a r. t, 11)144 illegto.ter then IDiorough Of i Allentown. Lehigh County, Pa., every Wednesday, by & DIEFFADERVERr - 1141 ; `60`ii 6 i annum, payable in advance, an& $2 00 if not paid until the end of the year.— discontinued until all arretujies are ?aid. •''? IIbwb:FFICE in Hamilton street, two doors west Reformed Church, directly oppo site Moser's Drug Store. IrT'Letters on business mist be POST PAID, othefarifie they will not be attended to. • JOB PRINTING. Having roently added' a large assortment fasihionable and most modern styles of type, we ara twepared to execute, at short notice, all _kinds of Book, Job, and Fancy Printing. pottit LOVE. EY MRS. R. T. ELDREDGE It is.et'siroet and beauteous flower, Theln.° heart is its native bower ; The lovely flower•gem cannot rest Witbinn.cold, unfeeling breast. Ali it needs the purest soil It heeds not care, nor pain, nor toil ; But.'watered by affection's hand, Its beauteous petals will expand. Tie loveliest in sorrow's hour . ; Neglect cannot destroy the flower Though it may droop bligath the The germ from whence Wsprings Trim, fervent love can never die ! 'Tiu•tinged with ardor from on high ; None but the virtuous, good and pure, aiL E'er dream of love that will endure! .Alr HAS SHE ANY TIN o.do not paint her charms 40 one, I know that she is fair ! Lknow her lips might tempt the bee, Her eyes with stars compare. Such transient gifts I ne'er could prize ; My heart they could not win ; I do not scorn my Mary's eyes, But—" has she any tin ?" The fairest cheek, alas, may fade, Beneath the touch of years ! The eyes that light and gladness played, May soon grow dim with tears ; I would love's fires should at the last Still burn as they begin ; But beauty's reigp4o soon is past, So--" has she tin ?" 51, Capital, torii. THE BANDIT'S REVENGE. CONCLUDED _ mo ment Francois found himself so near them, but in so low a tone that the youth could not catch his words ; the rejoinder to it. however, fell dis tinctly on his (Ili. It was the butcher who spoke. " Yes !" he exclaimed, fixing his eyes full on Roberto, and bringing his fist to the table with such force that the wino bottles toppled : "yes, remember what your affairs have brought us to ! When a boy of sixteen years, your proud words—it is something to know you had pride once—caused the suffering and death of your mother and her babe, and 'the beggary of your father and brothers. Yes, ab solute beggary ! for when I could not procure work, I wandered through the streets of Paris, a - beggar ; think of that,—and I a boy of four teen ! and when too old to beg, we heconie highwaymen. But it was not to keep myself or my brother from starving, that I was the one or the other ; it was to obtain means to give you an education—to place you where you could be revenged on him who had ruined our family.— And when he a second time triumphed over you, hurled you from the enviable position in in which you had placed yourself—by the cir culation of an infamous libel—tore your wife from you, thereby causing her death, and he hoped, that of her babo,—we met your five brothers and their cousins, and swore to be re venged on your enemy, and make your son, if he.lived, heir to the title of his mother's fami ly ! • You drew up the terrible contract, and wo signed it A brother and a cousin have died on the scaffold for your sake. I have done more ! I stole his heir, called him my own son, and nought him up in ignorance and crime. He fell by the hand of the executioner ! He died bravely,And--" The speaker interrupted himself by swallow ing a large.goblet of wino at a single draught, and as he sat down the glass, he glared around him, without speaking, for a moment ; but as the countenances which met his gaze were un changed—the face of the host was resting on his hand—he continued, though now in so low -a tone that the secret listener could catch only a part of his words, Atid now perform your part of the con tractre• will grant no longer delay. Give us Francois for our leader ! wo must explain to him to -night the part he is to perform in this enterprise." The rest was unintelligible to the youth, as Was the reply of Ruberto, but his tones were low and full of entreaty. They., were-interrupted, however, by Merle, who rose; as did the three men so strongly resemblinehim, (rpm the table ; and with an oath too horrible to be repeated, swore that unless. Francois was given into their oharge, they would the nett day dellier themselves - up to - nsitiCe;"and inforin againit their compail long? , Tlio ly offluberto was not heard by Fran cois,' ihe, old wonuin seizing 1!4131 by the arms dreW him i ;noi unwillingly, from the spot. • " One word, Lunette !!' whiiipered the youth '.. - .l . '*'l - 4 1.:11:'::'.1',.n.' - '...: - ' --. ...... - 1L:..1',.:: - '4'.''''1:(..:U.2.1 . :,':... ifhuotett to lota' nub antral 31rids", ,!clatirulture, (Fisburation, Rinratitti, Initiormrtit, 311.arktte, &r., VOLUME IX. as they again found themselves above ground ; " what relation do I bear those men ? Is my father among them ?" But the woman only answered him by put ting a purse of gold in his hand, and then open ing the cabin door, pushed him from it. .. By the window of a chateau overlooking the Rhone, sat, on a sweet evening in June, two individuals, the one a tall, handsome, fair browed youth of twenty, and the other a beau tiful, bright-eyed brunette, apparently about the same age. The young man, with his cheek att lit resting on his hand, was gazin stractedly on the sheet of w ter that was s' far out be yond the gra of the chate nd now sil vered with th ms of the risinemorn. The la iy was tti,g with the strings other guitar, Affnow . and then humiiiing stlittettf some lively air ; but the dark eyes that o turned furtively to her companion, had in thili*ex pression which told that her thoyghts; NV not altogetili so carefree as the m she was brcathin might have led one to su The apparetitly unconscious o Oxer re gard at length turned toetids NM " Lady ghriStabelle seems not inclined to practise her lesson to-night," hersaid ; " if she has no far- Cher commands for one, I will retire from her presence." ,'• . A shadow flitted over the countenance of the lady, and the lifting of those little hands to her face was not sudden enough to prevent the young man from „pbserving it, for the moon light fell Lull on tbat round rosy cheek. " What would the Marquis of D--, or the Count, who will be at the chateau to-morrow, not give to pass this sweet moonlight evening beside the daughter of d'Enghein ?" and she laughed gaily : "but Monsieur le Professeur, whose company she might prefer to either, begs leave to retire, though Bella must, consequent ly, wile away this long evening alone." And then, pushing the guitar towards him, she ad ded, in a changed tone, " Please run over my last lesson once, and then I would be left a1 ( 19,61 - Ine gayety and seriousness, the young man very plainly saw, were both affected ; and instead of complying with her request, lie was kneeling at her feet, and pouring into her car words, the import of which, neither himself nor his companion seemed fully to comprehend.— They were, however, perfectly r.nderstood by an individual, who, unknown to them, stood in the embrasure of a window ; and as the words of the young man fell on his car, lie laid his 1 hand on his sword, and started as if lie would spring towards them ; but he restrained him self to catch the lady's reply. " May I believe what you are saying, Fran cois ?" she asked, timidly. " Nay, your word is enough ; but we will talk of that, hereafter. Now," and she laid her hand on his arm, and spoke in an earnest, rapid tone, " now I must think only of the safety of my cousin—Francois d'Enghein —the son of my father's sister, so Louise,• your foster-mother, has told me you are ; and your father is the great musician do 1 Maestro, of whom nothing has been heard for so 'many years, but whom you have known as Ruberto ! My father learned, three days since, who you are ; but I have not dared to say to you, before, what I wished. Francois, your ' liberty, and I fear, life too, is in danger ! Holy Mary—my father I" • But before the Count d'Enghein, who had stolen out from his hiding 'place, let fall the hand which was raised above the head of Fran cois, his arm was seized in the powerful grasp of one, who, secretly as himself,-'had found his way into the apartment ; and at the 'furious call of the count, instead of his servants, a number of armed men rushed into the room.— They were all masked, but their leader, as ho seemed to be, the individual who was grappling with the count, the young man instantly re cognized, by the ejaculations which escaped his lips, as his old friend—Merle, the butcher. Francois fancied that the recognition was mu tual ; but most likely it was the figure of the hyang d'Enghein • whose ignominious death he caused, which was presented to Merle's mtal vision ; for the ruffian was very super stitious, and the form and features of Francois were strikingly similar to those of his cousin. For an instant ho gazed on the youth, and then uttering a cry of agony, the butcher relaxed his hold on the count, and reeling backward, fell to the floor with the sword of d'Enghein in his breast. . . The count was now defenceless and sur rounded by half a dozen ruffians whose bright arms were glittering in the moonbeams ; and a whisper in his ear had trinfixed Francois' to the spot where ho was standing, supporting the fainting Christabelle in his arms. " Count d'Enghein, do you know - who we 'are?" asked the individual, who had addressed Francois, " and wherefore we arc hero ?" "I have cause to know!" answered the count. • "4 Truly you have!" said tho mask ; and lioW soon shall it be before, you will comply Pith oui• demands 1' 12HILIT 411101128i11v-YERVII4II 30 IPallnalla. ALLENTOWN, PA., MARCH 21, 1855. " Never! stay, does the father of the boy ye?" " He is addressing you!" "De Maestro—villain !" exclaimed d'Eng hein, " - I will die before your terms shall be complied with?" " Count; we will not bandy words now," said the other, calmly : " you are aware, and so am I, that we aro quits, though injuries have been done you by those who had sworn to be my avengers, which I would have prevented, had I been able. I would have given my life to save that of your boy, though you would gladly bereft me of mine. My companions are witnesses, that I am with them to-night to pre vent bloodshed, though alas, I have not been able to do so. My thirst for revenge is quenched, and I ask now but justice for my son. Place in my hand the certificate of my marriage with the Lady Emilie—l know it to be in your possession—and swear 'to me that jus tice shall be done him and yon shall never more be molested. We have always performed what we have promised you. Pause, before you de cide ; we'can give you time, for your servants though unharmed, aro all secured." The count did pause, and he glanced towards Francois, in whom ho had, previous to his dis covery of the relationship the youth bore him self, felt a strong interest from the remarkable resemblancehe perceived in him to his lost boy ; the hope had been cherished that he was his Atii soil, and the discovery of what he really was, was the result of his efforts to prove him to be so. It was very likely much more, because ho saw no other way of escaping the fury of the ruffians before him, who it was evident, liked not the dispassionate manner of their spokes man, than from anf other reason, that he was induced to accede to the terms of de Maestro ; though the thought did pass through his mind that lie could regard the noble manly youth, whose year's residence in the chateau had so endeared him to the hearts of the inmates that ho was treated more like a near relative, than the simple music teacher that he was, as his " I will comply with your request," he said, " but only on this condition ! Deliver up to justice those who caused the death of my son : or hand me my sword, and let the murderers stand forth one by one !" " The matter has been already settled !" said de Maestro ; " the only man among us who knew, until after his death, that the noble boy was your son, lies there !" and be pointed to the prostrate figure of Merle, now cold and life- less. The paper which, twice before, that band had searched the chateau to find, was placed in the hand of do Maestro, and the robbers disap peared, carrying their dead companion with them.. They were never heard of after. De Maestro, under his assumed name of nu berto resided, for several years longer, in his cabin, with the old Lunette who was a relative of his family ; but after the death of her father, whose lifo was undoubtedly shortened by the certainty of the fate of his boy,the lady Chris tabelle, now the happy wife of Francois— Count d'Enghein—persuaded him to. take up his residence at the chateau ; and her hus band's kind foster-mother, the good Louise! who was now a widow, the countess also made a member of her family. Clock Making. Of all the inventions which conduce to house hold comfort and convenience, those must be considered the best which are adapted to the means, not of the rich alone, but of all sorts of people, and hence we cannot too much com mend the ingenuity of those who have made that useful machine, the clock, attainable by all. Go where we may, whether into the log cabin of the far West, or into the neat farm house of Now England, we are sure to hear the music of the bell of the Yankee Clock. , It is a matter of wonder what men did, in an cient times, without clocks or watches. They had, it is true, some defective method of ascer taining the time. The sun dial, for instance, appears to have been the most ancient. It was invented about one thousand years before the Christian era, and would have been a tolera ble substitute for a clock if the sun would have had the goodness to abide twenty-four hours a day, and if the clouds would have been kind enough to keep out of the way. But, as men want to know the time at night and in cloudy weather these contrivances were much of the time useless. The hour glass, the water clock, and other similar instruments, were very defective and inconvenient. The invention of machinery for measuring time, is ascribed to Pacificus, Arch deacon of Venice, in the ninth century, if we may trust the testimony of Uginilli. Others attribute the invention to Boethius, about the year 510 ; and some go back as far as Archi mides, to whom. they give the credit of the discovery. But we know for certain, that Ed ward the Third, of England, gave permission to three artists to come over from Holland and settle in England, to practice the art of clock making.• This must have been about the year 1360. Their ccinstructions, however defective compared with modern clocks, entirely super ceded the instruments first named. They were regulated by a small fly-wheel ; but this was soon abandored for the pendulum, which has ever since been used, except in spring clocks. They were called nocturnal dials, to distinguish them from sun dials. These ancient machines did not strike the hour. The striking part was a much later invention. Before we proceed to describe the improved mode of clock making at present in use, we would remark that a very ingenious machine was invented by 11ir. G. Dyer, of Vermont, which differed in every respect from the com mon clock. So simple was it in its construc tion, that only two wheels were required to continue the operation for eight days without winding up ; and three wheels would do this for a year. With all its apparent advantages, however, it has never been in general use. The Dutch, many years ago, manufactured large quantities of wooden clockS, which were sold all over the continent of Europe, and in England. They varied in price from four to twenty and thirty . dollars. But it remained for the present age, and the ingenuity of our country to bring this useful machine within the reach of every one, in an elegant form, which renders it.as ornamental as it is useful. . We have often heard the question—How is it possible that such handsome clocks can be made at such a low: price ? We will describe the process in one of the principal manufacto ries in Connecticut, which may, we presume, be taken as a specimen of the whole. The manufactory in , Forrestville employs about eighty men, each of them engaged in a distinct part of the work: This manufactory alone sends out about sixty thousand clocks every year, varying in price from fifty cents to six dollars. None are now made of wood, brass being found quite as economical. The ma chinery consisting of cutting-presses, rolling mills, lathes, draw benches, stamps, &c, is orked by water, or by steam. The brass for Cw iro frame Lou mom:, aim tbr the various wheels, is rolled in the flattening mill to a prop er thickness. This operation renders it hard and more durable. It is then cut by the press into the various sizes required for the wheels and other parts—the cutting of the teeth of the wheels being performed afterwards, by a dif ferent machine. The parts, thus roughly pre pared, and then passed to the hands who dress them perfectly smooth. The wire for axles, pendulums, pints, &c, is drawn at the draw bench. Nothing now remains but to put the parts together. The number of wheels varies in different clocks, from four to ten. 'When we consider the immense number of clocks made by the establishment alluded to, and consider further that there are in the coun try about 10 more rnanufactorieS on an exten sive scale, the total number made, cannot, we estimate, fall stort of four hundred thousand annually. The weight of brass in each, is about two pounds, which makes a total of 800,000 pounds. But in order to obtain this in a fin ished state, at least 1,500;000 lbs or seven hun dred and fifty tons of gross metal is required.— The result, is, we have clocks which may be sold at a very low price, and yet yield a fair profit to the manufacturer, while in distant lands, and in our own frontier settlements, the rich and the poor alike are in the enjoyment of the cheap and democratic luxury of a Yankee clock. FEMALE IBEVUTY People differ very much in the matter of taste, and what one nation considers a beauty in personal appearance, another would set down as a deformity. It is so in relation to other matters, manners and customs, style of dress, etc. It is not alone the " human form divine" that exhibits food for this great diversi ty of taste. Probably, however, there is no subject on which there is so much difference of opinion, " among the nations of the earth," as there is in the matter of what constitutes female beauty. A Broadway or Washington street belle •would make a sorry appearance in the bazaars of Constantinople ; and the prettiest Yankee girl in all. New England would be thought hideous by the ladies who bow before the throne of the emperor of Japan. Let us consider some of the customs of the women of various nations. The ladies of Ara bia stain their fingers and toes. red, their eye brows black, and their lips blue. In Persia, they paint a black streak around the oyes, and ornament their faces with various figures. The Japanese woman gild their teeth, and those of the Indies paint them red. The row of teeth must be dyed black to be beautiful in Guzurat. 'The Hottentot women paint the entire body in compartments of red and black. In Greenland the women color their faces with blue and yel low, and they frequently tattoo their bodies by saturating threads in Foot, inserting them be peath the skin, and then drawing them through. Hindoo females, when they wish to appear par ticularly, lovely, smear themselves with.a mix ture of saffron, tumeric and gi;ease.. In nearly tiUthe islands of the Paine andlndian oceans, NUMBER 24. the women, as well as the men, tattoo agreat variety of figures on the face, Bpi and tongue, and the whole body. In New Holland the females cut themselves with shells, and by keeping open the wounds long time, form deep scars in the flesh, which they deem highly ornamental. And another singular addition is made to their beauty by taking off, in infancy, the little finger of the left hand, at second joint. In ancient Persia, an aquiline nose was often thought worthy of the crown ; but the Sumatran mother carefully flattened tho nose of her daughter. Among some of the savage tribes of Oregon, and also in Sumatra and Arracan, continual pressure is applied to the skull, in order to flatten it and thus give it a new beauty. The modern Per sians have a strong aversion to hed hair ; the Turks, on the contrary, are very warm admi rers of it. In China small round eyes are liked ; and the girls aro continually plucking their eye brows that they may be thin apd long. But the great beauty of a Chinese lady is in her feet, which in childhood are so compressed by banda ges as effectually to prevent any further in crease in size. The four smaller toes are turned under the foot, to the sole of which they firmly adhere ; arid the poor girl, not only --endures . much, but becomes a cripple for life. Another mark of beauty consists in having finger nails so long that the castings of bamboo are neces sary to preserve them from injury: An African beauty must have small eyes, thick lips, a forge, flat nose, and a skin beautifully black.— In New Guinea, the nose is perforated, and a large piece of wood or bone inserted. On the northwest coast of America, an incision more than two inches in length is made in the• lower lip, and then filled with a wooden plug. In Guiana, the lips are pierced with thorns, the heads being inside the mouth, and the point resting on the chin. The Tunisian woman, of moderate pretensions to beauty, needs a slave under each arm to support her when she walks, and a perfect belle carries flesh enough to load down a camel. And thus we might go on in stancing until-we wearied the reader's patience ; but we have said enough to show how vastly people differ in their estimate of what consti tutes female beauty. The Ocean and its Depth. Professor Olmstead, of New Haven, has ton tributcd to the last number of the New Eng lander (a quarterly publication) an article enti tled " a Philosophical Survey of the Ocean," from which we extract the following paragraph. The author commends highly the labors of Lieut. Maury. The waters of the ocean cover nearly three fourths (or more exactly, five-sevenths) of the surface of the globe ; and of the the thirty-eight millions of miles of dry land in existence, twen-. ty-cight belong to the northern hemisphere.— The mean depth of the ocean has been various ly stated, but may for the present be taken at four miles ; the numerous soundings now in progress will soon enable us to speak with more definiteness on this point. Enough has already been done to rove that the depth is ex ceedingly unequal; that like the surface of the earth the bottom of the ocean • hero rises in mountain peaks, and there sinks in deep val leys. Until recently the deepest sounding ever made was that by Captain Scoresby in the po lar seas, which was short of a mile and a half. As late as 1848, the maximum sounding was that of Captain Ross, in the south Atlantic, and gave 27,600 feet or a little over five miles, without, finding bottom. But more recently, at a point of the Atlantic farther north, Lieut,. Walsh, of the U. S. schooner Taney, without reaching bottom, to the depth of 34,200 feet, or nearly 6 miles. Within a short time Capt. Dinham communicated to. the Royal Society a report of having reached the bottom of the At: lantic, in a passage from Rio Janeiro to the Cape of Good Hope, at the astonishing depth of 7,706 fathoms, or 81 miles ; a depth so pro fund, that the plummet occupied in its decent from the reel nearly 9i hours. From these re sults it appears that the depth of tho.ocean ex ceed the heights of the mountains, since the loftiest summits of the Himmalaya aro a little mord - than 28,000 feet, or 51 miles. Notwith standing these in the immediate vicinity of places where no bottom could be found, were spots of no uncommon depths. These facts in-' dicato that the bed of the .ocean is diversified like the surface of the earth . The, Gulf of Mexico is thought notl.4.exceed on an average ono mile ; and. tho Greenland seas are of such moderate depth, that whales, when harpooned, often run.to the bottom, as is indicated by ap. pentane° when they rise again. to the surface. Whales are even supposed to seek a part of their food at the bottom of the sett/ The Love of Nature. How many are there to whom the 'lustre of the rising or setting sun, the sparkling eon caVe of the midnight sky, the mountain forest tossing and 'roaring to the AY, or warbling with nll the melodies of a summer evening ; the. sweet interchange of hill and dale, shadmand sunshine, grove, fawn, and• water, which •anr extensive landscape offers to the View ; the• . scenery of the ocean, so lbveiy, so majestic, and so tremendous ; and the many pleasing varie ties of the animal and vegetable kingdom— could nevcr•aflbrd so much real satisfaction as. he steams and noise of a ball-roetn, the insi pid fiddling and squeaking of an opera, or the• vexations and wrangling° of a .card fable !L.- But some minds there are of a different make, who, even in the early part of life receive from the contemplation of nature a species of delight, which they would hardly exchange for any other ; and who, as avarice and ambition are not the infirmities of that period, would, with, equal sincerity and rapture, exclaim -7 i • I " I care not, Fortune, what you me deny ;• You cannot rob me of free nature's grace ; You cannot shut the windows of the sky, Thro' which Aurora shows her brightening face; You cannot bar my constant feet to trace The woods and lawns by living streams at eve." To a mind thus disposed, no part of creation is indifferent. In the crowded city and howling wilderness, in the cultivated province and soli tary isle, in the flowery lawn and craggy mountain, in the murmur of the rivulet and in the uproar of the ocean, in the radiance of sum mer and gloom of winter, in the thunder of heaven and in the whisper of the breeze, ho still finds something to rouse or to soothe his imagination, to draw forth his affections, or to. employ his understanding. This happy sensi bility to the beauties of nature should be cher ished in young persons. It engages them to contemplate the Creator in his wonderful works ; it purifies and harmonizes the soul, and prepares it for moral and intellectual discipline it supplies a never failing sources of amusement it contribules even to bodily health ; and, as a strict analogy subsists between material and moral batty, it leads the heart by an easy transition from one to the other, and thus re commends virtue for its transcendent loveliness, and makes vice appear the object of contempt and abomination. An intima to acquaintance with the best descriptive poets—Spenser, Mil ton, and Thomson, but above all with the di-• vine Georgic joined to some practice in the art of drawing, will promote this amiable sensibili ty in early years ; for then the face of nature has novelty superadded to its other charms, the passions are not pro•engeged, the heart is free from care, and the imagination warm and ro mantic. BLOSSOMS OF THOIMBIT. He has good sense, the rest follows.—Lu• Fon!aine. Do not allow grass to grow on tho road of friendship.—Madame Gcoffria. Cheerful looks make every dish a feast, and 'tis that crowns a welcome.—Massinger. Persons without energy, allow things to go as they come, always hoping that everything will go well.—Madame Riccoloni. It is heaven upon earth to have a man's mind move in charity, rich in providence, stern upon the poles of truth.—Lard Bacon. A vacant mind invites dangerous inmates, as a deserted mansion tempts wandering outcasts to enter and take tp their abode in its desolate apartments.—lfillard.. They that arc against superstition, often times run into it of the wrong side. If I wear all colors but black, then I am superstitious in not wearing black.—Selden. • Mere ballthilness without merit is awkward;; and merit without modesty is insolent. But modest merit has a double claim to acceptance. —h uglirs. If strict justice be not the rudder of all our other virtues, the faster we sail, the further we shall find ourselves from that haven where we would be.—Colton. Sunsets in themselves are generally superior to sunrises ; but with the sunset we appreciate images drawn from departed peace and faded glory.— Hillard. Americans Kneel 'only lo God. The following incident is said to have occur red, during the revolutionary struggle, in a conversation between a British officer and a young lady, at the house of her uncle who Was suspected of favoring the Tory cause. e conversation turned on the subject of liberty, and the success of the American arms, both of which the officer treated with leveity and contempt, adding, " Wait a few months more and you will see the whole party with the much glorified Washington at their heads, humbly begging for his majesty's forgiveness before the royal governor., They won't think of liberty when on their knees. I warrant you."— " Americans kneel !" exclaimed Aurora, end . only ris Hash ing like inns. kneel ! me is left unturned by rain's ploughshare, while an American forest clothes.a hill iu leaflY verdure, while ono tllliundation of an American church. tends unshaken by the kings' artillery, While heaven lends Americans life, and, you oppressors• aro but hunian flesh—so long, sir, you will never .eo our gallant Washington, and his brave troops kneel before the minions of your mon ' rchs ! N?, sir'! Americans kneel only to God !" The Mother. It has been truly said : The first being that,. rushes to the recollection of a soldier or a sailor' in his heart's• difficulty, is his mothers • She: clings to his memory and his affections,-in the:; midst of all the forgetfulness and hardihood in• duced by a roving life. The last message he: lea ea is for her, his last whisper breathes • her nes e. The mother, as she instils the lesson of pie y and filial obligation into the heart•of her lea e a vain. They may drop into the grave—. is sped and will do its office. y h s er fo i e n i fl t u h e a nces her tt: lx) tw r ill is. : O ld : is broken, but the soe• i n a t hfoe s r o h n haa , sr ei l h e o ft u T l bh d eeh a bil not I but Ivor