ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. : Suturhnn ftlorninn, SVpril, 21, 1835. jwledtlt |Joetr)j. [From the Independent, January 2">.] AN EVENING PRA YER. I come to Thee to-night, In my lone closet, where no eye ean see. And dare to crave an interview with Thee, Father ol love and light. Softly the moonbeams shine On the still branches of the shadowy tree-. While all sweet sounds of evening on the breeze, Steal through the slumbering vine. Thou gav'st the calm repose That re-t.s on all—the air. the bird, the flower, The human spirit in its weary hour— Now at the bright day's close. 'Tis Nature's time for prayer : The silent praises of the glorious sky, And the earth's orisons profound and high, To Heaven their breathings bear. With them my soul would bend. In humble reverence at Thy holy throne, Trusting the merits of Thy Son alone, Thy sceptre to extend. If I this day have striven With Thy blest spirit, or have bowed the kuec To aught of earth in weak idolatry, I pray to be forgiven. II in my heart has been An unforgiving thought, or word, or look, Tlio' deep the malice whieh I scarce could brook, Wash me from this dark sin. If 1 have turned away From grief or suffering which T might relievo, Careless the - 'cup of water" e'en to give, Forgive me, Lord, 1 pray— And teach me how to feel My sinful wanderings with a deeper smart. Anil more of mercy and of grace impart, My sinfulness to heal. Father, my soul would be Pure as the drops of eve's unsullied dew : And as the stars whose nightly course is true, So would I be to Thee. Nor for myself alone. Would 1 these blessings of Thy love implore, But for each penitent the wide earth o'er, Whom Thou hast called Thine own. And for my heart's best friends, Whose steadfast kindness o'er my painful years, lias watched to soothe affliction's griefs and tears, My warmest prayer ascends. Should o'er the ir path decline The light of gladness, or of hope or health. He Thou their solace and their joy and wealth, As they have long been mine. And One—o Father, guide The youthful traveller in the dangerous hour : Have him from evil and temptation's power, And keep him near Thy side. Watch o'er his couch to-night. And draw him sweetly by the cords of love To blest communion with Thee, far above Faith's withering cares and blight. And now, O Father, take The heart 1 east with humble faith on Thee, And cleanse its depths from each impurity. For my Redeemer's sake. Stltcfti ©itlt. [From Household Words.] TLTII glkaxer. '• They have all been touched, and found base metal."— Shakespeare. "S<>. this is my return to my native village! This is my reception from relatives who owe me so much !" Thus thought, rather than said, a poor looking old man, as he stood leaning over the pate of a newly cleared whcatfield, in the bright, bustling, busy harvest time. " One," exclaimed lie, as his musings took a tone of passion whieh broke unconsciously into words, "one—yonder portly landlady, forsooth, kitting in lu-r bar, us she is pleased to call it —her bur, quotha! In my young days it was the little lioarded parlor opening from the tap-room. A bar in the old Bed Lion ! What shall we hear of next ? One, bedecked, and bedizened, with j htr gotvu like a rainbow, her fringed apron, j and her cap stuck out with flowers, sitting in ■or liar, if that be its style and title, amongst j |tT glasses and punch bowls, with a bell upon j ! ucr tabic and a net of lemons dangling above j cr head ; >hc, Miss Collins, as she call.* her die used to answer to the name of Jenny : ' ".lilts twenty years ago—refused point blank j I ' acknowledge me ! denied to my face that | I •" had ever seen nio ! called me a cheat and j I mi impostor ! wondered at my impudence iu j [ ' 'onipting to pass myself off for her dear uu- I " Michael Norris! threatened me with the ;' 'ks ami the round-house, the justice and the 1 i'reeious minx ! She whom I rescued l!n drudgery and starvation, from living half woman, half maid, with the stingy terma ' clear-st;irchcr, in Belford Marsh ! whom ' ;1 P m that very Red Lion—perched upou "j 'crone, in the arm-chair, in the bar !—pur ! the lease, the furniture, the good will ; Pj'd nor first year's rent; stocked her cellars ; . a hundred pound bank note into her And now that I coinc home, old and M'k and ragged, she reviles me as a va ,auf' an lot poster, and tells me to be |''l '° her compassion and tender-heartcd that she does not send for the constable un". me to jail ! Liar that she is ! —base, j - ' •-'hi. perjured liar ! for she know me.— t!i ;i t dm knew me; aye, as well ,■„ ' U r would be glad to be no more ". in the years that have changed her from ifu"' f ' ! ~ twenty-fire to a 1)1 oated woman forty, than I, in those same years, •A ail my griefs !" t0", 7 ' T l ' ro f" uer —'—It maddens t e( l , n!nK °f their baseness—whom I eduea . apprenticed, finding him money after !■ ' nto partnership with old '•d r:V!Q £ been draper. He, indeed, ... P rfc tend to deny that I might be his on • i-'fant that I were, what claim had I 9 " ' -" ' " " r " -v r j" ' •" upon his charity, more than any other starving wreteli ? What was I to him ? He pitied ine, Heaven knew ! but what could I expect from him ? O, the smooth-speaking, soft-spoken knave, with his pity and his charity ? Hypo crite in look and word ! His tone was as gen tle as if he had been bidding me welcome to bed and board for my whole life long. What a fawning parasite that would have been now, if I had accosted him like a rich man ! Well, there is some virtue in these rags, since they teach false tongues to speak the truth. Then came ray cousin Anthony, whose daughter I portioned, whose runaway son I clothed uitd sent to sea. And this Anthony is now u treat meal man—a rich miser, who could buy up half the county. What says he ? Why. he was poor himself—the scoundrel—nol o ly knew how poor, and had becu forced to make a rule to give nothing to beggars; aye, he called me a beggar ! 1 might go to the Union, he said ; the workhouse 1 O, the precious rascal ! The son of my father's brother, brought up in mv father's house—worth a hundred thousand pounds, and would have sent me to the work house—me, his only living kinsman ! O, this world ! this world ! Then—for I was resolved to try them all—l sought out my old school fellow Nicholas Hume, the spend thrift, whom I bailed in my young days, when little richer than himself, and saved from prison by paying his debts. What was his gratitude ? Why he, forsooth, had never heard my nauie. Mi chael Norris ? Who was Michael Norris? O, they knew me well enough twenty years ago. when I returned from the West Indies a rich man. husband of a wealthy Creole, master of flourishing plantations, to visit my early haunts, help my poor relations—l found them all in distress, some way or other—and shook hands with inv old friends ! Nobody iiad forgotten me (hen. But now that I come back a ragged cripple, houseless, and friendless." And the old man paused, and lifted his wretched hat from his thin gray hairs and passed his tatter ed handkerchief over his furrowed brow, with an air which proved that he was as much oj>- pressed by mental suffering, by indignation and disappointment, as by the sultry heat of an August noon. "There are none left now," thought old Mi chael to himself, as. exhausted by his vehemence, he sank into a milder mood ; " none left for me to apply to now, except the three orphan children of my poor nephew, William Leslie, the cousin of these hard-hearted Collinses, and their mother ; and they, I tear, are themselves in great want, and great trouble. He, lately died, after a series of undeserved misfortunes, and a iong and wasting illness ; and she, work ing as hard as ever woman did work to keep herself and her family out of the work-house— that Union to whose comforts my precious cousin Anthony so tenderly consigns me. Poor things ! They may well deny any knowledge of me. for they never saw me ; ami I have had a good sample of the slight impression that benefits conferred leave behind them ! Wil liam was only eighteen when I left England and returned to Jamaica, after my last visit. A line, frank-hearted lad he was. J remember wishing to take him with me. But my poor sister would not part with him. She had mar ried again after the death of her first husband, William's father, and a wretched match she made ; for this second husband proved to be a habitual drunkard, always half mad when in toxicated, who broke out at last into desperate frenzy, and, but for my interposition, would have murdered the poor boy. I seem to see the struggle now," thought the old man, clos ing his eyes ; " he flinging himself upon Wil liam with a table knife, and I rushing between them just soon enough to receive the blade in my arm. I bear the mark of the wound still. Tiie madman was sent to an asylutn, and there soon died. And my poor sister, well oft' for her station, cotil 1 not part from this only son. He was a fine lad, was William, spirited and generous ; and when she also died he was al ready attached to the girl whom he afterwards married. I helped them, too, for I loved the boy ; I helped on that match, for it was one of sincere affection, and they were in away to earn a handsome competence ; there must have been some imprudence, or great ill luck, to have reduced them to such poverty." So ran the train of the old cripple's revrry. " I never sus pected it; he never wrote to mc ; and I, on- j gaged in my own affairs, and with children then of my own—well, I will sec them, however.— J They are in t hits field, gleaning. So said their : neighbor. Yes, this is tho field; there they ] are. I'll see them," thought Michael Norris, ; "though it is probable that they, tuo, will j know nothing of me." And, opening the gate, the old man limped slowly across the furrows, and began gathering the scattered ears of corn in his withered hand. We have said the field, although, after pass ing the gate, which admitted him between the two high hedges that bound it on the northern side, the wide expanse from which the wheat had just been carried assumed the appearance rather of a large open ridge of arable land bor dered by the high road, and terminated by a distant village, than of (he small wooded enclo sures so common to the midland counties. A pretty scene it was, as it lay before him, bath ed in the sunshine ; and a lovely group was that to which his attention was immediately directed. A pale young woman, whose regu lar and beautiful features received additional Interest from her oln.-n widow's cap, stood be fore hiio. holding a fine infant, in a arms ; a very pretty girl of twelve or thirteen was flourishing a tuft of wheat cars before the ba by's eyes, smiling herself at the smile she ex cited, while her little brother clung to the mo ther's petticoat in momentary fear of two high fed dogs attending a gentleman and lady riding slowly along the road. Tuo poor cripple drew hack, and sat down under a clump of maple and hawthorn, gay with the purple wild veitch, the white bind weed, and the pretty clematis, known by the still prettier name of " the traveller's joy whilst the riding party called off their dogs, spoke graciously to the child and his mother, ar.d parsed slowly out o? sight. A3 they le:t her, Mrs Leslie, for the it was. approached the old man, to replace her infant x his cradle; PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA„ BY E. O'MEARA COODRICH. " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FS.OM ANY QUARTER." niches under the fragrant shade of some over hanging hazel-stems, just beside his rude seat. Struck by the evidence of poverty, sickness and sorrow, afforded by his tattered apparel, and his wrinkled yet venerable countenance, she took uj) a pitcher, which stood by the cradle, and, with the kindness which the very poor so often show to each other, and a remark upon the heat of the day, offered him a small cupful of the milk which formed the contents of the jug. He took it with a trembling hand, and thanked her with an emotion whieh our readers will comprehend, but whieh at once surprised and interested its object. "Your name is Leslie?" asked he, as, after returning the cup with thanks and blessings, he made room for her beside him onthethymy bank. " Your name is Leslie ?" "Margaret Leslie. It is so.*' " The wife of William Leslie ?"' " His widow. Ah, mo ! his widow !" re plied she, with a sigh. " The widowed mother of those children. Michael,' added she. as the boy came near them, " take some milk yourself, and carry a cupful to your sister, and bring what wheat cars she and you have gathered to mv little heap. "Michael !" echoed the old man, "vourhus band's name was William ! How came you to call his son Michael ? But the name belongs to your family perhaps ; your father, or some fa vorite brother ?" "No," replied the widow, "it was for a dif ferent reason. A very dear kinsman of my husband's bore that name, and in token of love and gratitude to him, and in fulfilment of an old promise,so our only son was christened." " T remember," muttered the cripple to him self. " I remember William said that his fn>t boy should bear my name, and 1 think lie wrote to that effect after the child born ; but the letter must have arrived at that time of misery." Then rousing himself, and turning to the gentle creature, whom a feeling of unusual interest still detained at his side, lie added aloud, " I do remember now that William Les lie had an uncle called Michael Morris, but what peculiar cause of gratitude———" " What cause interrupted Mrs. Leslie ;"a thousand causes ; from a mere infant, when 1 have heard my husband say that lie gave him the fir-t shilling lie ever possessed, that kind uncle, abseut or present, was his good genius. He insisted upon his being sent to Bedford School; paid himself for masters, whom his guardians thought superfluous ; rescued him from the frantic frenzy of his step-father ; sav ed his life at the utmost peril of his own, from the furious assaults of that wretched madman; placed him in the paper mill, which, but for the rash speculation of his partner, would have been not merely a comfortable income for himself, but ail affluent provision for his family ; and, last and dearest kindness, when William, with his characteristic generosity loved a poor girl, the portionless orphan of a naval ollicer, when interested connections and officious friend-, all opposed the union, did not he, from across the wide ocean, send himself not merely his appro bation of the destined marriage, but a portion for the destitute bride ?" "i never saw him," continued .Mrs. Leslie, in a lower tone than that which had been dictated by her enthusiastic recollection of her benefactor's goodness ; " but night and morning I have prayed for him, and night and morning do uiy poor children join in those prayers ; and my dear husband, amongst his latest words " Did lie pray for the uncle who seemed to have forgotten him?" asked the old man, his voice half stiHed with emotion. " Look, Mar garet," added he, stripping up his sleeves and showing a deep sear extended diagonally across his left arm : " tin's sear was received from the knife with whieh his furious and frantic step father was pursuing William Leslie. I am Mi chael Norris. You do not disdain to acknow ledge the cripple who comes to your door hun gry and ragged. Here, too," said he, taking from his pocket a bundle of papers, "are char acters that you well know." Tearfully, yet joyfully, the warm-hearted and grateful Margaret returned the embraces of her venerable kinsman —presented her three little children to him one by one, and replied to his questions as to their change of cireum- : stances. It needed few words to tell the story. No- ' thing is more rapid than a descent. The roll- : ing of a stone down a hill is a true type of a i falling fortune. Taking advantage of a long , illness with which William Leslie was afflicted, his partner engaged in desperate spec ulations, j They failed. The rush speculator absconded, ; and William remained a bankrupt, without a i friend or resource. Honest to the ia>t, his j wife resigned her small settlement to satisfy the ! creditors. llis debts being paid, he tried eve ry means of living, and whilst he retained his health had supported his family by tbc most persevering industry ; but a lever, occasioned by over-exertion, had come 011 ; his constitu tion, impaired by anxiety and labor, had been unable to resist the attack, and since that pe riod the wife who had been the faithful part ner of his cares and his toils had at least so far succeeded as to maintain her children without the assistance of charity, whether public or private. " Why not have written to me when this bankruptcy took place ?" inquired the uncle. "Alas, dear sir! we had before heard of that terrible hurricane, in which " " In whieh," said the old man, filling up with stern composure, the sudden pause that from a mixture of delicacy and sympathy had arrest ed Margaret Leslies words—"in which the plantation where I resided was laid waste, my house leveled with the ground, and uiy wife with four helpless children in the ruins! In striving to rescue them, this thigh,"-—striking' the withered liir.b with a hazel twig—" this thigh was broken I owe ray preservation to the gratitude of an emancipated negro ; but for months, for years, ail uiy life, all nature was blank before me ! I have sometimes won dered how I could have survived such a blow; for what purpose I was spared ' The doubt was sinful, and finds its rebuke, its thrice mer ciful rebuke, in this blissful nour. You beird then, of ray losses, dear Margaret ? Poor W il i ax heard of them !" " We were sure that something must have gone amiss, from receiving no reply to the let ter which announced the birth of our boy, and claimed your promise of standing godfather at his christening: William did not like to write again upon such an occasion ; it would have seemed like encroaching upou your too gener ous spirit. But when the news of that awful hurricane arrived, and Nicholas Hume and the Collinses made inquiries in London, and ascer tained that your plantation had indeed been amongst those laid waste —then your silence was too well explained ! I head this sad news first ; for it arrived during the dreadful illness which preceded my husbaud's bankruptcy.— And when he regained so much breathing time after his own misfortunes as to ask news of you, no tidings could be obtained ; all traces of you seemed lost. O, that he had lived ta see this day! His will be doue ! But 0, that my poor husband had lived to see once more the kinsman he loved so well!" The old man pressed her hand in speechless emotion, and Margaret, smiling through her tears, went on: " You must live with us, dear uncle, and we shall wait upou you and work for you, and be happy together—as happy as we can be with out him—after all. My Annie is a good girl —O, such a good girl I and pretty, is she not, dear uncle ? and poor Michael, your namesake, is a boy of a thousand We have had much to be thankful for. Farmer Rogers, the over seer, whose books my husband kept, (little Mi chael keeps them now, as well, the farmer says, as his father did,) supplies us with milk twice a day, Mrs. Liseelles, the rector's wife, em ploys Annie and tne coustanly it) iieeiMe-work for her large family ; and if we can but. keep our pretty cottage—if we can keep that cot tage at whose porch poor William planted the honeysuckle and the China rose, and the vine which now covers the thatch—that cottage where we worked and wept together, and where he died the death of the righteous ;* if we can but live together there, witliiu sight of the turf 1 that covers his dear remains, I should ask for nothing better on this side of the grave." The"widow's.tears flowed afresli, and once again the old man pressed her hand. " Is there any doubt of your retaining this beloved habitation, dear Margaret? And does my coming cause that doubt ?" "O, no, no, dear uncle, not in the slightest 1 degree. The cause of doubt is, that we have no lease, and that Miss C'oliius, as she calls j herself, poor William's cousin, wants it for some purpose another—people say with some j view of marrying, but this is idle talk—village ! gossip. What is certain is, that she wishes to take it, and is willing to give two pounds a year ' more rent than I now give or can afford to ! give. If our old landlord, Mr. Godfry, had ' stayed, he and Lady Elizabeth had promised ! that 1 should remain ; but the Ilall, and the village, and the whole estate are sold, and the new lord of the manor is coming this evening. Hark ! you may hear the bells ring even now. Mr. Godfry and Lady Elizabeth intend stay ing a few days at the rectory ; you saw them ride by with their dogs ; they have promised to speak in my favor to the new landlord ; they mentioned it even now, and the good rec tor and his excellent lady will second my peti tion ; still—" "Be of good cheer, Margaret. Even if you should leave your pretty cottage, T would wa ger something—" The old man checked him self, and resumed, in an indifferent tone— " Who is the new lord of the manor? what i.-> his name "The property was purchased by Mr. Price; but he is understood to be an agent, and I have not heard the name of the real proprietor, who is said t" be an elderly gentleman, and so rich that lie will hardly be tempted lo turn an old tenant from her cottage for so trifling an addition of rent. Nevertheless— " " Once again. Margaret, be of good heart," reiterated her uncle. '• The tenant* arc to meet him in the avenue - the farmers ami their sons oa horseback, the cottagers, women and children, on foot. Ought I to join them ? 1 have no shame in honest la bor. hut do shrink from meeting the scorn of those purse proud kindred who—" and poor Margaret's tears fell fast. " Ought I to be , there, dear mule ? 1 will go ol- stay us you direct."* " Go, Margaret. Go, fear nothing. Gath er up your treasures ; the jug, whose generous draught was the sweetest I ever quaffed ; the wheat ears, and the cradle with its irowing babe—blessing ou it (Far face ! Go boldly ; I will not shame you by these unseemly rags, but will rest aw hile under the friendly shade of the hazel, while you return home and prepare for the procession. Be sure that you fail not. We shall meet again soon, dear ones ! For the present, farewell." There was something about the old man, ragged, sick and lame as be was, that Margaret, found it impossible to disobey. So, heartened up, she knew not why, [for many have felt, without being able to give the feeling its true name, the mingled power of sympathy and ap preeintini! to comfort ami to cheer,) she called about her her bloomingehildren and departed, Annie and herself bearing the cradle between them, and the boy laden with the gleanings of the day. The setting sun gleamed brightly between the noble elms that formed the beautiful aven ue to Curston Hail, gilding the rugged branch es anu turning into pendant emeralds the leaves of the branches which met across the wide car riage road ; luut and Interleaved in a lengthen ed arclnvay that might well have suggested the rich intricacies of a cathedral aisle in the proud est days of Gothic architecture. The village bells pealed amain, horses pranced, flags waved, the children of the parish schools strewed the gaudy flowers of the early autumn ; and as the carriage of the new lord of the manor rolled between the vivid lodge to the gray old Hall, a quaint, irregular structure of Elizabeth's or James'day, with a tame peacock sunning him self on the stone balustrade, a large old Eng lirh spaniel basking on the steps, and the ten ants in their holiday apparel grouped round the porch, an arb6t, whether painter or poet, aLjnt have envied the accident wxea protiuc- Ed an arrangement so felicitously picturesque. Something of this feeling, however, unper ceived or unguessed by himself, mingled with the natural cinotions.of curiosity ami interest, iu unr friend Margaret's bosom, as, standing humbly apart between her two cider children, with infant in her arms, under a large syca more, she gazed around upon the scene, and perceived, gaily adorned, in the extreme coun try fashion, the rival candidate for her belov- cottage—the buxom landlady of the Red Lion, surrounded by the unfriendly kindred of her late husband. Neither Margaret nor her William had ever applied for assistance to these people ; and yet she knew instinctively that some from pride ami some from shame felt the silent reproach of her unassisted pover ty and her blameless life—that all wished her absence, and would contribute, as tar a a thorn , lay, to turn her from her home ; \in spite of the encouraging influence of her lately known kinsman's cheering forebodings, her heart sank within her as the door of the cottage was thrown open. An elderly gentleman, very neat- j ly dressed, but pallid, oinaeiated and lame, was assisted by Ids servants up the two low steps j that led to tlio porch. Having ascended them j with some difficulty, he turned around, took oft"; his hat, bowed with a gracious sitiifr to the assembly, and then paused, as if in search of ! some one whom he expected to see. The effect of this apparition Was a start of surprise and horror from the portly landlady, I seldom equalled on a stage or off; her brother ; the haberdasher, who had just flourished his hat preparatory to leadiug the general cheer, j let it fall in dismay, looking the curses which i his habitual hypocrisy scarce repressed ; cousin i Anthony, the rich, miserable miser, smothered a groan ; and Nicholas Hume, in spite of his ' consummate impudence, fairly stole away. What, in the meanwhile, did our friends in j their humble nook under the sycamore Little j Michael danced for joy. A unie chipped her ; hands, and poor Margaret, for the twentieth ! time (luring the la*t six hours, burst into tears; j this time, however, of unmiugled joy. " Mrs. Leslie ! Margaret! my dear neioe !" ; cried Michael, [or, as we may now call him, : Mr. Norris,) advanced to meet her, "to you j alone, of all my relations now living, do I owe any account of my motives for coming among vou as I have done to-day ; with the re.-t of my kindred I have done forever. But I also owe some explanation to my tenants and future neighbors. You all know that I left England about fifty years ago, a poor and friendless lad. I returned, nearly thirty years afterwards, with riches honestly obtained, the happy husband of a wealthy and excellent woman, and the father of four hopeful children. I came to Corston, found my relations, some indigent, some com fortably situated,did what I could uuumg them and went back to Jamaica, with the view, at some future day, of placing my sons at the head of my plantation iu that island, and coming home to die in my native village. A hurricane passed over the estate where 1 lived, destroy ing mv dwelling, my wife, my children, and al must myself. "For many years T was dead to the world ; but care had been taken of the large property i that remained to me, and when, by God's mer- j ev, I was restored to health, mental and bodily, ; 1 found myself rich indeed, so fur as money J was concerned, richer than ever ; but in the j blessed charities of life, must poor—a childless. j desolate, bereaved old man. I knew that a; report had gone abroad that 1 was ruined bv j the hurricane, and 1 resolved to prove the re-j lations I had left in England, l>v coming among them in seeming poverty. 1 have done so, and the experiment answered well. And now, my dearest neiec, I need not tell you that the cot tage is yours ; but for the second time to day, J throw myself upou your charity. Aou will not abandon me because 1 happen to be rich ? You will never have the heart to do that ! You remember your promise that we should live together ; so eotnc with those dear ehsi tlrcu to brighten and gladden the old Hull. PREJUDICE. — All men are apt to have a eon- j '■eit of their own understanding, to bo tenaci ous of t lie opinion they profess; and vet almost all men are guided by the understandings ol j others, not by their own ; and may be said more truly to adopt than to beget their opin ions. Nurses, parents, pedagogues, and after them all, and above them all. the universal pe dagogues, custom, fill the mind with notions i which it has no share in framing, which it re-; eeives as passively as it receives the impres- j sions of outward objects, and which left to it self, it would never have framed, perhaps, or would have examined afterwards. Thus, pre judiees are established by education, and ha bits by custom. We are taught to think what what others think, not how to think for our selves ; and whilst the memory is lo.idod, the understanding remains unexercised, or exercis ed in such trammels as constrain its motions, and direct its place, till that which was artifi cial becomes in sort natural; and the mind can go uo further. It may sound oddly, but it is true in many cases, to say that if men had learned less, [heir way to knowledge would be shorter and easier. It is indeed, shorter to pro cced from ignorance to knowledge, than from error. They who are in the !a-t condition.must unlearn, before they can learn to any good purpose ■ and the first of this docile task i? not. in many respects, the least difficult, for which reason it is soldoni undertaken. Ha?" We have a friend, a Fx footer, who was promiiiading, on a public oecas'ou, with u magnificent woman. "We are the observed of all observers," said the gentleman " Yes," replied the lady, "we are two brilliant stars." " Put the .'.tars together," responded 'he gen tleman, "and what a brilliant SUN they would make." A genius in Ohio has perfected a rifle that knocks the Minic into a cocked hat. He f flared an ounce ball in it on Tuesday evening ast, and fired at the sky. A few moments af terwards. the dog star commenced howling,and in such a manner that the people of Cleveland " are lm was wounded in the thorax. VO L. XV. IS O. 45. HADRIAN - AND THE PLANTER —Tiie Emperor Hadrian, pacing near Tiberius, in Galilee, ob served an old man digging' a large trench in or der to plant some fig-trees : " Hadst thou pro perly employed the morning of thy life," said Hadrian, " thou needest not have worked so hard in the evening of thy da vs." I have well employed mv earlv davs, nor Mil 1 neglect the evening of"my life ; and let God do with me what he thinks best," replied the man. " How old mnyst thou be, good man ?" asked the emperor. " A hundred years," was the reply. " What," exclaimed Hadrian, " a hundred years old, and still planting trees? Canst thou, then, hope ever to enjoy the fruits of thy labor ;?" " Great kijig," rejoined the hoary headed man, " yes, I do hope, if God permit, I may even cat the fruit of these verv trees ; if not, my children will. Have not my forefathers planted trees for me, and shall I not do the same for my children Hadrian, pleased with the honest man's reply, said, "Well, old man, iff ever thou livest to see the fruit of these trees, let me know it. Dost thou hear, good old man ?" and with these words he left him. The old man did live long enough to see the fruits of his industry. The trees flourished and bore excellent" fruit. As soon as they were sufficiently ripe he gathered the most choice figs, put them in ff basket, and marched off toward the emperor's residence. — Hadrian happened to look out of the windows of his palace ; seeing a man, bent with ago, with a basket on iiis shoulders, standing near the gate, he ordered him to be admitted to his presence. " What is thy pleasure, oldmau?" demand ed Hadrian. " A ray it please your majesty," replied the man, "to recollect seeing once a very old man planting some trees, when you desired hi:u, if ever he should gather the fruit, to let joukuow. 1 am that old man, aud this is the fruit of those very trees. May it please you graciously to accept them as a humble tribute of gratitude ft>r your majesty's great condescension." Had rian. grut'hed to see so extraordinary an in stance of longevity, accompanied by the full manly faculties and honest exertion, desired the old man to be seated, and ordered the bas ket fo be emptied of the fruit and to be filled with gold, gave it him as a present. Some courtiers, who witnessed this uncommon scene, exclaimed, " Is it possible that our great um peror should show So much honor to a misera ble Jew ?" "Why should I not honor him whom God has honored ?" replied Hadrian.— " Look at his age. and imitate his example." The emperor then very graciously dismissed the old man. who went home highly pleased and delighted. S_JS_ M WHEN VOL (SHOULD TAKE YOLK HAT.— Young men, a word. We want to tell you when you should take your hat and be off. Aud * miud what we offer. It is when you are asked out to take u drink. When you find out you are courtiug an ex travagant or slovenly girl. W hen you find yourself in doubtful company. Wlien you discover that your expenses ruu ahead of your income. When you are abu-iug the confidence of your friends. When you think you are a great deal wiser ilmn older aud luore experienced people than yourself. When you feel like getting trusted for a new suit of clothes because you have no money to pay for them. When you wait upon a kidy just for the fun of it. When you are making a noise in a printing office. W lieu you don't do your duty. THE N'IUIITUARE. - Somebody gives the pub lic the benefit of the following receipt to get up a night-mure : " Fifteen minutes before brd-tjiuceat upono dozen of cold boiled cabbage, with five or six pickled cucumbers. Eat heartily, and wash down with a pint oi' brown stout. Undress and jump into lied. Lie fiat ou your back, and in about a half att hour, or thereabouts, you will dream that the devil is sitting on your chest, with Htiuker lliil Monument in his lap." Tbuis XELKH AND BOSOMS. —Fashion in Washington during the past winter has been carried to the vcrg.'ofmadel artist exhibitions. Low neck dresses have been all the go. A good story is t<>id of a country man being ask ed, after leaving one of the Presidential levees, if lie had ever seen such a sight before. " No," was the emphatic rcplv, " not finer I icas item ed f Opg- A soldier on trial for habitual drunk enness was addressed bv the President, " Pri soner, you have hard the prosecution for ha bitual druukeuness ; what have you to say in defence ?" " Nothing, please your honor, but habitml thirst? &r- Brigham Young, the Mormon Prophet, thinks that St. Paul, in saying that a piehop should be the husband of one wife, meant, not to in'erdii t him for having any more, but that he should have one icir to begin u ith. |t--.?*" It's a very solemn thing to gG mar ried " said aunt Bethany. '• Yes, but it's n groat flea! more solemn not to," said her niece. fikiV Temperance, the, only thing that ren ders nun lit for employment; Morality, the on* ly principle to fit him for society; Religion, that which brings him to God aud prepares him for immortal life ! fe-sr- The person who goes into society with the simple wish to please and to bd pleased, generally succeeds in bnrh objects. Plow rlav lands d?pp in the autumn and winter, and bandy land= in the spring.