ONE DOLLAR °ER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOAVANDA : Thursday Morning, April 11, 1861. . Stlttiti GONE AWAY. I see the farm house, re J anil old, Above its roof the maples sway ; The hills behind are bleak and cold ; The wind eoracs up aud dies away. I gaze into each empty room, And as I gaze a gnawing pain 1 in my heart, at thought of those " Who ne'er will pass the doors again. \nd strolling down the orchard slope. (So wide a likeness grief will crave.) Each dead leaf seems a withered hope, Each mossy hillock looks a grave. They will not hear mc if I call ; Thev will not sec these tears that start , 'Tis sutumn—autumn wiih it all And worse than autumn in my heart. 0 leaves, so dry, and dead, and sore 1 I can recall some happier hours. When summer's glory lingered thre, \nd summer's beauty touched the tlowers. Adown the slope a slender shape Danced lightly, with her Hying curls. An I manhood's deeper tones were blent With the gay laugh of happy girls. . j O stolen meetings at the gate . 0 liugerings at the opeu door ! 0 nw"nfigl>t rambles, long and late ! MY heart can scarce believe them o'er. Anil vet the si'ence, strange and still, The air r f sadness and decay, The moss that grows upon the sill— Ves, love and hope have gone away! So like, so l ike a worn out heart ! Whi h the last tenant finds too cold, And leaves, for evermore, as tiiey Have left this homestead, red and old. foor empty house 1 poor lonely heart ! 'Twere well if 1 ravely, side by side, You waited till the hand of Time liach ruin's mossy wreath supplied. 1 lean upon the gate, and sigh Some bitter tears will force their way ; And then 1 bid the place good bye For many a loDg and weary day. 1 cross the little ice-bound brook, (lu summer 'tis a noisy stream.) Turn round to take a last fond look, And all has taT-d like a dream. y — 1 11 "■* - j? 1Itctti S ale♦ 'COBWEBS Ilist look there !" f The speaker was one of two young men, r'io had come up to the mountains on a pe destrian and sketching expedition from the I ttvof Philadelphia. As tie spoke, lie laid his I bud on his companion's arm. The person he addressed looked, and saw a little girl, about ten years old, advancing in an old blackberry path. She was as brown as a berry from ex posure to tbo sun, and her feet and arms were hare, hut there was a grace about her, as she came tripping forward, that a princess might have envied. Ju>t in front of her a spider had spun his trap across the path, and as the young man spoke, shu sligtly stopped her head, and raising her hands pushed the cobwebs aside.— It was this artless, natural movement which completed the picture " 1 should like to paint her," said he who had spoken. " What ! love at first sight ?" answered his companion, laughing "To think of the fast idious Clarence losing his Heart to a sunburnt j fairy i Vou are eighteen, and she about teu —oh ! you can afford to wait." The conversation had been carried on in whispers. The child, still advancing, had by , this time come opposite to the two young men. Qj seeing them she stopped and stared curious- j 'it them,as a young deer that had never been "•ted may be supposed to stop and regard the f">t stranger that enters the forest. Her bright, speaking face, as she thus stood gruce 'u'iy arrested, was not less beautiful, in its way tiian her lithe figure. "My dear," said the last speaker, "would you like to be made into a picture ? My friend bere is a painter, and will give you a dollar if if you will let him sketch you." The girl looked from the speaker to his friend. Something in the latter's face seemed to restore the natural confidence which the free-and-easy air of the other had for the mo jnentshaken. She drew closely up to him, as if for protection. "I have read of pictures," she said, gazing H p in his face, " but never saw one. Is it a real picture of me you will make ?" Hie artless appealing of tlie child went to the young man's heart. He would as soon hate joined in bantering her as in bantering a sister. He took her hand as he replied, " I make as good a picture of you as I can, if you wilt let me—a picture like one of these" ftn; i he opened his portfolio, which contained , furious sketches. Oh ! how beautiful !" cried the child. It j 'as evident that a new world had opened to She gazed breathlessly at sketch after f *eteh till the last had been exauiiued, and then heaved a deep sigh. I'lease, sir," said she timidly, at last, "will ! me ni y picture when you have paint- No!" interposed the other young man, wo will give you a dollar." ' S; ie turned on the speaker, let go the hand 'be had been holding, and drew herself up s idden haughtiness. I do not want your dollar," she said, with P r oud dclicacv. She was turning to escape, ie ji the artist, recovering her hand, said not ungly, "never mind him, my dear, I will two pictures, and give you one. Come, *'ll that do?" Reassured, the child took the position in *ted to her, and Clareuce Harvard, for THE BRADFORD REPORTER. that was the young artist's name, began rapid ly painting. Before toon, two hasty sketches iu oil were finished. " There," lie said, drawing a long breath, " vou have been as quiet as a little mouse,and lam a thousand times obliged to you. Take that home," and he handed her the sketch, " and may be, some of these days, you will think of him who gave it to you." " That I will, all my life long," artlessly said the child, rapturously gazing on her new possession with an enthusiasm partly born of the artist-soul within her, and partly the result of a child's pride iu what is its own es pecial property. "Oh 1 yes," interposed the other yonth, "you will promise to be his wife some day, won't yon, Miss Cobwebs?". The child's eyes flashed as she turned on the speaker. Iler iustinct, from the first, had made he dislike the sneering man. She stamped her pretty foot, and retorted, sauci ly, " I'll never be yours, at any rate, you old snapping-turtle and. as if expecting to have her ears boxed, if caught, she darted away, disappearing rapidly dowu the path whence she had come. Clarence Harvard broke into a merrv laugh in which, after a moment of anger, his compan ion joined him. " You deserve it richly," said Clarence; "it's f a capital nickname, too; I shall call you noth clse, after this, than snappingturtle." " Hang the little jade !" was the reply.— ! "One wouldn't think she was so smart. But what a shrew she will make ! 1 pity the clod hopper she marries; she'll bet peck him out of all peace, and aeud him to an eaily grave." Nothing more was said, for at that moment a dinner horn sotit ded.and the young men rose to return to the read-side inn where they had stopped the night before. Their time was lim ited, and that evening,knap-sacks on back, they were miles away froai the scene of the morn ing. A week later they were both home in . the city, Clarence hard at work perfecting : himself in his art, and his companion delving I at Coke and Blackstone. I Years passed. Clarence Ilavard had risen i to be an artist of eminence. His pictures were the fashion; he was the fashion himself. Occa ' sionally, as he turned over his older sketches, he would coine upon " Cobwebs," as he was , accustomed, laughingly, to call the sketch of the child; and then for a moment lie would wonder what had become of the original; but except on these rare occasions, he never even thought ot her. Not so with the child herself. Nellie Bray was a poor orphan, the daughter of a decayed gentleman, who, after her father's death, had been adopted by a maternal uncle, living on a wild, upland farm among the Alleghanies. Her childhood, from her earliest recollection, had been spent amid the drudgery of a farm. This rude hut free life had given her the springy step aud ruddy cheek,which hail attracted tiie yu.ung artist's attention, but it had failed to satisty the higher aspirations of her nature — aspirations which had been born iu her blood j aud which came ot generations of antecedent culture. The first occasion on which these higher impulses had fouud congenial food was when she had met the young arti.st. 81ie car ried the sketch home, aud would never part with it. His refined, intellectual face, liauut ;ed all her day dreams. From that hour, a new clement entered into her life ; she became conscious that there were other people beside the dull, plodding ones with whom her lot had been ca>t ; she aspired to rise to the level of such; ail her leisure hours were spent in study ing; gradually.througb her influence,her uncle's household grew core or less refined; and, final ly, her uncle himself became ambitions for Nellie, and, as he had no children, consented, at his wife's entreaty, to send the young girl to a lir.-t class boarding school. At eighteen the barefooted rustic, whom j the young artist had sketched, had dawned j into a beautilul aud accomplished woman,who after having carried off the highest prizes at | school, w as the belle of the* country town, near ] which her uncle's possessions lay. For, mean-1 time, that uncle had been growing rich, like j most prudent farmers, partly from the judici ous investments of his savings. But, in spite of her many suitors, Nelly hud never yet seen a face that appeared to her half so handsome as the manly one of the young artist, whose kind, gentle words and manner, eight years be fore, had lived in her memory ever since.— Often, after a brilliant company,where she had been queen of the evening, she found herself woudering, in her chamber, if she should ever see that lace again. " Are you going to the ball next week ?" said one of Nellie's friends to her. " They say it is to be the most splendid affair we have ever had. My brother tells me that Mr. Mow bray, the eloquent lawyer from Philadelphia, who is in the great case here, is to be pre sent.'" " I expect to go," was the answer. " But Mr. Mowbray being there won't be the indu cement." " Oh, you are so beautiful, you can afford to be indifferent. Bat all the other girls are dy • ing at the very thought." The ball came off, and was really superb.— j Mr. Mowbray was there, too, with all bis lau rels. The "great case," which had agitated i the county for so many months, had been con ■ eluded that very day, and been decided in ; favor of his client. No such speech as Mr. ■ Mowbray's, it was universalfy admitted, had ever been heard in the court house. Its alter nate wit and argument had carried the jury by storm, so that they had given a verdict with -1 out leaviusr the box. The young lawyer,at that ball, was like a hero fresh from the battle field. A hundred eyes followed his form, a hundred lair bosoms beat quicker as he ap proached. But be saw only one in all that brilliant assembly—and it was Nellie. Iler graceful form, her intelligent face, her style aud beauty, arrested him the moment he en tered; be saw that she had no peer in the room and be devoted himself to her almost exclusi vely, throughout tbo eveDiDg. Nor bad Nellie ever shone so brilliantly.— PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY R. W. STURROCK. She could not but feci that it was a great compliment to be thus singled/iut from among so many. But she had hud another motive for exerting herself to shine. At the very first j glance, she recognized in Mr. Mowbray the companion of the artist who had ,-ketched her eight years back In hopes to hear something of his friend, she turned the conversation up -1 on art, the city, childhood, and everything else | that she thought might be suggestive; but in ! vain. She could not be more definite, because '; she wished to conceal her own identity, for it was evident Mr. Mowbray did not kuow her; besides, her natural delicacy shrank from in quiring about a perfect stranger. The next day, us soon as etiquette allowed, j Mr. Mowbrary was seen driving up to the i farm. Nellie appeared, beautifully attired, in a neat morning dress, and looking so fresh and sparkling, iu spite of the late hours of the night before, that it could hardly be considcr j ed flattery when her visitor assured her that she looked lovelier than her loveliest rosc-s.— Mr. Mowbray was full of regrets at cruel fate, ; which, he said, compelled him to return to the | city. He could not conceal his joy when Nel- I lie's aunt, inadvt rtcntly, aud much to Nellie's secret annoyance, let out the fact that in the I fall Nelly was to pay a visit to an old school- I mate in Philadelphia, Miss Mary Stanley. ' "Ah, indeed!" cried the visitor, and his i face flushed witT pleasure. "I am so deliglit ! ed. I bave the honor to know Miss Stanley. Yon will be quite at home in her set," he ad ' ded, bowing to Nellie; "for it is, by common consent, the most cultivated iu the city." Nellie bowed coldly. Her old distrust in | the speaker had revived again. Through all the polish of his manner, and in spke of his deferential admiration.she recognized the same sneering spirit, which believed in nothing true or good, from which she had shrunk instincti vely when a child. During the interview she was civil, but no more. She could not, how ever, avoid being beautiful; nor could she help speaking with the intelligence and spirit which niway characterized her conversation; and so Mr. Mowbray went away more iu love than ever. A few months later found Nellie domiciled for the winter in Philadelphia. Hardly had she changed her traveling dress, when her friend eaine to her chamber. " 1 want you to look your prettiest to-night," said Miss Stanley; "for I expect a crowd ot beans, and among them Mr. Mowbray, the brilliant young lawyer, and Mr. Harvard. The former claims to have met you, aud raves everywhere about your beauty. The latter, who is a great artist, and very critical, laughs at his friend's enthusiasm, and says he would bet you are only a common rustic,with cheeks like peonies. So I wish you to convert the heretic." " (July a common rustic," said Nellie to herself, heartily; and she resolved to be as beautiful as possible. Perhaps, too, there was a half formed resoive tobriugthc offeuder to iier feet in revenge. A great surprise awaited her. When she entered the draw ing-room that evening, the first stranger she saw was the identical Clar ence, who had painted her as a barefooted ' little girl; and then, for the first time, it flash-! Ed upon her that this was the great artist who had spoken contemptuously of her charms.— j notion proved correct; for .Miss Stanley, ini mediately advancing presented the stranger to i her as Mr. Harvard. A glance into his face reasurcd Nellie of his identity, and satisfied her that he lmd not recognized her; and then she turned away, after a haughty courtesy, ' to receive the eager felicitations of Mr. Mow bray. There were conflicting emotions at war in her bosom that evening. All her old romance about Clarence was warred upon by her indig- j nation, as a belief at iiis .slighting remarks aud at his present indifference; for he had made no j attempt to improve his introduction, but left 1 I her entirely to the crowd of other beau", pro- ; minent amor.g whom was Mr. Mowbray.— Piqued and excited, Nellie was even more | j beautiful and witty than usual. Late in the ! I evening she consented, at Miss Stanley's re-' quest, to play aud sing. She first dashed off some brilliant waltzes, then played bits of a few operas, and at last, at Mr. Mowbray's sol icitation, sang several ballads. Few persons had such a sympathetic voice, and Clarence, j who was passionately fond of music, drew near : fascinated. After singing, "Are you sure the j ; news is true ?" " Bonnie Dundee," and others which had been asked for Clarence said : " And may I, too, ask for my favorite ?" " Certainly, sir," she answered, with the least bit of hauteur. " What is it?" " Oh ! too sad, perhaps, tor so gay a com pany. " The land of the Real." I hardly dare hope you will consent." It was her favorite also, and her voice slightly trembled as she begau. From this or some other cause, she sang it as even she had never sung it before, and when she finished ! her eyes were full of tears. She would have I given much to have seen Clarence's face, but' slie could not trust herself to look up ; and partly to conceal her emotion, partly by a sud impulse, she struck into the Miserere of "II Trovotore." Nobody there had ever before realized the full tragedy of that saddest, yet most beauti ful dirge. Kven the selfish heart of Mr. Mow- ; bray was effected. When the last chord had ; died away, he was the first one to speak, and i he was profuse in admiration and thanks.— J But Clarence said nothing Nellie, at last, j looking towards him, saw that his eyes had | been dim as we'l as her own. She felt that i his silence was the most eloquent of compli- j mcnts, and from that hour forgave him for j having called her a " common rustic." Clarence soon became a constant visitor at I Mr. Stanley's. But he always found Mr. Mowbray there before him, who endeavored in every way to monopolize Nellie's attention.— Reserved, if uot absolutely haughty, Clarence left the field generally to his rival ; and Nellie, half indignant, was sometimes tempted to af fect a gayety in Mowbray's company which she was far from feeliDg. Occasionally, bow- " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." ! ever, Clareuce would assert his equal right to share the company of Miss Stanley's guest, and at such times his eloquent talk soon eclips ed even that of the brilliant advocate. As I Nellie said in her secret heart, it was Ruskin against Voltaire. And the more Clarence engaged in these conversations, the more be 1 fell that, for the first time in his life, he had i met one who understood him. j One morning the footman came tip to the little paneled boudoir where Nellie and her friend were sitting, saying j that] Mr. Mow bray was iu the parlor, and solicited a private : interview with the former. Nellie rose at once, for she foreboded what was coming, and was only too glad to have this eaily opportu nity of stopping attentions which had become unendurable to her. Mr. Mowbray wess evidently embarrassed, an unusual thing for him. But he rallied, and came directly to the purpose of his visit which was, as Nellie had suspected, to tender her his heart and hand. He was proceeding in a strain of high-toned compliment, when Nellie said, with an impatient wave of the hand : " Spare me, sir. Y'ou did not tdways talk so." He looked in astonishment. " Many years ago I answered you the same question which yon now ask. He colored up to the temples. " I surely do not deserve," he theii said, " to be made a jest of." " Neither do I make a jest of you. Do yon not know me ?" " I never saw you till this summer." " You saw me eight years ago. You and a friend were on a pedestrian tour. You met a little barefooted girl, whom your friend made a sketch of, and whom you jeered at and then nicknamed." And rising, she made a mock courtesy, for she saw she was now recognized: I am " Cobwebs," at your service, sir !" The discomfited suitor never forgot the look of disdain with which Nelly courtesied to him. His mortification was not lessened when, on leaving the house, he met Clarence on the door steps. He tried in vain to assume an indifferent aspect, but lie felt that lie had fail ed. and that his rival suspected h : s rejection. Nelly could not avoid laughing at the crest fallen look of her old enemy. Her whole manner changed, however, when Clarence en tered. Instead of the triumphant, saucy tor mentor, she became the conscious, trembling woman. Clarence, who had longed for, yet dreaded this interview, took courage at once, and in a few manly words, eloquent with emo tion, laid his fortune at his Nelly's feet. l'oor Nelly felt more like crying with joy than anything else. But a little of the old saucy spirit was left in her. She tliojght she owed it to her sex not to surrender too easily; and so she said, archly glancing up at Clar ence : "Do you know, Air. Harvard, whom you arc proposing to 1 lam no heiress, no high born city belle, but only—let me see—what is it ? —only a common country rustic." And she rose and courtesied to bim. "For Heaven's sake dou't bring that foolish speech up against me !" he cried, passionately, trying to take her hand. " I have repented ( it a thousand times daily, since the unlucky moment I was betrayed into saying it. Do me the justice to believe that I never meant it to be personal." " Well, then, I will say nothing more of that matter. But this is only a whim of yours. How is it, that, having known me so long, you only discover my merits ?" " Known you so long ?" " Yes, sir," demurely. " Known yon ?" " For eight years." " Hood Heavens I" he cried suddenly, his whole face lighting. " How blind I have been ! Why did I not see it before ? You are'' . " Cobwebs," said Nellie, she taking the words out ol his mouth, her whole face spark ling with glee ; and she drew off and gave ! another sweeping courtesy, j Before she had recovered herself, however, : a pair of strong arms were around her, for Clarence divined now that he was loved. Nel lie, all along, had had a half secret fear, that when her suitor knew the past, he might not be so willing to marry the barefooted girl as the brilliant belle, but all this was now gone. Two months later there was a gay wedding at St. Mark's. A month after that, a bridal i pair, returning from the wedding tour, drove | up to a handsome house in Philadelphia. As | Clarence led Nellie through the rooms, in ! which his perfect taste was seen everywhere, she gave way to exclamation after exclama tion of delight. At last they reached a tiny boudoir, ex quisitely carpeted and curtained. A jet of gas, burning in an alabaster vase, diffused a soft light through the room. A solitary pic ture hung on the walls. It was the original | sketch of her, eight years before, now very el egantly Iramed. The tears gushed to Nellie's eyes, and she threw herself iuto her husband's arms. " Ah ! how I love yon !" she cried. Nobody who sees that picture suspects its origin. It is too sacred a subject for either Nellie or Clarence to allude to. But it was only the other day that a celebrated leader of | fashion said to a friend : " What a queer pet name Mr. Harvard lias | for his beautiful bride ! In anybody else ex cept a genius it would be eccentric. But you do not know how pretty it sounds from his ! lips." " What is it it ?" " Cobwebs !" How TO BE A MAN. —It is rot by books ! alone, or chiefly, that one becomes in all points a man. Study to do faithfully every duty that comes in jour way. Stand to your post ; si lently devour the chagrins of life; love jus tice ; control self; swerve not from truth or right ; be a man of rectitude, decision, consci entiousness ; one that fears and obeys God, and exercise benevolence to all; and in all this yon shall possess the only true manliness. A Peep into the Bank of England. The Bank of England must be seen on the inside as well as out, and to go into the inter ior of this remarkable building, to observe the operations of an institution that exerts more i moral aud political power than any sovereign ! in Europe, you must have an order from the I Governor of the Bank. The building occupies : an irregular area of eight acres of ground—an j edifice of no architectural beauty, with not one window towards the street, being lighted alto i gether from the roof of the enclosed area I was led, on presenting my card of admis sion, into a private room, where, after a delay of a few moments, a messenger came and con ducted me through the mighty and mysterious building. Down we went iuto a room where the notes of the bank, received tlie day before were now examined, compared with the entries : in the book, and stowed away. The Bank of | England never issues the same note a second time. It receives in the ordinary course of business, about .£BOO,OOO, or s4,ooo,ooo,daily iu notes; these are put up in parcels according i to their denominations, boxed up with the j date of their receptiou, and are kept ten years, at the expiration ot which period they are taken out and ground up in the mill, which I saw running, and made again into paper. If, in these ten years, any dispute in business, or law suit, should arise, concerning the payment |of any note,the bank can produce the identical j 1 bill. i To meet the demand for notes so constantly j used np, the bank has its own paper-makers, I its owu printers, its own engravers, all at work under the same roof, and it even makes the \ machinery by which most of its work is done. A complicated but beautiful machine is a regis- j ter, extending, from t'ne printing office to the banking offices, which marks every sheet of | paper that is struck off from the press, so that j i the priuters cannot mauufucturc a single sheet | of blank notes that is not recorded in the bank. On the same principle of neatness, a shaft is j made to pass lrom one apartment to another, ; j connecting a clock iu sixteen business wings of j ■ the establishment, aud regulating them with such precision that the whole of them are al ways pointing to the same second of time. In another room was a machine, exceedingly sim- i pie, fur detecting light gold coin. A row of then) is dropped one by one upon a spring i scale. If the piece of gold was of the stand- ; j ard weight, the scale rose to a certain height, : and the coin slid off upon one side of the box; if less than the standard, it rose a little high er, and the coin slid oil' upon the other side.— 1 asked the weigher what was the average number of light coins that came into his hands and strangely enough, he said it was a questiou he was not allowed to answer. The next room I entered was that iu which the notes are deposited which are ready lor issue. " We have thirty-two millions of pounds ' sterling in this room," the officer remarked to | me; "will you take a little of it?" I told him it would be vastly agreeable, and tie h aided me a million sterling, which 1 received with many thanks for his liberality, but lie insisted on my depositing it with him again, as it would hardly be safe to carry so much money into the street. I very much fear I shall never see i that money again. Iu the vaults beneath the door were a director and a cashier, counting j liners of gold which men were pitching down to them, ea<-h bag containing a thousand pounds sterling, just from the .mint. This world of money seemed to realize the fables of Eastern wealth, and gave me new and strong impres sions of the magnitude of the business done here, aud the extent of the relations of this one institution to the commerce of the world, j SAVING TIME.—A clergyman who enjoys the substantial benefits of a fine farm was slightly taken down, a few days ago, by his Irish plowman, who was sitting at his plow in a tobacco field, resting his horses. The rever eud gentleman, being an economist,' said with , seriousness : "John, would not it be a good plan for you to have a stub scythe here, and be hubbiug a few bushes along the fence, while the horses are resting ?" John, with quite as serious countenance as the divine wore himself, repled : "Would it. not be well sir, for you to take a tub o' pota toes iu the pulpit, aad when they* are singing to peal 'em awhile to be ready for the pot ?" ' The reverend gentleman laughed heartily and left. The above yarn reminds us cf a story that brother Chapman, (not the elder,) put Lew. of the stage notoriety, tells on a certain preacher at Corning. He gives names, Ac., but we omit them. It so happened that the preacher was celebrated more for building Churches ! and putting them in running order, than for anything else, not being much of a revivalist. ! In pasing along the walk one day, be saw a little shaver carrying mud and piling it up, in great ernestness. Well, my lad," says the • domine, " what are you doing there ?" "I 1 am building a meeting house, sir," repled the I boy. " Where is your steeple ?" asked white cravat. " Oh, here is the steeple," said the little fellow, at the same time running a stick | down through the mud. "Well, well, that will do, certainly, for a steeple, and now you have it nearly complete, only one thing want- I | ing—a preacher. "O, never you mind, 'old boss, 1 think I shall have odds and ends ! enough left to make a preacher," said young i j America, as the priest moved on.— Wellsbvro Democrat. STRONG MINDS IN WEAK BODIES. —Why is it "no go" with some bright ihtellect ? A strong mind in a weak hody is like a superior knife blade in a miserable handle. Its work manship be ever so finished, its temper ever so true, its edge ever so keen ; but, for want of means to wield it properly, it will not cut to much purpose. Ambitious youth, who intend to carve out fame and fortune with their sharp intellects, should think of this simile, and see to it that their bodies—the handle whereby thej are to manage that wonderful weapoo, the human miud—are kept in sound-jointed, firmly riveted, perfectly cleansed condition. VI,. XXI. —KO. 45 fiiinntional department. History in Common Schools. In the foimer article on this subject, the nm'ti'y for introducing the study of History into our common schools, was argued from its great utility in the common concerns of life : that it is the key by which we unlock the great storehouse that contains the most of our present knowledge, and because it is so useful to the great masses of men, it ought to hare a place in their system of education. As this is an age in which the practical is esteemed of paramount i nportance to the speculative, it is proposed to carry the line of argument farth er in the same direction. That which invests the present vith such great interest, is not ] anything which thete is in it, taken by itself, but on account of its relations to the future. We plan and act not so much for present ad vantage and happiness, as for fattire well be ing. Our anxieties are not for this fleeting moment whose intangible form we cannot grasp, the rustle of whose invisible wings tells ns of its rapid flight, not for the momentary joys aud sorrows we at present experience, but for the long train of good or ill which is to follow them. The consequences which are to come from oar present conduct, and the de velopment of our present plans invest them with snch immense importance. Hut what those consequences may be we have no means of determining, but from knowing what conse quences havt followed from similar conditions in the past. The light which shines from the lamp of experience, is the only light, (save that of revelation,) which glimmers through the thick folds of that veil which the Almigh ty has hung up before the untrodden vista of the future. Hence other circumstances being equal, he is :he safest counselor, find his plans are most successful who has ihe greatest knowledge of what has been done under like | circumstances. Hence it is, that past expe | rience is appealed to, not only by politicians and statesmen in managing the intricate affairs of government, but by men in the daily and hourly concerns of life, to the planting of ! grain, to the harvesting of crops, to the laws which regulate, supply and demand in trade and manufacture, to the speculations and ex periments, as well as to the philosophy of | mankind. ow it is not claimed that in the j ordinary course of common school education, such an extensive knowledge of historv, gen eral and particular could be gained as to fit men for all the circumstances and emergencies 'of life, but the scholar would form the habit j of fathering together and treasuring np snch knowledge, as fast as it comes under his ob servation. He wonld form a habit, a taste to he developed in the future ; just as in arithmetic, it is not presumed that the pupil has an example of everything that he may ever wish to compute in all the multiform oj)- erations of business, but that he has such a knowledge of the fundamental principles, that he can readily apply them to every new case in which his arithmetic may be involved. Were it not for the absolute necessity of becoming somewhat acquainted with the post, onr knowledge of history under our preseut system of education, would be truly lamentable. As it is, the ignorance of our youth of those events which have marked the eras of the worlds progress, which let in upon it the light of civilization and freedom, and which ought to be inscribed upon the tablet' of the memo ry with a pen of iron, is deplorable. How little is known of the character and extent of that cultivation and refinement which existed thousands of years gone bj, how little is known of the struggles for power by unprin ; cipled men, of the toils and of the sacrifices it cost to brei.k the rod of oppression, of tbo effects of the popular diffusion of knowledge and religion, to say nothing of the thrilling events which transpired in our own country, and which, if they were known, would stimu late to higher attainments and juster views than the masses of our people had yet reach ed. A\ e need this knowledge to give us truer views of the principles of government, with which every voter ought to be familiar ; we need it to make us less boastful and self con fident, and more conservative, to have a higher regard for religion ana virtue. The Deed to hold up the lamp of experience before the transparencies of the present, and watch the outline and play of the figures as they are projected into the future, so that we may know what course and what conduct is the most proper for us to presume, what will tend most to our own happiness and to the happi ness of the race. Therefore on the score of utility, no subject which has a place in our ( common schools, has a stronger claim than this. The facts which it brings forth sheds a ; light upon all the concerns of life. The farm er at his plow, the mechanic at his bench, the merchant at his counter, or the statesman in the halls of legislation, each iu his sphere, ; needs the lessons she teaches. What thus I enters into the popular well-being of societv, ought by all means, to have a place in the popular system of education. TERRVTOW.V, PA. P. C. -♦ A CURIOUS CALCULATION*. —What is a bil lion ? The reply is very simple, a million ' times a million. This is quickly written, and j quicker still pronounced ; but no man is able to count it. Von may count 160 or 170 ia a 1 minute ; but let us even suppose that yon may go as fur as 200 ; then an hour will produce 12,000, a day 280,000, aud a year of 365 eays, 1 So, 120,000. Let us suppose now that Adam, at the beginning ot his existeuce, had begun to count, had continued to do so, and was counting still ; he would not even now, according to the usually supposed age of our globe, have counted near enough. For to count a billion he would require 9,512 years, 3d days, 5 hours and 39 miuutes. THERE is something pleasing yet solemn in tbe review, which as life's evening advances we tnke of our early cotemporaries ; where are they, how fare they, and who of all are yet pilgrims with us tbia side of eternity's shade