_ . . • - •-.•S • : . , ' .' 4 •i • : - - - - • - .1. , --• :1 - •,, - f: - •-,. -- • -..-..' '..-' --..:'.•..'- •-•.:: _ 7 . • i f:,':.• •- . 4 . . . . ‘• . . i!i - - ~ . . . . . - . . . . . ....,....... .......,_ ~,,..... ..... .. ...... 1 . , . • • . - . • • - • ....-.-,.. —4 . - ~- _ . ; 1 1 .'• •,., , ~ : -., . ... ~ -. , , „..„ ....-" ~ ,'''. ~.) &1 J . 53 • - i,l - :;•':_:: . ;..,: i ', '-:;: i..li :... ...; , : , •_: ::1 . . , ;,,,;' . : 14. •_ .; - .. : ,.. ;: rt:7 „:,,,„': ; " ., :t .t - ... f1 t :,, 1 -• , ..; -'. • " f a - .....- - • :•.:. . . .. ~ ....„ _ . .• . .. 9 t 11 . 2.' % i . ,„ -: :•_. N . 'A . •-•- I 411.- - Z. "E' ... ... :,...0,..., a ~,•• • ;;... •••• .: „ 1414 • .• -.., - .--• ,• . . • . _ ..... . •„ . . 0 - . ;.-.,..;;!.;,... ,-. • ,; ,„:. , . , _ ~. •, , . „:.. ti,..,,..,„:_ ~,, , ,•..,,,, „.., •• ... . ... . . .. .. .... ~ .:7: . ; • . - '.. .• . . . , .. „ • . '- . v. , '... • 1... - ' , 4 . ,_. : :,: I ' Ll i ''''' .. l-i".-. '..,,•, ' '..---' !! :.)-'-'.. : -'- -.4.11410.1- . - • . , , ~. . . '. ' l c " ?*4111114111P . ' ~ ~... . • 1. . . - . ', ::,;1: .-.- 4 -f. , , - . '• . . . ... . , ' . ~ '1 ."!,. -I - . :-;•.' , ":'' .-- 11. .:',.: 'i.t - , - ..1:', . • " I ' . ' '.* .. -_' . , ' ' • I ' ' ; • '' j., •-- . . . . ' - •- • - . - • • - . , . - .. .. - , •. .4 . -, cor ;O:iiiiti.u., OUR BABY. At our house at home, we've a tweet little bi bp As fit ae apoon in the fall d- And for, , misehipf;fun muSie;or whatever it may 4 e Of brats ite's the ge nil oral) ! With cheeks 4t li twit roses. , The prettiest noses , i Endeared to our Sios,es, ; -By ever); fond tie; ,1 • . In fair and. foul weather, He serves us a tether, 'To bind us together— my Betsey and I. : . From morning. full blossoraed,.till night draws her curtain, `His means for imploymentne'er fail; . And though hushed be - his gabble - of tnusie we're certain, When he drags the old cat by the tail. Now c.alling, and - bawling, • And falling, and Sprawlin g i - - And mauling, and squalingl At work - and at Play ; In dish-water-paddling, i • Or-Jowler paeksaddling, Or about fiddel-fuddling, - 4 "110 passes tire day. This' his third year is ended tiis present Sep tember; He equal to' any tt fire; - _ At two, he could poi on' as wall, as I remem ber, • As the best shouldered striker' alive; In consideration - • . - Of his qualifileation, I. • I'm in contemplation Of pliking him where H All the Mrs. Deneans, i - And all the Mrs. Flun,kinis Will say he's some punkins— , Arid this is—' 'Ens nun." - There's 'naught can escape hiS minutest inpec. r tion, ' ' l / 4 . . Displayed on the toy-seller's' tiOantis ; \Aid he helps himself-too, without fear of deter -1,1-, ' ' thin, , ' To the nicest the pantry alTmds. - '• He's just in condition • . TO. meet competition, • At the grand exhibition, • . • The ronge,'lwith lice eyes 7 • Tlicre's one thing—depend oal ' To make aquick end on't, Ithe can iav hand mit— I/ ri talc , Om. .pr ize. isaaantints. A :Madera Dictionary. ' AttOrney—A. Man who rescues .your for tiiine.front an-enemy,an,d keels it himself.. , I • ;' Belle- 7 4 -modern i nsu t titian '.; made . up of silks, whalebone Sand nonsense; a walking sign for a milliner's'shop. . .! ' . - - • ~..p,,, Critic—A large d?z,. lat. gOes .about un chained, and barka` at very thing that he does.not comprehend:\ : I - . • • Distant Relations— eople- who imagine they have a right - to rob you if isou are rich, and insult yOu ifpoor. • - - .. i - _EditorsPoorly paid men 'elle tend the machinery of government, but, get no credit \ .• for their labor. - . , 4, , . Friendship—A: shadow that ticks to you in the•suishitie of success, but leaves you in the darkness of faiftrre ; it is usually measur ed be dollana and, cents. . Honor-=Shooting a man:thiannit the head * wlwina 'you despise and late. - Matrimonv;---The gate throng!) : which the happy loverle,sves his euchanto regions, and returns,to earth. Nobilitc—A. race of pi.o . ple who are never minced When they die. -- - . ObitneryA -place in• newspapers. where virtues are disetovered in dead I people . . that they were net known to hare - pessesied when in life. -.- Physician—An unfortunate indirldnal,who is much abused because he -imnnot,..recOncile . health with intemperance.. TruthAß article 'so rare that some.peo ple are - ettremely saYing.ot: it. • Young Lawyer—A .ttsclelti.. member of so ciety, who often gets where he ' :has nobusi ness to be, because he has no bosiness where he ought. to be. • •. -1 - Too Tact.--:firs: intyirs a true word \ *hen tie .. (leleribei the edn_cation.of the "young gentletneti.ao ladies" of the riAing generation anion - g the' fishianahl4 its utterly devoid of corritnostf.ense;--sillinti only linden- cr is to mental weakness and physical decay. She says: .6 . A piing gentleman--a smooth faced stripling--wit!' little breeding and less sense, ripens fa 4, and believes6hinreif a'sice young man. Fle_clieivs l and inmkes tobacco swears:genteelly, coaies ,ein . hr'yo imperials with, bear's grease, twirls a rat4tin,speilds his father's money, rides fast .horses--on !wise back and in sulkeya—double anfl 'singe:-- drinks Catawba; curses,, the Idaine law, ;and flirts with 'young . ladiei,' hundreds of which are just like himself:l . lloo'of different gen der • and this is the fashionable ediMation of our day. The fathers nrid mothers'bf there' fools were once poor, Good fuitime:litc; •en them , abundance. Their childien will run through an inexhaustible fortune' 'in a few years, .atid die in the : - poor-hotise. 'Parenrc, you ari t ;responsible rtir this folly. Ser Your.. sons lad daughters to work, and let know that only. ,in u se fulue-s there is licit - or - and prosperity." Tam, man biR neither of them, very "well:ittforin. -t .i,:vi o • L .. / C roa.is and their use, elt:lflt e.l one .lay to- a t work in a field ne4r s :rail-rold travic. roads were ioyel 1141 t u tion r 7', to them, no.l whoa a train ofilars4int. hr, a . thought: wa4 ettgge.lad the.lati, Who toild to -his pareni A' Dad, tilts tdtms't you take a ride, In 'be tart, aoute'. a •,• • - - "Take a tide , ii , oo,o 2 lTs t 'Whyt got time, my.son": s " Gat timet • Thunder V. Ye :can go' any whets in the Cars quicker thin ye can stay at home:" • .. .[Eroni toe Kitiekerbeek-4 ill laxine..] '---. • • The : . , 11,14rIerer,p1 . 1C4chard Dowite. 'lleailerl - s ,lO ypa. kuOW. . ' who Richardalturder ;4 Pows Or ,4,18 - a :fear/el ; Atiti:. tjon, to.-aii4r,: but some say. it must . be .. answereli.f not br f vup of the l guilty ~ parties merely,but by, and ,of them. l'be story . ts,ett tir:elv.autlientieand recoriied• is the a i chieves lof ,St7tutish s;,:tt ,of learitipg: menti o ned ,be low : ' ..- ;; =-' Abou*,q - e enil of the - :eigliteenth eentnry, whenever at Tv student- of the i Ma 6,4;31 - Colege, Aberdeen; : . 'otiatntittc,ut - red the displeasure . of:the linnil! ‘.. 6i ilztn,,,, 4, was i,tsstijed . with the, eues,i6:l • Who mOiclerect IZ;chard DOw-. hie P . Rep ~• and rejoinder generollv brought. • Una collissi ,, tt: hetween 'Town and ,Gown,'• 1 altheiiglikth young geu,lemen were ' acoused' of: what - .W: ,chrouolOgieully iniposlible.---, People - hay, a right to the angry at :being i stiguatized : s' a murderers, when the aceu- I sers have Py .. liability on their side; but the i ( taking oll', of Dowsti occurred When the ' gownsman; i maligned, I %ere ill swaddling clothes. ', •• - . -l• . 1 i ..But they, was a. time ttii . be.branded as on ac 1 complice n theslaughter of IllotAttn Dow-. ~..q. made L ie blood Jun . Iti„ the cheek of many a yO iii, and sent Itim home to his books't hue fitful atiti subdued. • , , . Downie i as s:ierist or janitor at•Mariselial• College. ';titte i 4if his duties ciinsistett in..se curing the `=al e li a cetinin hour, peeVious to which 'al I he, students, had to assemble to the cumin:A WI, whele a La:in An ayei was 'delivered Illt the . principal. %Vile; tier in ..lis, eitargiter 'tl is funtli ion, -: I )u,% tlie was mote r i g id than lisvpit4let.itv , iiot in olliee, or wheth ether hi.t lie , .tine strie‘er in the perfortnatree of .it at one line than anether,, cannot now .be ascertain d ; but, the - le:can -.,be no .douitt that he el :'ed the gate With austere punctu ality, and 4 nit those who were - 'not .in the common lin !-within a mitinte of the pre!erih ed time 'we -lath out; and were. afterards reprimatnn2. and tined bi.- theprinei pal and and profess; •?..- The students - beinttne in i ta ted.at this - ' : trietness; and took every. petty me:ins of an t oying the sacrist ;'he' in.. his' turn, applie' the serows at tithiSrpiints . ..of'ae- adentie rout ne, and a fierce war soon began to raze bets e on the collegians.and the hunt ble fnuction trv.. Downie took-care that in all his pei.. .ro di n g; he kept within the strict letter.uf tht law ; but '4lis opponents. weie C -• not: so caret' 1. and the d'esiotts of the rule were unifelivly ag i nst them, and._ in favor o t' Downie. litplitintip:s and tines having failed in pr..triteith due ..!..nlTordmattun, rustication-; .Aullen:ditn, Ilmi even the; extreme setcen4:e- of I . expiii,ion hid tai be - put : in force; and, in the en d, 1 3 • N nr il!. order pr tailed. t. O Biala secret H .1,.:1 - aly vutige cotti4t . tit , tl to be entertain ed apiniu. I i 0:‘ ki,e. ,Vnliotii se,bernes. of rt!, ,-,,, g , ‘ve4!. : ItOlight of.; I).)4nie i,:t s . in ei•intima with .the'teaelters and t h e ta t ! Ir., (...fj.. 14 ,- the, leisureof the' ,1 1 .irt New ear::: I.neairtni : the pleargite I,c ing 110 don! greatly greatly enitatAcoil 1.% th e aitnitt.- aacei-iit al. ti he. It.ol liei-ti subj.-ined. - tlarill'•_r tkie lucent inekering:l• 7. ik hen: as he wa. one evening :-eased Aviih his fatudy ill'iti-' idiiiii-.1 residettee at the gate. a it:vs-en:44 it:bit:nisi him . that t •entlentan tt; it heiglibot ;dig ho:el wished to , sl,t: ak .%‘i th 'hint. Downiie idteied the: sumnp, i. and -W a ;• - . tti 4tered faun ue 1 room into at other, at, ;length he' found hituself in a '.u - gezipattnient hung with black and lighted i ]iy a solitary a xuwile.. After wait ing 6ir. si..antO:inie in this strange Mace, about flirt. Et•ftires,:ii.o die-w al in hlack, - and : . wilh black their facrts, . presented tlfo.m.:el yea. 'The): manged itheing.elve , s in the: form o f a court ;:,tt.f. Dowrftei waa gh - ea .t.O• i tinder• stand that h•; wag, abopt`to lie put nrion al.• A judge i ok hi. eat ' , .at the beneh : clerk.and Itti die prosecutor set below : a' ju , rywasempadhsl: and' witnesses and spec tators stood l t arothid..: Downie •at first set dmra the wligde allakOrs a j•lke but the pro wet+ cowitiefed with such p e t a ls: e l gravit thati. : I .h cof hi in -elf, he began•to believe in . ...hit, :relit:mei uitssiun' of the- trttfiti trildawil.' read ;an itidiettnent, ellargiaglliai l w:th,coaapiring against the lib erties of the S,itidents witnei•:ea 'were.exatnizi e4 in due foOri the ..t,prildie, prosecutor ad droi-edithe jar;; and the Judge suinmed Up.- '., 'ti • ...,- . (ientlenurt.' said Pown:e !;. the - joke has - -been stirti'eti!far . eiettigh . ; it j.s- . get ung . -Late: anti Inv' wife;: nd faniii - y-a ill - be at Ni.nlS il4(iilt. i me. • .if Ihi !.e . Vu') been stx ter wi t 1 . 1 you in Ii in..: v 4 ,4 li‘ JU ~i0rII;f01 - it; awl 1 -as , tirt.t 3 on l .A+. ill take 1 . tre care in fttinte: • -.6 , ..ntlenniu of the:Jury: said . the J:l'ige.. without. payit:4 , .in sliuliwtt.attelition' to tats alt . pti.:4l..equ'Ver • yo4r veYdit..tt.: if y o n ig iN ' t t lo retire, du l o .' , : - .. . ..- .. . The Jury itretireil.. • Diti•int; tfteir• . nitseinte Ole Most. pre,titsd• -iietine w :as otsetve.! : i.ityr. except !he 1''kt111,... , ; it(" the e.;tolller iltt; It at 4 beside the ja Ige.., there was not the * .. sligh .ev. tnovritnent... - - " - - - - ~.. The jury n i tuthel' :and - re:.o - trle 1' a verdiil of ' GUILTY r '.• - . -11 1 i•r fl . '••-• ' l. I-. 41 k , . ut ; ,e..4l,ettin,) .I...tintet a :lige , iv ezip,, And add , r ....-tt, th e Ile i , .ttlig . t . • • .. • ~" Rie hard 1 'ni'i mile ! M l'l'e itiry having iinin itnotisly foiitd • V,o,a 'gni! y..tif ''enuitftirittj4- itgaintil, the.1,i.,i,., lilier:t v :OA intinnnities (.4* ..he students . of -•:3litri;-eltia . o,ollege.- . .You : • Inite warifOny prOi, .tke , i . it'd insulted :Owe in Of- : 1 1 f e nsii.e lje4es ,ur -sqtis: - milli; )j antr -u pirii- , iiili!titit will I.Oreivile,i,otillidit. ..Yini init.: - prey:oe' fOrd ' t . it 1 - ‘, - i ln, fifteen ' min tt tet thr:., ienteuee al ; , tonrt will -biy caitied into - ef• feit.t.t •... I- ! ''- -: * ... • • • The' - Judie '*phiti . l:l; his waieh -on the hentdil A .6'1 0 ,4 ; an i i_ . !!‘ :1!;:ita Lair, of saw doss . . ~,.i . r e, 'brought iiitii . 'fie`i!eni, - re - of the Ilion): ti lite. itiore - te4" le . t lia'n . n tiy .- I hat.. had . 41 , N : t it eit earn. fiii* i•d, and ' Itieparkl to at,[ the ikiir . f. - .!r , 11690 . ...et: ' i- • . -.' . .•:' ' , • -. 1 • ' It . ':v is ttoirtiti , t; ini;,iiii L tlit. - flora. 'wt. , titl - - ttitt.l ituiiitt • tii; , ,e,v ii i :; - • oininons tiektiiii‘_;of . ....,. . tht.t'jit'l , re fti* : -..i..i!4•1'.. A I.) , ..p4ti r ilie betfAme, '-saliva. lf -p1 sow.: All:aie -, (1.' .-'.. - • .'-, ,', . t - : I.t'' . ~g, . .... ... .: 4,;; : . . 4 1' , "'t 4 1 if ! ': ' ,l l' , f , ;:k ,, '.ontlf•lnen,' said Jlat ter riff, ti w an; 4 iqf 3:(...i‘,11 , .(ne.i- I firtouli,;e that t , r,,, jr _n;-yer •tir:ti; .1 ...1i:5i - II:IV : 46 .:C.titiie for cern: lhin' " - 1 .1 '. - ; ' ... •11e18 pi . i r ii,. , ;t, 1 ? 1 t qnn iktyl the. , judge, V.,11":4rP saiti , V „ . l :4tlikl.itle efsw inoitteilm 4. 1 1 N t ;VA left V O O ? )1 - 6 iit l i; ' You 'troll* tile 1i3n44 . i.f i11i.;41 wain” (.4.lnititli y4in ,, ,1ifC..., No liunian . p-wer can .4irc pin . ', l At' tempt •to tit ft.i , .1111., f:r, r, you ' arc - , seized; aii,l yon r- floi•nn- ...nitlrl.o - 'd ,I;nfore von it:l n spier antl - tor l Ec-r v ,ine hele Prewlit..))f 4 ,,, w.1ie e .4 - klottirt inatli tn. , ;er t;,) 01 .- vest ,!4(_i jr. -te , H a Acf ,4? t lii : 4, wg:t 1 ; al: !Ire! *9 O WO t t ° !I (Iil : :,..!, )1 )t !frP"l!, ;.* Vi k‘ l;/. 111 4 '4 : 1;i; ll ' ' ti le .9100 41r1/14 . 1 . l .We Nlvfl1111101,40iiiill))!:•Wil weihwil 1110 PIT ,1 11 P.,Icti 6 ven ii? 01,0"Silit(1.L p"i e ,' pare, then, for,'_ la :, othei thee five minutes will be ellow4 ou—but no mere!' I. WEEKLY 3OURN4L-DEVTSTED TO POLITICS, •lik7S, 14`EilATU . 11E, hijIIICULTUU, AND - ". he.ttecurlunitte mati,.in an agony of dead ly terror, - ravtd and sliiiiled-for - itiefcY: the iriengeripaid'treed ft?•his cries. llis fevered; trembling lipsot hew moved '.as if in Oleat prayer;: for he, felt that. the briet.space hetween . ltim.and eternity 'was but a few : more tickings of that ominous watch. - •• • - .Now P - e*clainteil the iiidge. Four .l er,qn forward 'and .siezed Downie, on. Whose features cold, 'clammy sweat. had burst forth. ,They - bared his neck and made hint kneel before the •block. Strike!' exclaimed the judge. The executioner struck the axe on the door an assistant or the opposite'side lifted at the same ,irotnen a wet towel, !and struck it'yio lent l j Jierosq the neck of the recumbent crim inal.! A loud:laugh proclaimed that the joke had at last come.to ap end;. Mit Downie responded not to the uproar ious - merriment. • They-laughed again; but still he moved not. t bey. lifted him,and Donie was dead Fright had pled him as 'cffeAually as. if the axe of areal headsman bad severed • his head from . his body. i It Was a tragedy to all. :Th medical stu. dents ttied to Open a vein, but-all ,was over; :find the conspirators had now to bethint; themselves of llafety. TheY pow in reality st‘tw n au, oath among themSta*ves :and the at = 7 ftighted . otnk men, carryinz their disguises with theM,lefti the body of bowlau lying in the hotel. One of theirmunber told ,the landlord that their entertainment was not over, and that they did not wish th'e; individual who was left in•the'room to be dlsotibed for some houni. This was to give .them tilt time to 6- , en e. Nextfmorning the body WAS e found. dieittlmtptiry Was instituted, but. no sasisfac-: tory result cou(d be arrived at; The corpse of poor •Dowtde exhibited no marks- of, rio fence internal ,r external, ' i . Th e ill- w ill 1 )e twirtrthe:Ftwints Yb . rts , known ; it was also known; that, the qudents. find hired apart- , mews in the hotel for rt• theatrical represen ration Downie had been 'sent for by ibetit hut hevond thi,t. nothing 11 . '/151 known..r !mist% hnd been' Iteard.a nd no proof of mur der could ab.luoed. Of two hundred sttt• de'nts of the college : trio could point out the . i-ruilty or suspected fifty • :Moreover the Flu dents scattered over the .etty, and the sriza,:gis traits thevzsetref bad many of their own fam-. Hie,: among the, number, and it was not red(' to go the lob minutely. DowxlE's 'widow and family were provi de.) for,. and hisslaoghter remained a myste- . • ry : ab . o!it-tirto . en *Tears' after its .oeenr--, ranee a gentletn-tti,on his death-bed disclosed the whole Partiqularl, and ayow,td Ititn , elf to have belonged to the obnoxiimS eltots of stn•- +Lents who murdored Dowxtr.... -' W,t reaion to flotlbt '.tlyrs last part or i i ; i ra ph . We are 34Nnr,a, rri 5.f.i.3 is ki infra in. ,Anirrira, there % but On‘- p•r.on who re3l-' Iv en , rilii:int of 1 11:ie fats in the vase: and that, man i:—oirrlti69rmant.- , Among' tiro Mancoffendors whose tratne:s were Mon titnledi in iltc course of ilre-e.iirritri t ri e s, was one•who . stood alone unappioaetrod in guilt and o,farny, and . wborn big-s anti tories were equally -willing to leave to the ex treme rigor of the. law.. On that terrible day which w a s strve4eded by the Night, the roar of it grew :City disappoin!ed itf itc revenge. had .followed Jeffreys, to the drawbridge Of the Tower. lair im . prison men t wag not strict ly:legal ; but hel at first acctlned withlbanks anrl h! ess ino the Protectioa which tlare &it k walls, made fatri'ote by so i many crimes and sorrows, affordeti Inin against. the fury of the: multitude. So+, however, he became sensi-, ble that his life ftva.4 still in 'imminent:peril. • Fora time Mattered himself with the . , hope that a writlof habeas . corptes would lib-. orate !lira from confinement,. and that he should be able. to . steal to some foreio'n . country and to hide himself with part of iris ill-gotten wcaltlifroin the detestation of man kind; but, the _government wassettled,' tio.:re was• no court competent to grant a writ o f .hdbcos corpus;; rind, as soon as the govern ment :had been settled, the habeas corpus act was sti.pended. Whether the - legal guilt of Murder could 43 .brought Kittle to Jeffreys may be doubted.i : But he was tnbrally guil ty_ of Et) many murders, that-if there had . been no other way of teaching his life, a retrospec tive act of tat:l4l(ler would have been clam oroir,ly derrianded bs the tiliole ,nation. A di4position'to trifimph over the fakir has nev er been one of-dire besetting , &ins of.English inn ;, but the' 14red of- which Jeffreys was the object was, wjthout a parallel in oar his tOry, and parteot but too largely of the saV agetiess of his :toile nature. 'lstrepeo'ple, wijere he''was :concerned. were ; L , s , c : rne .; 0 4:1tirns t ilf, and exalted in his misery as he had been ,air..mstonied to exult in the misery ofconyiks lis'utiter tit the seivence . .of death, and of ',fathilies r•lad in 'mourning. The - rabble congregated before his deserted mansion in Dnke street, art 4 road on idle dohs ; .with shouts: Of 4141411 kti, the bills which annoirriced the tialc. Of his property. -Et . en delicate women, who bad tears for hight4y -111111. and hoes+ eakers, breatirid - hurt:vengeance :against' him. I The !mooting on him which %ire hawked about the town -were distinguished by an atrOcity rare even lir those days.: natig,ing wonld be too mild a deatit tor.hirn ;''r `grave under 'the gibbet - too r. spec:allo alresting:placi!; he Might..to -b e rollare'i arc Indian ; ho ought to ;be -.let oared alive. • •; ' . ••••. The. street 'poets portioned j 'out all his joints trim eauntble fer4city,. and _Computed bow, marty , roand: . 4 of. :leak : miglil.The cut Trout' his_ well fritteue,d,carcass. Nay,- ‘tht-, rage of his 41e-trues wayssttoh l that, in . language Veldorn heardju lEnglaadi they prot:laitned their wish _ tiny, he Might go to the place of wailing and :grothing ofteetl4 .to the worm that never! dies, to the fire That irs,neverlitenclutd. -They exhorted I7im to-hang liittutelt:lll A nd to cut iris; : v'fiat With , Ilia - They , tent up horrible pr,,ayers„ . that„lity targrit.:.not•-oe able . to renew, - .and might 'die, the fiji . th e ___lte! s l iip4rlo , wicked Jeffreys, that had jiv e r). Ilia as ;item) in ariver,,itr_ as in.olent and iiditinckika r sju ospet ity, ri tido , ; the !old lorpubiic,,ahlitirrent!e.— Ilis constit bad, and . , mu c h inipair e si ,by . „mtetttperanes, .wa.s :completely Molten by distressinud lie was tormented, py . tt arne) internal'Ais , 1 4 80 , most skillfukit , urgeoal--44htit 4%6 . 1.10 re, sitilium able, trk.ndieve.., -was left to Et;ettivhen.he . ,llad •1 Cale; to try mid ipoooils to - attend; :he luid.! .;Sttsquellauna, tuanta, Venn'a, Cliarsball 27 185,1 E , The q.a i paps of Jeffreys. - . , .. . I se!doto .gone to 'bed solver` Now, w h ew h e l had Mating:to oenopY his;:mind, alive terrible I recolleetions- and terrible •. - forebodings, he abandoned himself without reserve, to his, fa.-.• %%trite vice., ,Many..heiieved . • bite do be. bent on shortening his life Ity - - c.eesi. lie thought it better, theysaid. to go ifr in'adionken . tit titan to. be hneked . 'by. K tch,'• or_ torn limb from ilia by4fte•popnla e. . ~ . .• . I n .Once he Witt TOtaed fro : a state: of abject despondeuey:by an•agreetfble sensation, spee; dily folloWed by a mortifying disappoint Meta. A. parcel had been- left for4titn at the Tower: It appeared to be a, barrel iq' Colchester es ters, his ; favorite (bottles: He . Was greatly moved; for there are moments When those . who least, deserve affectton are pleasedto think. ,t hey' inspireit, " Thank God," be ex,-, clainied, "7 haVestill.so* friends left r He 'opened the barrel, and fro ii among a heap•Of shells nut unabled'a stou ihalter.:i:, ~: : • ! • It does not: a near that : Lone •Of the;Antter ers or buffo-ins whom he, tad eitriehedAnt of the plunder . of hi 4 vie:in:4l eatne'to - confort him in the day of tronble.:l 73111. he - was not left in utter solitude. . JobaTatchin, whom. - , . he .had•sentenced to tie fla gged every fort *night for seven years ; mar e ins way into the Tower and presorted- hit self .before the fat- lot oppressor. -. Thi6 - r• Jidfrevs, humbled to the dust, behaved with abject rlzeility, - and called f or m in e . "I am glad, gir t !' he said "to see you." " And I 'ant -glad,' the re. sentfdl .whig, " tosee yonr-lordship . in this place." " 1 served . My inater," said ,Jeffreys, "as I waS bOand- in conleience: to do,"-- "Wher e was yOur corDcieU'ee," said :Tntehin, when. you passed that venianee on Meat Dor. Chester?." "h was set deWn in my instruel tions,"- - answeted Jeffreys, fawningly, "that: I was to show - no mercy tojMen like you, riett of parts and courage. NNitten-T Went . back to conrt,•l was ril . primanded !fOr myllenity." Even Ten...hitt, aerirnon O us as Wag % his- nu tore, and great-as were hi wrongS, Reins to tu have been a little olliti II by the - Bitable t,. speetacle•whiell be had a .first contemplated with vindictive pleasure :ife always denied the truth of the report th?ti - he was the per -1 son nho sent. the ColeheSter barrel -to. the Tower. • A more henevolent.man; 'John : ,Sharp, t h e I . excellent p e ar ) of Norwiel4 forced, hi in 4.. If to I visit, t lie pi - isoher. -It wai a'painful . task. but ISharp. had. been treated by 'Jeffreys, in old times,. as. kindly a- it. , ask in the, ',.na,ture of Ijeffiqs to treat anytiOdy and had once or t twice been able, •by ratlentiy waiting until I the storm of curses and trive'etiet4;: lied spetit- Lir.: e lf , and by dextrously s!eizino• the ot;tment !:_ l! - 1 f gend humor, to obtain for. unhappy fami -1 lies - some.nutigation of their Sufferings. The I prisotier was surprised and iideased. -What I" I said he, "dare you knOWti, ~‘ now- r' - I,l_ It was'in v..in, luiv. - re-.'eil that the amiable . fdivine tried to - give'a F.:th.Liitry pain to that ! 1• -eared, tonseience.... JelleVs, instead -of ac -1 know ledgine• his guilt; exeralmed vehement- Ilv against the injustice r - t*ttukiml. " Pee ple call Inc a riurderr - tyyl doing - what at I the time was applauded Ibe some who ate n hi,..1 1 in' poblie fay , :r: They call :it-) a i, ,ow r oreakar Ite...tust I tabs - mei. to relieve me - in :.iv agony: he would not admit :that, As : Pr, , ;id e nt of High 4 ..otninission, ha k bad ;'slur,::ht‘viii:nz that rbeser 41 *reproach. Ilis 'H•,011,.t.gu,.5, he sr.i!r,,,ivereithe real eriminals, Lariti now they thre'w. all tire', biatine on him.—, I He spoKe with peculiar aSiierityofSprat,.who had undoubtedly been the most humane and :moderate member of the titian!. - ~ It soon beentne clear Ilea the wicked ' judge was fast sir;king under the weight .of bodily and mental suffer: 'lg. Dr. dohn.Scort prebendary of Saint Paul's' - st - -. clergyman of great sagacity, and authOr of the Obtistian Life,a treatise once' wi,lely renowned, was summoned, piohably on the . recommendation ,Oflris intimate friend Sharpi, to - •the bedside of the'dying mar.. It wt sin vain; however, that Scott spoke, as Shari} hail already spo ken. of-the hideous . hncherles of Dorchester and TanutOn. To the las't jetfreya 'continued to repent that those who : Ithonght: --hiM cruel did not know what Als orders were; and that he deserved praise instead Of blame, and, that his elZenency had drawn rin)iina the extreine displeasure of his master. , - -- • Disease, assisted by strong drink- and ?nits err. did its work fast. • The patient's stom telt rejected all nourishment. He• dwindled in a few weeks : from a portly mid - even cor pulent man to a skeleton. '• On. due-1 Bth cif April hedied, in the forftsfirst Year or I,i, awe. He had beeriChiefJuStice of the King's Bench at thirty-five; and.,l7,Ord Chancellor at thirtv.-smo. In . the whble - historY ef- tite English bar there is no Ogler instance of so rapid an elevation, or - of ;so terrible a fall.-- The emaciated corpse ,was• ;40, with all pri, 'vaey, nextlo the corpse Of. Ifonmotith irk the chapel of the Tower:—FrOr4 Ofacoli .7 His tory V Englund. ' !I . .1 - :: • ; I The fit!! of 3e:rOsalein. . . . Ono Of the mo , t f plenctil sketches it has ever b e en o ur ft,rtunes . to !peruse; is that by Croft'.- who, in Tone of - lij :works, thus .de setihes tlta fall of Jerti.gll . nti: -' - ' ~ I , • I "The fall of our illtoittions and tinkly city- was supern:ttural. . - Thp ileitruvtion 'pl the ethiquered: . was againFl the first.pribeipl i 'es of the it.untit p()tiey; anl, io the last liotti• of our national tetistanee, 'i.ll.lln . erheld Out of .fers of peace, and lamented our frantic dispo : sition - .t 6 be undone. . I.l4ithe deereo„ was gone forth froth a thighti4s:;!throne. .1) - uring. •the latter days of the • seige, - rt • liii4ility, to whielt that: of man was a'grain . of sand urthe tempest that drives.it .ott,O:vopoweretl strngth and senses.• Fealful shaiies;knd voices : in:the air; ijsionsstarOng us - fri - ait our. short and troublei3Ontii 'sleep ; I itaiV.l 'in - its . hiq49lis fOrms; Sudden death in tliOnidst .of 'vigor; the fury of the eletnents pt;' loOse 'upon:out unsheltered heads 7 —;we it 4 every ' terror : end evil that could 17eAet ..littinitit nature but es, t.ilettee, the tn'' sl piohaltl4.l:of 'n il , in a " city. crowded.. crowded.. with • farnishitifi,#, thp diseaktA, 'the wutinded and- the dead. 4i Yet, - thotigh' the et ree tit - were- covered wit 4 .unburied hod i es; every wall and _ I re.nch,l;Ots teeming ,with them.; though stx lintidrOjthotf , and.riPP*l lay liiingm - er the rampart and naked:to the , - . stin - -- - -•petitenbo camel. itot.;, r ot, if it had come.. :ftlienemy would harre . • I:4 n scared ttWaY. Pa Wthe abotninatioa.:4:o'dosolation4r ithe pagan . 'tutelar& Was 4e4.i ; ;lWltOr.e it ...W11:1 ln remain until the plough, htidpassed Over ;the ruins ofiernsalem. ,-." :—! li ' .' ' `On; this 'Mal night; no.4l l rin had.•hii heiii . .oillti'' piThiw; - Heaven anSd': earth 'weriln COntliet.":: :Meteors , buriledHi above , ' us ;. .:the ground shook. under, :okui feet ; the . . veleane Ldnieci *Vibe wind, hero. insArrenistaWe ,W.ate, and swept the living and '• ;die deid'i in iviiiii • '. - i ! •tvaidd'Atr inter 'the desert. • Weiteard•theliet-i; lowitg-of the4istant Mediterranan.• asifittO waters were,at ofit sidei, swelled by.- the•del-j ugd „ ._ The lakes and ylvers;spared,..and I dated the land: 'the . fiery ' sword shot oil to, told fi re. Thunder - pealed from' - every! qt+ter •Of Ate learens. "Lightning., 'in' • ' mense sheets, of 'intensity and duration:Altar turned the darkneeti into—more than day,-- , T witheriag eye and u rued froto,the ze nit 4 to the ground,and.niarked its.traek I forests of flame shattered the sin:nits: of I the; hills. ; .• -• - pefente • was ti nth g - ht the martal. enemy - had passedirom the mind. Our ; hearts quaked fear; but ..was to, F.ee•l the - powers; of I d leayen.shsken. •-All away the,shieltf i spear,:and couched before 'the .'deseend-' ,sierononseienee smite tens , • Our cries of remorse, 'anguish and hor-' lor,lwere heard '.-throrgh , the .uproar: of the I storm: W 9 hOsrled :to the eaveras to hide 1 us;~ we plunied -into the sepulchres ; to eseal , e I the wrath' that consumed ; we wOtild have buried'ourselvesunder the moin tai r s. i • • - :•' - • -• • : Il.knewAlte cause, the unspeakable Cause; and knew that the last hour olerime was 'at hand. few fugitive's, asionisdied.tv see one , man among mein not sunk, into the lowest . feebleness . of . fear .- ;reanie .- round me, and be sot:ila me to lead them , to, sonic Place P satity, li.such•wereluow to be,found on-earth: I _them onenlyl they .were- - to die,.. and couftseled . theM to die in the hallowed ground of the . `.They foirowed, :and -Tied thrOug,li the streets encumbered with . every 'shape of human suffering,to the foot of Mount 'Nlorialt. : Bat - beyond that, we:found advance imilossible. `Piles. of clouds, whose darkness wag palpable, eVen :in the midnight in which . we Istood, covered the holy hill. Impatient nal not be daunted by anything that man could overcome. I cheered my disheartened .batid, and .attempted to lead the way up, the :vcent. Bull had carcely entered the cloud,. Main I wai swept flown by a gust that tore thelrocks in flinty snow around me. 'And now cam the last and most wonderful Sig,a Altai inarkei .the fate of rejected _lsrael. • • !While. I lay helpless, 1 *heard the: whirl wind roar. through the , cloudy hill, and the 60)1' began to revolve. • A pale light, like that .a the'Tiaing, inoon;quivered.lin the edgeS .aral the .clonds rose' rapidly: shaping •thertir- 2 . atelorin_s of,. battlements and towers.' Tie Sounkor voices was -Ittard within„low and distinct, yet s'.tratigelv'swe e the. store . Iyrightened arid the airy building . 1 , 84, -tower on toil er,..and Lrittlement On _hat:' • tlethent. In the.aWe that held tis rotate, _we kndit and-gazed on this more than .nortal ,chilecture. that coMinued rising .and spread and glowing, With a serener light, 'still i•sof§ and silVery, •yet. to which 'the broadest moimlies.to was chin.. -At-last it .stood forth earth_ to heaven. the,collossal image- ..f theifirst. temple; of the building raised by : he wi..iest of men, once consecratedto the , vit-:zu e glory: . • ' Jerti- . alem saw the image, .and the'' .414 a that, in the Midst of 'llieir.despair„ as eenkled front it.. thousands and .tens of. tnid what proud renieMbrances there'] N‘'etle. But a hymn wa. heard that ! might 11aVe hushed the world beside.' Never feirt on int ear, never i on the. turnan - senses, a sound_ so tint;estic, yet so subdu' i i:otmelanchOly,vet grandner and command., The vast.portai opened,. and frrim it marched a 11!:it, such as mail had never seen before, ,u,•1 1 as ma n will nl.?ver see hilt miee again tholguardiati angel l s of the'ciiy" of. David I Tlnly came forth gloriously,"but with woe in all t heir steps; . the stars upon their helmets I dial . ;. their robes stained . ; tears . doWn thoir Cheeks Of celestial beauty. " Let toi:go hence." was their•song of sorrow "Let' us lience,".Was answered by the snl echos of the 'mountains. I" Let us go hence,".swell ed Ipont the niglit,!tO the uttermost limits of the iland. The procession lingered upon' the summit of the hill. -.The thunders 'pealed';' anal they •. rose at.. the' command, diffusing waned . over the extutnee of heaven. The cho mps vas heard, still magnificent,. and Melan chnly, until .their splendor was diminished to t brightness . 01 . 3 star.. Thesrthe der 14-Oared again. The Cloudy' teniphs.Was seatielrld on the wind, and rlarinesg,the mien. of thelrave, settled upon - 4erusaletn.- • ' rr iteriPet of the 4('oniity Superintend . ant of SOmp Ctranty. • • Puring - the yeritieuding .the - first of 1850, them have-bven operation' in.. Sus quelanna county,' iwo hundred and fifty-tour selKols. Oue• huil!dred and thirts . --tiv4 male tericlier.: 'and two hundred rind' tliirtrAeven female teachers have been emplofed. Aecord=. ing. to thie. report, there'' - are over nine ibi s:m(li sehoh . rrs. . •- Iri ..". sinumer females are einployed,andilieir ;il,irjies rangy© frotti five to ten 'dollars -per month. the tenclierl boarding with , the''.prO2 prietiors. • In %rititef', the:Salaries of feint lea range from eig,ht:te-twelite.ibillara,- and that of mules from fout4en, to imenty. Exiimiptv t ions, . and, .visitations—l. bare been! twii:o . tethielidistriet to exiunine tca,di ers; !have eX:ariiine4 fotir hnndred"Juirl three ;. have,giVeit'; three • hundrechthd :sixty"- siz tniporary certificates=--all-I-reeeiredfrOni the tiepartm9nt-: 7 -arid,perini,ts to._otborf.:;,b4Ve . 5h911.411115,t0 1 1 about ball of the schools, th, , pee`terl•-nearly all the selteeil Soiii ..f out:gond; 4ouses 'are grrA, plena. rintly I‘' , L.iiitetl, and tupplied -with out-:build ipgkinr-eeAssiry for. propriety. and 4luny of them are poor, . and . propriety and ette 1) ey. atrp, entirely disregarded.; but are• •grailoally beitig" r'es-pineed• . - bY better. - the snbobl houses lieretofore - lniVe' brien mastic boa by proprietoin the immediate. ••vinial. , ity inthe, preqent tiansition 'state, from to, ate n a, - !i.s . tem,, proprietors...ern not . c1i : 41, - OsiA to b u ild 'new ones, and' ,diroiitere find it extreni 3 OV 'dflgiiutt:l , s tie :it' AO, ‘ ie atiSfaction.'Y i< • '• certificate - 8.-1 have gins no iriifeksionol'eert.ifleiltet*`,They: ;sent oupn*:o-Attioicitdge - 107...44:, f athepf iegain9`PFllPti4 e.F 4 r.Y.044 1 which attends. the e ! nliool , ‘ .of; tisquetiannit . that: l s 7not act idiot--to ~rliich w lay 'Tic) thertzfiresketl' r eflintatilof our best tenter, that Sher ktiow of per'; tin who 4140.-714+! Me44lf.ti 1, 9.0 0 ,4. , Njt4. , :- this opi knee I pifnt4de,....,11?„ 43W,. =ego ‘ea4!: Q,f ypti 004)(,:i*, -eiiiv4fi doe6Nieff iiii4oriitg hundred of i"ne:euklissieh the tiObk lei tiltgt l'' ly, niiinniteb*iint goikOitkr; AO.; vsir-4::: when you require of us,itistead of:the 4 cram. lining in process:li) draw:out 'and develop in duelsrophrtioit'Alm• mental and moral pOw ers,',hot of thri- few, but. of ovary Child,. : to thrown fathom line to ilie bottom of its 14, 7 Ile measure its depth, grade pacitY; and'properlr ;.. ; - tO Subdue the * will, cuyb the passions,— , purify shit affections, und expand the under standing; to stamp upon._ that .youtig im mortal. the impress of an intelligent. and vir 7 tikena r man ; we say yeampf toil and study are before ug,ere we are thorOughly ri aljfied: The s chool .system —The propriety of our present sehuol- system has , been ft eely disettSs nd in Public niukprivate, and 1 c an safely say that the prevalent opiitiou among those who haveeon,tidered 4, is that it 12:is no superior, There is acttne objeCtibit to the power of the direct Ors •' bit! the inare it'is 'considered the Moire Chetaffully it. is isequiesced in, as the power Mustrest, somewhere, and it is consid ered to be as safe. in thashands of elected di ! reetory as in the hands of an uncertain jorlty„' or,' as` is oftener the .esse, of some domineering itidividual of the di-4trrot. We 'C'OnSitler that the •go verntnent, in this ; system: aims' at: self protection,-assetniog the tenstble position that. the intelligence of the people, is the coy , surz guaranty of...its .con".; tiotint:e andrwell.being,and that she renders ti fails (ii - inivolent to the tax paver- who. Sup ports it. He askiprOtection for .himself-and property.;- she - gives that protection by her las, which must be made atul.sustained, not tyran ignorant rabble,_but by the, sOnnd jntigtri.entof . an intelligent. voter. • Ificiaental 7 ly,by'tlibi . systeM she enhances ' the value'of prOperty, andirthink it can be proven,beycrid - reasonable' doubt, that mind proper 4 educatediu our common schools brought ,to. bear upon the almost unbounded reseurees'of our State, : would in-a short time Createvaddi7 tional.property, the tax upon which would I cancel our State dent' without any additional tax upon tbe_property at preent,in the State - -Ivrovenuats.- 7 .—. Two improvenaenta .are suigested: There:should be three paid, re rpotasibk scgool directors, instead of six .and that the syStern . should be who,lly supported by'a State tax, as the - whole State - reeeites the benefit-AA it., • authority.—The ,Nience of school .teaching; both in regard to'.governnient and instruction, has ben diiseussed iii public and in private, in the papers.and out ortheni,and the conclusions arrived at, are these:, lii matters of government: the relation 4 leacher and pupil creates the •right of authority on the part of the teacher ; and the duty . . tnission of the. Nat of the pupil, - but. that authority relates to the rmtions, and not to •the feelings or'opi'nions of the scholar. consider right views upon _ this vul , j4.!et -of great :'iripertanee, . In government,-propet authority, kindly exer4i:.=ed. mai:lA.ole fling sylject: in•matterS 'of opinion, a uthority . makes the.tnOtal 'slave:. The'rquf-stion to what are the 'intilianable rights' of the teach er and the 'scholar, has .been fr(yely _discussed; and ..Vi3 think,_resulted i i ,muelt *good. The. teacher who has correet views upon:this sub . - jeet has far more moral power than 'one 'Who has, not. • ilfodes of instruction.L--My examinations . or teachers- hare heen - carried on, for the most pit:, hr free and open discussions ; as .I con sider an- ability.. to . - •coin te icleai. the ~r e.a;eSt evidence of a ' _to ter.ch. Cf::Qs disetisions,' on eaekbiaovi . ), taught,. are also adopted'in our common - scLools by our .best' teachers. . ' , Bv,ineans. of - slates and :pen - cils ae give employment to every child. - that ,enters the sclich,l room, and confer upon him' .that most n Vli IMtbl e bi essi atit of indrrsfry.— In the:next place. we teach him ,to think, and we dO I this'hy developiny ideas in his mind. I:Here we teach tim,-you l nx•id?,l to shoot' Iforth,.And not merely to. metuorize the ideac- , 1. that others hat7e stait.. In reading we. deal I with' siinple ideas adapted to the mind rif a- I. AiLtlJ, Mental arithmetic. without rules or 1 answers ferms-thibase . of our operations.'--- , With Lillis , sin . teach- . a - -child to - - think; we open-. This M:nd, to.conviotiori; :we learn hint to reason; ,vre give him a habit of fixed -at tention, Which tie can. acquire no where elie: it is the geometry ofearly life. - VoCal reading' we. define:- talking,. with :proper emotions, ideas,.exprmed upon the written or pri,oted , page:, :' Consequently we May re a• . simple piece . over f ifty_ times , to . _ advantage. - Tht portraiNs tot/Made by ore rude hnish from the limner's hand; but-by - Loud, after touch, and shade after. shade; until it presents to . our view the loved object of oar affeetiOnl. : ,lit the - Ak h ist'S eye and . d ,must be train - et .. to. 17 reveal-the : features upo the- canvas,M so ust our organs of speech 0 'trained . to . express ideas fOreitAy,. and .ermithms properly: . . This we atM to do not-for - 111e ' select few, but for overt' 'thilth' .': ' . '- ' _ .. . Geography we.teacli l.r subj...ets.mquiring the teacher to know .Wlist, he .r-quires the scholar' folearn, and co:is,piently to be, able to ask !the *question, with - .ut the bOok. - Nkt, teaching, gmintuar we . enclaver .to, learn the Children and write *correctly, • ..ircr,na 1 schools--Theidea of Nprtritti* schOila meets With general - itriprobatinn, though:We' ~I c 'en!iider_ them liniited in the' • etin aciomOish, as,tltey 'cannot tliretvly..beactit, the matwof our tea Cheri. "7- - ./.natitutea.-. 7 4s I consider the great ol t icct of nav mission, its, County superintended to be the mirovement of, the teachers,- I have held, and intend - to hold in futnre, frequent town inNtitutes whieh the teachers .of _each town are required .to attend., In thete tut els freo4liscussidn' is allowed- -. I require the teachers to talk by idea' and' they re quire nr. to do the. same. We allow' o or.- -acle, tto ipae nignments'ithine - give B.uperioity l . A limier replyint Webster once said he had a doutte work to do, he had to combat hiM `arguments and his fame. We entlea or. to avoict every' thibt of this kina, fina: o o2 o s9 nristner4el -- °P I OIPO. svolliftS aristocracy in the tions Teachers; `itsioctatletni ' and county [lnstitutes have bora become'a final= i!P I • - . , " '- , Prnaiiegt•r4a m ny of our - districts there is,* decided, improvement C in it is euatcely-piralitable. - -= The Fist fear haahnia a;Yaat Ptchaausdayi and.settling pritiCiftbial ,retorej . kt o i)ic t i:jeat of action and oarrY‘', mg out those prlnniptee.- - hatii,alatidet school . in needy ererylein. - What' .:the - riV, eulkAyin ratuirt intuit 4 .1174taim RiOitaimatur; . affoitlßAPPror4 - ;, ",.Lealipptv.Nortiegierea,(l64l.,, - .7-..;4 1 .ki. , ;e 11 .f_ci - : - - -,, : ,_ . -..•...• . . . ~.,..,„:.„..„sir - 11,..„. t' eatainel4;,:limb . _ Simi; VounirT,aellen ti ' Said Asencilitieii,:4oetrattils.AUSlLs*k `Meeting Ilouse, - irletttprt.lll Debi 29th, 1 .856, ptitiuttutii) The day Wa - tsortitile;aild • :;, • nutnter in attendance. T he, Piesidetit'enited'aie tnifettn i f e t . Of • a li titteWl tna e ..orneremarxa rehitte!o , .a l l . -1 Progress of A-ssOciatint3;eited,i*Oiir! SeeretirY's iiPOrt; being tiref-ent, (iit another section of teaching,) A. B. tent - precented the OriAt: which contained reloti of eereral< rieen, ;bp. _ B. P. Tewicsbury was then ry, pro _tern. - • - , It being the :annn l . the election.of officers for the- - ent4i/ng`year the foilouing names wercrehosen Prezitlent,A 11. kent, '64(1 - P : residents; 11... N. Bmwiter, W. Walker T. S.cOtt . ; Clerks, ..11. 13ention t :It. , - kaput, Treasprer, J. Jameson; ...• • p , • The P resident elect, theioooli dui cluttiL.;- thanked the Association for the honor dhtthr ted on hirri;=—:sad hit made'nn'prefeirsiohils being a . sp.eeCh maker, but that hetelt = i'lleett interest in Ale; canoe of cotinitoirschergir vored the objects of the Association, and' thilie it shc•Uld ' net only C43 - YltiCtie io: haii lii;•hipt, Wishes, bUt'hii .- ntniost 'endettiOrs' tiii - zits att.' . A . • V anceinent. A. Ca.rr mitde some,Rfrtl l ...lPnt remarks ii* ) . t on' the 'true ' i don of the; teacher..e. i' -----2- , .- S. T. Scott nde tunas remarks telptieettai:_ the complaint that titiquAtilied, , ,fovitit-ine-, employed na teachers,, and the content. •doprofitablaiehools ;'said, matey do not ‘e+l,=m. to consider that while the - lor., makes" it the _ _ ~__ ISESEE duty of DireetOra to keep, thoiehools aped a .I)ekified ti rue, does rerrs.4-. ers;andlhattirst eiass are to be had. It therefote beeornua*.duty.or those. intending to . teach, ptaye eapei.6l, preparation therefor..., Prof. Richa rdsonsiid thatjte,badig,!senect - that there= is a diversity of opinion as to what constitutekt,qualification for teac h ingin maany respects, - Hence it would be , dfficatt: cidt upon a standard /of qualification- :that would 'suit all. Spalic,:it coasideinble length -- upon the education ; of childrea, tit - 0141st they -should be taught habits of itidnattj• it 'school * , - whtle you tg.,--hetice they lutist be,..interriteo —canuot be all •the'titae, witlr flry > Ilia honk-nor^reading /essoitruotAnited -totbeir ettpseity,---lienee slate. ancr:perol.ahnitld be furnished, and eneouraked in waking.letters,. drawing, Zzh - :,—that readitikstaa-,be,,tattgot, better by' the` . ,curd.sytretn:— . .that=Gnitriviso should be taught beginners upotat:ack- Board —that larger scholars should belsiiht, Book Keeping. - Aajourned to meet .A• • Met ac abore. -- -*- .F.-reyrkilia tv sp** , upon the propriety of haring, townsliliCAt* , cistiansand -Inatittitesei—thoiagbil4e, to( g:rest dis‘tance .4nd, inivcrgie• Many from atteOding who , othetwiik Pas std an. amendment' to Alio ..wmititati9o, appointed, 2t, committee to repoTt petit," of; by-LawF, and order-of neteise4, at the use . meeting' - - • Prof Richarkls'on' spoke - of the preterit po sitron of the Association, ,thought` tt to _ • -gaining the confide ice of the people,' - - , _ , The hour having ariive - d - for the lectiiit Rev. A. O. Ititrre' nacentied the ileikrame ititeres.ed`B hirge audience aith a decidedly inArnetive analtiactical:diticourt4. Some'of the piiints.treated in tiro : - addresr, , uncomforeable, arranged school 'houses—Tproverhial,neglect of .parent: to visit their schools--unreasonableness art far *a Nrlti'ry is concerned) of .0181tir'ng teach ers"who' have great - ,resportaibilitiegV—besidelk Many to please, with persons hiretF•try month in moit - other bu4iteis,..vhOltave,corti. paratively, few, rmonsibilitior 814 '-imlY eti employer to se--and: that teachers/I°mo, geneially win" to feel the ittiportanet of self mprOve'went. The people-of. that, Nieinity are 'desert:jag much comtneodatioa for` the, harem& . they nianifrie&iiveornroon aohoors, „and_ gspecieh notice for their- kindnestland boophality, . It liras, on the wii9le; otie of the btalt - Anikek--- ing.l Of. the . Association, Audfuguistlytiitat4i , for the ftittiny • Appointed a canatoitteigto . prooßeLee r thr• er nett' tneetlig. 11i1jo,irnei_i° to m eet ja 14betWAk*Atis• And'Friday; iir-11gt34-. AEA UN EIionTV.NAIi. lEl)+4V* bad' - pet dOg, amd:onO not sopetfluoiisli=6l4ll tit-6 Lit b ie-cloth tot ilia : . , n# wit - the . dog's oamits..,#'llo his,tosymki t ioliT*l hiinse4 monologue•like " Y e .4 2 , 1"Ye1 1 ; SPoL:A a •hNO teiAid dog; Split Mint. Whn.pied . -=with' the rafts' doubie,bertiMAgeubsiii:Vis hang Spot.. , Bid -dog. .11440iftt. 7 )04.10 hioakthst.,l74o,l*-M; rTim aerk 1t 1 1.3$ breakfast.§pot'sm2Wer missed him::: " Whew wbovf spoLitimwersitit.ltemthithiiittiesitaoss; “j oe ,l l- tubs::om, n libel:eV-Spot °Spot,. eir,"Asys , iloo4looltiog do'gra ,norne t said ahakiag!AliOv,at .;' , 'SPQrr T . skill You 'odd ho was to iv< 4skag‘_sir—bererer - ,. ,*,mi .10;1 hung him; itiri with-441190 ttottbki e sir r*—Taiet.hicoiiise. , /6•41. ost:,slgd * ti le_ j irl ocfige„mr! of4ige, C'diy one onl;Liti 41 laturr** the'reOli4 Went thin? bOttiblie44.-Ptalk intstrehia rm. canViptgARWIBIL. kit. fit* T:010,4M-44•14111-Likte 091N17,144. 44 "*"" • - - ;Jan j• t • ~.,. - ,r4-5.7,41r . . - , er• r...
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers