)(£ MLLAS PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE, TOWANDA : jlnrsiay Morning, January 22,1863. Original Hotfrji. (Written for the Bradford Reporter.) AUTUMN RAIN. BV TIIILA H. CASE. Rain ! rain ! rain ! Paltering over the window pane, Singing a dismal, sad refiuiu To the wind's low wail ; Moaning thro'the vale. A requiem dirge for the loved and lost, p or the dreary hearts, on the dark billows tost— The wild, black billows of bitter pain, That surgetH up tor the noble slain. liain ! rain ! rain ! Sweeping down on the battle plain, Oh ! will it wash out the purple stain Of the heart's warm blood ? That flowed in a flood, OTr the terrible field where our brave men fell, Xuble. true men, lighting long and,well Far their country and homes, Oh ! Autumn rain Sweep down and wash out the crimson staiu. Rain ! rain ! rain ! Dripping down again and again, Like tear-drops wrung from a heart of pain, Are they tears from the sky ? Are the clouds floating oy Weeping such crystal drops over the land. Wti-pirig such tears for the brave, noble band iia the battle field, still in their glorious sleep? While the wind o'er their unmarked graves lone vigils keep. ROME, I'A. iHi s 1111 a it to us. (Written for the Bradford Reporter ) The City of the Dead. BV L'ASPIRAST. Tim conven'-b'T.s ;tr< ringing , But mournfully and slow ; J;: tiu- ray s.putre turret swinging, With a dull sound to and fro. Heavily to the heart they go ! Hark! the hymu is singing— A song lor the dead below, Or the living, who shortly shall be so! Tor a departing being's soul The death hymn peals, and the hollow bells knoll. Byron. Toll—toll—toll ! Such were the echoes that greeted us ou one of the brightest after-, MOMS in the last of September, of the preseut year, its we entered the gateway of that City if the Dead—Greeuwood Ce . etcry, Gowanos Heights, Brooklyn. Toll—toll—toll ! The oil hell in the tower swung slowly to arid fro, sending its sad raid mournful echoes faraway ; ringing out the death knell of another poor mortal, whose life work wasetuled, whose task was complete, and, who having done with earth, was going down to the narrow home— the ciiarncl bouse of all things human the Grave. Toll—toll—toll ! A hearse, cover ed with the sable trappings of death, drove s.owly past, followed by a long train of mourn ers, whose steps kept time with the mournful cadence of tße funeral bell. Greenwood Cemetery is probably the lar gest piece of burial in the United States. It contains 300 acres, aud throughout is laid out in a m:,.-t beautiful and tasty manner It con tain' kttoen miles of roadways with avenues f - : iby paths innumerable. During the past >'iison there were forty burials in this place ibone in a single day, say nothing of those bu- ! Tod in the various other cemeteries in the vi ' :: ty of Mew-York and Brooklyn; and it is j ™ uncommon occurrence to hear the bell by i -he gateway tolling without intermission from I morning till night. Like every other institu- j tou of the kind, it has its costly monuments! well as its more humble graves—the rest-, : s place.- of wealth and honor as well as those | of poverty and crime. Go with me, kind read er, fur a little while, and we will tread the in itiate paths of the Silent City. I'ause now —aroimd us lie the sleeping multitude—mem- of the vast army of the unnumbered dead Here they lie—the prince and the pauper— '•he noble and the ignoble—the worthy and :: 'e tin worthy. One by one the ephemeral of earth, with mute lips and folded hands, take tneir places with the pallid slumberers. But f ve,J here it seems that death could not entire '? remove the difference iu the social position 0i the sleepers. Here—around us—lie the ff ealih and aristocracy of New-York ; while way iu au obscure corner is the " Boor Mau's Lot —the gr/.ves of the poor and the hum ,;e—of those who had not dollars and cents f ßongh to purchase a grave alongside of their D °re aristocratic brethren. before us is a magnificent ceaat&ph of Ital iin warble, hexagonial in form, aud erected • j Hie memory of one of the passengers that *cnt down with the ill fated Arctic, in 1854. 'I bears the following inscription :—" Erected 10 the memory of Charles C. F. Hamilton, perished ou board the Arctic, on the Memorable 27th of September, 1854.— JElat * ,J ' Here is his monument, while far away sleeps, with no marble mausoleum or wil planted by a kindly band, to mark his Stave. Who can tell of the terrible scenes 0t "i hour like that which closed the drama °f Lis !if s ?— 0 f the aspirations of a lifetime 'Rtiilenly dashed away—of the ties sundered p°f the hopes and wishes of years doomed to in a single hour. When disease fastens 1 - fangs upon us, and we fade slowly, day by j3 . v , vve come to look upon death with a calm : but to have every tie sundered in a mo ttent, every hope aud joy withered, is invest- Death with a double terror. Within the "i'ths of that illimitable expanse of waters — ocean—the fabled Nereid watches his , irse - guarding it with a zealous care. Ilia obsequies were short—'twas but A sadden plunge, the scene is o'er, Ue waves roll uu as they rolled before." ,^ ear by, nestled in a clump of evergreens, almost hide it from the view of the is a monument of pore white mar- R is a circular pillar, fifteeu feet iu height, THE BRADFORD REPORTER. and surmounted by the figure of anaDgfl,with bowed head and drooping wings, holding in its outstretched hand an open volume, and with _ the other pointing silently to heaven. The only inscription upon it is—" To My Mother" —" By Charlie—lßs4." How beautiful ! how touching ! it appeals more powerfully to the heart than all the encomiums that have ever been written in laudation of the great of earth. This is one of the most beautiful trib utes to the dead in the Cemetery, although there are hundreds around it which may have cost more mouey, oue iu particular, said to have cost $30,000, yet none equal it, both in elegance and beauty of design. Tired at last of all this display of sculpture and of marble, we turned our steps toward the " Poor Man's Lot." Tread lightly, carefully now ! around us lie the unmarked graves of thousands. Few, very few of them have aught to tell us who are the sleepers at our feet.— Some have rude head-boards, with a cross, or a hand poiuting upward, carved thereon, but few have even this. Nothing but a little mouud to tell us of a palsied hand and a pulse less breast beneath. Some are fresh and new, and some are covered with the grass of years. There is a group of six, apart from the rest, —two long graves with four little mounds be tween ; probably father, mother, and children. All but one had apparently been sleeping for i years, aud that one was of but recent date.— | While here, we stumbied over two little moss ! covered graves, with an evergreen shading the j spot. This was something unusual to find in I the " Pauper's Corner," and so we passed to ' examine them more closely. There were only two, nestled close together, aud with a little pine bead-board, which had rotted off and ful -1 len down. Picking it up we deciphered through . the mould and moss the inscription, " Charley Lflie—Cholera—Juue 30th, 1832." What a simple record, and yet it speaks of a more enduring affection than could costly sculpture or chiseled marble. Willi revereuee we re ; placed it and turned away wondering to our j selves who could have cared enough for Char | h-y and Lffie—two little paupers as they doubt i less were, to ret r this touching, though rude and simple tablet to their memory. Probably j that hand which had performed this work of | love had itself become cold and powerless, and | ' uo other was found to fill its place, aud save j ! its charge from the ravages of Time. And j ! no wonder, for every day the world sweeps by j the poor little outcasts, in yonder city, with a I smile and a sneer, unheeding the outstretched j hand, the silent appeal for help. If they care I *,so little for the living, why should they care for the dead ? Then " ltattle their bones over the stones, Tliey re only poor orphans whom nobody owns !" With feelings of sadness we retraced our | stops toward the Heights to catch a glimpse 1 1 of the setting snu and note the beauty of the j scene. What a magnificent, what a glorious panorama is spread out before us ! Away to i ! southward, standing out iu bold relief, are the j highlands of Nevorsink and Staien Island, I while farther on, stretching away to meet the | embrace of the distaut horizon, lies the grand ; old ocean, which, tinged with the rays of the I setting sun, sparkles and glitters like a sea of liquid gold. Nearer by, guarding the narrow i entrance to New York Bay, are the frowning battlements of Forts Hamilton, Richmond and . LaFuyette. Iu the foreground, the surf is i breaking upon the beacli with a dull and sul- 1 len roar, while the waters of the Bay are cov ered with vessels carrying the flag of almost every nation that beholds the light of the sun. and bearing within their massive hulks the J wealth and commerce of the Islands of the ; I Last and of the West. Lying off larantine ' i are a couple of U. S. gunboats and a sloop of i war, while a hundred yards beyond the French transport frigate " Finisftrre," recently from j Vera Cruz, is swinging slowly with the tide, : : aud from her long line of white ports can be j ; s.en the mouths of her grim war-dogs. Turn to the northward In the foreground i are Forts Columbus and Castle William with I the f> rtilieations on Bedloe's aud the adjacent I island. Beyond is New-York, with its brick j walls and stone, its churches aud theatres ; Broadway with its ever busy, ever fashionable I throngs. Wall street with its banks and bro ; kers, Five Points with its dens of filth and crime, and Fifth Avenue with its brown stone j i fronts and embryo palaces. While iu the riis j ! tance, as if to complete the picture, looming up against the clear blue sky, the eye can just ! discern that master piece iu the picture-gallery . of Nature—the Highlands of the Hudson. Tramp—tramp—tramp—with slow and j measured tread, with muttled drums and arms reversed, a military escort swept slowly past, followed by that long wagon draped in black, with its solitary outrider—the coach iu which sooner or later we all must ride. They form ed around an open grave a short distance away, the mourners gathered near. The coffin, wrap ped iu a flag entwined with crape, was slow ly lifted out and lowered into its narrow home. As we drew near, the last words of the speak er fell on the ears of the bowed and weeping throng—" Dust to dust—ashes to ashes." The i clods rattled heavily upon the coffin lid, awa keuing within the heart their dull aud pain ful echoes. At length the work complete, the ! last sod smoothed over the silent breast, the ' i escort marching around the grave fired a rat- j tliug volley—a farewell salute to their late brother in arms. As its echoes died away in j the distance, they filed away, leaving us again ; to our cogitations. We learned from one of the bystanders that this funeral was in honor of a Lieutenant Colonel iu oue of the New- York regiments, who fell at the battle of An tietam, aud whose remains were brought here ! for interment. How very few of the many thousands who go down to bloody graves, are accorded the honor of a military fuaeral ! The Captain 3, the Colonels, and the others of rank, may have the houor bestowed upon them, and right well do they deserve it, yet the myriads of the rank aud Gle who sink before the tempest of death, have an unmarked grave with the only epi taph, written iu the hearts of their friends all over the couutry—" Buried on the field !" and yet, they were just as true, just as generous, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA,, BY E. 0. GOODRICH. and just as noble as any who have ever worn the gaudy epaulette, or the gilded shoulder strap with its three glittering stars. But the world's criterion of merit is not founded upon those noble aud sterling qualities of the heart, which are the true index of the man, but of tener upon wealth, rank and social position. The world has yet to learu that a heart may beat with just as true aud generous impulses beneath rags cr homespun as uuder satin or broadcloth. What a terrible harvest has the Great Reaper been gathering in during the past year. In the camp and on the battle field—by dis ease and the bullet, he has been gathering in his harvest, —been reaping with a busy, tireless hand ! And we are daily proving the truth of Shelley's words, when he says— " Death is here and death is there, Death is busy everywhere, All around, within, beneath, Above is death—and we are death, first our pleasures die—and then Our hopes, and then our fears—and when These are dead, the debt is due, Dust claims dust—and we die too." At last the lengthening shadows admonish ed us, and we turned our steps cityward. As ! we were quitting the grounds the sound of ! the tolling bell again fell upon the ear, aud ; sent its mournful echoes far out over the busy, tumultuous city. What a coutrast 1 Here, around us, lie the inhabitants of the city of | the dead—where all is beautiful, where eter nal silence ever reigns, save the toliiug of the bell, which is but the welcoming peal of an , other recruit to the Silent Army, while from the city at our feet, ever and anon comes up the noise, the jargon of the hurrying, bustling throng. Toll—toll—toll ! Such is the com mon requiem of Man—to-day he is working and planning, and to-morrow he lies low. And as witji the worker, so with the works—they must perish ; and not only the works of man but the works of Nature itself, are doomed to pass away, to vanish like a fleeting shadow. Aye ! —" *' The clond-capt towers, the gorgeous palaces, T he solemn temples, the great globe itself, Y ea, all which it iu'.ierit, shall dissolve ; And, like an unsubstantial pageant faded, Leave not a wreck behind. — Hihaksjicurc. Toll—toll—toll ! A long hearse, followed by a magnificent cortege, moved past. The ostentation, the pomp told plainly that one hud been taken from the higher walks of life, , and as we turned away we asked ourselves the 1 question if this poor devotee at Mammon's shrine is any the happier now for being borue to his grave, surrounded by the pomp and pa geantry, the glittering paraphernalia of wealth, of pride aud place ? if the waves of Lethe's fabled stream roll more calmly over his breast than they do over that of the poor pauper who is kicked into his grave, aud over whose death ; the world gives a sigh of relief that he is out of the way ? if his sleep will be sweeter be neath a gorgeous mausoleum, than that of the beggar who lies a little way off without a mark or a stone? No ! Death is the leveler of all human distinctions. Beyond the River all will meet on an equality—the high and the low, the rich and the poor, the prince and the pauper, the proud and the humble. Death has been unjustly termed a remorseless tyrant, and yet, why should we fear him ? The sleep he brings is a tranquil, a dreamless sleep, where i no corroding cares break in upon its reposes. I TH but a rest from the wearying strife of j earth—a rest after years of toil and hardships. | When tired of these, we can fold our hands : aud lie down to that sleep which is hushed, j deep aud breathless, with the assurance that j its slumbers will be unbroken—its duration j eternal. Yes— " "l'i~ a long, 'tis a last, 'tis a beautiful rest, When all sorrow lias passed trom the brow and the breast; And the lone spirit, it wisely may crave, That sleep which is dreamless—the sleep of the grave." NEWI-ORT, It. 1., 'id Oct., 1.382. HISTORICAL EXCERPS. —" Rushes were used to strew the floors in Normandy when Wil liam the Conqueror was born, for at the very moment when the infant burst into life, aud touched the ground, he filled both hands with the rushes strewu upon the floor, firmly grasp ing what he had taken up. The prodigy was j joyfully witnessed by the women gossipping ou ! the occasion ; aud the midwife hailed the pro pitious omen, declaring that the boy would be a king." " When Harold was in Normandy, William took him with him in his expedition to Brit tainy, to make proof of his prowess, aud at the same time with the deeper design of show ing him his military equipment, that he might perceive how far preferable vas the Norman sword to the Euglish battle axe." " Harold's spies, before the battle of Has tings, reported that almost all the Normau army ' had the appearance of priests,' as they had the whole face with both lips shaven. For the English leave the upper lip unshorn, suff ering the hair coutinually to increase ; which Cmsar affirms to have been a national custom with the ancient inhabitants of Britain. " The English at that time wore short gar ments reachiug to the mid kuee ; they had their hair cropped, their beards shaven, their arms laden with gold bracelets, their skin adorned with punctured designs. They were accustomed to eat till they became surfeited, and to drink till they were sick. Those latter qualities they imparted to their conquerors ; as to the rest they adopted their manners." " Etherbald, of Mercia, who died iu 756, exempted all monasteries and churches in his kingdom from public taxes, works and impo sitions, except the buildiug of forts aud brid ges, from which none can be released. He also gave the servants of God 1 perfect liber ty iD the protection of the product of their woods and lands and the right of fishing.' Er go, there were rights of the feudal character, and game laws before the conquest." Kg" A western paper thus apologizes for a poor issue:— " The Editor is absent, the fore man has the toothache, the devil is drunk and trying to drink lager beer out of a boot-jack, the press is out of order, and we ain't well ourselves; so please excuse a poor paper this week." "REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." From the 141 st Regiment, P. V. CAMR NEAR FREDERICKSBURG, ) January 2, 1803. J EDITOR REPORTER— Dear Sir : I forward to you this complimentary extract for publica tion, as the 141 st Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers were engaged in the great struggle, and composed a part of Robinson's Brig ade which supported the battery all through the hottest of the fight. lam happy to say that not a man faltered, but all stood up to the work nobly. Yours, I. A. PARK. Capt. Commanding Co. D., 141 st Reg't 1L V. HEAD QUARTERS, ARMY Coßrs, ) CENTRE GRAND DIVISION, ARMY of POTOMAC, - CAMP NEAR FALMOUTH, Va., Dc. 20,1-62. ) i To Lieutenant-Colonel JAMES DICKENSON, Assistant- Adjutant-General, Centre Grand Division: COLONEL. —For details and particulars as to the movemeuts aud operations of Brigade Regiments and Battalions, aud tbe acts and duties performed by individuals, and detach ments, I beg leave to refer to tbe reports of some individuals, some of which are very elab orate and circumstantial. The state of affairs when Biruey's Ist Di vision arrived on the ground, followed soon af ter by Sickle's 2d Division, was anything but promising. Their opportune arrival, however, first checked, and then drove back the advanc ing enemy, who yelling, were iu hot pursuit of the two exhausted and retiring Divisions of Mead aud Gibson, saved all their arms which had been entirely abandoned by their supports. Doubleday's Division from being cut off, aud tukeu in reverse, left of Smith's Corps, (which hud not been engaged,) from being turned, and possibly, if not probably, the whole left wing of the army from disaster. But iu do ing this valuable aud important service, the Ist Division lost upwards of a thousandj as brave men as ever pulled a trigger. Of the conduct of this fine Division, I can not speak too highly ; composed as it is, of regiments of almost every State, from the Penobscot to the Mississippi. The whole country may justly feel proud of its well earu ed fame. The new regimeuts appeared to vie with their veteran brothers in arms, iu cool ness, courage and efficiency. When all act nobly and well it is difficult to distinguish. I must, however, be permit ted to compliment Brig.-General Biruey, on the handsome manner iu which lie handled his Division, and his Brigade Commanders, Gens. Berry, Robinson aud Ward, in the way they fought their Brigades ; also Captain Randolph aud his officers for the style iu which they used their guns, all the while un der fire of enemy, proving the value and effi ciency of thorough arill aud discipline. We, who survive, have to mourn the loss of many brave hearted brothers in arms, but in j no way are we discouraged or dispirited by i tiie failure of our efforts to conquer a brave and powerful foe, aud all we ask or desire is to be led to renewed effort in a just aud holy cause. I am, Colonel, Very respectfully, GEORGE STOXEMAN. Brigadier-General, Commawling Corps. (For the Bradford Reporter.) MR EDITOR : —Permit me to call the atten tion of the public to the law respecting " guide ; boards "at the corners where roads cross.— ! Any person who has traveled much iu this and the adjoining counties, must have noticed the lack of these useful index boards, the hands ! of which direct him which way to go. He lias also many times, doubtless, been at con siderable trouble to find his way when he has come to four corners, or where roads fork, be ing frequently some distance from any house. Iu such cases very great iueonvenience is fre quently experienced, persons sometimes having to go back or forward hundreds of rods or run the risk of going miles out of their way. The law is so plain on this point, that I do uot see why it is uot enforced. The act of June 13th, 1830, as found in the pamphlet laws for that year on page 564, section 61, reads thus : " The supervisors aforesaid shall cause posts j to be erected at the intersection of all public roads within their respective townships, (where trees are not couveuient) with boards firmly fixed thereon, and index hands pointing to the direction of such roads, on which boards shall ' be iuscribed in large and legible characters, ! the name of the town, village, or place to which j such roads may lead, and the distance thereto | computed in miles. " If any supervisor shall, after ten days' | personal notice, neglect or refuse to put or j keep up in complete repair index boards as aforesaid, sneh supervisor shall, for every such j offence, forfeit and pay a sum not exceeding ten dollars." j Subsequent to 1836, a special act relative to roads was passed, which act embraced Brad ford county. Material changes were made, but that part quoted above was not repealed, or changed, only in this respect. In the coun ties embraced by the subsequent act, three persons were to be elected who were to be styled " road commissioners," and tbe office of supervisor was done away with. Thus the road commissioners are now as much under obligation to keep up these " index boards," as were the supervisors. I have traveled on almost every road in the county, and I doubt whether I have seen twen ty-five "index boards," lettered and " kept in complete repair," as the law directs, in the whole county. Why this is so lamat a los 9 to determine. For persons traveling iu their own township, or its immediate vicinity, their absence is no great inconvenience, but to stran gers it is otherwise, as I have frequently found to ray great perplexity. The law appears to give any person tho right to notify the supervisors, or commission ers in this county, that these " index boards " are not kept op, and if one half of the fine goes to tbe complainant as it does in many cases, some money might be made, or the law would ; be complied with. X. Perils in the Air. The last balloon ascension undertaken fcr scientific purposes was that of Mr. Glaisher, which took place in England iu September. With utter disregard of safety or comfort,this gentleman has veutured upon scientific experi ments at higher altitudes than any timid per son would care to be, and although bis last ex pedition nearly proved fatal to him, he has re turned safely with a remarkable chapter on a?rial experience to narrate. The London Athenaeum justly remarks that in his hands the balloon Js restored to its oldjrank of philosoph ical agent. Gay-Lnssac has shown the men of sc'ence how to use the balloon for scientific purposes ; but Mr. Glaisher, by his successful ascents, is adding largely to our knowledge of the higher regions of the atmosphere. The September ascension was made in Mr. Coxwell's great balloon, and the highest point reached was five and three-quarter miles. Mr. Glaisher's interesting narrative of this voyage thus describes the effects of the atmosphere at different altitudes: " When we attained the height of two miles, at lb. 21 in., the temperature had fallen to the freezing point ; we were three miles high at lb. 28m , with a temperature of 18 deg.; at lb. 39m , we had reached four miles, and the temperature was 8 deg., in ten minutes more we bad reached the fifth mile, and the temperature of the air had passed be low zero, and there read minu3 2 deg., and at this point no dew was observed on Regnault's hydrometer when cooled down to minus 30 deg. Up to this time I had taken the obser vations with comfort. I had experienced no difficulty in breat: i g, whilst Mr. Coxwell, in consequence of the uecessary exertion he had to make, had breathed with difficulty for some time. At lh 51m. the barometor read 11.05 inch es, but which requires a subtructive correction of 0.25 inch, as found by comparison with Lord Wrottesley's standard barometor just be fore starting, both by his lordship and myself, which would reduce it to 10.8 inches, or at the height of about 5 1-4 miles, I read the dry bulb as minus 5 deg ; iu endeavoring to read the wet bulb I could not see the column of mercury. I rubbed my eyes, took a leus, and also failed. 1 then tried to read the other instruments, and found I could not do so, uor could 1 see the hands of the watch. I asked Mr. Coxwell to help me, and he said he must go into the ring, aud he would when he came dowD. I endeavored to reach some brandy, which was lying on the table at about a foot from my hand, and found myself unable to do so. My sight became more dim ; I looked at the barometor, and saw it between 10 and 11 inches, and tried to record it,but I was unable to write. I then saw it at 10 inches, still de creasing fast, and just noted it in my book ; its true reading, therefore, wast at this time about 9 3-4 inches, implying a height of about 5 3-4 miles, as a change of an inch iu the rrad ing of the barometor at this eleta'ion takes place on a change of height of about 2,500 feet. I felt that I was losing all power, and endeavored to'arouse myself by struggling aud shaking. I attempted to look at the barome ter again, and my head fell on oue side ; 1 struggled and put it right, and it fell on the other, and finally fell backward My arm, which had been resting on the ta ble, fell down by by side. I saw Mr. Coxwell dimly, in the ring. It became more misty,aud finally dark, and I sank unconsciously as in sleep ; this must have been about 2b. 54m. 1 then heard Mr. Coxwell say, " What is the temperature ? Take an observation; now try." But 1 could neither sec, move nor speak. I then heard him speak more emphaticall," take an observation, now, do try." I shortly after opened my eyes, saw the instrument and Mr. Coxwell very dimly, and soon saw very clear ly, and said to Mr. Coxwell, " I have been in sensible and he replied, '* You have, and I nearly." I recovered quick, and Mr. Coxwell said : " I have lost the use of my hr-nls ; give me some braudy to bathe them." 1/is hands were nearly black. I saw the temperature was still below zero,and the barometer reading 11 inch es, but increasing quickly. I resumed my ob servations at 2h. 7m , recording tho barometer reading 11.53 inches, and the temperature mi nus 2 deg. 1 then found that the water in the wet bulb thermometer, which I had, by frequent disturbances, kept from freezing, was oue solid mass of ice. Mr. Coxwell then told me that while in the ring be felt it piercingly cold, that hoar frost was all around the neck of the balloon, and on attempting to leave tbe ring he found bis hands frozen, and he got down how he could ; that he found me mo tionless, with a quiet and placid expression of the countenance. He spoke to me without eliciting a reply, and found I was inseusible. He then said be felt insensibility was com ing over himself ; that he became anxious to open the valve ; that his hands failed him.and that he seized the line between his teeth,and pall ed the valve open till the balloon took a turn downward. This act is quite characteristic of Mr. Coxwtll. I have never yet seen him with out a ready means of meeting every difficulty as it has ariseu, with a cool self possession that has always left my mind perfectly easy, and given to me a perfect confidence in his judg ment in the management of so large a bal loon. Mr. Glaisher is convinced that the balloon (containing only himself and tbe mrnonaut Coxwell) finally reached au altitude of over sir miles, but of this he is not positive, as bis ability to read the instrument ceased at the height of five and three quarter miles. On this point he says : On asking Mr. Coxwell whether we had noticed the temperature, be said he had not, as the faces of the instruments were afi to ward me, but that he had noticed that the centre of the aneroid barometer, its blue hand, and a rope attached to the car, were in the | same straight line. If so, the reading must have been between seven and eight inches. A delicate self-registering imnimum thermometer reads minus 12 deg. ; but unfortunately I VOL. XXIII. —NO. 34. did not read it till I was out of the car, and I cannot say that its index was not disturbed, The account of the descent is equally inter esting. Mr. Glaisher says : Ou descending, when the temperature rose to 17 deg., it was remarked as warm, and at 24 deg., it was noted as very warm. The temperature then gradually increased to 59 1. I 2 deg , on reaching the earth. It was remark | ed that the sand was quite warm to the haud and steam issued from it when it was dis charged. Six pigeons were taken up. One was thrown out at the height of three miles. It extendod its wings, and dropped as a piece of paper. A second, at four miles, flew vig orously round, apparently taking a great dip each time. A third was thrown out still high er, and fell downward. A fourth was thrown out at four miles when we were descending It flew in a circle, and shortly after alighted on the top of the balloon. The two remain ing pigeons were brought down to the ground; one was found to be dead, and the other (a carrier) had attached to its neck a note. It would not, however, leave, and when jerked off the finger returned to the baud. After a quarter of an hour it began to peck a piece of ribbon encircling its neck, and I theu jerked it off my finger,and it flew round two or three times with vigor, and Anally toward Wolver hampton. Not one, however, bad returned there when I left, ou the afternoon of the 6th. It would seera from this ascent that five miles from the earth is very nearly the limit of humau existence. It is possible, as the effect of each high ascent upon myself has been different, that on another occasion I might be able to go higher ; and it is possible that some persons may be able to ex-ist with less air and bear a greater degree of cold ; but still I think that prudence would say to all, whenever the barometer reading falls as low as 11 inches, open the valve at once ; the increased information to be obtained is not commensurate with the increased risk. During the ascent, Mr. Glaisher attempted to take a photograph of the scene below, which he described as being very beautiful, but the immense velocity of the balloon during the ascent rendered this impossible. LIFE'S AUTUMN. —Like the leaf, life has ita fading. We speak and think of it with sad ness, just as we think of the autumn season. But there should bo no sadness at the fading of a life that has done well its work. If we rejoice at the event of a new life,if we welcome the coming of a new pilgrim to the uncertain ties of this world's way, why should there be so much gloom when all these uncertainties are passed, and life at its waning wears lha glory of a completed task. Beautiful as is childhood in its freshness and innocence, its beauty is that of uutried life. It i 3 the beau ty of premise, of spriDg, of the bud. A holier and rarer beauty is the beauty which the waning life of faith and duty wears. It is the beauty of a thing completed ; and as men coining together to congratulate each other when some great work has been achieved, and see in its concluding nothing but gladness, so ought we to feel when setting sun flings back its beams upon a life 'bat has answered well life's purpose. When the bud drops blighted, and the mildew blasts the early grain, and there goes all hope of the harvest, —one may well be sad : but when the ripened year sinks amid its garniture of autumu flowers and leaves, why should we regret or murmur ? And so a life that is ready and waiting for the " well done"' of God, whose latest virtues and charities are its noblest, should be driven back to God in uncomplaining reverence, we rejoice eat th 'l3 capable of so much goodness, and is permitted such virtue. LONGEVITY. —There is nothing in the system of nature, which,in our present state of knowl edge, appears unintelligible as the scale of lon gevity. It must be admitted, indeed, that one knowledge upon the subject is very imperfect; for all that is known of domesticated animals, and the accidental facts that have been pre served concerning others, tend to the strange result that longevity hears no relation either to strength, size, complexion of organization, or intellectual power. True it is that birds, which seem to rank higher than beasts in the scale of being, are also much longer lived.— Thirty is a great age for a horse ; dogs usual ly live only from fourteen to twenty ; but it is known that the goose and hawk exceed a century. But fish, evidently a lower rank in creation than either, are longer lived than birds ; it has been said of some species, and of certain snakes also, that they grow as long as they live, and, as far as we kuow, live till some accident puts an end to their indefinite term of life. Aud the toad 1 It cannot indeed be said that the toad lives forever ; but many of these animals which were cased up at the general deluge, are likely to live till they are released by an accident in the course of cen turies. A SACRED MEMORIAL. —AmoDg the articles r9turned from the battle-field with the dead body of a young soldier from one of the Con necticut regiments, was a Bible which had been given him by a praying mother. On ex amining the Bible, a single leaf was turned down, which pointed to the following verse : " There is joy, in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repentetb." "Dad, I want to ask you a question?" "Well, my son." "Why is neighbor Smith's liquor shop like a Confederate note.?" "I can't tell, my son." "Because you can't pass it," said the boy. "Go strait to bed,you rascal, or I'll make a smash of you." The substance of a verdict of a recent coroner's jury on a man who had died from the effect of intemperance, was, " Death by hang ing—round a rum shop." To preserve Apples from rotting, put them iu a dry cellar, of easy acccs3 to a large family of children.