— AIM when they arrive at the blessed shores of Canada, 1 will compare those emigrants to a ship. at sea, Life is the ocean, the body the hull, and their souls are the cargo; the affections are their soils, pmsions their wind, comeience their compass, and reason their helm, hope their anchor, and happi ' :less their port. Canada ! Great Britain the home of the free ! ! L. t your language be like this "1 dare do all that may become a man ; Who dare do more is none." Dis Ctilanß. Old Mammy Milady's Experience. Tne old .Mammy's was one of a number of very curious experiences at a meeting in the backwoods some nine since. In or 'er to understand it properly. it is no ceseary to remark that the old crone had two tones of voice, so distinct and dissimi lar 014 it seemed Ott tinge that thi-y should each proce,l from the same talking op. tone, rather plaintive than otherwise; the other was coarse, rough and sharp, expres sive of energy and determination. That part of the experience in Roman letter was delivered in the first or .caritant' voice; ti,, other in the midi coarse briny. The meeting being in order, Old Mammy re lates the following: , When I inns very mien, I wit I. ft a poor lone, die , solate orphan in the world ! I had no relations or friends to keen her me, and had to live about front house to house, jilt what. the !sizes would let me stay : Arter a while I grew up and mar ried a mon that was mighty kind and good to me T thought then that I had seen tremble and in this world, and would be happy the lyila,ce of my dove. But ho wasn't spared .lon4 to no and I wns left a poor .issolate welder! lie that had promised afore the altar of God to love cherish and protect nw, hnd gone nod me. and I was in a worse condition than was before, (or I had a child then to take care of as well as myself. For you know that when women git married, they ere such cussed fools they will have children somehow. I had a bard time of it, to git along in the world, for I was a poor, lone, disco late widder ! And then I had no more sense nor to marry old Holloway! I thought then I'd see some peace and happiness in the world ; but my tri als and triberlattOns jist then began, for I soon had a house fullof children, and they were mighty noisy and sassy, and vexed me puny nigh to death ! And then to mead the matter, old Holloway, he went off and left use. Then I thought I'd look to the Lord for consolation and support ! 1 thought I'd pray to the Lord to help me bar up onder my trials and triberlations. But the chil dren kept up such d-1 of a confusion about the house I couldn't pray thar ! So I thought I'd go out into the silent groves, andpour out my soul in silent pray er. And jilt down at the edge of the over flow, thur was party little grove of hack- le berry hushes, the leaves was very thick and I thought nobody could sec and hear me but the Lord! But I didn't git more than half way to the thicket afore I got skeered and rail back agin ! But I moughti ktiowed nuthin wasn't gwine to katch me. Well the next day I thought I'd go and try it again, But I was such a fool I run back 'again. _ l ' eoncluded at lust I would go and Fray, and if the devil koched ow, he should ketch me a prayin'! But I knowed that ! Well I got to the thicket eller se long a time, and I neeled down and begun a prayin' to the Lord to have mercy upon my poor soul, and all at mast I heard n t Organ Grinding. voice, and it seemed to say. 'The wind llohnes, the 'wet, writing of the old style ce organ-grinders, who used to Mkt 11 , 8 servos bloweth whar it listeneth, and ye beer the sounds threof, but kinnot tell whence it says in his inimitable style conies from and where it goes to; so is! ene borne'd of the spirit !' Now I don't know whether them's the words, 'sally or not, but sumthin' putty much like it ! but indeed. I did see the huckleberry bushes shaken' a little V You think they are crusaders, sent From some infernal clime, To pick the eyes of Sentiment, And dock the talc of Rhyme, To crack the voice of Melody, An, br.sdi the legs of Time, Out hark the air again is still. Thu music all in ground, Water Bright Beautiful Water. , And silen ce , l• " pouhice Wrier! oh bright beautiful water for To heal the blow, curvet me ! Winer ! !leaven gifted, earth bles- It cannot ho—it is—it is-- sing, flower-loving water.! It was the A hat is going round. drink of Adam in the purity of his Eden i home; it mirrored back the beauty of Ere I A Bruce or Bor's • COMPOSITIONS.—A in her unblushing toilet ; it Wakens to life ! distinguished Georgian lawyer says that in agairi the crushed and fading flower ; i t ! his younger days he taught a boy's school cools, oh ! how gratefully the parched and requiring the pupils to writepomposi tongue of the feverish invalid; tt falls i lions, he sometimes received some of a pe down to us in pleasant ellowers from its eta liar sort, of which the following is a siie• home with the glittering stars ; it des- cum n : cends to us in the feathery storms of snow; ! "Ott Itedustry.—lt is bad for a man is it smiles in glittering dew drops at the be idol. Industry is the best thing for ■ glad birth of morning ;it clusters in great man and a wife is the next. Prophets and tear drops at night over the graves of those kings desired it long, and died without the we love ; its name is wreathed in strange ! site. The End." bright colors by the sunset t loud ; its name Mete is another. is breathed by the dying soldier, far away ! "Ott the Sealons.--'Phere are four sea on the horrid field of battle; it paints old sons, spiing, summer, autumn and winter. forts and turrets (rein a gorgeous easel up. They are all pleasant. Some people like on .your Winter window ; it charges up. spring best ; but as for me "give me fiber on the branches of trees in frost-work of ty or give me death. The End." delicate beauty ; it dwells in the icicle; it Jives in the mountain glacier; pit forms ( urn for Fodder.—We hope farmers the vapory ground-work spun which God i have found out that sowing or drilling faints the rainbow ; it gushes in pearly corn for fodder, is the ches pest way to get I stearms from 'he gentle ; it sakes ia great crop, in this Valley region, and glad the sunny vales ; it murmurs cheer- like what we said of millet, 4 can be got in ful sons in the ear of humble cottages, it and off, at a season when the farmer has oust,' ers bacliohe voiles of happy children time to do it. Any time in June is time it kisses the pure cheek of the water-lilly enough to put in corn for fodder, and it it wanders like the a vein of molten silver should stand thick enough so it will grog away, away to the distant sea: Ott bright ' beautiful, health inspiring, heartgladden ing water ! Everywhere around us dwel ktlt thy meek presence ; twin angel sister of all that to good and precious here ; iu the wild forest, on the gra,sy plain, slum big in the 1,,,,0nt of the lonely mom) the hurried uir floating ur•ei us of more than regal splendor; home of the Iteidin , angel When his wing bonds Co the woes id this (*Alen world. water for tar, bright venter for mi AA wine for the tretr,ttbusdebauche The North and the South, That most eloquent of all Southerners, u 1 think Mr. Prentiss of Miss, was ad. dr:sing a crowd of some 4000 people in that State, defending the tariff, and, in the course, of an eloquent period which rose gradually to some beautiful climax, lie he painted the thrift, the energy, the comfort, the wealth, the civilization of the loath, in glowing colors, when there rose op on tine vision of the rts,einidy ID tle. open air, a horseman of magnificent pro go lions ; and just at the moment of bush ed utteulion, when the voice of Prentiss had ceased, and the applause was about to break forth, rho horseman exclaimed, 1) the North." The curse was so touch itt unison with the habitual feel ing of a Mississippi audience, that it quenched their enthusiasm, and nothim, but respect. for the speaker kept the crowd from applauding the hois , inan.— Prentiss turned his lame foot around tool said, .Major Moody, will you rein in that steed a moment 1" Pie assented. Said he, "Major, the horse ou which you sit • came from Upper Missouri; the saddle that surmounts him canto from Trenton ' S. J. ; that bat on your head was made in Danbury, Conn. ; the boots you wear came from Lynn. Mass.; the linen of your shirt. is Irish, mid Boston made it up; your broadcloth coat is of Lowell manu facture, and was cut in lie York; and if to day you surrender what you owe the North, you would sit stark naked.' (laughter and loud applause. ) How to Conk Rhubarb.—lt is a corn nrm error in cooking rhubarb to peel it. This should never be done, as the skin contains the aroma of the plant and is not at all fibrous, but cooks us readily and be comes pulpy, We have derived this in formation from a French cook of note, ex perience and skill. The name cook tells us that asparagus should be cut Into pieces about three quarters of ass inch long, before cooking. It should be boiled wash a nice piece of salt pore, and served up in the same summer as peas. Destruction to House Bugs.—The French Academy of Sciences is assured by B. t ren Thenarcl, that boiling soup and wa ter, consisting of two parts of common soap, and one hundred parts of water, by weight, infallibly destroys bugs and their eggs- It is enough to.wush walls, wood work, &c , with the boiling solution, to be entirely relieved from this horrid pest. VOL. XXII. NO. 28 Cultivation of Corn.—Keep the cult% rater and hoe, or corn-harrow and hoe, in your coin field, from now until you lay it by, which should be when it gets into silk. 1,4 no weeds prow therein, and keep the he sure to keep the ,oil open. But don't Usu the plough. EV — A young Indy returning late from t!te opera, as it was raining, ordered the coachman to drive close to the sidewalk, but was still unable to step across the gut I can lift you over it,' said coachy. 'Oh, no,' said the sweet miss, .1 am too h:•nvy 'Lor miss,' replied John, 'l'm used to lit ring barrels of.eugar.' "Where a woman," says Mrs. Parting ton, "has once married with a congealing and warm heart s and one that beat. respon• slide to her own, she will never want to enter the maritime state again." Cluver for Huy ,Clover for hay should always be cut when it first comes into bloom t The 'editor of an exchange paper pub'ishes a punning 'market report,' in which he states that 'tin plates are flat, lead heavy, iron dull, rakes not much in quired after, champagne brisk, rhubarb and semis are drugs, starch is stiffening, egos lively, butter and lard rather strong, and paper stationary. There is no life in dead hogs, but considerable animation in old cheese.' Ir At a Sunday School examinatiou the teacher asked a boy whether he could forgive those who wronged him. Could you forgive a boy, for example, who line insulted or struck you ?' asked the teacher. c•s,s•i.r I think I could, it he was big ger than I am. IC!' The oest bull we ever heard of was shown in paddy's description of the ani mal of that name. .This is the way you may know him. When you see a group of cows lying down in the field and one of 'em isstanding—tnat'e the bull.' egr- with Thimmoth, I'm always re al glad you come vithiting to our houth.' 'Are you my little dear? You gre very fond of me then !' Mith Thunmoih t but we alwayth have two kind of pieth when you are hero to dinner. CURIOUS ENTRY.—In the parish register of Suekley is the following whimsical verso which must be reed down and up alternately : There and I'm one and he Is ono the but only only But only only lore one the end ohs that eon are