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HUNTINGDON, PA SHALL WE KNOW EACH OTHER THERE? =I When wo'bear the music ringing, Thro' the bright celestial dome, When Sweet Angel voices singing, Gladly bid us welcome home, TO, the land of ancient story, Where the spirit knows no care, In.the land of light and glory, Shall we know each other there ? Chorus-. Shall wo know each other? Shall we know each other ? Shall we know each other ? • Shall we know each other there When the holy angels meet us, As we go to join their band, Shall we know the friends that greet us; In the glorious spirit land ? Shalt we see the same eyes shining On us, as in daYs of yore ? Shall we feel their dear arms twining, Fondly round us. as before? Chorus—Shall we know, .fie. Yes my earth•wern soul rejoices, And my weary heart grows light, For the thrilling angel voices And the angel facet; bright: • That shall welcome us in heaven, Are the loved of long ago, And to them 'tis kindly given Thus their mortal friends to knoNs Chorus—Shall we know, &c. Oh ! ye weary, sad and toss'd ones, Droop not, faint not by the way; Ye shall join the loved and just ones In the land of perfect clay ! farp•strings touched by angel fingers, Murmured in my raptured ear, Evermore their sweet song lingers : "We shall know each other. there !" Chorus—We shall know, So. SHALL WE SING IN HEAVEN 9 I=3=l Shall we sing in heaven forever, Shall we sing? Shall we sing? Shall we sing in heaven forever • In that happy land? [land, Yes ! oh, yes! in that land, that happy They that meet shall sing fbrever, Far beyond the rolling river, Meet to sing, and love forever, In that happy land ! Shall we sing with holy angels In that land ? In that laud ? Sha we - sing with holy angels In that happy land ? • (land, Yes! oh, yes ! in that land, thathappy :Saints and angels sing forever Far beyond the rolling river, &c. Shall we meet our ChriAian parents In that land ? In that land ? Shall we meet our Christian parents in that happy land ? [land, 'Yes! oh, yes ! in that land, that happy Parents and children Meet together Far beyond the rolling river, &e. Shall we meet our faithful teachers In that land ?In that land ? • Shall wo meet our faithful teachers In that' happy land ? Yes ! oh, yes ! in that land, that happy Teachers and scholars meet together Far beyond the rolling river, Sze. Shall we know our blessed Saviour In that land ? In that land ? Shall we know our blessed Saviour In that happy laud ? [land, Yes! oh, yes! in that hind, that happy We shall know our blessed Saviour Far beyond tho rolling river, Love and serve him there forever, In that happy land ! ' PROFANITY IN THE CARS.—A writer mono of our exchanges has the follow ing to say about .vhat has been obser ved by many persons, viz : the rapid increase of profanity and vulgarity in the cars: .Ears polite are shocked by profani ty in the cars running on different railroads. To so great an extent has this come that ladies having respect for themselves have been compelled to change cars because of the shocking and lamentable want of common de cency, as exhibited by some of the passengers. If a gentleman out of po lite defference to the ladies, should happen to even gently reprimand the uncouth and vulgar fellows, instead of having a desirable effect it seems to make them worse. In such cases the conductors should turn the self con demned immoralists out of the ears.— The boards of railroads have long since passed stringent resolutions to prevent smoking in the ladies' car and a special car is attaelled, for the smokers' bene fit The smoke of a cigar is not offen sive to people, as a general thing, but the smoke of immorality suggestive of 'fire and brimstone,' is entirely too sti fling to everybody except the low, the vulgar, and the vile; and it should not be permitted to impregnate the atmos phere of a public passenger car, or any other place where promiscuous crowds of people are apt to collect. It is an intolerable nuisance, and with a view to ite abatement we would suggest the propriety of attaching a profane car in front of that occupied by smokers, fur the accommodation of those Who have no regard for the laws of God or for the feelings of those who may be with in the sound of their voices." Its, Time is money 41 50 WILLIAM. LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL XIX. GREAT EATERS Great eaters never live long. vo racious appetite, so far from being a sign of health, is certain indieatioti of disease. Some dyspeptics are always hungry; feel hest .when they. are • eat, ing, but as soon as they have eaten they endure torments so distressing in their nature, as to make the Unhappy Victim wish for death. The appetite of health is that which inclines to eat moderately, when eating tirne comes, and which, when satified, leaves no un pleasant reminders. Multitudes Mea sure their health by the amount they can eat; and of any ten persons nine are gratified at an increase - of Weight, as if mere bulk were an index of their health ; when, in reality, any excess of fatness is, in proportion, decisive proof of existing disease ; showing that the absorbents of the system are too weak to discharge their duty; and the tendency to fatness, to obesity, increa ses until existence is a burden, and sudden death closes the history: Par ticular inquiry will almost - invariably elicit the fact, that a fat person, how ever rubicund and jolly, is never well; and yet they are envied. While great eaters never live to an old age, and are never, for a single day, without some symptoms, sonic feeling sufficiently disagreeable to at tract the mind's attention unpleasant ly, small eaters, those who eat regular ly of plain food, usually have no•sparc flesh, are wiry and enduring, and live to an active old age. Remarkable ex emplifications of these statements are found in the lives of' the centenarians of a past age. Galen, one of the most distinguished physicians among the ancients, lived very sparingly after the age of twenty-eight, and died in his hundred and fortieth year. Kentigern, who never tasted spirits or wino, and worked hard all his life, reached a hundred and eight-five yrs. Jenkins, a poor Yorkshire fisherman, who lived on the coarsest diet, was one hundred and sixty nine years old when he died. Old Parr lived to a hundred and fifty three; his diet being milk; cheese, whey, small beer, and coarse bread. The favorite food of Henry Francisco, who lived to see one-hund red and - forty, - was t ea, - bread- and-but-- ter, and baked apples. Mr. Ephraim Pratt, of SlUiteshbry, Mass., who died aged one hundred and seventeen, lived chiefly on milk, and even that in- small quantity; his son-Michael, by similar means, lived to be a hundred and three years old. Father Cull, a Methodist clergyman died at the age of a hund red and five, the main diet of his life having been salted swine's flesh (ha con) and bread made of Indian meal. From these statements nine general readers out of ten will jump to the con clusion that milk is healthy, as are baked apples and bacon. These con clusions do not legitimately follow.— The- only inference that can be safely drawn is from the only fact running through all these cases—that plain food and a lifo of steady labor tend to a great age. As to the healthfulness and life-pro tecting qualities of any article of diet named, nothing can be inferred, for no two of the men lived on the same kind of food; all that can be rationally and safely said is, either that they Hired so long in spite of the quality of the food they ate, or that their instinct called for a particular kind of food; and the gratification of that instinct, instead of its perversion, with a life of steady la bor, directly caused healthfulness and great length of days. We must not expect to live long by doing any one thing which an old man did, and omit all others, but by doing all he slid; that is, work steadily as well as eat mainly a particular Jour nal of Health. rEe,..A colored sentinel was recently Marching on his beat in the streets of Norfolk, Va., when a white man, pass ing by, shouldered him insolently off the sidewalk, quite into the street ; — The soldier, on recovering himself, called out: 'White man, halt!" The white man, Southerner-like, went straight on. The sable sentinel brought his musket to a present arms, cocked it, and hailed again : 'White man, halt, or I'll fire 1' The white man, hearing shoot in the tone, halted, and faced about. 'White man,' continued the sentry, peremptorily, 'come hero!' fie did so. 'White man,' said the Soldier again, 'me no care one cent 'bout dis partick lar Coffey; but white man bound to respeckdis uniform, (striking his breast) White man, move on &a - 'I should think these omnibus wheels must be fatigued after running all day,' observed Sam. 'Well, yes,' replied Seth, taking a squint at them, they do appear to be tired.' hew men die •of age. Almost all persons die of disappointmon t, passion, mental or bodily toil; or accident. The passions kill men sometimes even sud denly.. The common expression, ked with passion,' has little exaggera tion in it, for eVen though not sudden ly fatal, strong passions shorten life. Strong-bodied men often die young— weak men ,live longer than the strong, for the - strong - use their strength, and the weak have none to use. The lat ter take care of themselves.; the for mer do not. As it is with the body, so it is with the mind and temper. The strong are apt to break, or like the candle, run; the weak burn out. The inferior animals which live tem perate lives have generally their pre scribed term of years. The horse lives twenty-five years; the hog. ten or twelve; the rabbit eight; the Guinea pig six or seven. They number tt'l their proportion to the time the ani mal takes to grow to its full size. But man, of all animals, is One that seldom conies to the average. flu ought to live a hundred years, according to this physiological law, for five times twen ty are ono hundred; but instead of that, ho scarcely reaches an average of two times the growing period. The reason is oln 4 ions—man. is not only the most irregular and the most in temperate, but the most laborioul and hard worked of all animals, and there is reason to believe, though we cannot tell what an animal scarcely feels, that more than any other animal, man cherishes wrath to keep it warm, and consumes himself in the fire of his own reflection. Mysteries and Miseries of Fishing An editor gives the following "ex perience" in fishing: We got ono worm and laid the sli my thing down upon the earth, and proceeded to dig for another. When wo had captured another, we discov ered that number one had squirmed around in an insane• manner and re entered the earth. This occurred sev eral times. We were in a quandary. We solicited our friend, in a very gen . tlornanly marmot, to f'O7llP and watch - the woimis, which he very .abruptly refused to do, unlesS Upon corn mission, preferring to rest his body upon an ancient root, in imitati'-n of the letter Z, and affected to ho highly amused. We scorned his assistance when we found we couldn't get it, and dug worms in a desperate manner, produ cing the nasty things in such abun dance that they were in each other's way, and could not escape. Wo ar ranged the tackle and dropped a line, "hoping to find the finny tribe in the same state of health." Wo fished and fished. There was nothing but min nows—myriads of nibbling minnows. They had not, apparently, tasted food for several weeks. After feeding away about a barrel of worms, and digging up about an acre or so of ground, we began to experience some indignation. Job, in the sorest'state of his carbun cles, could not have remained patient. Ono minnow, which, if possible seem ed more voracious than the rest, exci• ted oar indignation. In the heat of our excitement, wo regret to say, we hooked him in the bowels, and instead of a feeling of anguish ; generally ex cited-by a sense of guilt, we gloried in the remorseless act. After serving several other minnows in the same way, and having walked out some die. tance on a log, we were amazed to find our retreat cut off by a bumble bee's nest, and two cursed snakes in the root of the tree, over which we had passed. The groat alternative of taking four feet of water, or being bit ten by the images of satan, or stung to death by bumblebee's, was presen ted. We chose the former, and after buffetting with the waves of the 'ra ging canawl,' we reached the shore in safety, firmly convinced that Izaak Walton, (peaceful soul,) was, in his palmiest days, to say the least of them 'hard up' for amusement. WHAT PRESIDENT LINCOLN THINKS or GRANT.---Th reply to a question in regard to the present military pros pect, Mr. Lincoln, with that peculiar smile which he always puts on when about to tell a good story, said :'Well, sir, your question reminds me of a lit tle anecdote about the automaton chess player, which many years ago astonished the world by its skill in that game. After awhile the automa ton was challenged by a celebrated player, who, to his great chagrin, was beaten twice by the machine. At the end of the second game, the player, significantly pointing his finger at the automaton, exclaimed, in a very deci ded tone, 'There's a man in it !' And this, sir, is just the secret of our pres ent success.' HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1864. The Age of Mau. -PERSEVERE.- A Lesson for Wayward boys. About a year ago, the anxious fat) of a poor woman . in search of her lost boy, was familiar on the railroad in the northern part of Ohio. Her name was CITIiAItiNE BIME, and sho lived in the vicinity of Columbus. The fol lowing was the story of her affliction which sho told such sympathizing strangers as were prompted to address. her Sho was a widow with an only child; a wayward boy of about twelve years.—ln that boy centered all her hopes and fears. One clay she cor rected him for some offence, and on that day ho disappeared from home. *She made inquiries for him in the neighborhood as soon/as his absence was discovered, but heard nothing of him. Thinking that ho had joined some military company and gone to the war, she made a visit to the vari ous camps she could hear of, but al though she found many boys of her son's age not one of them gave her heart that nameless thrill which a mother feels at the discovery of her missing offspring.—Restless and anx ious, she would return home (home no more without her boy, poor heart!) to again start out upon her weary and fruitless search. • licr wild and haggard countenance upon which a settled grief had traced heady lines, became. familiar upon the railroad, and she was allowed to go and come as she pleased, no conduct or troubled her for a ticket or fare. Her story was known, and her afflic tion gave her immunities that nothing else could have obtained. At the de pot on the arrival and departure of trains, she would be seen scanning the moving throng, and there was but one image on her mind—that of her way ward and idolized boy. Her form would be seen gliding through the •'soldier• train," that was bearing away volunteers to the war, and the coarsest soldier checked his mirth and with held the rude jest when he saw that pale and sorrowful face, and caught the anxious unsettled glance of her eye as she scanned the countenances before her. We once saw the woman itt, a depot ihe.eleveland and road. search for three months. A compas sionate bystander was attempting to soothe her by telling her that her son was doubtless taken care of somewhere. She said she would he happy if she on ly knew that he was not suffering from hunger and she could not sleep, for the picture of her boy without shel ter was constantly on her mind ller anxiety and grief had made fearful inroads upon a countenance that must have been prepossessing once (she was only in middle life) and there was a strange glittering in her eye that be tokened insanity. In the folloWing brief paragraph in a recent number of the Cleveland Her ald, wo find tbo sequel to the sad sto ry of Catharine Buck : "KILLED BY THE CARS.—An insane woman was lately killed by the cars on the Atlantic and great Western Railroad, near West Greenville, Pa. She was sitting on the track and made no effort to escape until it was to late. —The cow-catcher caught her, throw ing her down an embankment and killing her instantly. Her name was Catharine Buck." The weary is at rest. What a les son is the above to wayward, thought. less boys, who think running away from home such a bravo achievement. A loving mother driven to• insanity and death. To a Mother. You have a child on your knee. Lis_ ten a moment. Do you know what that child is? It is an immortal be ing; destined to live forever ! It is destined to be happy or miserable ! You, the mother! you, who gave it birth, the mother of its being, are also the mother of its soul for good or ill. Its character is yet undecided—its des, tiny is placed in your hands. What shall it be ? The child may be a liar; you can prevent it. It may be a drunkard; you Can prevent it. It may be an atheist; you can prevent it. It may live a life of misery to itself and of mischief to Others; you can prevent it. It may descend into the grave with an evil memory behind and dread before; you can prevent it. Yes, you, the mother, can prevent all these things—will you or will you not? Look at the,innocent. Tell me again, will you save it? Will you watch over it? Will you teach it, discipline it, pray for it? Or will you, in vain search of pleasure, or in gaiety, or fa shioE, or folly, or in the chase of any other bauble or even household cares, neglect the soul of that child, and leave the little immortal to take wing alone, exposed to evil temptation—to ruin ? / , xfit=, ''': - . 4 . - , .„• -. CO 0: P. ' .: .... tc - : e... .--,-,i - 1 -- .. -je '' ' ,A.- ' ' , ' ... 5. la ' ' ' ' . ' . 4 f- 7 * 7 : l ' + 3- '- 4, ~, A z r ;' = 7;',' '" - V.• ) • • ;1- ~,, P .1 , . • .. .P . 7 V Kz .s . . Rebel Spy Shot and Captured... • On Friday last, Latshaw, the on rolling officer for Franklin township, Adams county, met a suspicious look ing character on the road; and queS tioned hint as to his residence: Ho answered that he resided in that town ship, but when interrogated as to the names of his neighbors, ho found that Mr:lLatsbaw was likely to detect hini and he said he had made a mistake— that he resided beyond Mereersburg. From hi . donfused . and unsatisfactory statement, Mr.. Latshaw felt it his du ty to arrest him, and he did so. The prisoner made no resistance, bat proposed to walk back to New Salem; but on the way he took the first favor able oportunity to jump the fence and run away. The officer purfined, and was joined by the people of the neigh borhood; and after a chase of about three hours, he was recaptured with- out being injured. Officer ratshaw then bound his feet togetber, and start. ed for Chamhersburg to deliver the prisoner to Captain Eyster, the PrO vost-Marshal. Latshaw and the pris oner wore in a single seated buggy, and Mr. Slonaker rode behind on horse back. When in the South Mountain, the prisoner managed quietly to get, his feet loose, and when opposite a dense thicket of laurel, he sprang from the buggy into the bushes.. Mr.Elonk ker fired at hint and lodged a ball in his shouldior, looking 11, slight wound, but it did not arrest the prisoner. Latshaw immediately jumped from the buggy and rushed into the thicket after him, and called to. him twice to halt or he would fire; but the prisoner continued to get away as fast as pos sible. Latshaw fired and struck him in the hip, shattering the bone badly, and of course arresting his progress He at once called out that he was mor tally wounded. Mr. Slonakcr . went up to him, while Latshaw pursued his horse, and the prisOner told him that he was fatally injured—that he could not live long, and at once admitted that he was a rebel spy, and had met a just fate. He gave his name as Lloyd, and stated that he had been in this section making observations for the benefit, of the rebels. He is a man of about forty years of age, stoutly built, with dark hair and. goatee, is quite intelligent. and has ev idently been a laboring man. It is more than probable that he is a rebel officer. On his 'person was found a belt with nearly filoo of gold, and had . Chattanobga Virgifflu rebel money and a little Pennsylvania currency. Ho represents himself as a native of Leo county, Virginia, but says he liv ed in Ai ssou ri for some yezthi .about fo rcluiii to Le'e, county. . had a letter, with the date And plaice where it was written torn off, which refer . :; frciin a journey to Up underta ken, and Ri3rtain inforniatioti to be conveyed; but it furnishes no clue to parties in complicity with him, He bad also a Cincinnati paper of the 28th ult. in his pocket, from which we think it probable that he passed thro' that place several weeks ago. He was in this town a few clays before ho. was arrested; tried to sell some gold at the bank, and very carefully , scanned a map of the county hanging in the bank. His thigh wound is very serious, but not necessarily mortal, and his recov. ery is altogether probable. He is now in the hospital in this place, in the custody of Gen Couch, amid will , . we learn, be sent to Fort Mifflin as. soon as he recovers sufficiently to be remov ed.— Chambersburg [Pa.] Repository, Nay 25th, GEN.GRANT.-,-A. "14TTLli" Lit:AR:NT. —The Nashville correspondent of the Chicago Journal relates the following: Speaking of `Grant's campaign, I .wish here to put on record a little in• cide.at, which I have never yet seen in print, and which was communicated to me by an officer some time since, and which might have been contraband once, but is not now, since the plans of the Eastern campaign have been de veloped. While General Grant was in front of Vicksburg, he wus conversing with several officers on the subject of the capture of Richmond. 'Can it be ta ken, General ?' asked one of these.— 'With ease,' was the reply. 'By the Peninsula?' contiued the querist. responded the General. 'lf I had the charge of the matter, I would want two large armies; ono to move direct ly on Lee, and the other to land at City Point, and cut communications to the southward. Leo would then be compelled to fall back, and the army from the north could press ; and if pos. sible, defeat him. 'lf be would open up communication again with the cotton States, ho must fight the army south of the James; and to do this, he must cross his whole force; otherwise he could be defeated in detail, if he did so cross, the No s thorn army could take Eichmon&;• .7 hf he did not, that from the south' could move up the heights south of the river. James, and shell and destroy the city.' I communicated this fact to two confidential friends the day Grant was first called to Washington ;liUd': - newi for the first time, make it pablio. At the time the remarks Were Made, the General had no thought of being called to the position he now occupies. Via.,, A lady who kept a pet-hear in New Hudson, New York, was eaten up by the playfUl creature recently. TERMS, - $1,50 a year in . advance EnDATIONAL COLUMN. B." B. CHANEY,.Editor, To whom all 'communications on tho sub jeet of Education should be tichlressea. The' School Room as a Teacher, "We should do our utmost," says Goethe, "to encourage the beitutifal, for the :useful encourage's itself." Tea r chers and k Sehool Complittees,4ite as much as other people,, may: profit,by this admonition of the "many sided" Germaii. 'They are, too apt to take itfor granted., that the: beautiful 'en courageS itself, and that it is the. i ns& ful which demaWs their utmost ef forts in its'behalf. How slow teach ers are to recognize the faCt, that. the love of the beautiful is as mach a part of Iran's nature as the memory or the reasoning powers, and that it demands no less thaii:they,,early and continued culture ! The school room should be o teach 7 er in this department of education. will be a teacher, whether you wish it or not., whether you are aware of it or, not. If it is neat and tasteful in its finish and furniture, it teaches a les son of neatness and good taste to, its inmates, even if they are the lowest class of children to be found In a large city. The beauty of tho place has a powerful influence over the perionid habits of the pupils. To those :unfor-. tunate creatures, all whose infantile impressions and associations have been those of filth and degredation, the parlor like school room is contin ually teachifig lessons, which their more favored mates, who have com fortable and cheerful homes, have' been learning from• the very cradle. In the neat and well ordered school ..room, they first sec the beauty of neatness and order. Their daily stay within its pleasant precinets'gradnally refines and elevates their taste, which before was:low and grovelling. No lessons that they learn at school are more. precious than these mute teaehings of the objects about them. • " • On the ether hand, a dilapidated hovel of a school 'tense is a teacher of a very different - character. It is "a corruptor of youth!' It confirms 11 ,, careiess and slovenly in their bad half- , its, or at any rate, loaves them no bet. ter than it finds theM. Those who; hive learned to love neatness at home . come to associate the school room With all that is cheerless and • micanfortti- . tile; and their views - of the studies . which they Must . pursue within its walls soon fake the same gloomy , Col oring. They think of going to , sehool,• as the mechanic thinks of going to:hi4 narrow and dirty workshop. They go, as to unpleasant work that must be done, and return glad, like the me chanic, to have finished the task, and to be at the cheerful firbside' again. This should not be so. All the appoint ments of the school house should be such, that the child who has a pleas ant home, may feel at home; with home comforts and conveniences around him.' • • • • We would have the,.. school not merely neat and clean and well furnished, but beautiful 7ithal.,, would add to what is merely - vsefal iq its appointinefits, 'something purely ornamental; not simply n . graceful fin ish to the useful, but something *hoSe chief or only use in its beanty, and the lessons which that beauty teaches. It is not enough that the house has "all the modern improvements," that its walls arc girt with blackboards and hung with maps and charts. We want to see; besides all this, some work of art—it bust, a statuette, a Painting, or an engraving. In very few school rooms in,Massa chusetts, have we found anything of the kind. In ono High School room, we saw every available place adorned with busts, and statuettes, and pngra vings. A friend of oars called it "the pleasantest school room'inAhe State;" but it is'theso works.ofart which make it so. Without them, it would: com pare unfavorably with scores of school rooms that we have visited.—With these, there is a home like charin ab out it, which you feel as soon as you enter. Plato and Socrates, Demos thenee and Cicero,: excellent copies Irvin; tho antique.marblee, look , down Upon you from the walls; with Wash ington and Franklin, not less - noble heads ofllse latter days. Statuettes of Galileo and BolOita remind . the young.studentuf the trials and the triumphs of great men who have led the Van in scientific disco Very and re. search; while Shakspeare, Goethe; 'lasso, Ariosto, and other bards whose songs 'resound through the ages, admonish him that 'the priests of the boantiful, no less than the pioneers of scientific progi•es, have their unfading Jatirels: Engravings of the Landing of the Pilgrims, the, M NO. 50. [From Um ra.; School Journal) Death of Viral.' on I3,tiiie'r,4lll and ot h e co nes - in - American history, are _perpetual lessons ofloyalty and-Patti otiani; the - Sebbol, 'boy what a price his fathers paid, - -in -tbil and anguishc - and.hidod,:fer.. sings heenjoystd - day: - ... -. But 'some OhOSayii,'"Allthafis very well, but wo . cannpt,afford to burpio tures and - .statuary for our school rooms: itis litird enough to get the useful thiriga that itre needed." itrik reply, that'We - - Wbuld , -•.not hilve the • . town or the eif,y-fut:nkshsthese worite of art; though the come when tladY wilr be considered fi , s n deli a pars of the necessary furniture of the school heuite; as flip 4.,),lo:ekhbards, and maps, and eha - rts. We woultLlook for them te .the liberality - of - individa rds interested in. the 'welfare •of; the school. Tri the ease*, 'Whieli . we decl above, nearly the.'S'tfituarj , ' and engravingi were the gift Of net a wealthy Mart; not fintiel:iilifeli) make such gifts to a sehoOT, thin :met to he found . ,iL„alrnost any Ne,w Eng . : • -. .13ut we must - postpone to another month, the remainder of meant to say, We abfillliopoto that Our school beautiful, aS . Well n neat and bon'Ve : nient, and that,' too, with 'ver,i• - iittle cost, ,either effolt orinorieY. tliftrisk. Teacher.--I?es..Edi(or. . ; The Seveh Ancient Waged 61314 The seven wonders of tlie„oli.l44il4 were „-: Ist. The - !mass , CplossustiA of Ithod 120 feet built byte:moB,AD, 2F4f; occupied twelv . e yearS in _raking.... •• stood acrosstbobarbor of Ithodesithi;r ty six yeli.s, and -was thrown dOwn by an earthquake. -It wai4 bought a Jew from . ' the< Bnvii6ons, Atlib,,lottded 000 darii els - wi brit§ 2nd. TheTyrainict4.pf largest one eNilteti 8'00,00 . 0 thirty years in buildiriCand 'haericOw stood at least-three thoriminii The Aqueducts of Ette dos gtt - ed by Appius Claudius,..the 4th: The 'labyrinth-of Pskrii on the banks of the .Nile;coontai within one 'oontinied•walll.ooo.hcitiglis and 12 royal 'palaces, all covered With' marble, and •having- only orie Ontraffeii Tho" building was said io 6ofitaioB;6oe/ chambers; 'and a hall -built of adorned with statues of the goda.:: - : - sth, The: Pharog of Ale±aridriti,: si tower built by order of Ptolerriy delphus, in the year 281, 13 - 0. "It wire- erected as alight house, and cOttriinett magnificent:galleries of marble alai* large lantern at the top . i , the light" . ot; which was seen nearlya - hundred miles off; mirrors of enormous , sizes' fixed around the gallerles,:rofiectinif everything on the sea: eommiiff tower 18 - how erected inita place. Tho. Walls of Babylon, tinilt fiy ovdor. of Somiranals„ or SobilMadnoz zai, and finished in one 3;9013Y99,- 000 men..they wero 7th. The temple of Diana, at P e plio f sus, completed in the reignpf sixth kin . g of Rome. It Wag. 450,feet:1 long, 200 broad, and,sYPPO44.6:l7 marble pillars, seA - paty feet i c nyg, beamsari4 - doors were of eaclar, thO, rest of the timber eyprnEi. strived by fire 13 AN INTERSTING STORY:—"Shon: - mine -Sben," , said a worthy Germap to his heir of ten,yoars, whom he t overheard using profane langdage; "Shen, mine Shon, come here, will doll you little Stories; , . Shon, ,shall it pe a. drug o,ory, ; or fi make pelieve.e i "0, a truo,storyi of' courso,',{mtawcp.-,7 od John. "Ferry voll den, -Dere WfiS i;;iti6e good nice oldt shentlernan (sh,oaet like; me, and ho had von dirty (shoost like you,) andt , heard him_ schwearing likp.a younv i fillain,,as he vas. So hp vent toder...l winklo, (corner) and took out . hides (Shoost,as I am toing now,) anti':; and he der dirty Eddie plackguard de collar (die pay, you see;)liildirpk.a . , lopped him shoost, so ! and On . tear Shon, he pull his ears dia . and. Bmacked his face dat. Pay;, and den dell him to go widoutliie .gupper,; . , shoost as you will do die efening."7 . . LlNcomv's LAST' ANECDOTE. --4 gentleman just returned from" Waidi-T: ingtou relates the following incident"' that transpired at the White" House the'othor day. Some gentlemen ' ' were present from the 'West, excited'. trotibled 'about the' cOnitniisiOns'ilid -t omissions ofthe adMinistiation. President heard thent 'patieQtly 'and then replied: "Gentlemen, suppOge . the property, you wore- worth - was' in' gold, and youhad put in thehart s • Blondin to carry . across thoNiapre.,,* 'liver on a rope, you would th r of table or keep shOuting out to 'Un--7 Blondin stand up-a little straighter Blondin stoop a little more—or a faster—lean a little more to the _Nordi —lean a title more to the South? Not; you would hold your breath as well 46' tongue, and keep your hands off until ho vas safe pver. ,,- The , are carrying an immense weight.;; told, treasures are in their ,hands„ They are dOing the very `best can. Don't badger them. .Ir.eeiCat• lence and we'll get you'eafe across: -- gat' An Irishman, by way OfMai.% , tracing the horrors of solitary confinci ment,.stated.tbat.out of litmdrict persons sentenced to endure. this 'purt.:.• ishmentfor lif&,only fifteen kifyived itE— . • '