of Publication. „ mrl COUNTY AGITATOR is pnb- T«E Morning, and mailed to sub Jftied e ver ? h v y reasonable price! of On* Don cribers at in advance. It is intend per annum. « sabscr iber when the term for ito nobly e ’ .■> ha ji i, aV e expired, by the stamp rhichbehas pa'd margin 0 f the last paper. -“Time Oat, be stopp id until a further re fbc P a P cr wl ' „By this arrangement no man jittance be re M(0 t | ie printer, an be brought i I[]C og c jal Paper of the Coun TnE Agitator stea aLiy increasing circnlation . with a large a ere „ neighborhood in the ladling int° of postage to any Post-office Entity- It IS ” and to those living within ritltin thecoun y conve nientpostoffice may lefimitai 0 . County. 5 inan» d JJ!” rd ® „ot exceeding 5 lines, paper m- Ru«iness bare*. Ztpii. p° r f ear ‘ = nb' dimly tlirougl' the mists of years; °That rod their dreary waves between, The gorgeous sunset land appears. in hues of fadeless green. And from that far-off sunny clime. Old half-forgotten songs *" 36 - and stealing o’er the waves of lime The sweetly lingering music dies. As some bright Wanfcof Forever blooming—ever «ir. Though cold, dark billows round tl-be. Eternal sunshine hovers there. Thus o’er the silent sea of years. Out eager longing looks are cast, Where robed in fadeless spring appears The sunlit Eden of the past. There memory weaves her garlands green iLide the lone, hope haunted shore! Audmusio ’mid the Arcadian scene, Twines flowers that bloom for us no more. Ob'hallowed clime! blest land of love! Sweet paradise of early dreams ! Still throagli thy vales may fancy Tove, Slill bask beneath thy evening beams. And there they dwell—those cherished ones . * With snow white brows and waving hair; I see them now—l hear their tones Of sweetness sigh along the air. Tjjrh i how their silvery voices ring In cadence with the wind’s low sigh; Hot sweeter is the wind-harp’s siring Thai wakes at eve its melody. Thej all us; see, they wave their hands— As by the mirage lifted high, Thtl dime in all its beauty stands Against the forehead of the sky. Willi wreathed brows —with laugh end song, Willi lender looks—hand clasped in hand, Tiiev move along, that love linked throng— Within the hannled sunset land. duty and kindness. There was an angry frown on the coun lennce of Deacon Jones Browning. There sere tears on the face of his wife. "He shall be be sent to sea !” said Deacon Browning sternly. There was a pleading look in the eyes of Mrs. Browning, as she lifted them to the iron lice of her husband. But no words passed her lips. "Philip is very young, Jonas,” said Mrs. Browning. "Not too young for evil, and' therefore not 100 young for the discipline needed to eradi cate evil. He shall go to sea ? Captain Ellis sails in the Fanny Williams on next Monday. I will call upon him this very day. "Isn’t the Fanny Williams a whaler?” The lips of Mrs. Browning quivered, and her voice had a choking sound. “Yes,” was firmly answered. “I wouldn't send him away in a whaler, Jonas. Remember—he is very young, not thirteen until next April.’’ “Young or old, Mary, he’s got to go, said the stern deacon, who was a believer in the gospel of law. He was no weak advocate of moral suasion, as it is familiarly termed. He went in for law, and was a strict con structionist. Implicit obedience was the statue for home, and all deviations therefrom met the never withheld penally. Mrs. Browning entered into no argument with her husband, for she knew that would be useless. She had never succeeded in changing his purpose by argument in her life. And so she bent her eye 6 meekly to the floor •JM, while the tears crept over hdr face, and fell in large bright drops upbn the carpet. Deacon Browning saw the tears but they did not move him. He was tear proof. FMip,lhe offending member of ihe Brown mg family, was a bright, active, restless boy, *tofrom the start had been a rebel against unreasonable authority, and as a matter of witse, not unfrequently against authority ™lt just and reasonable. Punishment had ™ly hardened him; increasing instead of diminishing his power of endurance. The Particular offence for which he was now in I! gf>ce was, it must be owned, rather a se- Wis one. He had, in company with three ™ er boys of his age, known as the greatest in the village, rifled a choice plum the fruit it contained, and then a favorite dog, which happening to iscoier them at their wicked wotk, altempl -10 drive them away from the garden, g e neighbor had complained to Deacon rownmg, accompanying his complaint with 10 have Philip arrested for stealing, you don’t do something with that boy ‘'hpht o ' 8 ’ ’ ' ie ac^et * with considerable feeling, 4e a J’ s ‘ n ® la,e Prison or on [j ej ar words were Ihese for the -ears of Hard° n ® rown ' n g> •he rigidly righteous ! ioihe* 0^3 and w ' ( h prophetic conviction He had not a very creative imag liiao ° UI ’ '. n ** IIS ' nslance the prediction of Uk ne ighhor conjured up in his mind as^/S a prison and a gallows, causing cold D er . 10 pass over his nerves, and the Fjorn!?'^ 1 ' 01110 stand upon his forehead. B ra „, . J 1 m °tnent the resolution of Deacon »as taken. was on the brink of ruin, and inesoj . aa y ed at all hazards. As to the heart 0 r n°' D ° t * l ' s ’ ‘ l never entered into the let oiu U f acon Browning to conceive of Pi'Se, TK o SUcb as involved harsh disci taasi v e . anaanile was in the land, and "'iiii V dr l ven out with fire and sword.— Sca oce lm A" e word duty had a stern signi- Esoy, 0 '.. j. d always tried to do bis doty, lad crust,- I 'l y onw ard in the path of life, ipta os “ own a H vanities and evils that by llle wa yi under a heel shod ®° f° Bea •” That was the last of atnet ly. In his mind, as in the * E ltip was *'* e Itinti some years ago, "Wti a l 8 B re at school of reform; and sent off ik WaS deemed incorrigible, he 0 6ca ' usually to have his evil THE AGITATOR- Befcotei? to tlje ssxttnsion of tijt WLvtx of JFreelrow an«J tijt SprtaO of 3&ealttig afcefotw. WHILE THESE SHALL BE A WRONG UNSIGHTED, AND UNTIL “Man’s INHUMANITY TO MAN” SHALL CEASE, AGITATION MUST CONTINUE, YOL. Y. inclinations hardened into permanent bad qualities. When Deacon 'Browning met his son Philip, after receiving intelligence of his great offence, it was with a stern, angry re pulsion. He did not see the look of appeal, the sign of repentance, the plea ibr mercy that was in his tearful eyes. A single -word of kindness would have broken up the great deep of the boy’s heart, and impelled by the warmer impulses inherited from his mother, he would have flung himself weeping into bis father’s arms. But Deacon Browning had separated duty from kindness. The one was a stern corrector of evil, the other a smiling approver of good. From his home to the wharf, where the Fanny Williams lay, all equipped for sea, Deacon Browning bent his steps. Captain Ellis, a rough, hard man, was on board.— After listening to the father’s story and re quest, he said, bluntly— “lf you put your boy on board the Fanny Williams’, he’ll have to bend or break that is certain. Take my advice and give the mailer a second thought. He’ll have a dog’s life of it in a whaler. It’s my opinion that your lad hasn’t stuff enough in him for fbiti experiment.” “I’ll risk it,” replied the Deacon. “He’s got too much stuff in him to stay at home, that’s the trouble. The bend or break sys tem is the only one in which I have any faith.” “As you like, Deacon. I want another boy, and yours will answer, I guess.” “When do you sail?” was inquired. “On Monday.” “Very well. I’ll bring the boy down to morrow.” The thing was settled ; the Deacon did not feel altogether comfortable in mind.— Philip was young for such an experiment, as the mother had urged. And now very leaf in the book of his mem ory was tnrned,jan which was written the story of a poor boy’swrongs and sufferings at sea. Many years before his heart bad grown sick over the record. He tried to look away from the page, but could not. It seemed to hold his eye by a kind of fasci nation. Still be did not relent. Duty required him to go steadily forward and execute his purpose. There was no other hope for the boy. “Philip !” it is thus he announced his de termination, “I am going to send you to sea with Captain Ellis. It’s my last hope.— Steadily bent as you are, on evil, I can no longed' suffer you to remain at home. The boy who begins by robbing his neighbor’s garden is in great danger of ending his days upon the gallows. To save you if possible, from u fate like this, I now send you to sea.” Very sternly, very harshly, almost angri ly, was this said. Not the smallest im pression did it seem to make upon the boy, who stood with his eyes cast down, an im age of stubborn self-will and persistent re bellion. With still sharper denunciation did the father speak, striving in this way to shock the feelings of his child, and extort signs of penitence. But it -was the hammer and ihe anvil—blow and rebound. Very different were the mother’s effort’s with the child. Tearfully she pleadecj with him—earnestly she besought him to ask his father's forgiveness for Ihe evil he had done. But Philip said— 1 “No, Mother. I would rather go to sea. Father don’t love me—he don’t care for me. He ha'es me, I believe.” “Philip! Philip! Don’t speak in that way of your father. He docs love you ; and it is only for your good that he is going to send you to sea. O, how could you do so wicked a thing 7” Tears were in the mother’s eyes. But the boy had something of the father’s stern spirit in him and showed no weakness. “it isn’t any worse than he did when he was a boy,” was his answer. “Philip I” “Well, it isn’t; forH heard Mr. Wright tell Mr. Freeman that father and he robbed orchards and hens’nests; and did worse than that when they we're boys.” Poor Mrs. Browning was silent. Well did she remember how wild a boy Jonas Brown ing, had been ; and bow when she was a little girl, she had heard all manner of evil laid to his charge. Very unexpectedly—at least to Mr. Brown ing the minister called in on the evening of that troubled day. After some general con versation with the family, he asked to have a few words with the Deacon alone. “Is it true, Mr. Browning,” he said, after they had retired to an adjoining room, “that you are going to send Philip to sea 1” “Too true,” replied the father soberly. “It is ray last hope. From the beginning that boy has been a rebel against just au thority ; and though I have never relaxed discipline through the weakness of natural feelings, yet resistance has grown with his growth, and strengthened with his strength, until duly requires me to use a desperate remedy for a desperate disease. It is a pain ful trial ; but the path of duly is the only path of safety. What we see to be right we roust execute with unflinching courage. I cannot look back ond accuse myself of any neglect of duly, towards this boy, through weakness of the flesh. From the beginning, I have made obedience the law of my house hold, and suffered no deviation therefrom to go unpunished.” “Duly,” said the minister, “has a twin sister.” He spoke in a changed voice, and with a manner that arrested the attention of Deacon Browning,-who looked at him with a glance of inquiry. WELLSBORO, TIOGA COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER % 1858. “She is as lovely and gentle as he is hard and unyielding.” The Deacon looked slill curious. “When the twin sister of duty, is away from his side, he loses more than half of his influence; but in her beautiful presence, he gains a dignity and power that make bis pre cepts laws of life to all who hear them. The stubborn heart melts, the iron will is subdoed; the spirit of evil-shrinks away from the hu man soul.” There was a pause. “The name pf that twin sister is Kind ness.” The eyes of Deacon Browning fell away from the minister’s countenance, and dropped until they rested upon the floor. Conviction flashed upon his heart. He had always been. stern in executing the law—but never kind. “Has that beautiful twin sister stood ever by the side of duty I—:has Jove been in the law, Deacon Browning V’ ' Side fay side with the minister stood duty and kindness—the firm, unshrinking brother, and the mild, loving sister—and so his word had power to reach the deacon’s heart, with out giving offence to pride. “Kindness is weak, yielding and indulgent, and forgives, when punishment is the only hope of salvation,” said Deacon Browning, a little recovering himself from the first emo tions of self-condemnation. “Only when she strays from the - side of I duty,” treplied the minister! “Duty and Kindness must always act together. Much more, and to the same purpose, was urged by the minister, who made only a brief visit, and then withdrew, that his admoni tions might work the desired effect. When Deacon Browning came in from the front door of his house, parting with the minister, he drew a chair up to the table in the family silling room, and almost in voluntarily opened the large family Bible. •His feelings were much softened towards his boy, who, with his bead bowed down upon his breast, sat a little apart from bis mother. The attitnde was not so much indicative of stubborn self will, as suffering. Deacon Browning thought he'would read a chapter aloud, and so drew the Holy Book closer, and bent his face down over it. Mrs. Brown ing observing the moment waited for him to begin. The deacon cleared bis throat twice. But his voice did not take up the words that were in his eyes and in his heart. How coaid they ? “As a father pitieth his children” Had there been divine pity in the heart of Deacon Browning lor his rebellious and unhappy boy 1 Nay—had there not been wrath instead? “As a father piiieth his children” From a hundred places, in (he mind of Deacon Browning, there seemed to come an echo of these words, and they had a meaning in (hem never perceived before. He closed the book, and remained in deep thought for many minutes ; and not only in deep thought but in a stern conflict with himself. Kind ness was striving to gain her place by the side of Duty ; and cold, hard, imperious Duty, who had so long ruled without a rival in the heart of Deacon Browning, kept all the while averting his countenance from that of his twin sister, who had been so long an ex iled wanderer. At last she was successful. The stern brother yielded, and clasped to his bosom the sister who sought his love. From that instant new thoughts, new views, new purposes, ruled in the mind of Deacon Browning. The discipline of a whaler was too hard and cruel for his boy, young in years, by no means as hardened in iniquity as he had permitted himself to im agine. A cold shiver ran along his nerves at the bare thought of doing what, a few short hours before, he had resolutely in tended. Kindness began whispering in the ears of Duty, and crowding them with a world of new suggestions. The heart of the stern man was softened, and there flowed into it something of a mother’s yearning tender ness. Rising up at length, Deacon Brown ing said in a low voice, so new in its tones to the ears of Philip, that it made his heart leap— “My son, I wish to see you alone.” The deacon went into the next room, and Philip followed him. The deacon sat down and Philip stood before him. “Philip, my son’’—Deacon. Browning took the boy’s hand in one of his, ariiHooked him full in the face. The look was returned— not a defiant look, but one of yielding wonder. “Philip, I am not going to send you to sea with Captain Ellis. I intended doing so; but on reflection, I think the life will be too hard for you.” _ ! Very firmly, yet kindly, the deacon tried to speak, but the sister of Doty way playing with the heart-strings, and their lone of pity was echoed from his voice, which faltered when he strove to give it firmness. The eye of Philip remained fixed upon the countenance of his father. “My son”—Deacon Browning thought he had gained sufficient self-control to utter calmly certain mild forms of admonition ; but he was in error; his voice was still less under his control, and so fully betrayed the new-born pity and tenderness in his heart, that Philip, melting into penitence, exclaimed, as tears gushed from his eyes— “O, father! I’ve been very wicked, and am very sorry !** Involuntarily at this unexpected confes sion, the arms of Deacon Browning were stretched out towards his repentant boy, and Philip rushed, sobbing into them. The boy was saved. From that hour his father had him under the most perfect sub ordination. Bnt the twin sister of duly walked ever by his side. Let’s Take a Drink. “Let’s go and take a drink, boys,” said a well dressed young man as the cars stopped at Waukegan station. And so the boys did, re-entering the cats with their faogoage and persons marked by the bar-room odor. Take a drink! The young men were well dressed fools. They have taken a step which will bear a fearful retribution. Years hence a thousand woes will blossom in the foot prints now made in young life. A false light gilds the deadly miasma which dogs their footsteps. They see not the smoking altar towards which they are tending. A host of shadowy phantoms of vice and crime are flitting on before. Red-handed mutder laughs at their folly ; and death is waiting at the fresh opened grave. There are tears to shed by those who at this hour dream not of the sorrow which these false steps shall bring them. Take a drink ! All the uncounted host of drunkards whose graves in every land mark the pathway of intemperance, look a drink. They took drinks and died. The drunkards of to-day are taking drinks.— Three out of four of the murderers of 1856 took a drink. Their steps were towards the dram shop, and then from the scaffold out upon the fearful waste that lies beyond. The palsied wretches which totter in our streets all took drinks. We involuntarily shudder when we see young men crowding the deeply beaten path to the dram shop. They are all confident in their own strength. With the glass in one hand where coils the deadly adder, they ha ! ha ! about the fools who drink themselves to death ! They boldly leap into the tide where stronger arms have failed to beat back the sullen flow. They dance and shout' in the midst of the grinning and ghastly dead, and riot upon the reeking, fumes of the grave’s foul breath! They boast of their strength, and yet they are but the reed in the storm. — They wither like grass under the sirocco breath of the plague the nourish. A brief time and they are friendless, homeless and degraded. Another day and the story of their lives is told by a rude, stoneless grave in the Poller’s Field. Don't take a drink ! Shun the Dead Sea fruits, that bloom on the shore where hail lions have died. The bubbles which float upon the beaker’s brim, hide the adder’s fang. The history of ages points sadly to the mad dening hosts who have offered themselves soul and body to the demon of the cup. The bondage of iron, galls but the limbs. That of the dram fetters the soul. —Cayvga Chief. What an Editor night Have Been. Holland, the editor of the Springfield Re publican, has been up in Vermont, to ‘where he come from,’ and he thus sketches what he should have been, if he had not left home and become an editor: “Your correspondent would have grown stalwart and strong, with horny hands, and a face as black as the ace of spades. -He would have taught school winters, worked on the farm summers, and gone out haying for fifteen days in July, and taken for pay the iron work and running gear of a wagon.— At two and twenty, or thereabouts, he would have begun to pay attentions to a girl with a father worth two thousand dollars, and a spit curl on her forehead—a girl who always went to singing school, and ‘sal in the seals,’ and sung without opening her mouth—a pret ty girl, any way. Well, after seeing her home from singing school one or two years, taking her to a Fourth of July, and getting about a hundred dollars together he would have married her and settled down. Years would pass away, and that girl with the spit curl would have had eleven children —just as sure as you live—seven boys and four girls. We should have had a hard time in bringing them up, but they would soon be able enough to do the milking, and help their mother washing days, and I getting indepen dent at last, and feeling a little stiff in the joints, should be elected a member of the leg islature having been assessor and school committee man for years. In the evening of my days, with my pipe in my mouth, thir teen barrels of cider in the cellar, and my newspapers in' my hands, I should sit and look over the markets, through a pair of gold spectacles, and wonder why such a strange, silly piece as this should ba published. An Eloquent Extract. —“ Generation after generation,” says a fine writer, “have felt as we now feel, and theTr lives were ns active as our own. They passed like a va por, while Nature wore the same aspect of beauty as when her creator commanded her to be. The-heavens shall be as bright over our graves as they are now around our paths. The world will have the same attractions for our offspring yet unborn, that she had for us, when we were children. Yet a little while all this will have happened. The throbbing heart will be stilled, and we shall be at rest. Our funeral will wind its way, and the prayers will be said, and then we shall be laid in si lence and darkness, for the worm. —And it may be for a little lime we shall be spoken of, but the things of life will creep in, and our names will soon be forgotten. Days will continue to move on, and laughter and song will be heard in the room in which we died ; and the eyes mourned for us will be dried, and glisten again with joy ; and even our children will cease to think of us, and will not remember to lisp our names.’’ If all the rascals who, under the semblance of a snug respectability, sow the world with dissensions and deceit were fitted with a halter, rope would double its price, and the executioner set up his carriage. ©ommmiications. Leaves by the Wayside. BY-AGNES. “Who does not love the dreamy, rich, col oring of our autumnal days, which come to us like a picture, where in all warm, emo tional life fades from our sight iaone'gor geoos tint and coloring,” said Lillian as she fished up one more shining lily the depths-of the Merrimac. ■ “But I,” exclaimed Zaidee, “love winter ! she comes so regally, with her flourish of music in the'martial blasts of her night-winds, and reigns proud queen of that portion of the world over which she throws her mantle.” “But I love spring!” exclaimed Maggie. “She comes in tears and sunshine, and[with an earnest soul warmth seeks to seve!r the monarch chains of winter, and to infuse life and freedom into every fettered thing of na ture ! Hers is a toilsome mission ; but I llove her all the belter for the struggle.” , | “And I,” exclaimed Mattie, “lovesummer, with her blue skies and her fragrant flowers ! I even love her scorching breath whichjfalls upon my brow, for it speaks of a healthy de velopment of our earth, without the sighs of decay.” j ••.‘But I,” said Metta, “love the sky, the stars, the earth in the deep hush of midnight, when the great stampede of life is checked and the soul is free to hold communion jwith invisible forms of worth and beauty, vyhose Jove for us blends with the worship of the Great Eternal.” j “But I,” exclaimed Walter Wenlers, “love to roam in the regions of thought, and by the power of my intellect bring men to my feet in admiration I Aye I by the sound of my voice and the force of tny will I would overturn political dogmas, church creeds, and make this nation a truly free and happy one, after the order of my utopian notions !”i “Hurrah, for our future statesmen!” cried I, “and now for my choice of destinyj: I love ” ere the sentence was finished, there came a flash of lightning and a peal of thunder, which caused us to hide our faces in terror. After the threatening aspect of the sky had passed away, I said : j “You see, my school fellows that the thun der-bolls of Jove pursue me. In ten years from this lime, I-will, on this same sput, sum mon you to meet me, that we may compare notes, and see what the journey of life has meted out to each.” “Familiar spirits!” I cried with mock solemnity, “will you come ?" They all arose, and promised by the gold en ties of that friendship which bound us, to meet me there in coming years. | - - ? * 1 “Home again !” echoed musically through my soul, as 1 slood upon ihe shores of Amer ica ! .1 had been a wanderer; England, Spain, and last, “brighi, sunny Italy” had been visited. My soul was awed by a (pres ence —a mystery as it were, as I gazediupon the wilderness of paintings, and sculpture of the old time, whose silent forms spoke |o me of the great masters of art who long (since had played their part upon the drama of life, and had loft the serene beauty of theitj Ma donnas to tell of the exquisite conceptions of their minds. j But now I had come home. As I jwan dered among the scenes of former days, I felt it was but a sepulchre. My mother and sisters were sleeping in the'churchyard. My old friends had gone their several roads in life. I was alone ! One morning as I watched the sun rjso, a sudden flash pi recollection shone upon my mind. I saw before mo the old trvsling place of our school-friendships—the gather ing of the water Allies—and ray summons to my school-fellows to meet me again in the same place. I resolved, as it was just ten years that day since the above had happened, to visit our play ground ; not that I expected to meet any pf my childhood’s playmates, but I yearned once more to lay my head upon the grass at the foot of the tpees, beneath whose shadow I had sported in boyhood. 1 I longed once more to gather some of .'those fragrant while Allies, which reminded me of the lime ere the thunderbolts of sorrojv had rendered life a tempest-tossed, tragical per formance. ■ As I stood beneath the trees that shaded the waters of the Merrimac, how strangely throbbed my heart. I had felt no such emo tion for years. Was it a foreshadowing of coming friends ? Yes, surely ! for therb soon fell a shadow by my side, ahd turning,;! met a pair of eyes of which I had often dreamed, but had not seen for years. , 1 “Ernest!” came in glad tones frojn her lips. “God grant, much loved Lillian, that a greater number of our school fellows .may be here Taking both ofherihands within my own. “Ernest, there will ;be no more here! I will tell you the histgry of our school fellows if you have not hea'rd al ready.” . I assured her that I had not heard one word from them, since my return home. “We will commence with She married a millionaire. That was well,’ if she had not wedded the position, instead !of the heart of her husband. She reigns jqueen over a circle of votaries of fashion and of folly, and Ako the -season she loved best, is dazzlingly beautiful, but cold and arbitrary.” '“Maggie married a minister. As shejmeek ly walks her way among the sheep iof her husband’s fold, I often think she has met the tfulfllment of the foreshadowing of he{ desti ny, as it fell from her lips ten years ago, be neath these trees. Is she happy I Ask the murmuring winds as they pestle in thejbosom of the great oak which sings in murmured numbers to their caresses.” j "Mafia married ; but not wisely.' Like the hot breath of the seasop which shes'luveci, Rales of Advertising. Advertisements will be charged SI per square of fourteen lines, for one, or three insertions, and 25 cents fur every subsequent insertion. AH advertise ments of less than fourteen lines eonsideredas a equate. The following rales will be charged tor Quarterly, Half-Yearly and Yearly advertising:— 3 months. 6 months. 12 mo’s Square, (14Iincs,) . $2 50 S 4 50 SG 00 2Squares,. . ... 400 600 800 i column, .... 1000 1500 2000 column,. . . . .18 00 30 00 •40 00 All advertisements not having the number of in sertions marked upon them, will be kept in until or dered out, and charged accordingiv. Posters, Handbills, Bill,and Letter Heads, and alt kinds of Jobbing done in country establishments, executed neaUy and promptly. Justices’, Consta bles’and other BLANKS, constantly on band and printed to order. NO. 5. she feels Ihe withering, scorching influence of her husband’s nature, quenching every well of gladness within her soul. But “He that tempereth the wind lo the shorn lamb,” sends some comfort lo her stricken heart.— For from ihe stormy clouds which hang over her pathway in life, she catches glimpses of "the better land” where there is rest lor the weary/ "Of Meets : Come with me to-morrow lo the church yard, and I will show you a grave, beneath a weeping willow, on which rests n marble slab with these words, ‘Meets, aoed 18.” ' ° “Culm on the bosom of thy God, Fair spirit ."rest thee now! E’en while with ns thy footsteps trod, His seal was on thy brow. Dust to its narrow house beneath I Soul to its place on high ! They that have seen thy look in death, No more may fear to- die.** “Of Waller: He Commenced the practice of law, and by the several stepping stones of political preferment, stands now in our Con gressional halls, a law maker for the people. His eloquence and power is felt by all who listen to him. But in his tempest tossed ex istence, I often ask myself, can be be hap py?” ■> “’Tis strange,” 1 said, that eaclt with such prophetic exactness have foretold their own destiny in life.” “But now, Lillian, tell me thy historv and I .will tell you mine; and then sweet Lillian, I will bind your brow with,the shining water lillies in token of our well kept faith.” I looked upon the moon and stars, but I lotjed them no more ; 1 listened to the night winds, but they only sang a dirge (or me.— How I waited for another coming day, and mingled with renewed zeal in the stampede, bustle and excitement of life. But all to no purpose. My dream of the low, thrilling voice of good, noble Lillian, was only a dream, like (no many of the visions offite. Lawrenceville, Pa. TEACHER’S COLUMN. For the Agitator. “How shall an interest be excited in small reading classes ?” I have adopted this plan sometimes, and succeeded well: I would arrange my class on one line, and if they read correctly I would have them pass over on another mark, opposite the class. If any failed from want of previous preparation, they bad the morti fication of retaining their places. Again, I have varied the exercises by reading myself; “playing that they were teachers and 1 their scholar,” and they, necessarily, must tell me all the hard words. Again, 1 have allowed my Ist and 2d Reader classes to thoroughly prepare those lines of Spelling prefixed to their reading lesson, and; after our usual ex ercise, request some member of the class to take the book, stand some distance from the class and’ give out words for the others to spell. This I found lobe peculiarly pleasing to them and highly beneficial in making them familiar with the most difficult words occur ring in their, lesson, also cultivating distinct articulation. We generally give a narration of what we have read, and not unfrequentlv tell stories which go far beyond “the printed one.” We enlist attention to the punctuation by having the pauses occasionally'called off ns we come to them in reading. Sometimes wc send some member of the class to the board to make them, and have their names speci fied by others. We find that a variety is an essential to the improvement of the children, and we aim at gratifying them in this particular. ‘ Constance Bishop, A. sf. A Sweet Boy. —My neighbor T had a social party at his house a few evenings since, and the “dear boy” Charles, a five year olp, was favored with permission to be seen in, the parlor. “Pa” is somewhat proud of his boy, and Charles was, of course elab orarelyj got up for so great an occasion.— Among other extras, the little fellow’s hair was treated to a libera! supply of Eau de Co logne, to his huge gratification. As he en tered the parlor and made his formal bow in the Indies and gentlemen, “Look-ee he re,” said he, proudly, “if any of you smells a smell, that’s me/” The effect was decided, and Charles, having thus in one brief sen tence delivered ,an illustrative essay on hu man vanity, hero of the evening.— Every one coufd call,to mind some boy of large growth, whose self satisfaction, though not perhaps so audibly announced, was yet evident, and not belter founded. A New Recite to Kill Flies.—Gci a four horse power engine, pul it in the hick kitchen, run shafting in every room connect ed with the aforesaid engine by belling. On ihe shafting place fly wheels; smear the wheels with molasses and set the engine go ing. The (lies being altracled bv ihe mo'us ses on ihe fly wheels will light on them, and' the wheels revolving rapidly they will be wheeled off. Have a boy under each «h>el with a flat shingle, and let him smile them as ihey fall and before ihey have lime Jo re cover from their dizziness. A smart boy has been known to kill as many as fifty a day. A writer in Blackwood says that every man who is not a monster, a mathematician, or a mad philosopher, is the slave of some woman. Rum, while in hogshead is capable of do ing but little mischief but when it gets into men’s heads look out. lie that does good without beip? goot| pulls down with one hand what he builds up with the c Iter.