C VOLMEIii Zo TOWANDA tton t sbap morning, %ngiust 8, 1841 (For the Bradford Rerorter.) fragments from a Paltfalio.—Na, YOUTH. • Ab, happy day s' Who would not wish again to be a boy —Ett-aosr As the loveliest time in the course of the year is when gentle spring is verging into-balmy summer, so the happiest period in life is when qilhood and manhood are blended together in joyous youth.— The mind, then, rising above the frivolousness of infancy, begins to think for itself, and act from the impulse of its own reason ; and the heart, yet re taming much of the purity and innocence of chili hood, feels expanding within itself those energies and capacites`which belong to maturer years; but is as yet, unacquainted with cares that ine% itably await them, The dawning of the intellect, and those manly virtues which are to give a hue to to. lure life, sheds a cheering influence around like the first light of morning; and the artless expression which yet lends its fascination to the cou,ntenance, is like - the star that lingers in the western heavens after the breaking of day. How swiftly the bright hours fly away at this joy ous period of life! MI nature seems to wear a look of gladness, chiming with the happy feelings of the heart; and pleasures are ever presenting themselves to view. But this season is not lasting. Ripening man hood brings with it anxieties which serve to _trepress the flow of gladness, and to break the sweet spell which youths bright dreams have woven. But when the summer time of life has passed, and the autumn of age comes nn, with what gratification Jo we look back upon those felicities of our early years.— This is one of the few pleasures of which the dark est hours of misfortune and soriow cannot deprive us, and which the tide of time only serves to bright en. When wearied with the world's-never ceasing tumult, and sickened with its anxieties and troub les. the thoughts to seek relief, turn and banquet, unsated, upon the pleasures of youth, and the rec ollections of by-gone years. In fancy, we again press the hand and lips of companions long since a their quiet graves. Again we listen to the sweet tones of a sister, or the tender words of a once-luv. ed.mother. Is there any one who has not at some time, in sunlight, or in sleep, returned to scenes of youthful jo,s; and who does not love to indulge in those dear recollections—though they may start the em= passioned tear? There can be no one. The ann oy spots which have been passed through often claim a retrospective glance ;—and happy are those . whose youthful hours were da.kened by no hang ing cloud :''to such, the retrospect will make each cord in their bosom—however nearly unstrung by v. sorrow—vibrate most tenderly. Who, then, could wantonly check a happy smile, or glad, bursting laugh, as it comes fresh from the, fount of youthful feeling ? One that could must indeed be an enemy to nature. I wish that the scathing influences of the world might leave to me some of the confiding hopes of youth, and its ignorance how virtue_ and vice, joy and sorrow are ever linked together in the chain that binds mortals to earth. 7 would that, like youth, I might ever believe bright thingn what they seem ; for I had rather live in a dream of beauty, joy and affection, than awake to truth and sadness. No wonder that so many long and weary searches have been made for the tabled fountain - of youth ll . one could be always young and joyous,:this earth would be paradise enough, and mortals would not sigh so otten for some more happy state. Herrick, July 25 1849. Ross zo. - . A YANKEE BARGAIN.-Okl Squire Hopkins WB6 the perfect picture of meekness, and his stuttering seemed the effect of bashfulness rather than inher- Stant ibysical defeat. One day a neighbor came to bay a yoke 'of oxen of him. The pace was nam ed and the animals made a very satisfactory Appear- ance. • ".Are they breachy?" asked the buyer. "N•n-n-never tr-tr-t-trouble me," - was•the reply. The other paid the price and took the yoke, in a day or two he came bock in a towering passion. •` Confound these critters, Squire—there ain't no fence will keep 'em. They'd break through a stun wall, or jump over the moon. What the dickens made you tell me they wasn't breachy ?" '• 1.1 dia'nt say n-n-no such thing." "Yes you did. You said they never troubled 3•0u..' "Oh, tc-well neighbor," said the Squire, "1 d-d-don't let s-such th-ings as-as that ere trouble me." The buyer eloped EARLY-SOWN Ave may be fed with sheep orcal res during the month of 'November, with Great ben fiet to the stock, and, if the growth is large with de etded ,benefit to the crop, as a large quantity of herbage, lying on the ground in the winter, renders the crop liable to be " smothered," as it is called, especially if it is covered long with snow. No in jury results from feeding rye with sheep or light rattle, any time in winter, except when the ground in so soft. that tt would be "poached, and the roots of the rye be - broken; and there is no food better fa such animals. We have often seen a young calf or lamb so improved by grating on rye, late at the tall and early in winter, that they not only held their own when returned with the rest, but took the lead in thrill and growth. Rye is frequent. iy for the propose of being fed by stock in tie southern part of Ohio and in Kentucky. It is also the best crop for early soiling. Ti s. .and 1312 Y be cut several times before ankle is far enough advanced for the pu NEE NORT.—Memory would play a very traitor's ➢an, if she should' treasure up the ills we meet w nh upon one day of life ; to cloud all others with a dark• remembrance: = .-----•••••- ~ 1 1, , ,,,..mi1m1in.imil imilim, _ ... . . - _ _ ~.> • • • - . - r -.... r- .. - eti : .. ." --,.., ...:' 344, :-.. rtef - T ^".) . e . . .C. , A t"4-47 ', itsfirf; i.: - 2 1 -, • -`.'" ''',-.:- AMPRW...-‘?, , , t., , ,..k.1, ,, .. ', . :.-' , 1,-- . .:,1 , .. d " , 4 ,4 4000:e ... _ ' . THE . ••• . 111 R • \.•• , , •.„.. . r ".: , .1 , .. t • .., . 1 . . . . 1 REP'-' ~ ~...„. .„.„4„..1. .1...4 _v. ..,....i................._ :.„...,. ..,.... „.......Frt..,... ,t_..... . -, ~,‘,..g.4,..•= -----&-i.,- - - f-'!' ..S- ...a.. ' i ..2 c -,,*'`-` , -.-...:•ki , ' , .-47-e.: , , 1,49-, -.-.. - --. kt, , ..-..*-_-• t-", 2 t 4- :er,.-,....--.&..: .. ' . . .: . Yon may see some of the beet society in New York on the top of the Distributing Reservoir any , of these fine November morning*. There were two or three carriages in waiting, and half a dozen senatorial-looking mothers with young children, pa cing the parapet, as we basked there the other day in the sunshine—now watching the pickerel that glided along the lucid edges of the black pool with- in, and now looking off upon the scene of rich and wonderous variety that spreads alone the two rivers on either side. " They may talk of Alpheus and Arethurei," mur mured an idling sophomore, who had found his way thither during-recitation hours, "but the Cro ton in passing over an arm of the sea at Spay ten duyvil, and busting to sight again in this truncated pyramid, beats it all hollow. By George, too, the bay yonder looks as blue as ever the d'Egean Sea to Byron's eye, gazing ftom the Acropolis !—But the painted foliage on those crags!—the Greeks must have dreamed of such a vegetable phenome non in the midst of their grayish olive groves, or they never would have supplied the want of it in their landscape by embroidering their marble tem ples with gay colors. Did you see that pike break, Sir ?" " I did not." Zounds ! his silver fin flashed npoii the black Acheron, like a restless soul that hoped yet to mount from the pool." "The place 'seems suggestive of fancies to your , we observe, in reply to the rattle-pate. " It is, indeed, for I have done up a good deal of anxious thinking within a circle of a few yards, where that fib broke just now." "A singular place for meditation: the middle of the reservoir !" You look incredulous, sir, but it's a fact. A fel low can never te.l until he has tried in what situa tion his most earnest meditations may be concen trated. iam boring yon, though 7" . '• Not at all. But you seem so familiar with Ihe spot, T wish yon could tell me why that ladder lea ding down to the water is lashed against the stone work in yonder corner ?" “„That ladder,” saki the young man, brightening at the questiorit why the position, perhaps the very existence of that ladder, resulted from my meditations in the reservoir, at which you smiled just now. Shall I tell you all about them'" " Pray do." " Well, you have seen the notice forbidding any one to fish in the reservoir. Now, when I read that warning, the spirit of the thing struck me at once, as interring nothing more than that one should not sully the temperance potations of Jur citizens by steeping bait in it, of any kind ; but you probably know the, common way of taking pike with a a slip noose of delicate wire. I was determined to hare a touch at the fellows with this kind of tackle. I chose a moonlight night; and an hour before the edifice was closed to visiters, I secreted myself within the walls, determined to pass the night on the top. All went as I could wiatr it. The night proved cloudy, but it was only a variable drift of broken clouds which obscured the moon. I had a walking cane-roil with me which would reach to the margie of the water, and several feet beyond, if necessary. To this was attached the wire, about fifteen inches in length. I prowled along the parapet for a considerable time, but not a single fish could I see. The clouds made a flickering light and shade that wholly foil ed my steadfast gaze. I was convinced .that should they grow thicker, my whole night's adventure would be thrown away. Why should I not des cend the sloping wall and- get nearer on a level with the fish, for thus aldue can I hope to see one? The question had hardly shaped itself in my mind before I had one leg over the iron railing: If you look\around you will see now that there are some half dozen weeds growing here and there amid the fissures of the solid masonry!. In one of the fiss ures whence these spring I planted a foot and be gan my descent. The reservoir was fuller than it is now, and'a few strides would have carried me to the margin of the water. Holding on to the cleft above, I felt round with one foot for a place to plant it below. me. In that moment the flap of a pound pike made me look round, and the roots of the weed upon which I partially depended gave way, as I was in the act of turning. Sir, one'ssen sirs are sbapcned in deadly peril; as I live now, I distinctly heard the bells of Trinity chiming mid night as I rose to the surface the next instant, im mersed in the stone cauldron, where I must swim for my life. Heaven only could tell how long! I am a capital swimmer; and this, naturally, gave me a degree of self-possess / ion. Falling as I bad, I of course had pitched out some distance from the sloping parapet. • A few strokes brought me to the edge. really was not certain but that I could clamber ap the face of the wall anywhere. I hop ed that I could. I felt certain at least. there was some spot where I might get hold with my hands, even if I did not ultimately ascend it. I tried the nearest spot. The inclination of the wall was so vertical, thatit did not even rest me to lean against it. I felt with my hands and my feet. Surely, I thought, there must be some leisure like those- in - which that ill-omened weed had found a place for its root !—There was none. My fingers became sore in busying themselves with the harsh and in hospitable atones. My feet slipped from the smeoth and slimy masonry benea h the water; and several times my face came in rude contact with the wall, when my foothold gave way .4 the instant that seemed to have found some ditainutive rockycleet upon which I could stay 4r y self Sir, did you ever see a rat drowned in a , ' f.filled hogshead! how he swims round and • 4; and after vainly trying the sides again an in with hia pawa, fixes his eyes upon the u rim, as if he would look him self out ery prison. I thought of the mis erable vier I %Might Or him - as I bora= watch. POLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA,,BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH'. From the-Literary World The in is lie Reservoir. IF CHARLES FENNO HOFFMAN ed thus his dying agonies, when a cruel urchin of eight cr ten. Boys are horribly cruel, sir; boys, women and, savages. All childlike things are cm. el : cruel front want of thought, and from perverse ingenuity, although by instinct each of these is so tender. You may not haie observed it, but a sav age bas tender to its own young as a boy is to a favorite puppy-- the same boy that will torture a kitten out of existence. I thought then, I say, of the rat drowning in a half filled cask of vrater,lual lifting his gaze out of the vessel as he grew more and more desperate, and I flung myself on my back, and floating thus, my eyes Upon the face of the moon. " The moon is well enough in her way, how ever you may look at her; bat her appearance is, to say the least of it, peculiar to a trian fr ing on Lis back in the centre of stone tank, wk dead wall of some fifteen or twenty feet tieing quarely on every side of him. (The young man smiled bitterly as ho said this, and shuddereclonce or twice before be went on, musingly !) The hue time I had noted the planet with any emotion she was on the wane. Mary was with me : I had brought her out here one momingio look at the top of the Reser voir. She said little of the scene, but as we talked of our old axd childish loves, I saw that its fresh features were incorporating themselves with ten der memories of the past, and I wascontent. There was a rich golden haze upon the landscape, and as my own spirits rose amid the voluptuous atmos phere, she pointed to the waning planet, discerni ble like a faint gash in the welkin, and wondered how long it would be before the leaves would fall I Strange girl! did she mean to "rebuke my joyous mood, as if we had no right to be happy while Na ture, withering in her pomp, and-the sickly moon wasting in the blaze of noontide, were there to re mind us of the gone-forever! " They will all re new themselves, dear Mary," said 1, encouraging ly ; and there is one that will ever keep tryste alike with thee and Nature through all. seasons, if tbou wilt but be true to one of us, and sremain as now a child of Nature ! A tear sprang to her eye, and then searching her pocket for her card-case, she remem bered an engagem ) ent to be present at Miss Law son's opening of Fall bonnets, at two o'clock And yet, dear wild, wayward Mary, I Thought of her now ! You have probably• outlived this sort of thing, sir; but 1, looking at the moon, as I floated upturned to her yellow light, thought of the loved being whose tears I knew would flow when she heard of my singular late, at once so grotesque, yet melancholy to awfulness. And how often we have talked, too, of that Carian shepherd who spent his damp nights upon the bills, gazing, as I do, en the lustrous planet ! Who will revel with her amid those ota superstitions? Who from our own unlegended woods will envoke their yet undetected, haunting spirits! Who peer with her in prying scrutiny into Nature's laws, and challenge the whispers of Poe try from the voiceless throat of Matter I Who laugh merrily over the eupid guesswork of pedants, that never mingle,with the infinitude of Nature, though love exhaustless and all-embracing, as we have! Poor girl, she will be cornpanionless ! Alas! companionlese forever—we in the exciting stages of some brisk filtration. She will live hereafter by feeding other harts with love's lore she has learned from me; and then, Pygmalion-like, grow fond of the images she has herself endowed with semblance of divinity, until they seem to breathe back the mystery the soul can truly catch from only one. "How anxious she will be lest the - Coroner shall have discovered any of her notes in my pocket! ".1 telt chilly as the last reflection crossed my mind, partly at the thought of the Coroner, partly at the idea of Mary being unwillingly compelled to wear mourning for me, in case of such a disclosure of our engagement. It is a provoking,thing for a girl of nineteen to have to go into mobming for a deceafed lover at the beginning of her second Win ter in the Metropolis "The water, though, with my motionless posi tion, must have had something to do with my chil liness. I see, sir, you think that I tell my. story with great levity ; but indeed, indeed, I should grow delirious did I venture to bold steadily to the aw fulness of my feelings the greater part of night. I think indeed I must have been most of the time hysterical with horror, for the vibrating emotions I have recapitulated did pas§ through my brain even as I have detailed them. But as 1 now became calm in thought, I summoned up again some reso lution of action. ,I will begin at that' corner (said I,) and swim roubd the whole enclosure. I will swim slowly, and again feel the sides of the tank with my feet. 'idle I must, let me perish at least from well-directed though exhausting efiort, not sink from more boodess weariness in sustaining myself till the morning shall bring relieL The sides of the place seemed to grow higher as I now kept my watery comae between them. It was not alto gether a dead pull. I had somevariely of emotion in making my circuit. When I swam in the shad ow, it -locked to me more cheerful beyond in the moonlight. When I swam in the moonlat, I had the hope of making some discovery when I should again reach the shadow. I turned several times on my back to red just where those wavy lines would meet. The stars looked viciously bright to me from the bottom of that wall; there was such a company of them ; they were_so glad in. their las- Woos revelry; and had such space to move in. I was alone, sad to despair, in a strange element, prisoned, and a solitary gazer upon their mocking chorus. And yet there was noting else with which I could communion ! I tuni si ed upon my breast and struck out almost frantically, once more The stars were forgotten, the moos, the very world of,which I as yet formed a pert—my poor Mary herself was forgotten. I thought only of the strong man there perishing; of ma in my_lesty Manhood, in the sharp vigor of my dawning pesos, with fac ulties illimitable, with senses all steel, berms there with physical obstacles Which men lkus wool' had through together ki iftr ;rotdoing. 'Trio lroedtlltl 'could never have wined di/ thing. I could nailed ItICIAIRDirsx or orsiniCIATION mom ANT CWASzNa.. " I would not perish thus; and I grew strong in inso. lance of self-trust. I laughed aloud as I dashed the sluggish water from side to aide. Then came an emotion of pity for myself—wild, wild regret ; of sorrow, oh, infinite, for n fate 'so desolate; a doom so' dreary, so bean-sickening. You may laugh at the contradiction if you will, sir, but I felt that I could sacrifice my own life on the ir.suint to redeem another fellow creature from such a place of horror, from an end . so - piteous. My KT' and my vital spirit seemed in that desperate moment to be sep arating; while one, in parting, grieved over the deplorable fate of the other. " And then I prayed I" " I prayed--why or wherefore Ino not. ft was not from tear—it could not have been in hope.— The days of miracle are passed, and there was no ,natural law by whose Providential interposition I. could be saved. I did not pray : it prayed of itself, -my soul within me. 4 4 Was the calmness that I now felt torpidity!— the torpidity that precedes dissolution to the strong swimmer, who, sinking from exhaustion, must add a bubble to the wave as he suffocates beneath the element which now denied his mastery! If it were:so; how fortunate was it that my floating rod at that moment attracted my attention, as it dashed . through the water 13) me. I saw on the instant that a fish had entangled himself in the wire ntrose.- The rod qnivered, plunged, and came to the sur face, and rippled the water as it shot in arrowy flight from aide to side of the tank. Atlara, driven toward the south-east corner of the reservoir, the small end seemed to have. got foul somewhere.— The brazen butt,which, every time the fish sound. ed, was thrown up to the moon, now sank by its own, weight, showing that the other end must be fast. Bat the cornered fish, evidently anchored somewhere by that short wire, floundered several times to the surface before I thought of striking out to the spot. "The water is low and tolerably clear. Toni may see the very ledge there, sir, in yonder corner,l on which the small end of my rod rested when II secured that pike with my hands. I did not take' him from the slip-noose, however; but standing upon the ledge, handled the rod in a workman-like manner, as I flung that pound pickerel over the iron railing upon the top of the parapet. The rod, as I have told you, barely reached from the railing to the water. It was a heavy, strong brass rod which I had borrowed in the Spirit of the Times office ; and when I discovered that the fish at the end of the wire made a strong enough knot to prevent me from drawing my tackle away from this railing around which it twined itself as 1 threw, why, as you can at once see, I had but little difficulty in making my waPtip the face of the wall with such assistance. The ladder which attracted your no tice is, as you see lashod to the iron railing in the indeutical spot where I thus made my escape ; and for fear of similar accidents, they have placed an other one in the corresponding corner of the other compartment of the tank ever since my remarka. ble night's adventure in the reservoir." We give the above iirrdar relation verbatim as heard from the lips of our chance acquaintance; and though strongly tempted to " work it up" atter the fantastic style of a famous German namesake, prefer that the reader should have it in its Ameri can simplicity. Taotrr Ftsnren.—We have a friend who is a somewhat noted practical joker, residing in a pleas ant country• residence near the ocean. Some time since he had a visit from Professor—, of poetic memory. The Professor is a keen trout fisherman, and seeing a large pond at some distance from IL's residence, he inquired— " Can you fish for trout, in that pond !" "Oh, yes," said B, "as well as not." Possible !—where's yonr rod !" " I have none ; I'm no fisherman. But if you want to try, we'll go over to S—, and get tackle, and yqi may try your hand at it to-morrow " it was thereupon agreed to so, and the day was passed by the worthy Professor in preparatiousfor angling. The next morning early, R. drove him over to the pond, and he whipped it all round to windward and leeward, and finally walked in up to hie waist, and threw his flies most skilfully, but never raised a fin. At length, as the sun grew intolerably hot he turned to R., who lay under a tree solacing him self with a book and cigar, and exclaimed— " I don't believe there is a trout in your pond." " I don't know that there is," replied R., imper tnrbably. " Why, yoq told me there was." " Oh, no," said R., leisure' ly turning and lighting another cigar, " you asked me if you could fish for trout here, and I said you could as well as not. I've sees folks do it olien, but 1 never knew of one be. ing caught hem." The result might be anticipated, R. walked home, and the Professor drove the horses; nor did 11. ven ture within reach of the Protemor's rod until after dinner.--Jourard of Commerce. "Napoleon Alexis Dobbs, come up here, and say your lesson. What makes boys grow ?" It is the pin, air." "Why do not men grow !" " Because they carry an umbrella, which keeps oil the; rain." What makes a young man and woman fall in love 7" " Because one of them has a heart of steel, and 'lather ha* a heart of Sint, and when they comes togldher, they strike fire and that is love." To klsre Yeasre—ito two middlingsized boiled peens, add s pint o 1 boring weer and two table spoonfuls of Wawa saga. One pint of bet water should 6s. appttad:en veer? half plot of the weer Pound. Hot water is better in warm weather. This ids; being made without flour, will keep l o ser, 'and is said to iirimie:h tett& than any ' pre ibuily in use. =ME • ThewWs N Labor. - Who can estimate the value of labor"! Go, ye wine-bibbers, gluttons, idlers, ye Any men and women of this world; go to the humble conagriof the laboring class and witness their contentment and cheerfulness, their good health and virtuous tile, and learn a lesson if you will. Go, too, ye city idlers, ye men who are too proud to be seen even with gloves on, sawing a stick of wood ; ye women, lovers of fineries and fashions, who tray long prayers in the morning, and yet are too proud tomake a loaf of bread; go, we say, lxd learn wis dom of the humble country people who obey daily the injunction, Man must work. We are proud and thankful that we have parents who taught us early the importarteer of labor; a father, who labors annually as many weeks and days as there are in the year; and who rises early, lives frugally, and attends personally to his own shins, and who is as indust.ious and honest a man as can elsewhere be found; a mother, too, we have, who loves her children too well to trust them to hirelings, who cannot have that sympathy for them that a parent should have—an interest which none but a mother feels. Even in the matter of preparing food, can we reasonably expect a hired person will feel a proper interest in making it of the best'poesible quality for husband and children! No; mine but a wife or a mother , can feel that in terest. She must at least oversee the matter her self. So it bas \ been with our mother from the day of her marriage' up ; and she has given birth to, and raised eleven children, six sons and five daughters, all enjoying good health. Did she ever dance Polkas and Waltz? Not one whit; she was married almost too young for that; and if she, had not been,. her parents were too sensible to en courage or allow such foolish practices. Is she thought anything the less of fur not knowing how to dance! Find if you can a mother of eleven children, who has read the Bible more, who under stands it better, or one who is more kind and at tentive to the poor and the sick, or who has a bet ter, or one who is More kind and attentive to the poor and the sick, or who has a better name among all who know her—we should be glad to see such a one, if such can be found. But to get back to our subject. Every person who is able, of whatever age or sex, 'should en gage habitually and uaily in some kind of work.— lf, possible, every man, woman and child should actually till the ground—enough at least to raise their own bread out of it. Oh; ye idlers with dys pepsia, gout and rheumatism, ye know not the blessings, the pleasure of this ! No one who has health and can possibly get at the face of the earth, should lose the opportunity of digging it, and rais ing corn and wheat, flowers and fruit. Tt would seem that nothing short of work eould make him contented with life. A bird cannot be happy if he is . not allowed to fly and sing, nor can a man or woman be really contented and happy without an opportunity of tilling our mother earth. " But it is unfashionable to work," says one. P is fashionable, very fashionable, we know, to be lazy—above work. It is fashionable to make labor half-starved and naked often, and everywhere greatly overlooked. Let then, all the fashionable people go on as they best can without work; they are welcome to the,ir reward, which' is sure to come. Observe, too the dignity of labor !• is it not to improve and beautify our mother earth, in whose bosom all must at last repose ! Who would not "deck her universal face in pleasant green?" Labor, too, in arts and mechanics is noble, honora ble useful and often beautiful but followed ex. elusively, it is neither so sa•isfying or healthful as labor oo the sod. -Every mechanic and artisan should, if possible, practice it a great pad of the lime. And this kind of labor is also more certain to pay. The mechanic must trust more to men; the farmer to God. There is one very unpleasant thing about labor as practiced at the present day. It is almost every where overlooked. Very generally it is the case that labor does the work, and wealth gets the pay. Irishmen do the hard di.ming; rich railroad corn. panies get the money. If every man and woman would work a little, I moderately, and just enough . for health, work enough would be done and no one would have to work much, nor could ickness hardly find a plaCe among workers. Work is one of the greatest things in the world to cure people with. Little more would be needed with the great majority of pa- tients than to get them into a regular system of labor.. To be sure there are hard cases enough that cannot be cured, but not without work. How hydra-headed dyspepsia is driven off if we can get a man long enough to hew and split wood, and dig the ground. If he be weak; he Must not go fast; if he feels i little worse at . first, let him go on and persevere. Then he-Will come out right in the end. What an appetite, too, will he have; and how sound will be his sleep at night. If with other good habits, he labors, he will not long be troubled with dreams and nightmares, and:he will understand to a demonstration, that "hunger is the best sauce." Bizzicas birmarzs.—One of the curioushies of Mexico, is the manner of selling milk, hum* of the neat white wooden vessel, of the spouted tin can, with the different measures hung upon it, and the rattling bell cart, or an old home-spun negro, packing it about on his crowned head, we have the animals themselves driven. from door to door of the different regular cuAomers where they'antt Rifled at a regalet . stand where transient patrons are sup plied by milking it in:rithe vessels in which they take. it home. Besides a drove of eows, with the cakes all muzzled, tanning ane bleating atier them than is also a peg of goatssesi asses driven aloft so that people may suit themeless - asp cud. icy itad price If' ilea, their illotoot lag*, for which there is no aecsaati4 Thicriejilehli one ativotltage ; tire•riiillt that in thus sold is milk. KNOWLEDOE.-4 en have made.sw ,and pan.; " — tools none to destroy each other, because . thef,..beeti imagined that brute force is the strong's! to' prevent aggression, dud erithe. 'They have, fought with their hands and shed eatholbeestieect because they have not been' acqriainted wiith their` moral contributions, and the potent, ialnenco me : which ideas and kindness have ih stibAtlft Mir goferaing each other. ignorant of the lime their nature, and superioray of mental Over physi; cal power In the government of the pitialites r an4 the subjugation's of . the will, - they have talon other's lives instead of making each other happy. - Let ignorance be removed by knowledge; lit the' understanding be enlightened, and the strpeitli al; tributes of the soul unfolded, and the berhsuois practice of trying to establish justice by =aid power, and enforcing obedience at the pries* lig' will cease to eAist. Ignorance is thS Meth., df /SE Let the mother be-renewed and the child iiilitheit follow. Ignonnice is the scourg that frame the' world; it paralyzes everything in man, his heart' and his intellect; it closes Op the *ey of Virtue bj concealing it from his views; by leaving hika in: acquainted with his duties and with his means of happiness. knowledge, on the other - hand, isithe greatest blessing 'which can be 'bestowed on socie ty, and will raise society to a position becoining its dignity and help to realize its appointed destroy -= The only royal road to happiness is knowledge— which enables a man to know who and what ..he is physicallY, and bowjtis physical nature should be regulated to realize health and longevity, and how it should be subordinated to the higher purpo ses of his spiritual being : that knowledge whielf opens springs of pleasure from every portion of the eternal world—from the insect, the rude iliffh, the flower, the star, from man, and all the chain of or ganized crewures—that knowledge which-enableif him to look outward on the vast universe, its at; tractions, revolutions, and mysteries; or inwardly into the immeasurable depths of his own conscious. ness, its capacities of hoping, doubting, aspiring; and imagining. SPLITTINc TUt DirrratEacr.—A nice young gen.: tleman, not a tlifiusand miles from after ofin* and assidous courtship, found himself, one bright evening, the betrothed of a pretty gill, the 'err pink of modesty. One night he was about to takif his departure, and aiier lingerifig about the door for some time in a fidget of anxiety declared and pen , ' tested to Miss Nancy, that he could not Ind woad not leave, untilfste kissed him. Of coarse, Miss Nancy blushed's: beautifully red, and protested in turn that she could not and.stonld trot do that. Shat never AO done such a thing, and nen& iiould Un til she was married—au rim he had it. The at tercation and debate becarne deep mid eieittng, until the betrothed buffed mitrigia, and deelared if he couldn't kiss her he couldn't have her—and Asa marching off.. She watched him to the gate, and saw " the fat Jras in the fire," unless something was done, " come back, then," sidd she coaxingly, " fit split the difference with you—you may squeeze my hand!" Peovcavv.—They speak of po sy as a gift from divine hand. Oh! no! It is bet the drapery with which an impassioned heart alive to beauty anti exalted sentiment, decks its thoughts: The appreciation of the soul, of beauty,*goodnesa and the thousand * Harmonies - of nature, is in troth the fountain-head of all poetic inspiration. When sorrow care, distrust or any evil passion has thrown ' a cloud upon the sours awn brightness, song hushed ; or if it 'tia heard it cOmea mingled with' with the wail of mourning—it speaks not the hem- - venly strains of joy, echoes of the universal andieifit of nature, but tones of disappointment, of wrillcils- - edness and woe. RcALrry.—The very rainbow hues of fancy dial have so aft delighted many hours of revery,, will 'concentrate themselves upon a phantom, ' till sd' life• like it becomes,' it can deceive even cleattial reason. But, as in nature, it needs no hurricane td' dissipate the clouds howeter densely gathered So with the gathered mists of fancy—it needs on' storm of paision, butime, alone is n 0611411 td' dispel illusions, and show their foundatiiiri'iti notirt ingress. Then all those hopes so brightly beauti- - ful, that rested on ithisioe let a bahiN•mtlttt wither'. How many such joyless lessons the heati`niest be . taught are it will learn to value everything bb the' just measures of reality. Wm.—Thou hest entered life, and cannot be as: empt from difficulties, many and preifol,:perMicut.. Pleasures and pain go hand in' band throtigh Since then, we may not avoid, it were hitter to nerve the mind to meet the ills of life, ehcf open aqua embrace all pleasures as their To quote a beautiful a Trials in liGi aretsi' the mind as rocks in the bosom of the Wetenc"-:- - Brigbterand purer doeifthe stream fall which pais": es over a rocky bed, Mhart when on clayey bolloite it quietly gide" alone witholit ftenreitess enougOtik i to cane a ripple. TB lar..ti..—;ts It Mk to wake tilitiaaditesitedi in reveries? Will converse with the Weal sated unfit the mind to enter upon life's sterner dedllley No! Such oftentimes, - on the contrary, give me ! , menta of great happiness. The pleisurea which waking dreams - shed upon the bead,' so, tar freak rendering the real in hid mere tome', fiSit: tentment, by making us readily pass - oter, atid. gard'ai petty aimoyanceig, the diecoritterlisaf experiecce ; while iina ‘ gination, ever asieliiig ttkw solid basis of truth to rest tijakii mageifise our every pleasuF o and so with many an WO: tional charm the joys that faltto our lot, Soueunr..--ICho easmot be happy alone--the dream of retirement from social life is at best, but a pleisinifaricY Which reritfOicoveir Op the real ity of gloom and lesoienni: are the.legitisnifif ofts.pring of an bolated (distend.: Knock down argurnente are aNntlimen prediN live of evil, as they become ee jfsOcel. slackike fistv