OSE DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ABVAN& TOWANDA: (Etinrs&ap morning, fit-comber 3, 1857. Stltdei jpoetru. SONG OF A. GUARDIAN SPIRIT. OR '■ droop not thou, my gentle earthly love, Mine still to be ! I bore through death, to brighter lands above, My thoughts of thee ! Yes! the deep memory of our holy tears, Our mingled prayer, Our suffering love through long devoted years, Went with me here! It was not vain, the hallowed and the tried, It was not vain. Still, still, though viewless, hovering by thy side, I watch again ! From our own paths, from Love's attesting bowers, I am not gone ; Iu the deep hush of midnight's whispering hours Thou art alone ! Not lone when by our favorite streams thou weepest ; The stream whose tone Murmurs of the thoughts the holiest and the deepest, IVe too have known ! Not lone when mournfully some strain awaking Of things long past From thy soft eyes the sudden tears are breaking, Silent and fast! Not lone when upwards in fond visions turning Thy dreamy glance, Thou seek'st my home where solemn stars are burning In nights expanse. My home is near thee, loved one, and around thee, Where'er thou art ; Though still the o'ershadowning veil hath bound thee, Oh. trust my heart! Hear my low voice, nor deem thyself forsaken, I.et faith be given To the still tones that oft our being awaken— Thev are from Heaven ! HJisrtllantous. Marl, Coal, &c—The Forethought of Ma ture. A long while ago, some laborers, in digging a well near our Atlantic sea-coast, threw out a sort of greenish sand, mixed with bits of sea shells, which strangely puzzled them. The next year the owner of the farm was surprised to find that wherever his green dirt had been washed by the raius, the vegetation was unu sually rich. Such was the first discovery of marl, a fertilizer which has already regenerat ed whole counties of New Jersey, and which when it comes into more extensive use, will make thousands of exhausted fields in the East to rival the rich bottom lands of the West. Not less accidental was the discovery of roal. Just when our great cities began to ex perience a scarcity of wood for fires, just w hen the astonishing national advantages of this century commenced demanding an exhaustless supply of fuel for manufacturers, chance re vealed. high up among the stony aud barren mountains of Maryland, Pennsylvania and Vir ginia, anthracite and bituminous coal. At the present day, millions of acres which other wise wouid be unproductive, yield up their fos sil wood to warm our parlors, cook our din tiers. drive our steamboats, propel our locomo tives aud turn our cotton mills. We owe both marl and coal to the provi dent forethought of nature countless years ago. For mar! is but the decayed remains of marine animals, and derives its fertilizing properties chiefly from the lime, which forms a principal ingredient of shells. Far back in some remote geological era, untold centuries before man iiad been created, the waves of a shallow sea washed the localities where we now dig up our marl, depositing there, precisely as the fx'ean does in similar places now, the shells and dead bodies of tiny marine animals. Year by year, generation by generation, age by age, I these deposits went on. At last, some change I in the shore, such as the opening or shutting I of an inlet, the closing up of a river, or the I sudden denudation of a bank, stopped the ac- I cumulation ; the deposit ceased ; sand oroth -1 cr soil began to cover thera ; in time they dis ■ appeared from sight ; trees began to grow I among them ; new and strange animals roved I through these woods ; men Finally came upon I the scene. But thousands of years passed, ■ and the red Indian had loug given way to the I fhite Araericau before these marine deposits I *ere brought to light and used to fertilize our I fields as marl. Nature was patient and could I j va 't. She could foresee and was content. — I before man was created she laid up in her I under ground the manure with I which he was to raise his bread when a dense I population and exhausted soil should make I corn difficult to get. I And so with coal. Iu another remote geo- I '>gical epoch, also before man trod the earth, I Va t pine trees covered the globe, growing I rankly everywhere as reeds in a jungle. Age I b. T age they germinated, shot upwards, shed I b'Cir coues, lived out their centuries, died and I • Age by age others grew in their places, I M in turn perished and fell, till they lay pil- I H one above another, like grass which the I Oower has cut. Then came a different geo- I agical epoch. The pine forests became swamps I ne swamps bogs, the bogs were succeeded by I s "'i earth ; and all this while, nature, in her I Secret alembic under ground, was converting I trees into coal. The mighty I hY; Uif>roUS era - w hich we have described, I r ,a i ' ts c ''' e f purpose the providing fuel for I r' " lztman - Millions of years before a hu- I Cf t n lived upon this globe, nature, aware I JL °®ly of his coining but of his future needs, I We ready tor his wants. I list follow out thiß thought and fnr- I now °,^ ier ''lustrations. We might show how, I rail . our > ce d ar forests are becoming scarce, I tree, s^in S' es are made from primeval I Droßt'r 001 swam P s where the tempests [ mii Ait j tl?eru thousands of years aigo. We I "fiPce v/ moDstJ " ate nature, long ages egao to manufacture diatnoDds, iron HIE BRADFORD REPORTER. ore, gold, a thousand things expressly for man, and is manufacturing them still. But we have enough. Great and benificent art thou, oh nature.— Baltimore Sun. The Influence of Science on Business Men The great mass of the business people of the world in such an active, bustling ftgg as our own, when the acquisition of money seems to be the great object of all, regard scientific pursuits as bordering a little on the ittsane.— Who is more dreaded than a poor inventor, with a patent right in his pocket, obtained af ter years of study, and at the sacrifice of eve ry comfort ? What a deaf ear is turned to his theory and his explanations ? What pro found nonsense does it appear to too many to be contriving "cut offs" for steam engines, spikes, and chairs for railways, cylinder pres ses for newspapers, hot air furnaces, gas light and cooking apparatus for our homes ! Did not the tvorld exist without these ? Is it tttif better thaw it vtas two thousand years ago ? What is the good of coutinually building ob servatories and gazing at the stars ? What crazy people are these chemists, perpetually attempting to analyze everything !—these ge ologists running about and knocking stones to pieces with their hartlrfiefs ! Why do they not set themselves down to some honest every day employment, and earn their living as oth er people do ? This is the kiud of remark one hears every day, and which makes the unhappy votaries of science indignant at mankind. Why should t work hard with my own hands, and such fel lows get along with clear brains, asks many an inconsiderate, yet good hearted man, who does not favor the inequalities of life. This is a one-sided view, however, and (fail not be justly taken. To no class is the world more indebted than to what are called scienti fic men. These are the most efficient friends of humanity, and to their exertions we owe nearly all our comforts and our prosperity. W r hat would we do without the steam en gine, which converts water into the most use ful power at work upon the globe, that ena bles us to travel thousands of miles in a day, to cross oceans with the greatest swiftness and certainty, to set millions of spindles at work to create the fabrics which we wear, to shape our implements of husbandry, hammer out our weajK>iis of defence, lift our coal from the mine shafts, and do the work of hundreds of men in a minute. What could we do without the incessant vigilance of the inventors in detail, who are continually contriving how to economize the power, to lessen the friction of machinery, to devise new forms of motion, and to make it applicable to every variety of labor. How could we travel so swiftly over our iron roads, if the minutest parts of their fix tures were not accurately considered and sci entifically arranged. What would a railroad train do on a curve unless carefully laid down, having a constant relation to its radius existing in the mind, and reduced to practice by the engineer. How would newspapers be so cheap and so abundant but for such admirable con trivances as those of Hoe. We take up a pa per which costs us two cents, and do not con sider what years of toil and study it has re quired to produce it. How should we get our dinners without coal ranges, or live comforta bly through our cold winters without hot air furnaces and the economical use of heat ? How could we light our dwellings so cheaply and brilliantly without the ingenious prepara tion of gas ? How could we find our way from port to port, without a knowledge of the stars, the variation of the magnetic needle, the direction of the currents, and the sound ings of the deep sea line ? How would we know what fertilizers to apply to worn out soils, how to stimulate the growth of plants but for the labors of the agricultural chemists? What food to prefer for our sustenance, what remedies to apply to our disordered frames, but for the analytical '? What crumbling edifices, what insecure marine structures would we not erect, but for the labors of the geologist ? How little would we know of nature or our selves, but for the unflagging, yet almost nil-, honored labors of scientific men ? The world two thousand years ago, no doubt was a very respectable world in its way, but it was chaos, compared to what it is now.— Houses without roofs, dwellings without car pets, food without variety, people without books, without shoes, without hats, without shirts, may hare been very brave, very com panionable, very good and very heroic ; but a mechanic of the present day, with the ordina ry success of modern life, is better fed, housed, clothed, and instructed than the greatest prluce of ancient times, with all their barbaric gold and silver. Yes, better off in all respects than even Queen Bess, of a more modern era, whose apartments were strewed with straw, and who wore silk stockings as a curiosity. Science is eminently practical. It is at the bottom of all our rational and healthy enjoy ments, it is the foundation upon which all our modern improvements have been erected. The press of our day begins to recognize this truth, in the care it takes to chronicle every advance they make. Let us then regard with respect these men of science, the friends of our race and our country, and give them the place iu our esteem they so richly deserve. Money is certainly the prevailing, the almost iusaoe de sire of the day, but let us not forget those who help us make it, aud of which too commonly tbey obtain but a small share for themselves. CLOUDS. —If it were possible to pass through life without clouds, it is likely that we should complain of too ranch light. As it is, the clouds appear to come, at certain periods of our exis tence. somewhat too loweringly upon us. The hope, the joy of youth, as they glide away, car ry with them so many loves that have been so bright romances to our imagination, so many friends that seemed as though they were born to walk with us through the whole length of our days, BO many dreams of peace, and proud ambitious thoughts of winning fame, that we become sadder, if not wiper PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA,, BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " REGARDLESS OP DENUNCIATION FROM ANT QUARTER." How to Tell. Here is but a " bit of advice" to young la dies, setting forth how they may know wheth er a young gallant is really " courting " them, or only paying them " polite attentions." The confounding the one with the other has been the source of very much trouble, both before and since the era of Mr. Pickwick and Mrs. Burdell : A young man admires a pretty girl, and must manifest it. He can't help doing so for the life of him. The young lady has a kind heart, reaching out like vine tendrils for some thing to cling to. She sees the admiration ; is flattered ; begins soon to love ; expects some tender avowal ; and perhaps gets so far as to decide that she will choose a " white satin uuder that gauze," &c., at the very mo ment that the gallant she half Icrtes is popping the question to another damsel ten miles off ! Now the difficulty lies in not precisely un derstanding the difference between " polite at tentions " and the tender manifestions of love. Adrairiug a beautiful giff, and wishing to muke a wife of her, are not always the same thing : and therefore it is necessary that the damsel should be on the alert to discover to which class the attentions paid her by handsome and fashionable young gentlemen belong. First, then, if a young man greets you in a loud, free and hearty tone ; if he knows pre cisely where to put his hands ; if he stares you straight in the eye, with his mouth wide open ; if he turns his back to you to speak to another ; if he tells you who made his coat ; if lie squeezes ycfur hand ; if he eats heartily in your presence ; if he fails to talk very kind ly to your mother ; if, in short, he sneezes when you are singing, criticises your curls, or fails to be foolish fifty times every hour, then don't fall in loVe With him for the world 1 lie only admires you, let him say what he will to the contrary. On the other hand, if he be merry with eve rybody else, but quiet with you ; if he be anx ious to see your tea is sufficiently sweetened, and your dear person well wrapped up when you go out into the cold ; if he talks very low and never looks you steadily in the eye ; if his cheeks are red and his uosc only blushes, it is enough. If he romps with vonr sister, sighs like a pair of old bellows, looks solemn when you are addressed by another gentleman, and in fact is the most still, awkward, stupid, yet anxious of all your male friends, you may go ahead and make the poor fellow too happy for his skin to hold him ! Young ladies ! keep your hearts in a case of good leather, or some other tough substance, until the right one is found beyond a doubt, afterjwhieh you can go on aud.'love and " court " and be married and happy, without the least of trouble. We consider this advice so sensible, that al though it is some what open to the charge erf bluntness, we have no hesitation in pressing it upon the attention of our lady readers. COOLNESS. —Sara Slick tells a good story about an overgrown hulk of a Yankee boy who was sent to the wood pile by his father one cold, winter evening, for a " back log" for the kitchen fire. The youth went out, but in stead of bringing in a good substantial log, only brought a thin little stick—or " brail " as the Pennsylvanian Germans say. His fa ther immediately gave him a good whipping, and sent him after another log. But the youth having his " dander " roused, left the house, went to Boston and shipped on a vessel which made a voyage of several years. In course of time the youth came back and started home on foot, It was winter, and just such an evening as the one on which he left home. So, remembering his father's order, the young man picked up a huge log, and stagger ing into the house, threw it down on the hearth before his astonished father and mother, and quietly said : " Father, here's that back log you sent me for." The old gentleman, not to be outdrme in coolness, replied, with a touch of severity : Well ! you've been a darned long time about it r We were reminded of this story by the fol lowing. which we find floating about uncred ited : " A certain distinguished citizen of Milwau kie, Wisconsin, who has filled the highest of fice in the State, was once in the employ of a farmer in Western New York. Among other things it was his duty to " bring in the cows." One evening the cows and boy " came miss ing." Some years after the farmer was pass ing down East Water street, Milwaukie, and saw the name of his cowboy over the door of one of the largest hardware houses in the West. He walked in and found his boy in the count ing-room, He stared a moment on the truant and then broke out with, " Hallo, Len, have you found them cows yet ?" One can imagine "what followed—a mutual recognition. It is said the old farmer was pacified without a breach of the peace." AN TNFIDF.L TRICK. —It has been the fashion of our late innovators in philosophy, who have written some of the most brilliant and popu lar treatises on education, to decry the practice of early instilling religious knowledge into the minds of children. It has been alleged, that it is of the ntmost importance to the cause of troth, that the mind of man should be kept free from prepossessions ; and in particular, that every one should be left to form such judgment on religious subjects as may seem best to bis own reason in maturer years. This sentiment has received some counte nance from those better characters who have wished, on the fairest principle, to encourage free inquiry in religion ; but it has been push ed to the blameable excess here censured, chiefly by the new pbiosophers ; who, while they profess only an ingenuous zeal for truth, are, in fact, slily endeavoring to destroy Chris tianity itself, by discountenancing, nnder the plausible pretence of free inquiry, all attention whatever to the religions education of oar rontb LET ME BE QUICKLY RICH. The prayer of most young men is, " Let me be quickly rich." Few seeem satisGed to become so by the once honored mode of indus try and economy practiced by our ancestors. Of the thousands Who make the effort fev be come quickly rich, and fewer remain so. But the story of those who prove successful, with fabulous additions, spreads with telegraphic speed, inflames the minds of the excitable and often many others, and they long to become quickly rich. Forgetting, or not regarding the fate of the unsuccessful, their whole ener gies are directed to the rapid accumulation of a fortune. They vainly imagine that the pos session of wealth, and living in a style common with many who have suddenly acquir ed it, confer happiness without alloy, although experieuce has everywhere demonstrated the fallacy of all such expectations. Mau is so constituted that employment is necessary for his health and happiness. He who devotes his energies to business to secufe a livelihood is fur huppier than him whose employment is caring for and protecting wealth, while no system of measuring merit can prove the latter more honorable or noble. A false and highly injurious notion is widely pervading the public mind, that honor and bappiuess flow from wealth, and that the want of it indicates dishonor and misery. This fal lacious theory has led to more misfortune, suf fering and disgrace than wealth ever prevent ed. It induces men to engage in the wildest adveutures, and to hazard, not only their own accumulated earnings but those of others as far as subject to their control ; while not one in a hundred proves successful. The effort to be come quickly rich is the cause of the frauds upon merchants by their clerks, and many of their customers, and upon banks and corpora tions by their officers aud employees. They are not content to follow the path trod by As tor, Girard, and others, and rise to fortune by industry and pursuit of business, directed with skill and intelligence. They forget that Astor commenced his commercial career by carrying his stock upon his back, exchanging it for furs ; and that regular business skillfully managed, conducted him to his immense fortune. They do not remember that Girard, from a cabin boy on a vessel, became lirst a small ship gro cer, and by unremitting attention and great sagacity, accumulated his millions. They only recollect them as millionaires. They wish to approach, or rival them in their accu mulations without subjecting themselves to the toil, physical and mental, necessary to ac complish the result desired. Girard once made a remark which is worthy of much re flection. A young man had been offered a salary which he thought too small, as he could lay up but a limited sum after paying his expenses. Girard replied—" 1 labor far harder than you, listing all this property to manage and take care of, and all I shall ever have out of it is my victuals and clothes." Out of his millions all he enjoyed was comprised in these two items. Men are most happy when constant ly engaged in business, and are most likely to perform all the duties of good citizens in the most acceptable manner. Of course they are gratified if it proves successful, so that it may guard them and their families against want. — If well and skilfully conducted, most kinds of business leads to independence and competence, which tend to happiness ; whereas the mere possession of wealth, except with the sordid misers, never confers happiness on mankind. Those who become suddenly rich lost all the pleasure and reputation derived from conduct ing a successful business. One lucky adven ture will lead to new hazards, and often occa sions a total loss of the fruits on the first suc cess. Among all who engage in mercantile business, not three in a hundred are computed to die rich. Among those who seek to become quickly rich, probably not one in a thousand dies so. Of the thousands in California who suddenly became apparently wealthy, or reput ed so, very few are not even comfortably off. The rich men there usually become so by the slow process of regular business. Of the thou sands who have been suddenly made rich by stock and other Wall street operations, few in deed close theif career with wealth. Among the numerous " operators " in land and other property, where a regular business course is not pursued,but a limited number ever come out with property, mnch less large fortunes. We hear much of those who in all these matters succeed, but lose sight of the infinitely greater number who fail and fall into obscuri ty. That father confers the greatest benefit on his son who educates him to some regular and respectable employment, and encourages him to happiness and a reasonable share of wealth. The aon who devotes his time and talents to such employment may rationally ex pect a far greater share of respectability and happiness than can be derived from fortune not, actually earned and accumulated but quick ly from one lucky move out of scores of unsuc cessful ones. He who prays to be made quick ly rich, if his prayer proves favorably answered, will fail in his greater object of becoming hon orably distinguished and personally happy.— Tint " BIBLE TWANG." —Once upon a time an elderly Scotch woman gate her grandson the newspaper to read, telling him to read aloud. The only reading aloud the boy had been ranch In the habit of hearing was at the parish kirk, and he began to read in the ex* tract tone in which be had so often heard the minister read. The good lady was shocked at the boys profanity, and giving him a box on the ear, exclaimed—" What ! dost thou read the newspaper with the Bible twang !" Many a minister has a twang or tone for the pulpit that he never nses in conversation. If a lawyer at the bar should address the Jury in a preaching tone, he wonld make them laugh when he wished to make them weep. Preach ing would be far mure efficient in the ordinary tone, such ng used between man and man ; but many preachers pitch on a key so variant from their natural voice that they wonld not be re cognized unless tbey could be een. —A* Y 1 THE PRINTER'S DOLLARS. —The printer's dol lars ! Where are they ? We'll suppose Otic of thefn is in somebody's pocket in Philadel phia, another is in Boston, u third in New York, a fourth in Baltimore, while a fifth is resting securely in some city or town of the West. A dollar here and a dollar there, scat tered all over the town, all over the country, mile upon mile apart, how shall they be gath ered ? The type founder has his hundreds of dol lars against the printer, the paper maker, the building owner, the journeyman, the grocer, the tailor, and all assistants to him in carry ing on business, each have their demands, un fortunately hardly ever so small as a single dollar. But the mites from here and there must be diligently gathered in, and very pa tiently hoarded, or the wherewith to discharge the large bills will never become very bulky. We imagine the printer will have to get up an address to his widely scattered, distant dol lars, something like this : " Dollars, halves, quarters, and all manner of fraction iuto which ye are divided, collect yourselves, and come yourselves, and come home—you are wanted ! Combinations of all sorts of men that help the printer to become your proprietor, gather iu such force, and de maud with so good reason your appearance at bis counter, that nothing short of a sight at you will appease them. Collect yourselves, for, valuable as you are in the aggregate, sin gly you will never pay the cost of gathering. Come iu here in single silent file, that the printer rnay farm you into battalions, and send van forth again to battle for him and vindicate ins credit." BANK XOTE PAPER.—A Bank of England note has seine peculiar and interesting charac teristics of manufacture, the paper being dis tinguished white, such as neither sold in the shops or used for any other purpose ; by its thinness and transparency, qualities which pre vent any of the printed part of the note wash ed out by turpentine, or removed by a knife, unless n hole is made in the place thus practi ced on ; by its characteristic feel, a peculiar crispness and toughness, by which those accus tomed to handle it distinguish the true notes instantly ; the wire or water mark, which is produced 011 the paper when in a .-tate of pulp and which is easily distinguished from a mark stamped 011 the paper is completed ; the three " deckle' edges—the mold contains tw) notes placed lengthwise, which are separated by a knife at a future stage of the process, this deckle or wooden frame of the paper mould producing the peculiar eflVct secu 011 th edges of un cut paper, and this edging being caused when the paper is in a state of pulp, precludes any successful imitation after the paper is made also by the strength of the paper, which is made from new linen and cotton. In its" wa ter leaf," or unsized condition, a bank note will support thirty-six pounds ; and when one grain of size has been diffused through it, it will lift half a hundred weight. If a little more care was taken by our State Government in regard to what sort of paper should be used in the printing of bank notes, the people would suner much less from the spurious stud' now in circulation. In some respects we are a heedless people, and have yet something to learn from the old nations of Europe.— Scientific American. STARTLING CALCULATION. — If a tobacco ehew er chews fifty years and consumes each day of that period two inches of solid plug, he will consume 6.475 feet, or nearly a mile and a quar ter in lenghth of solid tobacco, half an inch thick and two iuches broad, costing two thoosand and ninety-funr dollars ! Plug Ugly, sure enough ! By the same process of reasoning, if a man ejects one pint of saliva per day for fifty years the total would swell into two thou sand three hundred gallons ; quite a respecta ble lake, and almost large enough to float the great Eastern in 1 Truly, there are several things we never dream of in our philosophy. Whether these interesting statics will diminish sale of-the the juicy weed we are not able to say. There arc at least three million of energetic chewers in the United States. If one tobac co ehewer consumes in fifty years twothorsand dollars worth of tobacco, then the three millions will do in the same time the handy little sum of six thousand millions of dollars, the annual interest would be four hundred and twenty millions, and the interest each second would be thirteen dollars. The nnmber of rail-cars or ships that the tobacco would load, we will leave to some of our young readers ; but will merely state that accord ng to the estimate quantltyof saliva rjec ted by each tobacco chevrer, the whole amount discharged by three million Americans, would be a hundred million hogsheads. This would be more than enough to fill the ftrie canal its whole length, three times ; or a similar Cai.al more than a thousand miles long. Bngiuei r Barrett ascertained that about twenty millions cubic feet of water poured into the great Falls of Niagfa erery minute • yet enormous as is this amount, the estimated quantity of Ameri can tobacco saliva would keep this great cata ract in full action for more than two thirds of an hour. If the Yankees were compelled to manufac ture all this from their months by means of a bitter and poisonctts weed, it would no doubt be regarded as a tyranny infinitely worse, than exercised by George 111., or any modem European despot. tjSgr- A young and beautiful, but poor wid ow, was about to marrv a rich old widower. Her friends wished to know why she wanted to marry him. She replied, " For pure iove ; I love the gronnd (meaning the farm, proba bly) on which he walks, and the very house in which he lives.'"—There was a platonic lovo for you ! There is none of your school-girl romance in that. fgj- Prayer is a sovereign remedy for sad ness, for it lifteth up the soul to G n d, who ig bur only joy and cpso'at'ou VOL. XVIII. —SO. 26. A BATTI.R IFROFPT.Sf.—A the battle of the Thames, a laCghuble incident oceurfed, which is thus related by one who was in the engage ment i The British General had formed his fnen in open order, with their cannon pointing down the road by which tne Americans were advanc ing. General Harrison immediately took ad vantage of this and ordered Colonel Johnson'* mounted regiment to charge at speed by heads of companies—so as to expose the least possi ble front—pass through the -dpen intervals, and form in the rear of the British forces.— This movement was brilliantly executed by tho battalion under the command of Lieut. Col. James Johnson, his brother Col. R. M. John son, at the same time charging the Indians with the other battalion. Jt happened that in one of the companies under James Johnson's command, there was a huge, brawny fellow, named Lamb ; he weigh ed about 230 pounds, was a brave man, and as good humored as big—brave men proverbial ly are. Luirrb had broken down his Kentucky horse by his great weight, aud was mounted instead, upon a short, stout, wild Canadian pony, from whose sides his long limbs depend ed almost to the ground, while his bulky frame towered high above the beast—loooking not unlike an overgrown boy astride of a rough sheep. When the charge was made, Lamb's pony took fright and broke Into a run. Lamb pull ed until the bit broke in the animal's mouth, and all command was lost. The little pouy stretched himself out to the work, dashde out of the ranks, soon out stripped the file leaders aud pushed on in advance of the company.—• Lamb was no longer master of his horse or himself, and he was in a quandary. If he roll ed off his horse he would be trampled to death by his friends ; if the horse rushed upon the er.eniv with him, so far ahead of the rest, he must be killed. Either way, death seemed inevitable ; and to use his expression, he thought " he'd jist say so-mething they could tell his frieuds in Keutuckv, when they went home." lie stuck berth heels into the pony's flanks mid urged him to the utmost speed. On they drove, some fifty yards iu front of the leading file, Lamb's gigantic person swaying from sde to side, and his legs swinging in a most portentous fashion—the Canadian " pulling foot"ali he knew how, his tail straight, his nostrils distended, his ears pinned back, and his eyes flashing from under their shaggy fore tip, with all the spite and spleen of a born devil. Just as he gat within a stride or two of the British, Lamb flourished his rifle and roared out in a voice of thunder ; " Clear the way, 0 d d——n you 1 for I'm com ing 1" To his surprise the lines opened right and left, and he passed through unhurt. So great was their astonishment at the strange appari tion of such a horse, and snch a rider, moviDg upon them with such Telocity, that they open ed mechanically at his word of command and let him pass. So soon as he gained the rear of their position, Lamb rolled on the grass, and suffered his pony to go on his own road. A few minutes more and lie was with his com rades securing the prisoners. CCRIOCS FACTS. —Lees are geometricians.— The cells are so constructed as, with the least quantity of material, to have the largest sized spaces and the least possible insterstice. The mole is a meteorologist. The bird called a nine killer is an arithmetician. Also the crow, the wild turkey and some other birds. The torpedo, the ray and the electric eel, are elec tricians. The nautilus is a navigator, lie raises and lowers his sails—casts and weighs anchor, and performs other nautical feats.— Whole tribes of birds are musicians. The beaver is an architect, builder and wood-cut ter. He cats down trees and erects houses and dams. The marmot is a civil engineer.— He does not only build hou-es, but constructs aqueducts and drains to keep them dry. The ants maintain a regular standing army. Wusps are paper manufacturers. Caterpillars are silk spinners. The squirrel is a ferryman.— With a chip or a piece of bark for a boat, and his tail for a sail, he crosses a stream. Dogs, wolves, jackals and ninny others, are hunters. The black bear aud heron are fishermen. The ants are day laborers. The moukey is a rope,, dancer. THF: SHADOWS OF CHILDREN*.—N otKinjr SEEMS to weigh down their bnoyant spirits long, mis fortunes may fa!! to their lot, but tW shadows it casts upon their life-path are as ifeeticgas the clouds that come and fro in an April sky. Their future, perchance, nupear darX to others but to their fearless gaze it looms np brilliant and beautiful as the walls of a fairy palace. There is no tear whieh a mother's gentle hand cannot wipe away, no wound that a mother's kiss cannot heal, no anguish which the sweet murmuring of her soft, low voice car.not soothe. The warm generous impulse of their natures have not been fettered and t>rauiped by the cold formalities of the world: they -have not vet learned to ve I a hollow b' art with false, smile* or hide the basest purges beneath honeyed words. Neither they constantly on t!w alert to search o'\t the faults and follies with Argus eye ; bn the contrary, they experience tliat Lless'.a charity which " thiuketh no evil." k oothec'jP, determined to have an old offender extracted but there being no dentist near, he resolved todo the job himself, wherenpon lie filled >*> excavation with powder, but being afraid to touch it off, he put a slow match to it, lighted it, and then ran get out of the way. A GEF* XIKTOFIT. —" Von are very stnpid", | Thomas,"* said a country, teacher to a little j boy eight years old. " You are donkey, j and what do tin?? do to care biin of his stu pidity r i " VYhv thev f*ed him more, snd kick 1 less." the n-ehiß.