Deuotcb to JJoIitics, literature, Agriculture, Srieiue, iiloralitj), nub cueral Intelligence. VOL 15. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. NOVEMBER 8, 1855. NO. 50. iPublished by Theodore Schoefce TERMS Twoilollars pernnnuin in advanceTwo Hollars and n qu.irler.'half yearly :ind if not paid be fore thr end of the vcar.Two dollars and a half. t . N'i papers discontinued until all aw enrages arc paid, Except at the ontion of the Editor. U2P Advertisements nut exceeding one square (ten incs) uillbc inserted three weeks lor one dollar, and ' twenty-five cents for every subsequent insertion. The J charge for one and three insertions the same. A liber- j al discount made to ycarlv advertisers. IET All letters addressed to the Editor must be post paiJ. JOB PRINTIKG. Haunea general assortment of large, elegant, plain siiul ornamental Type, w e are prepared to execute every description of Catds, Circulirs.Bill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts . .Jumkuis, Legal and other Blanks, Pamphlets, &c. j.nnted witu neatness anu ucspaicu, on ruuMumum terms, AT THE OFFICE OF Ti2E JEFFERSOKIA!?. - OCT Answer to the Miscellaneous Enigma of last week. "Live up lo your engagements. WRITTEN TOR THE JEFFERSON! AN. Miscellaneous Enigma. t-. I am composed of 13 letters. My 12, 0, 5, 2. 7, is a descendant of Shern. My 5, 4. 3, 0, is what some become. My 1,"5, 4, 7, is used on a vessel. yv 12, 11, C, 9, are cat by many. - " A:y 3, S, 4, 12, is used by merchants. - s My 7. j, 4, in, 10, is sold by druggists. ,v, My whole is the name of a class of persons, roM-Iing-"in our vHlage. Answer next w eek. S:roudsbury, Penn. J. F. D. it "he Old Cottage Clock. BY CHARLES SWAIN. ;Oji! the old, clock, of the household stock, Was the brightest thing and neatest; -ltd hand?, though old, had a touch of gold, And its chime rang still the sweetest. Twas a monitor, too, though its words were few, Yet they lived thntigh nations altered; Am! its voice, still ttroiig, warned oh! and When ;!ie voice and friendship faltered! .'Tick tick." it said "quick, quick, to bc.l- For ten I've given warning; Up. up, and go or clseynu know, You'll never rife soon in the morning." A friendly voice was that old, old clock, As it stood in the corner smiling, AivA bless the lime with a merry chime, " The wint'ry houns beguiling; But a cross old voice was that tiresome clock, As it called al dnybrcak boldly, When the dawn looked gray o'er the misty way. Ant! the early air blew coldly; Tick, lick," it said "quick, out of bed - rr five I've given warning; Yuif ! never have health you'll wealth, never get Unless you'r up soon in the morning.'" Still hourly the sound goes round and round, With a tone that could never; While tears are shed for the bright days fled, And the oid friends lost forever! Ifa hetut beatd on though hearts are gone TJicl warmer bent and younger; Its hands still move though hands we love Are clapped on earth no longer! "Tick, tick," it said "to the church yard bed The grave hath given warning Uj, up, and rise, and Icok to the sk:e-a. And prepare for a heavenly morning!' Antiquity of the Earth. The following sublime description 0f j the Earth and argument as to its .proba- hj antiquity, is from a work on Thcolog- ical Sceincc, called pre-Adamite Earth, - t writteu by the eminent Doctor Harris. This is the moit sublime description of the Earth that we have ever read, and we nope none or our reaaen. xuu lu peruse it attentively. mnrXen ' Now revelation and science barmon sc , with reason, and are decisive on the sub- , i ii -l . i,.f tVi-.f -ia fnr thf. VJ.Sl!jjR ItfllVCrSC IS I ' ;: c motnr?i 1 concerned, he formation of its material , 1 ' r .. r .fi- ! preceaeu . i io.mai.uu , a. Turning first to the inspired record to ascertain tue ongiu or tmngs as tuey now are, we learn of our earth, that it as Bumed its present state a lew thousands of year3 ago, in consequence of a creative t no cess or of a series or creative acts con- ..l.,?tnr. with n nronfinn nf limn, which ex tended through a period of six ordinary , or natural days. Possessed of this fact ; rosnccting the date ef man s introduction on ho oarth, we proceed to examine the globe itself. Aud here we fiud that the mere shell of the earth takes us back through an unknown scries of ages, in which creation appears to havo followed creation at the distance of mighty inter vals between u..f. tl,nnffl, in tho nronrcsa of our in- ' ;r;c ennn fir.n that wc have cfearcd tho bounds of historic time, and are mov ' bvv" " - . , ing far back-among the periods of an pn ineasur.aed and immeasurable antiquity the geologist can demonstrate that the crust of the earth has a natural history. That'll 0 cannot determine the chronology of its successive strata is quite immaten- s- :il. Wc onlv ask him to p to prove tho order of their position from the newest deposit ; character of this vast formation, again, to the lowest step of the scries; and this ; tells of ages innumerable. For, though he can. do. For nature itself by a force many thousand feet in depth, it is obvi qalculablc only by the God of nature ' ously derived from the materials of more lifting up iu places the whole of the roigh-1 ancient rocks, fractured, decomposed, and ty scries iu a slanting, ladder-li.ke, direc- ' slowly deposited in water. The gradual tion to the surface, has revealed to him i and quiet nature of the process, and therer the order in which they wcro originally ( foro its immense duration, arc evident laid, aud invites him to descend step by j from the numerous "Platforms of death" Bfon to its awful foundations. which mark its formation, each crowded T.ot no nWfnd with him. and traverse : an ideal section of a portiou of the earth's 1 cru6t. Quitting tho living surface of tho ' grec-u enrtb, and entering on our down- ward path, our first step may take us be - low the dust of Adam, and beyond the limits or recorded time. From the mo - incnt we leave the mere surface-soil, and touch even the nearest of the tertiary beds all traces of human remains disap- pearpso that let pur grave be as shallow as it may in even the latest stratified bed, we havo to make it in the dust of a do - parted world. Formation now follows 1 clay, and lime, and presenting a thick - L J i nest of more than a thousand feet each. ( As wo descend through these, one of the , most sublime fictions of mythology be ' comes sober truth; for at our every step 1 an age flies past. We find ourselves on , a road where the lapse of duration is marked not by the succession of seasons , and of years, but by the slow esoava- I uou, p waioi, ui uu ueep vaneys in rocK , narmc; uy toe return oi a conunenc to , uie oosoui oi a ocean m wnicn ages ne- lore it naa neen slowly tormed; or by the ruu,u Ui uu- uuiw, uuu iuu luluJu- 1 - i? ii ti ! 1 't 1 inn ni nimrnnr. Mm i rf'nrn I n iti tr ,r , , 11. jour ui tvp iuui, ua uuiuw me uue wuicu is consccraiea Dy uuman qusj, we ruu turougu tueir cycio oi generations, have to take but a few steps more, before and became extinct and of the continu wc begin to find that the fosail remains of anceof this stratifying process, until these all those forms of animal life with which thin beds had acquired, by union, tho we are most familiar, arc diminishing,and J that their places are gradually supplied b' strange and yet stranger forms, till, in the last fossilifcrous formation of this di vision, traco of existing species become extremely rare, and extinct species every where predominate. The secondary rocks receive us as into a new fossilifcrous world, or into a now scries of worlds. Taking the chalk for mation as the first member of this series, wo fiud a stratification upwards of a thous and feet thick. Who shall compute the tracks of time necessary for its slow sed imentary deposition! !5o vast was it,and to widel3' different were it3 physical con dition? from those which followed, that only one trace of animal s-pecies still, liv ing is to be found in it. Crowded as it is with conchological remains for exam ple, not a shell of one of the seven thous and existing species is discoverable. Tjpes of organic life, before unknown, arrest our attention, and prepare us for still more surprising forms. Descending to the system next in order the politic with its many subdivisions, ond its thick- ness of about half a mile, we recognize new proofs of the dateless antiquity of the earth. For, enormous a3 this bed is, it was obviously formed by deposition from sea and river water. And so gradual and tranquil was the operation, that, in some places, the organic remains of the successive strata arc arranged witu a shelve like regularity, reminding us of the well-ordered cabinet of a naturalist -Here, too, the last trace of animal species still living, has vanished. Even this link TTT t t 1 T is gone, we nave reacneu a point, wnen the earth was in the possession of the gi- gantio form3 of Saurian reptiles, mon- , with the succession of worlds wc have sters more appalling than the poet's fan- passed through; of the slow formation of cy ever feigned; and these are their cat- J each of these worlds on worlds, by the acombs. descending through the later J disintegration of more ancient materials red sand-stone and saliferous niarla of and their subsidence in waters; of the leaf two thousand feet in thickness, and which ' like thinness of a great proportion of the exhibit, in their very variegated strain, a ! strata; of the consequent flow of timo ne succession of numerous physical changes. 1 cessary to form only a few perpendicular ! our subterranean path brings us to the carboniferous system, or coal formations. , . , . . jrei f h .,s f suc. cessive ancient vegetable worlds. But in ! w . the rank iuncles aud luxuriant wilder- nesses which arc here accumulated and compressed, we recocnise no plant of any existiner snccies. Here, too. we have pass- uu uuiu w me last tiuuu ui iuuiiiu nit;. . 1 t 1 .t 1 i i f gpeaking foot.priDt5 ia)presed on tho preceding rocks, arc absent here. Nor o Qv; - ;ndication that fftP4,sfI prhnpA tn i.a " r". . . voice of birds. But between these strata, beds of limestone of enormous thickness :nt-flrnoseii. cach nroelaiminrr the nrolom?- 1 j r o - 1- o ed existence and final extinction of a cre ation. For these limestone beds are not so much the charnel-houses of fossil ani mals, as the remains of the animals them selves. The mountain masses of stone which now surround us, extending for miles in length and breadth, were oncp sentient living at the bottom of ancient seas aud lakes, llow countless the ages necessary for their accumulation; when the forma tion of onlv a few inches of the strata re quired the life and death of many gener ations! Here, tho mind is not merely carried back through immeasurable per iods, but, while standing amidst the pet- "Sed remains of this succession of pn- , r meval forests and extinct races of animals piled up into sepulchral mountains,, we seem to be encompassed by the thicKest shadow of the valley of death. On quitting these Etupendous monu ments of death; we leave behind us the - , T 1 last vestige ot land-piants, ana pass aown to the old red sandstone. Ihc geological . withonranic structures which lived &dicd where they are now seen; and which, con- scquently must havo perished by somo destructive agency, too sudden to allow j of their dispersion, and yet too subtile j and quiet as to leave the place of their , habitation undistrubed. Immeasureably far behind us as we have already left the fair face of the ex tant , ., . v . creation, while traveling into the l c m. i- Lt- i iof ancient time, we yet fee!, as we. night , stand on the threshold of the next, or Si ! lurian, system, and look down towards J 'the foundations of the earth,7 that we are I ' ! survoying the fossil structures, we are first! siruoK wun ine total cnange in tue petri fied inhabitants of the sea, as compared with what we found in the mountain lime stone; implying the lapse of long periods of time, during the formation of the in tervening old red sandstone which we . have iust left. I3ut still more are we ini- ' pressed with the lapse of duration, while , uwoBuuing mo jaug &uoooiuu ui .ira.u, w wutcu co pi unary lOMiiiieroob lorma- , won n, compo.ea, wiien we uuu. ot luuir slow derivation Irom tlie more ancient , .ywuc, """r1'" """" a"u;rl fTinnrrli if. was .intnmn. The diahilas j - r ii.. 1 . ; .i r nnrfssiriTT n run 'niitf nnrmns nr rnnnsp I J I'll i 1 e - 1 uuiiug u u uuuuivu ui uuiuiai BpucB immense thickness of a mile and a half. Next below this, we reaoh the Cambrian system, of almost equal thickness and formed by the same slow process. Here, the gradual decrease of animal remains aamonisnes u., tnai even tue vast an: wuuu. uuuju u-o i a -uu la r Bcemed helping us play hide-and-thatwo are now ,n its outskirts But.J & 'a Wfl ,ooked through them at the thero is n. so iif.nrlo oreator than lhaf. nr ' . i the boundless desert, and a dreariness more impressive than that which reigns in a world entombed. On leaving the state rocks of the Cambrian, and descend ing to thoso of the Cumbrian formation, we fiud that the worlds of organic remains are past, and that we have reached a re gion older than death, because older than life itself. Here, at least if life ever ex isted, all traco of it is obliterated by the fusing power of the heat below. But we have not even yet reached a resting-place. Passing down through the beds of mioa schist, many thousand feet in depth, to the great gniess formation, we find that we have reached the limits of stratifica- tion itself. rIhe granitic masses below, ol a deptu wnicn man can never explore, ( are not only crystalized themselves, but the igeneous power acting through them, j has partially crystalized the rocks above, Not only life, but the conditions of life, are here at an end. row, is it possible lor us to look from . our ideal position, backward and up- wards to tue ten mue3 height supposing l Lrt c I t o f v r v,lrJ rv.v 1 m I . fvrm which we have descended regularly, with out feeling that we have reached a point of immeasurable remotness in terrestrial antiquity? Can we think of the thin soil of man's lew thousand year3, in contrast inches or all these miles; or ot the long periods of alternate elevation and depres sion, action and repose, which mark their formation, without acknowledging that, the days and years of geology are ages WW and cycles of agesl Let us conceive, if wo can, that atoms ot one or these strata havo formed the sands of an hour-glass; ! and that each gram counted a moment, . - t Tif rrn mnfr f I, rt n morn cnmn innrATtmn. "j "rt tion to the past periods of geology; periods . in the computation of which tho longest ! huraan dynasty, and even the date of tho ' pyramids, would form oulv an insienifi- rs . i .1 cant fraction. Ur. remembering that only one species of animals has, so far as we know, died out during the sixty or seventy centuries of man's historic exis tence upon earth, can we think of tho thousands, not of generations, but of spe cies, of races, which we have passed in our downward track, and which havo all run through their ages of existence and ceased; of the recurrence of this change again and again, even in tho same strata; and of tho many times over the strata must be repeated in order to equal tho vast sum of the entire series, without feel - 1 ing that we are standing, in idea, 011 ' pa as gone into bis grave buforc bis time, ground so immeasurably far back in tho y. mcrry S0Dg of tu0 iirasf the night of timo, as to fill tho mind with awe? hung 0f the insects, the piping of the 'How dreadful is this place!' Hero, at as f .and thc sweeping eurges of the incalculable a saccular distince, probably,' ajj S10W me tbat Qod mcant we from thc first creation of organio life, a should bo cheerful and merry. 'Who ev that is from the last creation here, si- qt bcartj of a lack-bird too old to whistle lence once reigned: the only sound which ja Wfen that coud not cj,jrp and flutter occasionally broke the intense stillness because of bis years? And why should being the voice of subterranean thunder: oW mQn fcurn a?i(le fromthat which mado tho only motion (not felt, for there was; h . , j aJn h.ippy Ifc j, as rigbt none to feel it,) an earthquake; the only JQ g.no s a j thc acc0rdion at phenomenon, a molten sea shot up irom rwv."-" , . - the fierry gulf below,. to form thc 'gy framework of some future eontment. Aud still that ancient silence seems to : ft4iii jfl,p, uA tn nl- imyv vjn..w6 ..... , , . low in its presence the activity oi nothing but thought. And that thought what direction more natural for it to take than to plunge still farther back intb the dark abyss of departed time, till it has reached a First Efficient UauseT A Divine, once praying, said4P4.LordvcrI.0 t0 my work, ' with a shout of i cive mo neither povcrty-or-.richos.vand glee, 'Here comes the old man anu uis uuce i.im 10 locai '-i-l J . ' o . . , .. . a fVfti- luc "pilint and varied ' pausing solemuly a moment, added, 'cspec ( ially poverty.' From lite Saturday Evening Post. Threescore and Five. By Frances Dana Gage. It was a beautiful autnmn sunset. rni. . nj - c .1 i i i :j ,i l j ,zling splendor, and sank to , fa , v , r ' i j 'clear, broad face, glowing and ;f egress his re J - . . rest with a benevolent, express his regret that so soon tho chili winds, which were piping through the trees and screaming round the corners, shaking every sear loaf from ' f h a nit v nrnnnnf f v crrntr trti rl nnr - xl ,b s,1 i....iJ-? ri mg creeper, or stra from the honeysuckle, should waft the frost to cut down the beauty of the gar den, the wood and the prairie. It was autumn, late autumn. It was the last wan ing day of tho moon, too,, and, with her great disk, she seemed answering the half-regretful smile of the sun, as he went down; for well she knew that she must ere ong give p.ace , iue mppuu 1' 1 it.- a: j. t. afc whicH maidg could look Qm r - ftrhinh til A tTAHT1n TV1 O 1 n AAU n IAn O . yer theip ribt sbouIders and breathe out . fc -aSDiration for fche success 0f their loves 'Yefc tho earth ooked cheer. ) -rrn 7 in li117 full CTlloninl i - . . . -1 . , I YUl O 111 LUtli IU11 suiMlum. au iu, uc- . j , vcrbenag geemed resolved to look beautiful to the last. The full moon was cheerful, though to-morrow it would I be no more. The katydids were cheerful, though every surge of the chill wind threatened their destruction. The swal lows upon the house-tops were cheerful, as they held the!P family gathering, per- ' chance for the last time. And tho winds themselves, as they toyed with the leaves nnof oi-f1 no folnn Ann1 Tinmbnrrlv f h locust and catalpa and Lorabardy stars, as thev came ffimtinir out m their j a w places, one by one, to bid the departing glory of the day good-night. The old man was cheerful too the old man of "threescore years and five," as ho sat in his arm-chair, looking out of tho west windows at the departing sun light; watching the twirling leaves, and listening to the piping winds. Aye, cheerful was he, as he played the old tunes of his boyhood on the child's accor dion, a soft smile played over his face, hi3 eyo undimmed by the survice of life, looked out clear and brillant; his lips half moved, and his toe patted time to the music. "When did you learn to play the ac cordion," said Will, as be watched the time-worn yet nimble fingers. "Only three years ago, my boy, only three years ago, and a deal of comfort it is to me, to be sure, to sit, at twilight, when my work is done, and play these tunes it takes me back to my boyhood." "Did you learn these tunes then?" "Aye did I. While I was an appren tice, ray master used to tako me to the houses of the wealthy and grand; as I worked in the parlors, hanging the cur tains, and putting up the papers, the pic tures and the mirrors, I often heard the young Misses playing upon the piano, tho guitar and harpsichord. I worked all tho more merrily to their cheerful voices and instruments, and laid the tune3 away in my storehouse, where they have rested many a year, while I have fought life's hard battles. But now the garner ed treasures of my boyhood cheer my old age, and almost make me feel young a gain. And tho old man placed the in strument upon hia knee, and his youth ful face shone out from beneath his silve- ry locks and brow, as he touched off, with nnnfirnf. thn mfrrv airs of the old- e t:me "Did you ever eeo such an old man layinK-rausic mamma, said little Bettie, ; fiT ... cn fnnn- whv rrandnana ij. buiuu .u u -" " ' J o x I Jones won't let me play and sing a bit when he's in the house. He says ho don't wont our nonsense. I wonder if Mr Johnson thinks it's nonsense? May I ask him?" "Oh, yes, child, I would like to hear his answer," The golden-haired spring blossom, that had felt the dew and sunshine of six Bum mers, bounded to the old mans side. He caught her eye and suspended his tune. "What is it puss?" "Do you think playing accordions ond singing pretty songs, and playing and jumping and dancing is nonsense. My grandpapa says it is!" "Hoot a toot," answered tho old man, with a hearty chuckle, "nonsense no I ,. , fch . Q of uf darling; your grand , sisty.five as :il sixteen, provided we have 1 sisty-uve, as ai s-isiceu, pvoviueu l tbeabiiit y M o do; which I'm of 1 : pinion we f-hcild more frequently Jf wQ ,vcJ.c , Q t u t0 supi,res tlie o- have, resa I he " 'V. . 0 " t" buoyant lite v. ltnin us uccause nru, - oroJiufr 0,j. i learned to play when I, "yaa'an0i,j mau; t an (hwcore and live,' (an(1 ma a hard days' toil has been i roumo(1 or and inadl, delightful by a , JuJrth ald masem J aui' HUro I am others are mn. nliiMren wolcomo me where- accordion. 1 am iireu souu'miiea uuu ninht comes. But when I get home,. it is' rest to my weary limbs to see the merry laughing faces that ran to meet me. Tommy put by my cane; Nellie draws up my easy chair; Joe gets my slippers and puts them on my feet; and then the ac- fnrnlon la hrniitThf. Fnr rrnriflri no rind I , 7 --b 77 -r-r-i ; jorgeo my ions amia ine aance, ana j. fgrow young again for the morrow. I "Aye, madam," said tho old man of threescore and live, turning to tiettie s mother, "it is not nonsense to be cheerful and merry, to keep the spirit fresh, whilo the body bears the buffeting of the winds of the hour. The whirlwind may tear the branches, and the lightning scathe the trunk of the old tree, but if the heart be sound it will still bring fofth tho bud and blossom to the last, or put forth the green leaves of it3 youth till the winds lay it low. "No no; it is not nonsense to be mer ry and cheerful. Let your children bo iJ "uu -oyfal Frown not down the exuberance I " - of childood and youth beneath the forms of dignity, or the monotony of utilitarian ism. Let it bubble and sparkle and glow, long as it flows in right channels. "The brook that dances through the valley, singing its accompauiment to the birds and the flower?, make all brighter 1 '. T i T -1 1 Z l- L I Dy its presence. xuc uam us sunorigut j waters, and they will become stagnant ; and impure, or overleap their barriers, ; carrying evil and destruction with them. J "I am threescore, and five. I have lived in the old world and the new. In , the village and in the great metropolis of j the civilized nations. My trado led me , into the houses of the lord and the peasant, ' the merchant and the mechanic my love , of investigation into the prison and the poor-house, the school and the haunt of vice. j "I havo watched the child upon the street, and in the drawing-room, in the crowded city, the quiet village and tho wildwood home. Half of my threescore years were spent in England, half in the "Land of the West," in its new houses of village, town.'city and country; and I have come to believe that a large propor tion of the vices of humanity are the out- : growth of restricted virtues. The pent up streams of nature have be come turbid and vile, through unnecessa ry and uncomfortable bondage. Some of the worst of crimes, if traced back to their beginning, will be found to originate I in thc best feelings or the numan heart. Cold, unsympathising harshness has turn ed sweet into bitter,, and rendered life accurst. Many a boy has found his ruin in the brothel, or at the gaming-table, because his father was too dignified to make himself agreeable to his young com ions at home, or too severely pious to shorten the hours and temper the impet uosity of youth by joining in the cveuing game, or merry dance at the fire-side. Many a mother has seen her daughter go down to destruction, or wean out a miser able life, because she could not conde scend to make one of the evening party, or take an interest in the sport or amuse- , ments of her child, thus bringing her in- ( to nearer and closer relations with her- j self than the endearments of parental love could over do, while tho cold, formal bar riers of proud dignity and sobriety are kept between them. The people of this country assume old age even in the very prime of life, and it is not unfrequent to find men, and women, too, bowed and broken at thirty-five. Ere sixty winters have bleachod their locks, or cooled the warm current of life, they cease to be useful to themselves or others. This would not bo so much matter, if they would cease to be annoying; but their life is spent in drawing dark lines over every beautiful picture; and in their deep groanings and discontcuts, they became the scare-crows of old age to all the young. No wonder it has become a popular, though vulgar saying, often in the mouths of both young and old in this country . Go it while you're young;' and no wonder that Young America rush es headlong into pleasure, and like the bee in the sugar-bowl, takes a surfeit at once. For tho teaching and practice of aire are too often that " When you're old you can't.' "I would rather bo the blind fiddler in the chimney corner, who gives innocont life and mirth and joy to the house, than the sombre statesman or learned philoso pher, whoso presence Dnngs a hush ot mirth; whose eye makes tho young heart tremble; and whose cold stern life makes laughter-loving childhood exclaim 'Oh, may I never grow old.' " The merry old man played " Life let us cherish ;" while tho little ones capered with glee, and the gcntlo mother Hiniled her thanks for thc lesson of wisdom, drawn from tho experience of Tlirccscorc and Five. St. Iuis, Oct., 0. t AaninwjiU (Jouricr savs: "Santa . i r. -i nr cfiv installed in i and near Carthairena. Uur roauer.s arc - aware that ho has a beautiful residence but a few miles distant from Carthagcna. His hacienda was under good cultivation two years ago, when he loft it at thecall of his partisans in Mexico. lie now ro- turns to nrivatc life for the third tune; and we presumo the little pueblo ot lo- basco roust have strong attractions to in- bui-uuw mm, un. ...- v.... career." (Educational. Teaching by Example. The iuflnenc of example upon the young is proverbial. With the juvenile mind it is lar more powerful than precept. Wc may tell a child, for instance that it is wrong to angry; but in a half an hour afterwards, he eccs us irritated by some petty provocation, he will think thero must be some important exceptions to tho rule and be likely to conduct himself ac cordingly. The little ones are in strife, perhaps about some trifling matter. You tell them it ets wrong. If you can truly appeal to them, whether they ever heard an unkind word between father and moth er, your descision is established, but if notj certain luckless remembrancen will be sure to undermine it; it cannot be so very wrong to imitate father and mother. Parents should be careful of their own conduct. I was once Young". It is an cxcllcnt thing for all who ard enjraged in givnu: instruction to vonncr people frequently to call to mind what they were themselves when yonng. This practice is ono of the most likely to im part patience and forbearance, and to correct unreasonable expectations. At one period of my life, when instructing two or three young people to write, I found them, as I thought, unusually stu pid. I happened about this time to look over the contents of an old copy-book, written by me when 1 was a boy. Tho thick up strokes, tho crooked down strokes, the awkward joinings of the blot3 in the book, made me completely asham ed of myself, and I could, at the moment' havo burned the book in the fire. The worse, however I thought of myself, tho better I thought of ray backward scholars; I was cured of my unreasonable expecta tions, and became in future doubly pa tient and forbearing. In teaching youth, remember that you were young, and in reproving their youthful errors, endeav or to call to mind your own. Euin of two Country Girls A Sad Warning. Among the delegates to a recent con vention at Syracuse, New York, were two young men well known to the political portion of this city. These persons wero taking a stroll through the btreets at Syracu3o one evening when they met two" very respectable young seamstresses, sis ters, aged 17 and 19, of whom they in quired their way. Thoughtlessly these "iris walked along together with tho young men, in conversation, until tho gathering darkness warned them of their prudence, when they started to return, the hour being about half past nine. Ter rified at the lateness of their stay, and afraid to compromise their reputation by returning to their boardinghousc, they yielded to the pressing invitation of tho two young men, and accepted an invita tion to pass the night at the hotekwhere they were f-taying, not doubting that they would receive considerate treatment. But by surreptitious means they wero forc ed to avail themselves of an apartment provided with two double beds, present ing no opportunity for their escape. They were not molested during the night, but their companions, underan apparent guiso of sincerity, in the morning induced them to accompany them to this city as a means of averting any exposure, and at the same timo securing lucrative employment. They finally consented and came on with them. Tho unsophisticated girls were then, on their arrival here, inveighled in to a house of infamy in Eliabeth street, where their ruin was accomplished. Af terwards they succeeded in escaping, and by selling their jewelry managed to get board in a respectable house. But employment was not to be procured ; and after selling everything they had, except ing the garments they wore, they applied toMayor Wood for relief when iu thc very last extremity. Their betrayers wero sent for, when the Mayor required them to pay thc girls' passage home which was all they iequired. At first they indig nantly refused, but the consequences of exposure and prosecution were too for midable to bo braved, and finally tho two scoundrels placed tho required sum in tho bauds of officer Leckcr, who pro cured the necessary ticket, and the un fortunate siters wero then dispatched homeward. Such are thc doings of somo ot the vermin known nrs stanch support ers of "the par-r-ty,"io tbia den of office seekers and political rufliaus, Now York City. A deacon who became rich in a groce- i ry not a hundred miles from Boston State' louse, used to hbast how much he had done for temperance, by mixing at least f a gallou of pure water with every gallouj of liquor he sold. A friend who has resided in North Ca rolina for the last twenty year?, says he .-till holds his own. He commcuced witU' nothing aud has got it all left. Women always want something to lean upon. As a fatiek is to green pea?, so is tho masculine gender to the feminine. EST "If a body hec a body carrying oil' liU wood, should n body vhale a bodip if a body could?-" - t 0 1$