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BRILLIANT PROSPECTUS ! FOURTH TEAR OP THE COSMOPOLITAN ART ASSOCIATION. The famous Dusseldorf Gallery of Paintings! Purchased at a cost of $180,000! And Powers' world-renowned statue of the GREEK SLAVE! Re-purchased for six thousand -dollars, with several hundred other works of Art, in Paint ings, Sculpture and Bronzes, comprise the Premiums to be awarded to the subscribers of the COSMOPOLITAN ART ASSOCIATION, trho subscribe before the 28th of January, 1888, at which time the awards will take place. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Every subscriber of three dollars and 3G cents is entitled to a copy of the large and splendid Steel Engraving, enti tled " batuFcsr DESTINY," also to A copy of the CosmormarAN ART JOURNAL one year, also to A Certificate in the Award of Premiums, also A free admission to the Dusseldorf and Cosmopolitan Galleries. Thus it Is seen that for every three dollars paid, the sub scriber not only receives a SPLENDID THREE DOLLAR ENGRAVLNO but, also, the beautifully illustrated TWO DOLLAR ART JOURNAL, ONE YEAR Each subscriber is also presented with a Certificate in the Awards of Premiums, by which a valuable work of Art, in Painting or Sculpture, may he received in addition, thus giving to every subscriber an equiv:dent to the value of five dollars, and a Certificate gratis. Any one of the leading $3 Manazincs is furnished, in stead of the Engraving and Art Aurnal, if desired. No person is restricted to a single share. Those taking five memberships, remitting $l5, arc entitled to an extra Engraving, and six tickets. Full particulars of the Association are given in the Art Journal, which contains over sixty splendid Engravings, price fifty cents per number. Specimen copies will be sent to all persons who desire to subsfribe, on receipt of five postage stamps, (15 cents.) Address, DUNBAR BROWNE, Advocate, HONORARY SECRETARY C. A. A., 132 Craig-Street, .Montreal. NEW GOODS! NEW GOODS! LF: - ) AT D. P. GW[N'S CHEAP STORE! .4? 2:k r -.- DAVID P. GIVI.N has ju.st returned from Philndelpida, with the largest and most beautiful a›sortment of FALL AND WINTER GOODS ever brought to Ituutiugdon, consisting of the most f3sh tenable DIT.Sd Goods fur Ladies and ticialomen, such as Black and Fancy Silks, All-Wool Delaines, different colors; Printed and Plain French Merino, Onthre striped Delaines, Barred and /alloy Dal:Linos, Levella Cloth, Coburg Cloth, Mohair Dehnize, ,Shepliord6 Linse3 s .and Prints of every description. . . Also,—a large lot of Dress Trimmings, Fringes, More Antique, Arcl vets, Buttons. Caws, Braids, &c. Bonnet Silks, Crapes, Ribbons, Cloves, Ali lls, Vei/8, Laces. Belts, Belting Ribbon, NI - flak:bone, Reed a all Brass Skirt Hoops, Hosiery, Silk and. Linen Handkerchiefs, Silk Neck Ties, Zephyr, French Wet king Cot ten. C,,t ton and Linen Floss, Tidy Yarn, Woolen Yarns, Wool Coal. and Hoods, Comforts and Scat fs. Also—Collars and Undersleeves, the best assortment in town. Jaconets, barred and plain; Mull and Swiss Mitslins, Moreen Quid hoop Skirts, Irish Linen, Linen Breasts, Shirts and Drawers, Linen Table Cloths, Napkins, Towels, &c. Also—Bay State, Waterloo, Wool Shawls, Single and Double BroClut Shawls, Cloths, Cassimercs, Cas sinetts, Tweeds, Kentucky Jeans, Yestin, bleached and unbleached Mullins, sheeting and pillow-case iluyli is, Nankeen, Tickett, Checks, Table Diaper, Crash, Flannels, Sack Flannels, Canton Flannels, Blankets, &c. Also, a Large lot of silk and colored straw Bonnets of the latest styles, which will be sold cheaper than can be bad in Hun tingdon. • Hats & Caps. Boots & Shoes, Gum Shoes. Hardware. queensware, Buckets, Tubs, Bit-lccts, Churns, Butter Bowls, Brooms, Brushes, Carpels, Oil Cloths. • llNsh Sc Salt, Sugar, Coffee, Tea, Molasses, and all goods Usually kept in a country store. lify old customers, and as many new ones as can crowd in, are respectfully requested to call and examine my stock. All kind 3 of Cduntry Produce taken in exchange for goods at the Highest .Markot prices, 'Huntingdon, October 7, 1857 jHE CAMPAIGN OPENED !- FIRST ARRIVAL OF FALL AND WINTER GOODS FISHER Mc.IIURTRIE Would respectfully announce to their numerous friends, and public, that they have just received from the East a most beautiful assortment of FALL and WINTER Goods; embracing every variety of new styles, such as Valencia Plaids, Plaid Ducats, Oriental Lustres, Gala Plaids, Tit 111011) Cloth, Poplins striped, and plaid, timbre striped DeLaines, French Merino, Printed DeLai nes, llayadere Stripes, Argen tine, Coburg, Mohair and Madonna Cloths, Shepherd's Plaids, French Blanket, Bay State. Lone; and Square Broche Shawls, Gents' Travelling ditto, French Cloths, plain and fancy Cassimeres, &dinettes, Jeans, Tweeds, &c. Ribbons, Mitts, Gloves, Gauntlets, Tal Inas, Cloaks, Che nille Scarfs, Dress Trimmings, Ladies' Collars, 'Brilliants. plain and spriged Swiss, Victoria Lawn, Nainsooks, and every variety of white Goods. Hats, Caps, and Bonnets of every variety and style. We have a full stock of Hardware, Queensware, Boots & Shoes, Wood and Willow ware, which will be sold on such terms as will make it the interest of all to call aud exam ine. Groceries can be had lower than the high prices which have been maintained heretofore. _ . - . We also deal in Plaster, Fish, Salt and all kinds of Grain and possess facilities in this branch of trade unequaled by any. We deliver all packages or parcels of merchandise Free of Charge at the Depots of the Broad Top and Denn'a Rail Roads. Huntingdon, Sept. 00, 1857. rrHE CHILDREN'S FAVOR [TE- E THE TEACHER'S AID-THE PARENT'S FRIEND! PROSPECTUS OF VOLUME V. Tim STUDENT AND SCHOOLMATE ; A Monthly Reader for Schools. Edited by N. A. CALKINS Associate Editor—A. R. Pori, '" NO SCHOOL Olt FAMILY SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT." As a Monthly Reader for 'Schools, this work has been ex tensively introduced into Schools in nearly every State in the Union, and it comes to them with something new and interesting each month, to awaken fresh interest in the reading exercises. Thus it supplies wants long felt by teachers. Try it in your school. Besides popular articles in the Natural Sciences, History, Biography, Travels, Stories, Poetry, Discoveries, and. the Arts, it contains, for Heading Exercises, Declamation and School Exhibitions, Original Dialogues, and New Speeches, with marks for emphasis, tones, inflections, and gestures. The Teacher's Desk is devoted to suggestions and hints to Teachers, Parents, Pupils, and to important items of valu able intelligence. Our Museune is supplied with an interesting collection of the rare, curious and amusing in literature and art; to gether with puzzles, enigmas, charades, questions, anec dotes, &c. This Magazine intimately unites the lessons and exerci ses of the School with those of the Family, and thus be comes an invaluable aid to stimulate youth to self-improve ment. It is published monthly, containing 36 octavo pages in each number, amply illustrated, forming a large and valu able yearly volume of nearly 440 pages. TERMS.---$1 00 A YEAR, 1N ADVANCE. Five Copies, a year, $4 00 Eight Copies, a year, $G 00 Fifteen " " 10 00 Twenty-live " 16 00 The Postage 011 THE STUDENT AND SCHOOLMATE is only six ()eats a year, when paid in advance at the Post Office where the Subscriber receives it. Sample numbers sent gratis to persons desiring to sub scribe or form clubs. Now is the time to subscribe. All letters relating to "The Student and Schoolmate," should be addressed to CALKINS & STILES, Publishers, 348 Broadway, New York novlS. Agents wanted BOOTS & SHOES. A new stock re ceived I LEVI WESTBROOH. has Just open-FEg ed another new stock of BOOTS & SHOES, of the best and most fashionable kind to be had in the city. Ladies and Gentlemen, Misses and Boys can be suited by calling at my store. Thankful for past favors, I ask a continuance of the same, knowing that customers will be pleased with my Boots & Shoes and my prices. L. WESTRE.IOOK. Huntingdon, October 7, 1557. COUNTRY DEALERS can buy CLOTHING from mo in Huntingdon at WHOLESALE as cheap as they Can in the cities, as I have a wholesale store , in Philadelphia. Huntingdon, Oct. 14, 1857. H. ROMAN. BOOTS and SHOES, the largest and cheapest assortment in town, at CLOTHING!—A large stock on. hand, at the cheap store of ]3ENJ. JACOBS. Call and ex amine goods and prices. (oci2S. Nf OUR N — .l. N G COLLARS—handsome A_ Etylvs,jubt received by FISHER & McMURITUE $1 60 ,gr WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL. XIII LIFE, DEATH AND ETERNITY. A dark, inevitable night, A blank that will remain ; A waiting for the morning light, When waiting is in vain; A gulph where pathway never led To show the depth beneath ; A thing we know not, yet we dread,— That dreaded thing is Death. The vaulted void of purple sky That everywhere extends, That stretches from the dazzled eye, In space that never ends; A morning, whose uprisen sun No setting e'er shall see; A day that comes without a noon,— Such is Eternity. `A 'detesting Inisttlia. New and Effectual mode of Enforcing Temperance. [Cot respondence of the Press.] SMYRNA, Del., Dec. 29, 1857 We are Informed that a married lady of Dover met a gentleman from the same place, on the parch of a hotel in. lino ; rim, a short time since, and cowhided hint severely.— Our DO irtuant did not learn what the provocation was that induced her to chastise the gentleman." The paragraph with which I commence this letter having gone the rounds of the pa pers, and created not a little conversation, speculation, and excitement, I deem it proper to give you more particularly the circumstan ces which gave rise to especially as it is a good thing . and a matter out of which good will be lilcei y to come. At Dover there lives a gentleman of very considerable fortune, a man of unblemished integrity, a ripe scholar, and, barring his ec centricities, a very pleasant and useful citi zen. lie is blest with an excellent wife and several interesting children. Throughout this gentleman's life, it has been his misfor tune, greatly to the regret of his numerous friends, to get on what is called "a frolic," but -which, in his case, (as he never does any thing by halves,) may more properly, though perhaps less elegantly, be styled "a regular• Of late years'his delinquencies in this re spect have been less frequent, and his friends have had sanguine hopes that he had resolv ed to break the devil's head with a bottle, and never make use of one again. It seems, how ever, that a fiend in the cloak of a friend, persuaded him to do otherwise, and that on various occasions lately, the tempter succeed ed in introducing an enemy into the gentle man's head to steal away his brains. At length the gentleman's wife, mortified and distressed, called upon her husband's friend (p,) and as nearly as I have been able to obtain it, the following dialogue took place : Lady. I believe, sir, you profess to be a friend of my husband, myself, and my child ren ? D. P. GISTN Friend. I have that honor, madam Lady. Ilow then, sir, does it happen that you take pains to ruin him, mortify me, dis grace my children, and make us all very un happy ? Fiend. My good madam, can you for a moment suppose that I could be guilty of such an enormity ? Lady. I suppose nothing. I know, sir, that you are guilty as I charge you. Under your influence, persuasion, and example, you have of late frequently decoyed my husband from his home, and in your company be has frequently become drunk, and in that condi tion, regardless of what he owes to God, the community, and his family, has done many things deeply painful to his friends, and a source of humiliation to him when sober. Friend. Really ma'am you magnify trifles; a harmless frolic now and then scarcely de serves such severe reproof. Lady. Sir, you may consider drunkenness and its attendant depravities as trifles. I think very differently—an evil which changes a gentleman of refinement and education into a besotted, senseless, irresponsible being, is not a trifle. My husband, outside of your in fluence and association, is true to himself and the community, admired for his learning, honored for-his integrity, and beloved by nu merous friends for the kind and generous manner in which he dispenses the pleasant amenities of social life. -I tell you, sir, your conduct has seriously impaired the happiness of myself and children. The object of this visit is to request you to refrain from further intercourse with Mr. ; you can do him no good; on the contrary, you do us all a great deal of harm. Friend. I regret, madam, that you have so poor an opinion of me. I doubt very much the propriety of even a lady making such a request as you make. Lady. On that question, sir, I have no doubts. My mind is made up ; to me the path of duty is perfectly plain, and I intend to pursue it. I called upon you with the hope that I might find in your nature some re deeming trait, and that, through its influence, i you would be induced to aid n saving my ex cellent husband from the ill-effects of .his only weakness. I perceive my error, and discover you to be even worse than I had anticipated. I now inform you, sir, that if, hereafter, I find you in my husband's company, inducing him to drink, I will take the matter in my own hands, and remedy the evil. Friend. What would you do, madam ? Lady. Publicly horsewhip you, sir. Friend, (forcing a, very queer kind of laugh.) You would scarcely so far forget what is due to the dignity and delicacy of your sex. In addition to which, public opinion— Lady. Public opinion 1 I respect public opinion, sir, only so far as it acts correctly.— My first duty is to my husband—te protect his health and vindicate his honor. If, in D. P. ()WIN'S 'tittt Vottrg. A shadow moving by one's side, That would a substance seem,— That is, yet is not—though described— Like skies beneath the stream ; A tree that's ever in the bloom, Whose fruit is never ripe; A wish for joys that never come— Such aro the hopes of Life. f 4 "; . .•;:',' • . - e . 7 .....:: ' i .Z *A . :1 ,....: t,,,.., 1 ,' , !:.". - • . ! A , . 4. ) .":: -, •' . :1 • !V. Z.:7i; t. f:•: ,. . ''••,.:;: . 4 . , .. r.:2 - - ! 2•:!.. ~,,,,••• doing this, it becomes necessary to publicly horsewhip a pretended friend, but a real en emy, I shall not stop to consult either the dignity or the delicacy of my sex. That por tion of the public whose opinion is worth having will judge the act by the motive. I have not the least objection that it shall be told to my children when I am in the grave, their father was saved by their mother pub licly horse-whipping a heartless associate Who would have led him to destruction. I repeat, sir, that if I find you in the situation I have described, I will chastise you. The friend smiled, and the lady took her leave. Time passed on, and the next scene in this domestic drama is that referred to in the paragraph at the head of this letter. To understand it right, you must place your men tal eye upon the very scene of the adventure. Fancy alarge,powerful, reasonably handsome, intellectual-looking woman, her eyes flashing with indignation, and every energy collected for an unusual achievement. Her carriage has just drawn up in front of a hotel, and in less time than it takes to tell it in she steps to the bar-room. There, seated glass in hand, was her husband, and alongside of him his " friend." Quick as lightning she springs forward, and before you could say Jack Rob inson, with the "friend" twisting and writh ing in her grasp, she is seen upon the hotel porch raining stripes as thick as hail upon the doomed delinquent. The thrashing was fierce in the extreme, and continued until the enraged woman cast her victim from her, ex claiming, "Now, sir, I've kept my word."— She then moved towards her husband, and in a firm but respectful manner offered her arm, which he took, and, getting into the carriage with her, accompanied her home. An affair so extraordinary, and happening among persons of high respectability, has naturally created a great deal of talk, and has called forth a variety of opinions—some of the sterner sex think it is really awful, and a few of the wishy-washy, sentimental Lydia Languishes of the neighborhood, simper out a severe condemnation of the lady; the bet ter and more wholesome opinion, however, appeared to be, that a few such wives would redeem many husbands, and save the tem- Derance societies a great deal of trouble and expense. If a jury were sommoned, the ver dict would he, " served him right." Yours, &c., SPECTATOR. There is much good sense . in the article quoted below which we find without credit in one of our exchanges. The conversations of adults in the presence of children has much influence upon the latter in school, sometimes exercisinc , t' a most baneful and destructive in fluence. We often hear adults boasting of certain smart mischievous acts of their school days, in the presence of children, who are apt to take it for granted that it is something worthy to be boasted of. For the most part these smart things are coined fabrications— not a word of truth in them—yet they may influence the child bearing them to a course of action which will do a life-lon g injury.— Such follies should be corrected, and every sensible person should rebuke them whenever opportunity offers. Bat read the following: "Parents generally are desirous of securing for their children what they call a good edu cation. This is a commendable manifesta tion of parental affection. It still would be more so, however, if the motives urging them to provide a good education for their children were somewhat more elevated than they usu ally are. A good education is too often sought, merely chiefly as a stepping-stone to wealth or rank, or respectability in the world. There are considerations rendering a good educa tion desirable, of a much higher and more commendable nature than this. Need we name them? For the present, we will leave them to be presented by the conscience and good sense of our readers, while we proceed to say that which we intend to say. It is this :—Parents, in desiring a good ed ucation for their children too commonly in dulge in a very narrow and inadequate con ception of what constitutes a really valuable or good education, and also of what influence a child must be brought under in order to se cure it. Do not too many regard a school, a teacher well versed in the usual branches and apt to teach, with approved text-books, about all that is necessary in order to secure the good education which they contemplate for their children ? Is it not too generally and too much forgotten, that every conversation which they hear from the lips of their'parcnts and every action of their lives, which mani fest either a low or lofty character, either worthy or unworthy principles, are a part of the education, good or bad, of their children? Is it not too generally forgotten that every word and every deed of the companions and. associates of your children has somethiny to do in making in their education, either good. or bad ? Is it not generally forgotten that the temper, the taste, the habits of their pa rents," and, indeed, of all with whom parents receive to their intimacy, livincr. for high, no ble, Heaven-approved ends and objects—such appearing plainly in all conversation and conduct as the ruling . purpose of life—and they will then be receiving what constitutes the most essential part of what may truly be called A GOOD EDUCATION." gtV".Lorenzo Dow, the celebrated itinerant preacher, once came across a man who was deeply lamenting that his axe had been sto len. Dow told the man if he would come to meeting with him he would find his axe.— At the meeting, Dow had on the pulpit, in plain sight, a big stone. Suddenly in the middle of the sermon, he stopped, took up the stone, and said : "An axe was stolen in this neighborhood last night, and if the man who took it don't dodge, I will hit him on the forehead with this stone !" at the same time making a violent effort to throw it.— A person present was seen to dodge his head, and proved to he the guilty party. WS—Guard well your flag! uphold it high ! Beneath its folds fight, conquer, die ! .Brave ,actions are the substance of life, and good saying, , ,. the ornament of it. HUNTING N, PA., JANUARY 20, 1858. A Good Education -PERSEVERE.- The Drunkard's Children BY . W. A. DEVON. Poor children, God help them; for they have none other to assist them. What! have they not a father and a mother to look after them? No, gentle reader, they have neither one nor the other. The one who ought to be a father is a confirmed drunkard, incapable of taking care of himself, far less the care of these poor children which he has been the means of bringing into a world of sin and sorrow. From the effect of his ill usage, their unfortunate mother died last winter, leaving her little ones to the mercy of a selfish world. Ah I what a sad hour was that for the poor mother. The snow was lying deep on the ground, and the bleak, frosty wind was rust ling among the naked branches as she lay shivering on a bed of straw in one corner of a dark dirty room, and with scarcely a rag to protect her wasted form from the bitter blast. The stove was cold and black ; for the drunk ard could not waste his means in buying wood and coal, as long as he could get rum and brandy so cheap. The poor, ragged, unwashed children were gathered round the bed of their dying mother. Poor things, they did not know what death was, but they were only too familiar with hunger; and now they were gathered round her who had been 'their only friend, from whom alone they had ever received a kind word or look, and asked for bread. There was none in the house, and she bad not tasted anything herself since the day before ; for the little which a kind neighbor had given her she had divided amongst the children. But oh, how it wrung her woman's heart at that sad hour to hear her children cry for bread and have none to give them. Death was fearful, but here was a pang more bitter still. 0 ! if the Father had but gathered them home before her, how gladly could she have gone to meet them. But no; "Father, thy will be done on earth as it is clone in heaven," she said, and kissed the drunkard's poor, despised children, who were dearer-than all the earth to her; and with a prayer that the Father of the fatherless might be their protector, her spirit passed away. The wind still sobbed and moaned without, rattling at the casements and shaking the doors ; but it had no power to awaken that dead mother, and as little to call home the drunken father. The children had cried themselves asleep by their dead mothes's side, but -they were aroused at midnight by the inhuman fiend, who came reeling into the room of death, yelling - drunken ditty, and, fell senseless on thefioor, quite unconscious of what had happened. When he awoke in the morning and beheld the wreck which he had made, deep, though momentary, was his remorse.— He cursed the fiend which had bound him in its spell, and made him the murderer (lawfully) of the best and gentlest of wives, and he swore he would never taste it more. But the fiend laughed at him, and bade him take a little to soothe his sorrow and ease his guilty mind, and now he is a greater slave than ever. His home and his children are deserted for the " rum hole ;" and they may be seen sitting on the stoop at all hours of the day and far into the dark and dismal night, clothed in rags and filth, - and with barely enough of food to keep body and soul together. - God help them, poor creatures, neglected by their father and despised by their neigh bors, their spirits are broken, and they look upon themselves as Ishmaelites, "every hand is against them, and theirs against every one." They are left to grow up rank and noxious weeds in the garden of life,- without education and religion. The consequence will be that they will go to swell the already too extensive number of criminals, while the guilty father goes unpunished. God help the poor children; and let every one who knows of such (and who does not) try and help them also, by word and deed.— Remember, "Charity covereth a multitude of sins ;" and what can be greater charity than to save the drunkard's child for time and eternity. Yes, you pass it along, whether you believe it or not. You don't believe the one-sided whisper against the character of another, but you will use yotir influence to bear up the false report and pass it on the current.-- Strange creatures are mankind. How many benevolent deeds have been chilled by the shrug of a shoulder. How many individuals have been shunned by a gentle, mysterious hint. How many chaste bosoms have been wrung with grief at a single nod. How many graves hate been dug by false report. Yet you will keep it above the water by a wag of your tongue, when you might sink it forever. Destroy the passion for talc-telling, we pray. Lisp not a word that may injure the character of another. Be determined to listen to no story that is repeated to the great injury of another, and, and as far as you are concerned, the slander will die. But tell it once, and it may go as on the wing of the wind, increasing with each breath, till it has circulated-through the State, and has brought to the grave one who might have been a bless ing to the world. Some time in 1838 or 1839 a gentle man in Tennessee became involved and want ed money; he bad property and owed debts. His property was not available just then,and off he posted to Boston, backed by Dames of several of the best men in Tennessee. Money was tight, and Boston bankers,looked at the names. "Very good," said they, • t, but—do you know General Jackson?" "Cer tainly." "Could you get his indorsement ?" "Yes, but ho is not worth one tenth as much as either of these men whose name I offer you." "so matter; General Jackson has al ways protected himself and his paper; and we'll let you have the money on the strength of his name." In a few days the papers with his signature arrived. The moment these Boston bankers saw the tall A. and long J of Andrew Jackson, our Tennesseean says he could have raised a hundred thousand dollars upon the signature without the slightest diffi culty. So much for an c~tablishcd character for honesty. Slander. 14; 41:4 : - Beautiful Tribute to a Wife Sir James Mackintosh, the historian, was married in early life, before be attained for tune or fame, to Miss Catharine Stuart, a young Scotch lady, distinguished more for the excellence of her character than her charms. After eight years of a happy wed ded life, during which she became the moth er of three children, she died. A few days after her death, the bereaved husband wrote to a friend, depicting the character of his wife in the following terms : "I was guided (he observes) in my choice only by the blind affection of my youth. I found an intelligent companion and a tender friend, a prudent monitress, the most faith ful of wives, and a mother as tender as chil dren ever had the misfortune to lose. I met a woman, who by the tender management of my weaknesses, gradually corrected. the most pernicious of them. She became pru dent from affection ; and though of the most generous nature, she was taught frugality and. economy by her love for me. "During the most critical period of my life, she preserved order in my affairs, from the care of which she relieved me. She gen tly reclaimed me from dissipation; she prop ped my weak and irresolute nature ; she urged my indolence to all the exertions that have been useful and creditable to me, and she was perpetually at hand to admonish my heedlessness or improvidence. To her I owe whatever I a,m ; to her whatever I shall be. In her solicitude for my interest' she never for a moment forgot my feelings or my char acter. Even in her occasional resentment for which I but too often gave her cause, (would to God I could. recall those moments!) she had no sulleness nor acrimony. Her feelings were warm and impetuous ; but she was placable, tender and constant. Such was she whom I have lost when her excel lent natural sense was rapidly improving, after eight years struggle and distress had bound us fast together, and moulded our tempers to each other ; when a knowledge of her worth had refined my youthful love into friendship, and before age had deprived it of much of its original ardor. I lost her, alas! the choice of my South, the partner of my misfortunes, at a moment when I had the prospect of her sharing my better days." OLD.—Gold—bright, beautiful gold 1— What an interesting subject to man, because it fills his heart in the market place—because it causes him to ponder, with brow on hand, at- the fire-side, w4en ho should hush the whisperings of his . Wnting-room's presiding god, by paying better heed to the sweet voices of his household deities. Gold! gold! how many hearts pine for it as bringing honor—how many hands close over it with a more earnest pressure than that which answers the greeting of a friend —how many eyes glisten over it that never glistened over tales of woe? How powerful it is I It brings the gracious nod from lead ers of fashion and rank to the owner of bonds and mortgages, be he ever so poor in soul, and makes dull the vision of such, when spiritual wealth goes by in a brother's form, 'whose material pockets, alas I know only a shilling. It gives some carriages, and leaves rough traveling-boots for labor-plod ding feet. It graciously puts out its jeweled hand to help the millionaire up the rounds of social fame, while the poor shilling one lifts up his tattered foot with bitter disap pointment for a similar ascent. It takes the life of rarest fish and fowl to gratify the pampered tastes of fastidious favorites, and makes dear Mother Earth find roots and such cheap things for her pauper sons. Man will not realize the virtue that lies buried in glittering stones ; he will not see the balm for stricken hearts which is hid therein, and so revels in selfish luxury -and unblessed ease. He , makes of it a bed of thorns, when it might give sweet rest to the weary-hearted, and be to himself a pillow of down when night and memory come. He chooses the bed that rises to the wine cup's brim, rather than the grateful tear' which overflows the eye of blessing poverty. He uses it to lead the young and thoughtless through the path which has a pleasant guide post, but at the end a, graVe with no light around it, when he might lead them, by its well-used power, to a final resting-place, the way to which would shine with deeds whose brightness would go before them to God's throne. Why do People eat Fruit ? Is it becatse it pleases the palate, or do they look a step further, and take it because they are convinced, from long observation, that it has a most beneficial effect upon the constitution? It would seem most likely, from a want of any • apparent system in its daily use, that the former rather than the lat ter is far more the incentive to its use. Were our citizens as fully convinced as the people of France that perfectly ripe -fruits, and the grape in an especial manner, when used large. ly, dilute the blood,' made too viscid by the free use of animal food, increase the circula tion of the skin, give color to the pallid check, assist to overcome obstructions of the liver, lungs and other vital organs, aiding digestion, and by its diuretic quality renioving gravel and dislodging calculi from the kidneys. They not only secure these advantages but they also give great tone and vigor to the sys tem, and elevate hi the scale of health and strength the feeble, the delicate and the con sumptive to a degree unattainable in so short a time from the use of any other diet. We should appreciate this excellent fruit still higher than we now do. They will tell you —and they are excellent judges in these cases —that the grape confers not only all these advantages so much more important than the mere gratification of the palate, (though this is not denied us,' as the fruit must be per fectly ripe and sweet to possess these virtues, ) that they exert curative and recuperative in fluences on the system that no other article of fruit can confer It is an error to think that a logg face is essential to god moralF, ur that laughing is all 111111,11CIOnadb1c : rime Editor and Proprietor. NO. 31. The Uses of Rome Where lie the clearest proofs of a heavenly watchfulness over, our 'heads, ,if not in the shelters where we lay those heads at night ? Consider what securities home affections bind about tempted virtue; how the man of busi ness carries a zone. of Moral purity woven about him by the caresses of children, from his house to the market-place ; how the false and fraudulent pUrpose, half conceived in the countin . g-room, is rebuked and put to shame by the innocence that gazes into his eyes and clings about his neck when he goes home and shuts the door on the world at night. Con sider what a hindrance household love inter poses to stay the erring feet of dissipation— what triple shield it holds up against the sins of prodigality, indulgence, or dishonor ! Con sider that, with most of us, whatever inip&- ses of generosity visit the soul, whatever prayers we breathe, whatever holy vows of religious consecration we pledge, whatever aspiring resolves we form, are apt to spring up within the' sacred enclosures of thehousc! Consider how the mere memory of that spot, with all its precious endearments goes forth with the traveler, sails with the sailor, keeps vigils over the exposed heart ameng the per ils of the foreign city, sweetens the feverish dreams and softens the pain of the sickly climate, and, by calling his love homeward, calls his faith - to heaven Consider that the discipline of disease, the purification of be reavement, the tears of mourners, are all el ements in the sanctity of home ; that closets of devotion are parts of the architecture of the house ; that Bibles are opened on its ta bles ; that the eyes of new-born children open, and their first breaths are drawn in its cham ber; and that the dead body is borne out of its doors; how fast do the gathering proofs accumulate, that the human dwelling is a sanctuary of the Most High l—firitiztiion. A BEAUTIFUL INSCRIPTION.---In Trinity church-yard there is an inscription on a tomb so singularly and affectingly beautiful, that we cannot forbear to record it, and the emotions it awakened in the bosom of a stranger. It is en oblong pile of masonry, surmounted by a slab-stone, on which are deeply cut the following words : " MY MOTIIER I The trumpet shall sound and the dead shall There are no other letters or characters on the slab or pile. If there is one inscription in the thousand languages, that are or have been of earth, fitted to retain its sublime meaning through every period of time up to the resurrection morning it is this. The wri ter seemed aware that names would be for gotten, and titles fade from the memory of the world. He, therefore, engraved the name by which he first knew her who gave him' birth, on the stone—and the dearest of all names, that of 3.IOTEIER, shall sound a thrill through the heart of every one who may ever lean over this monumental pile. If any shall wish to know further of her who hada child to engrave her most endearing name upon a rock, he is sublimely referred to the sonuding of the 'trumpet and the rising of the dead, when he may know all. PLAIN TRUTH.—Some one who seems to understand the subject describes the educa tion of "young gentlemen and ladies," of the would-be-fashionable sort, which tends only to mental weakness and fashionable 'decay, as follows : A young gentleman—a smooth-faced strip ling—with little breeding and less sense, ri pens first, and believes himself a nice young man. He chews and smokes tobacco, swears genteely, coaxes embryo imperials with bear's grease, twirls a rattan, spends his father's money, rides . fast horses—on horseback and . ' in sulk.eys—donble and single—drinks Ca tawba, curses the Main law and flirts with young 'ladies,' hundreds of which are just like himself, though of a different gender ; and this is the fashionable education of our day. The fathers and mothers of these fools were once poor. Good fortune has given them abundance.' Their Children go• through with an iri,sxlianstible fortune, and into the poor-house. Parents you are responsible for this folly. Set your sons and daughters to work and let them know that only in useful ness there is honor and prosperity,' TUE POOR Bor.—Don't be ashamed, my goad lad, if you hate a patch on your elbow. It is no mark of disgrace. It speaks well for your indmitrous mother. For our part, would rather see a dozen patches on your jacket than hear one profane or vulgar word escape from your lips, - or smell the fumes of tobacco on your breath. No good boy will shun you because you cannot dress as your compan ions; and if a bOyl l, nglis at your appear ance, say nothing, my go, d lad,. but walk on. We know many a rich and good man who was once as poor as you. Fear God, my boy, and if you are poor, but honest, you will be respected a great deal more than if you were the son of a rich man, and addicted' to bad habits. LIMIT Surm.—One of the great secrets of health is a light supper, and it's a great self denial when one is tired and hungry at the close of the day, to eat little or nothing. Let such one take leisurely a single cup of tea and a piece of bread and butter; and ho will leave the -table as fully pleased With himself and all the world, as if ho had eaten a heavy meal, and be tenfold better. for, it the next morning. Take away two men un der similar circumstances;Strong.; hard-work ing men, of twenty-five years; let one take his bread and butter and a cup of tea," and the other a hearty meal of meat, bread, pota toes and ordinary et eeteras, as the last meal of the day, and I will venture to say that the tea-drinker will outlive the other by thirty years. TELE O(; TER AND TUE INNER WORLD.—There are some who seemi to live entirely in the outer world; while others find their true posi tion in the inner—a few live in each alter nately. The first are such as seize the pleasures of the present, with no thought of the future, and find matter for enjoyment and mirth in almost any Class of externals into which they may be thrown. The second aro contempla tive, sensitive and poetic; their thoughts are with the glories of the past, the idealities of the present, the. bright hopes of the future. They merely liVe in the outer world; their pleasures are all drawn from the inner. The few, of the third class, combine a hapy ad mixture of reality and ideality. To-day they live in, the outer world, to-morrow in the in ner. They laugh with the cheerful, and dance with the gay, yet deep within their souls is a contemplative, sensitive, poetic gem, which, ever and anon, shines forth amid the grosser glare of outward formalities. • It is said that the kind ruothers,of the East have got so good, that they give their children chloroform previous to : , ' whipping them. /-• rTell ma with whom thou i goet and will toll thee what thou &est.' rise." El