TERNS OF THE GLOBE. Per annum in advance 'Six months Threo mouths A failure to notify a discontinuance at the oxpiriation of the term subscribed fur will be considered a new-engage men t. TERMS OF ADVERTISING. 1 insertion. 2 do. 3 do. Four lines or less, $25 $ 3734 $5O One square, (12 lines,) ...... .... 50 75 100 Two squares, 1 00 1 50 2 00 Three squares, 1 50 2 25 3 00 Over three week and less than three months, 25 cents per square for each insertion. 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. Six lines or less, $1 50 $3 00 $5 00 One square, 3 00 5 00 7 00 Two squares, 5 00 8 00 .10 00 Three squares, 7 00 10 00.....- ..... 15 00 Four squares, 9 00 13 00 9 0 00 'Half a column, 12 00 16 00 . ' 7 4 00 Ono column, 20 00 30 00.— . ..... 50 00 Professional and Business Cards net exceeding four lines, one year, $3 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, $1 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. c idett Vottrtr. THE DYING WIPE. Lay the gem upon my bosom, Let me feel her sweet, warm breath, For a strange chill o'er me passes, And I know that it is death. I :could gaze upon the treasure— Scarcely given ere I go, Feel her rosy, dimpled fingers Wander o'er my cheek of snow. I am passing through the waters, But a blessed shore appears, Kneel beside me, husband, dearest! Let me kiss away thy tears; -Wrestle with thy grief, my husband, Strive from midnight until day, It may have an angel's blessing, When it vanishes away. Lay the gem upon my bosom, 'Tis not long she can be there ; Seel how to my heart she nestles, 'Tis the pearl I love to wear. If, in after years, beside thee Sits another in my chair, Though her voice be sweeter music, And her face than mine more fair— If a cherub calls thee " father," Far more beautiful than this, Love thy first born ; 0, ray husband ! Turn not from the motherless. Tell her sometimes of her mother, You will call her by my name? Shield her from the winds of sorrow; If she err, oh ! gently blame. Lead her sometimes where I'm sleeping, I will answer if she calls, And my breath will stir her ringlets When my voice in blessing falls, And her soft black eyes will brighten With wonder whence it came; In my heart, when years pass o'er her, She will find her mother's name. It is said that every mortal Walks between two angels here; One records the ill, but blots it, If before the midnight drear Man repenteth ; if uneancelled, Then be seals it for the skies • And the right hand angel weepeth, Bending low with veiled eyes. 1 will be her right hand angel, sealing up the good fur Heaven. striving that the midnight watches Find no misdeeds unfurgiven. You will not forget me, husband, When I'm sleeping 'neath the sod! Oh, love the jewel given ne, As I love thee—next to tiod! tied torlr. V444l;ll(42.l;ll;4o:)elzilt;42{•i•lellfiv4t po A TALE OF THE OCEAN WILDERNESS BY HARRY HAZLETON. We were rolling home in the old Plymouth, of Boston. It was a fine, starlight night, and there was a glorious breeze blowing in just the right direction—upon our quarter. Seated with five of my messmates upon the windlass, our conversation naturally turned to home and its associations. It was a suita ble subject, for, as we glanced at the swell ing pyramids of canvass extending upward to the lofty trucks, we felt that these " white pinions" were shoving the old vessel along, each moment, nearer her destination. " Jack," said I, turning to one of my mess mates, a robust, young fellow of twenty, "how happens it that you have nothing to say upon this subject ? Have you no mother, sister, nor other friend to talk about ?" I uttered these words in a light, jesting tone, as my shipmate had remained silent during our con versation. A shadow fell upon his brow, and he seemed under the influence of some powerful emotion. "Tom," said he, in a mournful voice, "nev er mention the name 'of mother again ; it is a painful subject to me, and one upon which I never like to think. But I will tell you why. Many years ago—not such a great many, either—for it was only five—l lived with a kind, gentle widow woman, who was wont to take me by the hand and call me son.— That woman was my own mother. She would take all the pains in the world to make me comfortable and happy. I was then a lad of fifteen, and used to work very hard. My pay was not very good, but with that and the money which my mother earned by taking in sewing, we managed to live. I shan't try to describe any of the little acts of tenderness on her part toward me. You all know, boys, at least all of you who have been blessed with a mother long enough to appreciate her, how she would be likely to act toward an only son. Well, as I said, I used to work very hard—very bard from morn till night. Du ring the leisure, which was afforded me Sun days, I naturally felt the want of some amusement more excitable than that of the pleasures of home, and the society of my poor mother. Unluckily, therefore, I fell into the company of some dissipated young fellows, and resorted to the stimulus of strong drinks to afford the excitement which I craved. It is unnecessary to go into details. From that time my course was downward ; and all the persuasion of my mother to turn me from the fearful road I was pursuing, proved of no avail. At last by constant neglect of busi ness, I lost my situation altogether; and then, frantic with grief and despair, I fled from that roof which had sheltered me from infancy.— Having always had a strong inclination for the sea, I shipped on board a whaler as cabin boy. The vessel was gone about three years, at the end of which time I found myself once more in my native town. I sought the old cottage in which I had previously resided, hoping that my mother was still living there. But I found the place deserted, and on inqui ry from some of the neighbors, learned that my mother bad remained upwards of a year after my absence, in the old homestead, griev ing for my departure. She had found out from some of the ship owners in New Bed ford, that I had gone to sea, and waited a long time, hoping that I would write to her. But as a whole year went by without bring ing any news of me, she became almost fran tic with grief, and seemed to be gradually losing her reason. One day she loft the house with a bundle in her hand, and when the neighbors inquired concerning her intentions, she commenced to weep and wring her bands, saying that she was going to look for her long-lost son. They saw her take the road to New Bedford, and since that time she had ....$1 50 WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL. XIV. never be seen or heard of again, in the vil lage. " Such was the story they told me, and you can judge of the effect which it had upon my mind. I plunged into the most degraded society, and drank deeply of the wine-cup to drown sorrow ; so that in a few months all my hard earnings were spent, and I was forced to take to the sea again. It was then that I shipped in this vessel, the Plymouth, and came among you as mess-mate. I have now given up all hopes of ever again meeting with my mother, unless it be in the land of spirits, after my death." Jack drew a deep sigh, and again the shad ow fell upon his forehead. After a moment's silence, he added : " What makes me feel worse about the matter, is, because they told me in the vil lage, that they thought she was insane.— This may have got her into some difficulty." " Perhaps you wouldn't know her again, if you was to see her," said one of the men. "Oh! yes, I would," answered Jack ; "that is, if I could get a glimpse of her arm. But I think she'd have to be very much altered in the countenance for me not to know her if I saw her." "You was saying something about her arm," suggested one of the listeners. "Yes, I was going to say I would know her if I was to see her bare arm, but I don't like to tell why," answered Jack, moodily.— " Yes, I will though," he added, after a mo ment's silence. "In her right arm, just above the elbow, are the marks of my teeth I One night I staggered into the house, and, under the influence of liquor I had drank, reeled to the floor. My mother took hold of me, and gently raised me up ; and I—monster—brute that I was, fixed my teeth in her arm and bit her, while she was so doing. My teeth were very sharp, and they sunk deep in her flesh. It was some time after that, ere the wound healed ; and when it did, four blue marks—the impression of my teeth—were left upon the skin." Such was the story of Jack Ratlin ; and weeks after, when our vessel arrived at Bos ton, I had almost entirely forgotten it. , But certain incidents which I am now going to relate, recalled it again, and that very forci bly, to my recollection about eighteen months afterwards. After having left the Plymouth, I had shipped in a sperm whaler ; but not being satisfied With the usage I received on board, I took the liberty to desert her when she arrived at her first port, in Talcahuna, ten months afterwards. I remained here for nearly ten weeks, earning a few seals daily by serving in a Chilian schooner, plying up and down the coast. At the end of that time, as dr:re was no other chance, I shipped in another whaler, then lying in port. Scarcely had 1 leaped over the bulwarks on first com ing on board, than my eye lighted upon the well-knawn countenance of my former ship mate in the Plymouth, Jack Baffin. le was walking up and down the quarter-deck, issu ing, now and then, some orders, in a sharp tone, to the men forward, who were employed about the windlass. As soon as he saw me, he ran up, and des pite his dignity as second mate of the veessel, shook me cordially by the hand, and inquired after my health. He then informed me that shortly after leaving the Plymouth, ho suc ceeded, through the influence of one of the ship owners, in obtaining the birth of second mate on board the Rochester, which was the name of the vessel in which I now had ship ped as a foremast hand. "You'll find me a good officer, Tom," said he ; " although, perhaps, the men think I'm a little quick tempered." "No doubt of it Jack—no doubt of it," said I, as I bundled forward with my chest and valise. We had not been out from Talcahuano but a few weeks, when I was also inclined to think with the rest of my shipmates, that Jack Rat lin, although he had been quiet enough as a foremast hand, was quick tempered as second mate. He treated me well enough, but the greater portion of the men had cause to complain of his conduct towards them. There was one individual in particular among the crew whom he used like a dog. This personage was a pitiful looking specimen of humanity, about fifty years of age, called Brooks. His eyes were sunken, his cheek wasted and his brow wrinkled as with care. He always kept by himself and would never eat anything at meal times but a little hard bread and some water. He was evidently half an idiot, for he would sometimes walk about the decks, moaning and wringing his hands, while his eyes would have a strange vacant stare. He never seemed to take pride-like the rest of us in making himself look neat, although. he was far from being filthy. His garments were generally clean, but always ragged and nev er seemed to fit his attenuated figure. This poor fellow was the butt of the crew, and I pitied him from the bottom of my heart. Sometimes I would see him sitting all alone in some obscure part of the ship eating his solitary meal; while the tears were streaming down his hollow cheeks. Whenever the offi cers ordered him to do anything, instead of executing the command, he would stand and look about him wiih a bewildered stare. It was at such times that the wrath of Jack Rat lin would become aroused against the unfor tunate fellow, and he would deal him a blow or a kick. To this abuse, however, he would only 'respond by clasping his .hands together and uttering a strange, plaintive moan. One night, presuming upon our former .acquain tance, I took the liberty of remonstrating with Ratlin in regard to his behavior toward the poor wretch. " Torn," said he, "do you know what makes me so hard upon that fellow ? I will tell you. It is because there is a look about him which always makes me think of —" "Buzz ! bang ! crash Down keeled our ship on her beam ends, and away went the main-top-gallant-mast. We had been struck by one of those sudden squalls so common off the coast of Japan. " Clew up top-gallant-sails ! let go topsail halyards fore and aft !" yelled Rollin. The men flew to obey the order. " What in are you about? Go there .„.. . • and help the men clew up the top-gallant sails !" roared Jack to Brooks, who was stand ing close to him trembling froth head to foot. The man did not stir. Enraged at this, Jack caught up an iron• belaying pin and struck him on the head. Ile uttered a low moan and fell heavily on the deck. Jack now re pented of what he had done, and as the squall by this time had passed to leeward, he order ed some of the men to convey the body into the cabin. I was one of those who obliged the order, and helped to carry the body into the state room, and lay it out upon a sofa.— As the light fell upon his features it was to be seen that they were deadly pale, while a small stream of blood was trickling from a wound in the temple, which had been inflic by the belaying pin. The eyes fell upon us with a fixed look, which there was no mistaking—it was the icy stare of death. Good God !" groaned Jack, "he is dead ! Yet—oh, no no !it cannot be that I have re ally murdered him ! Perhaps he may recov er ; this heavy jacket alone is enough to stifle the man." While uttering these words, the second mate had been engaged in divesting Brooks of his jacket. He had already disengaged the sleave of the right arm, when something was heard to drop from one of the pockets to the floor. Jack picked it up, and on examina tion, discovered it to be a small locket con taining a likeness of himself. He instantly tore the shirt from the back of the corpse ; the supposed seamen was a woman. He lif ted the right arm, and looked at it closely.— Four blue marks the impression of teeth, were perceived just above the elbow. Ratlin ut tered a wild cry, and sank insensible on the deck. By these marks he had recognized the figure before him as the corpse of his own mother ! I shall now merely add that it was subse quently discovered, upon further investiga tion, that the mother of Jack Ratlin, having disguised herself in seaman's apparel, had shipped in four different vessels, (previous to entering the Rochester at Taleahuana,) for the purpose of bunting up her long-lost son. It is not very probable that she would have undertaken so wild a project had she not been affected with a slight derangement of her mental faculties, caused, no doubt, by the sudden disappearance of her son. The lapse of time had so changed the countenance and form of the latter since she last beheld him, (a mere boy of fifteen) as to prevent her from recognizing him in the person of the second mate of the Rochester. Her disguise, as well as the alterations which time and sorrow had wrought upon her countenance, likewise pre vented Jack Ratlin from indentifying his mother with the person of the haggard-look ing seaman. I shall conclude by adding that the matricide is now the inmate of a mad house. " Will you please learn me my verse, mam ma, and then kiss me, and bid me good night ?" said little Roger L—, as be opened the door and peeped cautiously into the cham ber of his sick mother. "I am very sleepy, but no one has heard me say my prayers." Mrs. L— was very ill; indeed, her at tendants believed her to be dying. She sat propped up with pillows, and struggling for breath—her lips were white—her eye was growing dull and glazed, and the purple blood was settling at the ends of her cold, at tenuated fingers. She was a widow, and lit tle Roger was her only darling child. Every night he had been in the habit of coming in to her room and sitting upon her lap, or kneel ing by her side, while she repeated to him passages from God's Holy Word, or related to him stories of the wise and good men spo ken of in its pages. She had been in a deli cate health for many years, but never too ill to learn little Roger his verse and hear his prayers. " Rush ! hush 1" said a lady, who was watching beside her couch; "your dear mam ma is too ill to hear you say your prayers to night. I will put you to bed," and as she came forward and laid her hand gently upon his arm, as though she would have led him from the room. Roger began to sob as if his little heart would break. " I cannot go to bed without saying my prayers—indeed, I cannot I" The ear of the dying mother caught the sound. Although she had been nearly in sensible to everything transpiring around her, the sound of her darling's sobs aroused her from her stupor, and turning to a friend, she desired her to bring him to her couch and lay him on her bosom. Her request was grant ed, and the child's rosy cheek and golden head. nestled beside the pale cold face of his dying mother. Alas, poor fellow ! how little did he realize then the irreparable loss which he was soon to sustain ! " Roger, my son, my darling child," said the dying mother, "repeat this verse after me, and never, never forget When my father and mother forsake me, the Lord will take me up.'" The child repeated it distinctly, and said his little prayer. He then kissed- the cold, almost rigid lips before him, and went quietly to his little couch: When he arose in the morning, ho sought, as usual, his mother's room, but he found her cold and still !—wrapped in her winding sheet! That was last her lesson I He hasnever forgotten it !—he probably never will ! He has grown up to be a man—a good man— and now occupies a post of much honor and. distinction in Massachusetts. I never could look upon him without seeing the faith so beautifully exhibited by his dying mother.— It was not misplaced. The Lord has taken her darling up. My little reader, if you have God for your friend, you need never fear; father and moth er may forsake you—the world may seem to you like a dreary waste, fulls and thorns— but Ile can bring you safely through trials, and give you at least a golden harp and snowy robe, like those the purified wear in heaven. Ile can even surround your death bed by an gel visitants. He is all-powerful----an ever present help in time of trouble. Will you not, then seek His friendship and keep His commandments ? HUNTINGDON, PA., JUNE 1, 1859. The Mother's Last Lesson. -PERSEVERE. There is a kind of pathos and touching tenderness of expression in these sweet and fragrant emblems of affection, which lan guage cannot reach, and which is calculated to perpetuate a kind of soothing sympathy between the living and the dead. They speak of cords of life too strong for even the grave to break asunder. This practice, no doubt, gave rise to the ancient custom which pre vailed in the east, of burying in gardens, and is one which conduces to the gratification of the best feelings of our nature. It prevailed in and about the Holy City, and among the Medes, Persians, Grecians and Romans.— The Persians adopted it from the Medes, the Grecians from the Persians. In Rome, per sons of distinction were buried in gardens or fields near the public roads. Their monu ments were decorated will balsams, and gar lands of flowers. The tomb of Achilles was decorated with amarath ; the urn of Philo pemoen was covered with chaplets; the grave orSophocles with roses and ivy ; Anacreon with ivy and flowers. Baskets of lilies, vio lets and roses, were placed in the grave of husbands and wives—white roses on unmar ried females. In Java, the inhabitants scat ter flowers over the dead bodies of their friends ; in China the custom of planting flowers on the graves of their friends is of very ancient date, and still prevails. In Tri poli the tombs are decorated with garlands of roses, of Arabia, jasmine, and orange and myrtle flower. In Schwytz, a village in Switzerland, there is a beautiful little church yard, in which almost every grave is covered with pinks. In the elegant church yard in Wirfin, in the valley of Salza, in Germany, the graves are covered with oblong boxes, which are planted with perennial shrubs or renewed with annual flowers ; and others are so dressed on fete days. Suspended from the ornaments of recent graves are vessels filled with water and the flowers are preserved fresh. Children are often seen thus dressing the graves of their mothers, and mothers wreathing garlands for their children. A late traveler, on going early in the morning into one of the graveyards in the village of Wir fin, saw six or seven persons decorating the graves of their friends, and of some who had been buried twenty years. This custom also prevails in Scotland, and in North and South Wales. du epitaph there says: "The village maidens to her grave shall bring The fragrant garland each returning Spring, Selected sweets! in emblem of the maid, Who underneath this hallowed turf is laid." In Wales, children have snow-drops, vio lets, primroses, hazel-bloom and swallow-blos soms on their graves. Persons of mature years, tanzy, box, ivy and rue. In South Wales, no flowers or evergreen are permitted to be planted on graves but those that are sweet scented. Pinks, polyanthus, sweet williams, gilly-flowers, camomile, and rose mary are used. In Capul, burying-grounds are held in ven eration, and were called " Cities of the si lent." The Jews call them " Houses of the Dead." The Egyptians visited the graves of their friends twice a week, and strewed sweet basil on them, and do so to this day. While the custom of decorating graves and graveyards with flowers and ornamental trees and shrubs has prevailed so long and exten sively among ancient and modern civilized nations, some of the American aboriginals will not permit a weed or - blade of grass, nor any other vegetable, to grow on the graves of their friends. King Cup and Clover Blossom. BY I. W. !JANSON. A white Clover Blossom modestly lifted her head from the green Earth. Her pale cheek was almost hidden in the long grass. She was scarcely conscious of her own exis tence, and would have bloomed unseen, but for her fragrant breath, which filled the air with perfume. High above her head flaunted a brilliant King Cup. As the winds fluttered her broad yellow petrils to and fro, she seemed a golden butterfly, and not a flower. She did not see the White Clover blossom that slept at her feet. And there was a beautiful brown Bee that the King Cup loved. His wings were trans parent like silken gauze, and he wore a broad glittering band of gold about his waist. But the Bee cared not for the King Cup. A tattling Zephyr came riding by on her invisible steed, and she whispered to the King Cup the cause of the Bee's neglect.— He loved the unpretending Clover Blossom. Then the King Cup looked down to her feet and behold the Clover. Blossom slept.— Her pale cheek was wet with tears, and head bowed with sadness. She dreamed of the Bee. " Vain aspiring creature !" cried the Cup, " what ambitious spirit has filled thee, that thou darest raise thy thoughts to him I have selected? Dost thou think he will deign to regard thee, thou art seeking Daughter of the Dust ? Will he look so low as thou art while I allure his eyes ?" Then the Clover Blossom timidly looked up to reply, but her bosom filled with sad ness, and breathing a prayer of forgive ness, she sank at the feet of the haughty flower. A musical murmur filled the summer air. Nearer it came, charming the flowers, and hushing the Zephyrs to rest—it was the Bee. Round and round the lofty King Cup he flew, while she delightedly listened to the musical murmurs. But they were not for her. With a hasty wing he left her, and dropped to the bosom of the sweet Clover Blossom. And the proud flower withered and died, hearing no voice save the sound of the Bee, as he sung the song of affection to the unassuming but lovely flower. Maiden ! 'Tis not the proud, the rich, or the beautiful that win the love of others ; 'tis the virtuous and the good. ,s°' If you want an ignoramus to respect you, "dress to death," and wear watch seals about the size of a brickbat. tOr The sunshine of life is made up of very few beams that arc bright all the time. Decorating the Grave. Funeral Ceremonies of the Hindoos Immediately after the person is dead, and in many cases before this takes place, prepara tions are made to burn the body. We have seen the wood lying by the side of the sick person while he was still living. The person being dead, his son, perhaps, takes up water in a new pot, and while the priest reads the prayer, puts linseed and toolsee leaves into the water, and after annointing the body with clarified butter, pours it on his father's head as a kind of abolution. This is accompanied by a prayer to the different holy rivers, that they may come into this pan of water, and that the deceased may have the merit of hav ing been bathed in them all. Then the son, throwing away the old clothes, pats new ones upon the corpse, one of which is folded and placed on the body. One of the relations now digs a hole in the earth, over which the wood is laid ; about 300 lbs. of wood is suffi cient to consume a single body. The rich throw on sandal wood, on account of its fragrance, among the other wood of the fu neral pile, and a poor man endeavors to pro cure a little. Clarified butter and Indian pitch are also poured upon the wood, upon which a new piece of cloth is spread, and in this cloth the body is wrapped and placed on the pile with the face downwards, if a man, and the reverse if a woman, the head being laid towards the north, and the legs placed under the thighs. A trifle of gold or copper is brought in contact with the mouth, nos trils, eyes and ears ; and after this, boiled rice, plantains, clarified butter, sugar, honey, sour curds, seeds of the toolsee, etc., are offered in a bowl to the deceased, repeating his name and family. The heir-at-law then lights some straw, walks round the pile three times with face averted, and touches the mouth of the deceased with the fire, af ter which those present set the pile on fire all round. At this time, the heir presents a prayer to the regent of fire, that whether the deceased committed sin, or practiced religion, sinned knowingly or unknowingly, he would, by his energy, consume with the body all its sins, and bestow on the deceased final happiness. The fire burns about two hours; the smell is extremely offensive when no pitch is used. Three or four relations generally perform this last office for the dead. When the body is partly burnt, it may so happen that some bony parts have unavoidably fallen on the side. These, together with the skull, are carefully gathered, beaten to pieces, and con sumed. The Hindoo who related these facts, added, without the least apparent concern, that when he assisted to burn the body of his father, the burning made a noise like the frying of fat, and that when he beat his father's skull to pieces, to be reduced to ashes with the other bones, it contained a very large quanti ty of melted fat. At the close, the heir, ta king seven sticks, a span long, in his hand, walks round the pile seven times, throwing one of the sticks on the fire at each cireum ambulation ; and then beats the fire with the hatchet seven times. Water is now brought, the whole place washed, and a gutter cut in the ground, that the water from the funeral pile and the Ganges may unite. They then fill a pot with water, cover it with an earthen plate, and put upon the plate eight kourees. They afterwards, with the handle of the spade, break this pot, spill the water, and then, crying Lturee-bull or, Tiuzza I they de part. The persons who have burnt the dead, be come unclean, and cannot return to their houses till they have bathed. After shaving, bathing, and putting on new garments, one of which is twisted like a rope, or poita, the heir-at-law goes home. Yet a son cannot eat or drink on the day of his father's funeral. Before they who have burnt the dead go into the house, they touch some fire prepared at the door for the purpose ; they put their hand on the fire, take the bitter leaf of the lime tree, chew it, and then spit it oat again.— Near relations put on new clothes, take of their necklaces, refrain from combing their hair, annointing their bodies, carrying an umbrella, riding in a plankeen, or wearing shoes or a turban. These and other actions are intended as signs of an ancient state, as well as of a time of sorrow. A gentleman who has recently returned from England relates an anecdote of Mr. Spurgeon that is too good to be lost. The preacher had for his theme one day the pow er of individual, personal effort, and to illus trate it he told a story of a Yankee who boasted that he could whip the entire Eng lish nation himself. "And how could you do it ?" said a bystander. " 'Why," said the Yankee, " I would whip one, and then I would take another, and so I would go along till I had whipped the entire nation." At the close of the sermon, Mr. Spurgeon and several friends retired into a vestry.— Soon there came in a tall, lean, long-faced, solemn-looking man, who hailed from the State of Maine. lie presented to Mr. Spur geon a letter of introduction, and was wel comed by the preacher. Soon, Mr. Spurgeon addressed the new corner by saying, " Well, my American friend, how do you like my illustration of individual power, drawn from your countryman ?" "Oh," said the member from the Pine Tree State, "I was well pleased with it, be cause it was so true," and this was said with the utmost solemnity of tone and gravity of manner. " So true, so true," said Mr. S., " what do you mean, sir ?" "I knew a Yankee that did that, once," was the reply. _ "And what was his name ?" Mr. Spur geon asked, to which the Yankee answered— " The name, sir, was George Washington ; perhaps you have heard of him ?" Mr. Spurgeen was dumb for a moment, then joined in a hearty laugh, and allowed the Yankee was too much for him.—Boston Journal. Zeic-A man can get along without adver tising, so can a wagon wheel without grease, but it goes hard. Editor and. Proprietor. Spurgeon. and the Yankee ' When we looked forward to the vast amount of printing and of the reproduction of books ] which will probably take place during the coming century, we feel that it involves more than one reflection which may serve to stim ulate to action not only all those who have claims to intellect and education, but may al so encourage a higher standard of honesty among many who would soon change their lives, if they thought that they were ever to be dragged from obscurity and placed prom inently before the world. Reader—let us look at it. Already this ag . e, with its rapidly increasing millions and spirit of historical collection, is gathering up infinitely more than even the learned are aware of. From reprinting first class poets and prose writers, we have taken to repub lishing the works of' the pettiest rhymers and pamphleteers of old, since there is scarcely one of them who does not become, with time, interesting, and present traits of his age which every new generation renders more marked and quaint; despite the thousands upon thousands of books which have been written, there is little dangerof anything which has the slightest value as illustrating: is age ever becom ing extinct. There will always be collectors, or students of certain departments, who will rescue from oblivion all which refers to his own special ite. And so rapidly does the read ing public increase, and so enormous is the growth of literary and antiquetarian tastes, that we feel conscious that we indulge in na exaggeration when we say that there are few persons who choose it, who cannot secure that memory, after death, which is so dear to all. To do something to be remembered, to be quoted ages hence as one who once thought and reasoned and labored, while thousands of cotemporaries had passed into the veriest oblivion ; this is, after all, worth no little. pains. What this age is doing for the past, by carefully exhuming its every social frag ment, its song and legend and book, will be done for it by a future age. Then let no ono despair. Whoever does one great or good deed, who ever accomplishes one noble work, who ever writes a book, or resolutely becomes something or somebody in these times—in this forming, transition age—will be remem bered, though he or she forgets it. It is hard ly possible for one resolved, intelligent man or woman to cultivate his or her mind, in this age, and apply that cultivation to any purpose whatever, without making sure of a memory which will react either for good or for evil. Would you write? Devote that time to vigorous classic authors and to a study of great cotemporary literature, which you now give to trashy novels, wishy-washy sectarion writings and the like. Would you do good practically ? What a field is open to you in aiding education, in studies to practice. In this field laborers are sadly wanted, and there is not one who will not be gratefully remem bered in coming ages. We never see one of those quiet little pamphlets, devoted to set ting forth what is being done for education, for charities, for reform institutes, for the blind and poor, and suffering, and sick and lunatic, without a tender feeling; without a sentiment of heartfelt respect for the zeal which prompts such works. Those pamph lets do not die; they always exist somewhere, to be discovered at a future day by those who will write histories of certain reforms, now in the bud, but which will be some day in full fruit, when those who were early in the field. will be made memorable. There is many a quiet, patient woman many an earnest man, who now pursues, without dreaming of fame, some little local scheme of beneficence which the most wildly sanguine imagination would never characterize as great, which will be great indeed in future days. Good deeds nev er die. NO, 49. There is on the other hand, an immortality of knavery and rascality. 'Woe to the rascal who in his career rubs against men, events or circumstances which are not destined to be forgotten, but to be revived ; for as sure as they live, their names will be called again to life, to be a burning shame to all who bear them. The number of wretched ones who foolishly believe that their evil deeds will die with them is very great ; but they deceive themselves. Look over the biographies of authors, who are the meg of all others, who in their own lives carry down the lives of others to pos terity. What a fearful judgement overtakes those who oppressed them, and what an un dying shame it is for their children. Aud in this age, as we write, there is an amount of this dread chronicling going on, such as few dream of. Our American cities are probably destined, as is many a village also, to attain unprecedented greatness; to become the homes of millions and repositories of all treasures of art and science. There will be in those, days no street which will not be carefully de scribed from the beginning, no man who dwelt in it unmentioned. Why we have seen such antiquarian accounts awake such an amount of collecting, noting down, and ad ding to by zealous, gossiping scholars, and lovers of antique scandal, that we really pitied the wicked. Those who are once marked, remain marked ; in the future great ness of our communities, in the constant in crease of events to be remembered with which they have been associated, rests their " brand-mark." MODERN REFINEMENTS.—PeopIe do not laugh now-a-days—they indulge in merri ment. They do not walk—they promenade. They never eat any food—they masticate it. Nobody has a tooth pulled out—it is extrac ted. No one has his feelings hurt—they aro. lacerated. Young men do not go courting girls—they pay young ladies attention. It Is vulgar to visit any one—you must make a call. Of course, you would not think of go ing to bed—you would retire to rest. Now a-days, too, one buys drugs at a "medical hall, wines of a "company," and shoes at a "mart." Blacking is dispensed at an "in stitution," and meat from a "purveyor." One would imagine that the word "shop," had been discovered not to belong to the Eng lish language. Now-a-days, all the shops are "warehouses, or bazaars," and you will hardly find a person having the hardihood to call himself a shopkeeper. "Workpeople are "employees," "tea meetings" are "soirees," and "singers" axe "artistes." ,tom' Whoever feels pain in hearing a good character of his neighbor, will feel a pleasure in the reverse. And those who despair to rise in distinction by their virtues, are happy if oth ers can be depressed to a level with themselves. isEr At a Baptism down South, lately, a negro who had been kept under water longer than he thought agreeable, drew a long breath and exclaimed, " Some gentleman lose his nigger yet wid dis foolishness." s)"' Childhood and genius have the same master organ in common—inquisitiveness. Know what thou canst do, and do it This is the only self-knowledge. A Lesson. "Fate for you shall sheathe her shears You shall live sonic hundred years."