ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: QatnrDag) Itlorninn, iaiinatrt L\ 1855, JMttfrb LOVE AND TIME- Let those lament thy flight. Who find a new delight In every hour that o'er them swiftly flies ; Whose hearts are free and strong As some well-carolled song, That charms liie ear with ever fresh surprise. To wealth's stern devotee Too fast the moments flee. That gainful schemes to golden issues bring; And fame's deluded child By glory's dream beguiled, To twine his laurel wreath would stay the wing. They who have learned to bind The warm and restless mind In soft content to pleasure's rosy car, May sigh ro hold thee back, And linger on the track, That sends no lofty promise from afar. By the heart that turns To those celestial urns That with love's dew for ever flowing, Uncherised are the years No sympathy endears. When all thy flowers droop beneaifc the snow. What hnlv spell is thine To bless a holy shrine. Or wake glad echoes where no music flows 1 Why to a barren thing With senseless ardor cling, Or gardens till that never yield a rose? Yet when devotion pure Breeds courage to endure. And grace to hallow the career of time, When for another's joy Thy moments we employ. Like, clouds by sunbeams lit, they grow sublime. The tender, true and brave, Disdain a gift to save In which soul only claims a weary part; Nor would thy course delay To pamper their frail clay. And life consume in tricks of soulless art. Haste, then, til! Thou hast brought The good so fondly sought, And love's bright harvest richly waves at last! Then will I call thee mine, And hail thee as divinp, The present cherish, nor lament the past. UtisrtllatteBs. I'rom the Correspondence of the X. V. Observer. Monks or St. Bernard. The weather was threatening when we set of! from Maringy, and we had m-r.y forebotings that the dogs of St. Bernard might have to look us up, if the storm should come before we reached the hospice. A char-a-banc, a narrow carriage in which we sat, three in a line, with the tandem horses, was to convey us to the vdliage of Liddes On leaving ihe valley and crossing the river Drance. we soon commerced the ascent, by the majestic heights on either hand. A terrible taie of devasta tion and misery, of sublime fortitude and heroic courage, is told of the valley of Bagnes, where the ice had made a migh'y barrier against the descend ing waters, which accumulated so rapidly that a tunnel was cut through the frozen dam with in credible toil, when it burst through and swept madly over the country below, bearing destruction upon its bnecm. In two hours some four hundred Koines were destroyed, with thir'y-four lives, and half a million dollars worth of proper y We were four hours and a half getting up to LidJes, where we had a wretched dinner, and then mounted hordes to ride lo the summit of ihe pass. Ttie rain, which had been falling at intervals all the morning, was changed into snow as we got into colder regions The pith became rougher and more difficult, and i! was hard to believe that even the indomitable spirit of Napoleon could have car tied an army, with all the munitions of war, over such a rou'e as this. Yet the passage now is smooth and easy compared with what it was when, in 1309, he crossed the Alps. After leaving the miserable village of St. Fierre, through which a Roman Catholic procession was passing, and we had an opportunity of refusing to take off our ha's, though some of the peasants in- Is.sled on our so doing, we came up to heights were no trees and few shrubs were grow ing, flow ers sometimes would put their sweet laces up through the snow and smile on us as we passed, and I stopped to gathej them as emblems of beauty and happiness in the midst of desolation and death The most of the ttavelers on their upward way, were mnun ed on mules, but a lew were on loot, and among these was one of the monks of the dospice, who with a couple of blooming Swiss damsels. was returning to his quarters from a visit below. VVe pascd one or two oottages, and a hnujß of stone which had been built away up here tor the reception of benighted travellers, and after a •''i some journey of four hours just at sunset, we the Hospice, a large three story stone house, on the height ola mountain more than 1000 feet above the sea, the highest inhabited spot in Europe. To shelter those who are compelled to 0,0,8 formidable pass in winter, when the paths 3 e ldr ''own underneath the snow, and travellers are 1 ' anger of bemg overtaken by storma, or over- C " n ' ! fatigue and sinking in the deptha of the L 11 'i hig hospice has been founded, and sustained l9 ""timer season, as now, it is merely a large where pleasure parties are drawn by curiosity be monks and their establishments, famed ld9 world over lor its hospitality and self-denying ar 'y- The snow was falling fast as we ascend, ■he rugged pa'h, and at least six inches ol it lay be g ro , ln( | al |[ie lQ p j reach- 1 ' m 'be midst of such a storm. It gave me a picture ol the hospice when its walls and eerfy, hm s aa j ; n j sympathies are r.ceJed for exhausted pilgrim". Such were some THE BRADFORD REPORTER who arrived here this evening. Father Millard a young monk, received us at the door, and after pleasing salutations conducted us to our chambers, plainly furnished apartments wiih nocarpetson the floor, tut with good beds. The house was very cold. As the season is not far advanced, perhaps their winter fires were not kindled, and as no luel is to be had except what is brought up from below on the backs of horses, it is well for the monks to be chary of its use. Our host led us to the cham ber in which Napoleon slept when fie was here, and my young German friend occupied the same bed in which the Emperor lay. He did not tell me in the morning that his dreams were any better than mine, though I had but a humble pilgrim's. After we had taken possession of our quariers, we were at liberty to survey the eslablishmeut We began at the kitchen, where a small army of servan's were preparing dinner over immense cooking stoves. The house is fitted up to lodge seventy guests, but often times a hundred and even five hundred have been known to be here at one time. To get dinner for such a host, in a house so many miles above the rest of the world is no small affair. We came up io die Cabinet, enriched with [ a thousand curious objects of nature and art, many of them presented by travelers, grateful for kind ness they had received, and some of them relics of the old Romans who once had a temple to Jupiter on this spot. The reception room, which was alo a sitting and dining room, was now rapidly filling up with travellers, arriving at nightfall One Eng lish lady, overcome with the exertion of climbing the hill on horseback, sank upon the floor and faint- ' ed as soon as she was brought in. A gentleman who had bu' little more nerve in him, was also ex hausted. The kind-hearted priests ha-tened to bring restoratives, artd speedily carried off the in valids to their beds—the best place for them. It was quite late, certainly seven fri the evening be lore dinner was served, and with edged appetites, such as only mountaing climbing in snow time wc were ready a', the call. The monks wait upon their guests, girded with a napkin, tjfk ing the place of servants, and thus showing, or j making a show ofhumiiry. It was not pleasant lo my feelings to have a St. Augustine monk, in the j habit ol his order, a black cloth frock reaching to ' his leet and.buttoned with a white band around his neck and passing down in front and behind to his | girdle, now standing behind me while I was eat ing. offering to change my plate, and serving me an alacrity worth imitating by those whose business it is to wait on table. And when I said, "thank ' you. father," it was no more than the tribute of respec due to a gentleman of education am! taste, 1 whose religion had condemned to such a life as ! this. Father Millard presiJed at the table, and was 1 very conversable with the guests cheerfully im- j parting such informa'ion as was desired. Of she eight or ten monks here, riot one of them sppaks the English language but the French, Italian, and German are all in use among them. I enquir ed of Father Millard if those terrible disasters of which we formerly read so much—travellers per ishing in the snow—are of frequent occurrence.— He told me that rarely, I -think he said never, does a winter pass, without some accident of the sort Hundreds of ihe peasantry engaged in trade, or for the sake of visiting friends, will make ihepass and though the paths are marked by high poles set up in summer, these are sometimes completely buried under moun'ains of snow and the poor traveller loses his way and sinks as he would in the sea He also told rne that after his brethren reside in this cold climate for a few years, they find their health giving way, and they are obliged to retire to some other field of labor, and usually with broken constitutions. Yet there are always some who are willing at this hazard to devo'e ihe best years of their life to the noble woik of saving the lives of others. Honor to the men, whether their faith be ours or not. Our dtnner ; this being our only dinner where monks were our hosts and servants, is worth being reported. We had no printed bill ot fare ; but my young friends helped me to make out the next day as lollows: 1. Vermicelli soup. 2 Beef a la mode. 3. Potatoes. 4. Roast lamb. 5 Dessert of nu's, figs, cheese &c. This, with plenty of wine, for which the cellars of St. Bernard are famous was dinner and supper enough for any : cer'arnly we were prepared to do it justice as to a table spread in the wilderness. After dinner, the party now numbering fif'y or more assembled from the two or three refecories in the drawing-room, and the many languages spoken gave us a small idea of Babel. One of the priests took his seat at a pcor piano, sadly out ol tune, and commenced some lively airs. The two Swiss maidens who had come up with him to visit the hospice, stood one on each side of him at the piano, and sarig with great glee to his mu.-ic, and at the clo*o ol every song ihe party applauded with hearty clapping ol hands that would have pleased Mario and Grisi. I ai-ked Father Millard, who stood by me all the evenins, and with whom I formed a very pleasant acquaintance, if they had such gay times every night. He said that during the summer travel they had pleasant people who enjoyed themselves much during their brief visit. We certainly did. And at an hour later than usual, we retired to our chambers. It was so cold that I had to take my Glasgow blanket and wrap myelf well in it belore turning in but I slept soundly and was awakened by the Convent bull, before daylight calling the monies to morning prayers, 1 rt se and hastily dressing hurried to the chapel. The priests, the servant", and thirty or forty muleteers who had come wiih the travellers were on their kriees on the stone floor of a very pretty chapel, devoutly wor* shipping. None of the travellers were here j but those who entertained and served them, had left their beds belore dawn lo pray. Breakfast was not prepared lor all at once, but each person as he ws ready ealled for his cofleo and rails, and they were immediately brought. The celebrated dogs of St Benard were playing m ihe snow a* I stepped out B f cr b'eakfas'. • a PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " RESARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANT QUARTER." noble set of fellows they were, and invested with a sort of romantic nobility, when we thought of them ploding their way through diilts leading on the search lor lost travelers and carrying on their necks a basket ot bread and wine which may be as lifts to the dead. The dead come and see them. Close by the hospice i a square stone house, into which are carried the lifeless bodies of those whoperish in the snow, and are found by the dog, or on the melt, ing of the snow in the summer. They cannot dig graves on these rocky heights, and it is always so cold that the bodies do not rot, but they are placed in this charnel house just as they are foottd, and are left to dry up and gradually to turn to dust, I counted thirty skulls lying on the ground in the midst of ribs, arms and legs; and twenty skeletons were hanging around the room, a ghastly sight.— In one corner a dead mother held the bones of her dead child in her arms ; as she perished so she stood to be recognized if she might be, by anxious friends, but none had ever come to olaim her, What a tale of tender and tragic interest we read in these bor.es. Sad and sickening the sight is, and I am willing to get away. Father Millard walked with me into the chapel, showed me the paintings, artd the monument to General Dessaix, and when I asked him for the box into which alms are put, he pointed to it, and hastened away that he might not see what I put in. They make no charge for entertaining travelers; but every honest man will give at least as much in the way of a donation, as he would pay at a hotel. lMy friend, as I now call him, Father Maillard, embraced me tenderly, and even kissed me, when I bade him farewell, and mDunting my horse, set off at eight in the morning, with a bright sunshine, to descend the mountain. Itxnos. " I DID AS"THE REST DID " —This tame,yielding ' spirit—this doing "as the rest did"—has ruined j thousands. A young man is invited by vicious companions to visit the theatre, or the gambling room, or other ' haun's of licentiousness. He becomes dissipated, ; spends his time, loses his credit, squanders his property, and at last sinks inter an untimely grave. ' What ruined him? Simply •' doing what the rest did." A father has a family of son*. He is wealthy.— | Other children in the same situation of life do so and so, are indulged in these thing and that. He induges his own in the same way. They grow up idlers, triflers and fops. The father wonders why his children do not succeed better. He has spent so much money on their education, has given them great advantages ; but alas ! they are only a source ' of vexation and trouble. Poor man, he is just pay- j ing the penalty of " duin£ as the rest did." This poor mother strives hard lo bring up her daughters genteelly. They learn what others do, to paint, to sing, to play, to dance, and several oth er useful matters. In time they marry; their hus bands to suppotl their extravagance, ! and they are soon reduced to poverty and wretch edness The good woman is as'onished. " Truly," ■ says she, " I did as the rest did The sinner, following the example of oihers, puts off repentance, and negleota to prepare for death. He passes along through life, till, una wares. death strikes the fatal blow. He has no time left now to prepare. And he goes down to de struction, because ha was so foolish to " do as the rest did." A WEI.I. OITDXAED HOME."—These words are a '• home thrust" to many in practical lessons ol wisdom The relations of husband and wife, parents and children, and brothers and sisters, are all em braced within their meaning To the hushand, love, kindness, honesty, sincerity and forbearance towards the chosen partner of his life, are essential. To the wife, a loving heart, a cheeilul home; " bright fires instead of black stoves," smiles of welceme, devotion and obedience, mutual fore bearance, mutual interests, a cultivation of mutual taees, pursuits and studies, a love of the beautiful and true. To parents fixed rules of government for children, founded on justice ard mercy, whose fruit is love, recognising and strictly observing the rights of the child, as scrupulously as they demand obedience; lo cultivate order and system in all things, and a taste for the useful and beautiful, in s ead of lollies and frivolities—all these are equally essential. Provide amusements for children if you would keep them from seeking it away from home Make the house cheerful and happy and desirable, if you would have it irresisiable lo all the members of it. Discard (he austerity and cold stiffness of formality, but observe all the true arid genuine po liteness of honesty, hearty humanity, which teaches us to "do unto others, as we would that others should do urilo us" and " love one another." Such ahome should every christian family be. Then the seeds of piety, honesy, uprightness, cheerfulness, and elevated happines*, sown and nutured in the home, would spring up and grow and multiply, as ihedifierent membars ol tbe-e families radiated to all points of the compa*s like a halo of glory ; and " peace on earth, and good will to man," would be the glorious result. POLITENESS AT HOME.—By endea*oting to ac q iire a habit ot politeness, it will soon become fa miliar, and sit on you with ease, if not with ele gance L J i it never be forgotten that genuine po liteness, is a great fosterer of family love It sof tens the boisterous, stimulates the tndolvn', sup presses selftshnes*, and by for r ing a hat it ofcon sideratinn for othets, harmonises the whole. Po. liteness begets poli'-ufrs, and brothers may eaily be won by it o leave off the rude ways they bring home from college. Sisters ought never to receive any little attention without th i king them for it, never to ask a favor of ihem but in courteous terms —never to reply to their questions.in monosyllables and they will soon be ashamed to do such thing* 'hsmselves The Boston Massacre—March the sth, 1770. Oil Friday, the 2d day of March, 1770, a soldier of the 29th asked to be employed at Gray'a rope walk, and was repulsed in the coarsest words.— He then defied the ropemaker to a boxing-match ; and one of them accepting his challenge, he was beaten off. Returning wiih several of his compan ions. they too were driven away. A large number came down to renew the fight wiih clubs and cut lasses, and in their turn encountered defeat By this time Gray anJ others interposed, and for that day prevented further disturbance. There wa an end of the affair at the ropewalk, but not at the uarracks, where the soldiers inflam ed eaeh oihers' passions, as if the honor of ihe re giment were tarnished. On Saturday they prepar ed bludgeons; and being resolved to brave the citizens on Monday night, they forewarned their particular acquaintance not to be abioad. Without | duly restraining his men, Carr, the Lieutenant Colonel ol the twenty-ninth, made complaint to the Lieutenant Governor of the insult they had re ceived. The Council, deliberating on Monday, seemed of opinion that the town would never be safe from quarrels between the people and the soldiers, as long as soldiers should be quartered among them. In the present case, the owner of the ropewalk gave satisfaction by dismissing the workmen com plained of. The officers shoulJ, on their part, have kept their men within the barracks after nightfall. Instead of it, they left them to roam the streets. Hutchinson should have insisted on measures of precaution; but fie too much wished the favor of all who had influence at Westmins'er. Evening came on. The young moon was shin ing brightly in a cloudless winter sky, and its light W3s increased by a new fallen snow. Parties ol j soldiers were diiving about the sweets, making a parade of valor, challenging resistance, and striking ; the inhabitants indiscriminately with slicks or j sheathed cutlasses. A band which rushed out from Murry's Bar- I racks, in Braille street, armed with clubs, cutlasses and bayonets, provoked resistance, and an affray ensued. Ensign Maul, at the gale of the barrauk yard, cried to ihe soldiers, "Turn out and I will j stand by you ; kill them ; stick them ; kick them J down ; run your bayonets through them and one i soldier al'er another levelled a firelock and threat ened to " make a lane" through the crowd. Just before 9, as an officer crossed King street, now Siate stree', a barber's lad cried after him. "There goes a mean fellow who halii not paid my master for dressing his hairon which the sentinel sta. tioned at the westerly end of the Custom House, on the corner of King street, and Exchange lane, ! left his post, and with his musket gave the boy a stroke on the head, which made him stagger and cry lor pain. The street soon became clear, and nobody troub led the sentry, when a pariy ot soldiers issued vi elently from the main guard their arms glittering in tho moon light, and passed on, hallooing.— " Where are they ? Where are they ? Let them come." Presently twelve or fifteen more, u"ering the same cries, rushed from the sou h into King street, arid so, byway ol Cornhtll, toward Murry Barracks. " Piay, soldiers, spare my life," cried a boy of iwelve, whom they met. "No.no, I'll kill you all," answered one of ihem, arid knocked him down with a cutlass. They abused and insult ed several person* at their doors, and oihers in the etreet, " running about like madmen in a fury," crptng " Fire," which seamed their wa'chword, and " where are they ? knock them down." Their outrageous behavior occasioned the ringing of the bell ai the head of King stieet. The citizens, whom the alarm set in motion, came out with canes and clubs ; and, partly by the interlerence of well disposed officers, partly by the courage ol Crispus Attacks, a mulatto and some others, the fray at the barracks was soon over. Of the citizens, the prudent shouted "homo, home;" others, it was said, called nut, " Huzzali for the main guard, there is the nest;" but the main guard was not molested the whole evening. A body of soldiers came up Royal Exchange lane, crying " Where are cowards?"and brandish ing rheir arms, pissed through King street From ten to twenty boys came after them, asking 1 Where are they ?" " There is ihe soldier who knocked me down,'' said ihe barber's bay, and they began pushing one another toward the sentinel He prim ed and loaded his musket. " The lobster is going 10 shoot us," cried ihe boy. Waving his piece about, the sentinel pulled the trigger. "If you fire you must die for it," 6aid Henry Knox, who was passing by. " ! don'i care," replied the sentry ; ' damn them ; if ihey touch me, I'll fire." " Firo and be d—d," shonied ihe boys, for they were per suaded he could not do it without leave from a civ -11 officer; and a young fellow spoke out, "We will knock him down for snapping," while ihey whistled through their fingers and huzzaed. " Stand off," said the sentry, and shouted aloud " Turn out, main guard. They are killing a sen'i nel," reported a servant from the Custom-House, running to the main guaxl. " Turn out; why don't you turn out?" cried Preston, who was captain of the day, lo the guard. ' He appeareJ in a great flutter ol spirits," and " spoke to them roughly " A party of six, nvo of whom, Kilroi and Mon gom eiy, had been wors'ed at ihe ropewalk, formed w.th a corporal in Iront, and Preston following. With bay one s fixed, haughidy rushed through the neo ple upon a trot, crushing them and pushing them as ihey went along. They found about ten persons around the sentry, while about filly or sixty came down wiih them. '• For God's sake," said Knox, holding Prer on by the coat, " lake your men back again: il'ney fire your life most answer for the censeqor nces." " I know what I am about,'' said he hastily, and much agitated. None pressed on them or provoked tbem till they began loading, when a party of about twelve tn number, with their siickt in their hands, moved tern 'he middle cf lie e'teetwhers they had been slanding, gave three cheers and passed along the front olthe soldiets, whose muskets some ol them struck as they went by. " You are cowardly ras cals," they said, " for bringing arms against naked men ; lay aside your guns, and we are ready for you" " Are the soldiers loadeJ?" inquired the Palmes of Preston. "Yes," he answered, with powder and ball. "Are they going to fire upon the inhabitants?" a.'ked Theodote Bliss. " They cannot without my orders," replied Preston ; while " lite town born" called out, "Come on, you ras cals, ynu bloody backs, you lobster scoundrels, fire il you dare. We know yon dare not." Just then Montgomery received a blow from a stick thrown, which hit his musket; and the word fire being given, he stepped a little on one side, and shot Attacks, who at the time was quietly leaning on a lot.g stick. The peopls immediately began moving off. " Don't fire," said Langford, the watchman, to Kilroi, looking him full in the face ; . but yet he did so, and Samuel Gray, who was standing next to Langford with his hands in his bo som, fell lifeless. The rest fired slowly and in succession on the people who was dispersing. One aimed deliberately at a boy who was running lor sarety. Montgomery then pushed at Palmes to stab him ; on which the latter knocked the gun out ot his hand, and levelling a blow at him, hit Pres ton Three persons were killed, among them At- j tacks, the mulatto; eight wero wounded, two ofj them mortally. Of all the eleven, not more than one had any share in the disturbance. So infuriated were the soldiers that when the men returned to take up the dead, they prepared to fire again, but were checked by Pres'on, while the twenty-ninth regiment appeared under arms in King street, as il bent on a further massacre.— "This is our lime," cried soldic-s of the fourteenth, j and dogs were never seen more greedy lor their | prey. Th 9 bells rang in all the churches ; the town \ drums beat. "To arms, to arms," was the cry.— And now was to be tested the true character of Boston. All its sons came forth, excited almost to madness; many were absolutely distracted by the sight of the dead bodies, and of the blood which ran plentifully in ihe stree's, arid was imprinted in' all directions by loot tracks on the snow.— " Our hearts," says Warren, " beat to arms ; al most resolved by one stroke to avenge to avenge the death ot our slaughtered brea.heren " But they stood self possessed and irresistible, demanding justice according to the law. "D: I ynu not know that you should not have fired without orders Irom a civil magistrate?" asked Hutchinson on meeting Preston. " I did it," answered Preston, "to save my men." The people would not be pacified till the regi ment was confined to the guard-room and the bar racks, and Hutchinson himself gave assurances that instant inquiries should be made by the County Magistrates. The body of them then retired, leav ing about one hundred persons lo keep watch on Ihe examination, which lasted till three hours after midnight. A warrant was tssupd against Preston, vrho surrendered himself to the Sheriff, and the soldiers who composed the party were delivered up and commuted to prison— Bancroft 's new vol. History of (J S. MEDICAL IME or SALT —In many cases of a dis ordered stomach, a teaspoonful of salt is a certain care. In the violent internal aching, termed chol ic, add a teaspoonful of sail lo a pint of cold water —drink it and go to bed—it is one ol the speediest remedies known. The same will revive a person who seems almost dead Irom teceiving a very hea vy fall, &o. In an apoplectic fit, no time should be lost in ponring down salt and water, if sufficient sensibili ty remain to allow ol swallowing, if not the head must be sponged with cold water until the senses return, when salt will completely restore the pa tienl irom the lethargy In a fit, the feet should be placed in warm wa ter, with mustard added, the legs briskly rubbed, all bandages removed from the neck, and a cool apartment procured if possible. In many cases ol severe bleeding at the lungs, and when other re modies fail, Dr. Resh found two teaspoonfuls of suit completely stayed the blood. In case of a bite from a mad dog, wash the part with strong brine for an hour, then bind on some salt with a rag. In toothache, warm salt and water he'd to the part, and renew two or three times, will relieve in most cases If the gums be aflected wash the mouth with bine; if the teeth bs covered with tartar, wash diem twice a day with salt and wa ter. In swelled neck, wash the part with brine, and diink it twice a day until cured. Salt will expel worms, if used in lood in a mod. erate degree, and aids digestion ; but salt meat is injurious il used much. ADVICE TO THE GIRLS.— Mrs. Ellis WHO is evi dently an observer ol girls as well as " men and things," talks to the girls as follows: " My pretty little dears—You are no more fl lor matrimony than a pullet is to look after a family ol fourteen chickens. "The truth i, my dear girls, you want, general ly speaking, more libetly and less fashionable re s raint, more kitchen and less parlor, more l*g ex ercise and less sofa, mora making pu Mings and less piano, more frankness and less mock modes ty more breakfast and less bustle. 1 like the bux om, bright eyed, rosy cheeked, full breasted bounc ing lss, who can darn stockings, make her own frorks, mend bowsers, command a regiment of pots and kettles, milk the cows, feed the pigs,chop the wood, and shoot a wild duck as we.l as the Du'chess of Marlborough or the Queen of Spain be a lady withal in the drawing room. People are often found dead wr-h an empty bottle by their side, wh *h piece* thr neceesi j' oT keeping a full en' - . TdDHrtSTEOH ©So MARINO INDIA RCBUSR SHOES. —Contrary to the ; general impression, India rubber, in the process ol manufacturing, is not melted, but is passed through ( heated iron rollers, the heavies, of which wtfgh I twenty ions, and thus worked or kneaded as ( dough is at a bakery. The rubber is neatly all pro. j curei ' fro ™ 'he mouth of the Amazon, in Brazil to j which point it is sent from the interior. Its form j upon arrival, is that ola jug or pouch, a he natives j use clay moulds of that shape, which they repeal • eJiy dip into the liquid caoutchouc until a coaling of the desired Ihirkness accnmula'es, when the clay is broken and emptied out. The rubber, af ter being washed, chopped fine, and rolled to a putty like consistency, is mixed wilh a compound | of metallic substances, principally white lead and : 'o give it body or firmness. Those sheets ! designed for the soles of shoes are passed under rollers having a diamond figured surface. From these the soles are cut by hand, and the several pieces required to perfect the shoe are put together by females, on a last. The natural adhesion of the mbber joins the seams. The shoes are next var nished, and baked in an oven capable of holding about two thousand pairs and heated to about three hundred degrees, where they remain seven or eight hours. 1 his is called the " vulcanizing ' process, by which the rubber is hardened. A large quanti ty ol cotton cloth and cotton flannel is used to line shoes, and is applied to ihe rpbber while it is yet in sheets. Not a particle of any of these materials is los'. The scraps of rubber are re melted, and the bits ofclo'h are chopped up with a small quan tity of rubber and rolled out into a substance re sembling pasteboard to form the inner sole. The profits of th> business have been somewhat cur tailed of ia'e hy the prevailing high price of rubber, which ha varied wither a year Irorn twen'y to six ty cents per pound. The demand, however, is veiy !a-ge. A species o! rubber shoe, lined with flannel, is ex'er.atvely used in some parts of the country as a subs i u'e for the leather shoe.— Jour. of Commerce. CONTENTMENT^—A LITTLE PARABLE FROM THE GERMAN —lt happened once on A hot summer's day that I was standiug near a well, when a littl* bird flew down seeking wa'er. There was indeed a large trough near the well, but it was empty, end I grieved lor a moment to think the little crealnre muo go away thirs'y; bat it settled upon the edge of the irougti, ben! its lit'a head downwards then raised it again, spread its wings and soared away, singing: its thirst was appeased, f walked up to the tronuh and there in the stonework, I saw a ht> tie hole about the size of a wrens egg. The water held there had been a"source of revival and re freshment ; It had enough for the present and desired no more This is conten'mcnt Again, I stood by a lovely, sweet smiling flower, and there came a bee,'hntnming and socking; and it chose the flower far its field of sweets. But the flower had no honey. Tiiis I knew k." IMTCMPRRIKCC —No class suffers more from in temperance than the poor. It robs them of fue ; of food and clothing, ol shelter; of health—and of almost every Messing They cannot afford to bo in - j temperate themselves, or have intemperate friends, lor relative*, or neighbors. The grog shop is thei f implacable, ever exacting ; most deadly enemy. Their interest ; the very instinct of self preservation . every manly principle within them, demands that they should combine for its suppression. No poor man shoulj give fits against prohibition,Jor jo so doing he vote* against his own welfare, i*t hi* i* r efer,r art 1 prospective pmperi*r