;jp famity NAUHAUGHT THE DEACON. Nauhaught, the Indian deacon, who of old Dwelt, poor but blameless, where his narrowing Cape Stretches its shrunk arm out to all the winds And the relentless smiting of the waves, Awoke one morning from a pleasant dream Of a good angel dropping in his hl►nd - A fair, broad, gold-piece, in the name of God. tit 4 1 He rose and wentfor e early day 11 Far inland, where theltok*.of , the waves Mellowed and mingled with' tche whispering leaves, As, through the tangle of the low, thick woods, He searched his traps. Therein nor beast nor bird He found; though meanwhile in the reedy pools The otter plashed, and underneath the pines The partridge drummed: and as his thoughts went back To the sick wife and little child at home, , What marvel that the poor man felt his faith Too weak to bear its burden—like a ropii That, strand by strand uncoiling, breaks above The hand that grasps it. " Even now, 0 1,614! Send me," be prayed, " the angel of my dream! Nauhaught is very poor ; he cannot wait." Even as he spake, he heard at hiibtire'reet A low, metallic clink, and, looking down, He sew a dainty purse with diskroflold ilrowding its silken net. KWhile he held The treasure up before his eyes, alone With his great need, feeling the wondrous coins • Slide through his eager fingers, one 'by one. So then the dream was true_ The angel brought One broad piece only ; should he take all these ? Who would be wiser, in the blind; dumb woods ? - The loser, doubtless rich,. Wotild scarcely miss • This dropped crumb from a table always full. Still, while he mused, he'seemed to hear the cry Of a starved child ; the sick face of his wife Tempted him. Heart and flesh' in fieica revolt Urged the wild license' of his 'savage youth Against his later scruples, Bitter toil, Prayer, fasting, dread of blame, arid pitiless eyes" To To watch his.halting—had he lost for these The freedom of the woods—the hunting grounds' Of happy spirits for a walled•in heaven .-. Of everlasting psalms ? One healed the sick Very far off thousands of moons ago : Had he not prayed him night and day to oome And cure his bed-bound wife? Was there 'a hell?' - - Were all his father's people writhing there— Like the poor ahell-fisli set to boil alive— Forever, dying never ? If he kept • This gold, so needed, would the droadful God Torment him like a Mohawk's captire stuck With slow consuming splinters ? Up in heaven Would the good brother deacon grown so rich By selling rum to Indians laughlo see him Burn like a pitehline torch? His Christian garb Seemed falling from him; with the'tear'and shame Of Adam naked al the cool of day, He gazed around. A blick snake lay in coil On the hot sand, a crow with sidelong eye • Watched from a dead bough'. All his Indian lore Of evil blending with .a convert's faith , In the supernal terrors of the Book, . He saw the Tempter in the coiling snake And ominous, black-winged bird ; and all the while The low rebuking of the distant waves Stole in upon him like the voice of God , Among the trees of Eden. 'Girding up His soul's loins with a resolute band, he thrust The base thought. from him: Nrilthaught, be a man! Starve, if need be; but while you live; look out From honest eyes on all men, unashamed, God help me ! I am deacon of the church, A baptized, praying Indian! Should 'I do This secret meanness, even the barken knels Of the old trees would turn to eyes to smelt, The birds would tell of it, and all the leaves Whisper above me: 'Nauhaught is a thief!' The sun would know it., and theaters• that hide Behind his light would * watch me, and at night Follow me with their sharp, accusing eyes. , Yea, thou, God seest me Then Nauhaught drew Closer his belt of leather, dulling thus The pain of hunger, and walked bravely beck To the brown fishing-hamlet by the sea ;. And, pausing at the inn -door, cheerily asked: " Who•hath lost aught to day ?" "I," said a voice; "Ten golden pieces, in a silken purse, My daughter's handiwork." He looked, and lo! One stood before him in a coat of frieze, And the glazed hat of a seafaring man, Shrew-faced, broad- shouldered, with no trace of • wings. , Marvelling, he dropped within the stranger's hand The silken web, and turned . to go his,way. But the man said.; " A tithe at least is yours; Take it in God's name as an honest man." And as the deacon's dusky fingers closed Over the golden gift, "Yea, in God's name I take it, with a poor man's thanks," he said. So down the street that, like a river of sand, Ran, white in sunshine, to the Summer sea, He sought his home, singing and praising God ; And when his neighbors in their careless way Spoke of the owner of the silken puyse— A Weltleet skipper, kndiv,n in, every port That the dupe opens in its sandy wall— • He answered, with a wise smile to himself: "1 suw the angel where , tkey see a man." Wurrilza in the Atlantic Monthly POLLY SYLVESTER'S DREAM. Little Polly Sylvester lay fast asleep 'on her cot bed in Mrs. Tarbox's garret. It was a cold, dreary place, where the rats scampered about, and the mice scuffled and squeaked in every corner; there were broken panes in the window, that let in the bitter November wind, and all about hung streaming cobwebs, bundles of dry herbs, hanks of yarn, and wisps of flax, till you could hardly see that there was a window; but through its dingy glass what little light there was on that gray morning, fell aoross the bed and rested on Polly. She lay very still; the tangled mass of deep chestnut curls was brushed away from her pale, delicate face, the great eyes were shut tight, and their heavy fringe of dark lashes never quivered; but there was a smile on her parted lips, sweet as summer's owns sunshine, and so wistful it would have made anybody with a heart ache to see it. But Mrs. Tarbox hadn't any heart, or if she had, and ever felt it throb in her breatit, it had its ears boxed long ago, and was now hard and silent. She came lumbering up the stairs this morning with Fish in her arms, in a great passion. "Get up,'you little carrot-head ! get up, I say! You're lazier thault snail. If I git at ye Iguess you'll move pretty.considersble spry !" " Dit up, tulle% hed, else I 11 bang oo !" echoed Fish, who sys 6 idthoSt three years old, but a baby still, and alo#id.cige. The smile on 81allf, tender little mouth changed to a piteous quiver in; she Sung aside the bd clothes, and with a abiver . „jumped out of bed. " was dreamin'," she in such a sad voice. " Dreamin' 1 1 4 11 be bound you're alias dream in', day in and day out but you've got to dream out o' bed °adieu ors, mornin's, now I tell,ye. Autry Up come • down ! There, he's most PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1869. ready for his breakfast, 'nd I've had to lug this great feller all round, and Vi-oh-ly she wants her shoes tied 'nd her thing hooked up." " Turn along tick, ' fore j: ' me kick oo !" shouted Fish ; and Polly, having huddled on her thin and ragged clothes, slipped into her shoes,—an old pair of Mrs. Tarbox's,—and scuttled down stairs as fast as she could. She didn't stop to comb her hair or to wash her face, but took Fish in her arms and went into the bedroom to dress Viohly, (whose name was Viola !) a scrawny girl some eight years old, with thin light hair, weak blue eyes, and a sallow complexion•, fretful and sickly, but, after all, kinder to Polly than any body else in the house, and loved accordingly. Master Fish was set down on the floor while his sister's boots were laced, her hair brushed, her clothes fastened, and the rent in her pink calico frock basted up; and he amused himself by over turning his mother's mending-basket, which Polly must set to rights; then she spread np the bed, and shouldering' Fish, , Went into the kitchen. There at the breakfast-table sat the rest of the family,—Jehiel Tams, the father, a rough, stingy, coarse farmer, whose loose lips, red eyes, and stupid expression; told the road he had taken at Mice; Viohly, her mother, and two big boys, Jackson and Everett, the terror and torment -of Polly's life,—two young brutes who thought a poor trembling child fair game, and took pleasure in her shrieks and supplications. Now Mrs. Tar box took Fish on her lap and fed him with fried pork, cold cabbage, and hot biscuit yellow with soda, while Polly fried cakes over, the, hissing stove,—not fast enough by any means to suit the boys or their father. "Hurry up your cakes, Silly Poll !" shouted one, "or I'll let the old bull out into the barn-' yard 'nd Set Yen to catChin' chickens there." 1 ° CoMe on, Polly Syl I" chimed the other; " fetch along your slapjackS, or I'll conic 'ad stir ye up,"-La process Polly had experienced before, and stood in mortal fear of. But when breakfast was scrambled through, and Polly allowed to eat her serape of food stand ing at one.end of the table, and, because she had slept too late , denied the one, thing that could hayalii,ide her ' scanty meal tolerable to her.--a Ciip'of - the 'hot 'drink "they called coffee,—Mrs. Tarbox began to map out her day's work. " - OurtrplAion't — be':,,a . Atandin' there all day ; swaller your viteres quick 'nd fly round.. There's heaps 'nil heaps to do. After you've fed the chickens, '.ndeniptied the, swill pail, 'nd ,drove the mows,' iri'd - g6tiVigh' to sleep, 'nd righted -things-generallyq thereW tiro barrels o' red apples -thetls got to fixed for dryin'; Viohly she can string 'em, I guess." " gay, - Marreitn't - I go down to the pastur',lot, long of Polly i " whined Viohly. Yes, if you're a mind ter, only don't hang round there all day ; get home quick." So when Polly bad done, her first " chores," and established Fish safely in a dry•goods box with a heal') of Sand, an ear of corn, and a string Of thread, spools to play with, in which primitive nursery he was used to coetent himself for; an hour at a time, perhaps, the two girls put on their hoods and shawls, such as they were, and set off. Polly opened the cow-shed door and let the mild eyed, friendly creatures out into the.lane, saying a word;or two to each. of the. three as they passed they had been friends. is "tithe o tic to introduee our little girl. Her father , hailheet 'flourishing Young carpenter in a Varmint/linage, .that,hid itself among vast and verdant hills like a nest in the crotches of a fir tree. Sam Sylvester loved his sweet little wife so' Oat, lirllken one tlay)she died and left him, he wanted to die too; and nobody could com fort hitn,—not even the tiny baby that lay and wailed,in,iikold.graclitt wit' it felt, what, it could not yet -- ,know,the sorrows of a motherless child. There was no one in Ifillvale in any way related helitiSitti - Orptildi, like his wife, and any relatives he -might have in the seaboard :England town• 'where las father had lived he had never seen- or•heard frourkso;that when ,he made up his -mind.to .try. his fortune in 'California, be cause` Hill Vale was desolate to him now, he put Tauliiie,ewho was' named for her mother, under the care, o, : f his next-door neighbor, a Mrs. Mobie, leaiing money enough, to pay her for a year, and promising to send on more. He went away with a sad heart; but when he got to Cali fornia, the voyage and the change had taken 'his thoughts off his own trouble, and, hard work - at the mines did so still more. He was quite sue eessful. In the meantime Pohy grew up under kind and Motherly Moore's care- into- a fat and happy baby. One day, aVotit.,a'year after he left home, a souge•of his nsining„ruates,who had been down to San Francisco for stores, stepped into his tent, and after standing about uneasily for a moment, one of them spoke. "Say, Sylvester ! you didn't come from Hill vale, Vermont, did ye ?" "Yes.l did, to be sure." The two men exchanged a glance, and the one who had not spoken sauntered out. Bill , Decker went on ;= "Anybody there related to 'ye any ways r.' "Nobody but my little girl." "Name's Mary, ain't it." "No, Pauline." "Good Jupiter!" " What are you asking for, Bill Decker?" "0 nothin', nothin', 'only suthin' or other turned up queer down in Frisco." " Tell me what it was, quick!" said Sim, rising to his feet with a pale face and angry eyes. " Well, my mate and I we went into a saloon like to get a drink, 'nd ther' was a paper a lyin' round loose on the bar, 'nd I chanced to see 'Syl vester' on't. I kinder thought it might be some o' your folio lied ,kicked the bucket, and so I'd tell ye.about it; and I read it, an' it sed Pauline Sylvester was dead, up to Hillvale." Sam sat down on a box and put up his hands as if to wipe away some mist before his eyes. Baby was dead then; the little creature he had hoped would grow into as sweet a woman as her dead mother,'while she waited for him to come back and claim her. " Well 1" said he, slowly, "that's the last on't; but I may as well go to work," and he did. No thing more was heard of him in Hillvale, and he never knew that the paper Bill Decker had seen was an old one,—so old that it was his wife's death in the register, not his child's. In the , meantime g ood Mrs. Moore, not receiv ing any money, or 'h earing any news from Sam SYlvesteristill took care 'of We lovely little child as if it had been her own. It had found its place in her great tender heart, and though she was poor sh would never give Polly up. The child was six years old when Mrs. Moore died suddenly, and sing a childless widow, with no property to leave behind her, Polly Sylvester was sent to the selectmen of the town, and by them bound ont to Mrs. Tarbox. Two long years ago, and six months beside, had Polly taken her place in this new family,—for it was not a new home. When she came there she was a plump and rosy child, with rows of shining chestnut curls, eyes as brown, clear, and large as a flying squirrel's, and neatly dressed. To.day she was what we have seen her; the long drudgery, unkindness, improper food, and no care had made little Polly a forlorn sight. We left her driving the cows with Viohly. "Say, Polly, what makes you shiver so?" in quired the other little girl. "0, I'm dredful cold; seems as if. I should freeze, Vi!" "I ain't! the coffee was real warm " "But I didn't have any coffee, because I didn't get up quick:" • " Well, why didn't you get up ? you 'most atlers do." "0 Viohly, I had such a splendid : dream! Don't you know we had; that picture-paper Miss Slater let us take one time, and it had aboUt Christmas in it, and how children somewheres hanged, up their stockings; and you said it was real splendid, 'nd you wish your folks had a Christmas; 'nd I said I guessed if my father and mother wa'nt dead I should have one, because Mother Moore always told me what clever folks they was ? And then don't you reklect that (peer picture of let's see, what's his name , ?—oh! Sand Claus filliri.' the stockio's ? Whey, Rainbow,!" —shouting-to a cow ,that left the line of march tempted by a turnip field with the bars down. " Well,-I dreamed that Santi Claus came down chimney right there in the garret somehow, and hung the dredfullest great big red stockire you ever did see, clost totheloot: of mibed.• 'nd When I looked at him he kinder laughed and said, 'Get up, Polly, and look in „your stockin' ; it's Christ mas day.' So I looked in and the stockin' grew bigger 'n bigger, and there was a most ,splendid kind of a wagon or somethin' drawed by two white borses, ant in it—O Viohly, what do you think? —my owns really truly fathei and mother hoidin' out their arms to mei—d dear!" The tears , streamed down those little pale, hol low cheeks„and Polly, sat down on a stone sob bing bitterly; for she had driVen the cows into the lot a,nd put up the bars while she told her story. Viola was not a bad child, and she was a child; a certain dull sympathy filled her heart for the ! poor little thin.. who sat there tryipg not to sob, and mopping her face with the boner of her ragged calico apron. " Say ! don't ye cry no more, Polly. I'll give ye a real soft apple to stop ; don't no more, now." "I can't help it-; Viohly, I'm so tired ; 'nd sometimes I'm so scared np garret nights, and the boys do pester me the •whole time. I wish, 0 I do wish, I had a real live father and mother ! Seems as if I couldn't stand it no longer. Miss Slaterosometimes she talks to me 'about hevin' a Father - 4 in the sky ; but I expeot He's' forgot abouCnieffie has such sights of things to see to 1" Poor tiny soul! He had not'forgotten you! Day after l day went by, and Polly grew yet more pal` and pindhed. Autumn had brought its still4arder work than summer, and when winter came, with drifts -of pitiless -snow over mountains and valleys, and the fierce winds blew more and more keenlY upon Poll Y's half-clothed body and poor pretence 'of a. bed, the child seem ed to, shrink away daily; there was no place for her by the fire at night, no warm and nourishing food by day, and ' . when she was worn out- with hard work she crouched and shivered under her scanty bedclothes at night, falling asleep from fatigue, without being warm. One mornina—it was the day before Christ. mas, but Polly did not know it, for no record- of any holiday but Titanksgiliing Was ever kept in' the Tarbox fainity—she was found in her.garret so drowey, and stiff with cold that=' Mrs. 'Tarbox took alarm lest some day her bonn'd girl might be unbound, and leave her for the house of that Fa ther whom the' poor child thought had forgotten her. So they told her she might bring' her bed dawn at night and spread it in a- corner of the kitched, if it was done. Only after r the family had gone to bed and retrieved before they got' up. That night the moon , shone full and clear Over the sheeted snow, silvered the crests 'otthe great mountains that bore up its drifted piled and streamed into the darkest depths of the valleys. By its- light Polly crept up garret and loaded her trembling shoulders with the husk mattress and cotton comfortable Everybody in the house was warm in bed, and just as she flung her . bur den down on the kitchen floor there 'came a loud rap at the door. Polly was frightened, and Mrs. Tarbox Called from her bedroom,— " Open that are door, Poll, pretty quick; don't stand gawpin' round 'as of you was' city folks!" The startled little creature" did as she was bid; and there on .the doorsteps stood a - man, while beyond him, , in• a sleigh heaped with furs the, moon, now shining like day, showed to Polly a lady muffled to .the throat, andjust holding`aside a silvery veil to look out ; and the lady saw a slender, pallid child, With large soft eyes and a head of tangled curls shiVering' on the doorstep before the strange gentleman. This took but one instant's glance, and the stranger asked if Mrs. Tarbox lived there. . • " Yes, sir," said Polly. The man seemed choked with his next ques tion, it came so painfully and so slow,— " What is your name, child'?" " Polly Sylvester; sir !" • • " My own baby I" was the deep, low answer ; and Polly rested right in her father's arms, sobbing so herself she could not hear the answer ing throbs of his heart, though her poor tired head lay upon it. Polly, shut that door!" screamed Mrs. Tar box,; but there was no answer. Out she hopped from her bed, fully intending to give Polly a trouncing, , and came upon the sight we have seen. " Well ! I should like to know—" ' " You shall," interrupted the stranger. "Mrs. Tarbox, I am Polly Sylvester's father; you have treated my little darling, whom I believed dead long ago, worse than a dog, and she shall not stay another rainitejn`Your house I" " I guess there's two folks to settle that bar gain. Fustty how do I know you be her father?" " Look at me !" said he, lifting his cap. " Why, Sam Sylvester !" " Now you have committed your own self, Mrs. Tarbox. I haven't changed too much in nine years to be known again." " Anyhow there's the s'lectmen, and the bond, 'nd I'll have you persecuted sure's my name's Tarbox, 'lid hey the law on ye of you tetch to take her away !" Sam Sylvester laughed. " Do it if you dare !" said he, and taking the great traveling shawl off his shoulders, he wrap ped Polly all over in it and carried her off , bodily to the sleigh. " Darling,", said he, as. he put her into the lady's arms, " I have brought you a new mother as sweet and good as your first one was." Polly did not doubt that the lovely face bending over her with kisses and fond words was all her father said ; and when he, sprang into the sleigh and the driver let his impatient horses bound away and shake their silvery bells along the smooth road, Polly. only ..whispered, " This is better than my dream It seems that Sam aylvester, o,ll' a rich, man, and married to a young English girl he had met and loved in San Francisco, had, about three months before, met a .Hillvale man fresh from home, who; after he had got over his surprise at beholding Sam alive , and well, told him ail, about Polly ; and of course the father, set out at: once to find his child. They drOve' over to Drayton, the nearest large village to Hill Vale, and there „ after a warm bath, and a good supper , happy Polly fell Sound asleep, holding her new mamma's handl but when . she woke up next morning her grst words,'in answer to the loving 'smile of thOse blue"eyes were, " Mother, is it Christmas `day, r" " Yes dear r '1 " And' dici you come out of 'a red . stOokina• ?" • " Why, no, my little girl.!" " 0, I'm so glad ! then it isn't a dream'!" —Rose Terry, in Our Young Folks. MOTHERS, HEED THE WARNINU. " Ain't it splendid ?" .1 heard a little boy exelaini, as he took A huge bite from the brandy-peach his'play - mate had offered. "What makes it so good, Lewis ?" " You little godse, don't you know ? Why, it's the brandy, of coarse," was his compa nion's " Then brandy must be very good if it makes peadhos. taste so nice," said Frank, I smacking' his lips. "Prather think it is," answered Lewis. " I coax Mother to give me a spoonful every time she opens a jar. Father don't like for her to do it, though. HersAYs I Might grow up to be a drunkard; but mother sAysthere's no danger, and I say so too; for 'I do think it is awful mean for a man to ,get drunk and go staggering about the streets, and rolling in the gutter. No, indeed, I'll never—never be a drunkard ?" Years passed, and I was one day strolling 'through the still, Shadowy groves of Green wood Cemetery, when a funeral procession filed slowly in. I followed it, and when til'e mourners and others left the carriages, I won't with thercuto the open grave, and stood near to the pall-bearers as they deposited their burden, for a few moments, on the'rude boards placed to receive it. The coffin was very rich and costly, and as a sunbeam, the farewell of the departing day, flashed across the silver plate on the: lid, I read-- "Liwis ABBOT. Aged' 18." " So young," thought I, sadly; "'cut down in the very spring-time of life." When the coffin was lowered, the mother, whola;d been strangely calm, soddenly sprang away from the arm on which she had been leaning, threw herself on her kneed beside the grave, with her hands clasped andler tearless eyes gaiing wildly downward into the dark re ceptacle " 0 my precious 136 - y ! Lost, lost forever ! Sent to' perdition by.your mother's hand !" As this dei,spairing cry burst from her lips she threw her arms. upward, and, with a deep 'groan of mertallinguish, fell back death-like and inanimate. She was removed by her friends to the house of the officer in charge of the cemetei7, and 11 shocked and startled be yond measure, .16N-the place with that ter- rible cry of Self-reproach ringing.in my ears. As I passed 'out, I met. a friend to whom I related what had.transpired, mentioning the name of the' you th. "I heard of his death this morning. Poor Lewis! It is a brief but sad history, andilas I have knoitin the family for yearn, I can ex plain the scene you have witnessed. " Mrs. Abbot was famed for her brandy peaches, and allowed , her children to eat of them freely. Lewis, the oldest son, seemed to have a special fondness for them, carrying one to school 'almost every day as part of his liinch. After a time he began to beg for the brandy in which they were preirved, and the indulient mother often gave him a spoon ful, until, at last, it began, to disappear very rapidly and strangely, and Lewis was caught, one day, drinking from the jar. Mrs. Abbot was appalled ; but her work could not be undone. Her jars were locked away safely, but it was too late. The infatuated boy spent his pocket• money for brandy; and when that was withheld, sold his skates, then his watch, then his books; his medal, which he prized so highly, and even arti cles of clothing were all sacrificed to.the fa tal appetite that was consuming every at tribute of his high, noble nature. For four years he has been rushing madly, recklessly to his doom, and. now the star, of his young, life haagone out in everlazting darkness. Ris last words were full of the most fearful im port ' Those infernal brandy-peaches, mo ther—they gave me the first start on the downward road. Remember that, mother " Ah ! might the heart-broken mother reproach herself in the bitterness of despair at the grave of her lost boy.; truly her hand had done the work., • Q mothers ! heed the warning. In every crystal jar of peaches and.eherries ; , from which the brandy, Ames arise 4 in ever,y,glaps of the sparkling, domestic wind your hands have so skillfully prepared, lurks a fiery fiend which may relentlessly and cruelly crush and blight the fairest, the noblest, and the dearest of all your cherished household treasures.--Advocate. LOOK OUT FOR HIM. For the great adversary who always aims at the open point in the harness. A shrewd writer says : "Does not Satan attack us in our weak est point ? How he suits his mode of temp tation to the disposition of the victim ! Are you vain ? In how dazzling a lustre will he place the pleasures of this poor world be fore you! Are you ambitious ? In what splendid honor wily he make the great things of man appear I Are you disconten ted? In what exalted light will he place the advantages of others before your eye s ? Are you jealous ? In what strong con trasts will he place the kindness of the per son you love toward another than you! Are you of an ill temper ? How he will make you think everybody hates you, neg lects you, despises you, or intends to slight you l Are you indolent ? How wearisome will he make the slightest effort for another's good seem in your eyes! Are you too ac tive ? .116 w useless will he make the quiet hour of prayer, and thought, and reading seem to you ! He tempts us to what our nature is moat inclined; he snits hie allure ments -to our inclination. If we are of a quiet temper, he will not tempt us there; if we are only , ambitious, he will take care to make us jealous ; if we are too active, he will not tempt us to be idle. He knows us well; he drives oar inclination to its far ex treme.' INFLUENCE OF SUNLIGHT. In his lecture on this subject, Dr. Grissom said : Sunlight, particularly in dwellings, has become absolutely necessary to health and comfort. The lecturer illustrated how carbonic acid gas is deleterious to human life, by exhaling into a bottle the air from his lungs, and then placing a light therein, which was immediately extinguished. The life of a living insect, he said, would have been extinguished there with equal rapidity. The oxygen necessary to human life is de rived from plants through the operation of the sun's rays—the yellow ray—and the Vegetables in return absorb the poisonous carbon eXhaled from the human lungs. Both these operations take place only in the sun's rays, hence the impropriety of sleeping with plants in our rooms. With man, the sun's rays play a part very important. Under their operation continual change is taking place in the human system; a constant chemical process is in operation. The ac tion of death was a mere chemical opera tion, produced by the incapacity of the system to inhale the necessary oxygen and exhale the poisonous carbon of the system. TO preserve this condition in life, and a healthy system, as well as the development of the mental powers, alike in old and young, a due proportion of sunlight is necessary. BUDOT : .9F ANECDOTES. —Mr. Gray had not - been long minister of the parish .before he noticed an odd habit of the grave-digger; and one daY (*mint , upon John smoothing and • trimming the lonely t ' bed of a child which had been buried a few days before, he asked why he was so particular in dressing and keeping the graves of infants. John paused for a moment at his Work, and looked up, not at the minister, but at the sky, and said,' Of such is the kingdom of heaven." "'And •on this account you tend and adorn them with so much care," remarked the minis ter who was greatly struck with the reply. "Surely, sir," answered John, "I cannot make overbraw and fine the bed-covering of a lisle innocent sleeper that is waitin' there till it is' God's time to waken it and cover it with- a white robe, and waft-It away to glory. When sich grandeur, is awaitin' it yonder, it's fit it Should be decked out fine here. I think the SSviour will like to see white clover spread above it; dae Ye no thinksae tae, sir ?" "But twhy not cover larger graves also ?" 'asked the minister, hardly able to suppress his emotions. "The dust of all His saints is pre cious in the Saviour'ssight." " Very true, sir," responded John, with great solemnity, a but I canna be sure ho are His saints, and, are no. I hope there are many of themlying in this kirkyard, but it wad be great prestimption to mark them out. There are some that I am gey sure about, and I keep their graves as nate and enod,, as I can. I plant a bit &tire here and there as a sign of my hope, but daurna gie them the white skirt." referring to the white clover: . "It's clean dilleren, though, wi the bairns."—Dr. Thompson's' Seeds and Sheaves. —The narrator, at that time surgeon of a Pennsylvania regiment, was seated in Washing tou's tent a day or two before the battle of Trenton. The general was engaged in writing, when sud denly tearing off a piece of the paper on which he had just scribbled 'something, he crumpled it in his hand, and rising from his seat threw it on theground, and then paced the floor absorbed in thought. This act was repeated several times, and the doctor's curiosity being aroused, he put his 'foot on one of the pieces of paper which hap pened to fill at his feet, and as Washington walked away transferred it to his pocket. On reaching his own quarters he •found the words written were, Victory or Death, This phrase was given out the next day to'the troops as the coup tersign.--From, the January number of lifppin cott. —lt is related of a, distinguished Senator, who had been in, rather bad health, that he was ac costed by a constituent during one of those breath less periods of the late war when the very desti nies of the nation seemed to our excited fancies to hang upon the fortunes of the hour. " Oh, Mr , I am so ; glad to see you!" • said the friend. "Is there have you any news ?" " Thank you !" responded .the Senator, with grave serenity—" Thanlf.ypu : I am much bet incott's Magazine. terr-J-Janual number of Lipp