SINGLE COPIES, } VOLUME XL-NUMBER 33 THE POTTER JOURNAL ?WISHED krErcy THURSDAY ..NOIINING, HT Thos. S. Chase, yo..ailom all Letters and Conimunications s hould in , addressed, to secure attention. Tenns—hwarlably Li Ad*anCe : *1.25 per Annum. ~0 0 n=3, a im 1111 l itummunsismineu ttttttttt tinstuomsu. Terms of Advertisifig. ;Square [lO lines] 1 insertion, - 3 ‘: - - - Esth subsequent insertion less than 13, :Square three months, -- _ _ _ six " nine " . " one year; Srlesnd figure work, per - sq., 3 ins. - cars subsequent insertion, I Column six months, 18.00 41 10 00 ,g IL a 7 00 a per year. 3O 00- i 16 00 ruble-ccrlumn, displayed, per annum 65 Ot. six months, 35 00 three " 16 00 one month, GOO per square of 10 lines, each insertion under 4, 100 Eats of columns will be inserted at the same tees. - • i I Administrator's or Executor's Notice ; 200 , •:ff illitor's Notices, each, • 1 50 f, 1. ,t.ri'l's ?sales, per tract, 1 50 .!- CI Virrive Notices, each, lOO -, . . . DTO'Ce Sauces, each ; - 1 50 t.; lhaistrator's Sales, per square for 4 ~, 1 .1 insertions, 1 50 inincis-or Professional Cards, each, let exeedimr, .5 lines, per year, - - 500 4necialtind Editorial Notices, per line, 10 t rollt transient: advertisements must be tt:din advance, and no notice will be taken if stivertisements from a distance, unless they reaceompanied by the money or satisfactory licence. - ' , . ~, • bltstltEss earoo., _wumn nu JOHN S. MANN, . . . i. i . TIORNEY AND COUNSELLOR.AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend -the several Co l urt z l , ut in PotteralncinMiTs care willlott Counties. receive h i pompt attention. Office on Main st., -oppo lite the Court House. : 10:1 • • F . : W. KNOX, 'TTORNEY AT LAW : Coudersport. Pa., will 3plarily attend the Courts in Potter and the adjoining Counties. 10:1 ARTHUR . G. 01.318 TED, nuESEY & COUNSELLOR AT LAW. t:4eudetzport, Pa., will attend to all basines:• tcrrttite4 to his c.sre, with promptues a:14: lit ity. ()Nee in Temperance Block, se:- vad roor, Main. St. 10:r ISAAC BENSON. ITORNEY .A.T LAW. Coudersport, Pa.. ratal to all 4usiness, entrusted to Itiul, with tee and proruptuesi.. Otlioe corner of IV . es: mi Third ,its. 19: L.: • L. Y. WILLISTON, TTORNEY AT LAW. WelMoro', Tioga h., will attend the Courts in Totter and Counties. IV. K. KING, • rAVEYCIR, DRAFTSMAN AND CONVEY- AnER. Smethport, M•Kettn Co., Pa., will eit , ml to bu.:iness for non-resident land upon reaz , ormble terms. Reit:rut in girin if regitire,l. P. S.—Maps of any ;an of the County made to order. 9:13 0. T. ELLISON, Acm.:ING PITYSICI.Vi, Coudersport, Pa., informs the. citizens of the vil :ipaudvicinity that he will promply re 501d to all calls for professional services. dce ou Main st., in building formerly oc npied-nv C. W. Ellis, Esq. 9:22 1 4 .. 1 -.'-, MEM SMITH & JONES, LEI'S DIIIIGS, MEDICINES. PAINTS, Fancy ArLic . les,§tationery, Dry Goods, Ncerics, Jilin st., Coudersport, Pa. RS. 10:1 D. E. OLMSTEI), .ER IN DRY„_GOODS, READY-MADlthing Crockery, Gruceries, itc., Main st., lersiiort, Pa. /U:1 M. W. MANN, ZOOMS k STATIONERY, MAG- Music. N. W. corner of Main coadergrort, Pa. 10:1 GILLOII, late' from the Citc of iliop opposite Court 'ter Co.' Pit. • . iou paid Co CUT -10:35-1 y. ILVSTED • , - D. KELLY OLMSTED & kft. IN STOVES, TIN & SHEET IRON 4t/:, Main st., nearly oppoiite. the .Court CPudersport, Pa.- _Tin and Sheet 11 4.4 re ablAte to order, iu good style, on . srt notice. 10:1 couDEEsPORT-HOTEL, GLASSIIIRE, PrgrOetor, Corner of in and Second Streets, Caudergport, Pot- Co., Pa. 9:44 ti HOUSE, HUMPHREY, Proprietor, corner of :inn and North St's ' Olean, N. Y. 003"-A msge rugs to and from all the Pcssenger ' 14 5 on the New York and Erie. tailroad. [11:22. ' , •-• . AINIIMEMBIMI....III -....-.. .....- _ .......... .. . t or All •• , 1, , .. : •. -•-• • .1. -.• .. . ~.,.., . . .., , .. . . . . t) ..,, :-..,.•0 , ..'' - . ~ : ...,' ,, .. -. .... , - .14 . - • H i r,- . -. '-.... , . , .; : :; - :: : , '!„,:,-,,',..,:.--,',-...,...:._....:-., . . .. , - --.- -_ • . . .._ ~-, - -_. . •,...,;, i :, ~:.. ...- ~...:,_..,,. „ .. , , i /........,,,,:.....:„......;:. , ~.__ gF ts &att. The skater and : glides, ; Unknowing,that beneath the,ice: Whereon' lid - ettrves.his fair . deviFe, A stiffened corpse in silence stands. It glarethrupWard at his - plaY; • • Its rold; : blue, rigid lingers steal Beneath the treadings of his heels; It floats along and floats away.' IBM 25 2 JO 4 00 5 50 6 00 3'oo • 50 • . He has not`sticin iti'hOrror Heart is blithe ;:• he iillagibears' His distant la.nediter';, he careers Fn •festiyc waltz, a-thwart the glass. Nye are the skaters. 'we wbo'kkkh . "; • The surface of Life's salmi' flood; And drive, with gladness in our blood, X daring dadde from brim to brim. . . Our.feet.are swift, our-faces , ,burn . Our"hopes'aspire litte.soaring - The world take= courage from our Words, • 'And sees the golden time return: , , But ever hear Us. silent, cold Float those who bounded front the bank - With eager hearts, like rs,: o and sank _ Because their fel were over-bold. They sank thro' breathing-holes' orvice, Through - treacherous sheens of vice.' They know not their despair and.grief, Their hearts and minds are turned to ice. —Atlanticjlonthiy. BE CAREFUL. OF YOUR MONEY. • When life is full busy health andtlee, Work. work,. as as a bet 1. And take this gentle Hint me— Be your money You'll find it true, that friends-Are few' . 'When you are short orinonevl The. single graintnst . in the inonld - Map spring and give a hundred-fold,. More precious than. its weight in.gold I Be careful of your money The grain yrn sow to treks may grow ; ,Be careful of yournmey But do not shut sweet Merey'a doors When SorroW pleads - or.lVant imploree ; To help to heal Misfortune's sores, Be careful .of your monef ! To help the poor who,-seek yonrfloor; Be careful of your money ! : Would you escape the he , zr,rar' lot„ The death-bed of the tippling sot, And lire in sweet contentment's cot? Be careful of your money! And if von need a friend indeed,. Be careful of vour money! JAmEs SMOI ha; written some lines on Winter. which hese flinch - of the spirit of the old English poet& The frozen in the stream; The church is decked with holly : , 'Mistletoe hang from-the kitchen beam, Tn fright,away melancholy; ',Hes clink in the milkmaid's pail, Younker; skate in 'lie pool helort" ; Iliazkbirdz perch on the zarden nd hark how the cold winds' blew Thee goes the!iire to shoot at snipe. Here runs Did: lo ; [p i pe You'd hrP t h woe the stunke of In the frosty rivallin g fo g . • fiod g e is breaki n g i,•e for alp kine. Oid rind youn g eou tt li as they co ; The round red sun for g et,: to shit A.. And hark, how the colds winds blow! _ Bi%chug. From the. IV. Y. Evening Poet Iniand.Narig:ation of North - western America.. If an American were asked to number and name the great river•systems of his continent, he would probably specify'. tin. Mississippi. the St... Lawrence and the Columbia, with their respective, tribnta. ries. These, he woald sav setting asid, the lltidson, tie Swinefinial:l and the smaller streams of the AtlantiC coilst..are the latee rivers n hieh drain. the three great agricultural divisions of the contir nent—thecentral, the northeastbrn and the western. Subh a division of the Uni ted States and the - Can:oas is well enough. but of the continent it is lacking in' one most important particular. .It leaves out of account the inagnificenk northwestern areaS•of the continent, and the gigantic river-system by Which they are' watered and drained. - ' MEM! The great fact of these areas is this': North, uf the latitude of Mitwaukie. and west of, the longitude of, Lake. Itasca: the source of the' Mississippi," is 'a cultivable and inhabitable area, as" large as all the states east of the Mississippiiaken togeth er—an area of more than 800,000,Square voiles. : Ilaif a million square miles of this immense, agricultural.d;strlct lie this side of the'Rockv It haS a 'ricer system of ifs- oWn. Its baSe is Lake Vi nni peg, a lake two handred'dad'thirty`tuiles long and forty. wide r about tiiesize of-Lake Erie, mad con . occted, with twO smaller lakes.— . WitioipegOos,,a,nd. Manitoba which, taken 'together,' are abonr half; as large as 'Lake 'Winnipeg. 'three are enclosed in the trapezium the - flair' sides of which, arelatitudes 50? and 51°, and longitudes 96° and, Iol°., ..Into this cen trallake.(the final ,outlet of ;which is by Katchewan and NelSon riveraintii Eltidon Bay) flow-two principal Iribn i taries; the Saskatcheman from the base ofithe Rocky Mountains, - at the extreme " west ; 'arid Red River; from the undrained plateaus, be tween thelead-waters of the Mississippi' and the great bend of the Missouri, at the , , DobotiD . 0 of, liftio Daii)oet.4e, Qissepiopiioß of, 110 1ce1333.i BM THE' SKATER: WINTER 001:1D 91SPORT,` , POTTER COUNTY, gA., THURSDAY, MARCH 10, _1859. . . . Wren:l:South.. - The Saskatchewan hasl .two branclies, which unite in tatitudes3°. aid loUgitude 105, one-third the distance from Lake W inuipeg. to the Reeky Moan-' tins. - .The southern branch ot" the Sas- ' kiatchewan, which takes its rise in the' Lucky Mountains near latitude 49°, (the international ffontier,) and long:tut:l6lls°, flows nearly- eat, till, in longitude 107, ill deflect greatly to the north to, join the *than branch of the SziskatclieWati. This= northern branch :takes its rase .lit ahout, the same longitude as the southern blanch,•but in latitude.s3, and,flows in-a nearly Southeasterly direction till, in longi tude:lo7°, it turns and - flows almost nor,tl- 7 east,, and then, united With the southern branch,-'it-pours its waters into Lake Win dreg, forming at its mouth the Grand 1 apids,:three miles in, length, Except ing this obstacle, which is not insupera ble-, the Main and upper Saskatchewan is navigable by'steamboats in a direct ling ii pre thairseveii hundred 'miles, and by. t e coarse of the stream nearly double t at distance-that is, to the Edmonton I- owe, within sight of the Rocky,Mohn tlii [is (lat.: - 54, long.' 113,r). The South Saskatchewan' is eciTuilly well navigable, it is said, to ChesteHlield lionse iu about the same longitude. • This `river alone drains afertile. valley of 363,000 square tulles- The Red River of the North, the other principal, tributary of Lake Mani , Peg,- flows almost exactly north along the parallel of l6ngitude 97, from latitude 45° 34,tlic nead of steamboat nevi zation. two . degrees and a half this side of the inter national boundary. 'Troia this point in Minnesota, therefore, a Steamboat might sail northward,- : dawn edltiver and• through Lake Winnipeg; olt len dragg,ed through the Grand Rapids the Main Saskatchewan, she.could steam Westward;: till she was covered by the shadows_ of the Rocky ,Mountains,, The enter rising people ,of St. Paul, in innesota, will place a steamer on the ed River of the North as early as the Gming: June. Ohe man . who, in the yshets of last spring, got his steamboat fo the waters of Crow Wing river, offers r two thousand dollars to tate it apart, 'd carry it On sledges ninety miles across • Brerkenridge, the head of navigAion Red - River, and- launch it by the 15th 4prd. He will give bonds of-!$5,000 or the performance of his coutract, Al 4idy the $2,090 are nearly or iplite rais -1 by private persons, and the St. Paul tambcr of Commerce offers in addition bonus of SSUO each for three boats to be livered in the Red River any time dur-! g.the conitog,summer, and a reward of ,000 to any person who will run a steam- i at of inc hundred tons burden on Red ,ver this summer, beginning her trips on! before the lst of June next. . - 1 'l apt. Anson Northrup isnow transport ing teamboat oi. sivtlgt,4, in eonsider-tha of the . Paul tin/as, and i-xpets to tc ri-ady tor' :diriq trio by April Ist t He haul- his bolt sledges from Gull to Red river, and is pro- bly tat his - headquarters on the latter river s this time.—ED. Jotdt.] Phis is the first public step of a wove- 1 nt which is.yet to diVert the products 1 the industry and wealth of an inland 1 ustralia to tht. United States. lute the; trt it magnilictMt areas, hardly surpass in fertility anti bet/ut; in the temperate ' ie. tile steauibual this summer will fete.' . way, and mai k the chaotic{ thrungli , ieh their products wiil dow witch those ; :duns have become populous: as in a few i re decades ofyeSrs they inevitably . will: ueisely what are toe characteristics and' paeities.of these northwestern areas we all in a a-üb.sequeLL article attempt to 1 I w. • Enough, however, is known ut them j point a:comparison of the sagacity of y inerchan s 'of Si. (Paul with that of the -esident of these United States. The e, whose treasury is already depleted, d who every day 'runs deeper into debt, minds of the country $.30,M.000 to ti negotiations fur buying 'an island at we do not now want, from a country it will nut sell. The others will spend 4s than $5;00. and make 31inimsota the iewayto the northwestern areas tit Brit a America. - The prospective results of this enter ; Ise it way not h,e wise to prediet„ , not at List .uutil the: cllaract.vri4ics .of thine as are better. known. , The immediate 111 h is easier to see.. By means of this eataibuat and * means of. th# railroad,. I ~ ro hundred tildes lung, between St. Paul id Breckenridge, sixty [mks of which ill be, completed theeouting year, the ade* of' Assinihoia; the distriet . of British Mcrica occtipiedi by the Selkirk' se tle but, and embracing the lower or north= ernseetion of the Red River and the,pro . r docti:e Valley of, the Assiniboine, will be atbuce firmly securLl its the United-States. Itt is already :concentrating at :St.. Paul, • I d' duringlasear amonnted tosinilliun of dollars: There is a community . of : ten' th usand peuplest-Assiniboia, Fort Garry .1 and Fort Rouge, situated ou the three points of nts of Lni formed by the junction of th i n Assinibinne .• with the Red River. Within the last year ur two, and ever since the Fraser 'liver 131114:ration, the growth in population of this section of country is sa d to-have been rapid and steady. n II The sagacity cf the merchants 'of St. J'aul, to whom sonic of these facts, were set forth in a document read before their Chamber of Commerce by Mr. James - W. Taylor,-January 22d; is inorethan:vindi qated, if that were necessary, by the fact that a Company was utranized.in.Canada last October; the immediate object of which was-to carry into effect the - very project which is. now spurring .the Minnesotans into such enterprisiag exertion. The curs and 13oard of Directors were from the Joust - respectable citizens.of Canada ; capital £lOO,OOO. They proposed to c,m strnct the portage roads between Lake', Superior and- lied River (140 miles wagon road); t- place sonic small steamers nu t tlie.,navigable reaches in Rainy river, ! Lake ,of i the: Woods. with freight boats, and oared boats for shallow water; to place a steamboat on Red river to run 350 miles to the G rand Rapids of the Saskatchewan : near its debouchement into Lake Winni peg; to bui!d a portage road at the Rap ids, and.to put another- steamboat -above the Rapids to run up-the Saskatchewan. Influential persons are engaged in this company, who believe' that it not only opens thewagtillieent agricultural district east of the Rueky Mountains, and the way to the.gold fields of:Fraser River and Ore gon and Washington territories, for- pas sengers from Europe, and from the popu lous states and provinces of the St. Law-- , reuce valley, but. that it must inevitably become the route tbr the tirst.Paeific Rail , road across the continent. . . The merchants of St.. Pauli. hoWever, are beforehand in the 'matter, or rather, Nature has been. by : opening up a . high. way from these northwestern districts in to the heart of Mintir:sota,,and they are wise enough td spend tire few thousands now, which will come back in tens of tliuus:ands hereafter. From Ihr Philadelphia Liuactin. The Diabolus Bang Pa?ers.. E=l Lux eece suryit aurea ! "Be wide awake, aini catch my drift! Be r.artv, orthe bridal train And bridegroom on his bob-tailed nag May sweep along in rain; ifiterere tad!" —LADy ALICE lICN rEnuows. G-o-o-d mor—niug! You don't know me, i.ey ? But you will, PleauFautly. I have a name—DIA BOLUS• SLAM BANG—pretty name, isn't it? Wouldn't it be a good name, though, for a Reverend? Fur a regular Hard Shell Hunker brother; one of the sort who sends. out his shuts from a shovel frum'a cart-tail pulpit at the sinful mul titude. \Vlreu sintiers are hard to con vince—bang 'cur : That's the way—, hang 'cur. The fact 14, I've got some other wall's name. I kdow I have, Rob ert I've always been of the opinion that every man born is burn to a certain wife and a certain' name. But the right coup= le seldom meet, and the right man seldom gets the name baked foildin when he was burn The Chinese say that an old man sits in The moon holding , hur.dreds Uf mil- of invisible curds, -some red, scene white. The further end of'every coed is round a human neck ; the white round the wmnen's, the red round the men's.— So, we all dance with our curds—but here, says the i orear Confucius, the accordance ends.- For the old fellow is always tr . } lug to draw the right couple I,,gvther a "laid old fellow, this lunarian—but the vagabonds iu red .go running, about so to right left. and enss-crussing, balanceeing, over-yondering, this way:kng. serpen tiu Mg, tip and sifterin, up the middle and down the sides, dud t hug, ducking and philan dering, ogling acid flirting, butterflying, and paying. attention first to this lad} and then to that, at such a rate that the %Omit: assortment of strings are. mixed up and entangled, forever and ever. Imagine a barrel of milliuns . of eels, oh, beloved, ev. ery eel, in the barrel as long as from Broth er to the moon, and these eels ail Of the croidtcdest and liveliest kind. Lift Up your imagination it full play to soar forth ! into the infinitude of Eeidom and picture to itself the ne plus - ulterior uss of wiggling entanglement— and I assufe you; oh, friends, that all this would be litraightness itself, and seem like freedom compared to the entanglement of those. red ,and white lines. et there the uul,nituf sits driving us . all like horseS, Iris hands full, Of reins. Such a . tezun ! Those - who lose Ibeir 'parents are the off .That's why we don't gal the wives ap 'pointed for us. Now fur the names. My natural panic,,if I'd ever got it,' would have been " Alfonso Cherubino. Conyng liame. de 'ere Esek Short. Still, I've occasionally doubled even' this. "Folks who never doubt,"say the Italians, "nev er know anything." — ,Sometimes I've Oniuglit' that my name waS S..i.cK'S Then I offeied' l to change with Fred Cozzens, and keep the Sparrowgrass for Spring calls. Then I wanted to trade with Col. Ilawkes, he said he'd always been "one of the birds," and intended 'to remain or nithological as long as they flew kites in Wall Street T en, I proposed' to,:tein llver—tand Tom agreed. him Self that Shiin Bang wa'n't a bad' name - from' 'Anna det•—but when be leaid that .I;shoi.ild drop his . cbristian- one,':and call xil . .qelf Excelsior—Hyei, 'tfecli ped.' .• . ' But I haven't 'yet . toidriiu. 'him it is that people don't get' their - right: nam . es, ' and why ladies are called AngelioaS, who ought to be Devilettesi and called .Josepli sornetiines, .ivlierilthey are no Josephs at: all.. • ' , • " Every snow-flake that fills," 'Barthel Samoyedes, "haS a name."' - No*, the first! time a snow-flake falls on the 'head of a child. if the 'child bdbareliediled; and the flake happen. to fall 'in tlic 'Middle of the forehedd and melt, why Child gets` the right name: 'But if he hayel'adap on; or a hat, for that matter, 'why Flake is•knock.: ed off,• and: the name is lost.7'' 1. have fining ont'ot complete satisfaction, that the first tithe' I.Wai out id snow storm,' was'ili a nailor eabload;, wherein I was brouOt young lady's to represent TilE CIIILD . PoLisn. EXILE. — 3.ly virgin ''inaniina knelt in a graceful zittitudd with uprolied eyes--,indeed,the 'artistic 'conception was a 'most immaculate• one, and well .: . desetV ing a Triem—and I knelt by her side. X show storm of torn' visiting cards and mil:. I liner's bills fell from sn unpitying upon our defenceless beadS', and gradually rose in drittsMillie earivit. Of course, a /flake took? tile—but it 'didn't ':inelt PaSteboard . seldoaf does'3:- I mamma wore her hair in What-Were then called .turrets. :'Of course they caught the flakes: "ldieii, fair Stiowdori - , with thy turrets high." So sang David Lindsay. Poetry, You know, is often prophecy; and if history tells truth, the word for pea once meant Prophetalso. Things, have changed since then. Poetry is no longer profitable, while the very worst poetry we see now a-days, is that of the prophets—especially of.the ‘astrologists" who show the face of your future husband, ladies half price, give love philters for half a dollar. I give you a specimen of this, poetry, on one of the cards of a celebrated New York , witch : " Wimild you your fatal husband view Or read the mystiek,futiire true Or find a cure fair drunkenness I can relieve your fond di.iiress." As for love philters 7 -wellj never tried them, but I believe that they have the' same result in common with water filters —they triug down the dust. Whether l they bring'down ail attachmene is another ' matter. But as I have known a great patron of fortune tellers to be sold out by. the Sheriff, I am inclined to believe that such is sometimes the case. I have been rather discursive in this ' first paper, rather polygonal and .mixed up, slightly various and not altogether unitarian in toy topics. In this I follow' precedent-41a!-of Oliver Croinwell,.who, in his first interview with anybody or cod ies, was 'always accustomed- to flit about, from subject to - subject, darting from North-EaA to South-West, from post to ,• pillar, from West. to S. S. East, and from; one Toini to another, until his, auditorsi were not quite certain whetlfer North was, South, or whether North South was'utl somewhere between West North and The ekventh of January. Herein tool .followed—albeit at a great distande—the. eminent Napoleon, the Gun can Sybil, Rev. Edivard Irving, Lord Dexter, Or- t pheus, Park Benjamin, Francatelli, the' Angel Gabriel, the Delphic Pythoness, the musical critic of the—and-4-not! io inention—and--all of Whom were or are 'iceit:toined in their introductory' speeches, or compu s itions, - proeines . , pro-, logues,Threfaccs, commencements, or be.' innins, to pleksantly and ingeniously entwine such a -variety of 'disconnected. eleuients,, that all who heard, or tasted, were or are wont to sit iu silent wonder, I..arvelling what thread . of continuity would ever be severed from such a hand ful' of unsorted and' rattled-Up . mosaic stones. - For the thread of my discourse, see'my second :roiiper—l should say . my thread paper. Here endeth..the first lesson of your friend Diabblus S. Bang. Go in pea Ce-. • EdHOF Dreaming on Wedding , Cake. - • "A baChelor ediiur out West, who had received from the , fair hind , of bride, a .piece of elegant wedd:ug .cake to dreain on, thus.gives the result of his experience: " We put it tinder : the :head..,,of.ont• low, and shut mit' .eyes,iweetly, ns . in fant blessed with an easy conscience,-and soon mired, prodigiously. •.. The . god of .dreams gently touched us, and presently, in fancy,! we were married. Never was a little editor so happy. It was 'my love,' dearest, 'sweetest,' ringing in our ears every moment. Oh, that, the dream had broken . off here t But.no • some evagen ins(put. it in the 'head, of our (lucky to have pudding for dinner, just to -please her lord. In a hiingry dream we sat down to din-, ner. 'Well, the pudding moment arrived, and a huge slice obscured from sight the plate befue us. BENTS. TEltris.-41.25 PER ANNUM. • . 41 3ly dear," said we fondly; " did.yon make•tlais Y•' • "dies ; rave; ain't it nice "Glorious-the best .bread puddingi scsr.mated in .my • ' • "Plum puddiug,Aucky," - suggnsted my wife- • p( - )h I - no dearest`, , bread'ltudding; : h I as always fond of. 'em." • •-- 't Call that broad pudding ?" said .; my .. l ire, while her lipS „slightly curled' with. contempt. . ;7 • Certainly, my dear. i Reckon. rye 'had ,enough - at therSherwood House to know bread piaddingi , Euy logo; Eby all . means.",' "Husband! ;this is really too bad. Plunt pudding is twiee hard to make as bread puddding, . and is lnore • exp:nsive, arid a great. 'deal better. J I say this is plum pud 'ding; sir and . tity :pretty wife's _brow flushed-with excit6inent„ . ", My love, my isweet;:my r _dear love r !exclaimed: we, sapthiegly, .f do not: get angry,. Is am sure it's Very good, if it is. bread pudding." ,1 :•', ' ' , 4' You mean, low wretch," fiercely re ,pliedny wife, in a higher. tone," you yea know it's plum pndding. ' s, ;•- ,[ " Then, ma'am t v it' 80 meanly put • to gether,- and so badly burned, that the dei n hiluselt wduldnttAnow it. I tell 'you, madam, most distinetlyand emphatleally; land I will , not, be Icootradieted, -Oat' it , is , bread pudding, : aid the very meanest kind , at that," "It , plum ; pudding !" shrieked. my ' wife, as she, hurled a glass of claret in my face, the 'glass itself tapping the claret from my nose, " Bread pudding,!"; grasped we, pluck to the last, and grasping a roasted chicken i l by the left leg. I • " Plum pudding I" rose above the.din, I as I. had a distinct percaption of two plates !smashing across t i ny head. "1/3read pudding I" we groaned in rage, las the chicken left our hand, and flying .:,with swift wingslacroas the table, binded in madam's boson]. • i " Pluin pudding V' ; resounded . the' *at cry frinn the enemy, ; as - the gravy dish 'took uswhere we had deposited .the first ,part of.our. dinner. and a plate of beets ilanded.npon our white vest. . : • -.1 -• li . ".tread pudding forever !" , shouted we, 1 stn defiance, dodging the soup tureen, 'awl • failin„( , beneath its. eon tents...; . :,,. : .- 1 "Plum pudding !" ' yelled the . angle , I I *use, as, noticing cur misfortune, '''She determined to keep, us down by piling' on our head they dishes with.no gentle hand. Then, in !rapid succession folloWed the war-cries. i." Plum pudding !" sho 1 -shrieked with every dish. - i " Bread pudding V" in smothered tones came up from the.pile. . Then it was "Piunt pudding' in rapid succession, the last Cries gr s owing feebler and feebler,. till; just I. can recollect, it, had groW4 to' a;.tvlihs er, " Plum pudding" resounded like than et. - S followed by :a trmendous' crash, as my wife leaped npon the ;pile with - her 4eli cate feet, and cothmeticedjamping upnd down, when, thank heaven, we : Awoke, and thus saved our life. .We!,-aLA never, dream on wedding cake again. - -; , I Man's !ninAortpditty. TIIOI.I SIIALT NEVER DIE. Neither an you reader 179 u may indulge in skepti cism, as .to the Divine authority of the Christian Scriptures, and reject that eter nal salvation which they bring to light, but yow cannot thus get rid of the idea ot your immortalitY. • It is planted -deepl in your moral - nature. There it is , . Written on your living heart.! The words name out, when you look within, I CAN NEVEIt ,um. Whence came :it, if there be' no reality answering to it ? Is the strongest wish of our nattire based upon nothing ? 'Fnd the child, Cr the. savage; who ever thought of there being any ter.ninatioU to his existence. Isou.rereat,or, in implant ing an aspiration which gives its highest nobility to our nature, tuockingAus with a cbituera 0, no • , • • 1 - • immortality deciphers man; And'opees all the mysteries of his make; Without it half his inStineta, are &riddle ; Without it all his virtues area dreamJ' i What an .elaborata arrangement' for a most insignificant end we should havd - if we could bcdeve that Ciud made theivaild, and all things ih it, for wait, and then made man ;fox! ,nothing! - Arck MU the analogies of nature violated in his case? Shall all other living organisms; vegetable and animal, deVelope all thellowers,.`and fill up all the capacities, of which they' are capable, before they pass out of being; and he be the 'only exception, by' being prematurely arrested,- or cut off in an 6- 'finished state.?; If we had a. tree or a bush in our garden,: covered with bade' that never opened, or with blossoins that were never succeeded by seed or fruit, %ye should pronounce it worthless and rem ve it; or if we permitted it to cumber the ground, it would be merely as a miens' specimen of ,a freak of .nature. If death be the end of man, then freak becontes the law in his ease, the, fixed law of his entire race. . 'Snub, in brief,. are the nature and amount of the' argument, from the light of reason; for itninortality.-24 1 : 1 l: obSerter. I 1 I FM