1JL U PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. : florsday Morning, May 5, 1869. ■ SWtttt SPRING. BT ALKKKD TBKXTSOH. Dip down upon the Northern shore, 0 „weet new year, delay in)? long ; Thou dost expectant nature wrong, Delaying long ; delay no more. What *ttvs thee from the clouded noons, . Thy sweetness from its proper place ? Cat trouble lire with April days, i Or sadness in the summer noons ? H Bring orchis, bring the fox glove spire, The little speedwell's darling bine, Deep tulips dashed with fiery- dew, laburnums, dropping wells of fire. 0, thou, new year delaying long, Delajest the sorrow in my blood, That longs to burst a frozen bud, And flood a fresher throat with song. Sow fades the last long streak of snow : Now burgeous every luar.e of quick About the flowering square, and thick Br ashen roots the violets blow. Now rings the woodland loud and long, The distance takes a lovelier hue, And drowned in yonder living blue The lark becomes a sightless song. Now dance the lights on lawn and lea, ' The flocks are whiter down the vale. And milkier every milky sail On winding st ream or distant sea. Where now the scamew pipes, or dives, In yonder greening gleam, and fly The happy birds that change their sky, To build and brood, that lives their lives. From land to land, and in my breast Spring wakens too ; and my regret Becomes an April violet, And buds and blossoms like the rest. Stltdtb ®ale. Who Sitteth in Judgment." THE STORY OF AJ 01 TOAST. CONCLUDED FROM LAST W£F.K. "Good eveuing, madam," said the lawyer, is a lady, closely veiled, a moment after en ered the library; " pray be seated ; here take ibis arm chair near the register. The night is A wild ODC for a lady to venture out. Pray, that may be your business with me, madam." " I have business of great moment with Mr. Thorne," the lady replied, in a low, husky tone, and I would speak with him alone, and where there will be no fear of interruption, or of be rig overheard." The lawyer went to the door just in time to catch sight of the retreating form of John, who had been doing servant's duty at the key-hole. Shutting; the door lie turned the key, and wheeled in front of it a large screen. He then Jiifcw down the curtains, aud closed tightly the window shutters, and taking the large arm chair near his visitor, and as he supposed, cli ent, he signified that he was ready to hear i at she wished to communicate. The lady, without uttering a word, slowly, and with a quiet, determined deliberation,raised her veil and confronted the lawyer : " Great God !" he exclaimed, as he met her iue, starting up and staggering forward. " Is this Jenny Irw in T" Then, quickly recovering mraself. he resumed his seat, and drawing up near to bis visitor, asked her, in a hoarse whis per, what, in the name of God, had brought her there, and what she would have of him. " 1 come, Gilbert Thorne," she said, "to have a final reckoning with you " " A final reckoning with me ? Did we not have it six years ago ? and did you not sign an agreement, under oath, that you would never call upon me, seek me, speak to me, or in any way interfere with me, or address me again ? What do you mean, Jenny Irwin ?" "1 mean this—that wheu, six years ago, you bred of me, and wished to cast me off, per haps for another love, perhaps"— "No, no ! Stop there, Jenny ; stop there, lou know full well that it was not for another ' or e. You know well that my sense of duty aone drove me to the step ; that I provided handsomely for you"— "False ! It is false, Gilbert Thorne. You • t me worse than penniless—helpless, frieud ■ess, hopeless, homeless, aimless !" " Nay, nay, Jenny ; be just. If you wish to obtain more from me tell me so plainly; but ( lo not deny what I have really done. Give me the credit of, at least, generosity toward you. Did I no t settle ten thousnud dollars upon you, in cash, when you signed that con tact, which you have this night broken ? Did not do more than one niau in a thousand could have done ? Could I have, done more J" Now, hear me, Gilbert Thome," she re ined, in a slow, still voice, and with much emotion; "let me say what I have to say w tomit interruption ; let us not quarrel to ,ll£ , but let me simply call to your mind some tlnngs which you may have forgotten, known*"*' P cr ' I, P s i which you have never , "V her *° proceed, resting his el hinrt ''°J' * desk ' and head upon his half ' 8,1 a f ln £ D P° n Iter with an abstracted, half sorrowful expression. 1 ou doubtless remember, Gilbert Thorne, pet to * n 'Pht. N'ou will never for- Ynn n i Ve ca " e^'. 1 a gain to your mind. next n „i il , M y brother Dick i eve L , ; 11 was a W Christmas for a I ?•* Do , t ' arid ' car celj thought ried r after . whether yon were mar • or not ; you said fair things to me then ; er < ", came a welcomed at my fath - board. ; you were not rich, then, Gilbert ®v G from it - well > y° u - to win m - T Gve ; you won it." A - ,; ght tremor rau over the woman's frame, a* . THE BRADFORD REPORTER. and drawing her hand across her forehead, as though to soothe its pain, she went on : " Then my brother Dick went away to Cali fornia, and who so kind and who so brotherly in his attentions as you ? Then came the news of his death—shot by some traitor hand ; pur suing his solitary way over the mountains; then my mother's illness ; for Dick was all her love—her death /" Another pause, and again the hand was pressed upon the forehead. Again she went on : "We thought you very kind then, Gilbert Thorne. It was better, perhaps, for father that he went as he did- better him and bet ter for me—fathers are very blind, and mine was blinder than all the rest, or he might have seen what I too late understood. Was it strange, when he felt the chords of life loosen ed from "earth, that he should have thought you the most worthy of the sacred trust of be ing his daughter's guardian, and the executor of his will ? Oh, fate ! oh, fate ! how cruelly thou doest use us ! Well, well, Gilbert Thorne, you were my guardian. The world reputed ray father rich. All that lie left on earth was in your keeping—his fortune—aud his daugh ter. You did not take that daughter to your home, and cherish her as a sister, as you prom ised upon his dying bed—No, no. JJut lam as much to blame, perhaps, as you, for what followed, with only this difference : There was no excuse for you, as you were a man of ma ture years, a husband and a father, while I was only a girl of a loving heart—loving as a wo man—without knowing or understanding what a fearful thing it is for a woman to embark all the rich freight of her affections on one who can never fill to her the sacred relation of a husband: —well, well, I became your mistress; but God above can bear rue witness, 1 knew not what 1 did. I only knew that I loved you, worshipped you with all of the intensity of a strong heart's first affeetiou." Again a pause and again the same hand pressed upon the brain, and again she goes on in a softer, lower, and more tremulous voice than before : " I was very, very linppv in those brief, few, ; months, Gilbert. I say it with shame, but yet 1 cannot help but say it. I used to watch for your coming the few times a week which you spared to me, oh ! so eagerly, so earnestly. T have thought sometimes that much might be I forgiven me for what I tried to be then. I have 1 remembered since that sometimes you used to ! tell me about my father's property, and some ! times we went in carriages and signed papers in 1 courts and in lawyer's offices, and that after many months' you told me that my father's es tate would little more than pay his debts and the expenses of administration. I remember that I never scarcely heeded what you said, and that 1 only cared for the money as it was of need to you. I never even thought that you could wrong rae, for I knew you loved me, and I was beautiful and worthy of being loved. I can recall all the foolish, yet tender sophistries with which I used to reconcile myself to my fate I would say, ' I can never be bis wife ; but I will be to him such a tender and devo ted friend, so true so disinterested, ever watch ful of his interests, ever patient, enduring, and loving, that he will cling to me more fondly than ever husband to wife, and hold me in such close relationship that nothing on earth can ever break the tie which binds us togeth er.' Oh! weak and simple fool!—you little thought that at the very moment when you were building such airy castles, the cherished object of theni all was planning to crush them | down to earth ! " I well remember the night which decided my fate. I have thought of it many times, and never without bitterness and hate until to-day. Von came to me as usual, and after our little supper—how sweet those little suppers were ? ' —you told me that a great change had come over you ; that your daughter was coming up —your wife, a good, faithful woman, was suf fering from your neglect ; that your friends shunned you ; that your own conscience smote you ; and many other things of like import ; and then,to cap it all ,that [IC IS the cause. You ; said you had determined, while it was yet in your power, to break, at a single stroke, the ties between us, and that each must go our ways, never to meet again. You told me that it had been a matter deliberately thought of | by you, and that, from the love which you had borne for me, you could not let me go unpro vided for, and that, to satisfy your conscience and your heart, and to insure for me a pcr , manent support, you would divide your fortune I with me, and settle upon me the sura of ten the>usn>'ft dolhrs in r/lsh. , ' " Oh, Gilbert Thorne, what a wretched, wretched, night was that! When life came hack to me, after the full realization of your puqiose had left me insensible upon the floor, and I found myself lying upon the bed where you had placed nie, while you, bending over me, chafed my temples, and sought by every tender epithet, to bring me back to reason—-I felt all broken, and as though life was worth no further struggle. You asked me many, very many things—if I would promise never to see you more—if I would sign a paper, and if I would be satisfied to take teu thousand dollars, and call all things square. I said yes! —yes—yes —to everything. What did I care for? what was ten thou sand dollars to me ? Well, you left me, and promised to come the next evening. You came, and with you came a friend—you said a brother lawyer—to wit ness the settlement, and to make out the papers. 1 remember I signed a great many documents. You told me to be calm, and not to let the stranger see me affected, as it would injure you if I did so. I was calm. I signed everything you told me to, and then, whei. all was finished you handed me a paper and a little book, and told me that there was ten thousand dollars in the bank, for me, which I might draw at any time. The stranger said it was all correct, and he thought Miss Irwiu bed received a liberal settlemeut; and then he went away." Here site paused again, and this time she pressed both hands upon her temples—remain ing mute for many minutes. The lawyer sat firm in his chair ; he had PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " RESARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." not moved a muscle, and only the contraction of his brow told of the warfare within his heart and brain. Again she went on, slowly and distinctly, but her vioce was very low and soft : " You closed the door of our little home that night, Gilbert Thome, upon the most wretched being God ever permitted live. You went awav from the spot which, in my foolish pride, I had thought was the dearest one on earth to you—without even looking back, and without a single tear. I watched you through the curtain from the window. I said surely, sure ly, he will return ; he cannot, cannot mean it —never, never, to see me again. I saw you reach the corner ; I said, he will turn hack now ; he cannot go ; the magnetism of my strong love will bring him hack again;—he will come back ! You turned the corner ; and like an arrow through my heart, came the conviction, that you were gone from me for ever. I fell insensible upon the floor, and, many hours after, I was found by a neighbor— sick in heart, and body, and mind—ready to die. "Now 1 come to your crime—and my dis grace and sorrow. You thought you did a generous thing, perhaps, when you gave me so large a sum as ten thousand dollars ; but what did I know of ruouey t I scarcely knew the difference between a hundred and tea thousand dollars. I had always been cared for in that respect, and had never been taught to take care of myself, or to believe I should ever be thrown upon my own resources. I will not dwell upon what followed. I loved you so sincerely and so devotedly that I had great difficulty in keeping my oath that 1 would not seek you—but I kept it. With returning health 1 sought new associations, and about this time learned that the gin-cup would drown much misery. Well, I lived a gay life. I had no one to love—to tie to bind me to virtue or a higher niin. You took from me everything but ten thousand dollars —and that soon followed. Then came more misery, more degradation, more shame ; my beauty began to fade ; my temper grew violent. Through my ignorance and improvidence, poverty came at the time when, having a little chil l, I found myself friendless and without the means of getting bread ; then death came, and took away mv little hoy; then I was com pelled to pawn jewels to bury the little child ; then my appetite for drink grew more and more, and one by one, everything went to the pawnbroker's, until, after long weary years of sorrow, and sickness, and wretchedness, and un happiness, and misery, and crime, 1 came to be the miserable outcast to whom you threw the paltry coins this evening in the Park.'' " What !" interrupted the lawyer. " were you the wretched being who crossed my path this evening, to whom I threw some change ?" " Yes!" .-he replied "1 am the same. Three picayunes and a dime, and 1 have laid it out at interest —where I think it will help me to bet ter life. Put don't interrupt me till I have finished what I have to say. I am going away to a distant country to live—l cannot live here more ; and before 1 went, 1 determined to come and tell you plainly how well 1 have come to understand the great wrong which you have done me, as well as those who are sleeping under the snow, away over the river in 'Greenwood' I understand it all ! " Al, Gilbert Thome ! I might truly have said to you, in the language of the wronged and gentle Tamar, ' This evil, in sending me away, is greater then the wrong thou didst un to me.' You took me a child, as it were, from the home of my dead parents, with no one in the wide world to love but you. You took from me everything I had in life, and left me, more than ever before, unfit to take care of myself. You thrust me out into the world without a purpose or an end, or anything to cling to —with passions of whose existence, but for you, I might never have known, wrecked at the first breaker of life—with ap petites needing but the excuse of wretched ness and remorse to kindle into a never-dying flame—with not a friend, a hope, or anything to prize, with none to counsel, none to encour age, none to aid, none to advise, none to warn, none to befriend, and none to love—thus you thrust me out in the world, and in the place of all these you gore me ten thousand dollars! " Would it not have been better, Gilbert Thorne, had you kept your ten thousand dol lars, or my dead father's money, whichever it. was, and have kept me too. Would it not have been more like a man and a Christian— yes, better in the sight of God, had you turned my too loving heart to its best account, and permitted me to have lived out my little dream ? 1 should never have troubled you or yours. The little child who sleeps now in Greenwood might have lived to some good purpose. I should have been contented al ways in my little home—oh, so happy ! If I could have seen you only once a week, or even month, then this great grief might not have come to me, ar.d life might have been put to better purposes. But your selfish heart had other piaus, and poor Jenny's life must be sacrificed to minister to your ambitious and worldly pride. But the day of reckoning will surely conic, and you will yet feel that you might have atoned for the great first wrong which you did to Jenny Irwin, had you cher ished, and protected, and turned to its highest account the true and earnest love which she bore to you. When that time comes, Gilbert Thorne, I wish yon to remember this night, and to call to mind that I came here on this Christ mas eve, the anniversary of our first meeting, to have a final reckoning with you. I come not for money ; you have placed the last in my hands which I shall ever receive from you— three picayunes and a dime —l only come to you to say that I know if nil now ; I know the source of the riches of Gilbert Thorne." The lawyer's face grew dark. " But I come uot to upbraid you ; I come not to expose you ; I come not to do you any harm ; I only come, ere my departure, to bid you a kindly farewell, and to tell you that out of the great sorrow and wretchedness which has made me the miserable outcast which I bad come to be, a holier, better spirit utters a full forgiveness for all the evil which I have received at your hands. " This is all I have to say, Gilbert Thorne; all the reckoning I come to make, and now," slowly rising, " may the great God, through the intercession of Him whose nativity the ceremonies of this night commemorate, keep you aud yours from all evil and harm, and not visit the sius of the fathers upon the chil dren." As she said this she had risen to her full height, and her upturned face was lit with a radiance which it had never known before. " Oil ! Jenny, Jenny," groaned Gilbert Thorne, throwing himself at her feet, "for God's sake curse rue. Do not say you forgive me. This is my punishment ; 1 see it all now." "Gilbert Thorne," she rejoined, and a deadly pallor overspread Iter features, " this is no time for impiety ; my carriage is waiting, and I must go. I have said all that I have to say: but kneel with ine one little moment, that I may intercede for YOU " Her voice was singularly distinct, but very soft and low, and faint tremors ran through her frame. The strong man was bowed ; he knelt beside the outcast, and she, whom nil men reviled, off-red up for him a petition to the Throne of Mercy, which was taken up by angels, and borne to Him who suffereth not a sparrow to fall to the ground unheeded. The words of that prayer dwell ever in the mem ory of Gilbert Thorne. Tears came back to him as when a child. The agony of the strong man, bowed, pen may not describe. In vain he pressed her to stay. In vain he told her that the house and nil was hers : that he would go forth, and leave her to her possessions ; that lie would work as a galley slave, any thing to make up for the wrong which lie had done. Blie only said ; "Too late, too late ! All is prepared for iny departure, and I must not, cannot stay. We part now, Gilbert Thorne, and let it be quickly over. Good bye !" And she took his hand in both of hers, and pressing it once only to her heart, glided from the room. Once she only turned to look hack as she threaded the dimly l glited hall ; once only she paused, and through the open library door she -aw the lawyer, with clenched hand against his forehead, and heaving breast, standing in resolution and agony, combating the impulse which hade him follow her wliere ever she went, and snatch her from a fate which was already half foreshadowed in his mind. She opened the street door, and as the cold wind rushed in, wrapping her frail form in its chill embrace, and moaning through thr hall, it seemed to seek to drive her hack again, say ing "Go not forth ; go not forth." A moment only she paused, while her shuddering frame had need of all its resolution to urge her forth into the desolate night. Perhaps, in that brief moment, standing in llie half open door, looking out upon the falling snow, she hud a lingering hope that a kindly hand might he laid upon her shoulder, drawing her back from the fell purpose on which she was bent. Hut no protecting hand came at the last moment, to detain her; no sympathetic voice to bid her stay. She closed the door, and forth into the desolate storm she went, out into the bitter night, amid the drifting snow and pitiless winds, leaving a blessing upon the threshold, which she was never to recross again, for him wiio had been the cause of all her ruin. On the :27th of December, 185-, the daily papers of the great metropolis contained among their city items the following announce ment. :• " Dr. Mil FHOM IXTEMPEKAXCE AM) Hxi'OSl KK Cl)l i-t mas morning Officer Sayles, while patrolling his heat at day-break, found, partly covered in the snow, on the steps of a house in Fifth avenue, the hody of an abandoned wo man, commonly called Wild Jen : hut whose real name is supposed to have been Jenny Irwin. She was taken to the dead-house, where an inquest was held—Verdict: " Died trrm intemperance and exposure." She is supposed to have lost her way in the storm, while leturuing intoxicated from some revel the previous night, ami becoming bewildered and chilled, sought refuge on the steps where was found. She will he buried in Poller's Field. Thus ended the life of Jenny Irwin. ******* It boots not now to record the secret satis faction which mingled with the remorse of Gilbert Thorne, as reading his. morning paper over the rich breakfast service, he learned for the first time the fate of Jenny Irwin. The world thrives well with him ; honors and riches wait his every step. They talk of ma king him a Judge, and if they do, as they doubtless will, it requires no great gift of proph ecy to write bis future life. The ermine will fit him gracefully and well, to the world ; his judgments will be clear, and impartial, and fair, to the. world ; bis actions will be above reproach, to thr world ; lie will be a constant church-goer and a devout Chris tian, to the world, he will write a book upon some hackneyed subject of the law, which shall to the world appear very profound and learned, and then, after not many years, he will die.— The courts will lie closed out of respect for his memory ; for it is meet that Justice should pause to weep when a good man dies. His distinguished brethren of the bench will meet in solemn conclave, and pass " Resolutions'" of condolence with his afflicted family, expressive also of their high sense of his public and pri vate worth, and of the irredeemable loss to the country. There will be a meeting of the Rar, over which the distinguised Judge " will be called to preside." That bright luminary and celebrated advocate, David Little, Esq , will pronounce his stereotyped eulogy. Coun sellor Slasher will recall sonic hnppv rcminis cence of the departed greatness, and will tell how " he knew him intimately and well, and that he held it ainoi.g the proudest recollec tions of his life to have been the friend of such a man." The head of the great firm of Drag on. Bully k Dunn, the great special pleader, will " add his mite" to the occasion, and in a "few brief remarks" will move himself and his audience to tears ; and then the usual " Reso lutions" will be passed, and the Bench and Bar will attend his funeral. The Church of the " Holy Moncy-bavs" will be crowded.— Sextou Goldboy, in his " Customary cuff of solemn black " will opeu the carriages of tue great " law givers" who come to pay their last tribute to departed worth. He will lead deerepid men decrepid both in mind and body —who still dole justice from the bench ; and venerable white wiars, who had long since retired, feeling that their age had gone beyond their Judge ship—through waves of criholine.impregnahle. save to the accustomed eye The Rev. Dr. Silvereup will read the well-known service with peculiar miction, and in a short funeral sermon, will lake good care 1o speak in no un measured terms of praise of "the divine calling of those who sit h judgment," and of that no ble profession of which the departed was so distinguished a member Then a grand cava I cade of prancing horses, and sable plumes, and gay equipages, will drive with measured tread aud in mournful array to " Greenwood." Then a monument, with appropriate inserip tions and emblematic designs, will be erected to his memory Perhaps Justice, with blinded eyes, holding the sword and scales, is not out of place, surrnountiug the tomb of the departed Judge ! Perhaps the inscription, 1N MEMORY OF HOW, GILBERT THORNE, JUDGE OF THE CIRCUMLOCUTION COURT Died —lß—, .El—. P'p learned and erudite Counsellor -the up right and impartial Judge—the faithful and affectionate husband—the loving father and the devoted friend distinguished alike for his public benefactions nnd his private charities ! may answer well for the world's eye, and for the world's judgment ; but when the time comes, ax it surely will, those of us who may, perchance, he present, may find a different record written upon the docket of that great court whose judgments are eternal. Then vou and i, dear reader, and all of us, may see— guided by a light, of which we can form no present conscption—how fallible are ail human decisions, how blind all earthly opinions, and how unjust the judgments of the world ? Then, standing at that great bar,where, written upon our conscience, the deeds of life are brought to light, each his own accuser and defender, you, and I, and Jenny Irwin, and Gilbert Thorne, and all of us, will learn uhy sitteth in judgment ! TSTKHI'KRAN'CK.— What hopes so precious that it has not withered f What career so promising that it has not arrested ? What heart so tender, what temper so tine, that it has not destroyed ? What things so noble and sacred that it has, not blasted ? Touched by its bell tire flame, the laurel-crown lias been changed to ashes on the head of mourning genius, and the wings of the poet scorched by it : he who once played in the light of sun beams, and soared aloft into the >kies, has basely crawled in the dust. Paralyzing the mind even more than the body, it lias turned the noblest intellect into drivelling idiocy.— Not awed by dignity.it has polluted the ermine of the .Fudge. Not scared away by the sanct ity of the temple, it has defiled the pulpit, lit all these particulars, I speak what I know. 1 have seen it cover it with a cloud, or expose to deposition fr* 111 tlie office and honors of the holy ministry no fewer than ten clergymen, with some of whom 1 have sat down at the ta ble ot the Lord,'and all of whom J have num bered in the rank of acquaintances or friends. Guthrie. (IFANN AUAIVST VN/SAR LAXOIAOE. —There is as much connection between the words and thoughts as is between the thoughts and the words ; the latter are not onlv (lie expression of the former, but they have a power to react upon the soul, and leave the stain of their cor ruption there. A young man who allows him self to u? careful of your words as well as your thoughts. If you can control the tongue that no improper words are pronounced by if, you will soon l>e able, also, to control the mind, and save that from corruption. You extinguish the fire by smothering it, or by preventing bad thoughts bursting out in language. Never utter a word any where which you would be ashamed to speak in the presence of ttie most refined female, or the most religious man. Try this practice a little while, and you will soon have command ot yourself. WHAT CAN" YOR I>o.—" Wlmt is your name?" said a Now Orleans merchant to a half-horse, half-alligator sort of a fellow who applied to him for employment. "My name's leabod Wing wlicu 1 am at home" was the answer. " Whore was von bom ? " " 1 was born nowhere—but was picked np out of the Mississippi, floating down stream on a raft." " What can yon do if I employ yon ?" " I can whip twice mv weight in wild cats —swim np Niagara Falls—twist a rope with three live rattlesnakes, and climb seven trees at once. Of course the merchant employed him, right off. tizjf Persons who are too shy and and aw kward to take their dnc part of thehusTing world, console themselves by assuming that the active and forcible qualities possessed by t' e real actors in life's stirring scenes, are in compatible with others which they choose to deem higher and more important." The company of a good-humored man or women is a perpetual feast ; he is welcome everywhere—eyes glisten at their approach, and difficulties vanish in tlwir presence Franklin's indomitable good humor did as much for his country in the old Congress, n- Adams' fire or Jefferson's wisdom ; he clothed wisdom with smiles, and softened contention.- mituL into acquiesei.ee. Keep in good humor. VOTj. XJX. —KO. 48. LITHUGRAI'IIT — WHAT IS IT? —The emrrav which weekly appear in the columns of the Scientific American are first drawn, ami then engraved en wood, and cannot as many seem to imagine, be lithographed. We often ) have letters from inventors, requesting us to | lithograph and publish their machines, hot • lithography is nut an engraving process, but siuiply the reproduction of a drawing. Again, j n common printing press would not produce anything like an impression from a lithograph, j but a mod i lien lion of the copper plate printing press needs to IK.* used. Tne name is derived Iroin two (jkeek words : lit hot , a stone, and the verb graphu to write. Lithography was discovered in the year 1800, in .Munich, by a German named Alois Sciiefelder, who, after suffering a life of pov erty and privation, gave to the world a process by which many have made priucelv fortunes. Hie stone used is a ca'carious slate, and is im ported from Solen Hofen in Germany. All limestones absorb grease or oil, more or less, and this fact is the base of all lithography. To make what is called a "crayon" drawing —such as those artistic designs by Jullieu of Paris-, seen in every print seller's window—the stone is first prepared by grinding it with fine sand, atai then washing clean with water- When dry, the drawing is made on the stone precisely as on paper, with (instead of a lead pencil,) a greasy crayon comjioscd of beeswax, tallow, shellac, lampblack, Ac., and, of course, is of a greasy nature. Every mark made on the stone with it, being greasy, cannot be re moved unless by removing the surface of the stone with it. The drawing, when finished, is covered with a weak solution of nitric acid and gum nrubic, which entirely changes the pro perties of the surface of the stooe, so that grease will not be absorbed by it, but the so lution does not affect the greasy drawing.— The surface of the stone is then moistened with a spo- ge and water, and a fine leather roller covered with a greasy ink is passed over it ; the printing ink being greasy adheres to the drawing, because the drawing is greasy, but cannot adhere anywhere else on the stone, be cause the stone is wet ; and as water and greese will not mix, the ink sticks to the draw ing only. A sheet of pnper is then laid over it, and a pressure of a rubbing character being applied,-the paper takes up the extra ink from the original drawing, and so carries away upon its surface a perfect "proof" or printing of the illustration or design. Portable lithographic presses can be mado suitable for merchants and others who wish to issue circulars and the like in their own hand writing, as they can write an original with a greasy ink upon paper, and thcu transfer it to the stone.— Scientific American. A CAXDID MlXD. —There is nothing thai sheds so fine a light upftn the human mind as candor. It was called whiteness by the an cients for its purity ; and it has always won the esteem due to the most admirable of the virtues. However little sought for or practised, all do it the homage of their praise, and all feel the power and charm of its influence. The man whose opinions makes the deepest mark upon his feliowtnen ; whose influence is the most lasting and efficient; w hose friendship is instinctively sought where all others have proved faithless, is not the man of brilliant parts, or flattering tongue, or splendid genius, or commanding power ; but he whose lucid candor and ingenious truth transmit the heart's real feelings, pure and without There are other qualities which are more showy, and other traits that have a higher place in the world's code of honor, but uonc wear better, or rather less tarnish by use, or claim a deeper homage in that silent reverence which the miud must pay to virtue.— Greta Learts. CORRECT SrEAKixc,.-—We adviso all young people to acquire in early life the habit of tiMiig good language, both in speaking and writing, and to abandon, as early as possible, the use of slang words or phrases. The longer they live the more difficult the acquisition of such language will be ; and if the golden age of youth, the proper season for the acquisition of language, be passed in its abuse, the unfor tunate victim of neglected education is very, probably doomed 10 talk slang for life. Money, is not necessary to procure this education.— Every man has it in his power. He has merely to use the language winch hp reads, instead of using the slang which he hears—to form his taste from the best speakers and poets of the country—to treasure up choice phrases in his memory, and 'o habituate himse'f to their use avoiding at the same time, the pedantic pre cision and bombast, which show rather, the weakness of a vain ambition than the polish of nit educated mind. ft-a)"" A bachelor friend of ottrs, says a cor respondent, returning the other evening from a ball in a crowded coach, declared with a groan that he had not the slightest objection to ' rings on lti finger o ," but lie had a most nu eqnivocal objection to "belles on his toes." Elder Manger, speaking of the time when he was a b iv: He says it was the custom of school children, as yon passed a school house to make a bow. !>ut in tlicsc latter days, as yon pass a school house, you must keep your eve peeled, or von will get a snow ball or a brickbat at the side of your head. OSfAn Irish gentleman remarkable for his devotion to the fair sex, one remarked, "nev er be critical on the ladies. Take it for granted that they are all handsome and good. A true gentleman will never look on the faults of a pretty woman irithrnU shutting his ajts." Phillips, the Irish orator, speaks thus feelingly of his birth-place : " There where the scene of my childhood reminded me how inno cent I was, and the graves of my fathers ad monish me how pure 1 should continue. Hrff If ay nng lady is not able to sport a riding habit, sue should adopt n walking habit