P TEM OP PUBLICATION. L. ~i - rertising in all cases exclusive Of sabscrip- . onatolhe paper. NOTlCESlnserted at Arrant; !CENTS per line, for the tretlnsertion, and viva CENT!! per line for suttiequeht Insertions. 10(1,A1, NOT4CES, sante . style as realling,mat ter,.TWENTY CANTS A' LINE. A D Eirris EN TS trtll tie inserted according to.the .following table of rates: Time 1 1w 4w 1 21n Sin I 6in'l lyr. 1 Inch 81.50 3.00 .5.041 ..00 I 0.00 115.00 2 Inches.c.,.l - 2.00 5.00 1 . s.Oii 19.043 115.010 . 1 20.00 S Inches.... 1 2.50 7.00 1 10.00 13.00 1 :0.001 30.00 3.00 11.00 . 18.2.518.25 121.00i11i,i.00 5. 00 rim] 8:0b 27.00 1311.00140.00 S column:: - 1 10.00 20.001 30.00 4 I 33.00 1 25:00 column... 1 20.00 50.001 60.00 140.00 At/ifikTSTRATCIII•9 and. Erecutor`it Notices, - .00; Auditors not ices. Tiusiness Card, fire Plies. (per Tear) #5.00. addli tonal Hoes. 21.00 each. YEARLY, Advertlaements are entitledto gear .l Brl `TRANSIENT advertisements must be, patd , ter I I!•; I)V A NCE., .ALL Itesollitihns of Associations. Comfnunies , tCons or limited or individual intnresi. and notices of Marrlsees and heath.. pie.eoding !Svc lines, are _e s larred-TRN CENTS PER LINE. • .tells PRINTING, or every kind, in plain and faneitl-eolorq. done with neatly,. and di.patnh. . Hand - Mils, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, 11111he4d.'. Statements. ke., of ever . ) , variety and style. printed at the shortest notice. TIM Itgronran *ince f's supplied with. power presses. ,a CDC.' assort ' ment of new type. and everything in,thr Printing : tine ran• he executed the most' artistic manner and at the lowest rates. TEIZMS tN ARIARLT CASH. `Professiottal- Ana Eneriess Cards. '4 3 • CHAS. M. HALL, Attorney-at-Law and Notary, WilLgiro eproful :atoll inn to PPYl , lloo o .x.entrtilt f.. 1 to bini. wilth & 01.0 t ./.owrnul 0111(.•), Towanda, .(.tune:':;. , 4-s1 • TA MFS WOOD,. , tf ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. meh.3-76 I • TOWANDA. PA. T°llN'F. SA.NDEIISON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.. - OFFICE.—Neuns Building (acorrow..ll'sSlore), . Inc.lo-74 Av. tt Wm. LITTLE, ATTo R SF: 1%5-.4 T-L A 11", TO TT'A NAA. PA Offire.ovvr Derkerlq Provision Store, Street, ) i ToWan,l3, IN,. April 18.'7G. kJ E,EORG 4T T :NT: I"! :4 .6 co 1':% 1 .5 F. 71:1,0k- A T-1, ATS —Mai nar dorm North of Ward Iffmse rro-tivoc in Supreme Court I . ,•tlsylvnriht 1 . 111tt.11 TO VA'UA, l'A lII: gtREETER, LAW OFFICE, I= OVERTOP & MERCUR, ATTORYFYS AT LAW TI)WANDA PA. ()Mei. nver Mnutanyes Store. - rmay67s D• i. DV i'. wrfi s. RODS KY A. MER(UR ANTA L 'M A X,\V ELL, .: • . _ . AT TOR NE r- kT-1, AN' OFFICE OVEIi DAYTON STOUE. Tow iNnA, VA Aprll•l2, 1 , ',7g. • P ATRICK k : VOYLE:) • • A rToR W. .5 . A T-1, W . Towanda. -Pa, !I yl7-73. Oflirr, In 311-i rur's lllork .T. ANC;LE, A 7 TOR NF: L A Ir wlth I>avit , s Carn,. - 11a:!, TtA%aptla, l'a jattl:77 aF t MASON, ATTORNEY' AT I. kW'. • ThlV A tilt.% l'A. I tffi,, , llrst, tloor south of U. qoe .0111 ov. l a. '7-i. IT I L. "1:1;I:N EY-AT-1. TOWA I , A, PA. Sr...M.mtanye.. MWMMI AT To ru 17 SSE I, - T- A H Wiert , !Wel' Cr 0,..• St , bru, Iwo s north of i'a. 31 ay 1.4., c ,, n,u1t,1 In I:,•nt E Vrtll 12.'7., •• & KINNEY; _ _ A 7:7',,RXE,YS-A TOWANDA, PA. On We ID Tracy S Sobl:'s Block T.,watztla, Pa.. Jan. 111, 14,-76 MEE 1770 lINE Y-A T-I,A W. Than Strr,t 14 Air. a's north of Ward 11-(4..,..4. watnla, Pa. (April 12. 1n77. W... . Nt su it attrnd I T ii( v ) . M I Sk . ) A T TORNEY. , to alk handn,s k can In !:tae, ford. 4innivan anti Wyoming- l'ahntles. 4.4fLen n. 1.1. l'orter. Di E S BRE E, VITA T.IWANDA, PA IMINEM , L. y ATTI )It N EY-AT-I. A IV, WII,KE~-ISIi:R u, !'A Col➢crtluns promptly attendrtl to. - 1 IZ'rc)N EI. 131 Z rro It• kfl AT I. .w. 1•1.1 • Pn tt‘P,lllli:" ..;fer icrt.li'vs to the 1.111.11 c. ,Spe. 1.0 ni [..•nr.ion gt,-1, to , In t I orrllatt',: U••gt•ter; ,•ort F IN. .1 it. 010-11-710) N. I :.1:1.:•1:!: - NIAPILL CA LIFF, ASTORNEY, , AT LA W . . IrowiA N A. .1111' , .. In Arf.g. , lN-111,ke1z, first d..1,r smtt".l of the First Na: Irma bank. H. .1. 11 k M.L. r ja:c4-731y) (I lUII►L,EI PAYNE,! • IT T!,Z.I. 1 St M STREnT =I OM =I I 111 \ \ 1 \ - • a t. ATTORN EY AT LAW, • AND C. coMMINSIoN ER, To WAND A, PA 4 , :llce—Nortn Side Public Square D.VIES. VAIZN ATLsw. QCIIAN, E OLT -.13 I, K • T AV. ANDA • P S k i t • - - - [ME I , i 1' E E-ir , A rrolt N ES-.VI-I,AW .._ - 8 .. I • Ft, 1: vil :, 1.1:14 :jell :01 I.,Avity, (If his 'l.'!f+ l' 111. , 114 . .41 , C. ( 4 44, ;1,44,4 Dui 4.40114 1.144'41-711. r I 1". cs 11R. s. M. WOODBURN t DllVAi ''' °M ice over Ithwy,•s Cl,..V.cry,,ure. . 1:•,,,,,I; ! . : sl,,y 1. 14t7v- . . . 1:0 1 . ). PA VICE', M. D., -1.'!.1J. PHIS frI.IN ASP .SUIIC:1:0S: .v,., ik"sirs from to lo 4, r. 4t. g•, F.) , anti Emr,-, JOHNSON, 1'11)0"1 EN" .4ND SITIWELQ: r Dr. ','”:!er S.,:i' , llrtlg %lore, ?Toivaltda \*. 1 1 ENTI1ST. N 41114111 lite f1..,r0 . 1 Dr: Pr.itt's liulv wrilt ited. E 71 ' B. 1:-E Y, r Tt,3l.tia, Pa. . , . -1011.14•;, and Al Te•rth extiactrti =II 1 c 2 AI. SVANIX, i)EN - risT, <.ll!y<• Travr 0, .1 4.Ver likoat It. stor,l. p: to do all kind+ llf 4ctit.tl tw,ork •• pit in a hew gav aparatos. MET 11 . (7. wit ITANyit J3/.VJ)EJ Itru Fr.ouu,7owAlivA CI R.USS'ELI,'S G VN ER IX S.LICANC-E,AGENCY • TOWAN - pA. 1876 • /-'-';4.1'\!1.1 INSURANCE Ai:EtiCY. N ( )B17, - E & VINCENT, \IAN At:i. • P.I . :I,I.IitLE AN HE TRIED I e•,ii• : P. I N.,11.A.K EIWIT ANTS t. ;..; 0. A. BLACK.. S. ,W,. ALVORD, Publisher. VOLUME XXIVIII. What shall lido with the mischievous hands, That are ne v er Idle the whole day through? What with the fat little lingers ten—, W tiat, oh ! what,shall ? into Mischief' from morn till nighl, - , Loving the wrong and scorning the right— , 'Such wee, ineddlesome'hands! What can the remedy be? . . I'4l6W] I do with the tronblesomo feet, , Th all day long Into mischief stray— i I,lttlechite feet, that restlessly spurn • ' • ', ° . Nlytiler's commands eaeh day?. ' I %%Inning au7, now here, now there, • 1 I ; Ivini, Manuneh tyouble and eice:— • . Such a4e, wand ring feet lAhme ! • 1 What musl. the remedy be? • , What shall Ido withlko little king c: • Who rulers the himseltOltbk. ;he wee, wee boy,' The mischievous, naughtl,\and reOlous elf, ,1,%. Half nuisance, yet n ' 4) IV Itiy, . Lore him; till love with a new 't 'light shalt lead-the wandering footles a gilt, And teach the meddlesome hands thc way • : ; To he useful and good all day.\\ 1=1123 Ah : how lonely flits eartitt would be if it held no , bables, my boy, like thee t It no little feet ran hither and thither, Leading our hearts) we know not whither ; If 1.0 little fingers, on mischief bent, Into our houtzi , aiaa: were went; • fart, theretern bahles none - The Joy of tiring roh•ed were gene. • THE TEACHER AND HIS WORK." 18!11=1!Ilti „Warr ss 1,tp.111; R. r. S. C. FULToN. •tf Nichu/8. N. Y.. Del tins firadforrt rornty, Trorrhrrs• Assoriat at. Windham, Prz Jitav LS;;. a,v% Pel'ilished by :IZ,ler•st of A. A. tit:o4:l"i S ,, p , rintentlent f Mrhooln. . 1 . MR. PDEs ' IDENIi. LADIES AND GENTLE MEN i I am entirely in sympathy with the teacher and his work. Personal expeti ence-hasgenerated'in me this - sympathy. lhohl thatas a preadher I am a teacher. 'The o grand commission Christ gave his first preachers was to go and "disciple," or tench, all itationS. That commission . remains intdet to-day % so that every min: inter sent- forth by Christ is a_ teacher. The, highest ambitioi i of the preacher should be to become a - onsu ni mate teacher, Ilt , sides being a teacher it this sense, I hart been a teacher just as many of you arc teachers. About two and a, half of the Most pleasant, and perhaps the most ose ft tj, years of my life im ve been devoted. to the work in which. you are now en gaged. - So, you see, I can speak to you to-night sympathetically, and somewhat from experience. But, although I staid befor4_ you prit fessuilly a teacher, it is far froni my desire to assume the oflice of a teachei• of teach ers. While my limited - experience may put Me ih hearty sympathy With you and your work, and assist nib in speaking more intelligently on thiS odeasion than i;therwisp 1 could,' it has' hot been long; and full, and rich enough to wayrant me in sucltan assuinption. I come supply as a brother toencourage,; as a-lover of the , teacher to assist, if that is possible ; and chiefly, as a-friend to "stir. up yet } r pure minds by way of remembrance." ' . As my self-imposed wOrit , is mainly nat . of a reinembraneer, let me r4mind you r at the uuta.t. "of the nobilityofr the wbri: to which you arc ealkiig aiid 20 . ii * ch you have given yourselves. The teoehernt trork one of Yhi noblest iho: God hos committed to man.. 'All useful work is respectable and hog orable.. Lahqr itself is roid's first ordi nitiee. for man. And }=et, as has been truthfully .observed, ".we cannot avoid considering that a higher and nobler grade of I.thor which :Wi,orks on more val 7 uable and precious material, and produces a more noble, and imrqrtant - result." -The man who bads an 114 cart, if lie builds well, is as truly res,se.vtable as lie who ci;nstrueis an engine, and yet the one Is i s nobler work than the other. He who 1M1333M paints your Louse,- s if , he does his work. neatly and honestly, is-just as respeetable as-the artist who, transfers -ti; canvass the • 'loveliest and,sublitnes scenes -of nature, and yet you make a sharp' -distinction be tween the two vocations in the scak of dignity. Do you think of ranking thethan who quarries the .marble from thopuoun tain:side with the sculptor - who, frinn that rude."ussightly block britrgs forth a form of cormandituidignity or of surpassing loveliness? D - 7,es the stone-cutter rank in the same grade with the architect who designs and erects a Centennial Memorial lall ? Men everywhere graduate the no- J. V, CALIF I? DEMME IMMEM City of any vtieltion according to the nature of the mAterial with which it works, and the. result which it produces. .Ai ply , ing this principle to your voca t' m, how forcibly does it illustrate the 110 lity ''of your calling. The Material ..0 w icir you work is"iuot the - transient, cliangi':, and perishable forms tif Matter, but thgliktig immortal mind. How far \ superior tl& to the best forms of matter, I need . hardly :nisi. to remind you. gai ter in its nobles forms, its most beauti ful eimilitnatilms,' •ts most massive pro port ions,is matter st" 1, subject to corrup tion and dce:iy.. lle w o Works on Mate rial things, fl material c as, mast do if, under the painful con;lctie 1 tlAot the re-: sults of:' his labor- must i he trt isient and templary—that his imist,lieau iful p - .i:ictions,.tand ini'dest, most endu .. 4.; me ni,rials cal I•y within them the . clef cuts Of theii; ,m ti spCedy (lest ruction. * • 114 'different 'the material on whit you work. Slotisider the essential poWers of tlfe mind. You may combine and-ar ram:Te the particles of matter into "striking and beautifulforms-, but you cannot in spire them with reason; you cannot Make them think, or feel, or act. The sculptor may chisill out of the marble a form 01 wondrous simmetry and matchless grace. It may stand before - you io its exquisite j.ipoitions . and radjant beauty, like a thi of life, but after all • it is a cold, passuless, dead thin.' Speak to it; has it \ . ian amewer for you ? Clasp it ;-, do''.'you N - .. upon itany Nturteing pressure . :"Call upon it. to nfovr, \th i act, .to do and 7 daie ;' is there any resl)(inse ? IlOw it stands,. s in . its dumb passilq y, mocking your urgent . appeal. . .. - - . But who shall desribe the powers and capacities or the livin;.Nnital ? Language breaks down under tI le N lTetei pt Ad tell of i.s miglity achievements : It pans rivers, \\ brelges.eweans, tunnels mou - f..aitis, blows out Hell Gates. It ransack the vast 'strele• iii..,s of nature, appropria 'rng their gems, aiod g4.ld, and treasure. -It- makes the air, \the' fire,. the water do its bidirrig. It . Wei:laws airy vapor iulatias of bte. , . . POthy. WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH MN BY WARY 1). I.3ItINE. .4likellartrotO. ani) drives it with thunderinil\speed along the iron road. It Compels the Fnm to'pairit the portraits of its friends, With ,audu cious power it snatches th e lightning-from the hand of "..cloud compelling Jolt him self," about to flash out 'upon its mission of death, and sends it obedient on its er rands of merciy. It turns, over the rocky leaves of this ponderous earth volume, anciby the light of sun and stars, rends the history oeworld..growth and planetary development, all the way from the start ing point of "fire . .mist," to the end, " eternal Me."' On unvcearying, wing it Sweeps the outskirts of space, communes with suns and - Systemic, learns their size, measures their dittances;. tracks their pathway through the heavons, and makes even strong Orion bend to its analysis. It sing songs, pronounces orations, writes, history that will live forever. It qxee' utes all that makes history, written or unwrit, ten4bovring its tremendous energy eve- rywhero With what mater'al thing then.can you compare the human mind? As well might yon liken the toy baloon, brealAing, away from the child hand and vanishing in the air, to the sun sent, forth from,tbe' hands of the,lntinite; careering in majes along the path ef agek, as to attempt a c4ltNßparison 'betwet n* the lowest form of ' mink and the highest form Ad'. matter. Nay, en then the analogy islmperfeet. The ttiy)t d - the sun arc alike material, differing on • in the degree of their dnia- tion. Not all le*Worlds'of the Univilyse can compare wit one infant mind, 'me youngest child with 116' Weakest intellOt, piat looks to you and i lls you "teacher," gives you material • ork upou *far above the grandest object's of material cteation as the substance or , eternitv sirJ passes the shadoW's of time. Next'''. tol' Godl'iiiinself, the buinan 'mind 'the grandest thing in this whole' creation. How noble; how sublime that vocation which work's on such a. thing as this Add'to this the fact that such minds ;lid lives as those. of Plato, Aristotle, daeotot, and. Arnold, in all ages lave bepiidevaesd to the teacher's York, and further, that Christ gave ,himself• to this work, and surely you need no oth , erreminder of the nobility of your voca „., , . tiOn;k ' • • . 1 Ila?ingivinindcd'yoti of the nubility of your 411.7,4 it may be well now to remind you or tlieditlieulty'of the teacher's call ing; I 'presume you think thete is little danger of you forgetting this. The dif- lieulty of your ctcation presses upon You every moment yoMare found prosecuting your wdrk: and it is, natural,' that you should prefer dismissing this considera tion, for the present, froM •Iyour Ihit:bear with me, '=while I R`old yonrthought to it. foi a moment. to zeter''s work is as dilficali as if is hptple. • The greatest difTionity of the educii.toi grows out of the very nature of the work in NP bleb he is engaged. There are many eve - 11 in this finlightened, 'progressive age, who think that the I.,eachvi• leads a very easy; enjoyable kinft of life—that'4' his work is almost egnivaleur to no work. This.fit'le estimate of the teacher's work arises from a mignmlemtanding or ignor- tneeot the nature of that wmk. Ttutiie . ,ersOns doma understand what is meant io34cilucation. They think and spetik of education as if the -mind were a vessel into which 'a certain :Cm(taut o(informatflon is',to be poured until it; is fo, them thi: justruplr's work is. simply to cram the memory of his puita with names, qat6, - facts; and rules. But t , the putting' hitwthe mina all the facts Of science and history, is- not icducatinn. Thelre is a widedifferenec bet Ween infor mation and education. Ttire . :ai'd many 'Well-informed lICISMIS NOM /, have never been educated, whose ntindt.i have never 'been' developed ;and "trained. These are intellectual giants buried under thoun tains of gtild, but Mt. educated Men ( and women. SoructimCs education is spoken of as the Mind sv:re a stone, on which the in krtretoi: Was to.act as a lapidary to chisel it :into graceful form and polish it into beauty. In harmony with this vieW;; N;e are constantly hearing of the aCeeeeplish- Illents, such as music, painting, drawing-, etc.. Some the most uneducated.per suns in the world possess the most of :these accomplishments.'-.Under all such external brilliancy, liere may lie para ly4etteueriries anq stinted minds. -The Mission of education has been Mils- tratcd by the story of Michael Angelo, the; '• great siniptorfand painter, who, walk ing i with a triend"through an obscure . street in Florent;'e, discovered in a,yard a: bluek of nn:rble, tind who, regardless of his- holiday at ire, set to work digging out thy slime, cleating from it fhe dust - and tilt', dedm iris., in answer to the query of his astonished ft iejti, •• There' is an angel in the stone, ford I want to bring it out.''' Alter mombs of patient chisellinf , and Ito •,.. n . , lishinghe let the angel mot,' . • / /,, - This illustration is in part pertMetit, hut it fails to e\ - press the true iilea/if .0- ueation. We arc all :tgreed that the tchCh er is an artist; {nut that his mis y qien,. like that•of Angelo,' , is to l bring angds out of. the rude blocks he finds, arOund hink . lint : not iy El li:ie let . i'at e ibi,d* is thiS to be done. 'lnstead of chipping off cXternal tedun .dancics, and chiselling arid ie,dishing the sutface, the educator into work his way into the block, find the rudiment i 1 angel hidden and slunibering there, teadrit the use of ifs own powers, discover to it the -fury of its own capacities, ail & show it 1 hew through jter own endeavor it is to th off the /rude externals biding it from he world's recognition, until it stand's a laSt before men in Ike maturity 'of its st ' tg and, beautiftPlidelleetual angclhood. The angel is to be brought Ma of the bloc - , but not by the chiselling \\ -and polishing of he artist, while the. an gel lies passive ant •'dumb, but hy its own ;Let iVe development, `t•ttler the wise guid ance of the apist. - Thivne process gives a dumb, ca , ild statue, pretts.of conrse, but useless and lifeless; while like - other . givi-s a living, trained, I t Yltleated Milli, ready for future acquisition and coot rest, evi dencing alw = ays its heavenly origi .1 • If education were a mere telling, , rill lag, ing, rote-learning or Cramming proce.-4, - by which thh mina is tilled with a Int l * bundle o f undigested, unassimilated faitt:•, acquired.by the learner without labor and retairied without profit ; or, if it Were inerely a chiselling andpnlishing .of the marble—addition affer,addition of •tmper ticial acelimplislimenk—tlien the teither's work weh indeed an eni;y, inferior, and enjoyable pihtiine, amounting tizoNery lit MO OM tle. , But education is .sometbing more. than this•superficial -chiselling and Cram ming process. The trite 'end of education, in its broadest, grandest sense, tbe'un tolding and directing aright of the entire nature. "It is the cultivation of all the 'native Wirers of the child, hyi exercising them in accordance with the lasts ot his being, with view - to development and grOwtl \ Its °ince is to call korth power of eterylthul,power of thought, Wee. tion,-Will, tind outward action •;. power to observe, to reason; to judge, to contrive ; potter to 'adOPt ends firmly, and to Pur- SuOthernefficientlif \ pOwer to govern self and 'Vttence others ; `poweirto gain and spat_ happiness.," . And, itOhe develop ! mentiot these powers, it redst be remem beredlhat the young are to be made, as' far as possible, " their own tiakers, the discoverers of truth , th e interpreters of nature, the framers of science., They,are to be helped to help Ileinselves. ;They Are to become self-teachers. They are to' gain knowledge `or themselves by,the ex ercise of their own" native powers and through personal,,experience." So 'that the teacher's work, instead of being that of telling,. explaining, correcting and 'cramming; is that of a stimulator, diree ttr, and superintendent of the learner's work. Taking 'this view of the . case, who cannot see that the work of the educator is one of immense difficulty, owing to its Very nature and , the reiult it seeks? With exquisite discrithination has Locke declared, in his,great work on the " Ilu man UuderStanding," that "the business of educatiOn is not to perfect a learner in all or any of the'scienek, but to give his mind thatlrettroin. that disposition . and' those habits that may enalle him to ob tain any part Of ,knowledge he may apply himself to, or stand in need of, in the fu.• 'tore course of hiS,llfe." The teacher who succeeds in doing this will never - be caught napping, and leas soinething to do besides playing. ' • :Then again,,the 4turn of the material upon which 010'14M:her - works,, adds to the difficulty - of hislwork. Go into any school-room,. look (to oven; the. there you will find all kinds of characters, every shade of disposition represented. There arc some who need the bridle, , and some who ne6d the spur. Here is a shy, 'timid, sensitive little creature to whom:a frown is a whipping and whipping is deal.lr-tipoti whose feelings you can play as : you please. Here is one Of, those stub born little 'urchins who can but wou't learn, like a little, three-year-old I once tried to introduce to i.qc ni*teries of the alphabet, " Taking him . t inp - Olt. my knee, and pointing to the first, later, I• said "Ihirry, What OM uanie.of thatletter ?" Twisting up his little' face in an inimitable Way, be whined Out, petulantly : " ean't say it." "0, yes," said 1, ."„Harry, can say it ; .yonActiow the name of that' letter:" " I can't ' say it," ' again he whined.''" What is it yon can't say, Har ry ?"..` I can't - say A," he bawled, ont.., And so you find in every school those who can but won't learn the lessons you give them. • • Then there 'am those who are stupid and really can't learn. pockr-uMuredlit tle bundles':of fat' and muscle, who, if they are blessed with brains at all, have them hi 'den away so deeplund carefully under flesh and skull, that it takes them and their reacher, and everybody else, ex cepting the parents,' a lifetime to find them. The teacher is expected by the dotinglihrents to jog theselittle fellows tip the difficult hill of knowledge,' at - an even pace with the nervous, ambitions, hedinful boy} al their side, who at their' own Nyill flaunt their banners to the breeze, anti shouting "Excelsior," run -up with joy the stbe . p yet shining way. Yonder, again, .is that slow and sure boy_ It takes him a long time to get an idea into his brain, but wlten.be gets -it, once there, it is there forever. Ile is like the acorn, of . sloW and tediotA growth,. but eventually becomes the:bulwarkand glory of liAmee.• Yet he tides his/teach er's patience and adds to his burden. : „.Arfit•tben, .there is that irrePr"ssible, Mean iigible, red-headiti urchin; full of. snap and mischief, apparently strung on wirek as 'if - -on . ptirjetse to facilitate his jumping into the next Mischief he shall .discover. Always on the lookout (or fun and frolick. The bell ringsl'or recess, and the first Sight you catch of him lie• is get- Ong, astride the ridge-pole of the selio6l' house, or has climbed the chttrelt:".MeeW, • er isleadingtiome of the rest of the boys into trouble 4f some kind. "In school; 4vhile the yaclier's eyes are on him, the most. sedate and stndiOus of a;11, but as soon as the teacher's eyc4 are turned he Lis throwing' his eyes about sceking"and creating niischir2f, woke than ever titiera lcs/hrew iris 7 about standing gaping in thetst real; of Athens. He au angel in the rough, very rudimental uleed'; iiud not„matter how he .governs an delics,itnd torments father and mother add all at hotne, the ptx teacher is'expeeted to tame him into lamb-like subthission and obedience, and so traysforin hini that be sliall-'sing gushingly and spontaneously, " I want to" be in angel, and 'with tlMan , gels statul." 0, yes, the teachei is a fail ure unless he developes i this essence of mischief and incorrigibleness into a per.% feet intellectual angel. • And beside all this,- the teacirts woik is made more difficult oftertinies 1:;) , the conduct of pinrcuts * and guardians. am sorry to say that parents - are found who,. thoughtlessly or imentibnally, un kindly, cruelly increase the heavy burden under which the teacher already staggers and which he hardly carry now, even with the help of ,Parents, instead of sympathizing and co-operating with the teacher, thus lessening his load, are found holding au indifferent or antaeonia tic relation with the teactiO, 'taking sides with the child 'against the teacher—talk ing in the Oresence of the child against the' teaclie4 etc. The tridsti.tnwise thing a parent can tio.is this. .1.3ut,',0f course, tlii,•4 does not apply to parentisht Penn sylvania—much less parents iii Windham, —but to parents over there in Newl7 s ork Stale, up there in Canada, across wider in Turkey—everywhere else but here,•yott -know.. As it does. not apply to us at all, let us turn our thoughts to something more practical. ' But, in the meanwhile, if any Oilik - that the teacher has an- easy. pleas :6k enviable time of it, just try it for a •I\or so yourselves, will you , . and see :hat,. your verdict will be. Try it, s,. and tell us when you have •on like! it. '47: - , - • aided you, of the . nobility " your - Isoilq• it way be yea 1. then niy f , ivied lioxi• Haiin;ere L. and diditadty REGABDL OF DENUNOIi I • TOWANDA, BRADFORD t UNITY, PA., THURSDAY 'NORM waillo reml you also of the importance 1 . and respoos it# , ,y of yopr vocation. • - ''its multitn es,\by narrow and errone , r • \ ono views of ucati n, have been blinded to tile diflicu ty:of th teacher's irork, so have they failed to reali its importance. "Nothing," as Dr. Chann og has faceti ously said, "istmore commoli than mis takes as to 'the comparative tm \ rtarce of the di ff emnt vocations of life . Noisy, showy agency, which is sire o 4 a great - surface, and therefore' seld m pe ie trates beneath - the surfade, is calledlglory. Multitudes are blinded by official dignity, and :stand *•ondering at a pigmy, because ho happens to be perched on some emit rience ot Church or State. SO the declaim er who can electrify a crosid by passion ate oppeOls, or splendid images, which give noelear perceptions to the intellect, which developPio general truth, which breathes no' firm disinterested purpose, rasses for a great man. How few reflect, that the greater man is he, who without aplse or show,'is wisely flzing' ig a few , minds Woad, pregnant, geperout princi ples\ oqudgment and action,. and giving them impulse which will carry them ,on fore4r." \- \Tes,,aiends, noise and show, and bluster,\wi the thoughtless, get credit,for an immense amount of work, that t ey.have little or no part i. ,, in accom piishin 1 -When at tile :Centennial Exhi bition alt summer, tlie, first; thing I went' to see, of course, was the\ corliss Engine, that mighty piece, machinery,: carrying on its nerves of steel the poWer of ,four teen hundreds .of horses. , The:•grandest sight, .in all that wonderful , ground; was ,that of Aching this giant awakening in the morning froM his rival: slumbers, and setting in motion the countless pieces of machinery he propelled. Ho shook him self and calmly said, "Let there bo mo tion," and motion - was through every part of that, vast building—foal - teen- acres of machinery responded instantly to the. throbbing orhis mightly heart - of tires commencing the lab — rs of the day. Stand- ing by that engine, We could hear !the faintest whisper, so noiseless was its Mo tion. _ Indeed, so smoothly, harinoniously, and quietly did it work, that i after id' we had heard of it,_ we w Id suffer! for the first feW moments, 88 e stood beside it, a feeling of disappoint ent, and be in clinedto ask, and is that all? But like Niagara, and all other truly mighty pow ers, the grandeur and glory of. its power grew,upori us as 'we:gazed. Turning away from this majestic presence, .I wandered to a distant part of the building, ivhere my attention was arrested by a deafening rattle and clatter, on my right. I walk ed a few paces, and there I found a li,ttle bit ota machine perched upon a high ta ble.. Oh! It , leafcitts nto to think of it. Whi - z-- r whir-r-r=r;whirl spit-spit-rattle clatter-bluster-thunder you could not itear yourself think for its noise. ' I col \ • • lected my confused senses, and stood thinking for a moment. "Little fellow," 'said . to Myself, "in you, and not in that engineionder, must surely, lie the power that propels the-machinery in this hall. I have certainly,beer misinform / eV' The 'operator was standing by, looking like a. martyr. Making \ a desperate effort, I shouted with all thelung: power I could command, '' What ts \ ih and what does it. (IA'?" Ile Made some-reply, but alas ! I could not heal. He" prcimii4nced some name; but I did not succeed in catching . it. As alas' resort, ho held up a little bitof a braid, about half 'the size of my little:finger, Hof rough lookihg material. _That's what it did, and' all it did, and yet you would larva thought, by its bluster and thunder, that it was the power that tno'ved/thatjwilderness of machinery. It was.amusing, to see the crowd 'stand gap-, ingiaround it—awed Unto silence by the tremendous noise and self-display. • Such mistakes have been made respecting Ma . - chinek, anti:such, mistakes are made eve ry day respecting thC world's trite work ers. Noise, show, blnster,pass for achieve ment, while quiet powerful, energy—do- . ing the World's work, and the work of a w9rld—is ignored. • ;The teacher's vocation, in its quiet un ostentatious way, is doing more for hu manity than all other vocations combiued. Compare the teacher's calling with Oak of the statesman, if you please. The states man of the piesent time is gaped at, and wondered at, and admired for his position, and difficult efficient labors (?). The statesman may set fences around our propeity'and dctellitigs ; but hew much more are-we indebted to him who calls forth the"Powers_and affections of those for whore' our property is earned, and our are reared, and who-render our . childrdn.objects of increasing loire and-,re spect. L it is the chief function of the statesman buZ24ateli over the' outward in- Wrests of 'a imople—that of. the - .educator -to quiekeivits soil. The statesman must .study.and manage the pa5.4:13,11 . 5 and :prej udices of the community—the educator roast study the es.,eutials, the , deepest, the loftiest principles or human nature.- The statesman works with coaise . instru ments, for course ends.; die educator is-to work by the ,most.zretined - influence on that delicate,' ethereal essence, the ;int, mortal soul." ,In view of: its iniportaned find what it accomplishes, the teacher's ,Vocation will come off beit in every com parison. It, will be remembered that Lord. 13rougham trusted. for the :upholding and extending of the liberties olliiscountrY, morn to the fact that - .he school-master was abroad, armed with his primer, than that the soldier was out in full military array. And so' it is, and so will it ever be. The teacher is our safeguard and our hope. Teachers; you may sometimes be tempt ed to undervalue your work, and look up on it as unimportant, because it does nut, briog you before the world in a great breadth of self-demonstration. Do -not so; I.pray you. Your work is wondrous .high and farreaching in its results: An old philosopher was continually talking Ito his friend about his garden; iti wldch lie walked and studied. His friend, at length visited him, and desired first of all to see the garden. T he philosopher Jed him-to a little enclos ure not more " than twelve feet long and ten feet wide, with scarcely . a shrub or even a grass -blade on , exclaimed : the visitor, 4 ' don't 'see 'anything very wonderful about this muclitalked of garden: It is not very large,'neither is it very wide." "No," replied the , philosOpher, "but it is wend -roes high." \Your work may EOCM to you very narrow, 'Cary'cir,mrcribed, 'but re,. menthol- it is '"*olultoas high "—reach lug up unto 'heaven—out tin'o eternity. Men build bemes°,.teitiples, memorials; of l ON FROM ANY QUARTER. Mime , :'. cost ' a rpasaing be , uty, and \ massive splendor, but even while they build,' their - ift. enduring memorial. be gin to crumble tinder thb touch of Ti' , s' finger, and will ft&ni lie in the dust, los and forgotten, and t.as if they never had been. But you are bu ldiag character—. character that han live aa,long as mind itself, and the lifetime of mlnd is the life time of the eternal God. Silently, imper ceptibly, and unconsciously it\may be, you am flaking impressions npoi\m!nd and character that will remain forever. n the. far back geologic ages, thousan* o ears before man made hir appearance' upo 4ho•earth, there floated across the sky a cloud. Passing over an ancient shore lin rain drops fell Tro th its bosom, 'pattering n n the so ft shore mud, mak ing little inde Cationst as they fell. The sand drifted in tb c these, covering them. As the years paase)l:the susceptible mud hardened into stene, \, and lay buried deep down, far from the stirface. By and by, inquisitive mad came alo`n.., dug down, turned up the stone , and lo . the impres e%sions made bythe passing clo millions of years beforei, are there, ' flu on the_, solid rock forever. So, on the au . tible -1 minds of yon4upils, you are makinday by day, impressions that will last on and on, long after you have passed out of sight from the w4rld's horizmi— impressions that can never die. , You cannot be too careful, as to the character of the impres sions you leave upon the young minds , you are moulding and influencing for eternity.: Remember that you will live over and over again in your pupilsl—tliat in' their persons and characters, and on tho' per sons and characters of their pupils;' and so on, ad infinitum, you will re-live,oper sting 'upion humanity eternally. ' ',Oh Teachers, ,to you is committed a' work of tremendous importance and responsiliilij ty, You are moulders•of 'mind, builders okehamcter, masters and mistresses of . thei?cereieg generations and future 'ages, doiiik**rk th.3t . will tell for good or evil upon all coming time, striking chords that must Vibrate through eternity, set ting in motion ilirces, that-passing out of your control, sit:11,1;01)6-Mo with ei , ci creasing power, never ceasing their work ing.' You are creating circles brat will gir rippling out and op forever more. If this work be thus gr6d, difficult, and important, how -nce - ealary that the .teacher be thoroughly qualified for it. ° \ is matter of qualification, I am aware, is a. delicate subject for one as young and inexywienced• as myself to teach. And ye;/as I am before you, not as a' teacher, not even as a suggester, but " I simply as a remeinbrancer, .I trust you not deem it as an immodesty, or an iffipertinence, iCI remind you,. very brief, of some of the neces, , iary qualifications of the teacher .for his difficult and glorious vocation. But just here, on the consideration that .trou will never refit it outside of this house, I will let you into a secret , that' will, perhaps, give what I shall say on this 'point more grace and authority. More than once has Time tried to deck my brow With his silver crown; but the threads of which it was woven were always mys teriously spitited away. In plain prose my " better ~half," to keep me .from looking old, 01 , 4 out the gray ltaitifroril my head,liii ran as they make their ap pearance, so that - I arn older 'than I ap pear to be. Itlgtead of being twentyltwe, or twenty-five, as : I am sometimes taken to'be,\l have almpst reached the mature age of thirty.. But don't for the life of you i tell myivifewhat I have told you. . . And;ow, 44-ill simply try ,to , draw .Itly . v , n odtlinep:ieture of the goOd.tettAi-' cr, aisumit4that every teacher present is a goikl teacher, possessing all the oi:tits of excellence I sh a ll name. . ' The good teat 4 er understands thor-. °uglily 'what is mean by education. Ile . has no faith in {he ' dead yessel;'? or "stone polishing " theor s. To him \ ed ucation is'not a telling; eki lainteg role learning, cramming process, b t thedraw ing forth the powets of the min 'by - ex ercise; With a view td developme t and. growth. This undertaking is fu-odamen tal, and absolutely necessary to succ's." Is thltnot So, Mr. President? .‘ "The good teacher aims at knowing how I to educate ; and to reach this knowledge lie studies carefUlly; the He is a mental philosopher, thoroughly in vestigating the laws and principles which govern the growth and development of the minds upon which ho operates. Not. only does he study the child-mind in this abstract way, but he studies it 'concretely ns well.• The mental make up and ten- deucies of eith pupil arc made a'separ g t .e, special study.. Just' as the intelligent firmer studies the chemical composition .and peculiarities of the - sell lie cultivates, adapting the Seed to the, soil —jukt as iny friend Dr. KhaPp here, keeps not a bot tle into which he tumbles' promiscuously„ ipecac, morphine, quinine, aconite, belL ladonna, hellabore, etc.,l and then goes out dealing Out to his patients indiscrim inately, fifteen drops or twenty grain of the-mixthre,- but sits down and makes a 'careful diagnosis of ever) case,. taking in tO aceount-the peculiarities of the disease, and,the idiesyncracieS of the patientso 'thust the. teacher Study the individual minds of - his pupils, noting. differences, and adopt his means. and methods with .specitic skill anit9are. You cannot find two children precisely: alike in 'all re spects, iirany family, much. less' in any' !school. No two are exactly alike., 'You. must'stmly each by himself, until you have mastered his mental idiosyncriscics, if you would succeed in teaching him. Ih eitincection with this, and to learn how to educate, the good teacher studies thor oughly the method of nature in' teaching. 'her pupils,' or what is called natural edu cation. In vestigating nature's method of teaching, we find that she excites :'an interest in the .child'S ridnd, , ancl create : ; a desire,' ati insatiable thirst fur knoWledge.. FeW edi caters,' 1 am sorry, yet forced to say, succeed in doing this important work for their Ilow few they are (hilt is evidence by - the scores of young ' men of twenty and young ladies of 4weet sixteen, rushing forth from our sehool4 and colleges with a finished education. Nothing more. to do,' nothing hew to learn, no further acquisitions to make —finished !, Yes, and finished they are, as far as mental growth is concerned. The-. idea of any one's education ever being fin ; ished, of stopping satisfied with one small - draught from the glorious, yet dangerous " Pyerean Spring!" . &young man dune learning, . with (hod's' great .univ Orr of truth and ,toyaterry unfoldipihitself under G 4 JULY 9, 1877. , ,I(1I- ). 1 1 • . . . his cry e y es, luring - him on to lordly,con quest \ 11 .., nd princely acquisition! Oh!!'piti able s tack. And who is to blame, for it; but the educators, who have failed to create in lie minds of their pupils.:an . t:‘.% 'course o t. id any -it , - , in this al else"- the child but teaches it tO (Ind out for i lf, by the use of its mi l d . independent powe Because of their genero.usdispositions and and good nature, too many teachers fail here—telling their pupils what they Ought to find out for themselves. Help them to help themsOlves, but don't do all their work for them. That only is their oWn . knowledge which they acquire by . the•use of their own Powers. Vliat you tell them is information at second-hand,. but not. iirst-class knowledge. Nature dl* no drilling, 0 cramming. Nature repeatslier lessons. .Ropetifion has been called the sheet anchk of the teacher. Nature ex fircises the ;puwers of her pupils, and cre -ates habits of investigation. She leaves her pupils with 'an idea, and the power d( disposition to acquire: The form al educator Tam conforms throughout to the natural method need not fear failure. Study the mind' f the child, and in con nection with this, study Natitte's method of teaching:, In mastering these two . de- partments, forming one complete; branch of knowledge, you will, without knowing it perhap,4, have - mastered *hat leMiirig educatoT call "The Science and \Art of EduCatiOn." Justas there is a Science,of Lau', of Medicine, of Language,_ or The- . ology, so there.-is a 'Science: l of . ...ducation.. This noble Aung Science promises to do more for humaity than Chemistry; Cc ttfogy, and Astronomy combined. Study it its, two departments of . child mind and Nature's Method ; it will pay y . ou for your study ; fo>= it is the key tosuccess in teaching, and the !" . OPen Sesame " to the youthful intellect. The good teacher knows-well what ho ;:s. required to teach, as well as how this is to be done. He thoroughly understands those brancheS in which ho is to give iu- StruCtion. He is not under the necessity of learning to spell by teaching others hew to read., He knows what he is to teach, not merely that he Maylmpart or connnunicate, knowleflge--thiS is but, a small part of the teacher's business—but that he may guide:ethers in making the acquisition he. - ha's . . Made. Ile only is a good guide NOM has traveled the way him self,.and is familiar with its difficulties and alaagers. The good teaclia is not confentell-with* simply knowing • well those branches in which he is-to give ingirliction, 'bu,t keepss his-mind fresh, vigninus, and.growino. 43 , 'Studying eVer in advance of work./, If ho ,has to give instruction iu the First 'Hook of Euclid, he will do it much / be&r for having mastered the :Fourth. •If in ;Algebra he is reqiiired to take his piipps only as far as Simple Equations, he will do it far bett6r for having masterd Quad ratics and Logarithms. lie keeps\ ever. is advance of the demands . Made upon him. It is highly important tha,t •the teacher's mind be kept vigorous and ac tive by readinglind study. lie should read lle shonld read the biographies, and familiarize hiniSelf with the methods of the eminently successful educators - nf alkiges.; He should read History, 'Phil osophy, Literature, etc. Especially should ale make a careful' study of Psychology, or Intellectual Science. The,Main thing is to Iceep\ the mind growing.. Co into the orchard nd you will find that it is the latest grovi th of \ the tree that gives fruit. The oldest part? arc 7 nearest the' gron‘ucl,, Worm-eaten, dry and. bLizen. If you' would be fruitful as teachers, keep the \niind,growing,. - I lave \ hinted at the difli cnitiekof the teacher's N • t - kr k . There .is Woiderfill power in growth '`2i overcome ,obstalr, :*. remove hindrances. I have seen thtendec vino griming through rit , \ dead pal) si tik , n. 'Scientists havi. \expe rimented- wi i the ,pumpkin; and fciund that .using ita a fulcrum, and •putting upon it a long leer, With heady weightk hung upon it, tpurnpkin continued growing in . - spite of i heavy presl4)re. If there is such.power in tike griming pump .kin to overcome diflicutres, how much poweiis there in the growit4 minds of such, teachers as compose the Pond rd'Connty Teachers 7 .association. Mei e is wolniBnl philosophy in that exhortation' o 'aul. 7 - Grow in . ;knowledge." • • 1'1;1 Tile goad t i e:teller is a social and gen\ person. I have no 'sympathy whatever with those stiff, ' dignified, straight-laced,' pokerish teachers that -one sometimes Meets, wilt') ga.throligh their work as etun and sour as if they were marshaling, a funeral procession loaded; with vinegar, —who never look even sideways at you, and Who, it the should in an Unguarded Moment, condescend .to speak to you, do it in a matted monotone growl, do that you are glad to get a t way toescape getting bitten. From all such .deliver us. The good teacher manages to visit ;is frequent ly as'possible the homes of his pupils. Be ing a genial, social character, he soon gets . aiequainted with the parents a his schol, ars—enlisting their \ sympathy and CO'(:p oration. He gets wire fully acquainted with the dispositions of the children'. in this way. A romp with the children, and a cup of hot coffee with the parents, have a wonderfully warming indite:nee upon all cOncerncd, and, ii. some mysterious way send a gloW of love and spmpathy through ]tho hearts of these participating in, them.. YOu can open any mother's heart, and father's heart too, by a little graCious at to their children. ' Nor is it neeeS sary to hiss the 'little ones all, aroun‘l l , telling them hoW pretty they are, and' re marking that they bear a striking resem : blame to their 'minima: At school the good teacher is genial ,and affable in his Intercourse with the children. Ile" can be this atul'en.ill retain theit t .respect and his own authbrity over them. Pardon inn for . a 'brief reference 'to my Own experience fitat will illustrate this point. .I had in charge rtsehool, ono time - numbering nearly Ono - hundred selnAais of all ages and sizes. Theris was the, little- lisping I \liati I $2 per Annum In Advance. three -year-old, and there too,was,the prim and finical inaiden. lady, 'old 'enoogli to have been my mother, it not my' grand mother. When - the bell rang for rem* I was in for play'as well as any of thein. I entered . with zest into all the games of the. little ones. They swarmed around Me like 'beei about a hive. Perhaps I laughed and shduted as 'Ong law any any of then): 'Recess ovet all Iliad to do was to. say, "now,. .we.; have had a good time paying, let: us see hr .go6ll a time we ran, have working. tet„lts try. who shall to best and . accompligh most this session." Every one, ,yeuinf.t- and old; -largo and : small, was al quiet; and industrious •as • • •Yossible. • istied, inan- of our her, a . ;plyl4- That was all the trouble 'I had in goy e, ning that school. .That my pupils loved„ `ine , bad. ample . ptoof.. When flowei timo me, they' went far and 'near gath ering t most beautiful and fragrant flowers to. e found for theteachnr. If I had. beenpa ‘y . , yo - u would have been in • anger of mistaking me for Flora, . the . ga $ dess'of Howe had you entered my school s -room,. you erfight have thought it an' Hortpulturaj Hall.: When fruit time came; . nlies,' pears, , all kinds of fruit , mime pOuring in; Aso that my school•rooni looked like"-aPomologicallil. As an exercise I rex:piked theni to vr'to poetry, choosing their ow subject; and I ! I was ero theli of. their ikims. They I`kited r\ a mein seek glorious wore that modesty compelledrhe:to seek relief; 'and in -a`lit of desphir, after tiying, all other means to stop' their. milogistic•ilow; ; 6Old them to write a 1?i Pentastichn the Pen tateuch. It quieted .them, And et, my were . . ~- . Pupils always respectful lA You an hoof and out, wherever I metthem,. have the loVo . of •Yoar scholars and y, c ~e, retain their , respectful obedience, if you 'will. - I'know this is possible, . * ; .ged in or ex- . . The good teachet is Patient,= : Theleach7' er needs the',patieuce of Job. He . needs patience like that of Dr. : Howe; who spent months of his pre'dions•time in try ing to teach Ilio . ..blitl6leaf and dumb Laura Bridgman to •Yead, that 'hey dark life - might not be utterly joyless. He ntcds the patience •of that young man of master mind, who after being graduated froth Ilarvard,•tiud prosecuting his studies 'for four years in Germany, returned to his native country, and instead/ of enter ing the Many avenue - slo .we:dtb, position' and glory that opened before him,. sat down, Wrotdan:advortisemdrit, requesting that therdbe seuCtotim,the veriest idiot Unit ctould be 'found in% li the land. Wei dame at last, devoid of a lost e'vdry s l prisd, and faculty —a meye ma, . of ' nufsele,i scarcely, hunau, - That. you 4, man" 'took . 111 A position by'tli. , !side or that idiot, and labored for threezmonths: bef3re be evok- : .ed . the / shadow Of an intdlligent-tesponse from the -al4cist ' brainless' forth ,- before hint: Few , eil L iOu haVe, anything like- that to coateuOvith; but patience akin to that •d o, vett Weed in yOur work. ‘ - Let -pa , - - tience have het petfect work.' , " Do not Pr - onetime any child a "dunce?' at block head"' mull you, have faithfully plied him hi / every posSible way, as long, at least, as that young matt did the idiot boy Another ellaracteriti, of the ,good teacher is gentleness. I heattily endorse the resolutinn adopted, by- this. Associ. - i- Lion, this afternoon, fonehing this making the habitual use of idnu:sh guage and scolding" by the teacher un jawful, and enforcing gentleness in the administration of government, remargable fact that the .most mighty forces With which we' ate acquainted in nature, are l the silent, gentle ones. , There is . t.he force of gravitation, holding .xs'orlds out in-spue; and binding, them inseparq bly together into vast systems upon- sys ; temc with its giant grasp upon every ma• •terial thing,—,yet nobody hears, misees, or is - sensible of • thic . " Working of this' mighty •ag'ent. -Geologists tell us that the calm and •sileht indueniie.of the.,,atmos- - Phe . re is a power' mightier than the noisiet;.mcne boisterousrpowers of nature I coihbined. ' The 'greatest or all physical pqWers is the situbearn •/Itodrives the machinery of the wolid, :and lifts rivers rand oceans into the atmes . Phere, carrying them across the sky, scattering them over thqj face of theearth, in the form of rain, • .sziew, etc. Let but' the air drink in . a little more sunshine at one •Placei than another, and Oat of it bursts thed.Ornado . that sweeping on in'its funirtic wrath, de stroys everything before it : ; Yet the sun 7 shine - is . Sdgentle,that its. ray - ; fall more softly than the filmy snOwflaketrembling down through the air; 7 -so gentle, that a •strip of gollleatexposed as a target to is ,not stirred to the extent Of a hair's , breadth, though:an infant's . faiuteft hreatlilkonld set it 'in tremulous motion. Gentle forces are ml ht.y ip.nature, so are they iti‘the school•ragm. 'Gcutieness is. a; , .mighty rower in thelliatul of the teacher: There are few impifs,Wifo.cannOt be won Ly geNtle treatnieut, ';`.ioiricwhere lit this country, crone years ago, a rough-looking . - man brought his - gni:in° school, saying, .: '' I have brengl.t ,iityl)ov hAre, and wi:ntld like to see if 3=ou catt`,4. inything, with hini.Nl confess' , he is \ Mord than I can, ' Manage. Of 'all OW stubborn boys I kno • of \ ,'„he is the •worst."\One day .as, \ the'l ocher Was passing • -dew , b • the I . . \p 3 \, , desks, h laid 'his liand kindly, on the boy's sIUMIder; but the. ttd, .shiuldered • and Shrank from him. "What is OMT-it ter, Ilepryiskeil thci. teacher. •," I Thought you were going to Strike nie:',_, • "Why should I stria) you 1r! Because I , am such a had ; 'bay. ' :,` Who , sayS,. you : area bad bay"'':. • " : Cher says Ifam a bad boy, and Mother: sa3bk so, and every . one' says So." : "But you \croS not a'bad boy; - at lilast I.' think So; .an you can be. as good-a boy '"as any one.". The peer' boy's , eyes filled •with tears. Ile was not used to such kind words. From thakhour he began to be'a better boy, tiro{: a at •finer'estin hiS 'studies, and be time, t 4 most dutiful, loVing and earneit boy in . school. • Lie heetime ,a: great•and good, man; and not many 'years age was made • .Gnvernor of one! of our largest States., !lad. that teacher used harsh and scolding language, instead of those kind :and gen tle words; think - you would that boy have turned,ont as he: did?" I could - give an . instance vet y like this froni, my Own ex; ' perienee, excepting that my. boy has net yet become GeVernor. Ile gentle with your putiils. Treat them kindly. Do: 1 net scold them. DO•-not• be eorititnially finding. tank with theM and. their work. 'Give theM aWord of enceuragetant and credit for what more do.: Yipt can get im ~ I, s ely More oat of them by enconi- i agin and praising thent for What they 1 r au by scolding and fault-finding; A' word ut 'encOuragement front l ib kind-, heisited man, saved Dr. Adam Clarke, When a boy, from despair, and was the Means of making him one of the world'i - greatest scholars. Bo gentle, yet.remenv. ber that you must alio bo ilnn; and that your pupils must know thatin every in-'. stance, what you promise to do you will certainly perform. Never pet - Indio, of threaten to punish, but if you should. - in an unguarded moment, - happen,. to do so, see that . your promise is redeemed. Govern by. love. "Ile that rules by ter- • ror, doth a grievous wrong." . The good teacher is an inventive gen- Ms.' Ile runs not in ruts. Ho has no stereotyped way of reaching 'the child -mind. If one method will not do, he tries - . another. The teacher cannot be too in- . ventive- 2 -within.thelxiunds of 'the princi: pies of the," Science and Art of -.Eduds timr." Good teaelihrs artir4etliinsiasts: , They do not look upon their work es drudgery, , and pito it like !"dumb, driv en cattle,"'or galley slaVes. Their souls are iu their work. "They love their work„ 'and to it give their best-energies..- ' . - The teacher I have been trying to des cribe carries within him a determined purpose to make teaching . his life-work; Ile does not look upon teaching as a step ping stone to something higher. Higher ! What can one enter that is higher than moulding the future philosophers, states men, literati, ministers and presidenis of the nation,. and of the world. The teach er is already at the'top of thaprofessions. Yet, young gentlemen' thpver teaching' _ tothe profe4sion of law, medicine, theolo- - . .gy, etc. , And young leas; .mike teach ing a. stepping-stdne, to matrimonial bliss —sometimes; -however, it , proves to be matrimonial blister. ~ The ladies aze,more excusable, for they simply pasi.s out of a': . lamer 'into a smaller Scluiol - .j Stick to four work, teachers, : They say it takes a man at least-ten years to learn how to _ preach. If this be so, it must take a mall or woman fifteen ortwenty years to learn how v. ,to leach . We heed in these days,2 men and women who - areready to conse crate their Hiles to this . work. I bare my head, and can bow very lew to the man, who like our .worthy Superintendent at • my left, and' our excellent President at ny right, .have taken . up the work of teaching for life, and who is . centented to gritv old in that work, and die with the harne , \ s...ni. Stick to your work—stick to your wo - for life. I would. shout with - the etnpha. is of an earthquake, or torna do, if I coul( .ISTICK TO Fait won): •The good teacher, in addition to all Ithig, N is one who )11S made the - character ; • \ , of t.l\Great- Teacher his study and model. llis life is lhought 'to some - "t de gree at hmst under the ransforming, ele-. wilting aii(Nivingintlnen e of the life of our Lord Jci . ...Pirrist. Iflaot influenced by that life to th degree of piety and de- Notion.4the tea,e,ei should at least, in, view oflrhis dillicultd respOnsiblework, be brought under tlie\Ctistly influenoe ''.. sufficient to fre4im' fronLail immorality and irreverence, : Other things being equal, the best4eaclPer will; be fon ad . to , be.the one mo s t fully devoted -to lehrist.: But taken all together, do not these re quireznents place the standard too high: , for the great mass of te.ichers? Is not the ideal high, even for t o ile leaders and commanders in the great Ormy of 'educa tors? Is ithecesiary that the elementary, . —the common-school teacher—aim at re alising the ideal? ,I• ' • ti UMBER 7. Let me reply in the language of one of . the foremost' educators of this t age, slight- ly changing the words for the sake 4f i r .adaptation, and adding to them when 1 necessary : Whatever may be done in the . 'ease of these children who are somewhat''' advanced in their after, and - who haVO ..- • J. . - some extent at least learn4i how to learn, it is most of all importantlhat in the be= ginning of instruction, and in ,order. to ;- gain the most fruitful results of that 417; Istruction, the earliest teacher should be' .• the possessor - of these qualifications: o;, - notion that any ono ia- good enough - tg'.l. teach young children_ is all , wrong, and most disastrous ,When ...acted'. npoll.. In ~ tie district schools, and in the primary ~, departments of . .our higher schoolk — We i:.. 'need the verrbest teachers that can ,be seyured. - Letthe standard 11e high, and i the remuneration also, and there will be 'no difliculty:l We Should take a lesson - froin the Jesuits," who in iheirpunous -- schools, when they found a teacher Show- ' fug real skill and knowledge in teaching the higher classes, piomoted• him to the ..,.. charge .of the lowest . . There. was a Wise and keen insight into human nature in - this. Wbetherj the child shall 'hive or 7 bate knoWledge—whether 'his fundamen tal notion of things shall be clear or . • cloudy—whether he. shall advance in his course as an intelligent bang, or as a .- mere inachine,hetifer he shallatlast, leave school stuffed witir - crade, undigest; , efl.gobbets of knowledge, or possessed of knowledge assimilated by'his owirdig,es* tion, and therefore- a.. source' of mental. . health and strength,—whether he shall lean; atrophielf, Weak, destitute of the ' po er of self-government and self-direc tion,\ or strong, 'robitst .and independent - in 'thought and action--clopends Almost . altogether onthe, manner im which his ' earliest instruction is conducted, and this again on j the teacher's qualification and etliciezcy.l Place, then, your ideal high; and feel that you have never reached it. Keep it floating ever ‘sibm'a and beyond' ' you; and though faintpftentinies, still Ife_ pal suing. -Iris all :important- that those who are called to this work", should have" stritable..ViawF: of its magnitude and ohli- gations. 'Aff iniskiliff , il sculptor may spoil. a l'llock of marble, an unskillful physician may damage a. mortal - body; but 'an un:- skillful teacher may ruin forever an- im- . mortal Mind. ' ' - .' -. . . • I wouldAike •to say inore;.btit I am: afraid that you will. - be reminding your remerebrancerthat a good speaker knows whento Stop: I will only add : Go forth tO.your noble, difficult, resp9Mdble work.. solenui trust is.! collimated to. Your charge. Our jeivel#"we place in your, hands. Their minds .you are to train; theiCcharacters tire , form. The :thoughtful the greatest••power 'among inetaand you whoge vocation it is . :tO train and ftirnish it, are they who are to give shape and cohir to the destinies of the World. 'Go; - and remember 'that you shall ever bare • our warmest sympathies and most'varnest prayers. Go; and may God bless atUllielPlyou in your great al bor of love. • - ' A LITTLE felloWleho wore striped stock-, lugs Wag asked wliy he made barber-poles of his 14s. • his pert reply was, "Nell,. ain't I a little-shaver'?'! . \ .- • • A\ki . .Eastern - man, in ...writing to his friend of his marriage in Califorhia, thus terly ckesnribes his • bride : . "She has a head as ktd. as-a woopeckey's, and owns sheep uritikein can7trest:" LITTLE . SE:IE., looking at some pictures of,winged angelli, exclaimed : "Mamma, I don't want to bean angel.", -- " Why not,, I` Leave Off all my - Pietty chithes, and -w..ar feathers like. a hen • " COUNTRY girl wroth \lto her lover: "Now, George,-don't ynti fllio "to bu 'the singing-seliool . wrote baok In . iGis bright Iti*lcou of youth—VVoresitcr'ti•:-Alaiiri,' wcor4 .. tt4 tale,'"