Cfjt ftamilg eitttle. SUBMISSION. ruts saith the Lord, " Thy days of health are over!" A id like the mist my vigor fled away, Till but a feeble shadow was remaining, A fragile frame, fast hastening to decay. way of life, with all its blooming flowers,— Tho joys of life, in colors bright arrayed, The hopes of life, in all their airy promise, 1 6tvw them in the distance slowly fade. Then sighs of sorrow in my soul would rise, Then silent tears would overflow my eyes! a warm sunbeam from a higher sphere Stole through the gloom and dried up every tear; k this thy will, good Lord ? the strife is o'er. Thy servant weeps no more. " Thy cherished flock thou !wryest feed no longer!" Thus said the Lord who gave them to my hand; • Nor even was my sinking heart permitted To ask the reason of the dread command. • The shepherd's rod had been so gladly carried, The flock had followed long and loved it well; Alas! the hour was dark, the stroke was heavy, When sudden from my nerveless grasp it fell. . Then sighs of sorrow in my soul would rise, Then rushing tears would overflow my eyes I But I beheld Thee, 0 my Lied and God; Beneath the cross lay down the shepherd's rod; Is this thy will, good Lord? the strife is o'er. Thy servant weeps no more. Never aghin thou Mayest feed thy, people!" Thus said the Lord, with countenance serene, And bade me lay aside at once, for ever, The robes of office, honored long and dear, The sacred mantle from my shoulders falling, The sacred girdle loosening at his word ;' I could but feel and say, while sadly gazing, I have been once a pastor of the Lord. Then groans of anguish in my soul, would rise, Then burninglears would overflow'ly eyes; But his own garinent once was torn aminiy,,_ To the rude soldiery a soil and prey; Is this thy will, good Lord'? the strife is o'er, Thy servant weeps no.mori. " From the calm port of safety rideiy severed, Through stormy waves thy. shattered bark; ninsti go, And dimly see, naafi:the darkness sinking Nothing but beaNen above i and depths below!" Thus said - the Lord; add. thrOugh a 'wink sedan Of doubts-and fears my spirit toiled' in — vain. ah ! many a dote went forth of,liope inquiring, But none with olive leaf returned again! Then groans of anguish in my , soul would rise, Then tears of bitterness o'erflovved my eyes! Yet through the gloom the promised light was given ; From the dark waves, I could look up to heaven! Is this thy will, good Lord? the strife is o'er. Thy servant weeps no more. Thou shalt find kindred hearts in love united, And with them in the wilderness rejoice; But stand prepared, each gentle tie untwining, To separate at. my commanding voice! Thus said the Lord ! he gave as he lead promised ; How many a loving heart has met my own ! But ever must the tender bonds be broken, And each go onward, distant and alone! Then sighs of sorrow in my soul would rise, Then tears of anguish overflowed my eyes; But thou bast known the bitter, parting day, From the beloved John hast turned away. Is this thy will, good Lord? the strife is o'er. Thy servant weeps no more. Mowaa. THE GOLDEN TEXT. The minister of Isley sat in his study late one Saturday night, a weary, disheartened man ; he had . just finished a week of arduous duties and harrassing cares, and had not expected to preach an the next day, as he was suffering from a severe cold; but his anticipated help had not come, and his ser mon was unwritten, and himself in anything but a devotional frame of mind—for minis ters, after all, if they are 'ambassadors of Christ, are very human. Their physical na tures are often weak, and their spiritual condition is not always perfect, even with the Divine help they constantly implore. On this night Mr. Redmond : leaned his aching head on his study table, and almost wished he were not a minister, that he might at least provide his family with the comforts they so much needed; that so much would not be expected of him, and so little given in return. Ho was not even sure that he had the sympathy and prayers of his people; ,they were so distant toward him, he felt strongly tempted to have no service on the next day in the church,' and so excuse himself altogether. But was that doing. his Master's work ? No, he oould not prepare a written sermon at that late hour in his present depression of spirits, but he would talk to the people af fectionately from the pulpit, as a father to his children. He *petted a Bible to select a text, and chose-the first his eye refited on : "Bear ye one another's burdens." And nev er had he spoken so impressively as he did on that day ; neverhad the relation of pas tor and people seemed nearer to him,, or his sacred office of more enduring beauty. He spoke of the saintly fellowship of Christians upon earth, and his heart was in what he said. His people had only respected him before—that day they loved him. There were some narrow-minded men in the con gregation; one of these sat the next day in his comfortable home and talked with his wife over yesterday's sermon. "It seemed to me Mr. Redmond felt bad ly," he said. "Kitty, I've been thinking over that text, and about concluded to bear bis burden a little. I've got a sight more of that smooth hickory wood than I can use in two years, and I'll give him a couple of cords. I think that will help a little." Kitty said, " Yes, do,': and mentally re solved that when pork time came .a snug ham and some sausage meat should find its way to the parsonage. Somehow the woo was accompanied by a barrel of flour, the gift of another mem ber, and shortly after a real donation visit, made the - minister's home a happy one for ti k at winter, so that he was able out of his small salary to spare the means for a few needed books. But that was not all the good that text did. John Collins was a night watchman at the great warehouse of Barker & Co.; he Was poor, and his wife was sick, and do what he would he could not make ends meet. There was a trifle of money coming to him from a past employer, but it would not be due until three nibilthg. If he could borrow that, it would make him straight again. But THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1868. where could he borrow it ? His companions were as poor as he. The minister might lend it, for ho had been a good friend to John, but he somehow thought Mr. Red mond needed all the money be got. Mr. Barker, his employer, was rich and would never need it, but be was close. John knew that. However, for the sake of his little Melly at home sick, and his wife a pale suf ferer, he made bold to ask, standing by the rich man's comfortable desk and twirling his rimless hat, and telling his story plainly and pathetically. Mr. Barker heard him through, and looked at him from bead to foot, and " I cannot help you " was on his lips, when like an inspiration came Sunday's text to his mind, " Bear ye one another's burdens." As be counted the money out and gave it to the man, " Yon have been honest and faithful in the past, John," was all he said, "be so in the future." Mrs. Weston had never thought to in quire into the circumstances of the woman who did her washing, standing all day at that wearying work. But that Monday, when she went into the kitchen, , and saw the bent form swaying to and fro over the steaming suds, she thought of her as a wo man and a sister,, and by a. few questions learned her whole history, a very common one—a widow with %Ur little children. Mrs. Weston gave her some warm clothes for the children, and proinised to call and see her, and encouraged her by kindly words. - "Oh, ma'am," 'she said, "it's not the re gular washing I mind, but the ladies never think, a they putthings in when I. am just, finishing, for me to wash and starch, and if they see I'm likely to be done early; set me scrubbing the floor, sq, as to get a day's work out of me. It's a long day to. the children. The baby doesn't mind it, for the others amuse it ; but sometimes they don't have a bite to eat till I get home—that , . makes it so hard !" And Mrs. Weston resolved never to be guilty of such thoughtlessueEss again. "Bear ye one another's.burdens," yet rang in her ears and softened her heart. It had been a great wonder to the people of Mr. Redmond's church to see the old mi ser, Thomas Fulton, come up the aisle.upon that Sabbath. It was a still, greater wonder when they heard he had sent, to the alms house for his daughter Mary and her crip pled boy. Had the pastor's sermon touched that flinty heart? Under God's grace it had. " Can I ever be so discouraged again ?" thought Mr. Redmond, when he heard of its influence. "Surely the angel of deliverance Was near me on that night !" There are other parishes in which that text could be preached from with good "ef feet There are other hearts for it to reach and touch. It has a universal meaning; for .wherever toiling, weary humanity is, there should be learned the golden text, "Bear ye one another's burdens." MINISTER'S WIVES. If God gives a good wite to any man, that man ought to be the minister of the Gospel. None so much as he needs the support and help of 'a - good and true'womate. No man's wife- needs to be so much of a woman in the true and full sense of the word. And yet how often is it ,otherwise. I speak not from a stand-point of criticism and fault finding; but from the side of the, mtnibter, and de siring tot say the very: best r carrpfoi• xhiiiis ter's wives. Brethren of the - sacred desk, hoed many of you dare open the closet of your heart to public gaze, how many - of you have not a skeleton hid there? But I speak to the young—let the dead bury their dead—their mistakes cannot be rectified, yea though they seek bitterly with tears. Young men looking to the ministry —but one thing is of more importance than the choice of a companion, and that is your own salvation. Pause; think, study. The woman you choose will, increase or hamper your 'usefulness; will be wings to your soul or a dead weight. You have no right to fancy yourself strong enough to lug along such a dead weight and make advance up the steeps of perfection in spite of it. Better have a balloon than a lamp of lead. Use good sense and prayer in choosing, and leave the rest to God. Good sense will tell you that she ought to be pious. It is not enough that she be converted, barely inside of the death-line. She must be a decided Christian, heartfull of love to the Master and the;-good cause. Only with such a heart can she counsel with her husband, with him devise measares46e Zion's good, stand by him with her faith and zeal when the rest leave him to work alone. With a soul wholly enlisted in the cause,,slie can reach many her husband. cannot. She must have the decided Christianity that will leavepo room for question. So decided that it can stand by itself. Often her husband will be from home for days and weeks; and she must keep burning the sacrificial fire on the family altar, lest haply the minister's home and little ones are left prayerless and godless in his absence. She must have a mind, a degree of culture is absolutely necessary. No more does the chameleon take the color of the bark it rests on than we receive the impress of minds with which we are in daily contact. An intelligent woman will stimulate thought. An uncultured mind cannot appreciate in tellectual intercourse,, and this deprives the minister of what is absolutely necessary to keep thought active, mind vigorous. Ido not mean that in seminary routine she must have committed so many problems in geo metry, skimmed over rhetoric, touched as tronomy, and be able to locate the constella tions, 'looked at botany, and know the lan guage of a hundred flowers—this is not cul ture of mind. A woman may have done all this and be the most insipid; brainless doll. Wherever and however she came by her culture, she, must be able to grapple with stern thought, to look with an understand ! ing eye on the great waves of tumult heaved 1, up threateningly on humanity's ocean by the mighty winds of God. The questions of the ages must not be Samsonian riddles to her. The books on her husband's library shelves must not be all Greek and Hebrew to her; but she must know how to use the product of other minds for the growth of her own. She must have a discreet tongue. It will add infinitely to the comfort of them both and the congregation. Woe be to them all if the mechanism by which it is swung works so perfectly as to be a near approach to perpetual motion. Woe to all if she re peat some half uncharitable opinion of a neighbor expressed to her without the cau tion not to repeat. Trouble to herself, husband and people, if "they say" is a glib, conven ient phrase to introduce the latest bit of scandal, without shouldering responsibility.. Trouble,confusion and final rout to the minister whose wife does not know how to let other people's faults and failings alone. She must be a good housekeeper. Pardon so homely a trait in the ideal—it is really essential. Your wife must be neat and cleanly, never indifferent to personal appear ance, never guilty of the; sin of)ieing slat ternly. These are so common thlngs that I would• not mention them if observation, had not made me wise, but what I-aim at . more a especially is economy—ability to keep com fortable house on say 'B5OO a year. The average of ministers' wives must keep within those figures. Some make twice as much conffort with the amount: others do. Any one can keep a good house on s2,ooonr $3,000 a year; but only a few on the' pittance doled out to the minister. Many other things she must have and be, but I only want to provoke thought, and I leave you to complete the - Model for your self.—Lutherari Observer. FRETTING JENNIE, Little Jennie, fretful Sitting in a tree, Worried at the binzing Of a bumble-bee; Said she bad a headache, Wished it would be still; KneW it buzzed on purpose, To defy her will. ' Buzzing bee was happy, Busy at its work, Gathering stores of honey— Never thought to shirk; Never thought of Jennie, Fretting in the tree ; It was such a happy, Busy little bee. Jennie grew more fretful When it answered not, Said it was really hateful— That was what she thought. • Still the bee kept, buzzing, Glad its sphere to fill, Discontented. Jennie May be fretting still. Are there not some Jennies, Boyevand - girla, you know, Who fret at others Are not slack or slow ? Forth to duty, children Like the busy bee Minding not cross bee, On her fretting tree. JUST ONOE. Somehow, I can hardly tell in what way, we began in our Sunday-school lesson lately to talk about theatres and theatre-going. One of my boys asked me if I thought it was wrong to attend a theatre. I told him I did, and gave my reasons. Then came the question. "Is it wrong to go just once, to see what it is?" I said I thought it WAS. " But many church-members do go," was the reply. *" They say they go to see what the evil is, that they may warn others, though I guess they have as much cariosity as any of us, and go because they like it." "All this does not make it right," I said. Robert looked into• my face with ,a ques tioning look, but said nothing. "What, is it, Robert ?" I said, " for , T see a question in, your eyes." "Well, teacher, if you won't think it im pertinent, I wanted to ask if you ever went to the theatre." I stopped a moment ere I answered this home-thrust—stopped, thinking how happy I was that I had been so little tempted in this respect. At length I answered - "No, "I never went to a theatre, and I never mean to do so. I don't believe I shall be - sorry in heaven!' " I'm glad of it," Robert said. " Glad of what ?" " Why; glad that you have never been to the theatre. If you had said 'yes,' after all your talk to us, it would __have done me no good. I should have thought, I'll go once to see what it is like, but now E pro mise you I never will go, God helping me•"' How thankful I was that ID A feet had been kept from the way of evil. More than ever.l.felt, if theatre-going is a sin, then it is wrong for me for all, to go just once."-0 S. S. Times. In a recent pastoral, nishop Arthur Cleve land Coxe says:, " When I see the tawdry fashions, the costly vulgarity and the wicked extrava gance of the times, I feel sure that thous ands of American women are strangers to the first law of refinement—simplicity in manners and attire. " When I see that thousands of American women read the most shameful romances and the most degrading newspapers; fre quent the vilest dramatic entertainments and join in dances too shocking to be named among Christians; I feel that Christian matrons are becoming too few, and that civilized heathenism igt• rettirning -to - the fields we have wrested from the Indians. " When I read, daily, of the most ungodly divorces and of crime against social purity and against human life itself, which are too gross to be mentioned more particularly, I feel that too many of our countrywomen are without God in the world, and that radical reforms are necessary in the systems of ed ucation on which the young women of America are dependent for their training. " When I see thousands of households in which young girls are reared tor a life of pleasure, without reference to duty, I can not wonder at these results, nor at the mis ery in which they involve families and COM munition. Sow the wind and reap the whirl wind I "As a Christian bishop; therefore, I make my appeal to you, Christian women, and ask you to begin the - reformation, by faith fully bearing your testimony against all that tends to the degradation of your sex, and the more so, when such crime is not only Winked at; brit receives countenance in circles which ought to be exemplary." REASONS' FOR' GOING TO COLLEGE. .AnoiT fifty thousand young men in these United, States are• students in colleges. About one fortieth of the entire male pop ulation, between the ages of fifteen and twenty-one years, are enrolred on the college-hdoks. Not more than two-thirdi of these complete tlie coinie of study upon which they have entered, so as to be the alumni of a college. In this' esti mate we do not include the students in academies, high-schools, and seminaries, which embrace perhaps as many more of the same age, but we confine our attention to colleges. Nor do we , include in this esti mate the great body.of students of medicine, law, and theology, but simply under-gradu ates. We find here an army of at least fifty thousand - strong. ' Perhaps a hundred thousand young men are now deliberating whether or not to "go to college," and for the advantage of this great multitude of young men is this arti cle written. To answer this question, consider a few facts. These facts illustrate a principle. In Laninan's -Dictipriary of the United States Congress, published in 1864, the names and short biographies of three thousand eight hundred and ninety-two men (if we count aright) are given, who have been members of the United States Congress, from 1789 to 1864. Of more than one thou sand of them it is expressly stated that they were educated in college. About as many more are said to have been well educated (probably some of them in college), and of many no information is given except the date of their office and the States ,which they represented, the fact whether they were educated or not being unknown, while a considerable number reached their honor able position by the repiitatien acquired in military pursuits. Colleges are . now more numerous relatively to population than for merly, and we are - sure,,from a careful in vestigation of the matter, that ennsidera bly less than one in a hundred of the men in the country have been graduates of college Following the general average, therefore, less than one in a hundred of the members of Congress should have been educated in college; but the fact shows more than one in three, perhaps nearly one in every two This fact deserves attention. In like-manner, according to general ave rage, only one in a hundred of our Presi dents of the United States should have been educated,in college, and it would not have been strange if as yet not one such person had been chosen ; bat in fact, of the fourteen men elected directly as Presidents, all . but five were graduates of college, and three of the five non-graduates owed their influence to their reputation as military leaders ac quired in war, and the fourth, Abraham Lincoln, not able to go to college, surmoun ted difficulties by hard work, and made him self a statesman and an orator, and to a large extent a scholar. Five out of fourteen is the number educated in college, instead of one in _: a hundred! The lame thing would be found true of governors, judges, and other such officers. Again, take such a book as Allibone's History of Authors, and as you cast your eye over the catalogue of distinguished names, observe that nearly all of them have been educated,, in universities. v All preachers, physicians, lawyers, teachers, and editors, at.least, should have systematic education equal to that obtained in college.--.E. 0 Haven,' D.D. • CROWDING. I never heard it myself, but they told me out in Illinois, that on still nights you can "hear the big potatoes scolding the little ones for crowding so." The little fellows are growing, and there is no room for them all in one hill, and so the big ones scold, and bid the little ones keep, still. Ido not be lieve all of this story, because potatoes have no mouths, and cannot talk. They have eyes, and if they had mouths they would scold if they could, for potatoes do get ter ribly crowded sometimes--crowded all out of shape. There is a good deal of crowding, and worse than crowding, going on all around me.."'4 hill of corn came up beautifully and grew a foot high, and then stopped and turned yellow and died, all because there was a maple tree that crowded it and took away its'imP and sunshine. The other corn stalks a little way off saw it, and said it was a sha,rne 'for that great big, tree to steal a living away from a little corn family not six weeks old'! But when those scolding corn-stalks were grown up, I noticed that they spread out their blades and drank up the sunshine, and would' not let the little turnips grow between their rows! and a squash .vine got so mad at the corn stalks that he came up, and. ran away be yond the, outside Tow of corn, before he'd stop to. finish out a big leaf or grow a blos- som, and then he stopped and grew so rich, and fat, and big-leaved, that not a leaf of clover, nor a blade of grass could grow, ho covered all the ground so. There is a crowding and a quarrel going on in my garden all summer long. • The thistles quarrelled with my strawberries, so that I had to go out and hit them with a hoe, and then they would not keep still for more than a week at a time. Then my hens crowded on to ray corn, and do all I could' they ate it all up, leaving me not an ear no, not a kernel. The cabbages did well until after frost ; then a neighbor's cow came to gnaw at them, and leave them nicely white and open for bugs to creep in. So my cabbages got crowded. In the woods the large trees keep the little ones from growing up. In the waters the big fish eat the little fish. In the air the hawk catches the little bird. On land the cattle eat up the growing grass, and by-and-by, men eat upthe cattle. That's the way it is and always has been in this world. The stronger crowds the weaker and uses him up. Once a mad elephant came rushing along a village street in India, knocking down the' village bamboo shanties, pitching men into the air with his, tusks, and slapping dOWn the women into the dirt with his trunk Suddenly he 'stopped little baby in, the very middle of the street, looked at him, picked him up tenderly,, and set him in at a house door safely; and then went raging along , down street again.. Wonder ful ! beautiful.? to see such a monstrous crea ture so kind to a little baby. A doctor in _England had a fine, large, black dog, larger than any dog anywhere around. One day, he broke hie leg- The doctor set it, and took care of him until his leg was quite strong again. A month after ward this great big dog, fat and black and curly, brought home' a little sore, red-eyed doggy, running on three legs, and showed him to the doptor to be cured ! Wonderful ! beautiful 'to see a great hearty dog helping a; poor, lame, half starved cur 1 It is better than crowding or quarrelling.? Once 'I knew a tall, stout, good-looking man go to a picnic withi at least eight little children, six woinen, and some boys and girls. put up a swing between two trees, a long, swing, and then for hours he stood. there, giving all the boys and girls, and all the women and children splendid swings—away up in the air. He worked so hard that he could hardly keep awake long enough to get home, and 'the next day his arms were stiff and sore. But ho is one of the best men I ever knew. - He is so very strong that he helps everybody and so very kind that he never crowds anybody. He does not scold the little potatoes for growing, and he says we - that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please ourselves. And when I tell him that everybody crowds everybody in this world, he says, we don't belong to this world, but to the kingdom of heaven, where He that is chief is servant of all. I've a great mind never to crowd or quarrel. any more !—Little Cor prat. A BABY SOLILOQUY. lam here. And if this is what they call the world, I don't think much of it. It's a very flannelly world, and smells of pare goric awfully. It sa. dreadful light world, too, and makes me blink, T tell you, And I don't know what to do with my hands : I think I'll dig my fists in my eyes. No, I won't. I'll scrabble at the corner of my blanket and chew it up, and then. I'll holler; whatever happens, I'll holler. And the more paregoric they give me the louder I'll yell. That old nurse puts the spoon in the corner of my mouth in a very uneasy way, and keeps tasting my milk herself all the while. She spilled snuff in it last night, and, when I hollered, she trotted me. That comes of being .a two days' old baby, Never mind, when I'm a man, I'll pay her back good. There's a pin sticking in me now, and if I say a word about it I'll be trotted or fed, and I woald rather have catnip tea. I'll tell you who I am. I found out to-day. I heard folks say, " Hush, don't wake up Emmeline's baby ' That's me. I'm Em meline's baby," and I suppose that pretty, white-faced woman over on 'the pillows is Emmeline. No, I was mistaken, for a chap was in here just now and wanted to see Bob's baby, and looked at me, and said I " was a fanny little toad, and looked just like Bob." smelt of cigars, and I'm not used to them. I wonder who else I belong to. Yes, there's another one—that's " Ganata." Emmeline told me; and then she took me np and held me against her soft cheek and said, " It was G - anma's baby, so it was." I declare I do not know who I do belong to ; but I'll holler, and may be I'll find out. There comes Snuffy with catnip tea. The idea of giving babies eatnip tea when they are crying for information! I'm going to sleep. I wonder if I don't look pretty red in the face ? I wonder why my hands won't go where I want them to? ANECDOTES OP DB. WAYLAND. [From the Life published by Sheldon and Co.] "Yon remember the dialogne between George the Third, I think, and the elder Pitt. Mr. Pitt deserve my confidence, and you shall have it.' Sir, give me your confidence, and I will deserve it.' The king had the best of it. It is so with the public. If a man deserve confidence, he is sure, sooner or later, to have it." Having been informed, that, in one of the inferior courts of Providence, innocent persons arraigned for alleged misdemeanors were sometimes convicted and sentenced be cause they were unable to employ counsel, he conferred with a competent lawyer on the subject, and requested him to appear for the defendant in any such case that came to .his knowledge, promising - to 'assume the ex pense of such proresSidnal service.