THE TWO WORLDS. 
takable signs of pleasure. Disguised as it was, 
she knew the voice; something, too, in the form 
Bcemed familiar. In a moment her 
To these her adventure of the evening gave shape 
and color. The form of Ned Makkland was con¬ 
tinually present to her thoughts—always in posi¬ 
tions of danger and extremity. Once, turning 
wearily, she moaned, and unclosing her eyes she 
thought she saw him in the room, he seemed to 
have been bending over her, bnt moved away and 
melted into the darkness as her eyes closed again 
heavily, and nnconscionsness chased away the 
dreaming illusion. 
She was always an early riser, but on the morn¬ 
ing which followed these events, she was glad to 
leave her unrefreshing couch with the first streak 
of dawn. She often went out in the morning,be¬ 
fore the family were starring, and she thought to 
do so now, tin retiring, 6he always placed beside 
her bed a pair of list slippers, which site wore, be¬ 
cause of their warmth and lightness, the latter 
rendering her gentle foot-fall almost soundless.— 
Mrs. Bagley was a fashionably nervous woman 
ani> Quin or 
Two worlds there are, To one our eyes we strain— 
Whose magic joys we shall not see again; 
Bright haze of morning veils its glimmering shore. 
Ah, truly breathed we there 
Intoxicating air— 
Glad were our hearts in that sweet realm of 
Nevermore. 
The lover there drank her delicious breath 
Whose love has yielded since to change or death; 
The mother kissed her child, whose dayB are o'er. 
Alas! too Boon have tied 
The irreclaimable dead; 
We see them—vision* ftruuge—amid the 
Nevermore. 
The inerrysome maiden used to sing— 
The brown, brown hair that once was wont to ding 
To temples long clay.cold; to the very core 
They strike our weary hearts. 
As some vexed memory starts 
From that long faded land—the realm of 
Nevermore. 
It is perpetual summer there. But here 
Sadly may we remember rivers clear, 
And harebells quivering on the meadow-floor. 
For brighter bells and bluer, 
For tenderer hearts and truer 
People that happy land—the realm of 
Nevermore. 
Upon the frontier of this shadowy land 
We pilgrims of eternal sorrow stand; 
What realm lice forward with its happier store 
€)f forests green and deep, 
Of valleys hushed in sleep, 
And lakes most peaceful? 'Ti» the land of 
Evermore. 
Very far off its marble eitirs seem— 
Very far off—beyond our sensual dream— 
Its woods unruffled by the wild wind’s roar; 
Yet does the turbulent surge 
Howl on its very verge. 
One moment—and we breathe within the 
Evermore. 
They whom we loved and lost so long ago 
Dwell in those cities, far from mortal woe— 
Haunt those fresh woodlands, whence sweet carol]- 
ings soar. 
Eternal peace have they; 
God wipes their tears away; 
They drink that river of life which flows from 
Evermore. 
Thither we hasten through these regions dim, 
But, lol the wide wings of the Seraphim 
Shine in the sunset! On that joyous shore 
Our lightened hearts shall know 
The life of long ago; 
The sorrow-burdened past shall fade for 
Evermore. 
[Dublin University Jdogaiine. 
arms were 
around his neck, and in tones only audible to 
himself, she spoke his name with expressions of 
endearment. 
“Come with me. We cannot talk here,” he 
said, as glancing toward the house, be perceived 
a light flashing in one of the lower windows, and 
a shining, ebony visage pressed close against the 
pane. Before she could recover breath to reply, 
she fouud herself in the little Summer-house in a 
twilight so sombre as to render objects scarcely 
visible. 
“ Dear Ned! what does this mean? How came 
yon here?" was her first ejaculation. 
“Speak low and yon shall hear. I have come 
to bid yon good-bye. I am going on a long jour¬ 
ney, and it may be years before I shall see you 
again." 
“Where? Why must you go, and why this 
secrecy?” 
“To Australia. I have borne with hard work 
and poor pay, at the hands of that skiD-flint, 
Thorndykx, long enough, and I can bear it no 
longer. I only wish I could take you with me.” 
“Has Mr. Tuounpykk discharged you?” 
Discharged me! Not be, indeed I He would 
hold me with a grasp of iron, so long as be could 
make any thing out of me. No! I've run away. 
You’ll hear of me to-morrow in the papers, T dare 
say, as a truant apprentice, whose honorable em¬ 
ployer * forbids all persons harboring or trusting 
him, on bis account. 
[From the Tiroes and Me seen per, Augnrt 21,1859.] 
ADVICE TO FAMILY FOLKS. 
One of the mofit convenient Ami useful of *11 Articles re¬ 
centlydiscovered, with a •. ow to elicit the U^ernns* of the 
careful housekeeper, and shale her pain- ft> keep thllica 
domestic, intact, and tidy, is certainly Spalding 1 * Prepared 
Glue. No nuittei wbai you break, (notfrea it be your bead, 
perhaps,) tow Glue step* forward like the jrenfi of order 
and promptly unite- the dissevered parts— reduces the frac-’ 
tore, a* a tureeon would m.v—Slid renders all whole again, 
joys or tools, chair, or vases, leather, silk, wood or glass*— 
it operates alike magically on all: and at its bidding the 
sobs of the chi l.i cease,the uratffioutiori of the matron is com¬ 
plete. No lainiiy should be without Spaldings I’repared 
[From the Hartford Bally Courant, Sept 22 , 1869.J 
Everybody needs a Glue-Pot occasionally, hut everybody 
knows that the old-fashioned mode of dissolving glue is in- 
convenient- Spaldings Prepared Glue is chemically held 
in eolation, l* equal to the beat preparation of Cabinet-ma- 
kerfi Glue, and i y ti^ed cold. A bruah accompanies each 
bottle, and the whole costs only twenty-five cents. 
[From the Public Ledger, Philadelphia, Oct. 11,1859.] 
A USEFUL ARTICLE. 
A new and useful article, called .Spilding’s Prepared Glue, 
has been introduced to the notice of housekeepers. It is 
reliable and really adhesive, and enables every housekeeper 
to repair furniture and household ware without trouble, as 
it. is always ready for use. 
[From the I-adies' Visitor, September, 1859 .] 
SPALDING’S PREPARED GLUE *.-r ms to be universally 
welcomed by housekeepers wherever it goes; it is pre¬ 
cisely the ready, reliable, adhesive substance needed lor 
repairing furniture umJ house bold ware. 
[From the Boston Commercial Bulletin, Sept. 17, J859.] 
It* C. SPALDING is astonishing the natives with liis Pre¬ 
pared Glue,which ha* won h groat reputation, and is fust 
enriching )fs inventor. Mr. Spalding I - remarkable for in¬ 
telligence and tact, which be exhibits in the style of his 
advertising. He is a type of the genuine Yankee. 
[From the Independent, July 28,1859.] 
GLUE. 
Our advertising columns contain some testimonies to the 
value of a new article known .is “Spalding’s Prepared 
i Glut, useful to hoansCkcepLTW for mpuding furniture. It. ig 
prepared with Chemicals, by whlrb it in kept In the proper 
condition for immediate use, the chemicals evaporating as 
soon as it ie applied, leaving the glue to louden. We can 
assure our readers that this article has the excellent phre¬ 
nological quality of “large adhesiveness.' 
[From the Boston Evening Transcript, Oct. 10,1859.] 
SPALDING'S F KICI* A RED 11LL K. 
, Dio value or thin Glue for domestic purposes is inestima¬ 
ble. J he difficulty of prepanng common sheet glue for use 
led to the new article. In u liquid state the preparation can 
be unad without heating, dries slowly, emiui tin offensive 
effluvia, and is ready for implication. It ir pnt up In class 
bottles, securely Corked, and sold, with a brush to apply it 
at the low price or I'weuty-tlyecents. Every liunily should 
have the Compound constantly ou hand, <w thereby any ar¬ 
ticle of wood, paper, crockery or glass can be mended, it 
will save more than its cost every month in the year. 
[From Frank Leslie’s New Furnily Magazine, Sept., 1859 .) 
SMALL INVENTIONS - PREPAttKil GLUE. 
The numerous small inventions and mechanical conven¬ 
iences adapted to aid in saving time, money, and labor on 
the farm and in the household,are most promising fnr our 
material and social progress, aud wo are always happy to 
chronicle all such, boweverapparently insignificant. 
It ir estimated that there lire over live* millions of house¬ 
holds in the 1 lined State* supplied with cabinet and other 
furniture, tin- various parts of which an- chiefly united 
with cabinet makers glue, and which are likely tci become 
loosened and otherwise injured or broken by constant use. 
b ruin oue- to two dollar, i- required lor annual mending* 
and repair*, near! v all of which goes to the professed re- 
nttircr. who Is usually-CaJDil in when the dilapidation has 
become unbearable, notwithstanding the homely maxim 
»• .. .1 .tail In Uml. urlVi.M nlnr " J IUS.XII1I, 
Frank Leslie reads the banner of the Sons of Malta 
without the danger of initiation. 
He becomes convinced there is an insect of the gentt6 
Pul-ex in his ear when each letter is pointed out to him 
and he is asked what it spells. 
as not for you, I 
wouldn’t care a straw." 
“0, Ned, I am sorry! Not that you are to he 
rid of thankless toil, and a hard master, but that 
you are driven to such a course. Only six months 
more and you will be done with him, ut any rate. 
] know it is hard, but could you not have borne it 
a little longer?” 
“Never! never! Neither yon nor any other 
woman can know what I have endured in silence, 
till I thought my heart would burst, or all manli¬ 
ness be crushed out of me. Do not try to per¬ 
suade me, elRe I fear I shall give way, for it is the 
thought of you that has been like the breath of 
life to me, through the past wretched year.” 
“But how can you go away? You have no 
money.” 
“ Don't you fret yourself about that I’ve got 
a berth on board the “Alhambra,” and shall work 
my passage. Dick Wilson and Joe Lewis are 
going as steerage passengers.” 
“Dear Ned, you know I never liked to have yon 
with such fellows. If you must go, 1 wish it were 
not with them. ^ on remember bow you were 
when we met, after so many years, and I fear it 
will be so again.” 
“Never mind about that.! 
Matrimonial history is a narrative of many 
words; but the story of love may be told in a few 
letters. 
“ Ma, do you know why horses don’t wear hats?” 
“ No, Johnny.” “Because it would give them a 
hos tile appearance.” 
What were the feelings of the Minotaur after 
devouring the king of Athens daughter? He 
suffered from a lass-he-chewed. 
A i’rettY girl nod a wild horse are liable to do 
much mischief; for the one runs away with a 
fellow's body, and the other rums away with his 
heart. 
Wiiat is the difference between an oriental 
fire-place and the largest ship in the world? One 
is an Eastern Grate, and the other is the Great 
Eastern. 
Thai I was a sad dog 
once, is no sign that I am now, though I am far 
enough from good, the Lord knows!” 
“Hush! you mustn't speak so.” 
"Well, the angeh then, if thatfll suit, you being 
one." 
“Ah’. Ni?p, do not think me unkind, you know 
you are all I have iu this world, and I cannot help 
being anxious about you. Y'ou are so impulsive, 
so open, that I fear the influence of evil minds 
upon you, Promise me, do promise, by all the 
love you bear me, and the memory of our sainted 
mother, that you wiil not give way to temptation 
in drink, or any other vice.” 
“I promise, though, may be, it’s a promise I 
shall break; but I mean to do right Livy, and one 
of the days I will come back with plenty of money 
and you shall live like a lady. There, don’t begin 
to cry and shake your head. You can’t deceive 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA. 
I am composed of 26 letters. 
My 2,10, 3 is a wild animal. 
My 12, 24. 13, 212 Is the name of a famous rifleman. 
My 12, 2. 9, 6 in a common vegetable. 
My 18, 20. lt*>, 21 ig n kind of grain. 
My 9, 23, 23. II, 2 is a fruit of many varieties. 
My 18. 13. 20, 10 is a very useful article 
My 23, 25. 16, S is a kind of meat. 
My 20. 9,12, 1,17, 7 is a small animal. 
My 18, 16. 20, 5, 2 ig a kind of bird. 
My 1, 9, 26, 21 is what every farmer bag. 
My 19, 9, 5, 22 a part of the body. 
My 14, 20, 13, 3 is what we do every day. 
My 1.10, 9, 5,18,16, 20, 26, 6 is the name of an inventor. 
My 18, 9. 23 is a coveriug for the head. 
My 12, 20,10,10, 8, 24, 0 is an invention. 
My 23, 4, 2 is au article of food. 
My 25,18, 7,13,1, 2, 20 is a month of the year. 
My IS, 11.13.16, 3 is a useful instrument. 
My whole is a maxim, 
Glendale, Hamilton Co., Ohio, I860. Jerry. 
Answer in two weeks. 
[Written for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker.] 
THE LIST SLIPPERS. 
evidence. One, that she had been seen by two of 
theservantsto bold communication with u strange 
man upon the grounds, long after the time when 
modest young ladies preferred retirement to the 
house—the other, that near the safe in the closet 
a slipper had been found which was evidently one 
of luo.-c which that young lady was in the habit 
of wearing. 
Having thus delivered himself, Judge Baoley 
paused, and Fmaeking bis lips, as was bis custom 
when be had said anything particularly convinc¬ 
ing, he rested his hands upon his knees and gave 
Olivia a keen, cold stare, which seemed to say:_ 
“There, I think, I have yon now. What can 
you say to that?” 
And for several minntes she said nothing 
She was perfectly astounded that a man of 
Judge Baoley’s sense could for a moment har- 
BY CAROLINE A. HOWARD, 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
ALGEBRAICAL PROBLEM. 
I ora farmers, A. B, C, and Xh each own a certain num¬ 
ber of acres of land. A says to B, •• If I had of your 
farm added to mine, I should have as many acres as I ” 
B gays tu A, “ If I had your form and 1-9 of C’a added to 
mine, I should have twice as many acres as I now have.” 
“ Well," says C, •* If I had >j of B’s farm added to mine. I 
should have as many acres as D.” D says to C. ’• My tarn 
contains 30 acres more than yours.” How many acres 
had each? j. Mahtjn Bkaixekd. 
Gainesville, N. Y.. 1860. 
£5?” Answer in two weeks. 
turesque, in the Summer and Autumn. On this 
particular evening, it was especially lonely, as the 
family bad all gone to ride. There was no one 
within, bnt one of the maids and the black boy, 
who scoured knives, tended the door, and served 
as a sort of under-waiter. So Olivia preferred 
wrapping her shawl more closely around her, and 
remaining in the open air awhile longer, to going 
in, to endure the seclusion of her own room, or 
the cheerless gloom of the deserted parlors. 
Something of an unpleasant nature seemed to 
weigh upon bar mind, for at intervals she would 
press her hands tightly upon her bead, or, rising 
hastily, would walk for a few moments up and 
down the gravel walk, with a quick,nervous step. 
Returning again to the seat, she sat for some time 
gazing with a half vacant stare into the dark 
aisles, and impenetrable nooks of the wooded 
lawn. Gloomy thoughts, suggested by something 
within herself, and heightened by the surround¬ 
ing landscape, began to prey upon her mind. All 
that she had ever heard, or read of robbers, or 
assassins, lurking in a place like this, was called 
up by ber over wrought fancy, until she trembled 
and started, if a leaf fell at ber feet, or the wind 
sighed a note louder than before. This was be¬ 
coming unendurable, and had well-high forced her 
to return to the house, as being the least of two 
evils, when her quick ear distinguished, as she 
thought, a sound like a heavy foot, crushing the 
twigs and dry grass. “Fanny,’’ a small terrier, 
which had been lying npon the seat near her, 
seemed to have heard it, too. for she started up, 
her eyes all fire, ami stood gazing at the opening 
of a little path which led through the woods, to a 
small, natural arbor, near the water’s edge. Fol¬ 
lowing the direction of the little creature’s eager 
eyes, Olivia perceived, against one of the trees, 
a dark outline, somewhat resembling a man._ 
With a short bark, “Fanny’’ leaned from the seat 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMAS, &c., IN NO. 526, 
Answer to Puzzle: 
SOCIETY OF CHILDREN. 
when we ieel, like Wordsworth, that “the 
world is ever with us;” that we are growing of 
the earth, earthy; that our perceptions of the 
beauty and truth of God’s universe are becoming 
dull—we rush into the society of children—into 
the company of hearty, happy, silly children, who 
love flowers and birds, 
pantomimes, strange, i 
mystic elfin traditions 
pet rabbits, clowns and 
wonderful legends and 
i — not the abominably 
clever little men and women produced by the 
“forciug system,” who have no relish for the 
simple joys of childhood. We join them in their 
revels; we listen to their prattle; we make their 
pursuits ours, their pleasures ours, and, as far as 
we can, their nature ours. It is as if we were in 
the company of ungcls unawares. Our heart 
grows purer, our mind grows healthier; some¬ 
thing of a new life and a new spirit, however 
evanescent, lifts us above ourselves, Who is it 
speaks of children as “birds without wings from 
Paradise?” His must have been a wise and 
kindly nature—ihe comparison is so apt, so true: 
for do they uot, with their pleasant voices, make 
a sweet and happy music, which seems like an 
air from heaven.—like the tender strain of some 
Answer to Geographical Enigma:—Eternal vigilance is 
the price of liberty. 
Answer to Charade:—Friend-ship. 
Answer to Arithmetical Problem:—$25 .7168 plus. 
other. I shall pray for you continually, 1 hear 
the carriage, I must hastsn. in!” 
“ Stay, Livy, one moment. You know Judge 
Bagley got me the place with old Thorndyke, 
for which I thank him little enough, and to-mor- 
row he will tell yon, as a piece of news, that I 
have bolted. Do you tell bim that you knew it, 
and tell him why I did so. Tell him, also, from 
me, if you like, that I said it would be just the 
place for that great, good-for-nothing son of his, 
as he told Thorndyke that I was a hard case, and 
needed to be kept under, with a tight grip,” 
“0! hush! some one will hear you.’’ 
But the caution was unheeded, lor with a kiss 
and au earnest clasp, he had lied, and Olivia stood 
alone. For a few seconds she felt like one in a 
dream, but children’s voices above, recalled ber 
scattered senses, and by another way she hurried 
to the house and to her room. That night her 
sleep was restless and broken by frightful dreams. 
SPALDING’S PRKPAItLD GLUE! 
USEFUL LV EVERY HOUSE. 
SPALDING’S PREPARED GLUE. 
BOLD BY STATIONERS. 
SPALDING’S PREPARED GLUE 
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. 
SPALDING’S PREPARED GLUE 
SOLD BY HARDWARE DEALERS. 
SPALDING’S PREPARED GLUE, 
SOLD BY HOUSE-FUKNJSHiNG STORES. 
SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 
SOLD BY FURNITURE DEALERS. 
SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 
SOLD BY FANCY-GOODS DEALERS. 
(SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE, 
SOLD BY GROCERS. 
SPALDING’S PREPARED GLUE. 
SOLD BY COUNTRY MERCHANTS GENERALLY 
Manufactured by 
HENRY C. SPALDING & CO., 
4S Cedar Street, New York. 
Address Post-Office, Box No. 3,600. jj 
MOORE'S RURAL KEF-YORKER, 
THE LARGEST CJROrLATKD 
Agricultural, Literary and Family Weekly, 
IS PCRLISUEO EVERY SATURDAY BY 
O. D. T. M.OOKE, HOC ULSTER, N. Y. 
Ofik, Union Buildings, Opposite the Court House, Buffalo St. 
TERMS IN ADVANCE: 
Two Dollars a Year— Si for six months. To Clubs and 
Agents as follows:—Three Copies oue year, for $5; Six, and 
one free to club agent, for *10; Ten, and one free, for *15; 
Fifteen, and one free, lor *21: Twenty, and one free, for *25; 
and any greater number at same rate—only $L25 per copy 
—with an extra free copy for ever}' Ten Subscribers over 
Twenty. Club papers sent to different Post-offices, if de¬ 
sired. As we pre-pay American postage on papers sent to 
the British Provinces, our Canadian agents and friends must 
add W£ cents per copy to the club rates of the Rckal.— 
The lowest price of Copies sent to Europe, Ac., is *2,50—in¬ 
cluding postage. 
For Special Notices, Ac., see preceding page. 
A cheekfvl man will do more business, and do 
it better, than a melancholy one; beside diffusing 
happiness everywhere he goes. 
