:•■ , j''-', ’i, '■* • 1 ; v ; r ■ ' \ ■■ ’■ ■ k i; - ; i ■■ ! ■,;.•• J ; !, -s '. ■ '.* : \ "M : -'‘Hi ■” ‘J" >-j I If -i'j ■ \ ‘ ■ S : ‘ ■ c - |*' ■ ißiiii POETICDAX. i b.—b.. jHB FOOTSTEPS OF DECAY rite following 5 is ft translation flfom an an ient Spanish Poem, which, say s .tße Edinburg • ew , Is surpassed by not! dpg with' which wo acq ii!Hntcd in the Spanish language, ,ex cept tieyOde of Louis do I eon.’’]. . ' ' Ohr)et the soul its elanbers break— . Arouse Hs senses and awake, 1 To see how soon: , ‘ Life, in? its glories-glid 33 away, ' And-the sterii footsteps of deeoy I Como stealing on] j 1 ■- , And while we'view the rolling tide, VOW.n "Uloli wu.i fl«n ; , , Away so fast, ,j., ■ Let a” 3 l Be present bon r employ, , • Andde'em each future Ireain ■ $ Already past. , V],. . ' Let no vain hope clever re the mind— ■No happier let ub hope to find ' , ■ - To-ijiorroW'thaii to-day. ■' ■ Oar golden dreams of 3 ore Were bright, t hike them the present shall ' delight— \ ■ ( hike them decay, " ' Out Utcs like hasting streams must be; r That into.nnc engjulphi ag sea ■ ■ire doomed to • The sea of death whose waves roil on ■ O'er k/ngaud kingdom. cijown and throne, And swallow all. I : Alikeithe rivers lordlj tide, _ ’Alikclthe humble .rivulet glide . fTo that sad wave:. ; ,•>. UcaOf levels poverty and pride. And riih nnd>-poor sletp; side by side , r fi / v - .Within the gravj.. r - • Oiir hivt-h is but a starting place; ;«■ ", t Ljfc,is'thc running of ilc race, r (And death the goal;; i - There all our glitterim; toys arc brought— The‘pa|th alouo, of all unsought, ' : - ■ -Is found of all. 1 See then lioiv poor and little worth , j Are all these glittering toys of,earth I ' ' (That lure us hureli : Dreams of .a sleep (hr £ |death must break. ' Alas! oofore it bids u;i p’akc, j - Vie disappear. ; j Long ctc the damp of earth cah blight The ehoeha pure .glow of red and while - J ' , j lias passed awiy, i . : Votifli srailod and all v'aßjheavenly ,fair-^ Ago came.nnd'laid hiii finger there, , lAnJVhetß are they?. •' "TVherejis the strength thalispurned decay, . The step that roved s 3 light and gay, *" .The hearts blil he tone! j ' The Strength is gone, the step Vs slow. And joy growgjWearisiimeand wq! ' l When age comes "oh. - , , ' ,' j ‘ ’ , ■' t Miscell lowing intci ccnp j "'as handed ui Ja‘ Wilson, Esq., ,« ff publication. He orayo and gallant sol perato charge at Fj . will 'find pit •is well as intoroslin g, sketch.] | ' ■ After the battle and four men, in Qaetiin L-.i C 9 an entrance, and the »eni mVv lbo balance of bis men, Parnnse *- ear the house for the " q„ i u off hisrolreai from • reeled attention was di nntii h» L, ae . w, ndows ,of the house ean.loctid B .l ta^' ed clfckof a ■ larned oniooV house.. He c °cked in w Ub; .Lis revolver al 'o4t fift v _’ 8 j aad , and- saw Horn, , Vitty ofrtonnf^l afc fc be head r of a fbi »e i t-Dorn had his raised and was jn the ket of IMII takingaim at him. Capt., Wilson fir ed his'rcvoider at Dorn;' more to dis tj act hia 'aim 1 than with 'tKe axpe eta ;l|,dn ofshooting him] -It had the! do sirbd effect, ns" the ball whistled past without harming hinj. Capt. Wilson and party immediately dashed at] the rascals; they broke and fled, each man for [himself. Thc-firrng attracted] the attentionVif the party, in froht, .Who were difimounted.and by (ho time they had . regained their &addles the guer rillashad the startof thorn. Then coir menoed a. race that was .the las) one. Ibr more than' oho 6f the retreat ing party. JCapU JiVileon Jpdk the track of Dorn, ,and they went down the road pell-moll,each one firing his rc' volver at the other, as opportunity offered. Capt. Wilson, was gaming on hint until a short curve in the road brought him so close to atreothai his elbow struokit, knocking the revolver out] of his band, and some, thirty Soeb away, leaving him to pursue the chase with a disabled arm, i.sabre and jear blhjej but the delay enabled Dorn to effqct hia escape, i X|orn usually rode a white, horse; but this time bo {was noti on the white,, hkving exchanged with a brother Capt. ‘ Wilson’s bro ther, J. C.',Wilson, although last,to re gpip the saddle, bad a fleeter horse, or was a more reckless ] ridcrj took the trujek *6i the. white horse, and noon passed-somo of his own party and sev. eral' of'tho guerrillas;, pressing the white horse vcry'hafd, exchanging shot* as they flew- along, until the white horse. left. the road. Wilson still pressing on andijgaining on| and firing at.hjm' with his second revolver;; demanding his surrender at short in tervals, until; they had/left the main , road about a mile, when suddenly the white horse , was wheeled round and [the man threw up his hand, cried out, “Ijsurrondcv,:! I surrender a prisoner of Iwatr The grim-;lopking customer was armed to the teeth, and at ileast ono-tliird larger than hiscaptoi]; but he was quickly disarmed and driven into camp by Wilson, Who wps much elated with fiis exploit.. Butiie’did prove ,toj bo the leader of the tang, as; ho w.as supposed to. he during thd pursuit. guide drove his'man in to the. swamp, and; his horse fdll and floundered; but before the’ guerrilla could extricate himself the guidejshol I him, and both horse and rider disap peared in the ditrk water of the siyamp. Three of the guerrillas 1 were kiied, and each ot the party, excepting Capt. Wilson, had'.’mado a capture.-r- But Dorn letl that ipart of tho doun wjr -vei j ouaoeniy..' - = —>— Aftcr participating in the fights-Tit Island No. 10, Now Madrid, andiTip lonville-v-thc 2d lowa Cavalry waslacnt uj) the Tennessee to Pittsburgh liand 'nS- Corinth, ,'aiid Farmington.J At At the latter place Jr 0. Was killed, in|a n\ost desperate charge up on. the enemy's, batveries, on thoJ f him, and cut\hiia off -from the main army, determined to withdraw.” ■, ■ n A swamp : was in I his roar, 1 across jffijiich only a single roadbed, dvoi * ' ■* 1 >tf- 1 .neons, resting remiiiis- S by onr friend Brighton, lost his , sorf, k. dier, in- the des rmington, uur ch 'that is new, in the following. bo must carry his entire cotni ;mand, In |hc .meantime, the rubais had moved Ibcir artillery so as to dd liver a cross fire on this,- while thcii extended wirif'.i.were sweeping dawn 1 on either flank? n ■ : \ “To leave nothing behind, and gain time to get .his-columns across ithis single narrow croas way .Paine ordered the second lowa cavalry to charge the enemy’s, guns.. ’ r - “It was a'desperate order, but Col onel Hatch, to whom it was dolivorod, cared little for that. Five hundred were to charge in the face. of ten thousand; • but his only anxiety was lest his, menj sbpuld refuse to; foU low him.. • But the bravo lowans woro ready to a ipaii, Piling'.np a ravine os Jar as they could, to avoid the shot, and shell that swept the field, i.hey boldly ascended the siopo, face to face .with the battery. . “Quickly responded to tho pealing bugle with Joud shouts, and with Sabers flashings above iicir heads, dashed full on the guns. Th * skirmishers in front wont down! like bending grain, before their fierce' jgol lop; but] the momont'th e field was clear ed of these, -the artillery opened on thi th > ' ' • ' ,uem wu. canister and shrapnel. I Be- •7, - , religion. Uiu. Toro tho.destructivd fire, that line of ewryleffort to get horsemen Weald have disappeared ' d Q a ® en Isabella thatljio like mist in not the P/?, P i P f ,. tbo “W worW would bo lost gins, in the caused] Ai'fi’ Co * this sudden apparitrodj beoffiloomueir -? 1 ? bayefibtpa,Baid the Queen, depressed; ' .<■' J i‘- I £ * l ha T° l ® Bell toy c-oWn jewels— .,m.. - , ... • • • . ; ! .aais[ was three hundred 1 years arm !n if fi n e oad9 *??* luo ® r( 2? d wh6n the ,women,if .thoy got anything in front of them, catling down a bun- .into thcirlieads.gonoiallylaccomplish* dred horses but did not stop the re v edit. fLaughtor.l : J j P w fnli „nnn D f h the lf we this nation to others, pest full upon them, the-affrighted 1. h i one . more {hr humanity fr n^S^^^od^the^ ie than others. It has severed church I th° -charno being ahd state, and thus struck a deadly , WaS t ° blow at hypocrisy. 2. It has educau could svr.ft- tod the j masses more thanoth«-s. 8. Ratf»!n B Kn r ? 83 4 fir ° ; ' 8 T t ’ educated and olevhted women Hatch the bugle to, sound flip to,positions of higher usefulness and rewll. But tho troopers nev- iono'r. ;4. It has done > more than ®L h . and d«rthin» oed M lt others tb otovatu the humlilost to pla not and daShmg on the ces of,honor and trust, the fcontW bred them at their pieees. They tfieu boy. Lthe.fttrmor’Uoyi” may be- id tbe fell back to the swamp, land the col- highest pfiicos yot. Vf ho does not re nmns safely effected its retreat to jthe member j Clay, the ‘‘milt boy- of the farther side;* • i slashes? ’ Jackson of Jopr pa-J New Brighton, Peb. 22, 60. \V. |.nd be had read somewhere' bl. :.-ta Bed, Ok- ! ' I con sp: in history 6fa ‘ t"- j - formgncpJLO one who has not heard it and ive propose, to,offer to the reader only a blriof and fragmentary outhno. After a ] brief introduction expressive, of appreciation and regard tor ail educational agencies- achieve* melts, th‘o speaker addressed himself tp his subject as follows; ! All oyjes are turned to t_he front; all hearts are anxious forefathers, hus bands, and sons, who for us and jmav return no jtijore. What will jth'ejeiid |be ? is the gijl&at inquiry.' Though jwo cannot prophesy ; we have sorae mcans-of kuowjng wfiat shall be. We jbelieVe to-morrow morning’s sun will rise; for thatNis alaw df nature. Thoyo arc also,laws for| pations, God has revealed his purposes jin ing [governments. If.jtf' knpw his piind, we can predict thcnresul't. God .raises or easts down gavct-hmoniß, not for the rulers,but for th«f'|ieoplo. -Wo may|regard it as a law thl&vthe gov* cbnraente which in science; literature, and mofials, is ac cepted of God.-;jThe nation,: 1 which doesi ndtLlhiv God will Overthrow.— Thus, Israel displaced the Canaan ites. j E£ypt passed because it Oppressed God’s people,.}# J Tiiore aro several pos»|lelBßucs in our present national coiipict. One is, shall tbip nation perish^ 1 If-soJ. the nation superseding - us must be'better than! ours. Has this hatiion finished •Us mission ? If Wo God wals with ns asjho novor 'lias, with any j other nation. ( Ho bation ever perished, in a hundred years/ (Search i history,Egypt cotinted itsjgfowth and decay by, centuries.-/ prin ciple] holds-in re'gajd to Bhbyiofcia, Phoenicia, Greece, Home;fSnd in more inoderu times, to France,. England, Germany, and tCho age of the wor d -whjch jGod chose for our birthj' shjowed there was ia great mis sion fift-jus. • Wo wore hidden till bc|- encoj add religion needed us -.Qther lands wjeio discoyored ; tfr6m temporal motiyes; ours from jelfgion. - Colum- W ©'<^©s -i should say dat wastam pad news,” b k-f ? Ur s :^ Fr °f excitedly; interrupted the, German. tnUn poseasion of u for the United -Yes, you say right Slates. Just at th? right time, (Jod o ff, -dis, however, will but gold upi to U8 ‘‘ r; Y c F,s of oil . • p ad for, the Union cauie, tam pad, and Franco, djuhtlass hud it is UotTor my ten thousand/ Don’t !^meih W g to dp invWentmg,th !? you'fee.Schulfz,. thatl.in buying gold KifSSWP yod instaptly Wakd the interest! of forma,Etfgnand fear- tho Eobols your, mtete-ts-that ydu E f omin Si°o briboyoutaeif to wist them to sue. !t S Ar bt,t When j )ur r c , r ° Bh oobd, and to wish your country and the Mernraac,they suddenly became yonr countrymen to fail?, And if neutral., , j ■, ■ : i these unholy desires; Schultz, don’t JisHop. saw, the define af Bebejl, there is no language k> jo war in tfio d'dprociatidn of the reb el'currency, the scarcity, or their men, the evidence of despair shown by the manner of treating our' prisoners, and in the desertions and desponding of the rebelarmy. ; On lour side he saw' men, - and valor-!—iaspira tion almost, as in the case of Hooker and his, men in Lookout Mountain, fighting above the clouds. Who can conquer menwb°. fight above I the clodda? .Slavery will Voabolishod.— The conqnesta for freedom, are sur passing all expectation®.- {What shall be dope with the ncgr(jea?’j N lBt. Wo might do with them ids Jeff:, Oasis wished ns ,tp do with him-r-lot ftcm alone. 2d. instead ofpgitaung, edu oato. .them. ■ “3rd, Lei thorn ’■ rededm- - Africa 4th.; Lot then have Texas and Arkansas.. They willjbe propar ,Cd for aiughor civilizUion and.freer. I donr lifter their babtisA of blood.' * ! After summing up are more noted' measures;. baUlesandjn ciden tsoftho war, and the various bjnoficial results certainly to accuro ,and_, 8,1865. • =SU ; 'S; =NM REI y_ ~~. x - .• ■ ]"■ • ; - use of Representatives-—[Ssk 2d! paob.] the . ..:111.' •I .■!; l; t .-j i t \'t^ 1 ' '/ ■- i;•* i' ;.. I '■ V : ;. • r %t 1.1 and to the world ; at ■ largo from the .complete and speedy overthrow of 'this rebellion—an [event which must very sbcjn in the ordei of. providence result o4|the well’ earned trophies Of our valient arm lot, and' wise legislations and judicial decisions of bur patriotic stat esmen, and juris ts-f -i the and pathos had become" ioverwhbhnlhg ,to his, \ast bpell-bonnd audience,eoncludcdby ferrjpg to the fact that th 6 ' telegraph informs us that. Sherman , has taken Columbia, and that' Charleston is ours! [Loud j cheering!] : Ton , may have heard of Sherman, said he—he is a northern rnan wilh f‘ southern proclivi-, tieB.” [Laughter.i And there is Phil Sheridan, who, doles not know e* hbugh to keep off the sabred soil of Virginia. Some'sigh for a man at the or a Jackson, x pray no that} 1 1 think God has already!Groat-ed us one., .[Great laughter ] ' | ■ Ilia apostrophe to the flag, that gloroua banner of ours,was indescriba ble, and is coi taiiily j nnoqualed in any known oration. : L ,1 ! • Buying Gold Hakes Onea Rebel , j - 1 I , * There is instruct pn and example ip the following incident barrated 16 us. by a Pennsylvania friend,;: r An honest Schuylkill CountyGor* man nijcrchant, who! had accumulated more money Xban ho could employ'as capital in bis-business, came to a pa triotic banker in Philadelphia' and said,: j ■ ' ", , •}; ; •' ‘•I have got some, moneys, and I want 3’ou to buy mo bomogold.” “Why, Shultz,, what do you want define boo, ’ Don’t you see that’buy* ing gold.jneyitably I tarns bopest,:pa« triotic, devoted men like yod, ■ away from the pause which they ought to support, and, which they think . they do,support, i but which they jeanjnot support;' because they have made- it for their interest not to support! it ? Dotft you ' s aeo it, dear old feUpjy:?’? “Be shore 1 do,” said the hditest man , with of mannerandhu- ffand I ax pardoh;of the wah Put tho whple ofdat in My money gooS- with my principles.” —NrY. Tribune. ■ ‘ 1 j ' Tgf- ; sguA; tavern keeper in England who was talking boastihgly *bout bis; caatomdrsi said of one of them:; "He is fb.earnest regular man ;in Warwick* homines hero and'gets Saturday, and Mias done.j thelsSme' for ten yebrs, oxcejpt whonbis mother died, and that t(me ho ' eairte onuSnri* day. Mlt is a grand thin g to.be pniadr t nal.”. f (■ ■■ Vl' ■' . ■ \ ■ • ‘ i • • ? - - * l t - ,W \t 1 Si ’ v 'K« : 1 Cl V MIN «%. "• i, I E B®.A marriage ceremony i tern recol .iMigbiafly that tli baa promised lo njarry him tl daj\ Before, and' th tt he - wan minuter tp;‘hold ;he£sd her. wo objection wag nolpbto4sderod jo after li^^^pjnf^aipr^-tfa'e Goloby • discardec ln is girl . for bre; promise,- bat: subsequently promised the matter on her. a ] to do his washing for one " .'•/ .. -_.f tgt.'A person enquired at Pm | of the' ■rnijrbadrotations, I ;what time the’ 7.45 train would start,’ and was v ioid “at a quarter to eight."; “Bless me,’’he ex .clamed “you 7 are always, changing the .tirr|e'on,thia lind.’ - J 1 / V '1 ‘6-’- — ' % i j-xi- 2'tl7.u V*"' II Nasbyl£ Fifing 'i Cam uvth*77Bth Ohio Kxmattl tjmiar, V ,-K r i •; ; Tomido > OcrTrarf?, f ' Xamhere, -clad ip the garni"liv sla* very!' Nasby, clothed Idal/bobtail ed bloo.coatj- awopUn shin and blob. Eabte, with a Oyßteranjnuskitin hie adds, a goin thfo the exerciser Good hayings! wat a spectacle ! f- 2, . The draft was .over, «ndt]thbt that wunst more I'd visit-toy 2 native lanfl. Gaily. Istept aboard the bote that was to carry me.from British shores 1 —gaily lisay, for my money] had giv en : qut some weeks, aforo, and Lb ad earned a precarious subsistence asaw in wood, in pai^oorsbi^wfthJa |diagast4 .in mulatto, and I looked forward with goyfnl antisopashons to the time whenjj 1 shoodagon embrace Lopiker Janb/j (the pardnot uv my bazzbtk,) arid!; keen my skitf perpetually Ml uv tbq elicksor or life, out uv bSr Washirt money. (Joyfully 1 spiarig | off th« bote bnto the wharf at Toledo,-when a lievy band .was laid ontoniyqhoaU| deb. Twasa.eoljei! Tho fbl lorin con versashen ensood: : “Wat' Wan test tbow, n.y iontlb frend ?” > ■ J ’ I •*! \Rpptyoo, my gay Kanajpnif'. ‘ ; ‘‘On watgrounds?” retortid I i | “On .the’'ground- uv eloodcn uv the draft;” sez he, L.. ■ 1 ’jj “Your mistaken,”'sez I,lm % ab-ji emmissary. I hev bin a. apredin .the bred uv life among thp poor kulerd brotfarin in Kanady-, and amjcstrolurnin to run thro another lot. Let me pass I entroattheo,” nor stay me in my good work" (This was strategy.}’ i.,; | “Not ’much,” sez ho,- “IknoW b'dt tei. Ypur a butternut.” Yf : | ! 1 “How knowst thou?”'sez I. : i “Your nose” eoz hoiTba . buchucs bcekuh like,, was* payee got out uv spring water.’-«c,' '* j *’■"■■■ J'jl '' j i, ‘' Y o ork no wlo d g e u jr; menac'd things is’ too much for, mo. jl confess apd Surrender as. disCreshuh'i—do With irid ez thou wilt v r -,.. 1 And he did.*,; -1 was and wuz allowed to rHuntedr. to'figift against my-ConvichsfiSns—againSt«hy bretiiren. who hev taken, up aAns ip a rightousWioz. So bo it. Ilentzlih the naim uv Nasby will-shine id the list uv matters. ! ~.jV . Amid tho dark, deep gloori that cnE- Wellnpo-.mojswun ray.uv light strikes rne. I hoyyseoiS/ ,rd turns, ap|> w*ep,/I seed' cm 1 yelled Hallelogy! Me apd another victim uv Linkiu’s tyranny,who is 5 Dimekrat, 1 (ho wp« i» ijpoalpauntmr Hiint nu non, and-when remOved oy Llnkid did ept give up the balance uv nioonoy ho badrph hand, fearing twood be uaed to subvert our a jd bilcc, ' Wejsmuggled a bottle hv,con» denst okstasy, ana oelcbatoa macblv. “Tho Norths; redeemed!" showiid I. “Lets the Eagle scream!” yelled ho.— “The Quakers hev votid I ahowtid I. “Ablishniani dead !” sorea mod lie.— “Dimocrisy’k triumphed 1” jkft 1, and so on, until jafterj midnite, when, icoml. pletoly cggsaustid, wo sank i ito slpim her, with a empty boUloaTwoem ns. j. ' V. Nxsby. P- S—Toll LOoizor Jane tl at I fnay never sec her again—that shied it be my fate 2 perish in tho bat .10-feeld, amid the tore fiv battle and the hor rors nvmjacollanoonacarnage , my last th ol ,ez.life ebbs , shel be uv hot, and ask her ef she ckn’t send me half prthroe-quarters uv tho mou sy shVgits foi washinpz whisky costs fritefully hero. - nP. V. N. Beautiful Answers.—A Abbo Sicord gave the follqwi ordinary answers:’ ‘‘What ■ , “Gratitude is the memory heart.” i “Whaitis hope?” I “Hope is the Blossom of hai • “What |s the difference, hope and desire?” ; . jf'Dosiro isVa tree in leaf, -1 three in flower,; and ohjoyra tree in fruit.” ■ - ' * "What is eternity?” “A day without yostorda; morrow—ajino that has ho.di “Wbatiß^time?” 1 ji'l “A line that has tvroiends—a pain; which begijßß at the cradle and ends in the ' - v ; “What is God?" “The necesary being, .the eternity, the merchant of nat] of justice, the watcbmake universe, the .soul oftho wbrlc “Doe* Godreason?” “Han reason s,,'becaus3 h< he deliberates—-he idecides., omniscient, "He “never dou neyer rbasons.” ir i'll 1111 ■AI 111 ;i , !■ / u .» • y. •> a- ■ • j . —ltjs asserted that His.flbljpieija, thb'P9po,wdlßendtßeLat aadsword. v/hi ch'’ received his'benediclibn'proyi-' : ous ..to the. Christmas ceremonies,* lb , the- Emperor ; Maximilliff Thbhat ; is bt crimson velvet lined pr mine, trimmed, with * a goldenj/eolrd, having -ji*. dOVc—the symbol' bf the ' the - mibdlb 'wh tbifc crown. rTHogiltiabbabe' tbikentinoo.. dr polcbtato whose ■. conduct -during thopast ycsiK’bas demOTsftatod didst obedience to, and. beat In thapausojor Holy Mother Church. ? i*;/ ‘ ~We understand, ■ says; the Heeds Mercury, that jr “Brotherhood” H iro picesofthOclergyiorfrtheparishfChujcch to bo called “Tho Brotherhood pf ; the Holy Redeemer;”/ IThe brethren.,wo ■ •io be 'subject "to'strict ■rales,' “hr.d J will bb expected to bttbbd prayei J s; etb.yat similar hours to those whicHarcbp pointed in.tbo liomisbChurch. * ; 1 ;—Thp following obituary'notice 01 tho death of a Cnristlan wbO had 4y misfortuuo and sickness .lost .all,yet maintained a cheerful spirit contaipa a profitable lesson: “Exchanged bis poverty. Ipr eternal riches,*, anq big rage.for a crown Which fadcth not the Winchester PporHonSe, (Cl.) November stb, 1864] iJamc&C. Smith, pgediTsisty-,seven.; ' The ppll bearers were few on this many perhaps as they that waited on the 'shining shore,’ and wont up yyith the old man toihis Father’s house. —The Psalmody question is attract ipg a | good deal of attention 'across >the water, as well as in this country. |The discussion is very spirited, and we look for good.rcsulla froni tho ven tilation Of The Presbyte rian^Ways the English Presbyterians Pro earnestly' dißcussing the subjecl’of “Praise.'’ The articles in Peter Baino’s Tl’ee/%, Review, of a Jate date, are writtch; :!wilh ranch iutoll,igcp.ce, and warpath | of' feeling. r “—r- ' ) ; 1- —The ! Advocate and Jouriial has an article on “Cbureh Eocons truction- in Rebeldpm,” in which it is assumed ’ that the M. E. Church' owes it to‘her self apd; to the people of thmSoutb to enter into and occupy all that-pohn try, anil that, tad,- entirelyindopopd-. eiitlv of the pretensions';of the local Methodism, which has become dope ! ' ! ; ■ i. jT V • . • i -T.The laymen oftth'e Baptist church es ip Boston and vicinity.havo formed a “Social Union.’’ for: the promotion of friendly in.tei.oourßo.among the pas tors and churches of (hat vicinity. ,"■! iCorti Sugar- The Buffalo ; C6mn\efcial stales, that .the'parties interested in the recent " discovery of sugar to be manufactur-l| ed Irora corn arc actively engaged.in j making piopaiatidns for theefitonsivo manufacture, iif- sugar- By tbo _/now '* methodiand that they will ed prepar ed to put the cow staple upon the mar ket in a few days. ’The Commercial adds: r'JD.cvolopmbnts which bave i: been made since the matter was first annou need by ns[ than con» firmed the statements made at' that time, and; more tliah Justify, the antic. - 1 ipations jwe the com" | plotd success of the enterprise.’’ • - i Every sugar consumer \ylll bo glad 1 to* hear this, and wilt! 4 hopefully await | the ad vent of tho “new staplo” in jargo j quantities at eheap ratos 1! iT pupil of ng extra- of the j Otateltan. - V- J, Messrs. Crby & Sons, write us as .follows eoncerniug ililolr ■ expor fence with this, variety of cgno: *‘Qur success jih making sugar frQni.tbo , .Otaheitan canoiltlie past. 1 three .past •!• years is all that! we could reasonably Of our last year’s crop 61 iyr ; 0 up mora thau tbreo-fburths ol it is al ready a 1 beautiful sugar 'sediment of well crystals, and- no' less . pure and sweet: than that fottnd in the bottom of molasses'' casks of tho -Farmer. ,:!■ ,■ , . .-J'- "• • , ipineas.” between lope Es,g, Lent, is a I 1! ✓ t or to* id.” sum of ire,, the r of the Pruning Trees. : . ■■At r the lastmeetingof the Farmers* Clu.b r there wasia longJdis’oufldbn'ron pruning trees, by Dr. Ward, and Messrs. Ely, ijDarpohJer,' and. Smith,, sand thoyagroedln dpxnioc. ao the l-e- ,; salt of their ; experience, thdt* the-Best time for pruning is wbeh the trees «iro at that time heal more readilyv and are loss likely l%be attacked By bliiok blast, or'othijrwiso injured,than if pruned, in,tho winter: .: doubts; God {is )ta-*-He ||a Vf6s ntly by on, who 10 lady is very ied the •d.” The Ohi ftidj 'WUhoatgj if it has p; each vatic ail'd label il a-flhed,;wl moist; or < at the fijjt will not effV i: No m m can show i fruit wb ich tdn years tied bey im to bohealt cnltivattjd jal.and Service niEreht i lover ,ch';. of ■comii rccing irtwo- R^Hgipus. Agricultural. ri