* DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: Tlursday Morning, January 17,1861. jWtftA JMrp. [PI-BI.ISHED BV BEQI-EST.] WE DON'T TOROET THEE MOTHER. We don't forget thee, Mother, Tho' many days have past Since we gazed upon thy marble brow,— We knew it was the last; Bat Ob, we wl! remember That solemn hour of prayer, And how we stept so softly, For we felt that death was there. We can't forget the hour When thy Savior called thee home. And angels bright from glory, Were hov'ringin thy room; That acene. o sweetly awful, To tell, we scarcely dare, But 0! that hour,how sacred, For we fett that God ' . We don't foget thee, mother, Tho' time has swiftly flown, And tall upon thy silent grave The flowers and grass have grown ; The whitened marble rises there. Thy memory to save, And oft it speaks in accents deep, ••This is thy mother's grave." We can't forget thee, mother, How vacant is thy chair, We come around the table , Oh, yes, we miss thee there; Thy room, thy bed, thy Bible, Yea all, that once was thine. To our 'relt heart, thy absence Jn saddened notes doth chime. We don't forget thee, mother, Thy miniature we see, That loved memento is most dear Because it speaks of thee; By night, in dreams, thou oft art near. Again, thou art our own, Again, that well known voice we hear. We wake—but thou art gone. We don't forget thee, mother. Thy care and love expressed, Nor how our heart was smitteu When first of thee bereft, Yet we would not recall thee. Back to this earth again, With pain and sin enthrall Uit:e, Tho' ours should be the gain. We don't forget thee, mother. But olt in glory bright. By faith we do behold thee, Among the saints in light; Released from earth and sorrow. Crowned with immortai bloom. With angels thou art bowing Before tbe eternal throne. I • political strife that has from time to time agitated j vcwintry. I feel nndcr the more obligation at such a ■'•"'M'.his, and under such a call as you have made, to j F. r v "ice, however feeble, be heard in the manner | r/ORpest. If it shall contribute to enlighten any j or to abate any prejudice, or allay any unfriendly j fa* 3 ' to P romo,e the settlement of the unhappy • P ITIES that afflict us as a nation, I shall feci amply the dispones bears the marks of the haste | , n which it was written, the sentiments it expresses | r ' ' 3II P been entertained Kespectfully Your's and our Country's, _, J CLICK FOSTER. | f astor of First Preshyterinn Church, Towanda. i r ————— eliter into the defended citicff, j li t i US K '^ en t there ; for the Lord our (iod hath put J- 8 w silence !' T I % brethren ; we never before were at such f ,oss ft hat to say. llow has (iod put to M®e ail our confident boasting of our great r**'°ur strength and our union ! How is lie F 'j"? " 3 in his displeasure ! Whut shall we I'" ;j °° caf! ' on may unseal our lips. The r ?sideut of these States bag appointed this .pr lasting and prayer. The Governors many of the States have recommended Its . fiance to their several constituencies—the orator of the General Assembly of the t ,V'| trian *-' )lir( -'b of the I". S. has recom -.ed the observance of the day—and the j 'hisdiocese of the Episcopal church fin- i°? e l ' lc sam e. Here is encouragement, i *lp must be in God. L,h, ( °u , ' t t^lal reigns over nations is to whether there be any God. To disre-i L 's authority and his law in national af- ! H? 8 the sure way to bring ruin upon any th o upon a Republic where laic Ig only recognized power. Onle fof the Jews is a raemorahle ex t ie divine regard to the conduct of eat in/ 0 ?- lhe call of Abraham to the re- 1 u „ °. the care of God over them kp,eaoas. Amidst the trials to which ltTf , , r . e e *P<>sed in that land of bondage iu d lu!j t ranCe and sett lement in the prom nd itirie,'ri" S ' are was not ,ess conspicuous : store uu T er - V ~aK c of tllcir subsequent *' tr u °der judges, or kings, or in THE BRADFORD REPORTER. [ captivity iu Babylon, or when restored again to Judea and conducted through an eventful career to the coming of Christ, or iu their fi nal overthrow and dispersion, the same is true. To this r try day the Jewish history plainly ex hibits the dealings of God with a nation— a much favored—a stiff-necked—a sorely pun ! ished nation. But the Jews we are told, were an exception. Their experience is DO criterion for other na tions. The Jews were an exception, for they were singled out for a particular purpose ; a special dispensation was revealed for their benefit, and a special result was arrived at. But is there any proof that other nations are not equally under the divine government ? Is there any proof that other nations are not held to as strict an accouut for their advantages as the Jews were for theirs? There is no proof of any such freedom from divine authority or control. The dreams of Pharaoh which led to Joseph's exaltation were as ranch from God as were his own which led his brethren to sell him into bondage. In their deliverance from Esrypt there was as much control exercised over the uffairs of their enemy and oppressors as over theirs. In their settlement in the prom ised land, Israel was no more under the divine government than were the seven nations of Ca naan whom they supplanted. The chief dif ference is that God did more for Israel,—that they sinned more, and are punished more.— And the fact that the descendants of Abra ham are at this moment a scattered and yet a distinct people—fulfilling the divine decree con cerning them, is a standing admonition toother nations that there is a God that ruleth over nations, and holds them accountable for their national as well as individual character and conduct. God has done moch for us as a nation. His favor marked the origin of onr national exist ence, and his government over us has marked our progress. The present, crisis in our affairs is the legitimate result of former conduct—the proper fruit, of our own doings. This it is fol ly to deny. Different individuals would no doubt point out different items in an attempted catalogue j of our crimes. We propose to refer to a few which we suppose no clear head and true heart can reject, as among those which justly call for rebuke from God. The mere circumstance that our country is so extremely diversified in climate, soil, pro ductions and interests, we do not consider any cause whatever of the present difficulty. These diversities are what adapt the different parts of the body to each other—each producing what the other needs. What then is the cause ? It is our failure to acknowledge God, and to make his will onr rule of action. Iu too many instances we elect men to responsible positions without regard to their religious sentiments or moral character. Political villiany is openly advocated as no dereliction of moral duty ! It is a fearful experiment to trust the destinies of a nation in the hands of those who fear not God, and regard not their own word. How I can we pretend to trust in his protection as individuals when in our collective capacity we j disown him ? We desire to give offence to no man. We are speaking of principles which it ,is useless to dispute. Principles work out their i own results in spite of us. A man that does not fear God, and seek his direction and aid should shrink from a responsible office in the State as earnestly as Moses shrank from the duty of conducting the Israelites out of Egypt, and much more. It is a bold step to cast off reliance upon divine aid and trust to our own understanding. But this is often done by those who profess to fear God What shall we say of those who profess love to God while they are viola ting most solemn obligations ? The apostle speaks of those who having not the law are a law unto themselves ; but in our day men are not wanting who have "the law," but cast it aside and choose to he "a law unto themselves." They adopt some hobby and every man and every thing that does not fall in with that hob by must be trampled under foot. If t-fae Bible cannot be made to uphold the hobby the Bible is repudiated as recklessly as the opinions of any frail man. Their own views are supreme, and whatever does not harmonize with them is denounced as discordant with the harmony of the universe. Something like this is the propensity to med dle with the mote in our brother's eye while a beam is unmolested in our own. Charity be gins at home. Thou hypocrite! First cast the beam out of thine own eye ! It was a matter of lamentation with one : "They made me keeper of the vineyards, but mine own vine yard have I not kept 1" [Cant. 1. G] If the zeal and nervous influence that have been ex pended by different parts of our country against each other had been employed in cor recting evils among themselves, the evils which now dhtract our country had been avoided "Stndy to be quiet, and to do your own busi ness," is a divine admonition. Among the sins of Israel which provoked the Lord to anger was that of covenant break ing. And when we consider what a solemnity attaches to the whole subject of covenmits, we shall not be surprised that it is so soloemnly guarded in the word of God. Whut else holds society together ? What else gives security or happiness anywhere ? What else than the in violability of the covenant —"the better cove nant"—can give any assurance to men of the blessedness of heaven ! Faithfulness to en gagements is iudisper,sable to safety. A breach of covenant is treason ! Now it is well known that the several States of this Union agreed to let each manage its own concerns except in such matters as by the constitution were given up to the general gov ernment. Any interference of one State with the institutions of auother, is an offence against this engagement. In this matter there has been much and grievous sin committed. The different parts of our country have acted too much as if each considered the other as out laics ! things ought not so to be. This cannot fail to weaken the tic that binds us to gether. We think our neighbor in errjr We tell PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY R ¥. STURROCK. ' him so. He seems not to heed it. We ad monish him again and again. He tells us— "l have considered this matter. My mind is made up. Let us talk of something else."— We press the subject of disagreement. He says : "I have heard enough ; say no more !" We continue our admonitious. As a man of peace he goes away, and leaves us to ourselves. Now it is neither polite, nor honorable, nor right to continue to worry him about that mat ter. But suppose you and your neighbor are so connected in business, or by some other ties, that he cannot get out of your way ; if he did it would be with great loss or injury to himself and family ; it would be inhuman to treat him so that he could not do otherwise. But sup pose if he leaves he involves not only himself but you also, and yonr family, and an unknown amount of evil and unhappiness would be the result of the separation,—it would be little better than madness thus to keep agitating the forbidden subject. The several States of this union entered in to a league, offensive and defensive. They agreed to act as one body in some respects, and in other respects as independent. Each State agreed to respect all the claims of the other as specified in the bond of uniou. What that bond promised each state had a right to demaud. Now any interference iu the matter, whether by individuals or societies, byway of denunciation, or attempted insurrection with force and arms, or by the Federal Executive in approving an unconstitutional measure, or in attempting to carry out that measure by employing the Federal troops, is a violation of this compact, and just ground of complaint. But here we are met by the plea of a "high er law" than the Constitution. There is a great fallacy in this plea which many men seem not to see. That higher law! What is it ? We are told it is Nature's late ; or it is God's law! But who thus puts himself in God's stead to announce a law for Him which he has not seen fit to promulgate ? Who is this that thus "sitteth in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God ?" [2 Thess. 2:4] God, no doubt has a higher luw than any be has giveu man to execute upon his fellow man, for his law extends to every thought. But he has not authorized man to publish or en force any law that overbears the written word ; that law which He has given us in the sacred scriptures, as exemplified in the Old and New Testaments, we are bound to regard and obey. Whatever evils may escape legislation under that law—and evils will escape all human leg islation—whatever evils may be beyond the reach of such legislation, we may safely trust to llira who will rejudge all human judgments, and has indeed, reserved no small part of leg islation entirely to himself. As to our political obligations, the constitu tion of our country is the standard of ortho doxy We are bound by that instrument to the full extent to which its provisions reach. As to the right or the wrong of adopting such a constitution, and engaging to nphold it, it is uot competent in this connection to in quire. A solemn promise has been given by ali parties, in the constitution of our country, and no part of that promise can be violated without offending against the union and har mony of the States. The Giheonites were a doomed race ! Israel had as positive orders to make no peace with thorn, have no communion with them ; to ut terly destroy them as they had thus to treat the rest of tho seven nations of Canaan, all whole crimes were so enormous that the land itself was ready to spue them out! By aft in genious artifice they obtained the promise of peace with Israel. The princes of Isruel pledged the nations in a solemn engagement, to these ambassadors of Gibeon. That en gagement was binding, eveu against the ex press command that had gone before ! Thus the people themselves regarded it. Thus the matter was regarded by all parties until the time of Saul. In his zeal for Israel, he at tempted to treat them now as the nation had been commanded to treat them at the first.— But how did God regard the national engage ment to spare those whom he had decreed to utter destruction ? A henry judgment from God rebuked this sin of covenant breaking, and vindicated the. authority of a national engage ment. But the Bins of one section of our land against another by no means constitute the whole of our delinquency. To say nothing of the prevailing vice and unbelief, in all parts of our country, and among ell classes of our in habitants, there is the perversion of legal authority—the abuse of delegated power that have been carried to most alarming lengths. There is the sympathy for crime, and the favor that is shown to crimiuals, making the name of justice ulmost a mockery, weakening all sense of security and impairing all rever ence for the laws. The proscription, by the party in power, of all who differ from them, trampling in the dust every consideration but that of self! The absence of patriotism iri those who are intrusted with the interests of the country. The shatnelessness with which legislation itself is bought and sold ! Who can look npon all this without indig nation ? But do riot expend all your indigna tion upon your unfaithful and mercenary offi cers. The people are the responsible party. It is with us and our officers of all grades as it was with Israel and jthtir religious teachers: " and it shall be like people, like priest 1" [llos. 4.] As long as the people wink at such peculation—uphold those who practice it —stoop to share the spoils, they make office an occasiou and a temptation to official un faithfulness, and the sure aim of unprincipled men. As matters have 6eeined to be going for some years pas', we could not resouably expect to remain long a prosperous or a uoited people ; even if no such question of dispute between the north and eonth, as now agitates os, had existed. The great evil among ns is a disregard of laic. If we do not submit to laic —make it supreme —we must submit to an archy, or to some other power that is beyond control. " Don't unchain the Tiger If we choose to set the example of trampling upon our laws, refusing to be subject to the pow ers that be, God may give us our till of iusub- " RESARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." ordinatioD, and a second reign of terror is by no means impossible under his righteous ad mioistratioD. We must not expect to be free from the operation of principles that govern all the world beside. The Jews were, iu one respect, an exception among the nations of the earth, but no such exception as allowed them to dis regard their obligations to God, or man.— We regard our country as an exception among the nations of the present day. But there is no exception that frees us from obligations which God has laid upon all ; none that au thorizes us to make to ourselves higher laws, to contravene the common law be has given us. If a man in one part of the country may plead a higher law for violatiug one provision of the constitution, who shall deny another the right to plead a higher law for violating another? This resembles the rationalistic in terpretation that has been given to the Bible itself, in which human reason is placed above Bible authority—and thus that authority is wholly set aside ! Who is ready to nullify the Constitution of these Stalesl We must be kept by the divine power, or wo shall not be kept. We must lie blessed of God or we look in vain for a blessing, to any quarter of the universe. If we would be blessed of Him we must have a regard for the principles of right he has given us in his word. What he has in store for us we do not know, but cer tain it is that if it be any thing good, it will come in answer to the prayers of his people. Even when he had foretold by the prophet what blessings he would bestow upon the chil dren of Abraham, he added—" Yet will I be inquired of by the house of Israel to do these things for them." It has been thought inconsistent in the President to appoint a day of fasting for a particular object which he neglects to use the ineaus put into his hands to attain it. But he does not preteud that the idea originated with him. It was at the suggestion of good men in different parts of the couutry. Aud even if it had, aud he had been ten fold—we were going to say more unfaithful —if his adminis tration had been ten fold more unsatisfactory than it has, that would be no reason why a christian people should not hold such a fast, and pray most earnestly, to God, for his mer ciful interposition. Our present Chief Magistrate does seem sadly to have disappointed the expectations of those whose votes elevated him to that ofliee. It is very probable he is in great straits aud knows not what to do. Then it is every way suitable that wisdom be sought for him from above, —both the head and the heart of man are iu the hands of the Lord. If he is wilfully unfaithful, so much the more need of calling upon God to iuterpose uiid save us from threatening evils. His advisers too, need divine directiou in I their responsible duties. It is much easier to see that something must be done, thau to tell what and how to do it. Our members of Congress need the wisdom which is from above, which is first pure.— Where is the patriotism that can make our country our great object ? We need more of | the spirit that says : " I had rather be right j than be President !" First pure then peaceable. Let not your good be evil spoken of. There ; is such a thing as striving unlawfully for a lawful end. There is such a thing as counter- I acting, by our mauner, the very effort we make !to do good. At such a time as this we have | special need of a peaceable spirit. We cannot expect it without the intluence that is from above. We cau think of no persons, under any circumstances, that more need special aid from God than our legislators, and men in re sponsible stations in the general Government, at this time. We need to pray for our citizens—all. We are prone to use harsh words when mild ones would do better. Every hard speech we utter only provokes the like in return. Every un kind feeling we indulge is a hindrance to the restoration of peace—an obstacle in our own bosoms, to the enjoyment of peace. When DAVID was driven from his throne, and reviled withal in most opprobrious and provoking lan guage, the feelings of his friend were outrag ed, ami he asked permission to silence the of fender by taking off his head. But DAVID looked npon it all as from tbe hand of God, on account of his sins. "So let him curse, for the Lord hath bidden him !" "It may be God will requite me good for his cursing this day 1" Could we witness a similar spirit in our citizens ; a similar sense of sin, a similar trust in God, —there would be hope. We must submit to have many things very different in this life from what we would de sire. We should beware of making such op position to what we regard as evil, that will not only fail of removing, but tend to aggra vate tbe evil. There is a sense in which we must obey the injunction—" lie still, and know that lam God !" While there is a sense in which we should chide our inefficiency by the startling inquiry— " Why do ice sit still ?" As onr present difficulties have arisen from disregard of the requirements of the Constitu tion, they must be removed by a return to our duty in this matter. Let every State and every citizen rally around the Constitution with a calm, a heaven supported resolve to abide by its provisions, and to maintain its au thority. The whole thing is included in the dying words of the patriotic President—" I WISH YOU TO UNDERSTAND TNF. PRINCIPLES OK THE CONSTITUTION ! I WISH THEM CARRIED OUT 1 I ASK NO MORE !'' THE PLANNING OF CITIES.—The London Builder says that a spider's web furnishes a better plan for the laying out of new cities than any wnich has been devised by surveyors and engineers. Any one that eau find a distinct aud complete web unbroken, will see how beautifully regular it is, and how perfectly adapted for the quickest pssage from auy one point to another. The conceDtric rings are uot circles, but polygons, the radiating exqui sitely regular and straight. Music in the Mammoth Cave. "Were you ever in the Mammoth Cave? It is, with all its wonders, the most God for saken, dreary, gloomy spot mortal ever enter ed. Yet there is some strange mystic power in the place to transfigure the weakest, most wretched music into harmony fit for the celes tial spheres. "After poking about iu the bowels of the earth for three or four hours, visitors to the cave arrive at Echo river, where they embark on a disgustingly muddy scow, or if the party is large enough two or three wretched boats are brought into requisition. The women are all dressed iu fancifully colored bloomer dresses and with the uplifted lanterns,present a strange and weird appearance as the boat is pushed from the shore, and floats down into the black gloom, the lights reflectiug themselves ou the surface of the deadly still water, and lighting up with strauge effect the arch of rock over head. When they are fairly out of sight we enter the other boat, and ourselves push out into the dark stream. Dark, awfully dark, it is. The dark river of death finds on earth no more vivid parallel than this. You know, in the first picture of Cole's Voyage of Life, the gloomy river of the past from which floats out into life and light the little boat of a baby voyager. The stream issues from a dark,rocky cavern, mysterious and unknown. Such a 6tream is this ou which we are embarked.— Silent and gloomy, dark and mysterious, it serves as a type of the past and the future; of the past mystery whence all life evolves, of tbe inscrutable future whither all life tends. "The feeling of security is not very great.— The boats sink dowu almost to the water's edge, and the perpendicular slippery rock on either side offers no ledge on which a ship wrecked voyager might find a temporary foot ing. Above, sometimes so low that you must crouch to avoid it, and again so high as to be scarcely visible, rises the rock-roof, while the water iu which you glide is thirty feet in depth and as cold as the brow of a corpse. There is no sound but the rippling made by the boat; not a cricket along the shoreless stream, not a fish to plunge np and flush a moment in the air before returning to its watery home—no symptom of life—no sound, no motioH, save that made by ourselves. "Hark ! there is a sound I Far off a delicate fhade of music, so faint as to seem the ghost of some wandering echo. But by degrees it increases. It becomes clear and defined. Rich harmony, trembling with strange sensuous wild ness, fluttering around the rocky projections, swelling in waves of harmouy to the arched roof above. Now it appears to come from one direction, now from auother. Anon a higher note or strain is heard, like some clear voice rising above a mighty chorus. Never did syren sing more magic songs to listening traveler—never did the mysterious maiden of Lurleiburg chant more entrancing melody to the unwary boatman who floats aloug the moonlit Rhine. "Suddenly a turn of the boat brings yon opposite a break in the perpendicular rocky shore; and, perched upon a mass of broken rock, you see a party of four nearroes playing upon violins and a cornet. There are the syrens, these the Lurliues of Echo river. Out on the earth's surface their music would be merely quaint and odd ; but here, in the Mammoth Cave, it is weird and unearthly. "Floating away, out of sight of the above minstrels—who are, in fact, the barber, boot black, or waiter from the hotel at the mouth of the cave—their music resumes its supernat ural tones and effect, and so, until we land at the opposite shore of the dark river, it haunts the ear with its peculiar harmony, while ever after it forms the most vivid reminiscence of a visit to the Mammoth Cave." THE GAME OF EUCHRE AND LIFE —There is a genuine humor in the idea that an Arkansas man finds the most natural expression, even of parting advice to his sou, in the language of the card table, and the manner in which the terms of the game of "euchre" are there fitted in the game of life is very ingenious: "Bob, you are about leaving home for strange parts. You're going to throw me out of the game, and go it aloue. The odds is against j ou, Bob, but remember also, that industry and perseverance are the wining cards; they are the ' bowers ' Book learning and all that sort of thing will do to fill up with, like small trumps, but you must have the bowers to back 'em, else they aiut worth shucks. If luck runs agin you pretty strong, don't cave in wnd look like a sick chicken ou a rainy day, but hold your head up and make 'em be leave you're flush of trumps; they won't play so hard again you. " I've lived and traveled around some, Bob, and I have found out that as soon as folks thought yon held a weak hand, they'd buck again you strong. So when you're sorter weak, keep ou a bold front, but play cautious, be satisfied with a p'int.—Many's the hand I've seen euchred"'cause they played for to much, keep your eyes well skin'd, Bob ; don't let 'em nig' on you ; recollect the game lays as much with the head as with the hands. Be temperate never get drunk, for then no matter how good your baud, you won't know how to play it ; both bowers aud the ace won't save you, for there's certain to be a 'miss-deal'or something wrong. "And another thing, Bob,(this was spoken in a low tone) don't go to much on the women; queens i6kiuderpoor cards; the more yon have of them the worse for yon; yon might have three and nary trump. I dout say discard 'em all; if you get hold of one that's trump, its all good, and thar's certain to be one out of four. And above all Bob, be honest ; never take a man's trick wot dont belong to you; nor 'slip, cards, nor ' nig,' for then you can't look your man in the face,and when that's the case thert's no fun in the game; it's a regular cut-throat.— So now, Bob, farewell, remember.wot I tell you and you'll bo sure to win, and if you don't carves you right if jou got 'skunked!' " VOX,. XXI. NO. 33 (Sktaliimal gtprtmtut. The Eleotion of School Directors. In a few weeks, the voters of this county will be called apon.iu their respective districts, to cast their votes for two or more School Directors, who, in conjunction with their asso ciates already members of the board, are to manage the educational interests of their re spective townships for the ensuing year. This being the case we deem it a proper time to say something upon th.it subject, and here let us heartily recommend an article upon this question that appeared a few weeks since in one of our village papers, excepting the clos ing paragraph which v/as so highly complimen tary to one of the editors of this Educational column. We hope the readers of that paper will give good heed to the advice then given. Directors are,we believe, the only officers in the township that ure required to labor with out pay, but they are not, tkcrefort required to perform duties that are of little or no im portance to themselves and their fellow citi zens,far otherwise. Their acts are of more con sequence and have more to do with the best interests of society than most other town offi cers., Why then they arc expected to labor for the welfare of their neighbors and the ad vancement of education without pay, it is not easy for us to discover, but such is the law.— This being the case it is frequently difficult to find the best, most suitable men who are wil liug to serve as School Directors, —perhaps it would still be the case if they were paid, but, be this as it may, it not unfrequeutly hap pens, that the most unsuitable men in the whole township are elected to that office, — whereas, in our judgment we should have the very best meu that the township affords.— Their duties are responsible, aud often require the exercise of the best judgment—the wisest discretion and the soundest wisdom. Their acts hear upon the well being of the children of the country, those who have no legal power to complain, if not justly dealt by, who can not, by law, call those to account who defraud them of their rights. The duties of Direct ors are manifold and many times difficult of performance,—they are frequently brought by the faithful discharge of these duties iu colli sion with their neighbors, who feel that every cent paid tor education of the youth is so much money thrown away,—who deem all money paid for building comfortable School Houses, as so much extorted from them by the school law and its officers. Directors shonld therefore be men who are willing aud deter mined to do their duties, to labor for the best interest of the cause of education ; men who will not be driven from their right convictions, because some complain or find fault, men who will administer the law faithfully but judicious ly, who esteem the well being of the youth of more consequence than mere money. One important duty that Directors are call ed upon to perform, is the location of School Houses. This mauy times requires more nerve than ail our citizens possess. In many of oor districts, where new houses are to be erected, there arc more schools than can well be sup ported, and more than one are needed. Now the country is cleared and the roads are good, to locate a house so that one or more old schools shall be discontinued, and some inhabi tants who have always lived near the school, half or three fourths of a mile from it, fre quently introduce as a bone of contention into the neighborhood and calls forth denunciations against Directors, which they are not willing to incur, even if they feel that right requires the thing to be done. The selection and adoption of a series of text for tho schools is a delicate task, and oue from which many directors shtiuk, or j rather oue which they utterly refuse or heed lessly neglect to perform, but a duty, enjoiued by the law as positively as the employment of teachers, and one which is of great impor tance to the advancement of the schools.— These and other duties devolving upon school directors, require our most intelligent, judi cious, prompt aud independent men for their faithful performance. The practice of electing men as directors who have no direct interest in the schools is a very bad one, as it seems to us, candidates are sometimes selected because they are large tax payers, aud will consequently oppose raising auy more money than just enough to keep the schools open four months, sometimes because thev are opposed to the building tax, some times young men are elected who have no families, merely to bring them before the pub lic in some official capacity. Any one can see that such school officers, as a general thing, will injure the system. They have uo desire to improve the schools. Men should not be selected merely because they arc heavy tax payers, still there should be those on the board who will be called upon to pay large taxes ; they have a pecuniary in terest iu the matter at heart, and if good men in other respects, a portion of the board should beloug to that class. The poor man has as much interest in our common schools as the rich, aud perhaps more; he too should be represented on the school board. No man should be elected because he is rich or because he is a poor man, but because he is a good man for the post, and will perform his duties as director faith fully and fearlessly. Let the electors see to this matter in season, and bring forward their good men for this im portant, but payless, position. Let all classes who have direct interest in the schools be rep resented, so that all shall feel that their inter ests and their rights will be protected, and the schools of the district be improved; select men who will provide well for the schools in every department, by levying tax judiciously, and expending it profitably, but with proper regard to economy ; who will locate school houses properly and build them substantially and with refereuce to comfort and convenience—men who will see that we have good schools. PRENTICE says he has heard of but one old woman who kissed her cow, but be knows of many thousand youn? oues who hare kifsed very great culrcs