WcvUb to fJolttua, itctahtre, agriculture, Science, ittoraiitu, anb (Stencral Intelligence. 9tf VOL 15. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. MARCH 8, 1855. NO. 16. i ?bUsfced hf Theodore Schoch, iTtRJtS Two dollirs ner annum in mK--. T,tr. ioliihi tad a gnartcr, half yearlyand if not paid bc lor fiadnl the year, Two dollars and a half. ; 710-papers mscoaunucd until all arrearages are paid, VaxetDC at th ODTion of the Editnr. ...03 Advertisements not exceeding one square ton f ) will be inserted three weeks tor one dollar, mid twenty-Are ceat for everv -subsequent insertion. The ' charge for oae and three insertions the same. A liber al ttlteoant Ti6o to ycurtv drrlisers. 1E7 AU ktter addressed to the Editor must be post- ' JAM. , lOIt PRIKTIXG. Spring a jene ral assortment of large, elegant, pliiin ud oruamental Typo, we arc prepared to executcevcrydpsciiptionof JVrtU, CircnHrs. Dill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts k WWII.. UtU.W. I UUIUmCU, U. trin:ei with neatness and despatch, on reasonable r', a rr m it i i- i- r -r -r At tllf. Uf I'll)!!. Ur ;rMB Jlil-l-'KKSWftlAS. t . m ; . tVBOa AS IS BOETEY. r i u . . We know not when we have seen any - ,?j ....... ... , . Ihincr m tn rirtrtif wriv flint rnmo hnmo In ; ' r . .. - ;:, . our feelinga quite like the following: The Printer's Love. i We lore to see the blooming rose, In all its beauty drept, Wc Ioto to hear our friende disclose t The emotions of the bre act. We love to see the ship arrive Well laden to our shore: . Wc love to Bee our neighbors thrive, And love to bless the poor. 1 We lore to see domestic life, . With uninterrupted joyr; TWs love to see a happy wife, I" With lots of girls and boys. We lore all these yet far above All that we ever said, We love what every printer lored, To Have Subscriptions Paid. Any delinquent subscriber who can resist tin appeal like the aboc, eurelv must have ; the heart of t brick-bat anil the soul of a " 1 rrind-etone. Lest there be any such, how- rer, totally indifferent to the printer's love, yr add the following verses of malediction: And may the wicked who refuse To pay the printer's bill, fie forced to travel without sheet--, Right op a flinty hill! And never may they turn about, Or sit down on a rail, Until the money they thell out And Eend il on by mail. TIME. . Jtfern talletk fondly to a fair boy straying Mid golden meadow, rich with clover dew; ""She calle-but he still thinkB of naught save playing, Acd so ahe smiles and waves him an adieu! 'Whilst he, stil rnerry with flowery store, 'TDeems not that morn, bwcpI morn, returns 4 ' no more. JVoon comcth but the boy to manhood grow ing, Hedr not the time hc sees but one sweet ' form, One young, fair face from bower of jasmine glowing, And all his loving heart with Mis is warm. sSoNoon, unnoticed, seeks the wcetern chore, And man forgets that noon returns no more. r Right lappeth gently at a caeement .. gleaming "JXjitb tbe thin firelight flickering faint and -.-r: low; -cBy which a grry-hatred man is sadly dreaming Of pleasure? gone as all life's pleasures go. i Night calls him to her, and lie leaves his . door. Silent and dark and he returnee no more. A Home Item. NVe have probably all of us met with instances iu which a word heedlessly spo- ken against .the reputation of a female has utuu ui.gumcu uj uiunujuus miuua umu i toe cloud uas become darli enougti to o-yer-shadow her whole existence. To those, who are accustomed not necessa- rAJy.trom bad motives, tmtlrom tbought- i icusncM to tpeas iigony ot iemaies, we reoommeno. iue loiiowiog -niuts ' as wor tby of consideration : propeV place, at an improper time, or in mixed company. Never make assertions about her that you think arc untrue, or allusions that you feel sho herself would Wuh to hear. When you meet with men who do not scruple to make use of a Voman'i name in a reckless and unprinci pled mauer, shun them for they are the very woret members of the community rmen lost to every sense of honor eve ry fueling of humanity. Many a good .arid worthy woman's character has been forever ruined and her heart broken by aMie' manufactured by some villain and Imported where it should not havo been, kiidrin tha presence of those whose little ju8jgnient could not deter them from cir sutalijlg the foul and bragging report. A slsader is &oon propagated, and tbe smal lest thing derogatory to woman's charac ter, will fly on the wings of the wind, and magnify as it circulates, until its mon strous weight crushes the poor unconscious victim. . Respect the name of woman, and jfc A$ you would have their fair name fcy theoderer'fl biting tongue, heed the ill titfyour own words may bring upon j etber, tho fiister, of the wife- of ffgje feUoW'Creature." Reverses of Fortune. Let not the rich boast of their wealth, or the poor complain of their poverty, is a rule which will answer both inprosper ity and adversity. The fickleness of for tune has been a theme for rjoeta and romancers ever since the story of Job's , affliction has been known. Tho uncer tainty of mercantile life, particularly, is : not only a constant subject of remark, but also one of general experience. No ; profession in life, except the farmer'?, . scented to be so fixed, or even so perina ( neut, that some adverse storms may not , sweep all away, and leave the fancied I , A 1 , 1.., -11 1 Bn Ot Wealth but the semblance of his ance or nis stocks, and astc paper, i poverty. What are bonds, s ' ! niortrrnorps hiif. in miih trnsfn ' o . ; f- rFwf wrimi fh Wid ,mnn M1, tU. - t u..u nZZZ "ttotfbS rf , wuuui puma me uni uusuci 01 ; potatoes, or the smallest loaf of bre-d to ' Fut.-",lBi ur lULbinaucbc joui 01 urc.u, 10 cnftcTtr f t "l " T1- , , yiuuuzv lUi3 uiuoii iu uruer io re- certain deatht Ho soon after heard I re.,th suddJn fal1 of , a hionable I a d and pursuing him bj moonlight, family from affluence to almost complete 1 overtook him, leaped upon his back, and j poverty. Last winter the frequenter of j cut h5a throat Hc tben dressed him and ! the gay reunions at Washington could I aki ou the hcarfc laccd it in hb I not have failed to notice a hale and hearty I pocket for a tropby. IIe continued walk . widow, fair and about forty, who attend- ; nA ,f ! nn nil Mia hnlld nirtina nnH rrn t ncenm rr. 7" """ t";j MCui- uuea ui uui uupuui. ouu uau a xoveiy daughter, scarcely seventeen years of age, innocent and retiring in her manners, but of an engaging and affectionate disposi tion. The widow was the owner of a plan tation in Virginia, encumbered with ne groes, and run down to such a state of poverty sho was actually poorer than the colored servants whom she owned. She resolved, however, to make a desperate push, and to marry her daughter off in such a manner to recuperate her decliri i ing fortunes. Her reputed wealth, the j charming appearance of her daughter, i and tho fmese which she knew so well how to use, was very soon successful. A JO"nS man of tllis city recently taken in . 1 1 Tir 11 as a Vot in a panning nouse in v an street, was at Washington, transacting some business for the firm, and while thero received an invitation to attend a soiree at the residence of the Hon. Mrl , a member of the Senate. He re ceived an invitation to the strategic wid- ow, who immediately saw. the game pre- l sented to her. The daughter was intro duced, and the young man, feeling rich 1 and important at his recent good fortune j in his business, thought it about time to i take a wife. When both parties are 'more than usually -anxious it does not j generally take long to conclude a matri i monial arrangement. At all events, so I spirited was the preliminary courtship,, j assisted by the experience of the mother, j that in less than two weeks the amiable j daughter of the Old Dominion and the j promising son of the Empire State were ! before the altar, and priestly lips had pronounced tbem husband and wife. The I plantation, of course, was not regarded, j but was left in decay and ruin under the care of an overseer. The young couple in company with the mother came ira- raeciateiy on to tms city, ana a spienuiu home in was soon procured, and sumptuously furnished, and all things went "as merry as a marriage bell." Servants attended the nod of each mem- ; of the family. The ladies luxuriated up ; on the magnificent sofas during the morn ing, and in the afternoon the carriage j was at thc door, and the obedient dri- ver gratified their most whimsical capri- ces. The bright and charming period of . life, however, did not last long. Last j summer a gigantic failure came, and the i aouse ot wnica the vouni? man was a t m . member went by tho board; and in less I time than it takes us to pen it, he was a3 rpoor as the son of toil who day by day labors with his hands for his support. The golden vision ha"d fled the extrav agant mansion had to be vacated, and the neglected Virginia plantation again I bega'n to look as if it were worth some- Miincr At. nil AVPTifq lr. w:iq tint, in rr !despfsedj and tbo mother who found al- ber watchful financiering for a rich hus- band for her daughter thus turned to ' i a nought, sought its quiet shado for repojo until uui auuu uuu cauiuli uuruui iu iue uucertain life of a fashionable metropolis. York Suularj Times. A Tough Storm Story; The Peru (III.) Chronicle, of the 7th ult., learnafrom c fanner who resides on the South side of the Illinois River, on the Bluff, some particulars of thc storm of thc 20th ult. Ilia cattle, thought they were inclosed in a cirele of straw blacks and hay stacks, were so much affected by the driving blast that they refused to eat. The snow was driven between their ' hairs, and coming in contact with the skin, j was for a mornsnt melted, then frozen, until j the whole covering of thc animal seemed one j unbroken armor of ice, which did not disap- j pear on many lor lour uays auer. ine snow melting on their foreheads and running down, formed huge icicles that passed down over j the face, and readied far below the nose,giv- , ing them the appearance of the beast with day evening, February 19th ult., in which the ten horns in many instances the broad be stated that New Jersey, with a popu sheet of ice falling over the eyes, blindfolded ; iation 0f 500,000, has not over 200 young them effectually. Their nostrils were filled J mcD in course of collcgc training, Penn with frozen snow that had been driver i into , . ?00 A, j' fc them by the violence of the wind. I he quai!s J . . , .j . hThad gathered about his barnyard, as a , withstanding the. prcvalent belief that so last resortTwere frozen to death. Prairie chick- j many younpien are ruined at college, sns were either frozen to death or so benum- the figures show that not more than one bed that he could take them with his hands in fifteen of college students are thus ru as they sat on the fence, sleeping with stupor. ined, while pno in four of those who en His barn-yard chickens were many of them j gage in mercantile pursuits in our cities frozen, and, what is singular, in nearly every jg joat tbu3 proving, that though some case they were found with their bills wide CfjArifa R ntiarra fio,l hnA ,irl i tlnnrt aa ttino pmilrl li .unJnroil nn! -iha -1 ! hit, teams and cattle over his fences, the snow j being on a level with them, and eo compact ! ea to eusuin a heavy load, At Extraordinary Endurance. On January 31, Nathaniel Gopp, son of Hayes D. Copp, of Pinkham's Grant, near the Glen House, White Mountains, commenced hunting deer, and was out four successive days. On the fifth (lay he left cgam, for a deer killed the day previously, about eight miles from home. He dragged the deer (weighing 230 lbs.) home through the snow, and at 1 o!clock P. M. started for another one discovered near the place where the former was kil bsd, which ho followed until be lost the track, about dark. Ho then found that he had lost his own way, and should, in all probability, be obliged to spend the ' nigbt jn tbe WOods, tbo thermometer at tbe time rajJRa from 32 to.35 below zer0i riifi rima rnnmnrr V :.. " 7 despair being no part ot his composi- t0U Wif'h P-CfC! 4p ence 0f nnnd, he commenced walking. wuiuh.um.u waifiluoi having no provisions, matches, or even a 1. ... . ' hatchet, knowing that to remain quiet I . " r . . ' . ' about A o'clock . jiM be came out at or near Wild River, in Gilead, Me., having walked, on snow-shoes, the unparalleled distance of forty miles without rest, a part of the time through an intricate growth of undcrbush. His friends at home becoming alarmed at his prolonged absence, and the intensi ty of the cold, three of them started in pursuit of him, viz : Mr. Hayes D. Copp, his father, John Goulding, and Thomas Culhance. They followed his track un til it was lost in tho darkness, and by the aid of their dog, found the deer which young Copp had killed and dressed. They men UUUK . HI a uuu nuiicu U1C Ul CI A u.,:n a hotlrs for the 'moon to rise, to enable them to continue their search. They again started, but with the faintest hopes of ev er finding the lost one alive, pursued his track, and after being out twenty-six hours in the intense cold, found the young man of whom they were in search. Goulding froze both his feet so badly that it is feared he will have to suffer amputation. Mr. Copp and Mr. Culhane froze their ears badly. No words can reward the heroic selt-denial and forti- tude with which these men continued an almost hopeless search when every mo- ment expecting to find the stiffened corpse of their friend. loung Copp seems not to have realiz- ed the groat danger he bad passed thro', and although his medical advisers say he cannot entirely recover tho use of his limbs for from three to six months; talks witn perrecc coolness 01 taking pare m uunca wmcn ue naa piannea lor me next week. A Negro Love-Letter. A correspondent has forwarded to us the following Negro Love-Letter. It is a veritable epistle, in the "color'd pusson'a" own handwriting, and bears date "Hunts ville, Walker County, Texas, June 26, 1853." " Bear Miss, it avails me great pleasure to write you a fuw lines to let you know that I am well hoping these few line may find you enjoying the same blessing when first I fell in love with you, your feachers I did gain : I wood like to cort you Miss Hulda if you have know objection the first time I saw you I thought you was the pink of the world. I do know that I love you bitter than any person in this world. Tf I could "just call you mine, I would be willing to j dye you are so pretty in tho face and so slim in the wast. If you love mo like I love you thare is no knife can cut our love in 2. I have seen all the girls in Hunts ville, but thare is non can como up with you Lord bliss my soul 1 1 lovo you more thant Gold. Of all the girls 1 evor see Hulda is de Gal fore mcl Jabob Skelton. "Kind Miss, my heart is very much broken about you. My dear miss I would like to have a kiss from you as I made my remarks afbout my heart being broken. Miss Hulda I would give my heart head and hand to peep at you once more. 0 miss Huliv do lit me in, for tbe way I love you is a sin. 0 could I but call Miss Huldy the darling of my heart I would bid farewell to this vain world and whipe my weeping eyes; do sun am set, dis Nigger am free: de colired gals I am bound to see. Carles Biudweel sends bi3 love "to you: sais de way ho loves ycu :a - :n is a sin. " When this you see remember me affectionate Jacob Skelton. Roses is red vielets blue sugar is sweet and so am you. Jabob Skelton. Rev. D. V. McLean, of Easton, Penn.. delivered a lecture in Trenton, on Mon- . ... ' disappoint the hopes of their parents, yet lt 13 far 8afer '? Eend yung men to8 well conducted literary institution, than to tbe temptations of a city life. I Yankee Doodle. In 1755, simultaneous attacks were made upon the French posts in America. That against Fort Du Quesne (the pres ent site of Pittsburg) was conducted by General Braddock: and those against Ni agara and Fronteuac by Gov. Shirley, of j Massachusetts, and General Johnson, New York. Tho army of Shirley and.lonaDle text- The hardest points in John Johnson, during the summer of 1755, lay on the eastern bank of the Hudson, a lit tle south of the city of Albany. In the early part of June the troops of the Eas tern Provinces began to pour in, company natcly most acknowledge no very deep or phasis as they do now. Nevertheless after company; and such a motley assein- personal concern. Anxiety respecting this has always seemed to us a matter bly of men never before thronged togeth- such things s to the great mass, usually that needed reform, and we plead for wo er,on such an occasion unless an exam 'not Tel7 distressing. But the doctrino man's rights decidedly, till this abuse is pie may be found in the ragged regiment Uuggestod in our motto, is a matter of corrected. It would seem that tbojirae of Sir John Falstaff. It would have re laxed the gravity of an anchorite to have seen the descendants of tho Puritans marching through the streets of that ancient city, (Albany) and taking their situationsito the left of the British some with long coat3 some with army snore coats, ana Bome otners witu no coats, and some others with coats at all with colors as varied as the rainbow; some with their hair cropped like the army of Cromwell, and others with wigs, the locks of which floated with grace around the shoulders. Their march, their accoutrements and the whole arrangements of the troops, furnished matter of amusement to tho rest of the British army. Tha music played the airs of two centuries ago; and the tout ensemble, J upon the whole, exhibited a sight to the wondering strangers, to which they had never been accustomed. Among the club of wits that belonged to the British army, there was a Dr. Shackburg attached to the staff, who combined with the science of a surgeon the skill and talent of a mu sician. To please the new-comers, he ' comnosed a ' a. flnj w:th mneh i r 7 0 j rnnnmrnnn.loH if f tha nHmnvo Via recommended it to the officers as one of the most celebrated ains of martial music The joke took, to the no small amuse ment of the British. Brother Jonathan exclaimed it was 1 nation fine; and in a few days nothing wa3 beard in tbo Provincial camp but the air 0f Yankee Doodle. Little did the ' autborj jn bis composition, then suppose that an air made for the purpose of levity and ridicule, 8nould bo marked for such bigIl destinies. In twenty years from that time, tbe national march inspired the , boroes 0f Bunker Hill, and in less than thirty Lord fjornwallis and his array njarc int0 thc American lines to the J tune of Yankee Doodle. Tbi3 tune however, was not original witb Dr, Shackburg. Ho made it from an 0id song which can be traced back to ' tbe regn 0f Charles tho First; a song j wb;cb ha3 jn -lt3 day been uged for a fffea variety of words. One of these sonsil wtten in ridicule of the Protector, be gan witn tnis line : "iue Itound heads and Cavaliers." Another set of words, to the same tune, was entitled "Nankee Doodle," ane ran thus : Nankee Doodle came to town Upon a little poney, With a feather in his hat, Upon a macaroni. The first American parody upon the original which we have seen, was entitled ! ''Lydia Fisher. An aged and respecta - bio fady, born in New England, says she J remembers it well, and that it was a com- j mon song long beforo the .Revolution. It was also a favorite New England jig. i Before the war, it was customary to sing J thc tune with various impromptu verses such as Lydia Locket lost her pocket Lydia Fisher found it ; Not a bit of money in it, Only binding round it. Perhaps there may bo something in this, for within our recollection tho "gals! i and boys" ot iuassacnusctts nad some- thing like it in tneir sports. jjut our version is a little different from the old lady's, and ran thus : Lucy Locket lost her pocket In a rainy shower; Phillip Carteret rah arter it And found it in an hour. And a later period the Tories had a song commencing Yankee Doodle came to town For to buy a firelock : We will tar and feather hinn So we will Joiix Hancock. This version has a very strong resem blance to the original the first line bc- ing the same, with the exception of the'vated. In our cities, school-keeping N, for whice tho Y is substituted. Tbo occurrence ot tbo words "leather" in tbe utiAL iiuu ia uu luaa luiuuinuuiu. A long' strong of similar verses are known to ex-J for us to disclose the amount of salaries,1 and supply half a do2en pulpits every 1st, which were supposed to allude to the 'which many receive iu and about the1gabbata w;tb tbejr weekly pay! So in coming .of Oliver Cromwell (on a small ' capital of Massachusetts, or all the coun- 'ancjent times this abandoned world had horse) into Oxford, with a single plumo, Jtry schoolmasters would, in the words of tbe same peculiarity, though perhaps in' a which ho wore fastened in a sort of knot, , Cowper, more esceptionablc way; buffoons dwelt which the adherents of the royal party I Crowd lhe roadS) impftlienl for he town ... in COUrt., saints dwelt in cavea. Thero called "macaroni," out of donsion. What t was a strange propensity to construe ben- renders tbe history of this tune the moro Id our villages, the case is different. efactor and malefactor in the same case, remarkable is, that to this very day tho Many aro respectably paid, it is true; but as we read Bear tbe cose 0f the go.pels. words of "Lydia Locket," alias "Lucy thero aro some, nay, many fful And if by a special dispensation of char Locket," are sung to it by school chil- servants, standing at the posts of the doors ity, earth's best heroes have escaped cru dren. of knowledge, who receive far less than cjgsjonj it has been too often only to be . they earn. Thoy sow the seeds of wis- bandcd ovrer to sta?Vation ; figy-Mrs. Swires says the reason chil- dom for so small a stipend and under; - dren are bo bad this generation, is dwing'auch disadvantageous circumstances, that' "Seven cities fought for Homer dead, to the wearing of gaiter slides instead of tho sight of the "cracker man" or a ped- Through which Homer living begged.hu tbe old-fashioned slippers. Mothers find dlor'a wagon holds out very strong in-' breaU m it too much trouble to untie gaiters to ducementa to desert. Wo are sincerely and begged it without receiving it; as'wa wliin ili1drn tfn iW an nnnnrushpd! Rnrrv for all such: we wish we could cive have too much reason to believe. So'if but when she was a child, the way tbe . . v . .. old'slippecusod to do its duty was'a cau- tj0Qj durational. Are you Satisfied with your Pay t "Man wants but little here below, Nor wants that little lonff." It would be difficult to preach a fash- of10,,a"e discourse from such an unfash vjuiviu a wieojogy woum oc Jess unwel- ana prosperous m tue single state as ro come to most; if for no other reasou, from formers would have them, it may be, the fact, that theological matters look for- they would never decline the verb To - Iwar to a future state, in which unfortu- personal and every-day concern. Jt looks so directly towards self-denial, that the most skilful demonstration of it will probably meet with only a frigid dissent. Tho idea of "getting more" is com - pletely ingrained into the feelings of man- I 'n' l '13 videntlj a plant indigenous to no'"'esoui. jlc grows witn our growtn; as one says, , "As if increase of appetite had grown By what it fed upon;" ,V1 . . .. , . . , . . , W hat is satisfactory this year, is fre-, quently found to come short the next; the Irishman is contented with a scanty faro of oa -meal and potatoes in his native isle; but he no sooner crosses a half dozen meridians towards the setting sun and; hiininil r.ho nronprm n mrr fhnn ho Id-irns to scorn the offer of "a dollar a day, and " ' " r-o " " " board himself with as much apparent! indignation as a good patriot scorns the ' thought of treason. As m the story of- l tbe fioman gib j tbe demand riae; as tbe " i j -i i uargam araws lowaras a Close. T. " 1 T, f . y ftU evBiywuere. xi is even nmiea !"dt. n"ab ' lu,"BB"f a,eac.a,eai 01 ine; .1. . m m m oiocy, regaru a can 01 rroviaence witn w ... . . . much more favor, if it is accompanied with a ''handsome offer" ; and it is said that they esteem their chance of doing good as much greater, if their situation is modified by the adjective lucrative, as well as laborious. But this may not bo so after all; we only give the common re port. Wc do know, however, that in most other professions that minister to the disorders of humanity, such ideas are very prevalent; so that in the vernacular tongue of every place we have as yet visited-, an unqualified "doing ucll1 appears to mean simply growing fat on good payl To repeat tbe caption of our present article, we ask you, teacher, Are you sat isfied with your pay? Probably not. There is no class of persons so small as those who are perfectly satisfied with their lot. The moralist speaks of the race to which we beloug, as never being, but always to be blest. We have heard of a man who Dubliolv offered a larrre estate f rf 0 I f i u .r i iu icu aiuipio tu auj uuu hu whs pc icuii- ly contented with his condition. It was not long before a claimant appeared. The generous patron of all contented people, asked him if he was perfectly contented with his lot; the reply was of course not otherwise than in the affirmative. Well then, says ho, what do you want of my farm! He was therefore perfectly safe in making the offer; his uncommon gen erosity could never cost him more than the price of thc advertisement. Bespected Teacher, we ask again, Are you satisfied with your pay! We will dispose of the "first person," by saying for ourselves, that we really want more pay! Our necessities have grown with our means. In construing the phrases of life, no words havo given us so much trouble as 'opus and usus signifying need'.' We began to follow the chalk in the red school-house at fifteen dollari a month and boarded ourselves; and as that was tho first time wo had converted our wits into the common currency, we thought the pay was large; and really wo have i i ii j :a no vur uucusu wuu suiiauuu nuu uui com pensation since. The more wo have had, the more we have wanted; our "sins and debts" have been a trouble to us all the way through life. Still wo must have the frankness to own that we have been paid much better than we deserve. Whether a kind Providence, that hag always taken care of us, will seo fit to vote us another gratuity in addition to what wo now have, remains, to be seen. For others we canndt so well speak. Many teachers are well paid; some, we think, may possibly receive more than they earn. The world commits such mis takes sometimes; but sins of that sort are probably neither very numerous or agcra -r- .' .1.11... "sustains fair prices;" teachers, there have; every reason to ne satianeu witn tneir lot. Indeed wo nuspect it would bo improper, .. - 1. :i i fv- . , tbem a nigner appoiuuuenc. jus in our inability to do so, wo can only refer them to Ibo oommittuo on unpaid cbjms, and sincerely hope their case will be favora- . bly noticed. " j But we apprehend that the cry of .dis tress issues mostly from those schoojs j where females are employed. The world aceiu.-j uiugiiruiy m me eiireme, in u pecuniary appropriations to woman; and - ' perhaps it is wisely ordered that it should be so: for if that sex were as well paid Love, with such easy and graceful era- work performed by tho weaker sex equal- 'y well as by men, ought to be as well paid. And we believe that it may be set 'down as one of the indications of reform, ' that the compensation of female teachers has been raised throughout most of the Commonwealth. Still, it is a authenti- . cated tact in Massachusetts, jana oiuer states are not more tree irotn me re- proach.) that women have kept hunger at a distance at less than "a dollar a week and boarded around." And it bas been h M a b tradU!on tbat 0m0 en . . distrfctg w ted their . f to plit a ,1 -of victuals, ;f not biaeet rfgVa lodging to make fc brf come 0butevenfIf there are x d Jn tbj3 or a sirai. J .'... lol. . L rfa TTmnnn T?,.linf Rn. ranr. nnnr than ciimtiri nr. nnrR nR .1 1 11 1.' j'e a3 object3 of pity they certainly nest oJ Sir FraDkHn. r , ...ij..,).. t,f it i nil r. wp i 1 1 il 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1. 1 v ijci 1 1: l: luul iuc iz- i proacl: i is in a measure, passing away; : , , lon,llirs ns a ciass are nok . (4 A - bilVUllll nD c!imtu i,. tiie:r comnen3!1. tion is far more respectable than former- , tJ 1 " ( , m, .. . ... r.i i.: IV. I nn TimP 13 3UUI UUlllU", il uuu already come, when rood teaching will command good pay. Perhaps we have treated this subject, which is really a matter of sober concern to many, with less sobriety than we ought. But we cannot close this train of thought without adding a few considerations of a practical, and perhaps to some a painful, nature. First; In the cry of too small pay, it must not always be taken for granted that the blame is wholly on one side. They are common maxims, that it re quires two to make a bargain, and that every story is good, until another is told. Perhaps teachers have sometimes in their vanity over-estimated their merit, and it is very possible that the much defamed community has paid them all that their service was really worth ! We remarked again, tbat perhaps the same amount of talent and enterprise in other kinds of business would not have made progress towards wealth any faster than here. We have as much vanity as a teacher ought to possess, and as much pride of profession; but we will not at tempt to conceal the fact that in pome instances, surprisingly little tact and in telligence have been exhibited in connec tion with the ruler. It has long since ac quired the force of ft proverb, that talent and skill will command success'; but we find no promises of competence and wealth to thc opposite qualities anywhere. We have seen teachers, and if we remem ber correctly, have "cried at the sight,", who in our opinion recsived all they were worth. They had never expended a shilling in qualifying themselves for the work; they seemed to be walking illustra tions of the idea of the poet, "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing!" Their chief merit evidently lay in their perfect orthodoxy; for they believed with Solomon, that to "spare the rod" was to "spoil the child"; and as one says, they "thinned tbe forests all the way down from Vermont" in demonstrating their belief ! Tbe increasing light of this cen tury, however, put a very emphatic per iod to their vocation long ago. We would always speak well of the dead; but wo have no idea that they left any unsettled claims upon the world for insufficient pay! Agaiu: It may be at least a comforting, though perhaps not a palliatingj thought, that the world has never been in the. hab it of rewarding labor according to its real merit. The standard of its prices, as well as of its moralsi needs reformation. We know some persons who never spent a dollar upon their education, and whoso sole business is to disscminate'whips and grrinll wnnn wbn rpf,p;Vft more comDen- clears over tue man ot toe world in a sation thaan tbc moil fdrtUnato teacher we wot Qf ylCy could outbid the wealth- f.iorfrvninn ;,, Western Massachusetts . r.. l. , ...!. teacuers, hub uiui. umyiu services, should be neglected andjuuderpaidVlbey at least aro- iu-goyi-eompao