5720711a1t =0 TOW AND A: !Mauston Morninn, Alan 2, 1840. [For the Bradford Reporter] UNES TO MSS - --st A being. bright. and heavenly. aft amu, Ikeautmg. like morn's ion light, Of radiance bowlful To gaze on thee, is a pleasure Juanita , Like gazing on a ma— lty all. acknowledged as the brightest, Fairest. one. in all the galaxy of • heaven's tilittering beauty. From thine eyesof express:on, Calm. truthful. and sincere. • Are seen the beauties of thy soul; Blended with innocency, and love Of ehrystal purity, clear, and deep, With child-like confidence • In all things, seeming truthful Unto thee. Who. can view thee. • As thou standesi on the Susquehanna's banks,— In thy graceful. modest mien; With thy deeply glowing, booty llalf screened by thy raven 'tuning Tresses. gedtly blowing in the wind,— And not feel thy influmwis, Of purest loveluress, and worth There. Than seemest like a being. from Fairy land. as thou art seen Watching the gentle-Bowing, heaven refilecung Water.. • Thou lovest it. As 'the ricer of thy childhood's sports' The cherished link of mri.homrs hours. The • loved beauty of My native village,' Ik•auttful Towanda. Thou bast wandered On-its banks of kivelincss, by the rays Of moonlight pale. Ham gazed, on his gently murmuring teiecim In the star light hones. srhen " all was Sull.”cs:tn. serene. and beautiful. Hash thought of thine* celestial, Holy. ;MM. and truthful, Tdl the stmt. seemed of earth No longer. As though. oa fancy's \Vines of brightest hoe : Twere flown to the flowery land, IT Imre spirits &Seen. Sock scenes, And thoughts are near akin, To a soul Ike thine, 01 ardent. )outhful dreaminna 01 a state of happiness ineffable. They unbind thee from life's Corruptmg inSuetrces of death, And Ind thy spirit. with God's • Eternal truths, commune. . Ever, Mev.ths-wul. thus be taught Ot God receiving from his works, Au impress. to stamp thy soul dcrine, And make thee. all thou. " couldst wish to be," " A child of nature, and of God." TOW3DA Pa [From the National Era I thartly in the Oeunting Heusi and Oat if it. A SKETCH FROM LIFE• BY JAMES H. PERKINS It's a desolate place, that suburb of Fulton. Of a cold, dark evening, when the easterly wind draws down the valleys, andthe clouds drift by with a snow-pit now and then, I know-not of a more des olate place on the earth. The long Front street of Cincinnati, which runs by the nver side, and fol lows the vagaries of tile Stream, at length draws close under the hills, and melts into the single ave nue which forms the thoroughtires of the suburb city of Fulton. in front; rolls the turbid Ohio, be hind rise the precipitous hills, whence clay aval anches forever !noiseless slide, pressing houses and stores hourly forward, forward like an inexorable fate. Slowly, wearily thrOugh the mud of that single thoroughfare, now on planks, now on the railway which runs in the midst of the street, now on the curb-stone of some intended, but never completed sidewalk, the straight, soldier-like form of Ferdi.: nand Spalding glanaed amid the increasing snow as he struggled, after a long day's work, to seek the material of mare work. On his left' lay ship-yards, with their ribs of future leviathians•glis ten ing •in the ghostly snow-light. Hill-pressed houses, nodding in tipsy reverie, uncertain when to tumble, glowered on his right. Before him,lhe lo comotive, filling the street with its black-white breath, and turning the snow-flakes to grains of gold with his fiery eye, came screaming, crushing onward. But Ferdinand saw not the silent spectral form around him, heard not the shriek of the mon ster that drew near. The voiceful electricity which overhead was carrying on the chit-chat of men a thousand miles apart, had no interest for him at that mompnt. He bad left hungry children, a tire less hearth, a sick wife behind him ;"and his soul, commonly as free from care as a bird's was for a while howedtdown. Slowly, wearily, Ferdinand has passed by the embryo steamers, the grating saw mills, the chipping, splinting, planing machines, the subterranean rolling mills, where half clad, brawny men struggle forever with red hot serpents of iron, and has entered the city, as street alter suect becomes conscious of gas, It was the same snow-spitting evening, two men longer in conversation than usual, still sat over the stove-store in Main street. The gloomy night grew darker, and still they talked. " I give freely," said the younger, buttoning his sack coat over a somewhat corpulent person, and drawing himself up with an air of satisfaction '. For my means, Doctor Stiles, I give freely. I know the watatslof the poor, sir. Lhave visited the per. Illy wife, your niece, sir, does .nothing but mother theuf. ,I give freely, but never blindly, Deacon Stiles; timer blindly." The elder, who had been sitting, doubled up, with his small, quiet eyes fixed upon the stove, suddenly opened those eyes to double dimensions, laughed in a supernaturally noiselessly manner, and, turning his cud, repeated, It Never blindly, never blindly, Reuben—freely; I know it, but nev er blindly"—and to chuckled again likelt spectre. " There ankmen in business," said Reuben, ern phaticallytedding his head, " who do as well as 1 do, and buy real estate out of their profits, and who give nothing Inthi suffering. , I know the men; I can put my finger on thew dtitere give to every be ; they make beggars. They nes beggar breeders, sir. They ought to be fined, taxed, to support the paupers they bring on us. to thistonn. try, Deacon Stiles, no hottest, industrinQt MU:laced Want; if he has health, you. know olettaele, Sheer me the well man that sayaleis sufiming, std i'll show you a rogue, sir—au imposterddr-wor drunken vagabond. I know ihepoo4 tu their houses." - `• Wife," .aid the Deacon, *tailing dwallei hN :lose as he spoke, " Childrea—amiet fevez—Me* . . NIIIIIMECEEIMiIIIIII/11•1111MEIMINIMEM. 'WNW - - tit • l " - I et * I . .. 1 . ( .1 tti ... 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Wii4.t_telle . i „... ^* . :•.. , I.# , e , -,...14, .7:•!. 1 -, ' -.el , - des—Can't work—No 'iools--pcctat look 'then - 0 Reuben's mind seeritedlisFdly gumeni of which his carapin" ion gave the heady,* he went back to his own experieni3es. "My neighbor, next door hem haat theory that a great many can be helped best by .toitking.thein loans, giving them credit, and so on. Ii s all non sense. He makes beggars. Such fellows need to be dealt with strictly. Make them'pay for what they buy, pay cash, drags the way to make- therm active, thriving, prompt." At this moment the door opened, and the same soldier4ike person that we saw coming &magi' the mire of Fulton, enteral, Wok off his straw Intl , hew ed stiffly, and asked if f. the proprietor" was in. Reuben coming forward as such, the inquiry was made for red flannel. "I am usually a purchaser from your neighbor," said Spalding, "but hi% is closed. I have an order, which Muskbe completed to-morrow noon, or I shall not be entitled to my ' pay ; and I must work till past midnight to Com plete it." As he said this, his lip trembled, and his eye swam. Reuben turned to present his goods, when the other stopped him, - and said, painfully, it seemed, but resolutely, "If I buy, sir, lcanrrotpay you till to-morrow, when I she* receive payment myself." Reuben looked at the Deacon and smiled.. " Did I not tell you so? My neighbor makes be^svars, doesn't he, Deacon 7" • " I am no sir," saidSpaldin,, half amaz ed, half angry. • " I spoke to this gentleman," replied Reuben, as he took his chair agaiu. " I have no flannel to sell you, my friend." The stiff bow was repented, the straw bat replac ed", and the cashless purchaser passed out once More into the storm. lie tried one or two other stores, but to no purpose ; so making up his marl to come at early dawn, to his usual place of pur chase, fie turned to 'time' , his steps over the deso late path he had so lately trodden in vain. " My neighbor makes b eg gars," repeated Reu ben, as the door. closed. The deacon, who tad watched the countenance, manner and voiceefSpal• ding, with his half shut eyes, laughed in his soul, and said to his companion, in a queer, confidential wuy, as though the store had been filled. with peo ple, Wrong, Reuben ; honest—works hard—seen ballet times." • Reuben would have gone into ad argument to prove that he was right ; but the Deacon, !tasking witlinoiselese mirth, stopped him with "No talk, no talk; minds me want flannel myself. Cash here." The young tradesman laughed heartily at the idea of requiring the rich old Deacon to pay cash, but nevertheless took the money and the two soon Parted. Reuben returned to listen, over his chops and young bzson, to his wife's account of the poor she had been mothering, that day; while the old man, who lived near Columbia, got into his wagon and began the perilunkjearney through the heights and depths, the broken pavements and immeasu rable mud-boles of tbe same pathway which Spal cling was pursuing on foot. Deacon Stiles knew rely well that Spalding was pursuing it, he knew where be lived, bad inquired into his condition, had sent him, or rather his wife, cur comers; and this dismal evening, as he passed the weary walk er, though he looked closely at him he did not stop as one might have supposed he would, to take him op, but drove quietly by, and left the straw hat to catch the snow-flakes at its leisure. • Had Reuben been there, he would certainly have said, " Wrong, Deacon." Perhaps the oli Man thought so; for his bead shook as if palsy-stricken with the laughter that filled him, as en earthquake might some gray old continent.- Round d fireless fireplace stood fear shivering children. In their midst, on his knee, a fifth was trying to kindle some wet chips that be had just brought from the ship-yard, as he returned from his day' i s work at the bagging factory. On the bed lay the mother, a, new-born infant, and a little girl with the quinsy. Of the two boys and to girls, who stood about the firelbuiMer, but one had on shoes —it was the smallest, not two years old. A pile of red flannel shirts lay upon the bureau. The room was clean,.and bad there been a fire, would have been quite cheerful, with its white curtains and engravingi. Oyer the mantle hung a portrait of the I oke of Wellington, and above it, the sword of an English officer. The fire kindles, goes out again; once more it lights op, and the little solemn faces around it glis ten, and ball smile ; but the wet drops a second time to extinguish their ~hopes. " It's too bard on yoti o lcihn," said the pale moth er, faintly, " after your twelve hour's barer." . " Make it go yet, mother," answered John, with a tone that was a perfiretchallengetod., " Fad('s had many a wore lime inking fire in the m 'n tains.rains:''• . ..• Hope perseverance conquer; the oak, chips slowly etched the blaze, pia* after - picture on the whitewashed wane wake up, and the little bare toes on tbarts:floor•loort to curLiwith cold soy longer. The child with the quinsy tries to-speak her pander through her swollen throat; •IMI the mother closes her eyes to thank God. - :, -. There co rn ea a block ak she dim- -- Jelin who had stood. beetto givelhe youngsters itehance,' opens it: A muffled "a is , eo,!4_ ....."*:(k,i. .. a .. bundle-of some kimij,epaitof ettf FAr.140 4 , 1111 ,- then large, look heat theseenerelliie• iire,'anit comprehend it aIL L. nu's* for toliftglit Or Whet ' 4 "P*7l text day. - I . :lftAli4*Or". h!lfi:t4:46E:o4::vie.T*;!' John takes the flannel 'Zed 161'1 ' 4;1ft/4i iiii .ii lug nothing 'of *trait ilk some, The trisiter:kise- , ' es the little gid dist has gone tii thedoor ter iesPirber 'La s s come; i1iP1(4 0 91 4 int . lih* : 13 .00.;*#4 4 himself do=diiiiihill, eveit*li.illiktr_7#ll4* the rood w old white horse end green wag `6oo, waiting Ii !Ulu - No 'ace. ocessith:Ciiiird - 11 i.4 16-4toith'#o4l ll *. l o l4 ;' - illielii4Mbii cpcl.with:ciosed.4h-ina -. . 1 1'.44. .'"-**** thersnowiraier out* igs•risk,-- .t.,,;:, *5,...5,4-; • • qt.* Ltit, me' ; ISM rpnaisllp Inay wni*D - 4y, Af*tilibA, Bi =MS IMMIE=II "SO PA * hrn" "7'.ol -- roan; thanlitully, u but what 'l* means;: j . don't knpior. ~last oa thank God fot its theagit, fir *oda no a anaalltai John was•*bottle say behadlia dinner at the factory; and indeed he had eaten:his 'natal Chunk of bread—for his dinner was iiiirapt kept tilleven mg, it mated so much better alhoitto—but be re membered the dollar. AndOtire4llliFigglf hum the temptation. 4ttt i wasaf, to lie, even to give them a meal. • . " : Little Mora, nvemwhile, had sun to the fire to see What theinranze mnwhad gives har.:. was a paper of sugar;plums and candy, with an orange at the bottom of the " That was &sr marnma; they all knew thrt.was for mamma, atid the Most! delicate morsels of cream her were for poorl Bidet they wouldn't bun her threat one bit. But, who could . 'the strange man be in There gams nol .end of wondering. In ball an hour,, the ather's' step was heani.:.lli‘'docor was opened; the chil d= eprarig to meet him ; heembraced them with a mournful Ewe; but their hearts were so bright that their eyes were din?, and they lay in his coun tenance rethrefed thirjoy that iiparitie'd in their own. "And who was it that brought your flannel," said the mothe, "and what does 013 dollar meant" r " Flannel ! dollar !" cried Ferdinand, with amaze ment. The articles were shown him, but there was no end of wondering. The cry still was, " Who could the strange man be I" However the dollar was used, and John ate his dinner in company. Long after those merry eyes were closed and those cheerful voices silenced, Ferdinand was at Work. The sick child turned and moaned and be gave it drink, and it, ton, slept at length Hs beat up his wile's pillow, walked the uneasy infant to rest, and is the intervals, and after all were lost to this world's blab, his needle was busy. It was a strange sight doubtless, to any ghosts that fistiered through Fulton that night—this old soldier of the Peninsular making flannel _shirts on the banks of the Ohio. Spalding had come to America with a emnpe fence. He had bought a farm in Ohio, had been ruined by Merino sheep and endorsements. Giv ing op everything, he came to Cincinnati, whelp he knew one man ; that man was on hisileath-bed, and could not aid him. For months he bad sought in vain for employment; he knew no *one; his manner was abrupt, his pride strong; and but k.r some sewing which his Wife was doing, they might all have starved or bed. When john got into the taming factory. if ; Was a help bat when—the wife was prematurely confined in the salsa of a contract which she had taken, and the pay for which depended on the exact completion of her work upon - a specified day, all seemed lost. Bat Ferdinand was I mad of resource; as a soldier be had used the needle, and now used it again. By noon the next day the shirts were placed be fore the employer, and with a straw hat in hand, the Englishman awaited his payment—oixpencefur each skirl, beyond the cost of material. With mic roscopic eyes the contractor examined the 'fiches; he detected the man's hand. " Worn do : wont do. Who made these 11 " My wife part. I part." " Thought so, thought so. Can't have them. Poor trash'," replied the storekeeper. "11l give you the coat of the material, not a cent mare." "My wife is sick ; we are starving. Take her's, they are well made," cried the unhappy substitute. " All or none. Cost cf mateijal or nothing. Keep them, find a market if you can." Too proud . to chafer; in debt for the flannel ; wholly unused to such scenes, Spalding took the offer of the human vempyre, and with a heart sick against his knows, aria hall rebellious against his God, turned away. .He paid the merchant' who had trusted biro for most of his materials. The remainder oldie money and the remanent of flannel left from his last piece, he laid away until the owner should appear. And now hope a series of rectifies, selkieniala, and sufferings, which we dire not attempt to des cribe. Every saleable article was sold, except the sword and portrait of Wellington. John's wages were reserved for rent. The money due the strange visitor of the snowy night lay in the drawer, bit no one thought of touching it. At Ism an oiler was made of some work, if a peculiar material could be ' bad. Ferdinand went to his old fiend; he had now; there was none, he :troth; in town unless at Reu ben Smell's.. With feet of leaiiiinfinimif onus again preseniedt impel( before the man who gave freely to_ the poor. Reuben remembered the straw hat. ale isol,t l so; bet lie could refir io the next door to prove his puoctuality. .Iteuben shook his bead. -The article was scarco--wes a cash, article. "But I sun ria, . "Then work." "How can I, without material I" "Ate you a iGtQabiresti " i hty 'wait • . ; , "And you, like a vagaboaik, dapeaki‘ on yew, • ape, dorm) ) , ! Laala - #1 !gang * • Reuben . ,!; 1 114 1 ..0 . 0 661 $ :indigno o 4- Hw placidly tans the fire light over the Saxony 'earpeti'fiesteirsl4eteetimilJOtigeOlowi astitsk ti** isprai *mow 1 . 11 0 -beautiisollicaimpo by WaiNsiddi din plumes ii; in theliakataiiipia; liaiglafte yau erasing after • Tjmier's or gliannefaireihelicpkif: .itombiraat.".t TM:Meat esoustabbi is *spat with! the: A ao,of aia(agarp*,. Ali t na Siva* Oa by the , giatemakiat aivitsagy., betioaa with: , 'plitiel.-Itarbapa ;its;earibiaaaallifflai— Ntishl".,4•ldild I * * * l- the • , Poortibbt she biliklagui4ivetV!•Stiaibia falaaaidab??llarailyabitobtiblia be; a1a. , V44"". im"'N'•""1", . , .. - .1 ,0 , 1;.)!.% a AliLW.fz , :p.5...1.4 -i , ... 1' ._ ', ._Nlitii i i ja gi in. -- . 3:‘3 , - - f4 3i e t'l . I'4 t.ii:d- ' ; ng...!Wif . •--if, ..:4:5 ~,..,...-, i7 'i ::,' i - ~ e., ' . =I Y FIEF FORD , COUNMILiIIf 01[EA14 GOOOPCII. tifuenti Jtouts's rnut . 444?a, to.l r but what bas Oilitt ttt with shivery 1 , :The ohtemloca _opens ; there is a hertibbiag grid growing, a istrockiitg of leet, a Owing Of throats Sod blowing of hoses ; and the hula woman rocks more and utororiervoesl). Theu Relabel' ante S. tgah says the little wife, korriedir, "Pe Want of socira cure! such h easel"' ticesibent halal that day-it wasjost a "Sleek after Spalding last saw him=Oven fire dollars to the agentofthe Protesuutt Society, le something almost like .4 frown creased his brow at this threatened'at tack AU his pocket; hOwever, it meat have been a wrinkle of-ire-WM - --••,.-- T ~ . "The Thompson's, that hadn't a pillow.cose in this been*, *moil nothing to -it," said Mrs. Small.. "The Browns' case woes sad one,"she continued; "09 'Ph no angar, for an air, but this is real starva tion, Reuben—posinve , starving to deal? Yon must go with me tomorrow morning and see it:— We'll hare the carriage, and go after break-fast, and you can be back by eleven."' "Where is it? Whet, would you take me, my love"! I'm a man of business ; remember, Mrs. Stria, a man of busin ess." . "110 you must go, Reuben; you must go, Uncle Stiles, whotokl me about it, said you must go; he wished you to go." . . "Ah! well my love, well ! Deacon Stiles, well! If he desires it, ofeourse. I respect the Deacon, Mrs. Small. But how comes he to know anything gibe poor! Does be visit the poor! He's a rich man v a fine man, Uncle Stiles; but a title careful, 1 think, my love—a little close ;hardly g i ves like some of us," and Reuben laughed happily. He thought partly of his own free-giving, partly of the unencumbered property ofhis wife's bachelor uncle. This same old bachelor, after his visit to Spahl ing's with the flannel, had been tied to his bed by rheumatism ;-perhaps that hunt in the mow for the shirtmaker's house had some hand in it. However on the morning of the day we now write or, he bad gat out again, arid, on his . way to town, had called at the same house, with some work he had.tmosp• ed up, to pay for the dollar he had given them.— Heknocked at the doo-; no one came. A'second and third knock were 'unanswered. He ventured to lift the latch, and enter. It was a bright morning, but the curtains of the little apartment were all drawn - , mid aifirst hecould see nothing. Then came to luaeyes a bed, and by it were kneeling somirsobbingehildren. What was Ou the bed ? lie cold net see. He drew nearer. A sheet covered the. whole airtime of the Ma mattress. With piotw bands gently :he folded it Joint ; three forms mind asthe iM On the thres hold lay there, side by side—a mother, an infant, and a little girl of tire or six yearscilil—allto was ted that it was terrible to look upon their henry 'faces. Shuddering, the old than turned brick the shroud. He looked at kneeling children,, who had at lust noticed him. They shook with Cold . ;* the skin amraid their temples was' haltaranspamit; their eyes seemed phosphoric in the twilight. "Did you bring us some bread?" said little Mom. The Whole hideous tneh, which be heir' from him, afraid to think - it—came like a blow, upon the old man's heart. Paint and staggering, he,hasten ed to the nearest stove-scandalizing old Mrs. Strong, who law him issue from the door, and told all her neighbors, for twenty-four bouts how Demob Stiles, ,o, !.Columbia, had been up drinking with that buy fedlopr; Spalding. ' Hebroaaghtisome food, begged some firewood, caught the,fit# Women he knOw by the arm, and draare4 her With him; and when the widowed soldier, ha,tauf and heavy-eyed, opened his door with his arm full of ship-yard chip, be found a fire blazing on the earth, a pot simmering over it, the pale-faced children nestling in its blaze, and the Deacon doling out to them very small mouthfuls of very dry bread, bidding them be careful to eat slow, and masticate thoroughly"—a - direction which resulted mainly in opening theirl ! sunken eyes till they looked like four dvrtif spectres. A few questions identified the present helper with the friend of the slimy night. Little Mora, indeed, had whispered twenty times that it weals). A taw words explained the misery of the English man. • The galas of the shirts for their cms, the ne cessity of paying their rent with John's starnutga— for while the wife was sick they conkl not more; the last disappointment at Moth= Small's; the short and shorter allowance of food, dwindiingto nothing, his 00111011111 l 1011111114100 fiwnearly forty.eiddit tours by the triplet demb l berl, which had takewlaway even theiragumut of a*eld'und the semhbanco Of a fire —theactiriatm.arrnt seen told. As the Inaband and further clamed hit sordanchci.' ly tale - hei ;reek tienitrtii• the drawer, laud brought to the Deacon the remenent of flannel and the price of wiadite - bad teed; telliagliim what: p. - Ims. The wags from his Oak PlateuktiLlite labia ,with,therpihcber of milk and le loaf of bread, and dropping from his tapas model be had been cut ting with his jack-lh.n:fis. ; 'Great GodUind• you base , tsten Waning with this mom ititheliaseri vis firer rid dito quietly: ' ~ , i neweet. Amnon,: theworoionable 11u1.wea booffiregen owned by MG Snell-wee flinnidedeg 'en ile nario Tuttelieritrii , 111011410Wbli10 , ie malediction helf-wey up* Itoeben's tononoi tam: okind/ DawaVAiles, illrallC*;;; 10 "e 4 * 4'4 4 i**0 1 °, 81 1 1 "4. wlieroboy bilieged; Viiemile-doeu!lbsiuggatikAi lieepAgreer inneedier; bet ineeendy cone the la? thral* aw er h !, ; lon"sity 4 1 iSe;„: ll oibiliii;i"l': , ' l 4,•atr ii° : B4a i l t4 e . kf!akinte, i dtek,pdfe, and Wieedn Widt: tindded OS: l 4tt 1440* hip *AO; 6*ll i 144#1111° Ingsm in godist. tiosaibliv .114601 whet stare miiedidinekiriibeiew, motto pet *it **lgralte.• ''' s I tiosiklorii•s*ifeb , io":*!-';‘4, 4 :# 4.1 : 4 4.; AstbptilitamaissiolvZill,llol4: , * , *o l 4.l vposaprilstiOkei • - res:the 4110-ladiNtiViielliii--; 9Ektifir.4 '.7::rye '4Y t~: ;.; 't ME MB EMI Man - • ... ben stood in IthaVdwalling 'a - - . •might mere/ hair. bas i been visbni b Delft; Mid .. -be'bol asked a „kw kind questities el the maws' -Wife -"ra seam suites, or been' *Wing to rake h neighbor's emu ranee that .a peoe Man:Might be meestli-sa. same meets, *odd have takeit'in • ' motieut bad -11 country merchant been the customer: - - On the WI; the only-testing place, wore the two coffins; !Margie one, be trawl' features of - ma tber arid babe; from thi °Uteri the 'anteseyes of little Kate, spoke`of _woes that few know cati earth. The other chiklren,.deceatly clad, bet Win ideast and pinched from theteold and famine they bad goonthroogh; sat open's beach by the bedside--the fartlier - bad goes for thirefergyman: - - -•-,- • - Reuben, whoeeleatt vratra kindmoe f felt loan gely trotibled; as he looked , upon the's feebly -of starratioor-st thing as had' always. thonttt mg said, unknown ureincirmati; whew all is emboli. dant and so cheap.* ' He turned to the' Descie, and asked the-particulareof the seenehtswitnemetl. "Father,'A said the old mart, "soldier; roan of prosperity ;ruined uo work; knew nobody; proud, honest; wouldn't ask, sonnet die." "A soldier," said:Reds*, "did I ever see hind" "Be in presently"" and. eomethieglikeilswereil silent Lauer shook- the•Descon's Weald.. The , M' went-on; "Wihs sewed; boy in .bagging , facto?; never tan in debt ;no debts, no debts ; wife sick; Huts girl sick I*.C4 Whet fewee*-Ateitheit Brew.gm easy—"all day, all night; cooked; nursed; sewed. Was cheated Sld'Statuf„clothesztal,: yell butter him—cheated out of ill his work and her work on seven doted red flannel sniffs." As the Deacon grew warmer, he spoke loader and more like other men. "Yes, sir," and he opened his eyes on the Main street dealer, whose gaze was now, on the still coffins, now on the liollow sleeted children, I t "the.making of seven do=es red flannel shirts ere they cheated out of." Th e Ted of the flannel ed reflected in the cheeks of Reuben . 4 Thert ' began to mania." confined the spaker ":11tee,, ick felt it most; they sold all to the bed, iit".4lpo , tof Wellivon, that sword, which this man has Used under the eye of Wellington. More work w$ of. feted; a rare material was needed; the only ellizt— hear me, Reuben—for Ruben bad risen and gene to the window—"the only man who had that 'mate rial would not trust him ; though he offered et. best reference." : -.. '-cruel wretch," cried Mrs. Small. "Yes, cruel" mill her uncle, "Mail his thoueti lessnesv, "trough his theoty that charity was nct to be given brimming, by loaning, in the • way of business at the coendneetuse." , . !Um] did they darter' cried Itenben,:\ turning, with tears running down his cheeks, alter a fashicin that made his wire admire him more than ever.— "Did they indeed starve?" . ' , They had monkfin the house," continued the Deacon," but it was -not ttteir , they would not use it, they lived on corn meal; they' picked up :bones and boiled them; but alining tatituch taiga titled up the mother's milk; the child died, the mother's heart sank, broke; she could eat nothing they could could buy with the few cents they earned now and then, het stomach rejected it—she died; the little girl, with the quinsy, had no medicine, no food, no warmth, no mother, and she diet, too. `•You may say yourself, Reuben, .if they starved or not" "And I am their murderer," zried the conscience stricken man, praising his boAtead against the wall, as if to cash-the thought that haunted him. "No, Reuben," Bail the old man; kindly, "you are not their murderer; but neither • are you what you might have been—their saviour. God put it in your power to sane them, but you did nd dream that a colleting tooth, hm chub selling; might be made.the field aura the media otsuch wonders.— You had not learned that the bed sphere of charity is our diily walk' in life" • Just then the father and the minister came in ; the neighbors gathered; the service•pmeeeded ; the broken beaded family gathered around the coffins, and ga'e the lad look; but their hearts, as•maeh as they suffered, die not suffer as his did that day, when the clads fell tm the victims of want, for their mencierdes were =Clouded. *Lan oar readlets phonid think with him. we would say that one caw, nt icaa.haoaccuried in Cincinnail this yearoa which both paseita hail , *tamed ati death; they wren Ensisr. and ittiliceveval chikkien. , Ckw wiry is, ni all to *arms. chiwarn Goui acts arnica our Inanwirdvs. Anacticrrc or' Da. Bancturaltev. Dr. Lyman Beecher, as he manning hansoms night, canyin a volude el an encyclopedia' under his arm saw* animal standing in lasi path: The doctor knew. that ii was a *balk , b B 4. ' o e 4 7iaEltklaao7 hurled the at him. Whereupon the skunk opened. Webster? void" a return fire io veldt, direc ted tfiat dielOctoeirisidadite - Kt*. Whin , he his:'Ocidatonkf:aanai: ly come near HMelmhes woo io infected that Ants, ob itedialany them. Some tientither•AhlarAnstof Dr. Be ! nbeek euemies pgd a path Olia 111. 4 very abusi y o liskY.744o:,*Pol. a .baak•and , put•him - rluelr .rYikuti atio. one of his advisers. "I have learned better," said to mahatma a=s in kakauk, and I acres mean to Ity , the tmemitaentlaiptia." 110 . w ecoLassLoss.-7,4 'Ventlige as sierp , lObo has presolted some 25 rim Wilts mai place be ing "asked iihat fh(efest or imiticipt te9441 ig:l44aaili;llol4oool4'33 4 ifl 16413.0 d keep : c 41 • 1410 -iAitaikii . MK. :W . kit , %eat M yren, saidAs reply dieioo7o i How: kW." ict hive slirsis • Wimort trod` sad obliging; hare neser trairlted"-aiihtliyai ilaifflo44-,a 6 4 l POb'le fistilf)! bpd thins , andblY,-newec !),6111,k4'1,10 Hon flitrits/A:wrilot ii Nitiomd)Owei.' geociiimentiont the invent* of floom It%a*-by; 1111 . 0111 41 4 .. 1 40m oolil 14 2 040 0 ,; !in, sl l .oreaq: 11 4 1 (4Alitiliknix 1 ra I ° ,44 *. l "hif WY* miles41. 1 4(" 1 141 1 f,10 411 *. „4•1 1 ,. - Ai' tell soidikt *PI cithimellari#l l i"•;l-iii• i iiitiots*tafee. .- . . iIIEME IBM MEII .3- Ktr= trr thetimmedigi iffittibothood , y 1 bis hiber's new seeletiang, on (hi rim :-ad renterer,,..named Bryan,, seem sew and piented himself nem tissifiliklargai 111110:041 on we side bye. krrely inesarsin siasseni neer whiebtad :been der *aim Moira irion4 ditty young apnclemeni. 011 , a emtlinfweesing, 8008 vagrgeka Inead,torneetium at &alarm Fat the pinup, of enga;nnikinlo 4 / 1 114 •7- Ail. gal wild sport, one of thwpattiorsassally: Ownegh the forest; with a pine torch borne on high, which shedding a giallo' g liewibrongb the gloomy pm so _dazdes the ayes of deer, tit ibiligiker orb* k an-tai, abootsibe gamstberwews the eyna, Mb& thwbesildwe4 *Opal jar Booreacompanien was bear, !he lamb, llilyrat,earal-ao the Aerd sum! gnineolthe IMO Ther haik..not IgeFewl ed fat, whoa &Now gills. eancerled, signal to Th , hossonorn _ooso► and- weikid InomentarY ImPlotadolPlCltrarios the sharp and ishitnnenterble hind's fit* NO hearing &mewl% be:llWiera big ..bag Slcar. lain the cause gibe assmeranted 1000 jo ma* *Nikhieed t lbm hi* tialls set _gad, amuse shadiraraie4 evecimikaall:Oriotrinacir • _ Whoa Boon gavellas irigmmt,, hOody , he-lo? deed Mew die - awns of the tacit reffeete . d .by a pair - oaf brilliant eye*, milt. immediately , mho& ' his gun mad bron i ih;•itru•hisoye; brit instead:of stand, ingsitipified at the light, to be abut el, f the auppu. edl fawnleheekti , preeititstely,actl i tied... During this onesal Imovermeol,,iloonasegiCe glimpse- of the-flowing Ws of a 'OrKtiotatt, :finial,' .hill ritkr and made ishassafter his gitems..,Solsgemms Uri beenitis Weasel in the persekthek be vim _link) lesemartnised them thit siter_,Forighhor *mob wheel° found himself sourdiog in the doorway, haying driven the object otitis oboe into• the!. pa• teroal arras. Boon's embar:assment and aqui" may nay be imagined, who he saw - the cieutunnation of die- Wow,. and the panting terror of his bsautifwtdaagh• ter, Who ha, scarcely tamed her sistiemehastainer, and whose lustrous ringlets werellyingaboot her face,.neek and paltitding bosom, ie. the lir.hast contrast of light and shale. • , • Strange as it may appear ofour hardy ltekwoos man, he became agitated in his turni, with all the stern and mood qualities of his mitunr,, heves ie. Juin captive by antaidon'sehaans.. And what was - so be! seangs, ; the blushing Hebei-who Lend euu into her father's arms, deelsringthe abs Ares. per seedily-a panther, now perceived that helms not whit frightful animal as her first impreosiou in the dark }ladled tier to loppoie. • indeed, Boon was at this timeless is the first .0024 of yonthlul ,rigor; his person 'straight and. well'propontoned, and -the whale appearance of the. Manykesenting,soch ehroWto the eye of the ansophiaticated girl, usher imagination VW likely to create - for itself in -that remote and seehaled scene—in short, they loved Tonality, and Miss RebeNa Bryan in a very short Bute. beacTie Mrs. 'Boon. The Committe on ploughing, at the late exhibi bidets of Onondaga Co. Agricultural Society, New Tait, laid down the following rules. Ia tegpUd to me first rule, ire think the agora 'of the- subsoil shook' be regarded in deciding on the depth of the funuw.—kbough six inches may -fie shallow enough for any soil. la cases where the subsoil is rich lathe sabot:ince which constitutes - the food ofplents, there is ofteugreat advantage in brircing,tbe loiter- earth to the surface, where by action of air, bestiary., Me-. becomes a manure ; but where .the elements of fer tility are to be added to the soil--that is, when the richness does not' naturally exist, bat is applied— wesre in fas Our of less lepth of !:crow, thougli.we Would loosen aid stir the earth ss much u practi 9tble) with the subsoil plough. • "Fire*. kbe ground all should be:llkonlked and is no caseless than eixiitches deep. .:The fertility of the soil sill lag greatly lease used to twelve inches, and a greater depth is desirable.. "Secondly, The"furrows" should be erellterned, and redo ibis, the "width"-of : the furrow she' *Must be, 4 except in the summer following, graduated to the depth of the forrow. lithe farrow: is too deep toitrae breadth cut, the slice will stand. edgewise. lf.the slice • is too wide for the depth of the furrow “balk" will be left on which nothing oughetoto expected to grow, and if the next hwrow is proper -Ij- ploughed, a hole will be were the presk ingfuriow Was hit Tiroperiftunted. 6 / 111 Y.4 1 Y? . !0" "due, , of will 'permit, the furrow sihoold be . u stfulguts" !'l6l the work marked may be more easily perksitetal, and have a more wortaniiilike Nips 'ltarancethalitother. wise would have. 4 - giFourthly, w i re the:eratif 'fad sandy, the fiat know it host r es it-4one the ,soil more com pact, antl lesslikely 101 Z inieredfly , the drought. If the soil iiifillantkinelliiingle eleii the furrow is best ill3frat in engle ( ef*Y.five; degrees, be.: cause the harrow will meet riffectually operate on the surface; and . milli Mehl Arnow *.' . small chan nel will be left, echich 7 sgliiiist ie disposing of the surplus water which-mai Dili ipon timothy., mad yam:NW *OW: more tome and. friable.'" • ; • ..4*.7tr. 17). xo'pgricF,l-9!!!"4". mh tie ath elia, pg*, . 1 of ligoi~y .1M,,41,.,7. -111,"" ' ' thie f! dracjinr : dot half the Olin* 01 11.0 *; • • a timi lilt caw ISE SODI .T !WAR my lagetitknemed )4';lOAdiair - ,S)I I tOriAn.YAIMI4I of es:booms of soda to amilifposod of` mead 'coffee. imOriimk4 ll o ll4oB )41:171110.4.WOO*Ofiai;iiiqield ' e i Vai s faid, st i lmithgonvf I' • Min MSS 42in== Roles hr MOW.