TERMS OF THE GLOBE. Per annum in advance $1 50 Six months 75 Three months 50 A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expiration of the term subscribed for will be considered a new engage ment. TERMS OF ADVERTISING Four Hues or 1e55,..... One square, (12 lines,) Two squares, 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 20 00 Half a column, 12 00 16 00. ..... ....24 00 Ono column, 20 00' '0 00.... ..... .50 00 Professional and Business Cards not 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. .elt.ct Vettui. THE LAND OF DREAMS. The land of dreams is brighter Than this dark land of ours, Its cloudless skies are lighter And fairer are its flowers, And hearts that earth would sever In union close and sweet, More fond and true than ever, May there tos . ether meet. The forms we most have cherished, That in the cold grave sleep, The beings that have perished Rise from their slumber {hop, And joyfully they meet us, With a pleasure beaming eye, And the voice with which they greet us, Is the voice of days gone by. The beggar with his wallet, Has a mine at his command, And the slave upon his pallet, Holds a scepter in his hand. In sleep the old man loves to dwell, He seems a boy to be, The prisoner laugheth in his cell, For he dreams that be is free. Vrom realms of cold reality, How starts the unfettered mind, Ranging as lawless through the sky As blows the mountain wind, Its home of clay forsaking, It journeys wide and far, Its boundless voyage taking From distant star to star. ~..; ~Z~t~ ~f ~~~1~. THE JUDGE'S VISION The Judge was a bale man of three-score years, erect, white-haired, and yet handsome. Much thought and many judicial cares had lined the noble forehead with seams; but both age and care sat gracefully upon him.— Men respected him because he had been suc cessful in winning both fame and wealth— women admired him because he pleased them. There was a rumor that as a young man he had been wild—and bonvivants winked as they declared that the old gentleman could toss off a beaker with the best of them. The Judge gave splendid suppers now and then. His clothing was of the finest, and he fared sumptuously every day. His house was built of marble, its appointments were princely; a retinue of servants gave seeming dignity to his possessions. lie had, whea.in court, a habit of settling his chin comfortably in the folds of his cravat, while work was in progress, so that sometimes when his eyes were cast down, he might have been thought dozing, but for the nervous pressure of his lips ; indicating that mind and body were ful ly awake, and intent upon the matter in band. One day there was an unusual press of bu siness. Several cases had been disposed of, and now there remained but an old man and young girl to commit. The one was an ha bitual drunkard, blear-eyed, haggard, unsha ven, trembling, muttering, bearing every vis ible mark of degradation in face, frame and manner. The other—God help all such ! was the pitiable thing, forsaken by her sex, humbled and despised by man•—a fallen wo man. When the latter was called up—she was very young—she started and shivered as one in an ague. She had none of that hardened brazen manner, so often assumed by people of her class. Her hollow eyes were scarcely lifted. Plenteous tears had nearly washed the false color from her cheeks sunken by dis ease ; her small, thin hands, so tightly clenched, that they seemed chiseled out of pale stone—spoke of prayer—agonizing, yet still hopeless—faithless. It chanced to be very still as she stoorl there. Why it was, the Judge knew not, but it seemed to him there fell an unearthly si lence over the entire assembly, like that of a grave. He lifted his head from the position which Lt t „had settled. His strong, piercing gray eyes fell full upon the pitiful object be fore him. Downward drooped the pale face, from shame and weariness. The whole pos ture betrayed a wretched life, an abject fear, and it seemed at that moment as if some un earthly voice cried out in the midst of the startling quiet— " Give her bread ; she is starving." It also appeared to the Judge as if the lawyer on his right—an angular, long-faced man, who had been examining witnesses all day, seemed unusually exhausted—that he made an effort to speak, as if it were beyond his power ; and his honor continued to gaze, first at the girl, who was so wan and shad owy, then at the lawyer, and still he wan dered at the strange still silence. Suddenly the Judge started. What was that shadow behind the girl? What was that misty cloud, that seemed growing out of that shadow, at first white and faint, but gradual ly taking form and feature, until to his horror a face looked with shining eyes into his own a face that he knew had lain for twenty years in an unhallowed grave. A cold sweat broke out over his brow, and a tremor seizing his frame shook him as with an iron hand. More and more distinct grew that ghostly figure in the awful silence, behind the droop ing form of the sinful girl who dared not face the wild but austere countenance of the Judge. "What—what can have broughther here?" be cried, in a husky whisper, his gaze still rivited upon the mysterious presence. " Who has called upon the sepulchre to yield up its sheeted dead—who ?" There was no answer ; still that dreadful silence reigned. The Judge grew livid, his teeth chattered; he sank back in his chair; unable to move his eyes from that thin shade that with raised hand seemed ready to speak. " Man," it said—and the tones who can describe ? Who can catch the moan of the wailing wind among the pines ? who shadow forth the sound of the breeie that sings the dirge of the dead in lonely grave-yards ? That voice was not of earth. " Man, behold thy work, and judge her if thou canst ! Look in thine own heart, and then dare to condemn Y insertion. 2 do. 3 25 $ 37y $ 75 1 00 100 150 2 00 WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL, XV, this poor child ! Twenty years ago I was innocent as she was within a few short months. Though you look pure and saintly, you, you ruined me. Though you stand erect among men, exalted above your fellows, bow ed;down to, eulogize and followed, you, you destroyed this sacred temple—you made it a den of thieves—you planted deadly flowers in its walks. Ay, and you, and those who stand in high places like you, know your own cor ruption, yet you dare to pass judgment on the erring. Oh that I could brand you now, as God will brand you in the future ! Ilow dare you condemn this poor man and that weak woman, when you are guilty of the very vices that bring them here ? In the name of all that is sacred, I ask you—how dare you—thrice perjured.and accursed ?" The words fell on ,he heart of the Judge like drops of melted lead. The figure of the shade grew yet more erect and terrible, and the deep eyes burned like never-dying fires. The Judge was conscious of but one feeling —remorse 1 It seemed to him that every ear had heard, that every heart was passing the verdict of guilty upon him, and that ver dict, in awful voice, as the voice of many wa ters pouring into his ear, while the people shouted— " Thou unjust Judge Thou hypocrite !" Still the covering figure of the poor street walker, with its clasped hands and stream ing eyes, wavered before him. Did she hear the accusation ? Was her soul stung to mad ness because of the injustice, the hypocracy of man ? It might be, for the tears came faster now, and the cheeks grew more ghast ly. The Judge essayed twice, thrice to speak —but the words would not come, and his lips were in-cold. " In this poor, sinful creature," cried the shade, with that same indescribable tone, "behold your wretched child. In this old man—this miserable wreck, ruined by in temperance and the anguish of blighted hopes, behold my father—now broken-hearted —he whose humble door you entered to break faith, prove recreant to manhood, curse a fair name, and bring desolation to a loving house hold. From that roof you went—a more than murderer—from that roof 1 was carried in one short year to the village graveyard, and over the mound which covers me, the nettles are growing now. From that same roof went out a child, cursed from the birth —the victim of coldness, neglect and brutal ity. For that old man, once the honest, up right husband and father—disappointed, world-sick, disgraced, ruined, drank to drown his grief, and made his home a hell. Ay I turn white, recreant Thou honest, faith —incorruptible Judge. Let no flush of crim son stain the dignity that twenty years have built around your fame. Hold up your gray hairs for the crown of glory. Point the fin ger of scorn at this poor street-walker. Hus tle her off to your jail, and then go home to your velvet couches, your marble halls, your tapestried carpets. Give her bread and wa ter, while you, oh peerless Judge, sit at a princely table. Consign her to infamy, while Honor writes your name above that of com mon men. Leave her to the iron bedstead, while you repose upon silk and fine linen ; and when she dies, throw her into the Put ter's field, while the costly marble is being moulded into a pyramid on which your vir- Ices shall be inscribed in letters of gold.— Oh, most peerless Judge !" White and cold sat the Judge, feeling that God's hand was upon him. He strove to speak—in vain, His voice was bound as in a prison of iron. Gradually the figure lost its unearthly height ; the gray midst floated round the miserable young creature drooping there ; there was a murmur and humming, as of confused voices ; the numbness left his limbs ; the court seemed in motion ; a sharp voice sounded near him, and with a start the Judge sat upright, though with eyes that seemed changed to stone at the poor young thing before him, who seemed that moment to be speaking. " Oh, sir, it is the first time," she sobbed. "I—was hungry—starving—oh! that I might die—die here. Oh! lam so poor! so helpless! so motherless!"—her voice Was drowned in grief, and she seemed falling to the ground. " Sentenced to four months in the house of correction," said the lawyer on the right. " Stop !" cried the Judge, with a thrilling emphasis ; "I did not say it." " We understand your honor," replied the the clerk, hesitating, " that—after the evi dence—" " Let the case lay over," cried the Judge, wiping his forehead, " God have mercy on us all!" The court was astonished. The Judge left his scat, and entering an adjoining room! paced the floor ; his face haggard, his soul in arms. " God have mercy on inc !" he exclaimed, ever and anon, " I—a guilty, unrepenting man, to condemn those whom I ruin Yes, in these high places of the world's honor, dwells iniquity. How many of these law yers are pure men ? How many are careful of the honor and reputation of women ? How many are there who do not drink to excess and but for their sealed houses, their silken curtains, gold and a reputation, would be in the same gutter from which that old man was dragged ? And I—Heaven help me ! am a vile, accursed thing, I am a whited sepul chre. Out of my black soul shall judgment fall upon my fellow men? Never again— never again! I have given my last verdict. I will rescue this poor child—this poor, hum bled woman, who has never known a mother's love. Dream of vision, whatever it was— that strange revelation has changed the cur rent of my life. I have no longer courage to stand before my Maker as I am—before men as I am not. God have mercy on us who make and administer laws! We are many of us rotten at the core, and we dare our Ma ker to his face." The public wondered why the Judge re signed. The papers were full of regrets.— That gray-white look came over his face again as he read this and that comment upon his "unstained reputation," how "wise, skill full, just and sagacious he had been! above all, how upright." "Rottcl., at the core !" he muttered, clash- 0; 4.;• , ;51 . ;1p 4 .4 , Y ., s, , I.%;!'r ing the paper down, " and God knew it all the time ! God is never deceived." People wondered, also, at the change in the old Judge. He was no longer convivial. He gave no more great suppers, was seen no more at public festivals—nor was his name paraded in capital letters on great occasions. There was a stranger in his house—a pale consumptive girl, who seldom went out, whose life had been a continual regret. But the old Judge was repenting before God. Hours of anguish did the review of his long life give him. His head was bowed—his step was slow—his words were few and penitent. Men said, "the old man is changed," with a sigh. Angels said, also—" the old man is changed I" but the words gave joy to their counsels. One day there were two funerals. The Judge and the gray haired drunkard were gone to their long home. One monrner— whose tears were of deepest grief—followed in the long train, and is " only waiting" to follow father and grandsire. - With God, who alone judgeth in perfect righteousness, we leave them all. " Pshaw ! harm—what a squeamish fellow you are, Stanton ? Why it's nothing but a raffle, and merely designed to give a little zest to an agreeable party. Didn't you know there's not the least possible risk in it? I can tell you that they act an the same princi pte in church fairs, and the good church mem bers buy tickets for pictures, and quilts, and piano -fortes, and all that sort of thing. If they can do it, I am sure we can, who don't pretend to any special piety. Thus reasoned Harry Brooks, a young man of twenty, while endeavoring to persuade his friend, Miles Stanton, to take part in a raffle. Miles had been carefully educated, and had always looked with suspicion upon all games of chance as not only hazardous, but immor al and pernicious in their tendency; but the cunning and special argument of Brooks somewhat unsettled his convictions. "'True enough," he said to himself, (and pity it is he had cause to say it,) " they do encourage such practices at fairs, and after all, it would be paying but a trifle for a good supper; only a shilling." And alas I he yielded—as Har ry knew he would—and yet, there was a voice, and it sounded wondrously like the gentle voice of his angel mother. saying, " Go not in the way of the ungodly." "What's to be raffled for?" asked Jonas Childs, who, with two other young men, bad just joined them. " Oh, a magnificent work-boy ; just a,:-1 thing to give to a pretty sister," said Harry, who knew that Miles was very fond of his sister •lice, and that the two bei❑g poor, and orphans, rarely had gifts bestowed upon them. " Come, it's nearly time, we shall have fun there, I tell you ; Elliston always gets up prime raffles—any way we shall only he a shilling out of pocket; we might spend that for cigars, you know." The four gay young men—two of them clerks in mercantile establishments, two of them bank clerks—wended their way to an other part of the city, and soon stopped on the threshold of what might be called a fash ionable restaurant, kept by a man of little principle, who seemed to understand how, by the most subtle advances, to gain a foothold in the hearts of the young men of the city. Miles Stanton was, perhaps, the only youth in the little company who did not at first en ter into the spirit of the entertainment. lle thought of his mother, who had been in heaven but a year ; be thought of his blue eyed sister, waiting for him in their humble home, and wondering why he. came not. But the merry conversation of the convivial party, the clinking of the delicate glasses, the an nouncement that he was the fortunate win ner of the splendid rosewood work-box, with its lid carved in flowers, its hinges of silver, its gold enameled compartments. and glowing lining, soon gave him new spirits, and when he was challenged to look " upon the wine," he drank and forgot. And again the tempter assailed him. "It was no harm—a game of cards !—only a fashionable amusement to while away the time—and what was a quarter? So small a stake was hardly worth a thought." " Come, come, Miles, you mustn't let them think you are a green hand. Sit down here, and I'll initiate you, besides you are one of the lucky ones; only think now, of that beau tiful box, that cost fifteen dollars—yours for a shilling—it is just that you should stake something." And he did stake something, though he knew it not, for there are fearful pleasures that cost men their souls ! Oh, the peril, the periLof first yielding to sin ! That beautiful work-box ! How the inno cent eyes of Alice Stanton flashed with pleas ure, and filled with tears over it ! Little she knew—sweet confiding girl—that this first " stroke of fortune " had poisoned the foun tain of a heart dear to her as life. Yes ; for now, alas ! the blush of crimson wine, the sharp shuffle of the cards, the fear ful rattle of the dice, the clink of the shining silver as it came rattling towards him in glit tering heaps, or receded, to fill the purse of some fortunate gamester, had become as sweet music to him. " To-morrow ! to-morrow ! I shall be ruin ed!" Thrilling was that cry, awful beyond por trayal, the haggard look in that youthful face. The eyes show bloodshot ! How corded the veins on the brow, seeming like knotted ser pents ! How the lips were blanched, the cheeks sunken, as he stood there, a young man of twenty-one years ruined irretrievably. Oh, the passionate cries that went up to God —but in them was no contrition. Convulsed in every motion, now he flung himself in ag ony on the floor, and now strode the room, his clenched hands raised above his head, his forehead beaded with great drops wrung forth by anguish. " Miss," said the woman to whom the rooms belonged, " there's some trouble up stairs. I heard your brother groan, and he walks up and down like mad." And Alice, alarm in her gentle face, pushes aside the costly rosewood box (alas ! she lit- HUNTINGDON, PA., MARCH 7, 1860. Only a Raffle. .~~'~-i. -PERSEVERE.-- tle knows what it has cost,) and springs up the stairs. Her trembling fingers rap upon the door, and there is a smothered sound that bids her enter. Poor brother ! he is prostrate on the bed. His face is hidden, but the throes of guilt, of outraged honor, are past. " Dear Miles, you are ill, you are in trouble I" " Yes, I am ill "—why glare those eyes with ghastly light upon her? " Yes, lam ill, what will become of you Alice, what will you do when I am gone ?" " Miles, Miles, you frighten me I—dear Miles." She gazes at him, breathless, ter ror-stricken. "0 Alice I burn that box—never touch it again; for that I sold myself!" She thinks ho wanders. Some sudden fe ver is upon him; but vainly she presses the hot locks from the burning brow—vainly ; for with a gasp, a cry for pardon, he is gone. One more crime has he added to his catalogue of sins—he has perished by his own hand. Harry Brooks sat in the club room with two chosen friends—one of their number was missing. " Well, boys, what has become of Stan ton?" asked Harry, shrilly, as he whiffed his cigar. " Oh, he'll be here with plenty of money, as usual," said another, " wonder where he gets it? He's lost enough lately." "Where we get ours, perhaps," muttered another, in an undertone—then he said, "by the-by, was it not you who had the honor of initiating Miles into this pleasant way of earning money without work ?" "He never would have known one card from another if it hadn't been for me," said Brooks complacently. In came an officer. More than one cheek paled when the guilty party knew that he sought for Stanton, and that Miles was a de faulter. An hour later, and the city rang with the pitiful news. Little he thought, when that first step was taken, helped forward as it was by the con duct of church members—little he saw then, the possibility of the result that followed— himself a thief and a self-murderer, his bro ken-hearted sister weeping and moaning over his dishonored memory and early death. Can I add to this sketch, founded in the main, upon facts recently developed in a dis tant city, one word of comment? Let me open my Bible, and in the spirit of the great apostle, exhort the followers of Christ to take heed " that no man put a stumbling block or an occasion to fall, in his brother's way. The Glasgow (Scotland) Daily Mail tells the following, which, though it smacks of the marvelous is still vouched for as true : Somewhere about thiity years ago, at a place nearly twenty miles from London, a boy about 11 years of age was returning from school with his sister. They were amusing themselves on the road by running after and touching each other alternately in their youth ful glee. They had arrived at a large play ground or green, and he had " tigged " and touched his sister, and had given her a slap on the face, when she gave him a push with her hand, whereby he was overbalanced, and he fell into a large well behind, and, timid and amazed at his sudden disappearance, owing to her inadvertant act, off she ran.— For some days a strict search in all direc tions was instituted fur the boy, but without avail. Advertisements in the newspapers were also resorted to without effect, and the girl, bewildered, doubting and still hoping that her brother might yet make his appear ance, or be discovered in some way, and, on the other hand, afraid that he might have perished in the well, refrained from explain ing to her relatives the truth. The conse quence was, that as time wore on, she fell in to a state of despondency, but her friends could never ascertain the cause. In the course of some years she was mar ried. her family often kindly inquired, and even pressed her to say whether anything was weighing on her spirit, but she could give no explanation, and it may be added, as it will naturally be surmised, did. not intend to do so till on her death-bed. In the mean time, her brother, after having fallen, as we have described, into the well, and sunk in the water, rose _again to the surface ; and laying hold of some projecting bricks or stones at the side of the well, called loudly for help.— After some time, a carrier who was passing, heard the cries of the boy, and going for ward to the mouth of the well, succeeded in rescuing him from his perilous condition.— When he had recovered a little, the carrier asked the boy the name of his friends and where he resided, but he would not tell him, and said he had no friends, but wished and would be glad to go along with him.— Through persuasion and entreaty, the kind hearted carrier, thinking the boy au orphan, took him along with him in his cart or wag on to London, and there gave him employ ment to run his messages. He afterwards sent him to school, and thereafter to learn a trade, but he was a little wild in his dispo sition, and did not settle well to his employ ment. In the course of time the news arrived of the discovery of the gold fields in Australia, and the carrier's son determined to proceed there, and as the boy expressed an anxious wish to accompany him, that wish was com plied with, and lie went out along with him. He was extremely prosperous, and wealth showered upon him. He acquired lands and engaged servants, and in short, fortune was lavish to him of her gifts. But in the midst of his prosperity he began to think of home and his early associations, and of how his beloved sister might think him dead, and as having been drowned in that deep well, and he determined on returning home to gladden them with his presence, relate to them his fortunes, and dissipate their fears concerning him. Having arrived in this country, he tried every means to ascertain where his friends lived, for they had removed from the home of his youth, and none in the neigh borhood could tell him where they had gone. After having made inquiry for a length of , Ti ...;.' f[ 4 ......., -v, * o „4. ,1. x. • • o,= , c ,t, ~,,.. •,,..: t --&-, • The Dead Alive. Editor and Proprietor time without avail, it so chanced that on one occasion he went to England to see the Queen passing, and while witnessing the cortege, recognized in the features of a person present one whom he had known in his boyhood.— He went forward and inquired his name, which he told, and mutual recognition took place. Then followed questions concerning his family, when it turned out that the friend whom he addressed had been married to his own sister—to that sister who had long been the subject of his waking dreams, and who had in his early years been the means, how ever inadvertantly, of giving a direction to his course and to his subsequent fortunes. Ile was further informed that his sister was at the time residing in Stirling, and it need scarcely be said that he immediately posted on to Stirling, where he arrived about the the 13th or 14th of September last year. The meeting which ensued between the long-parted sister and brother can only be left to the imagination. The surprise, the conflicting emotions caused by the re-appear ance of a brother after such a long absence, under the circumstances related, caused an indisposition, from which we are glad to say she has now recovered. The World The following was one of the late Major Noah's stories : " Sir, bring me a good plain dinner," said a melancholy looking individual to a waiter at one of our principal hotels. " Yes, sir." The dinner was brought and devoured, and the eater called the landlord aside, and thus addressed him : " Are you the landlord ?" 6I yes . ), "You do a good business?" " Yes," (in astonishment.) " You make, probably, ten dollars a day, clear ?" Yes." "'Then lam safe. I have been out of em ployment about seven months ; but I engaged to work to-morrow. I had been without food twenty-four hours when I entered your estab lishment. I will pay you in a week." " I cannot pay my bills with such promi ses," blustered the landlord ; " and I do not keep a poor house. You should address the proper authorities. Leave me something for security." " I have nothing." " I will take your coat." " If I go into the street without that, I will get my death such weather as this." " You should have thought of that before you came here." " Are you serious ? Well, I solemnly aver that one week from now I will pay you." I will take the coat." The coat was left, and a week after was redeemed. Seven years after that, a wealthy man en tered the political arena and was presented to a caucus as an applicant for congressional nomination. The principal man of the cau cus held his peace—he heard the history of the applicant, who was a member of the church, and one of the most respectable citi zens. He was the chairman. The vote was a tie, and he cast a negative, thereby defeat ing the wealthy applicant, and whom he met an hour afterwards, and to him he said : " You don't remember me?" " No." " I once ate dinner at your hotel, and al though I told you I was famishing, and pledged my. word of honor to pay you in a week, you took my coat, and saw me go out into the inclement air, at the risk of my life, withont it." " Well, sir, what then ?" " Not much. You call yourself a Chris tian. To-night you were V a candidate for nomination, and but for me you would have been elected to Congress." Three years after the Christian hotel keep er became bankrupt. The poor dinnerless wretch that was, is now a high functionary in Albany. I know him well. The ways of Providence are indeed wonderful, and the mutations almost beyond conception or be lief. Maxims of Washington Use no reproachful language against any one—neither curses nor revilings. Be not too hasty to believe lying reports to the disparagement of any one. In your apparel be modest, and endeavor to accommodate nature rather than to procure admiration. Associate yourself only with men of good quality, if you esteem your reputation, fi: it is better to be alone than in bad company. Let your conversation be without malice or envy, for it is the sign of a tractable and commendable spirit ; and in cases of passion admit reason to govern. Use not base and frivolous things against girown and learned men ; nor very difficult questions or subjects among the ignorant, nor things hard to be believed. Speak not of doleful things in time of mirth, nor at the table ; nor of melancholy things, as death or wounds, and if others mention them, change, if you can, the dis course. Break not a jest when none take pleasure in mirth. Laugh not loud, nor at all with out occasion. Deride no man's misfortune, though there seems to be some cause. Be not forward, but friendly and courteous —the first to salute; hear an answer—and be not pensive when it is time to converse. Keep to the fashions of your equals., such as are civil and orderly, with respect to time and place. Go not thither when you know not whether you shall be welcome or not.. Reprehend not the imperfection of others, for that belongs to parents, masters, and su periors. Speak not in an unknown tongue in com pany, but in your own language, and that as those of quality do, and not as the vulgar. Sublime matters treat seriously. Think before you speak; pronounce not imperfectly, nor bring out your words too harshly, but orderly and distinctly. Many persons suppose that diamonds are only used in jewelry—for rings and other ar ticles of personal adornment, and that they are really of no essential value whatever in the practical arts. This is a mistaken notion ; they are used for a great number of other pur poses in the arts. Thus for cutting the glass of our windows into proper size, no other sub stance can equal it, and it is exclusively used for this purpose. A natural edge, or point, as it is called, is used for this work, and thousands of such are annually required in our glass factories. Diamond points are also employed for engraving on carnelians, ame thysts and other brilliants, and for finer cut ting on cameos and seals. Being very hard, the diamond is also used in chronometers for the steps of pivots ; and as it possesses high retractive with inferior dispersive power, and little longitudinal aber ration, it has been successfully employed for the small deep lenses of single microscopes. The magnifying power of the diamond in proportion to that of plate glass, ground to a similar form, is as Sto 3. For drawing min ute lines on hard steel or glass, to make mi crometers, there is no substitute fur the dia mond point. The rough diamonds are called berf, and the points used for glass cutting aro fragments of the borts. Great care and skill are neces sary in selecting the cutting points, because the diamond that cuts the glass most success fully has the cutting edges of the crystal placed exactly at right angles to each other, and passing through a point or intersection made by the crossing of the edges. A pol ished diamond, however perfect may be its edges, when pressed upon the surface of the glass, splinters it with the slightest pressure ; but with the natural diamond the most accu rate lines are produced on glass, and their surfaces are so highly burnished that, if ruled close together, they decompose light and af ford the most beautiful prismatic appearance —all the colors of the rainbow flash from them as from the silvery interior of a pearl oyster shell. Diamonds are also employed for drill points to perforate rubies, and bore holes in draw plates for the wire, and also fur drilling in hard steel. Some inquiries have been made of us recently in regard to using them for dressing millstones, as a substitute for steel picks. We apprehend that they are alto gether too expensive to be used for this pur pose at present; but if some of our inventors would make the discovery of manufacturing diamonds as cheaply as we make charcoal, which is of the same composition, we might be able to recommend them to our millers.— The coke obtained from the interior of gas retorts in many cases is found so hard that it will cut glass ; but as its point endures but for a short period, it cannot be made availa ble as a substitute for the natural diamond for such purposes. NO. 37, Count what? Why, count the mercies which have been quietly falling in your path through every period of your history. Down they come every morning and every evening, as angel messengers from the Father of Lights, to tell you of your best friend in heav en. Have you lived these years, wasting mercies, treading them beneath your feet, and consuming them every day, and never yet re alized from whence they came? If you have, heaven pity you. You have murmured under afflictions, but who has heard you rejoice over blessings ? Do you ask what are these mercies? Ask the sun-beam, the rain-drop, the star, or the queen of night. What is life hut mercy?— What is health, strength, friendship, social life, the Gospel of Christ, Divine worship ? Had they the power of speech, each would say, " I am a mercy." Perhaps you have never regarded them as such. If not, you have been a dull student of nature or revela tion. What is the propriety of stopping to play with a thorn hush, when you may just as well pluck sweet flowers, and eat pleasant fruits ? Yet we have seen enough of men to know that they have a morbid appetite for thorns. If they have lost a friend they will murmur at the loss, if God has given them a score of new ones. And somehow everything as sumes a value when it is gone, which man would not have acknowledged when he had it in his possession, unless, indeed, some one wished to purchase it. Happy is he who looks at the bright side of life ; of Providence, and of revelation ; who avoids thorns, and thickets, and sloughs, until his Christian growthis such that if he cannot improve them, he may pass among them without injury. Count mercies before you complain of afflictions. Live not for relf alone, should be the lan guage of every thinking, reflecting mind.— Let us go to the flowers, the streams, the trees, and the birds, and learn wisdom, Do the little flowers that sparkle so beauti fully through the dew and sunshine, live alone for themselves ? No, no ! Do they not cheer our lonely walks ? do we not gaze on them, inhale their fragrance, and pass on better than we came, feeling that they have minis tered to our perceptions of the beautiful ? and, too, they give to the bees their honey, to the insects their food. And they help to clothe the earth in loveliness and beauty. Does the wide spending tree under whose grateful shade we recline when the noon-day sun is oppressive, live for itself alone ? answer no ; for it gives a happy home to many a tiny insect; there, too, the little bird finds a resting-place when his little wings are tired of soaring up so high, and a secure asylum wherein to build their tiny nests, and to rear their defenceless and unfledged broods. And, too, it gives support to many a tender vine. It also absorbs the poisonous vapors in the atmosphere, that would otherwise scat ter disetise and death broadcast over our land. And it helps to clothe the earth in majesty and beauty. Does the mighty river or the laughing little brook that ripples so merrily along, live alone for themselves ? Not so ; for on the broad and mighty bosom of yen tranquil river are borne the fortunes, the hopes and the fears, of many. And who can tell to how many millions of the finny tribes it gives a happy home. g-a. Lately, a negro in the West Indies, who had been married to a lady of color by one of the missionaries, at the end of three weeks brought his wife back to the clergy man and desired him to take her back. He asked what was the matter with her. • " Why, massa, she no good. The book says she obey me. She no was my clothes. She no do what I want her to do." " But the book says you were to take her for better or for worse." " Yes, massa, but she all worse and no bet ter. She am too much worse and no good." 13e - Creditore•and poor relations never call at the right moment, Usefulness of Diamonds Count Them Live Not For Self Alone