,W 03LLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA : Thursday Morning, February 21, 1861. „§:lcctcl) Ibctrw. [From the Century.] A DIRGE! Mourn for the young ! Mourn for the hrave ! Deep in the nnquiet sea The dead lie J-eareTully. VRhout a grave 5 And shall he go unsung? Mourn for the yonng and bra re ! Our hearts cease not comi>larning Of the anger of wind and wave ; Cea* not arraigning The mystei ious decree That lias removed him hence. Mourn for the excellence That was, that would have been, and yot was not to be sTonrn for the vonng . Mourn for the hrave! His death-bed was with tempo-ts huug ; The storm shouted in his dying ear, And the black wave Became his bier, The spirit is with Go 4 who gave it, The holly that with tloods that lave it, The memory with us here. We grieve ii"t for the old, For when the I'tain is cold The limbs may be, a-, well- Life's kernel is consumed; forth harvests hut a .-Ml. ITut, with the young, What heart-wealth is entombed I What joy and love .' What flowers are plucked unbloomcd'. What song- are hushed unsung ! For them, life marches to a triumph air; I For tiiem. hope conquers everywhere, like victors let them move On to the consecrated ground— Tncir temples b mnd, Not with mournful wivatksof autumn-brown But with a laurel crown 1 Monro for the young and brave 1 No friend was there To place the stiffened limbs at rest. To fold the garments on the breast, And wring the drowned hair. Mourn for the young 1 Mourn for the hrave'. Beneath the throbbing billow biceps he, with ocean for his grave, Its green pall o'er him Rung. He hath white coral For his colfln pillow, And seaweed for his crown and laurel 1 "WHEN THE TIDE GOES OUT." I Through the weary day, on his couch bt lay, With the life-tide ebbing slowly away ; [■ J .fl the dew on his cold brow gathering fast, As the pendulum-numbered moments passed. ■ And I beard a sad voice, whispering, say, " When the tide goes out, he will pass away. Pray for.'a soul's serene release ! That ;be weary spirit may rest in peace, When the tide goes out." When the tide goes out from the sea-girt land*. It bears strange freight from the gleaming sands ; fhe white winged ships, that long may wait Fur the foaming wave, and a wind that's late ; The treasures cast on a rocky shore, Emm the stranded ships tiiat shall sail uo more. And hopes that follow the shining seas, 01 the ocean wide .shall win all these. When the tide goes out. But of all that drift from the shore to tho sea, Is the human soul to Eternity ; FWtine away from a silent shore, I.lke a fated ship to return no more. Saddest—most solemn of ail--a soul Pausing where unknown waters roll. Where shall the surging current tend, Slowly dividing friend from friend. When the tide goes out ? For onr parting spirit, 0! pray, While the tide of life is ebbing away, I That the soul may pass o'er sunnier seas Thau clasped of o'd the Hesperides. i A bark whose sails, by angel bauds, thai! be furled on a strand of golden sands ; And the friends that stand on a silent shore, Knowing that we shall return no more, Shall wish us joy of a voyage fair, With calin sweet skies, and favoring air, When the tide goes out. ?clcftth (Cult. My Housekeeper. t.'} * pv w !'° can k've the best references as to charae- Rhility, wishes a situation as housekeeper in a j nun - family. Reference required. Address M. L. * *ITU. Box 101)4. t 1 was a bachelor. I had plenty of money, Jll ' I was thirty five years old and had never arrived at a satisfactory way of spending it.— * deluded that my error was the want of a "Re of my own. Conceiving a sudden div s ; " for hotels and boarding houses, I took a 'Rndsome house in a respectable part of the ■ *n, and began looking for a housekeeper, e advertisement which heads this narrative *n- us , l , ra ? e ? e as * glanced over the ants' in the evening paper. It pleased me. , reading it for the twentieth time, w jn a servaut knocked at my parlor door ' announced my sister-in law, Mrs. Eliza ' v 'P, and her daughter Eliza. Mrs. Bish- j l .'^ a* the widow ot ray oldest brother, and . a jrition to my comfort was really tonch -1 - >he followed the servant into the room, tying her pretty daughter, eldest and best '"lu-ii of the three. She wus a handsome 'I.UI of commanding, imperial order, and , p "oked her best that wintry afternoon iu ' ■ '"i - and velvets, her cheeks crimsou with ex*J l°' een air and the reise she had been taking. as 1 f , TPr < v (f!ad t0 y°. Eliza," I said, Hill,, " ' era c ' ia ' r - "There are some yon women know more about than an von i, r llke rne - and 1 wa t to consult ' ln „., Uave concluded to go to housekeep ftvifbije lightened into an expression I eveu more beaming than the one she had be stowed on me. It never occurred to me that she could be thinking of my future home as a convenient place for herself and three children. She answered warmly : "An excellent idea, brother Sandie, if you : are prepared for all the expenses and trouble !it involves. The expense to be sure is not I much of a consideration to yon. You have been so successful iu business tbatyou will not require so much economy in your house as I used to practice iu poor Robert's time, lie always said 1 used to make one dollar do the work of three. But there will be a good deal of tionble. In the first place you will have to find a good housekeeper." M The very thing 1 was wanting to speak to you about." " How kind, Sandie." ■"Not kind at all, troubling you about my affairs." " For shame ! as if you ever had reason to think that anything 1 could do for you would be a trouble." A very just remark, considering that her voluntary services on my behalf amounted to, besides frequent visits, u pair of slippers with a pink eyed pussy-cat on each toe, and a smok ing cap with a green eyed poodle couehant. I hastened to place before her the paper in which I had marked the advertisement which heads this article. "There, Eliza, this is what I have been thinking about. Somehow I fancy I should like Mrs. M. L. Smith $ Mary, I imagine her name is. lam going to write to Box 1004." "But areu't you acting o:i impulse, San die ?" " Perhaps so—l always do—and somehow my ventures have been tolerably fortunate. "Yes, but this is such an important thing. Of course yon know," —and she laughed rath er uneasily —"that you will be sure to marry the lady." Marry ? I believe every woman has in her the element cf Eve. Here was an apple 1 never should have seen but for my sister-iu-law. It was my turn to laugh. " Why, no, Eliza. That is an idea of course I never thought of. I don't imagine it would prove to be oue with tue. lam not a marry ing man. Besides she is, without doubt, a widow with children, und"— I stopped, for I remembered my sister's be reavement aud incumbrance. Iler face turned crimson. " All men do not think it impossible to mar ry a widow with children, and you may not when Mrs. Smith has kept house for six months, though to be sure, I dou't think some womeu could ever make up their minds to mar ry again." I suppose "some woman" referred to her self, aud I was glad of this hint as to her sen timents, for jioor Robert had left his family very comfortable, aud I did not want to see his children subject to the unteoder mercies of a second papa. After a few more cautions from Mrs. Bishop, and a few strong expres sions of admiration of various ai tides of fem inine adornment for little Eliza, which extract ed from the pocket of the good-natured uuele the customary amount of hush money, my vis itors departed, and I wrote uiy letter to Box 1004. In it I stated my residence, the salary I was willing to pay, aud the number of my | household. I gave her my came and the names of a few of my friends who would be ready to afford whatever information she re quired as to my means and character. 1 ad ded a postscript to say that i particularly ob jected to children, and should make it a point with my housekeeper to leave hers behind. If she liked the terms and stipulations, I request ed her to call at my counting room the ensuing evening. It would be idle to say that I attended very closely to business the next forenoon. The housekeeper fever, the home lodgings, had ta ken full possession of rue. I must confess, be sides, to no small curiosity as to the personal appearance of M. L. Smith. I wanted an agreeable housekeeper. Not too young—that wouldn't look well—no toothless, wrinkled crone to sit opposite me at my board, but a pleasant, cheerful woman, euough to make my home lively. It was about 11 o'clock when my young man ushered the lady into the counting-room. My previous favorable impressions were fully confirmed by her appearance. I did not think her handsome, certainly not in the style of my sister-in-law. She was a small woman, light footed and slender, with a sunny, pleasant face, which might have testified to twenty-five sum mers, but no winters surely ; or if she had met storm aud chill, she had borne them with such brave patience that her face reflected on ly the sunbeam. Her brown hair was put smoothly and simply away from her tranquil face. Her mouth was not small, but winning and smiling. When she spoke, her low, pleas ant tones endorsed the expression of her coun tenance. "Mr. Bishop, I believe ; the gentleman who wrote this letter ?'' She drew the epistle from her pocket. "The same, madam." " I came, sir, to say that I would accept your propositions, if you still wish it, now that we have met. I was about to say that I wished it more thau ever, since I had seeu her, but fortunate ly recollected iu time that compliments to my housekeeper were no part of the programme, aud very decorously concluded my engagement in a matter-off-act aud business manner. The next week she entered upon her duties. I had never knowu what it was to be so com fortable. My house was a model ofjconvcuiencc and simple elegance, at least my sister In-law, when she went over it previous to Mrs. Smith's commencing, pronounced it perfect. I had a sort of home feeling that I had never known before—room enough for all my possessions, a place to welcome my friends to and a very agreeable companion in my house-keeper when I chose to talk to her, and an unobtrusive miuister to my comforts when I was silent. True, Mrs. Bishop fouud, when she houor cd me with a visit, that something or other PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA„ BY R. W. STURROCK. was not ordered as she managed it in poor, dear Robert's time. Housekeepers, even the best of them, she was wout to say, required a little lookiog after. They ean't be expected to take so much interest in one's affairs as one's own relations—her comments did not give me much uneasiness, however. I went home one day a little earlier than usual. I thought a little quiet chat with my housekeeper over the dining-room fire would not be unpleasant. I had begun already to take altogether more interest in her thau I was prepared to acknowledge to myself. I pictured, as 1 hurried home, the cheerful room, the table handsomely laid, and Mrs. Smith, iu her neat, quiet dress, sitting with book or work, waiting for dinner to be brought us. As 1 reached my own door, however, I found it open, and in the hall were three children of varying ages, taking a most affectionate fare well of my housekeeper. I had never cared | enough for any one before to experience snch an emotion as jealousy, but I think no other I word would adequately describe my feelings as I walked into the parlor and shut the door.— Presently Mrs. Smith made her appearance. " I am sorry," she begau. " Not at ali madam." "Oli, but I am. I remember your stipula tions about tho children, perfectly. I surely did not intend they should annoy you. I pre sumed you would have no objections to their j coming sometimes in your absence, and I like ; to see them as often as I can, but they shall : not be here again at any hour when you are i likely to come home." She must have thought mo an ungracious ; boor, for I growled out merely : " No matter—uo matter at all." I was in an ill humor. The pleasant anti | cipations with which I had hurried home had | not been realized. Moreover, 1 suspected I | was becoming too much interested in my house- I keeper to like to be reminded that others had | stronger claims upon her. That evening I sat | on one side of the bright fire—Mrs. Smith on the other. I abbor furnaces—it is one of my j whims. I loved, when I was a boy, to make pictures in the fire, and the habit and I had j grown old together. We sat silently for some ; time; I was watching in the embers two little | boats sailing side by side. At length I asked | abruptly : | " What was Mr. Smith's business, madam?' " A merchant. He was in a dry goods firm ■ and able to give us every luxury until he died." So that was it. He had failed and died, and left her all those children to support. I ■ looked in the fire again. The boats had drift ed far apart, and were sailing down a flame colored river— " He on one side—she on the other." " Perhaps I could have stood the children, if it weren't for thinking she had loved some body else. She'd be looking back all the while, comparing rne with No. 1." " Sir ?" Mv voice had attracted Mrs. Smith's atten tion from her book, but she had evidently not understood what 1 said, and was looking up inquiringly. Tlir.uk fortune for that. I laugb j ed a little nervously, I imagine. " Nothing—l was not speaking to you; I think 1 was talking in my sleep." She looked down again, and 1 watched her instead of the lire. She was pretty—prettier than 1 hail given her credit for at first. There i was a delicate peach blossom on her cheek, an | innocent, almost childish expression to her face. Well, cheek and expression were noth ing to me. I got up and went disconsolately to bed. The next day my sister in law came to see me. As usual she had plenty of suggestions to make to Mrs. Smith, which that ludj re ceived in silence, but with a peculiar twinkle iu her eyes. At length Mrs. Bishop followed me into my library. " Well, Sandie," she remarked, seating her self, "since you do uot seem disposed to fulfil my prediction, and marry your housekeeper, 1 suppose I may speak freely. I have thought from the first that she was a very artful woman. I have no doubt that when she came here she meant to marry you. She is very attentive now, but of course she has her own motive. If any trial should come you would find out who your true friends are." Mrs. Bishop was right in this, for the trial did come and I saw who my true friend was, my own friend. I was taken ill early in the spring. My sickness came on suddenly. I was attacked with a severe headache and sharp pains iu my back. The first two days Mrs. Bishop spent in assiduous care of me; though, to confess the truth, her attentions were unwelcome, and I would far rather have been abandoned to the tender mercies of my housekeeper, who rarely came into the room when my sister-in-law was there. The third morning my physician pro nounced my disease small pox Even in that moment of terror I looked at Eliza Bishop.— Her face paled, and I could see her hand shake. She spoke in a trembling voice. " I wish I could stay with you, Sandie ; I wish I could. If it was only for myself, I would; but my children 1" " I would not have you stay." I answered. " I would not have you stay for worlds. I trust you have noi endangered yourself. Good bye, sister Eliza." " She went out of the room, aud I turned to Mrs. Smith, who was standing near. " Now you must go also. The doctor will find some one to nurse me, and you, too, must look out for your children." " I must look out for you, sir ; my duty is heie now. Live or die, I shall stay with you while you ueed me. The little woman's voice was firm, and her eyes shone with a clear, resolute light. I had not thought she possessed so much resolute will and courage. "Consider," I said, "do you realize all the risks you run ? Of loathsome disease, disfigure ment, and perhaps terrible death ?" " I have considered all, sir, and shall die." Was I selfish to allow it ? Perhaps so, but eveu in the hour of deadly peril, I who had never loved a woman before, longed to have " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." her at my side, to share my danger —nay, to die, if I died; to live for LUC, or failing that, for no other. I need not give the details of the sickness that followed—tho weeks of terrible suffering when my soul and body could scarcely cling together. I look back upon it, strong man as I am, with shivering dread. It was owing un der God, to her that death, who stood waiting day after day at my pillow, at last passed by me. What a nurse she was ! Vigilant, sleep less, untiring. Perhaps it was owing to her calm courage that she did not take the disease. She seemed to be always near me, and yet she found time to make herself look as neat and even tasteful as usual. Everything in my room, after I was able to notice anything.was in scrupulous order. Delicate flowers, as fresh and sweet as herself, bloomed on my tabic; a pleasant, dreamy half-light filled tho apart ment. What & chauge from boarding-house days I 1 was thinking of ail this glorious care ar.d tenderness as 1 sat np for the first time at the window, Mary—l had learned to call her so during my illness—was out of the room, but the tokens of her presence were all around rac. Presently she came in and sat down at my side. "Mary," I said, almost involuntarily, " I have been thinking I ought to thank you for saving my life. Aud yet I do not know as I am grateful. Lifo will not be of much value unless you will share it. With you for my wife 1 could be happy; but if you canuot love me, you might us well have let me go by the board." I had spoken as I felt, seriously and sadly, but a merry twinkle danced in her eyes. " So you think now you could stand not only the children but my having loved some one else ?" " Then you heard that foolish speech, after all. It wasn't meant for your car —forgive it. You are too good for me, anyway; I ask noth ing better of you, if you can love me, thau to take you just as you are." " Children and all ?" " Children aud all ; I'll try to be a father to them. Heaven help me " " I shall be satisfied, sir, if you will be a brother to then, since they are my mother's children and not mine." " And Mr. Smith is—?" " My father, lie failed in business last year though I am happy to say lie is living and well. I wuutcd to help him, but the only thing I knew how to do was to keep house. It seem ed a proper euough occupation for an old maid like me. You see lam not very young, sir. When I found that you thought I was a widow with children, I determined to favor the odd mistake. I am not Mrs. Smith, though, but Mary Smith, spinster, at your service iu your family, if you like that way of stating it bet ter." "And you will change your title and retain your situation ?'' Her answer is no one's business but my own. Six weeks afterward my sister-in-law was invited to my wedding She looked surprised, but she torbore any comment save the remain der of her prediction that Mrs. Smith would conquer my prejudices against widows with in cumbrances. The langh was against her when 1 told her that Mrs. Sandie Bishop was to go to the hvmenial alter for the first time. 1 have been married five years. My preju dices have yielded to the fascinations of a bold little Sandie, and a winsome little Mary, and sitting by my own peaceful fireside 1 bless the day and Providence that first made me known to my house keeper. Ma. SPII.LMAN had just married a second wife. One day after the wedding Mr. S. re marked:— " I intend, Mrs. Spillman to enlarge my dairy." " You mean our dairy, my dear," replied Mrs. Spillman. " No," quoth Mr. Spillman, " I intend to enlarge my dairy." " Say our dairy, Mr. Spillman." " No, mv dairy." " Say cur dairy, say our screamed she, seizing the poker. "My dairy, my dairy!'' yelled the hus band. " Our dairy, our dairy ! " re-echoed the wife, emphasizing each word with a blow on the back of her cringing spouse. Mr. Spillman retreated under the bed. In passing under the bed clothes his hat was brushed off He remaind under cover sever al minutes, waiting for a full in the storm. At length his wife saw him thrusting his head out at the foot of the bed, much like a turtle from its shell. " What are you looking for ?" exclaimed the lady. " 1 am looking for our breeches, my dear,"' says he. THE PRIEST'S ANSWER. —Paddy Malone went to his priest and asked him " what is a Mericle, your revereuce ?" The priest asked him several questions, and found he had been to a revival meeting and heard the strange talk. He was very niad and telling Paddy to stand out before him, he gave the poor fellow a tremendous kick iu the rear. Did it hurt you ?" asked the priest. "To be sure it did ?" said Paddy. " Aud it would have been a miracle if it did'nt," replied his rever ance, with which Paddy went away—answer ed, but uot satisfied. A PRINTER'S RISE. —The Roman Catholic Bishop of Pennsylvania recently visited Port land Maine, and in noticing his visit, the Bangor Whig says : " Thirty years ago, he was an apprentice in the Argus office. He entered a Catholic college in Ohio soon after he become of age, aud has now been Bishop for six years. Printers can be made into anything. A negro on being examined, was asked if his master was a christian. "No sir, he is a member of Congress," was the reply. Woman. Mrs. Murray, an English lady, has been a gipsying among the Spanish islands, and has written a book wherein she enthusiastically de scribes woman. A London critic takes the la dy up as follows : " These are pretty portraits which the lady has given us ; but one blight, brave English woman with her energy and her courage, her se'f-reliance and her honor, is worth the whole bevy. The marble skiu and languid loveliness of the harem beauty, her glorious eyes, her matchless hair, her bewitching mouth, make her very effective as a portrait; so is the Spanish woman, with her natural flowers braided into her magnificent hair, and her dark eyes beaming so eloquently from under her arched brows. Let the palm of beauty pass : let the fair haired English girl look pale and expressionless beside these glowing beauties ; but at home, who but she bears off the prize before all women of the world ? Who so neat, so hourly well appointed, so regular in her hab its, so charming in her management ?—who so sweet a home companion,so reliable, so truthful, so mate like as she? Not the Moorish maiden, ignorant, and to be protected by cage wires and impregnable walls ; nor the Spanish wo man, who washes the babies ou the dining ta ble, trails through the morning dressed like a ragged beggar, and may not even go to mass without her duenna and her guardian. For our own part, we would rather pay onr homage to such women as we see painted in the Acad emy, in scarlet* petticoats, Balmoral boots, turned hats aud gauntlet gloves, with that fear less look of honesty and dariug which only ex ists where there is freedom, self respect and social esteem, than to all the lights of the ha rem. ' Yes, or to any American woman, who makes home of a cottage, and smiles her gentle sway, a queen in calico. But it so happens that we have a great many ladies and not nearly so many women as we once had ; those who grace a frame more than they do a family ; good to write poetry too, and sing, "Meet me by moon light alone" too, and make "Books of Beauty" about, but neither Rachels nor Ruths. A classic nose is a happy accident, and so is a l p fashioned alter Appollo's bow, the nether one as if "some bee had stung it newly but a sweet spirit aud a graceful life are not acci dents ; they are 1 orn of patience and self denial, aud womanly faith. It is the nonsense of the thing called gal lantry, that has robbed the world of many a woman, only to make a lady of her; the stuff about, 'angels in disguise,' aud 'kneeling at their feet,' and 'paying homage to beauty' is as ab.urd to day, as the scene in the yard of the inn where Sancho Panza watched the first night of his errauty. As if it were pos sible to be anything better on earth than a woman; a woman in its true sense, who like Mary of old is last at every scene of suffering and first at every resurrection of a hope.— Chiaigo Journal. Carolina Bombast. The Charleston Mercury of the 29th indul ges in the following calm reflections : At this moment, the army and navy are both demoralized; and with half a dozen States to be subdued, the Federal despotism will have its hands full and the Treasury empty ! But tiic problem is to be worked out, ala Scott, by a due reference to Jackson's policy and Webster's speech. Our ports are to be blockaded ! The Constitution, and the Mace donian, and the Wyoming, and the Brooklyn, and possibly a score besides, are to hang about our ports, and the duties, which are all our loving brethcrn want at our hands—mouey— tribute—uot love, nor fellowship—these are to be collected at the entrance of our harbors ! We will pay no tribute ! Let the ports be blockaded. Charleston and Savannah, and Mobile, and New Orleans.— We will foi'ai goodly fellowship when onr ports are blockaded. We bid you welcome to the simple fare of an agricultural people. We have provisions enough ou every homestead in South Carolina to last a year—hog and hominy in abundance. We will bny no more Northern hickshaws. We will make our own. By next August God will give to our grauaries a good corn crop. In September we shall be gathering from millions of acres of cotton.— We have ranch cotton on hand now, which the world wants. What Great Britain and France will do for cotton, with our ports blockaded, we cau't exactly say ; but we sus pect that they will find away to bring us Eng lish and French cloths and cassimeres, and negro cloths, in place of those rascally, shaggy aud worthless stuffs, with which the Yaukees have been cheating us year after year. We will wear those cloths, be sure, and Great Brit ain and France may get our cotton as they can. The bully programme, for it is nothing n:ore will soon cure itself. Up to the very moment when our shot smote the Star of the West in her cheeks, these scoundrelly asses of the Northern press wore telling the miserable moonlings whom they have gulled to their ruin that ours was the bullying game ; that we were not in earnest; that all they had to do was to hold on, and they would sec us, cap in hand, begging to be received to favor. They judged of other people by themselves. They have been playing the thimble-rigging, the bragging, and the bullying game all their lives and as each best measures his neighbor's corn by his own false bushels,so these people would measure ours. But there must be a finish some day to all games ; and the thimble-riggers are likely to find themselves at last ia the hands of the constable. We shall play out our game honestly, as we begun it, and fling our shot into tho faces of the bullies whenever they ap pear. "Ah, Doctor, how is my wife to day?" The Doctor shook his head and said:—" Yon must prepare for the worst."—" What!" ex claimed the alarmed husbaud, "is she likely to recover ?" VOT.. XXT. —NO. 38 (ftwtatifwtl ftfidwti Visiting Schools hy Parents. This if? a hackneyed subject, constantly talk ed about, —but seldom done, acknowledged by all to be a duty, aud yet, a duty neglected by all. Every parent concedes that it would en courage bis oaii children, strengthen the au thority of the teacher, assist him in control ing unruly pupils, if he have such, and greatly benelit the whole school ; still every parent stays away from the school, from one year's end toauothe;\ All parents are interested in toe education of their children, and they feel anxious to have them make' the greatest possible pro gress. Yet they seldom go uear the house in which they are to receive their education.— While tlioy give strict attention to their do mestic animals, and watch carefully the Indi viduals having charge of them, they pay but little attention to their own offspring, so far as their education is concerned, and seldom if ever go to the school house to see what the per son having charge of them is doing with them. They would immediately dismiss an unfaith ful man from their employ in the shop, or store, or farm, but the teacher may wholly neglect bis duty to the children, and no par ent will know it unless his children enter com plaint. The teacher may teach morality, or immorality, he may instruct in the sciences correctly or incorrectly and the parent will not know which lie is doing unless he be in formed by some of the pupils. Now why do parents thus neglect an ac knowledged duty, a duty too, which they owe to the objects of their strongest affections. to their children whom they love as they do their own sonls ? Some say they cannot find time to visit the schools ; but, let me a-k do they not take time for other things not half so important? If their children were at work for them, would they not find time, to at least occasionally see how they were getting ulong ? Even if it does take a little time, should not parents af ford it, when the bc-at interests of their chil dren are at stake ? But say others, vre do dot understand tie branches studied, and consequently we cannoi tell whether the scholars are doing well or not. If they do not understand all of the branch es, they do some of them. They do know when their children read and spell well, if they hear them, they can tell whether they re cite readily and promptly, whether they are studious and obedient, or lazy, idle and trou blesome. If they will go to the school occasionally, they will know whether or not, their own chil dren are supplied with books such as they re quire to make good progress, they will find out too, what many parents seem not to know, whether the school house is comfortable and convenient, or whether their children, whom they are most careful to make as comfortable as possible at home, are obliged to sit all day in rooms so cold that they are in danger, every hour, of contracting diseases that will consign them to early graves ; they will ascertain, by going to the school now and theu to spend an hour or two, whether seats without backs, stoves without doors, and outside doors with out latches are such things as the pupils and teachers ought to be satisfied with. Others say, it is the business of the Direct or* to employ the teachers and visit the schools also, nr.d we are thus exonorated from all re | spousibi'ity in the matter ; but is this so ? . Because the law requires directors to hire, and superintendents to examine and license teach ers, and also, to visit the schools does it there fore free parents from the duty they owe to their children. Shall f neglect my child be cause the law obliges directors to hire persons to teach him, together with the other children of the neighborhood? Shall I pay no atten tion to the health of my boy, because a phy sician has been employed to look to his bodily ailment* ? No attention to bis morals because he lias a Sabbath school teacher, selected per haps, and appointed by some other person 1 Well, exclaims another, we have A first rata teacher, all the scholars says so, and I am sat isfied that all goes right, and even if it does not, I cannot alter it, so what is the nse in my spending time in running to the school.— Suppose you have a first rate teacher, he may not have all first rate scholars, and let me say to you in all kindness, that it takes good schol ars, as well as a good teacher to make a good school, lie wants sympathy, and encourage ment, and perhaps advice, if he is a first rato teacher, and he wants them from you, parents. You have a first rate band in your store, or shop, or on your farm, —do you therefore neglect him for months, and thereby show to him that you feel no interest in what he is doiug. You employ a first class physician when your child is sick, hut do you not want to know whether lie is killing or curing him? Do you never give any attention to a suit in court, because you have secured the services of a first class lawyer to manage the case? Parents, if you only knew how glad your teachers would be to see you at the schools, if it were but once a term even, you could not stay away. If you knew how much you would delight your own children, how much you would encourage the teacher, and how much good you could do the whole school by spend ing an occasional hour with the scholars and teacher, you conld not stay away, terra after term and year after year. Will you not go and see what kind of hou ses your children have to spend their days in, what kind of desks and seats and out door conveniences they have furnished for them in their young, sprightly, hopeful days. Go among them in their sports on the muddy high way, see how those little dear ones, of whom you are so tender when at home, are obliged to get along and suffer and endure in the houses in which they are to attempt to get an education. '"There, John, that's twice you've come homo and forgotten that lard. " La mother ;it was so greasy that it slipped aiy uiiud.