~.,.a.c :., Of latilg eittrit. THE BIRD'S WEEK. Where have you been, my birdy bright! Where have you been since Sunday night? What have you seen, and what have you heard? Ohl where have you been my darling bird? Monday. I hopped on the woodbine bower; And sucked the honey from many a flower; From bush , to bush, and from tree to 'tree, Raced with the butterfly and the bee.; Next, to the milkmaid's side I flew, When she went to the field in the morningdew; She milked steadily, I sat by, She sang merrily, so did I; And I laughed a little, though snug the while, When sbe and the pail fell over the stile. Tuesday. It rained, so I took to the tiara,, And perched on the beam to be safe from harm; The kind old thresher, I very well knew, Was working for every bird that flewl. " Those precious fellows I" I heard him say, HavP • , :k. of - n this dayl" Wednesd .y. " I rose quite stout and bold; The.flowers were jewels, the skies were gold; Ants and ladybirds, beetles and flies, Swarmed in the sun before my eyes; Revelled in plenty and delight, When sudden I heard the scream of a kite, And a poor little dove dropped down and died, With spots of blood on her milk• white side; 'Twas a piteous sight, I cannot deny, But .I whispered, much rather the dove than I. Next, I followed, with footiteps light, • A4entle youth and maiden' bright': A word to, mine ear the wind did bring, 'Of a large plum cake and a small golcl ring; But good little bird must hold' histongue, And not tell tales of the fair and young. Thursday. I went to view the town, -For I would not be thought a country clown. No, stable gleanings and stunted tree Were not for free-born birds like me. But the pert young sparrows made so free As to ; hint I was not good company, Because I uttered a harmless joke, Of their little black jackets and smell of smote; So adieu, my sooties, for I am away To lavender beds and , new-mown hay Friday. I joined a countless band Of merry wanderers in the lancl;_ The cherries were ripe, the.feast was long, And long and clear was the thankful song ; 'LA grave oldjudge ivotild have looked.away -,-..FromAi , troop of thieveeso glad:and gay, Unless that-judge had happeneci to be The owner of that same cherry tree. . . Saturday. Still. I shudder to.thiok How I stood on ruin's veriest brink ; I Was gathering worms at a cottage door', • AI nurse and her child was playing.before, When I heard the cruel old monster say, ,",You shall have that bird foryOur dinner to-day; To cdch yon bird you never will fail, , If you take some salt and put on its tail.," But before the, boy could turn his eye, I was a mile toward the sky. Sabbath. I made the steeple my perch, To watch the peoolesoing to. Church ; When they were in, I fluttered'about, - To watch the good people' c'Oming . out. Many nice boys I looked ,at there, ; With snow-white collars and shining hair But amongst , them all not,one could I - see Like James find little trave Ben tome. So now Pve come back to the old hall door, And will never leave James or Ben any more JOHNNY RAY, THE LITTLE NEWSPAPER BOY: A cold, drizzling sleet, arid a, biting east wind, had almost cleared the streets of passers by. Certainly no person would walk such a night for pleasure. Even business mist have been urgent to coax any one out who had a home to stay in. But, empty as the streets were, a passenger might, be seen here and there : a well-muffled gentleman walking briskly under the shelter of his large umbrella, or a splendidly dressed lady whirling past in her carriage to some evening party. Did either of them notice` that little newspaper boy' shivering at the corner ? The, gaslight shows that his face, over which hangs a tangled lock of red hair, is sharp and colorless, and the ragged clothes scarcely cover a thin and wast ed body. Johnny Ray had wandered far that evening,v trying to find a few . chstOra 'ers for some of those penny papers which were hidden from the rain un der.his jacket. He had crept slowly through some of the grand squares, where the servants sometimes bought a newspaper from him ; and, as he looked up at the parlor windows, the rosy light that glimmered through the warm curtains made him feel 'more cold than ever. Once the curtains had been flung aside: bY 'a boy".about his own age, and Johnny got a peep into what seemed to him quite another world: a happy family gathered , round a richly coveredteaetable. Home, friends; love, rest, food, fire—jiist every thing Johnny Wanted was there. But the laughing little faCe withdrew, the curtain's heavy folds closed again, and Johnny painfully felt' that he was' out side. Then he tried a poorer part of the city. He dragued his weary feet down narrow streets and, gloomy courts. At the top of, his voice he called out his Rewspapers for sale, until a hollow cough made him stop; but no one came to buy. .Tired from walking, and hopeless of Success, Johnny rested on a door step, and gazed up fixedly into the oppOsite windo*s. There were no.blinds here. Johnny could see all ttat was passing within. in one room, near the top of a tall old house, the feeble light of one poor candle sliorVed a woman bending over her sick child's bed, whispering something to the little one, and smooth ing its coarse pillow. Johnny brush ed away a tear with the, sleeve of his wet'coat : his mother was ileeping in the churchyard. In another room there was no caudle, but a bright, fire' sent up flickering shadows on `the stream ing panes. A group of child:rem: sat QUESTION ANSWER THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1865. round the hearth, watching a cake that was toasting before the fire. The ket tle hummed a song; the teapot cosily toasted its .brown sides on the hob, and the cups seemed to invite it to come to the table Then the father came home, and the children sprang to meet him. Johnny thought he could almost hear the kisses, taste the cake, and feel the fire glow. But Ms father was dead, and' he was himselrout in the cold: Johnny got up and moved slowly on, he scarcely knew where. At the farthest end of the court a door stood ajar, and so bright a stream of light came through, that the little boy won dered if some new gin-shop had been orrneil. He resolves:lto go ant „see. StePPing to the4Oor he peeped in.‘ A grand fire roared up the , chimney, , e it was no gin-shop There . s, and forrns, and -books, ; • • s ates, and' ra g ged boys 11:10.2ii. ••,- elf. There was' a kind-looking ,gentlendan, too, who s-einud to have a - good word for each of these rough fellows. ,Johnny' wait-' ed until all the scholars came out, and then he went In. He knew this must be a sc,hool, though he - never had been at, one, and., hoped the master might buy a paper; so lifting off his cap, and giving a pull to the little red lock that hung over his'forehead, he held out, a newspaper; crying, in his shrill - Voice, "Second edition, only one penny." - Mr. Eagan turned round and saw his little visitor. With a look of ten der pity and kindnesS he dripping boy to a seat near the,fire, and, having bought a paper, sat down beside him. - "Do you sell, many pa pers ?" asked Mr. Eagan.: • " Sometimes; not many of an even ing like this," answered Johnny, twirl ing his cap; "I often walk miles - with nut selling one." " And where do you live, my little boy?" "I don't live anywhere now, sir; mother's dead—and father toe • .” "But where do you sleep at night " In any place, sir, just as the season is. This weather door-steps are,' not very good,, and the policeman wakes one up with their move on.' But I earn my bread honestly and don't steal. Mother would not like that, and I'll never - do it While my name is Jchitny." " Can you read ?" • " - " No; sir; thougli Wouli . be very urfal in my ,hasines;,„the newspaper you know," headded; with a nod. " I know all the newspapers by their look, and make a guess at what is in thein,• too; by listening to other boys talking ; but I wish lodould spell >the words. Mother • used to read. She had' a big'bOok, with a nice cover ; it was on the bed'near her when she died,;: but father sold it,'l4.• her ringtoo. v/ e " " Then, Johnny, - 31Wc:Ome h-dt to me every evening, I will teeth 'you - to read. I will give you a book like your mother's, which, I am sure, was the Bible. Do you ever hear the ble read in God's louse r " Oh, sir, I never:,go there. Very nice these ragged,clpthes, would look next to a gentleman like you. A long while ?go, when we liv,ed in the. coun try, I used to go to church with moth er • the singing was very nice, almost like the birds. Mother used to tell me nice things about the good -place she was going to ; but Mid not learn the way right then, and I have no one to teach me ever since." " Johnny, I think I can tell you the way to the happy land where, your mother is gone." _ " Oh, sir, can you ?" cried the little boy, with a look of joy thatmade . even his plain, pinched ; features lose their harshness : "I will give you every one of these papers for nothing if you can. 3, "Johnny, there is one Friend, and only one, who is able to take you to your mother's home. His name is. the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son , , pf God. Jesus mean_ s Savioui, for he came to seek and save the lost. You and I are sinners, Johnny, and therefore lost---lost like travellers who ha.. 6 missed their way, or poor, prisoners cond Cinned -to die. 'Johnny's ..bright look faded quite away. "But God; in hisgreat love and pity, sent His. only Son Ito' die :for 'us -and Jesus , died." t‘ sorry.for that," said Johnny, as the old sad look crept over his ,face again. .; "I thought you told me he would show. .me3h6iway to mother. I' wanted to go to-him this very night." ".&nd so you can, my boy. The Lord - tieus lives again, and will hear you, if you pray. He has gone up to heaven, and is willing -to take you there. Trust him alone." Then Mr. Eagan drew a little. Testa ment from his pocket, and read the Saviour's own sweet words about the lost sheep Wand the good Shepherd. Clasping Johnny's thin hand, they knelt down together. An earnest prayer; that God would, for Christ's sake,.shoW them the way to heaVen; and enable them to walk in it, was simply offered. It .was the first - time that Johnny had tried•to pray. The fire burned low. The old church clock struck ten. It was time to close the school-room and go home. But'where was Johnny's home? Some doorway or bridge-arch. Mr. Eagan resolved it should be so no longer. He remembered a very poor couple living nigh at hand, whose, only -child had died lately. They lived in a ` garret'; he 'thought they might give dohnny a bed in the corner of it. Of .course he would pay the orphad's small rent; leading the - weary bop "down one or two streets, and up a long, creaking. stair, he knocked at a broken door. The old people, though much ,startled at so late a visit from the ragged-school 4 teacher, consented to let:Johnny share the shelter of their room, and promised to be kind to him for their own little Jeri]. s sake. Here Johnny lived for several months. He spent his days in sellint , newspapers about the streets, as usual, and, his evenings at the ragged-school; but he never failed to repeat to his =landlady, whom lie now'called .grand- T c44.,91;z-th Ai.b.J?-stories„- there, Or the good news anout the open way to heaven through faith in the death an•o •i 0 - rd Jesus; I ever - forgot to pray, " Show r e thy way, 0 Lord !" and through sim.ple teaching a blessing came. to .tha,thouse. But, day by day, Johnny I grew, weaker. His cough made the; old garret echo all nighelong. The poor woman and her husband nursed' him with the greatest care, refusing' any pay for kindnesS,' which they said was all for the sake'of their poor little. Jem. At length he- could not walk, even to the dragged-school, and his teacher, alarmed at his absence, went one evening to.see him. ,Johnny lay, on a heap of straw in the garret, cor-, ner. He was dozing, bUt the - voice of his friend roused him, and, stretching out both his worn- hands to Welcome him, he cried, Oh, sir, I see the way now! Itis Very plain and very short.' :But tlie'good Shepherd is coining to carry me home, like the lost sheep, you know; for I'm sick and -tired. Yes, mother, I am coming.-. Good. night. You must all come soon. Granny, don't forget the way." It was death, not sleep, that folded Johnnk'in his omian ' arms.—Childs C ion. - A ,SUCCESSFUL MISSION. FROM DR. 'GllTilltieS SKETWIES •OF '-THE',CO'..Wr' .GITE - EDINBURGH We selected a district'of the town,' named' The 'Pleasance, and so called' because in old times a religions*ireute. stood there, dedicated to Saint Bah cenza. 'lt ,embraced a population Of , two thousand people, of whom; but a. small number were Irish . Boman- Catholics.' The.mass was in a state Of ;practical heathenism ; very 'few at tending any house of God, and about two hundred children wandering ne glected On'the streets. Ake* with Dr. Hanna 'and myself. (the minister of St: John'a,) , its office-bearers—numbering' :some thirtyyz.elders and as many deacons,resolved to raise the money, ,and.provide,the .marWilfgy ,nece for cultivating that waste a teacher om-. miaertoo to sup-, pert, we built a schoOl where the chilf' 'ciren Were to be taught dUring the' Week, and the people to worshits'on Sabbath. As the mountain wouldtriOt corne.to MahomeVit was resolved that Mahodiet -should go to the mountain. The people in the district must be visited in their houses, and so to speak, compelled to come in. But this work Was not left to the missionary and the teacher. Having divided the 'Whole' district into portions, so knell that each contained only some six or seven families, we resolved that each of these minor divisions should 'have a visitor, whose duty it Would be. to visit , the families once or twice a week; to stir them out of : their lethargy; to.counsel them ; to help them, by teaching them how to help themselves.; to improve their homes; to wean 'them from drunkenness; to encourage habits of providence, cleanliness,' and sobriety ; to prevail on them to send their_chil dren to school, and go themselves on the Lord's day to the house of .God. Let it be. particularly observed tbat the division , allotted to each visitor was so small that the working of it could neither, be a heaiY demand on their time, nor seriously interfere with any of their other duties. The plan having been arranged; , Dr. Hanna and I explained it from the pulpit, and made an appeal to - our congregation; asking them to supply us with money, but above all with agents. The appeal was instantly 4trB•moblyacasponded'iM'il"Thb 7 nioney was forthcoming f -and some forty or fifty, persons offered their ,services as visitors. With the wealth. and`worth of St. John's; we descended ion The Pleasance. We had, a devote mis- Sionary, a capital teacher, and' some forty or fifty Christian agents at "work there every week. Each Monday, Dr. Hanna met with this staff; pro gress was reported ; the,,blessings of Heaven were 'asked ; the 'counsels of wisdoin given ; the, zeal of the visitors stimulated; and the whole machinery kept oiled, and in the beat working order. Behold the result ...Ere long 'two hundred children were swept off the streets into the sChool. On the Lord's day the school - began to fill with worshippers. - By-and-bye, the cry, " Yet then, is room," with which . our agents went, forth week after ,week, was changed into ,a demand. for. in creased accomodation. A church must now be , built; and our congre gation; encouraged bYthe remarkable success with which Md had hitherto blest the work, rose to the occasion and built one. Mr:"Coehrane, the mis B i onaj w, was ordained as a regular ministo,Vid there he now labors, assisted by a full staff:of elders and of deacons. -.His congregation, mainly made 'np who had 'been once living without God and without hope in the world, embraces six hun- Ared and thirteen members in, full communion • and of these, not less ;than two-thirds reside, in the imnie 41.iate neiahborhool ` Once sunk, graded, and irreligious, neglecting lie .education of their children, neither contributing to the support of religious - ordiiiiiices, nor even waiting on - them, th6y-now_have_a_school overflowing with children and a ohnia overttfirr „ ing with worshippers. They pay fees - for thet education of Melt' . -children and with money saVed from the dram shop come little short of providing a living for their minister, and. meeting all the other expenses of Divine wor ship. Christians - have given their work, and Christ his blessing. The desert is blooming like the rose and the lesson which I would press on my reader's is, that what St. (Tohn's con 2gregation has done in: 'The Pleasance may be equalled,_ if not surpassed, by other congregations elsewhere: . * !` WE -G0, 4 Into the silent lana— . Over the.ailver. strand , Lead ps with gentle hand, t '' • Savionr,`ltedeemer Where'his beloVed sleep, Angels - , their watchfixes keep, Guiding through. sorrows deep, Charged with our care. Whom the Lord loveth well Safely with him to dwell, Where no earth-trials swell, Hearts. His, forever. Through the eternal ages, Taming the sinless pages, Wheiello tempest rages, • Clouding our Sun. Our Sun, onr Shield, oiiiia-lory, Through all the ages hoary, in grateful song and , story ! Praising His 'name. —Translated front, the German. ADVICE TO YOUNG PEOI'LI, Keep good company or none. Never be idle.. _lf your hands;cannot be use fully employed,, attend to the cultiva ton of your minds. Aiways speak the trath: Make few pro Mises. Live p up `tor join' . engagehientS: Keep your own seciets,if you have any. When you speak to a person; look him in the face. Good company 'and good Conversation are .the very :sinews,-of virtue. Your Icharacter cannot be es sentially injured, except by. your own. acts., If any one , speaks evil of you, let your life be such that no one will believe him. Drink no kind of intox icating liqUers: (misfortune excepted) iviehin c ycitif income. 'When have`-beens doing during the • ay.' Make no haste to betich; if you would. prosper. Small and - steady gains give competency with tranquility of mind. Never play at any game of chance. Avoid : temptation. Earn money be fore you spend it. Never run into debt unless, yokSee a:*ay tb get out of it. —fici-n'6ll Tintil you- are to support 'a wife. Never speak evil of anyr.one. Be just before, you are generous. Keep yourself innocent, if you would be - .happy. Save when you are. young, ;that you may spend when you are old; and"above all, fear trod and keep his commandments. Read over the'above maxims at least once a week. A 'YANIEE,,SCHOOL-HOUSE. Passingthrough some Massachue setts village, 'perhaps at a distance from any house, it may be in the midst of a-piece of woods , where .four roads meet, one may sometimes even yet see, a small, square, one-story build ing, whose use would not.. be long doubtful. It summer, and the flick erinw shadows of forest leaves dapple the roof of the little porch, Wl,Pse door stands Wide and shoWs, hanging on either' , hand, rows, of straw hats_and bonnets that ;look as if they had done good service As you pass the 'open windows, ybu hear whole platoons of bigh-pitched voices, discharging words of two. or three'syllables with , ivendef ful precision and 'unanimity. ' Then jheie is a paude, and the voice of the omcer ,command. is-heard-reproving some raw recruit whose vocal , musket hung fire. Then - the drill . ofthe small' infantry begins an9,w,but pa - Oses again ;because some urchin—who agres with Voltaire that the superfluous is Avery necessary t10.p.e 7 -'insists'on sphlh subtraction" with an s `too much. If you had the good fortune to be, born and-bred in the Bay State, your mind is thronged with half 'sad, half hilmoions rdOollections. ,The, abs' little voices long since hushed in the mold, or ringing now in , the pul:. pit, at' the. bar,. or` in 'the Senate chain= her, come, back to,the ear of 'memory. You-remember:the high stool on which culprits used to be elevated with the, paper fool's-cap on their heads, blush ing to,the ears ; and you think with wonder how you • haVe seen them since as men climbing the: world's penance stools of ambition without a blush, and gladly giving everything for life's caps and bells. And you have pleasanter memories of going after pond-lilies, of angling for horn-pouts--that queer bat among the fishes—of nutting, of walk ing 'over the creaking snow-crust in winter, when the warm breath of every household ivas curling up silently: in the keen blue air. You wonder if life has any rewards more solid and per mane= than the Spanish dollar that was hung around' your neck to be re stored again next day, and conclude sadly that it was but too truc, *pro phecy and emblem of all wotldly suc cess. But your 'moralizing is broken short off by a Ottre of feet, and the pouring forth of the whole:ii!warm— the boys - dancing aneshouting—the mere effervescence of the fixed, air of youth and animal spirits uncorked— the sedater girls in confidential twos and threes decanting secrets put (*the mouth of one cape-bonnet into that of another. Times have changed since the jackets and trowsers used,to draw up f on one ._ side of the road, and the petticoats on the other, to salute with bow and courtesy the white neck cloth of -the parson or- the squire, if it chanced to pass: during intermission. —.T. B. Lowell. CHILDREN WORKING FOR GOD., When Jesus Was twelve years old he said to his parents, " Wist - ye not that I must be about my Father's ;business?" 1. e. " Don't you know I have something to do for my. Father in Heaven ?" And he doUbtless tried to do something all the, time to please and hopoißod ; as, when older, "He went abOut 'doing good." Take cop e " from Oirist in this respect, my dear little friend. You can do a great deal for God; if you only try. A boy lay on his 'bed, weak and -pale from a -severe sickness: He had early loved the Saviour, and. though life was beautiful, he was willing to die. " You are going to leaven, my dear boy," said the minister,,smootlaing his wavy brown he f ir. " You are now in the dark valley, but Christ is with you. I am with yOu always, he says, even unto the end. "I =know it, I know it," answered the child, ‘" I am with you always;' but say the other." "' Whcit other, my 'darling ?" asked his mother. , " Jamie's breath grew shorter ; but at last he said turning his eyes full upon his father, who was not a Chris tian , Be *:also ready.' God," he' prayed, " may my father never be able . to forget; " B 6 '0 also reaiky.' " "My darling Jamie," cried'his father, throwing his arms around him, "you must not die." . But the dear boy pressed his cold lips - upon his father's, cite*, and still, eager, o do him good, hegathered all his .strength and again said,"Father, be ye, also readi!" and so (hied. That message was never forgotten. It saved thefit' then You see hoN useful wain, this' eild, even though sink, and wetilr, I - I.erneTuber: another laase, showing how much V-ohild.may do. A few years ago, there was-a little' girl livingiin New York city,, whose mother earned ,a by selling apPles. This little child, was taken to the Sabbath- • school, .where she' soon was converted. Then' she felt, as Jesus did, that she must about her Father's Inisiness, So she went and:fatind two other, poor girls, and persuaded them 'to , come to the Sabbath-school with, her, and in a little:While they became Christians.:: When ; these girls, were grown up, they reinoved to a part of, the country where nothing was done to bring the children to the Saviour ; and they went to:work and gathered the little ones together into a Sabbath school. Then _they went farther' off, and formed , another school,' and -then another, until elelien Sabbath-schools had been: formed in the neighborhood, and itundredB , of- children ,saved them. All this from that, child of the applewoman Wthat encouragement . in these ex.- ampler for you to . try tO do smnetlnng for :God:! „ A gentleman, lecturing in the neigh borhood of London, : - "Everybody ' has influence, even that little , = child,” , pointing to a little. girl in her father's ATMS. " That's true," cried-the man. At the close he said to the lecturer, "I beg, your pardon, sir, but I could not help speaking I-,was a drunkard;' but as Tdid not like to go to the pub . lie house alone,' T used to carry the 'child. As I Aipiorroached the • public' hOuse one night, hearing a great- noise inside, she said : Don't .go, father.' ',Hold your tongue, child. ' Please, father, don't go, _Hold your tongue, I say.' Presently I, felt a big tear falling on my cheek I could not . g 9 a stop, fur ther, sir. I turned . rolind" and went home, and I haivnever heen in a pub lic house since, thank CrOd for itl I am now a happy man sir, and this little girl has donedt all ; and when you said.. that even-: she had = influence, I could not help saying.'that's true, sir.' All have influence." There is no little child too small To work for God ; There is a mission for us all, Froni'ehrist the Lord. 'Tis not enough for us to give Our wealth alone, We must entirely for him live And be his own. Though poverty our portion be, Christ will not slight . The lowliest little one, so he With God be right. The poor, the sorrowful, the old, • Are round us still ;- thid does . not always ask our, gold, lintheart and will. Father, 0 give us grace to see A place for us, Where.in thy.vineyard, we for thee 'labor thus I LNatiioiaad llaptist ••, og AN \ INFANT. - ; I r An angel canie'foi our - Bird hisi night,' • Last night at the midnight noon, As we smoothed the curls from the forehead Wiiites • And sang a low, lullaby tune : And . Wethetklit she had only faller`to sleepr Worn out with her torturing pain, And thatfmoothe,d by a slumber, so calm and sweet, She would wake and be merry again. But alas! in her intio`Ceutheatityshe died, Died in thn r elianiber over nthend, The waxen Miff e4i'Ver ilieganghuti blue eyea; And they saw thatennlarling-iivasidead I In the years that are bound to the 'beautiful Past, I have pitied poor hearts thai. werelogn Brthe:deatipofa - child-Fbulpattlasts oh kat:float I know what it is thus to mourn. Ye are kiud 4 i t ' yonrkindnerstlean n er yft.):Lp The pall thatis Over my heart, And your hand cannot take from my lip the dread-cup, , Or from rnyikriting bosom the dart! 0! was it for this that I suffered and loved! For this that I cherished my flower s , Till the strength of a mother's wild ldie I had proved, And the charm of each thrice blestied 'hour: No,-no! God forgive me, if blinded ; by Maki', I'see not his outstretched hagdi'l• And the bow which is linking 7 tio6 grief-laden years To the shores of the heavenly land, 7 . -Forgive-me, if stung by this terrible wog I walk in the blackness of night•L , And see but and a forehead of OD* , And a dimpled hand, stiffened and'ir*W- AFFECTING ORDINATION CHARM. At the late ordination of Rev: AY. S. Wright, by the Presbytery, of Lo . gansport, the charge was delivered:by his father, Rev. Dr. Wright, of Delphi, Indiana:* We copy from the charge the following tender paragraphs "And :: you; my first-born S4:74=rol,ty I not adaregs you from the ,outigtkifr ings of a father's loving hearil You have been the child of many prayers. The very day of your birth you were de dicated to God and to the service Cif the ministry at the family altar. When - the hands of your paternal grandfather,lting since gone to heaven, were laid upOn you in Baptism, that solemn act of de dication was rendered. You have been highly favored with the counsels 04 prayers of-your venerated and , ,beloved maternal grandfather, more ,recently called.to his reward. He, first received you to the full privileges of the Churoh of Christ ; and that 'retired Chatitbei'd prayer where he_daily communed with God for hours, haS witnessed many earrtest, importunate intercessions in ybur behalf. 1 "Ton descend from an almost un broken line of ministers for seven quo cessive generations, of whom the ven erable missionary and apostle to the Indians_, John Elliott, was the parent stock. 0 remember my son , the cloud nsses that hp i 've gone before yon, - 4 arid So live - and het, as not only to honor' the - Memory of your fatherb,- who -for many generations have stood forltheclefeneenfthe Gospel, , but to be true and faithful to Jesus Christ, o by giving yourself wholly tohis work." CANNOT PLEASE EVERYBODY. "If you. please; said the Weather cock to the Wind, "turn me to the South. There is such a cry out against the 'Cold, that I am afraid they'llput Me down if I stop much longer in this North palter." So the wind flew from the South, and -the Sun was master of the day, and rain fell abundantly. "Oh, ,please to turn me from the SOuth," said the Weathercock to the Wind - again. "`The potatoes will alrbe spoilt, and the corn wants dry weather,-and while am here, rain it will; and, what with -the heat, and the wet, the farmers are just mad against me." So the wind shifted into the West, and there came soft, drYing breezes day after . 14y.. "Oh. dear 1" said the WeathereAk. "Here's a pretty to do I au.cn looks as I get from eyes all:around - me the 'first thing every morning I the grass is getting parched up, and there is no water for the stock . ; and what is to -be -done ? As to the gardeners, theysay there won't be a pea to be. seen; and the vegetables will wither Away. , Do turn me somewhere - die." " What do they say to 'yait now r he asked. " - What ?" cried Weatherocek ; `why everybody has 'caught cold everything‘' is blighted—that's- what they'say.;` and there isn't a misfortune that happens but somehow . or other they lay, it to the East wind." " Well !" cried the W#4, s let ,them find fault ; see it's impossible Air, you and me to please everybodyl ; - s e, i n future I shall blow where I like; and you shall go where,. I like, without asking any questiOns; I don't' know but that we shall satisfy mbre-than we can do now, with alt - onr consideration. EARTHLY DISTINCTIONS. A certain ilLinister, Dr. Martin-Geier, . , used to say:-" The treasures, plea sures, honors, and distinctions which mankind are so ardently striving to obtain, remind me of a display of fire works by night. When ignited, they are very brilliant and , dazzling in ap pearance. But liow long do they last ? At the furthest, only a few hours, and then nothing remains but ashes and a little burnt paper_ So there are many who esteem themselves happy, because the world regards with admiration and astonishment their honors, their wealth and sumptuous manner of living, little dreaming that, in a littlawhile, altwill turn to ashes.", - -