(HE DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOAVANDA : Thursday lilorning, November 8, 1860. THE meeting. Bitter was the tale I dreaded. Grief of heart for evermore, When from years of weary travel, Landing on my native shore, I sought out the ancient village And the wcll-remembercd door. Long it was since any tidings Beached me wandering o'er the wave, And my soul lor certain knowledge, Though it held a curse, did crave— Though tiie melancholy answer Only echoed of the grave. > I had left three little children In the years of long ago— But past joy is present sorrow j Painfully tiie seasons How— Who am I to he delivered From the broken hopes below ? 1 had left an angel woman Guardian of the tender three- Is she dead or is she living ? Is her spirit true to me? Will 1 know that many winters Cannot change her constancy. And F sought the well loved cottage, Skirted by the poplar tall ; Waited b> the garden wiiket i Listening to the waterfall ] And I caught the pleasant odour Of the jasmine on the wall. Then I entered, and she knew mo, And sank tainting in my arms, On her lace 1 -aw imprinted Midnight watchings. pain, alarms, And her children clustered round ine, t'ndiviUeiij lite from barms. D 2. Worslf.Y . te= 1 " 1 ' ' Ulisnllaneous. Bread-IVI king iu Spain. Finding tnvsclf about two leagues from Seville, iu tlmt picturesque village of Alcude tie Guudaira, but commonly called Alcade de j, is Pa nwleres —or baker-. —aa almost nil tin bread consumed i" Seville is made there, I determined to know how it was rna No traveler who ever visited the south of Spain ever fails to remark, " How delicious the bread is!" It is white as snow, close a* cake, and vet very light; the 11 ,vor i- rnos' delicious, for the wheat i- good and pure, and the bread is well kneaded. As practical demonstration it better than Van-ay or theory, I would r.or content my s-'.t with the description of the process of I ' .li-aiakiiiif. but Went to the house of aba i V. , whose pretty wife and daughter L had ;>ed to look at, us they were sorting f - it, seated on very low stools in the j rue, the bouse. Ii was a pretty picture ; dirk, sparkling eyes, rosy Cheeks, and • .uvy teeth ; their hair always beautifully -setl, and always ornamented with natural I ers from their little gard"i>. in the back . land ; their bright-colored neckerchiefs lied i.i at the lop, showing the neck ; tiit i' - jtton gowns with short sleeves ; their hands -ensjealously clean, and o small that many an n ivoeratie dame might have envied them ; -abounded by panniers filled with wheat, which they took out, a handful at a time, sort ing it most expeditiously, and throwing every defective grain in another ba-ket. \Y en this is done the wheat i ground be tween two large circular stones, in the way it W-LS ground in Egypt two thousand years ago. rotary motion being given by a blindfolded mule, winch paces round and round with un tiring patience, a bell being uttached to his neck, which, as long as lie is ii: movement, link sou ; and when he stops he is urged to - duty by the shout of " nrre nu! from see one within hearing. When ground, tie *!i u it is silted through three sieves, the last i si) fine that only the pure Hour can pass gli it ;itis of a pilc apricot color. ■ ' bread is made of an evening ; and 3 """sunset I returned to the baker's and [ ".1 his pretty wi;e first weigh the flour, 3 'itiiea mix it with only just sufficient water, E- t-d with a little salt, to make it into dough. A very small quantity of leaven is added Scripture says, " A little leaven leaveneth '• vhnle lump but in Engl ind, to avoid 'ye trouble of kneading, they put as much .•aven, or yeast, in one batch of household yfeadas'm fspniu would Inst them a week for hi? six or right donkey loads of bread they Wiul every icglit from their oven. A\ lieu the dough was made it was pnt in irks, iui4 carried on the donkey's backs to '.he oven j n tj,„ f #M ,fyf pi e villa;•>, so as to kuke it immediately after it was kneaded. On arriving there, the dough was divided ; ■> portions weighing three pounds each. to iong i narrow wooden tables on tressels w ""e then placed down the room, and, to rny -iirpn.se, abom twenty men came in and r ' ! -"d themselves on one side of the tables. A lump oi dough was handed to the nearest, Y he commenced kneading and knocking " "'ut, aud then passed it to his neighbor, who yie same, and so on successively, till all -I - Kneaded it, when it was as soft as new • -■ a " ' ready for the oven. Of course, as W the first baker hands the loaf to his • Ji lor, another is given to him, and so on I ' w 'iole quantity of dough is kneaded J bum all. lh e baker's wife aud daughter ar it m'" -° r the oven " Some ol ,l,c loaVes into many smaller ones and itn ■Wistel, baked. The ovens are very large, y lires under thera ; but a jural' ' °' herbs of the sweet mar and th - vme . which cover the hills in great Tec i ar i P P ut ' nto oVen a,l d is'iited. \ atnl '! l ! oven t0 aQ ext ent required ;; ?'adii l ,n " ,' rea< * P pts baked the oven gets t y (:ullltr . fif > the bread is never burned forcltl.,)"?!' the , brea(i ' Spain with such but the palrn of the hand and the sec- S*? 0lL ; W™-* hli rc covered •is, ar,d it so affects the chest that THE BRADFORD REPORTER. they cannot work for more than two hours at a time. They can be heard from some dis tance. as they give a kind of guttural sound— ha—ha—as they work, which, they say, eases the chest. Our sailors have the same fancy when hoisting a sail. 1 have kept a Small loaf of Spanish bread for several months in a dry place, and then immersed it in boiling water and rebuked it, and I can assure my readers that it was neither musty nor sour.— London 'paper. Education in Ciiina. The boy 9 commence their studies at six or seven years of aire. In China there is no royal road to learning, but every boy, whatever his rank, takes the same class-book and submits to the same training. The school-room is a low shed, or a back room iu some temple or some attic in some shop, where each boy is supplied witli a table and a stool, and the teacher has a more elevated seat uud a larger table. In the corner of the room is a tablet or picture of Confucius, before which each pupil prostrates himself on entering tlie room, and then makes his obesiance to his teacher. He then brings his book to the teat'her, who re peats over a sentence or more to the pupil, and he goes to his place repeating the same at the top of his voice till he can repeat itirom memory, when lie returns to his teacher, and laving the book on the teacher's table, turns his back botli book and teacher, and repeats bis lesson. This is called backing his lesson.— in this way he uoes through the volume till he can back the whole book ; than another, then another,till he can back the list of the classics. The boys in tiie school, to the number of ten to twenty, eacli go through the same process, coming up iu turn to back their lesson, and he that has a defective recitation receives a blow on the head from the master's ferule of bamboo and returns to his seat to perfect Ins lesson.— School teachers are usually unsuccessful candi dates for the preferment and olliee, who, not haying habits lor business or a disposition to labor, turn pedagogues. They receive from each ol the pcpils a given sum, proportioned to the means of the parents, and varying trom three to ten or twelve dollars a year from each pupil, and perhaps iu addition an occasional gut ol fruit or food. The schools are opened at early dawn, and the boys study till nine or ten o'clock, when they go to breakfast and after an hour or so .eturn and study till four or five o'clock in the afternoon, and then retire for the dav. In winter they sometimes have a lesson iu the evening. Tiie first book is called the Trimetrical Classic, which all Chinese boys begin with, and which some of their commentators have called a passport into the regions of classical and historical literature. Wo should as soon think of putting a copy of Young's Night Thoughts into the hands of a beginner with the expectation of seeing him master it.— Tnese young celestials are not expected, how ever, to understand what they read,nut simply to memorize, and occasionally write out some more simple character, and perhaps, after two or three years' reading and memorizing, they | begin to study the sentiments of the author.— | The sons of tradesmen and mechanics seldom study long enough to master the classics, but gain a smattering of books, and learn to read laud write the language sufficient to keep ac j counts, and a little knowledge of math ematics, when their education is ended Such boys —and they constitute no small portion of school boys in China—as they grow up, retain i ! h ' •otiHtl of many characters, but are unable to explain the meaning ola page in any com mon book. Three or four years of schooling ! forms the sum of their education, and that is insufficient to give any one a practical knowle dge of the written language.— The China Mission, ly IE Dan, J). D. AUTJCI.ES OF DIET. —The useful articles of • lit t are numerous, and the commonest we have. As to the quantity required, the prize fighter, who requires most, has thirty six oun ces per day, besides the innutritions portion which everybody swallows at every meal. For women, twenty ounces may suffice, though a larger allowance is better. Healthy working men ought to have fro n twenty-five to thirty ounces. The greatest amount of nourishment of both kinds is contained in flour, meat, po tatoes, and peas ; milk, cheese, rice, aud other grains, and sugar ; while tea, coffee, and co coa are of great value in their way. Such are the materials ; but they may be so treated iri the cooking as to waste what is most val uable, and preserve what is of the least con st quince. It is possible to manage the rnak ing of a s'ew, so as to wash away the best qualities of the meat, and leave the vegeta bles hard, and drain away the thickening,caus ing a predominant taste of smoke and salt.— When Miss Nightingale and her assistants un dertook to cook in the Eastern hospitals, they made a pint of thick arrowroot from one ounce of the powder, while in the general kitchen it took two ounces to make a pint of thiu arrowroot. It was the proper boiling of the water that made the difference here. — Again, two ounces of rice were saved on every four puddings, when the nurse made the pud dings. Such incidents show that it is not enough to have the best materials for nourish ment ; they must be husbanded in the prep aration. It seemes probable that, by sensible conduct all around, everybody might command enough of the best material for food ; and it is certain that a small proportion of the wives of Englishmen know how to do justice to the food they buy.— llarricl J\[artiveau, in Once a Week. A French writer has said that, to dreain gloriously, you must act glorionsly when awake ; and to bring angel® down to hold converse with you in your sleep, yen must labor in tho cause of virtue during the day. Oaf- Gentlemen who smoke say the mote they fume the lees they fret. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " RESARDLE3S OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." How the Lion woos his Bride. Let os first sketch the story of the lion's life—beginning with his marriage, which takes place towards the end of January. He was first to seek his wife ; hut as the males are far more abundant than the females, who are often cut off in infancy, it,is not rare to find a young lady pestered with the addresses of three or four gallants, who quarrel with the acerbity of jealous lovers. If one of them does not succeed iu disabling or driving away the others, madam, impatient and dissatisfied, leads them into the presence of an old lion, whose roar she has appreciated at a distance. The lovers fly to him with the temerity of youth and exasperation. The old fellow re ceives them with calm ' assurance, breaks the neck of the first with his terrible jaws, smashes the leg of the second, and tears out the eye of the third. No sooner is the day won and the field clear, than the lion tosses his rnanein the air as he roars, and then crouches by the side of his lady, who, as a reward for his courage, licks his wounds caressingly. When two adult lions are the rivals, the encounter it more serious. An Arab, perched iu a tree one night, saw a iiouess followed by a tawny lion, with full-grown mane | she lav down at the toot of the tree—the lion stopped on his path and seemed to listen. The Arab then heard the distant growling of a lion, which was instantly replied to by the lioness under the tree. This made her husband roar furiously. The distant lion was heard ap proaching, and as lie came nearer the lioness roared louder, which seemed to agitate her husband, for he marched toward her as if to force her to be quiet, and then sprang back to his old post, roaring defiance at his distant rival. This continued for about an hour, when a black lion made his appearance on the plain. The lioness aro-c as if to go towards iiim ; but her husband, guessing her inten tion, bounded towards his rival. The two crouched and sprang upon each other, roiling oir the grass in the embrace of death. Their bones cracked, their flesh was torn, their cries of rage and agony rent the air, and all this time the lioness crouched and wagged her tail slowly iu signs of satisfaction. When the combat ended, and both warriors were stretch ed on the plain, she arose, smelt them, satis fied herself that they were dead, and trotted off, quite regardless of the uncomplimentary epithet. This, Gerard tolls us, is an example of the conjugal !i lolity of milady ; whereas the lion never quits his wife unless forced, and is quite a pattern of conjugal attention.— Westminster Itrvieic. Newspaper Publishing. A veteran editor, after an experience of a quarter of a century, gives his opinion of the common honesty of mankind. Hear him : " We have tried the business for more than a quarter of a century, and regret to say that our estimate of the aggregate honesty of mankind has been considerably lowered.— There is a great deal of latent, undeveloped rascality iu the race, and if a man has any of its composition he is sure to exhibit it when his newspaper subscription becomes due. Within the last ten or fifteen years wc have been engaged in the business, wo have lost enough money, through the rascality of our customers, to make a man of moderate de sires rich ! Many of those who owe us these small amounts—from five to fifty dollars—are rolling in wealth, and could pay any day in the year, if they wished to do so. Many others belong to the migratory trib, who are here today and in Texas or California to morrow. Others belong to a class quite nu merous, who write to the editors to send them papers, and they will pay when their crops or do something else ; but pay-day never comes; and finally, after sending liio paper for four or five years, it is ascertained tiiut they never were worth a snap! Another class of losses grows out of the negligence of postmasters. A subscriber, after taking the paper for six months or a year, leaves the country without giving the editor notice', and, after four or five years have elapsed, he happens to meet with the postmaster, who most magnanimously informs him that Lis subscriber has gone to 'parts unknown,'and that, if he wishes to got any pay for his paper, he had better stop it 1 or, after suffering the paper to come two or three years, he writes to the editor that, 'for the second or third time, he will inform hiui that the paper is not taken out' Ac. "These losses, and various others we might refer to, absorb the profits of the business to such an extent as greatly to discourage those engaged in it. " Although we have had our full share of non-paying subscribers, and have been worse swindled than any publisher we know, we take much pleasure in saying that we have on our books the names of many gentlemen, whose punctuality, through a long series of years, always paying in advance, entitles them to be rated as the 'salt of the earth.' Oh, for an increase of the number. " Occasionally some one long in arrears, moved by a tirdy sense of justice, pays his long-standing indebtedness. We regret that these cases are so rate." A good story was told us (Hartford Press) the other day about John Yan Bilren. He had taken some technical legal advantage, by which his opponent's client in an action was non-suited. The man was furious, and declared his purpose to give John a piece of his mind when he saw him—he would wither him. Happening to seen John one day at Downing's standing at the bar, getting ont side of a dozen New York bays, he boldly confronted the Prince, and, being a small man looked op at him fiercely, and bnrst out.— " Mr. Van Bnren, is there any client so low and mean, or any case so nasty,that you won't undertake to defend him in it? "I don't know," said John,stopping to pnt away anoth er oyster, then bending down and confidently drawling out bis reply in the little man's ear, , " What have you been doing ? ' A Vegetable Mummy Let us trace the history of a single pine tree of the Oolite, as indicated by its petrified remains. His gnarled and twisted trunk once anchored it roots amid tho crannies of a pre cipice of dark gray sandstone that rcse over some nameless stream of the Oolite in what is now the North Seotland. The rock which, notwithstanding its dingy color, was a deposit of the lower old red sandstone, formed a num ber of the fishbeds of that system —beds that were charged then,us not with numerous fossils as strange and obsolete in the creation'of the Oolite as in the creation which at present ex ists. It was a firm, indestructible stone.cover ed by a thin,barren soil ; and the twisted root lets of the pine, rejected and thrown backward from its more solid planes, had to'penetrate in to its narrow fissures for a straitened and meager subsistence. The tree grew but slowly ; in considerable more than half a century it had attained to a diameter of little more than ten inches, a foot over the soil ; and its bent and twisted forui gave evidence of the life of hardships to which it was exposed. It was, in truth.a picturesque rag of a tree, that for the first few feet twist ed itself round like an overborne wrestler strug gling to escape from under his enemy,and then struck out nn abrupt angle, and stretched it self like a bent arm over the stream. The seasons passed over it ; every opening spring gave its fringe of tenderer green to its spiky ioilage, and every returning autumn saw it shed its cones into the stream below. Many a delicate fern sprang up and decayed around its gnarled and fantastic root,single leaved and ; simple of form, like the scolopcndri t of our caverns and rock recesses, or fretted into many a siim pinnate leaflet, like the minute maiden | hair or the graceful Lady fern. Flying rep tiles have perched among its boughs ; tiie ; light winged dragon fly has darted on wings of gauze through the opening of its lesser ! twigs ; the tortoise and the lizard have hyber- I nated during the chills of winter amid the l.ol ' low of its roots ; for many years it formed one of the minor features in a wild and picturesque scene, on which human eye ne'er looked 5 and, at length,touched by decay, its upper branches began to wither and bleach white in the winds of heaven; when shaken by a sadden hurricane that came roaring adown the ravine, the raa.'S of rock in which it had been anchored gave way, and bearing fast jammed among its roots a fragment of the mass which we still find there, and from which we read a portion of its story, it was precipitated into the foaming tor rent. Dancing on the eddies, or lingering amid tho pools, or shooting, arrow like adown the rapids, it at length finds its way to the sea ; and after sailing over beds of massive coral—the ponderous Isastre and more delicate T/rimnastrca —and after disturbing the Hnul losaur and the llalemnite in their deep giccn haunts, it sinks, saturated with water, into a lied of aranaceous mud,to make its appearance after loug ages, in the world of man—a mar bio mummy of the old Oolite forests—and to be curiously interrogated regarding its charac ter and history.— Hugh Miller's " Popular Geology." QUAKERS —"Friends," commonly called Quakers,are easily singled out from the throng eis of Broadway by the dress, which,although the fashion cf two hundred years ago, is no longer so except to them. We never meet them without a respectful, affectionate draw ing thither, accompanied with a sorrowful re gret that there are not a hundred where there is but one. A true "Friend" is the embodiment of plainness, placidity, and prosperity. The be nevolent calmness which plays upon their fea tures inspires iu the beholder confidence and attachment. But what is the secret of their universal power of the presence and their general thrift? Who ever knew a Quaker to be in a fidget or a fix—the awful fix of having "nary red?" Tiiev neither beg nor steal nor—we mean the "true blues"—cheat. The renegades, the half-and-half, the deserters, the impostors, and those who have been " hove overboard " neck and heels, we say nothing about. We are speaking of the stern and steady sort who have never been ashamed cf their flag or drab. The members of the Society of Friends have the kindly respect of all men—not the respect of fear, but that of love. When thus ? It is because of their distinguished trait, that which is ever and all-pervading, they act from a consciousness of justness. They wrong no man ; they allow no man to wrong them. Or if they do suffer wrong, it is for the sake of peace, but with a protest or a " testimony " against it, lest they might seem to connive at evil and wrong doing. When a man acts always from a sense of justness, there is a freedom from fear, a con fidence, a feeling of repose which iu time fixes on the whole character a calmness, a serenity, which is worth to its possessor more that gold. Hence there is a quiet in a Quaker,and a power too, iu that quiet,which would rout a regiment of fussy people in any contest. The heart, the conscience, the features, the very gait of a Friend, all are quiet—the glorious quiet,which nothing can ever give but an habitual conscious ness of an all-pervading rectitude of purpose. Tims it is that Friends do not fidget and fret and fritter their lives away, like the " World's people," as they call outsiders. English statis tics show that their average age is some fif teen years more than that of others. The great eecret then, of a iong and successful life is to "Do justly."— Halt's Journal of Health. B©* A man down East has invented a ma chine to renovate old batchelors ; lie can make quite a decent young man, and have enough left for two small puppies, a pair of leather breeches, and a kettle of soft soup. 4©* An Irishman being asked, on a late trial, for a certificate of his marriage, took his hat off, and exhibited a huge scar, which looked as thongb it had beeu made with afire 6hovel. The evidence was satisfactory. tfimcatiomil department What the Teacher can Do. A few years since, the trustees of a school ! district iu central New York, applied to the principal of a neighboring acadamy, for a teacher. On enquiry,the principal learned that they had recently built a uew house, and were strougly desirous of improving their school ; and as a means of doing so, had determined to secure the services of a competent teacher: ! and os they (lid not expect to do so at their i previous wages of ten and twelve dollars per . month, they had resolved to pay fourteen or ] even sixteen dollars. The principal assured ' them that no such wages would secure the j services of the best and most experienced I teachers, but said that if they would say eigh teen dollars per month, he would furnish them with a teacher, whose success he would war rant. This was finally agreed to, nnd a young man of bat one winter's experience in teaching but whose success at that time, together with his known character, ability, and earnest do ! votion to whatever he engaged in,was sufficient j to justify the strongest expectations of his fu- I tare success, was sent to fulfill the engage | mcnt. Knowing that his friend and teacher had I fully endorsed his success, lie entered upon his j labors with the determination that the confi : denco thus reposed in him should not be be trayed. He accordingly threw himself, as it were, into his work. He gave himself upwhol i !v and unreservedly to his duties. He neither ! knew nor recognized any higher duties than i t'.iore which has vocation involved. liis ear ; nestness and enthusiasm soon communicated it : self to his punils ; they seemed imbued with a new life ; they labored iu conjunction with him ; they took home their books at night ; they talked of their teacher ; they repeated his sayings, so different from the teachings to which they listened before ; their zeal,earnest ness, and enthusiasm in their studies, know no bounds ; the parents caught the infection, and : wondered at the change ; they enquired of ! him in his visitations, while bearding round, ! how lie acquired such an influence : he answered—and at the same time took oppor , tuuity to suggest new thoughts and ideas upon the subject of education ; the interest deiipeneu; | the parents must sec how these matters were i conducted,to produce results so unusual ; they visited the school ; found order .and system to ' prevail, and labor to be the eve idea of teacher ; and pupil ; they saw that the great effort of ; tho teacher was not to get his pupils through j books, but to imbue the minds of his pnpi's ! wi'h the principles they contained; that he ' sought not so much to impart know/edge, as to develop rand ; that ho deemed one principle, thoroughly understood, better than twenty fails poorly appreciated in their bee rings and applications. These were new thoughts to the pie, and presented in any other form than with the practical demonstration of their utility and truthfulness before them, would doubtless have been strongly discredited. But with this conviction fully impressed, they were desirous of becoming better informed upon the princi ! pies of education, which service the teacher J cheerfully performed in his visitation and in- J tcrcourse among them. The result was, that * at the close of his school, he was solicited to engage it for the ensuing winter, at thirty dol lars per month, aud board at one place. ' lie accepted the offer, and taught the school with increased rather than diminished success. TiiF is a siinplcjiilustrution of what a teacher may accomplish. Here was a double duly per formed. Tit? teacher taught the schorl, and at the same time taught the people, too ; and this is the teacher's true mission —lie must not be content with exercising an influence simply in till school reran ; —he must be the exponent of the great principles of education,and enlighten the public mind with regard to them. We thus see, also, that a3 soon as the public are properly inform'., there is no lack of liberali ty on their part. Universally, the public are found liberally supporting those measures which then deen important. The difficulty lies in get ting them properly informed upon the subject ; and the reason why they are not properly in formed, is because teachers shirk from respon sibility and labor in this matter ; content to earn only the scanty piltano 'they receive. Had the district above cited, been at the first called upon to pay thirty or even twenty five dollars per month, they would have scout ed the idea, —because they could not then esti mate the value of education by any such standard ; —but when they are made to see its value, and the difference between that which is specious and that which genuine,they readily offer to the exttnt of their means. Will not teachers impress themselves with this idea, aud act accordingly ? Hudson. E. W. K. CORRECT SHAKING.— We advise all young people to acquire in early life the habit of using good language, both in speaking and writing, and to abandon as early as possible any use of slang words and phrases. The longer they live the more difficult the acquisi tion of good language will be ; and if the gold en age of vonth, the proper season for the ac quisition of language, be passed in its abuse, the unfortunate victim of neglected education is, verv properly, doomed to 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 which he reads insteads of 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, nnd habituate himself to their use—avoiding, at the same time, that pedantic precision and bombast which show rather the weakness of a vain ambition than the polish of an educated mind. GREAT MEM stand like solitary towers in the city of God ; and secret passages running deep beneath external nature, give their thoughts intercourse with higher intelligence, which strengthens and consoles them, and of which the laborers on the surface do not drearr.— VOL. XXI. NO. 23 NEW IN CHINA. —The following is an account of New Year's ilay in China : " The first of the Chinese year falls in the middle of the month of February, and is called at Yat- Youil. For some days proceeding,all business is suspended, and the people of all classes fre quent the theaters, and indulge in good cheer. The authority of the mandarins is suspended \ during those days, which sometimes occasions I disturbances. All disputes between parties, | especially between creditors and debtors, ere j endeavored to be arranged amicably on the eve of the new year The solemnities observ ed on the day itself are called Soon-Nin, and are the following : In the vicinity of each temple a large theater in bamboo is construct ed for the performance of pieces in honor of local divinity ; every house is decked out with new lanterns ; the furniture of the house is, in part, renewed ; red paper is stuck up at the door, aud the inhabitants put on their best clothes. The popular belief is that a man would be poor all tin? rear if he were not well dressed on New Year's day ; and the poor, whose garments are shabby, do not hesitato | even to pilfer in order to obtain something i new. At midnight, loud dutonutioos are heard everywhere, being caused lit fire-works, which everybody lights up. In front of the houses of the mandarins, the fire-wOrks are attached | to long poles, and burn about ten minutes, I causing successive detonations. The Chinese suppose that the use of fire works renders tho divinities propitious, and they employ them ou many solemn occasions. The Chinese pay each ! other visits of ceremony on the first of the year. A rich man to receive his friends places ! himself on a sofa in a large room newly de ! corated, and his servants, all wearing new > clothes, are stationed round the room. The furniture, freshly polished, is covered with red j colored stuffs. When the visitor arrives, the door is (lur.g wide open, and the master of the house advances amidst beating of tomtoms to welcome him. The two acquaintances bow re peated y to each other, and exchange cotnpli ; meats ; when one them is of high rank, tho i compliments occupy sometimes ten minutes j afterwards tables are placed before each of them, aud they drink one another's health in tea. Then they part, crying in a loud voice extravagant compliment*. Festivities are kept op for ten days after the new year. The fir>t. is ealiek Kay Yat, ' the day of the birds,' and is destined to remind the people that birds firm part of the food of man. The nse of meat is rigorously abstained from, and the sin gular custom of removing bells and secreting j brooms is observed, from the belief that those articles can occasion misfortunes. The second day is called Kov-Ynt, the day of dogs—an 1 animal which the Chinese reverence, though they eat its flesh. The third is Cben-Yut, !'the day of swine;' the fourth, Yaong-Yat, ' the day of lambs the fifth of cows, and the j sixth of horses. The four other days are ded icated to Pont 80, a divinity, who is supposed j to have taught the Chinese the use of wheat, rice, and meat, the cultivation of peas and beans, and other useful arts. Offerings are made to this god, bat they can only consist of wine, water, and vegetables." THE FIRST STEIX —Ttie first step towards the abyss of infidelity is a doubting or skeptical state of mind in regard to some parts, or tho whole of the Script life*: the next is either in to the wilderness of universal doubt, or into the abyss itself. Skepticism is a most danger ous state of the mind. Like moderate drink ing, it leads on its unhappy victim from bad to worse, til! Loth mind and heart are rained and damned forever. It. is the moral inebriation of the man in its incipient stages. Beware of it, ye young men, as ye would the contagion of death. Its administrations to the soul aru those of sorrow. Break away from the symptoms of its deadly approach. Let not a a corrupt and unbelieving heart beguile thesu vritli the promises ot a proud and vaiu philoso phy. There is no safety in a cultivated intel* I; ot, nor in ail the resources of a Christaiu ed uction, and the watchfulness, and teaching of friends; no,not even under "the droppings'' of the sanctuary. In the faith of Jesus only there is safety. Believe in him to the suiva tiou of the soul, then will you " know tba truth, and the truth shall make you free." Foixv OF PRIDE. —Take some quiet, sober moment of life, add together the two ideas of pride and man. Behold him, creature of a span, stalking through infinite space in all tho grandeur of littleness. Perched on a speck of the universe, every wind of heaven strikes into his blood the coldness of death ; his soul floats from his body like melody from tho string 5 day and night, like dust on the wheel, he is rolled §long the heavens, through a lab yrinth of worlds and all the creations of God are flaming above and beneath. It this a creature to make for himself a crown of glory, to deny his own flesh, to mock his fellow, sprung from the dust to which both will re turn ? Does the proud man not err? Does he not suffer ? Does he not die ? When ho reasons, has he not been stopped by difficul ties'? When he acts, is he never tempted by pleasure ? When he lives, is he free from pain ? When he dies, can he escape ilie com mon grave ? Pride is not the heritage of man ; humility should dwell with frailty, and atone for ignorance, error, and imperfection.— A MOTHER'S ISFCKSCK.—How touching the tribute of the Hon. T. H. Benton to his moth er's influence : " My mother asked me never to nse tobacco. I have never touched it from that time to this, and I have never gambled, and I cannot tell who is winning and who is losing in games that can bo played. She ad monished me, too, against hard drinking ; and whatever capacity for endurance I have at present, and whatever usefulness I may attain in life, I have attributed to having complied with her pious and correct wishes. When I was seven years of age, she asked me not to drink, and then I mado a resolution of total abstinence, at a time when I was sole constituent member of niy own body, and that I have adhered to it through ail time, I owe it to my mother "