O-JE D3LLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TO VOY^ID.A.: Thursday Morning, September 13,1860. \loitrn. mmm • [l'lH.ia tUt livening Eost.] THE MOSS-GIIOWN BRIDGE. r MRS. 1. 1. iiEMTNO. Tii ,\ wild, rude spat, jet just the place White poet'. lo\e to drcutß. In the dpep, deep shade. 011 the moss grown bridge That spans fti* mountain stream ; On either Side ttse Mggjr recti I.ikesen 1 ! i<"> stand alireifsr, While on 'he top of their tawny trows The ea?ie bu ids his ae-t. 'Tis a wild. "'ld -put. yet 1 love to rtrey Alone by tli.- Witvdjfffj stream And sittiner down t*r tlie mossy bridge, 0: other days to dr.-am ; There fauey wi aves her f.iiry web Of every -hade and i.ue, Wilde age dep ttr ad o{ the buried past T.ike a -anbeau: wanders through. Where eve.ping weaves her mystic charm*, To deck the twilight h air. With plekwnt thowgiits I hie me there, T > the I-rtSpe in the shady bower, Aud there with happy mart. 1 siug- Of future bliss i dream— While"laughing eoh' f; tvoin the cave Comie dancing down the stream. And oft, Treti.'nV. I hear a voice Among the Wpiling tret - , .And the rustling "fan angel's wing Borne unite evening breeze ; And coo .riess voices seeuno rise Aronm! me every where— While friends 1 ioved long, long ago Couie Oaeh to uicvt me there. Ar.d this is why 1 love this spot, It ever brings to me The happy bygones of roy youth Enrobed in purfty : And laiicy weaves her fairest wel>. As thus 1 -it and dream. In the epae' slwle u the m .ss-giown bridge That spuAi- the mountain stream. fetters from tfuropc. frornspondeiire of the Kepotter.J Horn. Lorn Its uo.v, Yilleneuv. -Swiuerlitul, July '17,1-00. HEAR CARRIE C. :—Dweller among Jukes at.d wyiil-iatids as you are, you Lave never t;tvi your eves to fairer f>re*t-t)M an '! n , ot,i ! rank,—several of LUu-sUi- '' wit L U ,lia< c ! y non'sis there, fiV. ' U " lhe c " ,nrn " dewgnaird by the I '■ f 'e am ns that of Bontiivard. Near . 1 • I ,' y l n,-ia exile f. .r lib- Hxii hLI '; f own I"' 11 ' cUmpion, ' W re Tt . r ' E *- U^ H • s,r,)P k. 1 saluted with love r ' L I • C £*' f S rald "auie, daply < * \° bo with all < s t ? lti W ls faire-it in ; he ' W J* os "*' HP ' l human in' 1 ; nm e tVih UUd of ~"ow. ! * t> co(, :mn d.s lST ,neerf'eeted FOeinl sfnte, — j children on whom the sins of their fathers arc visited, —women whose fetters are thr-ir own heart-trings, aud whom itenth shall one trav make irte, —poets, dreamers, tender and ns- 1 piling spuds, whom duty and net-easily, harsh, j yet, we must believe, not mitrtendh* iroh'rs pinipu uow, but shall t.ot forever hold iu bond age, -thinking thus on those who are hound, "as being bound with titeiu,'' I became, per haps, C.viikirg daugliter of uianv mils and many sorrows I) worthier to comprehend ; that ministry of captivity and pain, with which : the amrete of hnmnn discipline to earlv commissioned to visit your young life. A'fining op into the som-hine, I would not prof.me the solemn and r. vcrcnt 'mprcsdons pf the place, by n eouvenal visit to the upper po 4 "- tlun of the chateau. But ilm next day, taking i tlie wings f the inoruiiig, and the eotnpsiuiou i ship of a brilliant young Russian nolde, re publican ni. i hrro-wor-htppcr, in the enthusi asm of Iter seventeen vcftrs, I made the usual : j tour of the apartments, formerly occupied by the dukes i f SaVoy and their knightly retniu ers, aud saw the modest military appointments of the chambers—uoW .used us a national | : arsenal lot the fair house wives of IVuutyl- j I vatiiu'; firm houses, and the dwellers of her i village toft ages be content ; not one of them ' won! 1 exchange her lowly chamber for the ! ugly discomfort of the sleeping room of those ' I ducLcs.-es of four hundred years ago, nor her ( j fair and wi-H-lighted breakfast-room, for the ( i feast-chamber uf those sovereign dukes. Rest, j therefore, sister of the mountain laud, and i , you, you..g poet of tue western wdJs, i-i peace, uncoveting ! 11. C. 11. Perils of the Arabian Desert. The following i- a graphic account of the ' | simoon, the t' lror of those crossing the Desert, ' and the scenes that attend it, encountered near [ j Doan : | '' The heavens became suddenly obscured bv heavy clouds, until the sun. ray!e-s and as red as Wood, warned us of the approach of the 1 i temjn-st. Whirlwinds of sKVtd mingled with ' ' the falling vapors, swept the Desert, which ! j surged hefortl The Maid like angry waters.— i Wo Lu.-liiy ranged ourselves in Indian file, so ' | as to present as little surface ;u jiassibie to i the coming MIU- on. lor-wmcb, ou fliu? occasiou we wi re not iinpreiiurc i. j Gradually our lungs become oppressed, our I eyes hlood-:tot, onr hps hot and parched The air around us, scorching as the breath of a j furnace, was charged witjl particles of fine -and drifted Insfore the wind iike .iea-foaui iu a j storm. The lightning bolts flashed, accom panied by the crash of the thunder, which J sounded over the gloomy desert like the voice , iof Jehovah. Meu stood in \%iiU ulTright, taut-1 els broke aw vy and rushed bp]lowing Irum the.} J track, until tiiey fell headlong into the sand, | ; into which tliev plunged their head* and long 1 necks, seeking thus to escape the poison breath , of the plague wind. Atfeneth the rainbow appeared on the .-kirts ' of thg tonipost, spauuit g the dark sfiace frmn ea<> to W'-st like a kuatOutlS bridjre thrown i across the Morebund 11 ndramont, one end 1 resling up>u Ujebyi-AkhLar aud tho oilier op- j on Akhbar-Aud. * .N.ue of oar | were missing, iu searching lor which wo ap- , ' preached the edgewf one of Ihe sand go its, i when we stumbled upon the remain* of a car- i avail Loynd from Grtiu iu JJadrumaig, tp tflu. Jaseb. Tit-moving the sand, w.e Loyiuj several ( 1 dead Arabs, victims of the fell I'.usl of the iu thg terror aud coufuaiuu caused Uy , ] which tiny had evidently wandered Uiudiv to , tle edge of the treacherous quicksand in w hiph the a, an Htidy of th caravan bad perfrbedr Amoue them wo f mnd n voting man and u trirl ' 1 —brotnnr artiß sifter—: d in each Others 1 1 anus. A slight indication of moTsftfr^*drfflii f bodicsof tieesc incited us with lidjve'thaVit might not yet .fie too lata to restore ikciu to , ! cpuseiowcuws*. By jwdieioaa and persevering friction, and the copious use of lavender water, with which, luckily. I was always well plied, I soon had the pleas Tie of secipg tllw . j young ! revive ; whiln S ,Im, Ly the appi.- j • cation of similar remedies to the youth, was , eoually successful"" ~~ _ . _ m ' A RRAYPR —A Yankee eerving dtirintr the • 1 Mexicau War tm the eve of the battle of i; Bucjua Yiaif weid out into the field and offer- t ed the follow .ug j raj't r: | s " Oh Lord, her.Q we four ikou-j' wtDd of us, and twcii'y four thou-and YL xi-. 1 cans—enoflirh to'swn'ldvr us Without \ Now, if you can u. do ywrrfm'rvj for hsjavpu's -ake don't Mexicans-*- I and on- 'until to-morrow, and jottd \ \ u * (Imgaul darniest fight you ever seen ;u . j your W|? Toiirs,'respectful!v, amcnl" It '• j A •? a PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TO WAN DA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY £. O'MEARA GOODRICH. * ! cmom ban yU/.#f bo* IAUOJAU raid , ~ R.EI3ARDLESS OF DENTIKCIATIOW FROM ANY QUARTER. " Sabbatli Physiology. ' - i " J *" : * The Almighty rested oiie:seventh of time of commanding man tp observe an equal repose. THe neglect of this injunction will always sooner or later, bring-mental, moral aud physical death. Ile.-t is au invariable, law of animal life.— The busy heart teats ever, from infancy to nge.-atrtl yet a large part of the time it is in a state of repo t alines, it was his custom to cut hearty, substantial food, most highly sensoned. inst before going to his place, in or der to afford th'bo Iv that strength and ex cite the mind to that activity deemed neces >ary to the moineutous occusion. But, under the high tension, both brain and body perished pfcimtorcly. Not kjusr atro, one of the most active hn-i --iH-s* men of Hnglatid found his aff airs so ex tended, that lie dckberatcly deUsriuined to Ue -1 vote his Sabbath.- to his accounts. He had a miflit of a wide gra-p. ITis views were„o comprebensivp. so f:ir-i'eing, that wealth came ia upon bun like a flo ,1. He pirrcliascd ft counUy-ffeat ut tint cost of four hundred thou -and dollars, determining that be would now have Vest and quiet. But it was too late. As 1 he stepped on his fhre.-liold after a siirvey of his late pnrehn-'e. he b<-cnine ripopTeotic. Al ihoucii life was not destroyed, he only lives to be the wreck of a man. It used to he said that a brick kiln " must be kept burning over the Sabbath." It is now know n to be a lullary. There eau be no •'must" against' a divine command. Even now it is a reOtivi.d opinion that iron blast furnaces wdl buna rum if not kept iu contin ual operation. L.ghUxiU years ago, an Eng lishman determined to keep the Sabbath holy u" to them, with the re-u!t, as his books testi fy. that lie made more Iron in six days than he i did before in seven ; tfiat he made more iron in a given luue, in propoitioQ to the hands, . and number, aud size of the furnace*, than i any Psfahii-Lment in England which was kept 1 in operation during the Sabbath. \u our own New York, the mind of a man who in -be f.,i a uti-liou a year, went out in the niirht of madness and au early grave iu on- I ly two year-, from the.very -tram put upon it I by a variety of enterprises, every one of which . succeeded | "It will take about five ye'ars to clear them ' < if, tod iiu observant" master ot an Uruo'ca -1 nul-bouß alluding to tbe u..arAgmai influences 'on the'boatmen, who >yorked on Sabbath* as other day-. As to the boatmen and firemen j of the steamers on the Western rivers, which 1 j never lay by OH the Sal,bath, seven years is i the average of life. The observance, there I fore, of the .-eventlt poriim* ui. our uure lbr , i the purpose of rest, is demonstraoly a pfiysio | logical uecesoity—a law of our uaturc.--/11..Tv j J< i irtial i f JLIuUUi. A (L ASS or RRAVPT. —Don't hurt anybody, i Why, 1 knew a person, yonder he is now on ' j high-change, a speciim u of mnnly beauty, a i i portly six /outer. ILc has tl.o bearing >| a I I princes, llis tape wears the hue of health,and j now, at the of fifty odd, lie has tie- tpiitk, clastic step of fir young men of twetity five ! and none more full of mirth and wit than he, i and 1 know he u< vcr dine* without brandy i and water, aud uevcr guts to bed without a t terrapin or oyster sujipt r, with plenty of cbatu- j paigne ; and nioTO than That he wa a never known to be drunk. So here is a living ox ample and disprOQf of the temperance twaddle about the dangerous nature of an occasional ! gia.v-puid the destructive effect of a temperate use of go-ni liquors. Now it so nammnea tliat this specimen of | -aff brandy-drinking was a relation of ours.—J He died in a year or two niter thnt.of ehrbiJc - diarrher-.a •omanon end of those wh> are never i drynk flor. ever out ol liquor, lie left his six | children, a fid he liud vhips on every a eu, and j credit at ey.ery couaigr, which be never Lad ocv'tr-ions us nc. For months before he di^d—lie wrt n voir ' in dymg—he d aid eat OP ctrink nothing with out distress, am! at hi* dentil,the whole whue n- ; tary canal was a ma.-s of-dis,ea-c ; in the iuiUl, of the millibhs, he died of inanition. Tliat i,-, ' half, rr ivhv Ffc had been a steady dr; '}r, a daijydrinker, for twpr.ty-eight years—' He left a legacy fo-ms chtWren which he did not mention, a up one daughter,-for fifleep year* ; nnuUiur U> in the mud-Loose ; the third ai±J faurtli of unqjirihly beauty, there was n kind Of gratideiir in roat ' bcaoty, fcatnbe* hKghteil, mid pnbxl nnd fad- j ed into biiaveu.we trun.ln their sweeteif tc^ns-1 a'loilwj - is lotLuriog on tho vcrc-j of the grave, | maaoSs oT the ibises, , aml f -eacb of tfiefn as weak as water. Why, we fume from (be disserting room and made a 1 note uf it, it w® so horrible— lfnWt Journal 1 (Jf IfwttL tisod booj * #d bf oil* .tojifccA >t ! —' h CoQNir.M) 11a.—" What b;i* broaght v*oo f beru.jT nd. a ione woman, who was quite i -:i flu'-}rioted," Urn'.'ubLtar by an early , call ft"hi a b'K'b'M'r w'!. > lived .p --.. t, .-! whi she with jie'ctiflft r faror " I came to borrow I a Matches 1 that's a likctf Ttory t"AVhy don't jpbu make a match y wlrseTf? I know what you conic for " cried virgin, a* she backed the into a corner—" you ' came here to Ms* riieltflufbrt to death, ' you sban'r witliofit rob are strongest, ur..l ' goodness knows vOn are 1" : j i. . • * ' • a .. I '■ V V V Jt : I If you wfS.ff |p. dysuqn.se witk butfeg, , take i -w.-et, plump dam-.I to' wife,' omi, it \v-t. *TC r.cr, CAN ILLHI \ur I . . cofiee at breakfast without any bulla,. I THAT department of Jfnrper's j\hig*zine J called " The Drawer " contains usually about f the flattest and (silliest trah that ran be crop-, j ed together from the newspapers. The folfhtv-1 I ing, in the present number, is a good deal bct j than the average : " In the winter of 1857, about midnight, a passenger, with a carpet-sack iu one hand and a heavy til.awl in the other, catered the Trc mout llon.-e at Cldeago. "Walking directly to the office he hailed the clerk who presides at , Tremont. Being late at night, almost every oue lad Left this popular esclruuge of the great Northwestern hietpuolis, and the clerk had fallen to nodding. Awakened by the saiuta tion of the stranger, he jumpeel up. " Ah, Mr. Harris glad to see you ! Just amved.sujtpose fre>m Detroit !' " ' Yes, jut in ; very tired ; have not had my clothes off for two days ; straight from New York. Can yon give me a room V " ' I am afraid not ; we are very full.** " ' Yon must stretch a uointjor 1 must have a room,' replied Harris. " After looking over the register for some moments, the clerk said, " I can put you in the same room Jijdyje Douglas occupied the last time he w as here." " ' Ah !' rrpb.d Harri, 4 that will suit m° i I was born a Democrat, have livedo Democrat j and hope to dle'Oue. I voted for Buchanan, and would greatly have preferred yotiug for i Douglas. Send me up—l want to wuau uiid go to oleep.'' " A waiter was iuioicdiatcly called, who, taking the carpet suck iu one hand a i'ght, in i the other, -tou ted—.Mr. Morris following -lor , 112. Arriving there, they entered a large aud huudaqmelv fui'iu.-.ltcd UpaltUieJ.t, With four beds—roue iu each corner of the room—two geiitlemeu in each bed except one, there only one. The gas from the chandelier was dimly burning ever a large square table on which -tood, iu zraccfai n 'gfage six gfasse*. tho ro miiatits of ned up punches, two decks of bo-t eagle backs, a larg" spitlon at each cor ner of tire table, with tobacco quids ri-ing Tn them sngnr-loaf fah?on : unmentionables every where around. Harris looked mournfully | around ; the waiter started off. Harris called i ont, ' Stop, .Mike I I'll go down with you ia a I moaicnt.' Arriving at the office, Harris .-aid, | 'See here ! I ain perfectly willing to occupy i ( the same room Stephen A. Douglas oc< uprid, i ' but I'll be burnt if I want to steep With the mlu/U lAnocratic jnt r'y!'"' 1 Err Yortt IJEAIU) GROW.— IU 44 Timothy j \ letters to young men. wo have the ,( following in reference to mat: s ...r.-ute uppcuu. age : " You find a- you couic iuto man's estate that hair has a tendency to grow upon your i litre. It is the mark by which God mean: I that men arid wopieu shonl 1 be distinguished 1 .) from each other iu a crowd. That hair ( placed there by infinite wisdom, but your J lutbers have been cutting it off from their ; chilis \u small erodes for tuiity or fifty years, i i thus impugning nature's policy, wasting preci- | t ous time draw ing agreat deal of blood, and tiy- i j ing to froun Lneir faces tin difmlM tiiat j was intended to be maintained between them 1 and women. If you are a man and have it to ! wear, wt r it. It is enough to make a man ' with a decent complement of Information and 1 a common degree of sensibility (and a hand- 1 j some beard) deny Ids kind to see these smooth i faced men' around tlie'street and actually ' showing tin-m.-elves iu fciuui-. society. Let us have one genera beards. ' A Fu'x.vv INCIDENT. —Not long since one of ' our luoit popular ministers WH.- mforuu d wfiile t in hi* study, that a party was in the parlor ! t waitiug to engage his survi.-es, ; i'Le revcr tH'd geutlemm lai i down hibperi, while vision- of a fee ti cited before hT- rves j as he dohnH Filaek cont and—thought a fr-tv good Wxld lady sp< ko a- follows , 44 1 Wrslj yon to triarry my daurhtcr ami her ; fe..er,f rlisplavtng ranch more agitation than I the pnrri' , s tiiofit intere-tH. i 44 Certainly—l nm happy to see you. Allow ' t | nic do look at your certificate " " \ , ( The yonrig CdupleepmpTitJ with ilie r-qaest. t I The revvreud gentleiu.ui giaueed over llpjt , r docfilUeut, and a luok. of diaappotu. met.tap- ' f p( :re.l Upon bis.face. j f l llalio !"' ike would lie Itrfiiegrootu exclaim-; > i ed. " Nutliiixr binvt, 1 hope ' i VI am aorry to inform v m that your cer-1 v fifieate is infi rmal. nnd bwreinnMiffr I cnii*t 1 tnr.TTv you until nnolrer 're- of *A:rred." 44 Bnt, Mister." cried fk'e.Jri fadr, 4 ' can*' vbti' j half marry ura for to-night, ar.! To fiiortob t wtT irct a new prftifijfft and make It aU right., v It Wu" b A a urcaufi.l to the,., gfHjpmu-• ■ p - m CARAVAN- THATEI ING IN AFRICA —One bv ' one the caravan sink?mr?t*~roTpi'j slumber— , this.time,cspe ialty wJii n in the bw gte b vruae tlie scene often become* truiy imjwessive. The I dull red fires tlickerii kMouing a circle of | . ruddy light iu ike drptlis of the black forest,' f fiamiug against the tall trunks uuddcliqiug the | * Siliagc of the iicaru' frees, illuminate lurid groups of *Avage niun, iu every variety of shape I and posture. Abovp tly dark purple sky, d \\ith bbuntls parrowed by fhe etopia of night, c 'Ahd,behlStH fill the weltern horizon,a spkfldid 1 creseent, with a dim ash &!ored globe ju his i arrw, ami or owned by -parkibig -parkibig iike 0 a diamond, sinks through tlie rust space,in all 1 „ the glory ami gnrgeousness of ctcrnn! nature's [ c jaibhmet works. From such a night, methinks tic Byzantine man took his device, the Ores-1 r W FBI' TFFTFE TLII Ai CDUSJU IU . T i too hard for me.'' 11 Historical Facts. The tardiness with which mankind adopt , improvements, may bo iu some deeree iiiii.-n ai ed by the following facts, hastily thrown together : Canal locks were invented in 1581, by en_-i --neerp of Yiterbo, Italy. Th y were nearly u hundred years getting fairly into use in Ernie e aud aljoiit one hundred and lifty in crossing the Brifi.-h L'lninncn. At this time it was made felony, iu several European states, to"ride in wheel carriages. The steam eDgine was invented, or rather, the liiinCipfo of it discovered by tire -Marquis :of Worcester, as early as IGGO. Few nnder i stood and none eiicouraced it. lie died in 1 great mortification. The honor was afterward.-, engrossed by iSavary. In 17G5 tho Earl of Sianhepe applied the steam engine to propel ling a ve.-scl. A *tcaui boat was run twenty miles on the Sankey Canal, Liverpool,dn 1707, and another uu the Forth Clyde Canal in ](?0l. A steamboat trip was made on the Delaware as earlv as ia'Jl. [- In 1807, when Robert Fulton was fitting i.p bis first styamboat at New York, re.-pcctablo and gray haded men pronounced him 44 a fool for his pain ." Oiivur Evans went before coiniDit f ees of Legi.-latures, first in Pennsylrauia and theu in Maryland, with a pr J ct of a *Uam carriage as early as 1-ttf. He asked a little aid to de fray the expense, i'liev could hardly be pio kveiited lixl.n hqiortitig IN favor, not of attain ,ot ca..,, ol a a j.n k L for hiuiat'if. Now almost ail UatiOLo have fiad the sagacity and ingoumt* to seize aud utili/." the precious idea. AN'hen Peter the Grea\ in 17GO or there abouts, commenced a canal between the Walgn and the Dou, the G> vcrnoEs and Boyarda of tLe country opposed it turuostly, thinking it impiety to turn 'river- ut of chuntiols which Heaven had assigned thorn. M hen - me Dutchmen proposed to make the river Mauzauans uavignb.'e to the Tagus and that to iji - Lou, the Council said if it hud been the will uf God that the rivers .-Lould he navi gable he would have made them so. When BrinW, the great engineer, told a committee ofil'iii ii.fiiwiit,tu whom Bridewatcr's peiitiou was rulerred; tlmt canals were belter than rivers, r.ud would super--. Je them for the purposes *t:'' weu w itb carcases of va- i rions animal- that Lava pei'L-Lcd iu tho disu.v trous ga-'i— I'r jric. THF. Cnoi* —Tl.n Chicago p,~ ttn ! Tri bvr.e, in r-; !y to a South' : n pajx-r, make 1b : fo'iowiag • si.inafe uf tho N nibwest: "llii iio;s ha.- gi'uau uot u Losi.ci if wheat short u. . ffii.OOb.Ot'O, arid Indiana aWut lS,oUb,oob. — | Tue when' ehofi of M"- ■ wi!! txc' f 1 17,- 000.OflO. lowa 1 t.ffiio OOi. Minnesota 5,000*-' Uliy, and Aliciiican K,OOl(iOO. Yonr estiurate . iff Ohio, 'XuJ'OVi.vOO, i* about correct : but 1 many of imr .L^-t.ii Lntied e.'.iztn-> te.uk her j etop will rea a 000,000. Tims yunr per ceive that the veren North western States liavi produced 118.000.*)'t<) bn-htls of wheat. Th" 1 surplus that rid ie spared from Illraois,' AVLcausui, I. wa uud -Miiaiesota, after keeping j abundance f r bre .l aud -<•. J, will be tqiia. ; half of ;bc : r wlioje crop. If your net ;!e i:. the Sooth are lik-.dy to be d< -titute of lire i ' th.... buve euvugii ai.a to t WW';, AVl'}* !.- a t%s 1"., ■ cre&tif n ? Bepausi it is made* of nothing, and yet it is something. ' fLP* A man who was pitched out into a gut ter where gar bare was thrown, describes him self a* bfc.iig iu uu " offal euudiliou. Cir llow long did Adaui remain iu Para dise" before he sinned ? a.-ked an amiable lady ' of her hti-hJu. J. 44 Til! he got a wife,*' .was the calm reply. in all your undertakings consider the one you Imvc in view, ami be sure it be reaiiy good or at least iuuoccut. A sensible farmer remarked " I would rather be taxed for the education of tlie boy than the ignorance of the man.for one or the other I am i oinpelied to pay," iS? 44 It is a eaifconim. utarV upon the course of ih'stTuctlOn pursutd in toting ladle-' schools, thnt the graduate scPionj know how to 'c: iv au offer of marriage. VOL. XXI. —NO. 15. <£(nrratnm!e Teacln : - w..! br.ug with ihein II .. .i. fa !I --r ers, liiiell&ctua! and Written Arithmetics, Mu.-ic aue. , and paper ...id pencus. C It. COIiURX. Towaula, Aug. 11, 1 GO. + ic;'" Tic: R. • If >rd County Teachers'Associw tioup.vill hold it- ut meeting at the " liowley School llou.sc,hi Wei's township, ow Friday, rjcpieuibcr - ISCO,c. :nli. ncing at 10 o'ul- ek a. ui. An address v.ni oc uehvered bv lie v. J .JOEL J. • i, and an oay will be rend by Mi.-s lieu.. SiL.u, or Mi B. L::. Ilcs-dutions upon th • ge: ! i lUtert .-t> o c..u. itioii wiil also be discuss I. W . are informed that the friends in Wells are cxpe li: g teachers and friends , from all pari -of the county. We Loue they may not be disappointed. KGUYEII, President. B. L. Bhard.-LEV, Secretary. We this week commence the publica tion of a : ."S of ii,_ '1 [ !• r written for the OI.CI War.mi ui Education for 1552, by Andrew Free-'?, of Cleveland. We ! hope that teachers will read them carefully.— Tiny ( ..: in va! sugge.s:iu>..-, and advice • none the less to be ; rized because the articles were writ-. .. rig ty. ;•> ago. DEAR FRIEXD: At your solicitation, and agreeably to my pioa.. e, 1 LOW seat myself to • !:kr vo i a f- v 1. ut.-. and suggestions relative to the ore tiua a:.d general management jof schools, ieh at leu :a- my experiei.ee will ( enable me to give yon. I ,-huil do so the more, freely,in cou-L' •raf;--n that you are young and I ii.expi ri need ia t! <• ' i. inc.-s of teaching, and i arc about to er'.r upon the duties ot the i scb ol ro and feel anxious to do well. 1 will undertake to predict that you rill do well. The very fact fi it you arc s licitous about the matter,! ids •. tut' i'.k o ; fori have seldom 1 known an anxioos&nd solicitous teacher to fail. In the first ph. ?, let lae advise you to I establish - 'r,atd as\ tan of things ut the at the outset. Do :ot attempt to teach any 1 thing until y :i Lav it ; iud -1, there cau be I no successful teaching where order does not j prevail. I would not make a long parade of rules, as some do, laying them down with the . tone and air of •' one having authority," liiut ing occasionally < f physical force, and perhaps ' displaying the imj before the school, i A tew ph.iu regulations only are needed, such as would at once eon-mend themclve to , the good s:use of every scholar. A strict ad herence to these, however, sh -old ut all times be in -ted upon Not a single in-taut of the 1 infract; u of a rule she utu be suffered to pass. | Here is the point where tea ' trs often fail in i >chO(. irovi ri ut. 'J do ; t rr - err to realize me importance of prompt and if" •ieut , oometiOa in IIN Sett cases of transgression • f they imagim that a little indulgence at fr.-t 1 wiil do no harm, liitie d;eaming that such a j course is prcjini iui to the i nforceir.ent 6f rules | thereafter. See to it, then, that yen do not ! eouiii short here. Yoa must no: fail t > w itch ' • that y< uuo not full into cureh' -s ha! its ; r i ni'ow j the filar.- that you har dev.si 1 .or the -v-teni | at iv order it th.; gs al out ynt, to fell into r:eg ■ lect. Govern y nr- ,f. This, alter a!!, is the era .sec: t ( success is. ar ring a sclu ! ! Weil. Tlit ere pr< ervine <; kr among vocr scholars, will give you but lit !e trouble after ' :■ ( u far re brought yeurst If under a prorcr d:<- ji ! :e. and can beep other things in o: h-r a! you. But to be uthiWoiiyfirm ;: . punc tual, to let; iistui.t and preserving rt all times and in a", li !n_ in little thin. -n- wt.i as in •great things—will co-t you no sumH effort, I i know ijuilc well from txptri nee ; uud here I j will Ln.a.k, that I i said this the most LiiricUit jilt ol Si... 1 teael.iicr, so esyis it i f- r the t.a her to dip along, " ju-t k--r this ' once," j : ticuiariy wheu h© is iu u hurry or l f ■ Is a iittie i.i\ d, and not come exactly u:> to I I If you; ro t.ot always prccir j about the timo oi opv.nit;g ji tir soLfltiji; if you are irregular | about your recesses—sometimes allowing them I earlier and •metiinc.s i.itec. —sou.ciim - _iving ! five minute* and at cti ?r times thirty ; if your daily,order of exercises is . ' • V, now pijstpftning a ' ou for want of time, and again doing the same thing to snit the wishes of idle scLvfar- ; dipc-nd in u it you will !...vo eoiifusion ct:ongb, and accomplish tctLiug n 3 you should. After efasdfy'ng your scholars, I should advise you to establish an or 1 r of dally exer cise#; to be permanent, arrigiLog a particular hour to each exercise, and a!-o a definite uum i Iter of minutes. i Kvcry rebitatiop shotrtd tak jTace at stated | timcc, and the scholar shoal! look forward to it a= a thing of course, that knows no change. When 1 visit a school atal Lear the teacher in i quire if such and such chr-se are prepare 1 to I rtcite tor say, " f will hear your 1 ut after recess," or " 1 shall be obliged to d fcr your lesson until morning-," 1 can nt avoid form:: g an unfavorable oi'iu :i of the tea ! t.A. k 1- ing sorry for the habits the p- :!s art contract ing. A. L