'Terms of Publication. T nE TIOGA COUNTY AGITATOR i» pub , every Thursday Morning, and malted tomb Tory reasonable price of On Dolr jcribers inaaruMy in advance, Itiamtend- IV every subscriber when the term for ed ‘ o , ?. I.L paid shall base expired, by the stamp „ ouU” on the margin of the last paper. -“ Tiß,e Out., on ant;u fnrtherre . The By tliis arrangement no man Pittance printer, can be ht° a B 18 jhe Official Paper of the Conn Thi Aoit jteadily increasing circulation ty, with ala o j every neighborhood in the reaching in .t fte 0 j pottage to arty Post-office limits, and to those living within within in w jJ oae mos t convenientppstoffice may Lhe . l,m ‘adjoining County. ' b Bostaess Cards, not exceeding 5 lines, paper in elided. H ?exyeu. For the Agitator. the days of yore. BY JOHN LL. WILLIAMS. Ant—“ Auld Lang Syne.” Old friends, old friends, the dear old friends, Whom time has swept away. Ah, what can make the heart amends For the friends of life's young day 1 They were the morning stars of love That never left their sphere; The beacon-lights which shone above, Our darker paths to cheer. Old friends, old friends! can we forget Those days in boyhood's prime, When round our father's hearth we met And our voices* merry chime. Made the old hall ring to the roof with joy, As we sang the songs of yore. Or danced to the strain of the Harper boy On the bright old oaken floor. Old friends, old friends—as lime rolls on. We miss lliera more and more; Those Halls are dark where once they shone, And closed Ihe friendly door! And colder seems the stranger’s eye As we toil along our way. And think, with memory’s rising sigh, Of the friends of life’s young day. itraystille, Bradford Co. Pa. Little Sunbeam. “Christmas is coming, isn’t it, grandpa 7” "1 suppose it is, one of these days ; what of dial. Sunbeam 7” “Snow storms are coming, too, aren’t they, and the ground will all be white. Where ml f slay then, grandpa 7" “Why, in the house, the place for such a hula Sunbeam as this, I should think.” “Bui ihe cold winds are coming, too, they will whistle down the chimney, and creep in through ihe cracks of the door; what shall 1 do then 1" , “Put more wood on the fire, and clothes on your back,” laughed grandpa. “Jack Frost will gel here by that time, end he’ll be peeping in at the windows, and pinching our noses when we are asleep; wont he’’’ “That he will, if we give him a chance; what next, little questioner ?” There was quile a pause. “You are a very rich man ; aren’t you, grandpa 7” “Not at all, not at all,” growled grandpa. "Oh yes, but you are, I know you are ; and do all little girls have rich grandpas, I wonder 7” “Why no, child, what a question 1” “Then what do the poor lilllle things do, if they havn’t any father nor mother like me 7” “God only knows,” replied grandpa, with the tears in his eyes. The Mule girl looked thoughtful for a mo rnenl, (hen with a bright smile, she said— “ Now, grandpa, what is my Christmas present going to be?” "Just what your little heart wants most, I expect; that is always the way when you teaze. 1 ’ “Oh, that is nice I and you shall give me fifty dollars then, and I will be a rich grandpa to some poor little girls ; isn’t that a funny idea 3" "Whew!" exclaimed grandpa, “I should think it was. Fifty dollars to give away I Why, I hav’nt it to Spare, you little extrava gance 1” ' "Oh yes, you have, grandoa, I know you I have!" I “-N T o, I can’t possibly spare sd much I money, and I shall be cross if that is the Itune.’’ “Now, grandpa, you love Sunbeam, don’t you!" “"’hat if I do!” "Then you don’t want to plague her, and make her cry, do you 1” and the tears stood |m the little one’s eyes. 1 'Well, don’t look at me so, child. If you j 1 be 8 00[ i, g' ve you two little gold dollars; won’t that do?” I l_^ UI wam 10 k® B enerous 5 and how can , grandpa, with only two dollars? And you have so many great bagfuls, can’t you Ware me enough just to fill one little one? T™' please give Sunbeam what she pants this lime, and I won’t leaze you again, ■hats a dear, good grandpa I” I here, Mary, that will do, don’t teaze |®ny more. Tnu have made grandpa cross, t. orl l, not . B°' n g 10 give you what you wish Lv r . ls llrne - I must turn over a new leaf, Iknn T* 1 ' *° r '*' s high I ' me - D'd n ’ 1 you I, lv u- 1 B ra[) dpa could not let little girls I “ hls mone V away from him!” And I/,, , 8 0ze[ f sternly into the little upturned paw before him. lhe soft, dark eyes rest paein th laan ' B ace l"°r a moment; but ■u, hal J 16 was really in earnest, the eye- Kranit 00 ’ hididing her face in her Berbp 1 * aosom ' 'ho little girl sobbed as if fteari "o fl ! n OU ! d break ’ Ins,anl| y grandpa’s Sesnairi ene “>, as he-exclaimed in a most I 0 ?® ™? 'one. Isunbea^ 6 ’ n °“’’ ve one ''j turned my little Ibuoi.t , m ! m ° an A Prh shower ! Oh dear, I Kon’t . ° b ? ve known better. Come, now, roatinlfv ' in'* f good liltle B irl .” he said, |sl» SVB °/' , Uo , n 1 Cf y. Sunbeam ; you are ■won't h°° • and B r &ndpa knows it; and he Pare «l| B it! llngy aDy more » aDI * 7°“ B hall Poows it, , mone y you want, for grandpa Kood wtik • ° u Bn( * aunl Ellen will do more Iso b at ]|j. i, ll ’h an I shall. Come, don’t feel I'he fiMl" j'Vj" I . n ‘ ,e girl you’ve got,” said I "So y ’ wi 'ha fresh hurst of tears. I ~a°J OU are ' *o you are.” hht «obbed° U DeVer S i )oke 80 cross before,” [ ir you dld ’., bul * "oo’l sgain, child, PM heart r n ? y , Bmlle ’ an< l oheer .grandpa’s P'W Sunbeam U 'r h -j d ? wilh out bis I u> * He is afraid that his house THE AGITATOR ✓ ' to tfyt&xttnnion of tfce atrea of JFmOom anJJ tfje Spread of a&efotta. - WHILE THESE SHALL BE A WBON6 UNSIGHTED, AND UNTIL “MAN’S INHUMANITY TO MAN” SHALL OEASB, AGITATION MUST CONTINUE, VOL. IV. would be dark and dreary,-and his. heart .would grow cold and hard. Yea,” ho con tinued, “your mother was right, for you do leach the to lay up my treasure in heaven.” Thus mused the old man, while his darling gradually grew more quiet, until at length ahe lifted her head, and putting her arras around his neck she laid her soil curls against his face. The tears still glistened in her eyes, but they soon vanished before ibe fond' caresses of the loving old-man. April showers they were indeed, and the smiles soon brought back the flowers to Mary’s cheeks. After a few minutes they were chatting almost as gaily as if nothing bad happened. “You are a spoiled child. Sunbeam, that’s what you are,” said grandpa, as be fumbled in hia pocket-book. “Am 1? what makes you spoil me, then, grandpa 1” said Mary ; “I am sure 1 don’t want to be spoiled.” “Because I can’t help it w I suppose; I don’t know what el.se it can be. There, now, here are ten dollars for you, and the day be fore Christmas you shall have ihe Will that please my little Sunbeam 7” “Now, grandpa, you are just my own grandpa, and I do love you dearly, don’t I?” i'l shouldn’t wondei, but (here, I guess I can get along without any more hugs just this minute. Thera is danger of your loving old grandpa to death at this rate.” “Is there ? then you shall have the rest when I come back.’’ “Well,” she said, as she jingled the money into her little purse, “if all the Sunbeams carry as much money as this, I don’t believe there will be any poor children left, by-and by, grandpa,’’ and giving him a parting kiss, she turned away. “God is very good to me,” mused the little child, as she climbed the stairs to aunt Ellen’s.room, “to give me so good a grandpa, when he took my papa and mamma away to live with Him. I mean to tell them all about it when I get to heaven.” A nice time did Sunbeam have with aunt Ellen, buying and making up ihe hew things for Christmas presents ; and ll|e happiness (hat shone in her face on Chrislmai morning as she started to distribute her bundles, could be compared only to a ray of sunshine ol heaven. So thought grandpa, as she waved her little hand to him from ihe carriage window, and as he (urned away he mur mured, unconsciously, “Of such is the king dom of heaven.” Lillie Mary proved herself, that day, to be what her name signified, for she was indeed a sunbeam ; and scattering light and happi. ness in poverty 'stricken homes, and filling many a dark heart with joy and gratitude, it was no wonder that as she left a bless ing wherever her footsteps tarried, blessing should follow her, and that in happy, grateful hearts, long afterwards, there should arise the beautiful picture of a child-angel. Would that there wore more such angel Sunbeams to gladden our earth, and to teach us the way, and help us to love, to lay up our treasures in heaven. Nathalie. The Father of Waters. The vaslnessof the great Mississippi river, is thus given by a newspaper correspondent who writes from Maiden Rock, Wisconsin : “While I look upon the river, three miles wide at this point, my mind seems to lake in at one grasp the magnitude of the stream. — From the frozen regions of the north to the sunny south, it extends some 2,300 miles, and with the Missouri is 4,500 miles in length. It would reach from New York across the Atlantic, and extend from France to Turkey and the Caspian sea. Its average depth from its source, in lake Itasca, Minesota, to its delta, in the Gulf of Mexico, is fifty feet, and a half a mile wide. The trapper on the Up per Mississippi, can take the furs of (he ani mals that inhabit its source and exchange them for thq tropical fruits that are gathered on the bank below. Slaves toil al one end of this great thoroughfare, while the red men of the forest roam at the other end. The floods are more than a month traveling from its source to the delta. The total number of steamers afloat of this river and its tributa ries are 1,500 —more than twice (be entire tonnage of England and equal to that of all other parts of the world, ft receives a score of tributaries, the least of which are stronger than the vaunted streams of mighty empires. .It might furnish natural boundaries for'all Europe, and yet leave for every country a river longer than the Seine, It engulfs more every ye'arjhan the revenue of many petty kingdoms, and rolls a volume in whose depths the cathedral of St. Paul could be sunk out of sight. It discharges in one year more water than lias issued from the Tiber in five centuries; it swallows up fifty rivers which have no name, each of which are longer than the Thames. The addition of the waters of the Danube would not swell it a halfa fathom. In one single reservoir, 2,500 miles from the sea, the navies might ride at anchor. It washes the shores of twelve powerful Stales, and between its arms lies space for twenty mote.” A Good Witness. —“Did the defendant knock the plaintiff down with.a malice pre pense ?” “No, sir; he knocked him down with a flat-iron.” “You misunderstand roe, my friend; 1 wanHo know whether he attacked him with evil intent." • “Oh, no, sir; it was outside the tent,’’ , “No, nb ! 1 wish you to tell mo whether the attack was at all a preconcerted affair,” “No, sjr,; it was not ,a frcc fioncert agHir; it was a circus,” WELLSBOROj TIOGA COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY MORNING. JUNE 17, 1858. From Dr. Beecher’s Life Thoughts. —There are many professing Christians who ate secretly vexed on account of the charity they have to bestow, and the self-de nial they have to use. If instead of the smooth prayers which they do pray, they ■would speak out the things which they really feel, they would say, when thSj’ go home at night, “O Lord, I met a poor wretch of yours to day, a miserable, unwaslied brat, and I gave him sixpence, and I have been sorry for it ever since; or O Lord, if 1 had not signed those articles of faith, I might have gone to the theatre this evening. Your reli gion deprives me of a great deal of comfort, but I mean to slick to it. There’s no other way of getting into Heaven, I suppose.”— The sooner such men are out of the church the better. —I never knew my mother. She died when I was three years old, that she might be an angel to me all my life. 1 But one day in after years, turning over a pile of old let ters in my father’s study, I lound a package of her letters to him, beginning with her first acquaintance with him, and coming down in to her married life; and as I read those pages, at last I knew my mother. What- these let ters were to her life, that are the Four Cost pels to the life of Christ. But I remember that there was one leljer in which she first spoke freely and frankly of her love. That, to me, is the Gospel of John. It is God’s love-letter to the world. —A babe is a mother’s anchor. She can not swing far from her moorings. And yet a true mother never lives so little in the pres ent as when by the side of the cradle. Her thoughts follow the imagined future of her child. That babe is the boldest of pilots, and guides her fearless thoughts down through scenes of coming years. The old ark never made such a voyage as the cradle daily makes. —God designed men to grow as trees grow in open pasture, full boughed all around ; but men in society grow like trees in a forest, tall and spindling, the lower ones overshad owed by the higher, with only a little branch ing, and that at the top. They borrow of each other the power to stand ; and if the forest be cleared, and one be left alone, the first wind which comes uproots it. —lt is difficult to say which is the greater defect in a parent—strictness and firmness in his family without feeling and afipclion, or feeling and affection without strictness and firmness. Under the one system, the chil dren are apt to become slaves or hypocrites; under the other, tyrants or rebels. But true love is always firm, and true firmness is al ways, love. —You might as well go to the catacombs of Egypt, and scrape up the dust of mum mies, and knead it into forms, and bake them in an oven, and call such things men, and ptesent them as citizens and teachers, for our regard, as to bring old lime worn institutions to serve the growth and the living wants of to-day. —lt is with the singing of a congregation as with the sighing of the wind in the forest, where the notes of the million rustling leaves, and the boughs striking upon each other, al together make a harmony, no matter what be the individual discords. —Not parties, but principles. Let us be of no parly but God’s party, and use all oth er agencies as we use railroad cars—travel ing upon one train as far as it will take us in the right direction, and then leaving it for another. Gossippers—Startling Disclosure.— “How do you do, Mrs. Towe? Have you heard the story abovl Mrs. Gad?” “What is it ? Do tell I” “Oh, I promised not to tell for all Ihe world I No, I must never tell on’t; I’m afraid it will git out.” “Why, I’ll never tell on’t as long as I live, just as true as the world. What is it? Do tell.” “Now you won’t say anything about it, wil I you ?” “Oh, I’ll never open my mouth about it— never.” “Well, if you’ll believe it, Mrs. Lunda told me last night, that Mrs. Trot told her that her sister’s husband was told by a person that dreamed! it, that Mr. Trouble’s oldest daughter told Mrs, Nichens, that her grand mother heard by a letter which she got from her sister’s second husband’s oldest brother’s step daughter, that it was reported by the captain of a clam boat, just,arrived from the Fejee Island, that the mermaids about that section wear crinoline made out of shark skins I” A gentleman of Virginia, had a fine negro, to whom he gave the privilege of hiring him self out, and keeping one-half the wages.— A short lime since the negro came home to his master, to tell him that the man for whom he had been working wished to bay him, and would give thirteen hundred dollars for him. “Well,” said his master, “what of that? I don’t wish to sell.” “But you see.massa,” said Sam, “I’sa had a cough some time, aud ’specs I’m gwine in to dsumplion. I don’t ’spec I -shall last more’n two or three years, and I’d like to take dat man in I” A young physician asking permission of a lady to kiss her she replied; “No, sir ; I never like |o have a doctor’s bill thrust in my face.” . The strongest minded womanshrinlu from being caught in her night cap. The Game of Checkers. (“Aunt Molly," said Fanny Osborne, one evening, “did you ever hear any one pop the question?” “Why, certainly, my child, I heatd your uncle Charlie pop it, as you call it.” “Oh yes, of course,” said Fanny, but one dosen’t often (ell their own experience. I mean did you ever hear any one elseV’ “Well, yes,” replied Aunt Molly, slowly “I did happen to once.” “0 please tell me all about it,” cried Fanny, “I would so like to be a little mouse in the wall on such an occasion.” Fanny was jnst out of fifteen, and it was very natural that she should want to be posted. “Very well,” said Aunt Molly, “get your work, then, for I don’t like to talk to an idle listener.” Fanny established herself, and Aunt Molly began: “It was about ten years after I was married ,and house-keepiug, that cousin Will Morris, uncle Bnjamin’s son, came to live with us; that is he was a partner in your uncle Charlie’s store, and boaided with us. You never saw Will, did you?” Fanny nodded her head, and Aunt Molly went on. “He was a whole souled, straight forward substantial young man, not lacking in polish, either; but very bashful, so much so that I used really to pity him sometimes, when we had young company. Annie Evans was an old school-mate of mine, and just after I went to house-keeping, her parents moved to Oxford, and lived only a short distance from us. Annie used frequently to bring her work, and spend the evening with me, and uncle Charlie would go home wi'h her. Those were rare times, Fanny, and we enjoyed them fully. Annie was a real woman ; none of your nonsensical, love sick girls, whose heads are full of beaux that they won’t hold anything else. Fanny blushed as Aunt Molly said this, but Aunty looking very demure, and con tinued : “And knowing her as I did, I felt particularly anxious that she should be well settled in life.’’ “That means, with a good husband,” re plied Fanny, roguishly, “Certainly,’’ said Aunt Molly ; “ and after Will, came, and I became acquainted with him, I look it into my head that he and Annie would make a capital match. But somehow, after he came, Annie did not come so often, and Will, who was very entertaining in his conversation when we were alone, in her presence, was silent and awkward in his manner, as if under restraint; and Annie look but little ( notice of him, only as far as politeness required, and requested me pri vately to arrange it, that uncle Charlie should still go home with her, that is, if he had no objections. So the young people’s acquaint ance progressed slowly. Time and habit arrange these things beautifully, and gradu ally they came to be more familiar, so as even to call each other by their Christian names. I helped it about though, for I could not bear the formality of Mr. Morris and Miss Ekans. Just as 1 expected—Will became very much interested in Annie; for that matter he had admired her from the first, but he was modest in his pretensions, and seemed to regard her as beyond his reach. At any rate he could not summons courage to speak on the subject nearest his heart.” “How did you know, Aunt Molly ?” in quired Fanny. “Oh, from observation,” replied Aunt Mol ly, “and Annie did not help the matter any, for though she was quite friendly aod social in his company, yet there was nothing in her manner that betrayed the slightest interest in him. Well, one evening, Annie had been spending the afternoon with me, and were about talked out, when Will came home from the store, and 1 proposed their playing a game of checkers. Uncle Charles had gone to a political meeting. I sat some distance off, sewing, and with one eye watch ing the game. They were both good play ers, and for a long time moved silently, and apparently intent on ihe game. At length as if conscious that her case was hopeless, Annie remarked, identifying herself with the man she was moving, “[ see you are after me Will.” “If I catch you,” spoke Will with sudden energy, “will you leave me undisputed pos session ?” Annie looked up, startled by his. manner, and seeing in bis eager face ihe meaning he had placed upon her words, paused, blushed deeply, hesilaled and presently replied “Perhaps so; if you and Mary will prom ise never to tell anybody that I popped the question.” Will rose hastily, dropped the board—the checkers ran all over the floor, and taking Annie by the hand, led her to me, saying : “Cousin Mary do you think I deserve this happiness ?” “Certainly, Will,” I replied, “and I con gratulate you most sincerely, and now if you will come out of your happy state, and pick up these checkers, I will be much obliged to you.” Will and Annie labghed heartily, and he gan picking them up with alacrity, and as Will took up the board to put it-away he-re marked : “That was the pleasantest game of check ers I ever played in my life.” Annie said nothing, but looked very rosy and smiling. “And now,” said Aanl “are you satisfied V’ A western editor in speaking of a steam boat explosion, says that tfiieefiersotis were “-slightly” skillet}. THE PRESENT BUTT’ Ah, why against thyself sad warfare wage— Writing such hitler things on mero’ry’sipage? And why does all the future seem to,thee So clad in hues of dark despondency ? > Let no discouragement thy soul o’erpower, But do the duly of the present hour. ' • Tis waste of time to mourn o’er wasted years. So that thine eyes are blinded by thy tears; If sorrow’s night darken the light ot:day, How canst thou ever see the M narrow way 7” And if discouragement thy soul o’erpower, How fares the duly of the present hour? Be wise, then, and improve the fleeting Now; No more this palsying grief and fear; allow; The past, with all its vanity, is gone, 1 j The present, with its hope, is all thine own; And oh, thou’lt find full many a hidden flow’r Whilst true to duties of the present hour. AN ESSAY,: 1 Bead before the Tioga Co., Teacher’s Institute, Hay 1858, BY H. N. WILLIAMS, ilfr. Chairman, Ladies and Geiitlemen ; The subject 1 have chosen for your consider ation, and a few remarks, is Primary Edu cation—a subject that should engage the at tention of every Readier in the public schools of Tioga County—a subject that' embraces matters of vital and vast importance; vital, because it is the starting point of (fie young voyager o’er life’s dark sea ; vast, because it is the foundation of all education, 1 good or bad, judicious or deficient. Every man whose name has graced history’s page; who has been an ornament to his country and a bless ing to humanity, points with great ;pleasure to the primary school, as the place where he received his first deep-fraught impressions of duty, and acquired the energy requisite to nobly accomplish his purpose. Also, the greatest criminals bemoan their early educa tion, erroneous and deficient, as thd cause, why they have been so much the I curse of mankind. Again, I repeal, the subject is richly and deeply laden with great and essen tial importances. There is no time belter than in childhood to lay the foundations of an education that shall exalt, ennoble and beautify the possessor. With thelypulh, the philanthropist most hopes 10 succeed in great reforms. All eyes are turned toward the young, as tho staff and hope of the future. — The true statesman for men that shall push forward to the acquirement of more liberal institutions than has been man’s lot|to enjoy heretofore; the Christian and mprahst, for men of deeper piety and more sterling inieg rity, to do balile against a sinful world. The present living, love to dwell on pictures of the imaginaiion, highly wrought i and fanci fully colored, portraying the mighty deeds and wonderful achievements of theirlchildren and their children’s children; and neglect great and imperative duties for no cliher cause. Such conduct is extremely reprehensible, and must be accounted for to the smallest mi nutiae. Man has no right to dream! through life, and as it were, rust away, thoughtless and inert. Verily, it is our duiy to place the young in as advantageous positions as possi ble, and not to leave them bound; in error and superstition. From earliest lime to the present, the animals have changed as little as ihe herbage on which they feed, bribe trees beneath which they find shelter. Not so with man ; although in infancy the most helpless of all living creatures, and, if left [tq himself, growing up in many respects’inferior to the nobler brutes, he is endowed with! faculties capable of infinite expansion, and will con tinue to progress till he assumes |his God ordained position—a little lower lhajn the an gels. The simile is not inelegant!,- to liken man, anterior to moral and imelledtual cul ture, to a diamond in the rough-i-a'giant in slumber. Polish that diamond aright; arouse that giant to correct and judicious action, and oh, how brilliant,howtranscendentlyiglorious, the perfect, the free man ! Oh, that diamond of the soul! the immotinl soul! ho[w precious, how priceless, beyond the value! of rubies, and how far exceeds it Golcontla’s boasted jewels! The strength of the intellect no earthly power can withstand. The infant ,-mtnd is a mystery; it has longings and wants that none but the master hand can feed and supply. The infant heart bias recesses of immeasurable depth and richness, and few parents or teachers can reach the bottom and bring forth its glorious wealth ; it has fountains that should pour forth waters of liv ing purity ; and strings that should ever har monize with nature and nature’s God ! But all, all depends on education. And what is education ? The word is derived -from E, out, and duco, to lead; hence education means to lead out Ihe mind, to strengthen and enlarge the moral and intellectual facul ties. Education and instruction are often confounded, and used fur one and the same thing.’ Instruction mentis the pouring into the mind—storing it with facts and [truths.— Instruction is a necessary concomitant o( ed ucation, but without education, instruction is as useless as jewels at the bottom of old ocean’s deep, or beneath the mountain’s base. Education is divided into three heads, physi cal, intellectual.and moral, and these are so closely interwoven, that the promotion of one is the promotion of the other. Physical edu cation, for some reason, has been sadly neg lected. Parents and teachers have shown a culpable indifference on the subject. Most sorely the body as much needs development as the' faculties of the mind, in older to bring forth the full and perfect man. {3d mysteri ous is the union of mind and matter, that an intellectual giant and a physical dwarf are incompatible. Anatomy, physiology and hy gieoe are Intensely interesting subjects, and have a high moral tendency. No pierson can become familiar with the human ’organism without admiring the manner of its creation, so fearful, >Bo wonderful,-so majestic !nor with- Advertisements will be charged II per square o fourteen lines, for one, or three insertions, and 85 cents for every subsequent insertion. All advertise ments of less than fourteen lines considered as' a sqnaie. The following rales will be charged for Quarterly, Half-Yearly and Yearly advertising:— Square, (14 lines,) - IS 50 $4 50 16 00 2 Squares,- . . . 400 600 8 Oft i column, .... 10 00 15 00 20 00 column, IB 00 30 00 40 00 All advertisements not having the number of in sertions marked upon them, will bo kept in until or dered out, and charged accordingly. Posters, Handbills, Bill.and Letter Heads, tod all kinds of Jobbing done in country establishments, executed neatly and promptly. Justices', Const* bles’and other BLANKS, constantly on hand and printed to order. NO. XLYI. out being led inslinclively, up to the great Creator,-God. There is no better time than in youth to instil the principles of health and long life, and make them useful ere disease has fastened its destroying fangs upon the constitution. The teacher who lets bis scholars sicken and die through ignorance of the laws of health, js inadequate to the calling, however «ell he may be informed in other respects- Many are the constitutional bankrupts caused through ignorance of, and inattention to the laws of health. ’Tis no glory to have it said,, “the pupil has studied himself to death.”— ’Tis no honor to have a mind which the body is unable to support. Every teacher should make physiology a study in school. It isibe pupil’s imperative demand. Next comes ihe intellectual development of the child—a part of education that should elicit the most ardu ous care and scrupulous nicety on the part of ihe teacher. It is here that habiisof thought are lo be formed; and how necessary that they be correct. Neatness, order and regu larity of business depend upon early educa tion. A vast amount of the worthless, su perficial education prevalent, is chargeable to leachers. The poor spelling, ridiculous and shameful as il is, is a neglect in the primary School. Can there be too much exactness in these things? Nay, verily I This push ing scholars forward with but a superficial understanding of what they have gone over, and having them conjugate their “amo, amas, amdt,” when they scarcely know the elemen tal sounds of ihe alphabet, is too ridiculous to be tolerated and should be remedied. It is in this branch of education that the child is to be led, step by step, to think, feel and act for himself, and to know and appreciate that he has an independent identity, a self-ex istence, and is fast approaching the stage of active life and accountability ; and these can not be 100 forcibly impressed on the child’s mind. Lastly comes the moral: No part of education is of so vast importance as this. Without il, what is man? Worse than the brute. Educate him in all else, and he is only the stronger to do injury and carry out his plans of wickedness. It only enables him to be ihe greater villain, make more com plete his own ruin, and more dangerous bis pernicious influence. The undying soul, in a probationary stale for eternal weal or woe, is too precious to be tampered with by pollu ted hands. The human heart is so prolific of evil, that unless good seed be sown early, lures and thistles will spring up in luxurious growth. No education is complete without a full development of these faculties of the mind, which make the man bold in Ihe de fence of truth and right, and a haler of vice and its inevitable, results, and strong lo do battle with the baser part of his nature. Man is emphatically a creature of imita tion, made up by the surrounding associa tions, The infant mind is capable beyond our belief, end ere we think il able to under stand the least things, it is watching every motion, every word and look, and treasuring them up, deep in the recesses of the heart. The child looks on the teacher as a pattern, and ils greatest ambition is lo imitate the par agon. The teacher cannot bo lo much on his guard ; cannot watch every motion or word too closely. For who shall compen sate, if ihe faults of the teacher ruin the child? , Who shall enter into a mother’s heart and describe her feelings as she finds on the return of her child from school—a child she has tanghl with arduous care, that he has learned lo swear, lo lie and deceive. Language is inadequate lo the task. Nona but mothers can feel so deeply. The teacher .who puls on a fair exterior, but is inwardly dead and rotten at the heart; who secures the child’s confidence, but to lead it in the path of deception and vice, is a thousand times more lo be dreaded than the viper that coils itself in Ihe child’s pathway, and se cretly wails to inject its poisonous venom inlo life’s crimson current. Hero, in this branch of education, is a field of labor for ihe highest intellect, the greatest development ofcnjind, and the teacher who triumphantly succeeds in this department of education, has performed the most difficult of tasks’, and is worthy of the greatest praise. In this branch ol education all the noble and manly senti ments are called forth ; and as the eagle with mounts aloft and braves the furious blast to lead forth its young to soar in the deep con cave blue, so'should the teacher rise above the petty cares, grovelling thoughts and ba ser nature of man, and, pointing heavenward, instruct the child that it is not all of life to live; that great and imperative duties are to be performed; that an inheritance, glorious and blight, is to be obtained and enjoyed, long after this poor body is laid low in the dust! An old settler near Bloomington, Illinois, has seen the toughest limes of any-man we ever heard of. He says the winter of 1830 was remarkable for the scarcity of money ; so much so, that one man who was elected Justice of the Peace, couldn’t- raise money enough to pay an officer for swearing him in ; so he stood up before a looking-glass and qualified himself, There is a divine out wesP trying to pets suade girls to forego marriage. He might as well try to persuade ducks that they could fino a substitute for water, or rosebuds that there is something better for their complexion than sunshine. The only convert he has yet made is a single lady, aged sixty ! The Chiqese h av e a saving that an un. holy word dropped from the longue, cannot be brought'back again hy a coach and sii{ horses.' Rales of Advertising- 3 months. 6 months. 13 tno’s “Storm-daring pinion and snn-gazing ©ye,’*