_,_~~'. -. I. - I l: "` , t i; ii-- 1 t• • i i, . • IC •.I:` : r ;~~.~ , MEM '4113 / •ftl;:..-7c,t4X41 Ir.. • • 0 t I:•itio..l-P., - ;;X.;41 ,,, •: , ..1.3 ' ; ~ , ~,.,!...,:+,;......:.T ..„.1,...,, ..*,... I n, .., .......1imt.. i ..,;,,„,..1..,,,:.....::....r, V"rr'' , t• Aig'4, '.• ,T, ,:. .4_,4,4-1 7 .r. 4. r•:•,•<1:1•Tt.. I:* ' - : ii" , ALV:';:-T . :4;:l•4'''' .. :k , '.;:';'.:-;,:; i"s.. l) • - t t - - .41-, 4.1.4 '., :,:- •1:-,:;!,A.',' • .', l ,' c ''' ' ':'...i.'gil.••-•-:-••• 1 ,:::::•-:jr i'#.' • '....-, -, .. Y.-; . ; i: - , ~,14:', : :1-4. i •4.,::.;,4":- . 1-:' zi :11 7 ,- 41 , 7 , .t:is..:: ;-, *z. , ..41 , -::::4 - &-...,!.... 4 - 4 •4' , ' ir ~....);;;..1.4.1„.....:.,.i.....1...54 ~,,.......,:.i.,1it....t.r,..,,_ t ..,..1.:!,,....1: : :.11.„....:. ~,........,..t4.. i,t31iii,.;.7.. 4 ..1.4 :TA X" `14:.•-: r t.„ • kg. 47. 4 4+ - ItliNtHirsi) .. 1 4,11,,.4.;.11;t4': 11.0 . A,: 4 - ..,,,, ,, 4. '1; 4 gll' 't • : ''',,>'74'1 ., "• , . -; 14. '::i:ti;i:••• , ;4:A 4,- • ~• - , ,,, i . k . 1:J21, , ir'. • - , 1 , ... 1 :: : , : ,. 15.;:yA1.et;:4 ,1 :: ,:, Vi." l 11.,..„:.,,,iy„..... . : ::is 4:: ' '''' l - : - ' l :`o 4 ' . 4. 1 ,• * ,',.s' llf 3 •:1' 1 ,?:: . 1,,,...- ',.. a,-,14,,* :11, , ;1-1c41P - :'',7' . ‘;',i - 1 ~,. „ - n - -1t . )44. iti ic • • .; • .1'; - ' r, _t:=; :-'[:...... . ... , ' ..; 4. ; '.., ' ,;, I '. • : PINING - HYMN. FOlit• AGOOp BOY. nijeat to lay 824; quiet bed, Azid feet nomad that a day loag :•-• • I ban not bloomingly dope armig. now swat; to hear my mother ow, _ "Yon hays been my good to-day r How sweet to sett my lathe='s joy; Whittle inen - say, "My dear . good boy :" , How met it is toy thoughts to lend ::.To many a deny belayed Aland ; And thin k if they my heart could nee, - How:lvry happy they would be.-- How. sweet to think that He who loves Made ill the shining worlds abirre; •M 7 pure and happy heart can see, kihr loves a little boy hire me. PRESERVING OF FRUITS AND PEGS. - ' . TABLES.. AgT deal has bee n . written,' as well ais , said on the. subject •of preserving fruits, v getables, etc. , freak for winter and spring use; and many articles of the kind . are purchased as luxuries, at 'a high price, which I have ascertained . a very little amount of labor and expense will . enable any housekeeper to provide cheap ly, and at little trouble, for himself; Last winter, an acquaintance of mine, who is a judge as well as . a provider: of good things, sent me a 'can of - tomatoes,. one out of a lot ha had put up for his own use. The most acute palate could de tect no difference fronithe taste the arti .cle bore:in the season of its freshness. He told me that he had eaten peaches cut up and thus prepared to be eaten as fresh peaches, in milk or cream, : which • tasted as.well as in August or Septem , her; For the benefit of my readers I have obtained his recipe. It is the season now. for putting.up these things, and those who desire to .profit by these hints will act accordingly. _TOMATOES. pr Scald the fruit, taking the . skins oft; put the tomatoes in a preser►wg kettle ; when they are brOught to a boil, put theM into a cenobiter and solder them up 'while boiling hot. oasaN CORN. ' Ctit' the corn fnim ears in die •same milky mate _as used for the table, and stew as for table ; pot in canisters u in the cue of the tomatoes. ' .FOR' PRESERVING FRUIT OR VEGETABLES WITHOUT: COOHIMO -- • . Prepare -the` vegetable as for nie—say peas, beans, sliced peaches, ite.;. fill the satiniiters as full as Feasible ; solder the -tops while cold Lawn set the canisters in:a Shallow bat large tin or iron vessel with water, whih must be - placed on a 'stove and the water brought to the boil ing point, and kept at it during the pro cess. When the steam inside swells the cannisters, puncture a small hole with an awl or gimlet—the steam will then escaper Drop a lump of soldsritm the :opening, securing it perfectly tight Any kind• of fruit or vegetables can be thus put up, and keep . a long time per featly fresh; but in all cases the cannis tars must be pettedly right, and kept in a cool place' . , Two things must never be lost sight of in-these operations. The cannisters are to be closed perfectly air-tight and whent he lid of the cannister is punc tured to permit the steam to escape; the solder is to bitilropped instantly on the aperture before air from without can pen etrate. Also, carp must be taken, by • shakiog - or pounding the eannister on some hard substance, to settle the con . , tents, it being of great importance that the cannister, it thertime of soldering, should ho as es full as possible.- 'The philosophy of these procesties,is to expel the air from the emitters ' and ...to exclude it after being expelled. That this is accomplished is evident by the - . readiness of-the cannisters to collapse upon slight pressure externally . These are cheap luxuries. A dozen -such cannisters can be bought •at R ..Moorhead's, on Columbia st.-, Cincinnati, for a dollar. Mr. M. not only furnishes the. covers, but will Send a hand to any _reanonable , diitance, who will solder them to the cannistens.—Cist ' Art EXAMPLE WORTHY OP iNITATION. —The article which follows -we cull from the .. New Weans Protestant." We commend it to the special attention of our ministerial brethren, as presentin . an example: well worthy of - their imita tion. The Monday sermo, i l izoken of strike us as something ex , and ao one knows the amount of good they may be the means of 'affecting. We should be glad to furnish our brethren the oppor tunity of preaching frequently in this way.- Weekly Mug. "It is the constant practice of one of the best and moat laborious ministers of . .• the present to write a 'abort ' - arti le for some religious periodical, ev . .ory Monday. This he does with' little z l e ..„, . -fan' aor trouble, the labors of the Sab- - li suggesting some thought, or bring ..,4, hie light some fact worthy of recoil!. t- " 0 the course of a long life many vol - . might thus be written, and mneh be done which would be otherwise • - •. - -lost.l < Is it not a practice which should 7 .- - .• bectime universal? We - heartily teem :lr- :pandit to oar brethren in the ministry. : ..., .Yott preach on the Sabbath perhips - to -.. . some hundreds, you may preach on Mode - • ' day :to thousands. Your sermons are . . ~: . preached in a small , neighborhood, and a - - - - ferepetitaps will remember them for a . .•,, , little while, the paratraph of ten or tweet -jig lines may travel to the ends of the earth, and' do good till the end of time. • .-" We wish • there were more Monday :.' 'r euherL " ' . Umox.—The General As ., sedation of Onhodcrx Congregationaliais in Maine, appointed last year a commit • , -too to Ti ll the ecclesiastical bodies of the Methodist, Baptist, and ; Free Will Baptist churches, in that place, for the purpose of proposing some more fritter , nal terms of Intercourse among them.- - At the late meeting of, the . Association dlie committee reported as follows: -Yorir Committee, haring consulted the Committee - of the Methodist Episcopal Conference, and influential Individuals ,--, of this Baptist and Free Will Baptists, and 'they having expressed a disposition ~to' favor the proposed correspondence, itherefont ' Resolved, That this Conference ap point delegates to'represent them in Jhe general meetings of the Baptists, Meth