r Published by Theodore Schoch. TERMS Two dollars per annum in advance Two v nnnr.,i,i.nniin,.,i ,. !i ; :.t tsrinfed Mita neatness and ucspaica on reusonauie erins, AT THE OFFICE OF THE JEFF ERfcOXI Aft. From the Knickerbocker Gallery. "THE EMPEROR'S BIRD'S NEST. BY II. W. LONGrELLOW. Once the Emperor Charles, of Spain, With his swarthy, grave commanders, I'fbrget in what campaign, J-ong- beseiged, in mud and rain, Some old Frontier town of FJandcrs. Up and down the dreary camp, In great boots of Spanish leather, Striding with a measured tramp, Theec Hidalgos, dull and damp, Cursed the Frenchmen cursed the weather. Thus, as to and fro they went, Over upland and through hollow, Giving their impatience vent, Perched upon the Emperor's tent, In her nest, they spied a swallow. Ye?, it was a swallow's nest, Built of clay and hair of horses' Mane or tail, or dragoon's crest, Found on hedgerows, east or west. After Elarmish of the forces. Then an old Hidalgo said, Ab he twirled his grey mustachio, "Sure this swallow overhead Thinks our Emperor's tent a shed, And our Emperor but a macho." Hearing his imperial name Coupled with these words of malice, Half in anger, half in shame, Forth the great campaigner came, Slowly from his canvas palace. "Let no hand the bird molest," Snid he, solemnly, "nor hurt her!" Adding then, by way of jest, t,Goleudrinof is my guest 'Tia the wife of some deserter." Swift a8 bow-string speeds a shaft, Through ihe camp was spread the rumor; And the soldiers, as they quaffed FJemieh beer, at dinner, laughed At the Emperor's pleasunt humor. So, unharmed and unafiaid, There the swallow sat and brooded, Till the constant canonadc Through the walls a breach had made, And the siege was thus concluded. Then the army, elwhere bent, Struck its tents, as if disbanding; Only not the Emperor's tent For he ordered ere he went, Very curtly " Leave it standing!' And it btood there all alone. Loosely flapping, torn and tatleicd, Till the brood was fledged and flown, Singing o'er those walls of stone That the cannon-Bhot had shattered. Macho, the Spanish for mule. Golendrinot in Spanish means a cwollow and s deserter. Xite'Xcr1'11 l"uu' Strange Fashion of Building, etc.7 etc. I e? a "e P a P'W0" suelves IE? Advertisements not exceedinj; one square (ten , oi rock, ana under these shelves were nu- 111 be 11sc,rted lhrec wcs or one dollar, and On the 17th of October last, a party of . merous houses or fortificitionq Thp one twenty-five cents for ercrv subsequent insertion. The t i r j t j- i j j "il'luua ""uses or ioruucauons. xue one caarge for one and three insertions the same, a iiter- twelve Mormons and one Indian, headed ' 0 examined was divided into twenty SSlSSSSrUN. W' D' Huntington, left Manti, one of f0Ur rooms, each nearly square, and en- ?alJ- e most southern settlements in Utah closing an area of about one hundred and . Territory, by request of Gov. Foung, to ' forty-four square feet. The front wall oi v & n.m a m nnvi. explore the southern part of the Territory, ' was built ud to the overhanging cliff which Hating a general assortment of large, elegant, plain .pri-i f j t J i P ovtrnanging Cllir.wuicn audbrnamemat Type, we arc prepared ot which nothing is known, and if possi- formed the roof, and was curved and full "d?SU : ?e ?P-en a trade With the Navaje9 who ' of port-holes. The stones were all squared . .i tt'jyUtf (i&a dwell in that quarter, for sheep,xgoats and and faced, -were of an equal thickness, and ;uKs?e horsf t which ifc i3 known tbcJ have , laid up with joints broken in a workman- The Snow. The snow ! the snow ! how beautiful It falls on hill and plain, And weaves a shroud for summer bonre That will not come again. Each liny flake that parts the air With measured sweep and slow, Reveals, amid its beauty rare, A gem no king can show. The snow ! the snow! how beautful The fields are heaped with white Where cret the summer breezes swept, "When trees with leaves were bright; But now with naked branches tossed, They rear thy giant forms, And breast with stern and fearless hearts The winter's blasts and storms. The snow! the enow! how bright and fair It gems tho valley wide, Ac ewceping on before the wind, Like ocean's restless tide. It twines amid the withered leaves That ma'rk the autumn sere, And weaves a ead and faded wreath To bind the dying year. The enow! the bnow! how light it falls, Ab erst in other hours, Ere ehildhood'e hopes had passed away, Or withered youth's gay flowers. Each crystal flake seems some pa6t joy That cheered the morning beam, Then faded ere the light of noon Fell on the, gliding stream. -The snow! the snow! how beautiful , 'Ifalls on hill and plain, And weaves a shroud for summer hours That will not como again. Stern winter-binds tho sunny streams That rippled eweet .and low, And covers earth withfleecy robo And. pure and spotless eno RUINS OF ANCIENT CITIES IN AMERICA. . Extraordinary Discovery in the Country . oi me .wavaioes.- ATiornfir ffirra auuuuaiiuc. j uu,v-j uwiuw, vwusiuvmuiG on.ui, in manufactures, and make all their . . blankets, leather, bridle-bits, &c many 1 of which are executed with most curious ual sizo of all the doors, both in the out j workmanship. They also work iron, gold er and partition walls, with the exception auu 5ver iuio u uiutuiuae oi xorms, anu articles for the warrior, husbandman and tradesman. The party returned to the Mo rmon settlements on the 21st of De- cember last, having on their trip m'ade i j; - mt homu most reuiarKaum ucoveries. j.ney surpassing it in extent, lrom ilr. Hunt- , inston's account, furnished the Desert iews, we tuiie ine ionowing nigniy inter esting particulars : On the 17th, we left Manti with our VT 11 1 t 1 . I mil outut 01 men auu animais, ana witn . uiu aSu-. .1 v m;ui i-it uiuiu giouuiy and doubtful, or undertook what appear- ' 1 1 1 J r 1' i 11 7 C - " i 1 I ... ( iiiiiiiii uirii'rijii.r-iiintiriiTir.iT'Trr.iiiirini . I i .1 .1 . . . 1 11 1 .i . 1 1 n the rocks, very similar to the far-famed ! into the third, and so on. from left room ' effort, bv inheritance from Darents of pulses, mentals . ... , vim vuuv m aecona. ana mere tnrnnorh nnnt hir in n wnmh cnniM annntnnonn.m v. witnonc anv.iowKuei, nuu mra in the h-astern Dcsseret, and even to richt and from riirht to left, all through I broad and finished ndncation. What nriv-i teacher. He ed to us a more hazardous work, during J and rummaging about, we found an out- ' The privation most to be lamented is1 the many evils which teachers commonly observe, even iu some of the most prcten an experience of twenty years in this let to the cave. For three or four miles ' not only the want of formal instruction in'seek.to prevent, such as the following are t;ons eCu0ols of Ediubur", to rush out church. A wild, mountainous and drea- to this canon buildings were everywhere ! early life, but also that of intelligent daily 'prominent. Absence and tardiness, idle- flQ manv ;a an.tnalC- Cham. ry desert, hitherto almost entirely un- j known, lay before us, and what was still more formidable, Indian Walker and his allies had decreed that we never should pass, and with twenty Spaniards had post ed themselves on our route, and their rallying smoke was in full view. Still we unanimously resolved to go ahead, and our enemies fled before we reached their position, the Spaniards their way and Walker his, leaving our path perfectly o- pen- We followed Gunnison's trail to within 25 miles of Grand River, which, accord ing to our calculation, ia 350 miles from Great Salt Lake City. This road, so far, was a tolerably good one, but the country has little or no wood, grass or water. I here is a beautiful valley on i t,. ? 13 b"uVfal ValieJ 00 i and size; and in places where the soil was nofc imP3rt aDy of hls knowledge or vir nd River twenty miles long, and from , sufficient th wre overgrown with 6a(ye tue. ' One cannot get cither by absorp--to ten miles wide. It has good son i , n , fn nrforrr ... ... tion. There are many who revolve thro' Gran a , . . f. , , and grazing range, is very well timbered grazing range, is very uuu Huiuicu, uuu is auuui uiiy uiiics iiuuj ' J 3 .t...,i 1 en :i r 1 watered, and l the Elk Mountain. From here we trav- eled 110 miles to St. John's River, over t . a very rougn and mountainous region difficult to pass over even with pack ani inals, being covered with dense forests of . buil(li to this we could nofc find an en. very petty and contemptible ambition to cedar. It is forty miles from St. John s , trance &and unlike all the rest it had no know just enough of such men, as to ena River to the nearest Navajo town. j , ' , Q 1 , ble one to boast of their acquaintance. Reception by the Navajoes Cannibalism. The Navaioes met us with very hostile 1 a. feelings, as they arc at war with arrived ! bite man -r, ., ' whites, and three days before we had killed, boiled and eaten a white bo great was their exasperation. By the pcrsuation of two friendly Indians with -j. j ii i: "Td to fnZZZZhuZtsZ- tenca to an explanation oi our Dusmess. W wpro finillv pn.ililpd to form a trpafcv We were nnally enabled to torm a treaty aud did some trading with them, while thev were doin. ome tall stealing from tbe were doing .ome tall stealing irom us. They were highly excited, but the chiefs were more cool, appeared quite friendly, and wished us to come a'gain and trade Trade is the best letter o introduction iraueisine oesi icuer o. lniroaucuon a white man can take among Indians. Their creat Gantain wished us not to rro 3 . f ... . O Eouasb. pincnuts. with sheen and coat meat of tho finest quality, to fit us out for our journey home. First Discovery of Hulas. On the north side of the St. John's Riv er. and about five hundred miles south ea-st from Great Salt Lake City, we trav eled over a section of country mostly a mong the mountains, and about forty niileB in length, up and down the river, by twenty-five miles in width, covered with the ruins of former towns and villa ges. The walls of many buildings aro btill standing entire, some of them three or four stories high, with the ends of the red cedar joists yet in the wall, some pro jecting eight or ten inches, but worn to a point at their extremities. Every building was a fortification built in the strongest manner imaginable, and in a style that tho present age knew noth ing of; many of them mill plainly show the whole manner of ftructure, and even the marks of the workmen's tools. The first ruins we discovered were three stone buildings, crumbled to mere heaps. One annaared to havo been a pottery, for in ! and around it were loads of fragments of crockery, of fine quality, ornamented with a. great variety of figures, painted with various colors as bright a3 if put on but .yesterday. fhV?T',e4iyt on tho mapsas ban Juan river. It takes its me in the .mountains on the west sid& of the Rio dande, nearly jhuuiiuuiu. on me wesi sia oi ine Uio Uiiinae, ncariy oppositoTaos, and running almost due west. empUes jtito Grand nveriust above the ooint where Grand and Green rivers imjteto form the Colorado The San Juan passes through a country winch has been rarely trodden by the vhjtc man, and of which noUiiug is known, its junction with Grand mor it in about tho IMinxdo of MonterSy. among their towns and villages, as tbcro msiae wnu a mna oi ccraeni, wun wnicn were some that could not be controlled, , the stones are laid and the rooms plaster and he did not want to fight us. He said ! ed an( is.as hard as stone. we had come a very great way, and he' The inside arrangement of all the houses wished us well, and sent to his town and ! was mucu alike a11 baving port-holes in brought out an abundance of corn, meal, , the partition walls, and very small and flour, bread, beans, dried Dumnkin. dried obscure passage-ways from one room to A Fortified City. From hero we traveled ten miles, with 7 occassional ruins by the way. and enter- .1 j , , i jjq manner. xneomy entrance we could nnd was a hole about two feet square and eighteen inches from the around, whinh is the ns. 0t some subterranean entrances, which were yet smaller, and difficult to find. Through the perfection of the rocky roof there was very little rubbish in the rooms, From the first room we passed through a . ..... . r o small hole in the right hand corner to the the twentv-four rooms: find vrv ronll - Ffty yards above this was a lanre cave with a narrow winding entrance, guard- ed by a high wall; near the mouth of this entrance is an opening in the rock, lead- ang 0tt into the mountain, which we did not explore, and after a little looking and ti in view, of various forms and dimensions, and in almost every stage of decay. From hero to St. John's river, a dis-: tance of ten miles, there wcro scattering rums; ana irom there, in twelve miles northeast, we came to head of a canon, whose sides or banks, even to the very head, were perpendicular and shelvincr. and near the banks there was no soil on the rocks. Right on the brink of this precipice, and under shelves of rock be- neath, were the best building sites for those beings who built and dwelt here ages ago. Another Stronghold. All nrnnnrf the lori nftM. oonn rWn nn mfhor ca no oc rr-a Lu see, were houses of every conoeivable form WJ UUU1U and cedars, in every respect like that on . 1 . Jy v lt e In the centre of 1 rnn m nnnrnino ntrt?irrf u,uuuuuu'' aiuuuu. .1 . j .1 11 1 i j this nnnon nnn TlA.ir rhp honrl whq n hm H ( ) " " """" mg sixteen or twenty feet square, four ctnrino li 1 rr Ji finrl Ktillf- nrirtn n flnf rtl- f ' hnah Four fppf hinrhor t.Mfin t.ha loirol nf tVin o v canon, and but little broader than the One large building, which we entered, ind on th Ptv of thfi nrncMnicw wifh Bod on the edge of the precipice, with it front, wall oirmilHr nnd flush with th bank, which formed the back part, making the ground plan of the building like a rrhnrn :v e? , half-moon. There were no windows in the lower story of any building, and eve- rr ontrnncp. wns mafia nq fHflRnnlt. txriA ' b 5dd.n pos Sh. Th7d . rb5, , v , i mio tue one last menuoneu was guarueu different angles- y two or tnree wal,s 01 oinerent angles, thus making a crooked, narrow passage b , i b cth sage was in iun viow irom tne port-noies of the building, the front wall being full ! of them, like pigeon-holes, pointing in ev- cry possible direction; they were not more A!JttiV, nn fi, nnt than two inches in diameter on the out- side, and were r. astered smooth on tho . ... ., 1 1 i . ,! 11 . . :: k ' ..... i another, and from one or two houses, into , the mountain. Some on the cliffs abovo were connected with those below. Wo noticed there was no water about there, and inquired of the Indians how the former inhabitants could have man- ncffifl? Thev told us that thev had heard w. . 1nnr tlmo A thnrn wn wntor run. Ml V""(J - O - " " nin there. We asked them who built those houses? They smilingly shook their heads and said that they had never heard, but that surely somebody must have built them a very long time back. A Good Example. It is very well for men to be rich when they possess large hearts. Gen. Robert Halsey, of Ithaca, New York, has recent ly been doing a very handsome thing. He requests the tax-gatherer. of the town in which he resides, to pass over all cases where taxes have been levied upon indi viduals who cannot pay them without de priving themselves, or their dependent families, of the necessaries of life, or means of comfortablo subsistence, and present the same to him for payment. Sunday in New Orleans. Tho follow ing is from a late number of the New Or leans (La.) Crescent : " Mr. Samuel Reed's black slut, Gipsy, 'chawed up' the most rats m the least time yesterday Varieties Exchange, on Gravier i " " . .... j street. She Killed her hrst ten in tllirty : sireeii. outs liiueu uei uiot icu iu iun 1 , i i . . fnrt nannnd Seconds: uer last ten 1Q lorty seCOOO s and went homo hungry. We learn tuat Bhe is having her hair curlod, and may be eeon at Half Way-House, to-day." Acquintance with the Eminent. Some men are acquainted with a good many books; others with a good many wealthy people. But intercourse with ii i i . ... . . me latter aocs not make tuem ricli, and familiarity with the former does not make .1 , - .1 them scholars. Extensive and promiscu - ous intercourse with mankind has few ad vantages for the man of thought. Ac cess is not thus to be obtained to what is most valuable in others. Better for the stuaious, tnmKing man. to be much alone, .! m cultivating acquaintance witu tne msiaes of good books and himself, than with the outsides of other people, however emi nent. No men, although called great, are so: full of pearls of thought, as to run over in the presence of ordinary company. To be admitted into familiar intercourse with those who are largely accomplished in knoweldge of the world and books and things, is indeed an inestimable privilege Iransraitted property is nothing in com parison with intellect and information, ilege equals that of possessing a private key in early youth to the memory of one eminent for talent, scholarship or profes i sional learning? Equally, if not more to i be prized, is the privilege to be admitted to tho chamber of the good man ere ho meets ins late, as well as where lie meets it. and hourly conversation with friends of!ness, whispering, all disorderly move- solid and deep information on some sub- jects. There is a vast deal which can never be obtained from books, and yet it is necessary to progress. When this attained with felicity, by the way as it were, advancement is rapid and easy. When not thus acquired, these things so necessary to be known, become serious obstacles in tho path of the solitary stu- dent3, which a few seasonable hints from a learned friend would have immediately removed, if he could have come by such. 1 An acquaintance like that with the great ; and learned, is of inappreciable value, of which one has a right to be proud. Rut the sight of & philosopher or sage, or e w a & u' ven a sequent position oy ms siae, will on out3ide of intellectual society, but never have access to its esoteric priv ileges. They know no more of men of note, than travelers who visit foreign coun tries and never see parlors, do of its pri- vata mansions and domestic lite, it is a quaintance. Generally speaking, the best knowledge of a distinguished orator, for example, may &t from studying his speeches; of a Pet by reading his poems; of an auth- or b? ,mil.ian Wlth hls woks and so, on. This is the greatest advantage of greatest advantagi which they can be to us, unless their friendship and intimacy may be granted; f" F benefitto all. This rrreat nreroirat ve s reserved, however, to ------- o a few and commonly to those who are a- j j . f b e to VJ it by a fair exchange of iftg Tq consorfc wltb pnnces one must a prince; to have intercourse with a r . fXe in vo ,r Socket T to Z j hav? chanSe m ? ,r Pckets to balance ! aSaD8t yur fiods5 .""J t0 hc. admitted to the conversation of talent and learning, i MOfK 1 um- "JUi"' UUfcU aviU ,wr"'1' degree. Romance in Real Life. Some years ago a very beautiful young lady was the ward of a person in Louis iana, who defrauded her out of quite a large fortune. The lady came to this city, where she married, but not living on good terms with her husband, finally obtained a divorce from him and retired to a con vent. Whilst she was there, she received a letter from the son of her former guar dian, informing her of his father's death, and that himself had heired all his vast property, but that he could not consent . - ' to retain that which had been treacher ously taken from another, and offered to make restitution. The lady immediately proceeded to Louisiana, had an interview' py and healthful state of discipline, or to 'outside the gate, and the best disposition with the heir, and received back, both! keep them there, without the most vigi-'ej children in the world get anry and principle and interest, all that she had lant attention to those innumerable little and the Slnartes scholar Jj,, niisa been wronged out of. Tho strangest part acts and ways which bi-tray the disposi-i . , . . , of the story remains behind. No sooner tion and tendencies. If a boy walks ora less. ad tho wittiest say something had she got possession of her fortune sits in your room in a swaggering or care-! stupid, and the wisest essayist write some than she returned to this city, sought out j less manner, he is sure to be equally care-1 non?cnse, and stars will fall, will fall, her former husband, and in a few days1 loss in his conduct in more material re-1 an(j ,u00n suffer eclipse and mea was re-married to him. Verily, the lovejspeets. And if by any amount of patient! , ...u iipnvpn ,, i . l The parties aro now living in St. Louis, and it is to be hoped will agree better than formerly. St. Louis Intelligencer. There are 2,526 newspapers in the United States, and they circulate annual- ly about 500,000,000, of copies. bu5 ot tuem are reported as Whigs; 742 Dem- ocratic; literary and miscellaneous, 508; Roligous, 191; Scientific, 53. ID 1810, wo had 359 newspapers; in Ib28, b02; iu 1840. 1.631. The proportion to every 100,000 persons in 1810 was 6.1; in 1850, s 6.1 ; in 1850, aie annually ier press; and ;ar be estiraa- 12.9. About S15,000,000 expended upon the newspaper 11 IUO HUU1U 1S5UU 1U1 UUU yuui comua- ted, it would cover a surface of 100 square miles or torm a belt, thirtv feet wido; around the earth. EbumtimtaI. JJOT The following article suits us ex actly. The 'Connecticut School Journal1 i . . , i3 not on our list of exchanges, but if this is a fair specimen of its articles we would I 'like to have it. From the Conn. Common SchoolJournal. School Discipline. It is not right to regard any sort of discipline as a convenient, or even a ne- . - I. A 3 a . 1 i jcessary uejp to eaucauon. itisuseirtne great educational process. A well dis- ciplined mind is a well educated mind, 1. It t. 1. 1. 1 .1 i;..i . nudum ii- uaa uuuuu uuoviiuugu or iittte; and tho mind that is not disciplined is not educated, though it ia familiar with the wuole route trom A to Astronomy . he tr.u,e. busiiness, then, of the teacher is that of discipline. The wild colt of the prairies is unfit for gentle uses, but he ! may be brought to drag the plough or to De driven by a child. lie needs to bo tamed, but receives no new powers. The child that is to be the futuro citizen, or. nd moral, comes to the comes to be disciplined. The popular idea of school discipline ! has reference to the wholo apparatus of requisitions and probibitions, restraints 1 . 1. 1-1 J-" Jx I and stimulants, which are designed to reg- ulate the pupil's habits of study and de-' portmeut. .Let us consider lor tne pres- ,euc wis appj ication of the subject, guided by the proceeding observations. Among ments in the school-room, injury to any, j school property by making, cutting, de- j filing, &c., rudeness of speech or act in ' istuuoi j me course, or in pasiug wanu from school, profanity, every form of m- i . .. j , - , AmoDg the objects to be secured, some ; , iot which are implied by their opposite. named, are regularity of attendance, promptness in every auty, unquestioning fobeuience, trutuiuiness anu conscientious- nesj earnestness, diligence, thorough prep- aration of lessons, neatness in dress and acnooi-room nabits, tne "golden rule" as,. tuc rule or intercourse witn companions and teachers, &c. These lists of school f . 1 . 1 1 1 . Buiaiguu, watchfully cared for by evpry teacher in i - . J e j- i- i i. - his system of discipline. And tnis, be it remembered, not so much to promote tho j business of the school-room, as because of the certain shaping those daily school- j room habits, whether good or bad are to nave or maiviauai cnaracter ana aestiny for this world and the next. A system of discipline ought to accom plisfi completely the object it aims at. It should have no rules that havo not been ed to. I never err this way myselfbut well considered beforehand. It febould jmy conviction always laments it; and for then admit of no exceptions! but for the! ycar3 aftr j Devef offended in thia most indispensable reasons. Letdowns J , , , the bars to-day,and scholars will leap the I wa? 1 never needed three-quarters of fences to-morrow, and snap their fingers, an hour at most. I saw one excellency at all barriers the day after. The system i was within my reach; it was brevity, and i..l. .lrt-li .! wnne it lasts must be innexiDie, earnest, strong, thorough. It is much easier to govern pertectiy man partially, to say uothincr of the clear pain in temrjer and f . i ,i . comfort. Whatever is worth doing at:taat will not De so iorever; no man to-be all, is worth doing thoroughly. If an evil happy, but he that needs no other happi ought to be prevented, let the teacher de-'ness than what is within himself; no man liberate and then prevent it. tic can do it if he will. He must be patient, but determined. If any positive advance ment is to be made, the matter should be well considered, then let the teacher will and act like a Napoleon. A zcod scficol discipline is characterized by energy cfficicncy, Government should bo equable and u niform, not fitful and capricous. Schol ars should know upon what they may rely. They will acquiesce more cheer fully in a rule if it is constant, than it is ouly executed occasionally. Habits of j blast, and tho prettiest face some ugly obedience makes obedience easier to icn- feature The faIrcst faec ;s luost subject der and secure. It is moreover unjust! t e , . , i? , 7 . . r i r . ' to freckles? aud the handsomest girl is to pupils to enforce a regulation with, l'ai t strictness atone time, which laxity atan-'apt to be proud; the most sentimental other has led them to believe may safely i lady loves cold pork, and the gayest moth be disregarded. Any scheme of discip-j cr lets her children go ragged. The lino, to be successful, must be sure to kndest vifc sometimes overlook an: embrace details,, the "little things1 of; . . , i irr t i : ai!;uia n . absent shirt button, and the husband for- ppIiooI lift It is ntterlv lmnossible tOi ' bring a community of children into a hap- - j -- r l. , i 1 I J7 1 and habit of doing every little thing inthe very best way you may be unconcerned about his great lines of conduct. The boy is safe. If a young miss is pert or rude in speech or manners, there is a counterpart within; and if you regard with indifference these slight but true glimpses of the soul within, there may be much to, regret at a future day. Tones of voice, carelessness in pronunciation and phrase j ology, coarseness ana uncomuucab oi language, uutidineas of dress, gait, atti- tude, &c, havo thesouud of "little things. tude, &c, havo the souud oi "little tilings. But they are each signs and symptoms, and with certain index point out the path into tho future. More than this. If a iuiu iuu pupil commits a- inning Drcaeti 01 ucco - rum, ho thereby strengthens the impulse (that prompted it, and crates a probability of greater misdoing. Let the teacher strictly take care of all the "little things" in his establishment, and the greater ones will take care of themselves. This i.9 bo cause the former begat the latter. It has always been so. The oak comes from tho 1 acorn, the ocean from the little streams .l.i. 11 e i it . 1 n . t that trickle from out the rocks of tho ' mniinf nin fViIn Iiaovv Tinll nf snrrnw nnil death that overspreads our world from I that "little act" in the garden. "Little things" are important things. There is a divinitv in them. We have at times ' . ... been bo strongly "exercised" concerning tho importance ot ctvins more earnest heed to this subject, that we much fear 1 i ii i .11- i - we suan nave to deliver ourselves or an article upon it. So enough for the prea- ent. c. Schooh In America. I can positively affirm from personai observation, that in' nn:nf, nf 1 nlirtA the Amnrionn. Schools greatly excel any I have ever seen' in Great Britan. In Canada and in tho gtates every eaital.le provision is made ftiPv, WCA o ncnnl. spi10o1h of Scotland. T was much nleased witi. t nrPf,ntTfinirtfa filfi Amnrinan Sp;,onlc nrPnt diaordnr or imnronor interference one with another amonc the pupiis. All are at small desks not more . tijan teac two to gether in rows; so that the teacher can conveniently reach every seat jn tjj0 school. It is customary likewise.' to eause aij t,e nuni;8 to enter slowlv and decorously, instead of being sufferd, as I ;jers . rfF Ai0untair.s are considerable up' anddoWS in Vermont It is related that .. i .3 :..: i,j ze . t f , ' . , ,iCi i he answered, "chain lighting couldn't go down it without breechin' on!" Long Preaching;. There is nothing against which a youri'ir! preacher should be more guarded than .Noth;nfT aaVii Lament, "carr ' c t u uc , eww. one, it need not be long; and if it be a bad one, it must not oe Jong. miner, m ia& pniimp.rntjnTi nf ninn nnnlitma or a (road , . . 4, urr, . , preacher, gives as 3 sixth, "lhat he ' 6 1 should kE0W when to stoP-" Boyle ha9 an essay on patience under long preach- jag. This was never more wanted sinca the Commonwealth than now in our own day, especially among our divines and a cademicians, who seem to think their per formances can never be too much attend- r determined to attain it. 4"Wisdom allows nothing to be goody to be great or powerful, that is not mas ter of himself. Seneca. Professor Mapes thinks dogs" can reason. We doubt it. If they could. tf;thcy woujd not make sucl asses of them- selves as to go a mile in 2,40 just because a tin cullender is fastened to their tail. JJj3 The loveliest valley has a muddy swamp, the noblest mountain a piercing. , , t. . .. , 6 to kiss ms wne every time ne steps- WUU t W UUUWliJ, uuj . Relief Notes in Circulation, -From the Auditor General's Report. we clcan the following facts relative to tnc 'relief notes,' which still lingers in circulation, to the pollution of our now otherwise "clean" currency: Original amount issued QfQ jssuea redeemed re.is3UC3 jn cir. $2,243,016 2,195,079 culation. 488,uoy j At tue ciose ot iuo n-w j. in the sinking fund -8U,bou, to the further cancellation of n and during tho month of Uece At tile close of the fiscal year, there was fund S280,856, appliable reliel notes, mber, that . - 11 T J J ' 1 L. iuuiuuui. -vMv -w-..---, (leaving at, im umv iu u,, uiu.aUV, 3217,203. i