famitg TO THE ROSE OF GETHSEMANE Among the gems of the collection is a Rose, the original of which was picked in the Gar den of Gethsemane, pressed and dried, and after remaining several years in this state,,was presented to the author. On immersing it in water, the petals became softened, and were placed in their original position ; those in the centre retained their beautiful color, and the fragrance was like that of a fresh-blown rose. Fair Roseof Gethsemane I nursed by,the sod Which drank the bot tears. of the sad Son of God, When o'er t'he brook Kedron his weary steps • led, And those whom be loved all forsook him and When Judas betraiediim and Peter denied The beloved offkhis Father, God crucified. Beholding, I wonder, thou beautiful thing, Such fragrance and loveliness ever could spring From that cold, dewy garden, trampled and wet kith soldiers' rude feet and Christ's agonized sweat t Which, like drops of blood, trickled down to the gronnd t • • While timid disciples lay sleeping around. And much do I wonder that in his distress, His lips move to curse.not,,but only to bless ; • That beauty still thrives ,where such agony . . knelt, From g,round that had witnessed the sorrows he felt ; l'hough the fig-tree he cursed, he prayed for ' his foes And where thorns grew for him, for them blooms 'the rose. I look at thee weeping, thou innocent flower, Fair, silent memento of that dreadful hour. Ile , saw with a sorrow God only could feel The rabble biasphemers.in mockery kneel. HiEiweeping 'eye seer, what no mortal could see, Higown wounded , elide on- that ignoble` tree. I look if 'thee, stilling with joy through' my tears, r 4 Sweet Rpse of Gethsemage,coffined for, years. My eager hand took thee, thy grave-clothes un- ,t i• When, lo in thy hart a sweet perfume I found; Andwhen froin thy petals - thn rids were untied, Like," Rose Damascene" ;thy fair cheek was dyed. No more willLweep,, then t ,thou child.of a day. When ages `have passed in their swift course away, '' ' Our. Lord shall behold the redeemed among men, And all his soul's travail belmtisfied then; With each ransomed soul will the perfume re main Of thOse crimson' 'drops from the Lamb that was slain. • —.Mrs Dr Badger in "Floral Belles." BEAR YE 'ONE ANOTHER'S BURDENS, " Just wait one minute, Milly ; my bouquet is almost ready, and I wish you tocarry it to Miss Whitiv&th, Just' to show the dear old lady we have not forgotten her on this New Year morning." The. child. thus addressed looked eagerly,, up at the speaker. " 0, mam ma,,!;! she said, " what a pretty flower 1 I can't think how you contrive to ar range it so nicely. I am sure Miss Whitworth „will.like it very much; and' I am so 'glad she will have.some thing to cheer her. It must be very dultlo live alone, as she does, never ' able to go out, and at New Year's time, tool Mamma, and may I take her :the mark. I finished yesterday— the • one with the text on it, 'Bear ye one another's burdens ?' It is a very small present; but perhaps she might care for it, to put in her Bible." "Certainly, Milly, you may; and I know no one who obeys the command on your mark more fully than Miss Whitworth does. But now time is pass ingi;,so fetch your basket, and I'll pop the flower into it." Milly, ran off, returning soon, with the mark in one hand and the basket in the other; and after receiving the flower, set, off. There was snow on the ground„; and despite a bright sun, the air was bitterly cold, Causing little Milly to.' draw' her warm cloak close round'her and quicken her "steps to al most a run. • But by degrees she got accustomed to the cold, slackened' her pace, and began to look about her. It was • quite a country scene—fields upcp fields meeting the eye, and large trees growing on each side of the road; while in the distance, the spire of a church and some of the houses on the height told where ray the little town.' The fields were now white with snow, and the little stream, which in summer danced gleefully along the road where Milly walked, was now bound fast in icy fetters, and longs pendant icicles hung from its banks. with ; the sun glistening on all, Milly thought the landscape a beautiful one; everything looked so pure arid fresh. Then, when her eyes were daz zled with ga..ting on the spotless white around,' they jested with pleasure on the' bouqu'e't in lei basket, which was lovelYihdeed 2 --a bunch of pure white Christmaaroges , were encircled with the bright crimson' leaves of the Virginian creeper, anitsprigiof the mimosa, with, its golden balls, thcwhole,surrounded by beautiful ; glossy green leaves of the holly, W 4 *re and there a bunch of theirscarlo',burries.. 0 yes, ,Milly as li w litre Miss Sffhit*Orth would like that,' and Mark too. As she looked at the 'Livorno on it, she began' to riondel•r"What they really meant. "Bear :ye one another's? . burdens." How could she do that ? ' Just then a man'with'.aoheavy par cel on, back .passed the ohild, and she t witneteren if.. the. text meant that he should have, offered to help him to earry' y ,,it, a little way, ;.,but thew:it was so large, she could not have, done so and the .map was yoling and strong, and looked quite able, to bear it him ' self. No, no ; that could not be its meaning. Besides, mamma said Miss THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 27, 1866. Whitworth obeyed the command; and she could not carry heavy burdens for other people, poor old lady! for she never was able to do more than just walk across the room, and hardly ever left her easy-chair; and Milly laughed to herself 'at the thought of her carrying a 'heavy burden. "Mit she was such a dear Old lady, she would ask her the meaning of the text, and she knew she would explain it to her. Miss Whitworth was very much pleased to see Milly's bright little face, and was much gratified by the thought ful love shown in the presents of the bouquet and -mark. She- -looked thoughtfully at the text ; then drawing Milly to her side, she said, " Is not that a pleasant command, dearV.Doltnr try to obey it, Milly ?" "I ? No, Miss Whitworth; 'bit mamma says you `db. What does it mean, please ? and how do you bear other people's burdens ?" The old lady smiled. She saw the child was thinking of some heavy weight, which would require a strong body to bear, and wondering how one so frail as she could do that. Happy Mill.) , l As, yet she knew nothing,, from experience, of mental burdens, whose weight is often so great as to mail to the ground even the strongest spirit. " What think you, Milly ? When weary, sad hearts come to me for comfort and help, if I-can cheer them and point them to Him Who can comfort and help them better than any earthly friend, do I not lighten their burdens,- and thus fulfil the law, of Christ ?" O yes ! Milly saw that plain enough ; and 'one instance after another rose to her memory . of stories she had heard her - marnma'tell, of how helpful Miss - Whitworth had been to many in &is'. ~ti,essi- for; somehow, 'all her friends, when trouble fell on them, felt sure of Miss-Whitworth's sympathy, and has tened, to pour the ,cause' of their dis tress into her ear- and with truth she could say ," Old and young all brought•theii troubles, Great or small, for me to bear; I have often blessed my: sorrow, That drew °glebe grief' so near. 0 yes ! Milly saw how Miss W hit= worth' could obey the command ; but then, how could a little girl do So ? She would have asked her friend, but 'list then two ladies came in, and the conversation changed ; and soon after ward Milly had to say Good-bye, as she had a commission to do for her mamma_ in the town, and had to be home soon.: Certainly there was no burden on Milly's light heart, as she hOunded along—now glancing at the shop win dows, now at thepassers-by. Presently she turned into a grocer's shop'and gave her mamma's message to a pleasant= looking woman who stood behind the counter. While she was , sp t eakingi a gentle-locking widow, livery poorly dressed, came in, and bnying a small piantity of, tea, went silently out.. . 'The grocer's wife looked compas sionately after her. "Poor body !" she, said, " I've given her more than the proper quantity. 'Deed, she. has much need of a good cup of it to cheer her. She has e heavy burden to bear, now that her husband is dead, and she left with five young bairns. Hs !not much, they are like to have for their New Year's dinner, I suspect- 1." " A heavy burden I" thought Milly. " Poor woman, how I wonder if I could help her to bear it I mamma would send her something, I knoW, if I asked her o do so ' but then, that would not be `me; andthe text says, ' Bear ye one another's burdena.' know what I'll do ! I have that bright, new half-er t own papa gave me to-day. nu. ask Mrs. Alison, if it will buy any thing for the poor woman's dinner." " Yes, miss, it will 'buy enough to make her heart dance for joy, I'm sure," was the reply she received in an swer. to her question. " Look here, miss, and I'll do the best for you I can; for, 'deed, Jean Grey's a decent body, and much to be pitied.;" and taking Milly's basket, she put into it some slices of,ham, half a dozen of eggs, a small quantity of butter, and sending a boy to the baker's across the way . , she obtained a loaf of bread, to add to the little store. Milly's half-crown had purchased all these; and now Mrs. Al ison slipped in some sugar, and a pack et of raisins for the cildren, telling Milly that these were presents to her, to help to fill her basket. Milly's eyes beamed with delight ;-And accompanied by the shop-boy, to show her the way, she _set-off to the widow's honse, to leave her gift. She found the widow sitting, with a sad heari,"toiling at a pies of work, and contrasting the New Year; day, when she had hardly . a scrap for herself or children, for din ne't or supper, with that of former years, when her husband was eave,, ani..eornfort and plenty reigned in their- little house. The children, too; hung about not saying. much, only their faces telling they, were hwigry. - But if Milly_ foilnd heavy hearts when she entered, she left light ones. Her timely gift, Vffead with kind words and loving sythpathY, had lifted' the dark Cloud off the heart Of Mother and children; and if little Milly could have peeped in that night, and seen the little group gathered round the supper table; s and heard the merry laughter, and watched the mother's pleased face :as she looked at _Ler Mae_ ones, she :would have felt mire that she had helped to:bear the burdens of some less favored than' herself. It was With a very happy heart she turned homeward. She had intended to have bought a new doll with her half-crown ; but she was sure, had she done so, it would not have given her half the pleasure she felt now. Surely there was no little girl in i the world so happy as, she was. , The sun was shining very brightly now, 'and the cold was not nearly so great as when she had left home—at least so thought Milly. The man with the burden on his back passed her again. He had evidently been disap pointed in selling his goods, and he looked more tired and cast down than he had done in the morning. He touched his hat to the child, saying, `mia" l3 "lfilly re turned the greeting with a sweet smile, and «A good New Year to you," and then tripped on, little imagining that she had really done the very thing she had, a few hours before, smiled at the idea of her doing—helped him to bear that :heavy burden. But so 'it was. The bright smile and the kindly New Year's greeting had cheered the lonely pedlar-- and sent a glow of love 1-through his heart. Ab.l there are few more efficient ways of lightening the burdens of those around us, than by kind words. It was the same Spirit who indited the command, ," Bear ye one anotheelbur dens," who caused it also to be written, "Be ye kind one to another'.''' ; There was a New Year's party in Milly'saiome that evening, and merry peals , of laughter :from little voices echoed through the house; but It was something more than the merry games and magic-Lantern (dearlyas, she en joyed them) that:made Milly sayito her mamma, as she lay do wn..on her little bed, that' diat New { Year's cui was the very happiest on &Ate had ever known. No ; it was something more than these things 'which made' her feel - sal-, even the joy of, having learnt the lesson, how even she, childFasishe was;.could obey t ie command given to all the fol-' lowers of the loving and compassionate Jedus, to bear . one another's burdens, and so, his law. Ere .she .ssleep' she had told the story of the poor widow, and how she ,had spent her halferown, to her Mother, sure of her approval ; and as Mrs. 'Napier printed a good-night kiss on the fore head of her little daughter, she thanked* God that,the first lesson her child had learned in the New Year had:been the blessed one of" bearing one another's' biirdens;” and her ,earnest prayer, -for her: little Milly that, night was, that, amid` all tlie trials which she might meet in life, she might be enabled to cast -,her own burden .on the great Burden-bearer, who 'is as willing as he is able to help. - ' "How many deeds of kindness A little child can do Although it has so little strength, • And little wisdbm too. " lt wants "a loving spirit, Muchmore than strength, to prove How many things a child may do - For' others,' by its 19ve." SELF-CONQUEST. The wisest of men, King Solomon, 'says, " The beginning of strife is as when one letteth outwater."' In some countries where the'shore is low, as in Holland, they raise immense moundS, or dykes of earth, to keep out the waves of the ocean. If there should be the smallest breach in the dyke, the water begins to press from all parts tpiiard the opening; and if not im mediately stopped,`the sea overcomes all - resistande, and 'sweeps away the barriers, burying cities and villages beneath the flood; and spreading misery , and ruin all around. • " There fore,". speaks Solomon again, "leave off contention before, it _be meddled witb," - --rather, before it be "mingled together ;" that is, before, your spirits be joined in conflict, befOre you deal out hard words against one auother. "Greater," says Solomon, "'is he that ruleth his own spirit than he that taketh a city." Courage and skill only are needed in the one case; but' what efforts, and above all, what strength from God, to accomplish the other ! Such conquests, however, may and have been made, and that even by the young. As an illustration, let me mention how a little girl acted under circumstances of provocation, and the Victory which she gained over her- Two little sisters--Fiances, about seven, and Augusta, about five years old—were as happy &wade girls could be, loy_ing their „parents and each other dearly.. Sometimes, ,however, as it, happens with the be 4 of friends, little differences would arise On one of these ; :occasions, ~,Frances, perceiving how .matters.; were = tending, with a thoughtfulness, decision, and self-com- Maud surprising in so young itchild,' said,. `.' I am getting angry; -I hid bet ter go out of the room fora few min utes.' She acted immediately upon her resolution; and left the room for, a, short - time. When she' - returned, 'the storm was hushed, and they went to their play as happy as ever. This is no imaginary story, but a tact. and-occurred just as it is related; and it teaches our young friends, nay, all of us, a most useful lesson. Were all children to act like the lit Ile girl I have Mentioned, how many sad scenes would beey,oidsci, and what happiness would spring up in youthful hearts from self-conquest., There is this to encourage, that just as bad habits grow in strength, the more they are yielded to ; so each time temper is overcome will strength be gained for future conflict. Only remember, no effort of your own can accomplish it without the aid of God's Holy Spirit. That aid will be given if you earnestly and devoutly seek it'i . „ If parentk though sinful, know how to ziVe good things unto their cbildren,- liottilfnurA more shall your Father which is in heaven give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him ? • COMFORT -IBLE PEOPLE. Blessings on the class of whom Cowper'a "Comfortable People" stand rePTesen..4o.-vO , l- , *.Little .4heyo-know; - as" they pass along life's troubled way, how much hearty cheer they quietly dispense In these " comfortable ' characters, simplicity and truth are the basis of a superstructure of genu ine good nature. Without perfect truth, the good nature will lead to weakness of flattery, or injudicious assent, which, although for the' time soothingly pleaSant, eventually robs of the elethent of cOmfort, which is based largely .on - trust. There must be, no shams, , no traps laid behind plausible words, no fear of breaking through the crust, and. by .some un guarded word being precipitated into unpremeditatedquicksands. Aoranks, it is true, - Ire exempt from shallow ones, and thoie falsely labeled; ,yet among - the middle aged and elderly are we, most apt. to find this element 'of bomfOrt. , They' have tried life,- and learned , to. take things at their just ' valuskandiwhere in advanced life ad versity 4;1,5 , peither sharpened,. nor warped, nor, drank the sweet waters of fountain" dry, there we find the naost'of this "comfortable" charm. HOw'gratefullY we remember one old lady, Who, though Seldom met, and then for little rabic- than passing greetings, yet. gave out this element BO largely.: There is a stamp of uineness ?about such people that people could no more take than Sev res china could take impress of the guinea stamp. You know the Bona fides wherever, you meet them • and if . ..their names" be not upon the door plate, you know their" house the mo ment' you have entered it. Mrs. Bona -fideldoes not distress you-with excuses, if you arrive unexpectedly. She does not keep , you in .:state , in the parlor when the sitting-room requires her presence. She does not =follow the fashions indiscriminately, irrespective of taste and adaptability, either in fur nithre or apparel: She does not sport a new silk while the seamstress re maing' iinPaid. She does not remem ,ber what you wore - the last time' she met you, better than' she remerhbers what-you said to her on that occasion. And •heL,religion r if we-may take-the °liberty, with Joving ,hand to draw aside the veil from the soul's portal, we shall see, is not an occasional gar-. went in which she statedly pays tithes, but the aimbsphere of her, life, vivifying"and` rnaking beautiful the action. of its"secret springs. She her- Self puts aside the curtain, and her soul comes forth 'to meet us in all beautiful, unpremeditated words and acts. God bless her 1 With such an one z .there is what Cowper so well termed " comfort." The family like ness among the Bonafides is strong. Though toned down here, or touched up there to some piquant combina tion,-or again brought out, with well defined distinctriesS, the members of' thelamily are at all times easily recog nizable. And, dear reader, just here, with memory photographing the-thou sand acts through, which his 'pure soul shone, remembering • his .daily life, and that intellectual vigor of clearness and directness, which could haVe been cO-eXiStent "only with a' soul drawing daily life-draughts from the pure foun tain of truth—let us name softly that great, good man, Abraham Lincoln ; let us with utmost reverence name him pre-eminently a king among the Bonafides. We love to think of him in connection with this dear, homely word—" comfort," which suits him well. Talent, grace and beauty are good gifts of God, and to be desired; but the truth of such a character—and by truth we mean, not only that which is by veracity, and kindred words, but love and loyalty to truth and right, as such — 7 , this truth is above them all; and joined with, fine courtesy of heart, which,• in fact, is almost inseparable from it, gives that .of which so great a portion stand in need in this great world, and of which social and business intercourse is apt to give= so' little, comfort.—Home gagazine. - ' • -‘ THE ORNAMENT OF WOMAN. It ia the decoration of the soul, rather than of the body, about which• Christian woman should be chiefly so • licitans. The, soul is indestructible and immortal, so should its, orna ments be. What pan jewels of silver or jewels of gold do for this ? Can the diamond sparkle upon' the intel lect ?`- or the ruby blaze upon the heart ? or the pearl be set in the con science? or the gorgeous robe clothe the character ? m the feather or the flower wave over the renewed and holy nature? The appropriate orna ments of the soul are truth and holi ness, knowledge, faith, hope, love, joy, humility, and all the other gifts and graces of the heavenly Spirit. RESPONSIBILITY, This living is a fearful thing! I think, Sometimes, when broad and deep before me rise The awful shadows of our destine 'Twere better God should plunge me o'er the = lOrthe,abiss of nothirigpesi—so weak - - 4 14 11 y dropt hands are to do, irlY lips to speak deeds and, wordsthat s eefo °lvo far. , ..'.i 7 lliaabinden of responsibiliV— Too heavy for our frail humanity— Crushes me down as at His judgment-bar. Why ! death is naught to this ! If we should pray, If we should tremble, when the hour draws nigh, So should our hearts be lifted all the way._ , To live bath greater issiies than to die. —Carl Spencer, Catskill, N.V. ;I= CIIED-RiDDEN, We take the following, extract from the Methodist, which we commend to parents : The Divine order is thattlie parents shall rule ; - and; that they may do it lovingly and wisely, children are born into an atmosphere of love. Such is the beauty, and blessedness ,lof wise parental rule, that good..kings and governors, have been called the fathers of their people; but if law should fall into disrepute, the, nation sinks into ruin.- The same is true of fami lies. A househbld in 'which the pa ents are subject-to-the-whims and ca prices of their, children is' a legitiMate ,object of pity andsconterupt. This tyranny of children begins early. Its first form is unchecked passion and unresis t ed dictation. Thus" .strirted,*ith a fair field befiire it, it 'blooms out into extravagaritdemands ,for spending-money, for costly dress, for, atteridancenixm fashionable amuse ,menfisi ; theatres,_ operas, dances, and the like. The -boys go and come when they please ; .carry night-keys in ; their pocket, come, in at midnight, sleep,latein the morning, get school after the time, if, at t all, break their education - *into iselesi bits, and be 'come fast young men long'befOre they come of age. The girls haVe scarcely 'so good a chance for' the display of their independence,. and; often grieve that they were, not horn: boys: They are resolved, however, to.t do all that the proprieties of their girlhood will. permit. They, swell out, their hoops and' their Waterfalls ; they% have card, parties'and daneing parties ; they go to the theatre at sixteen ; they order carriages at - pleakie; load themselves with - jewelry, and do all - theie things withdut regard to cost ) or without a thought as to how money is earned. What a pitiable sight, and how-dis gusting it is, to see ,a family 'grown suddenly rich, turned upside down as, to all its forms of, life and modes of thoUght by a parcel of yetted and , puffed-up children:! ' The parents were, originally Methodists, plairCand poor. ,Their early homes did riot even Coii tain a piano. They were reared to hOld.eards in utter aborrence, and to regard the dance, and the:ltheatre as' sinfully worldly. But money has come and brought with it fashion, and for the children a measure, of, at least, outer refinement. They see plairily enough that the parents ,are not up to the mark in grammar and manners, and other matters of the lighter sort. They feel their own su periority, and blush for the old people. They are-new in fashionable life, and must demonstrate their respectability. They must have what others have, and do what others do. They have been to college and boarding-school, and are educated. They have found out that opposition to cards, theatres, operad, dances, is the merest prejudice of ignorance and superstition, and the parents, - - meekly accepting' the situa tion, allow themselvesto be metamor phosed into lay figures, dressed accord ing to the fashion and instructed how to repeat the parrot phrases of fash ionable ' life. They see prodigies in their children ; their:authority is yield ed up as to superiors.; the whole do mestic life is changed , • old acquain tances are dropped ; life becomes a painful struggle for social _position. FIRE ON THE HEARTH. The family is the tap-root of socie ty. If it continues fresh and vigorous, there need be . no fear of morals, reli gion or politics. The nation will be secure, and Christianity will flourish and spread. In reading the memoirs of Rufus Choate, one cannot but be struck with the influence. which his early home puritan education had upon i , his mind and heart through his whole career. He' never — ceased to reverence the religion of his father, nor did' it cease" to guide . .and steady him amid all the fluctuations of a fickle atmosphere of - TeligioAs Opirt , and the temptations: f f ions, ns o a pro es, sional success which h.ad proved the moral, ruin of - too many. Sometimes we fear the tendency in our times is =too largely in the direction of outward. trim 4, associations and operations, to the ne- WHERE YOUR DUI ; . glect of Nome: Our age is'so external, ' We - saw him last late in the even practical, leveling, that in ',Dui excess' ing, in the company of very bad boy', of zeal to benefit the Masses we are in and they each had a cigar; and, n®w danger of usurping the hours which` and then; some of than used very pro belong to the house, the real founda- fane language. As we looked at your tion and crown, at last, of a perfect son, .we wondered if yoti knew where society. - he was, and with whoxn lie associates. It is, therefore,&imperative impor- Dear, friend, do not be so closely ow" tance that the, family relation be thor- fined to your shop, office, or ledger, as oughly guarded;, and to be -guarded to ri.eglect that boy. Ile will bring it 'is not enough that it be insisted, t sOrrow into your household if you do upon, but the home must be rendered' not bring proper parental restraint o 'a spring of perpetual 'blessings to its' bear Upon him—and that very soon]; members. Intelligence, piety, cheer- Sabbath and public-school teachers ea fulness must illumine, gladden and • help you, but you must do the :mos% refine it. Resources for improvement and enjoyment must be furnished under the paternal roof, and thus the necessity and excuse for seeking them elsewhere be avoided. There is scarce ly any, nay, not one, of the many exer cises needed in the healthful culture of the mind, which may not be rendered comparatively agreeable to the young. Religious devotions, despite natural total depravity, may be so conducted as to be a delight instead of a bugaboo to children. The love of reading can be indefinitely promoted, and that, too, of an instructive, solid sort ; while the school lessons may be so illustrated and talked about as to be relieved of muctevof-their - distastefulness. If the heads of families would take the same pains to make the home charming to their offspring as they do to make money to spend upon them in needless luxury, or- o - bequeath to them at - death, then would there be many more bright, beautiful, symmetrical Christians, and fewer, far fewer, bro ken parental hearts. David's -treach ery to home virtue brought, him to the sad lament, " 0 - Absalom, my son I" , J - t, -will not do to parry the obligation with " I don't klidw how,' "It is not my nature." It is" the first,'the' sub ' b:nest business, before the mast; the , ship, the field, that-we study how, and so ,change our - natures as ~to save our children. Let invention he set to . work and we_shall be, suprised at its Thus will the 4ays, glide happily by, and the seam 'advance with deepening joys.— Christian-Advo 'cate. AWAKENING K I SIIEEPER Bl TELE ' dlitlt The Leeds . Arercuty ptiblishes the following, story a.a,an instance of the many singular_ applications of-telegra phy. A gentlemp i wli:bm. we will call Mr. M—, reaiding in,. LOndon, is employed there to "manage the wire" for a Glasgow jOrAat that is to say, hearranges the news to be sent down each eveningbfthe'wire''whieb that newspaper employ* iciy special arrangement with , one of-the compat -nies. The principal office of that com pany is at the top, of several flights of stairs in one of those immense build ings erected to fnrnish office acoom modation, which' abi?und . in some quarters of the city.: After a certain hour in the evening, the telegraphic clerk, who sends off the "'copy" by wire, is the sole occupant of this with the exception of the por ter who attends to the door; which, after the hour referred to, is generally shut. This functionary, :who is not often found nodding, . got ,into this ab martial - Homeric state~a night or two 'ago, and so profound was his slumber, that not all the *fantaSias Which Mr. M— performed on the dOor—loud enough to have awakened the`Seven Sleepers, and even louder than the works of some of our modern com posers—could arouse him. It was, of course, out of the question to attract the attention of the clerk, at .the roof of the establishment. Mr. }W— for tunately, however,hit upon the fol lowing expedient or letting , the porter know that he was waiting for admis sion. He went to an adjoining tele graph station and sent a message to the company's office hi Glasgow, re requesting the clerk there to telegraph, to the clerk in the London house, and instruct him to go downstairs to rouse the porter. This was done_ with per feet success in about twenty minutes. In that time, therefore, persons at a distance of over fonr hundred miles succeeded in awakening one who was only separated from the employer by a door, and whb, even at that short distance, was deaf to all persuasion. THE VALUE OF RELIGION. Religion commences with love to God and terminates in love to man_ Thus begun and thus ended, it in- Tolves every duty and produces every action which is praiseworthy or useful. There is nothing which ought to be done which it does not effect. There is nothing which ought not to be done which it does not prevent. It makes ,intelligent Creatures virtuous, and ex cellent. It makes mankind 'good pa-- rents and children, good husbands and wives, good brothers and sisters, good neighbors and friends, good rulers and subjects, and renders fami lies, neighborhoods and States orderly, peaceful, harmonious and happy. As it produces the punctupa ,performanes of all the duties, SO it: r 4Tredthlally se -ewes the -rights, of 'mankind. For rights' in us are nothintbUt just' claine to the performance Of-duties by others -Thus the religion.Df the Bible is the true and, oi . gy source of safety, pease and prospenty_to the -world: