'2IL 7 At.-IittEHLER, EDITOi'AND PROPRIETOR v0t. , xviu„.,461 RIIWARD. ''" ' , gr , o4 oicirvinsas:. Who; looking bockwiud from his oianiniod's prime, Elan pot the weans. anis mincipeoit time; Ap4. *nine* tb• ilksde Of limn:o . czgi s 11 . 1, planceci thick bekind, 6li ll;e wind' ' " With hi. loved dead V • ' Who, hemp° tractof Passion ' v evil force I Who altunti !lg . Wins; 0 terrible remorie Wbo'vtotild rkot clot lialfofhle figure from hitn,hut to win Waltokasatellilowitor the wrong •Ind sin Of the sealed past l A but e the evil, which we fain would shun, We do, and leave the wished•for good undone ; Our *bengal m.day Is but to-morrow's wcakncu, prune to Ali Poor, blind, unprofitable servants , Are orealvray. Yet whn, thualooking backward o'er his Zeal, Peelle not hie eye-lida werwith grateful teary. ' If he hath berii Permitted, weak and ,aloftil ari he *as, Td eheei l anil aid in some ennobling cause, - , His fellow men I If he bath hidden the °dant, or let in A ley of sunshine to the cell of lin If ho heth lent Slnollfil to the weak, end in en honed' need, Oyer the suffering., mindless of his creed Or hue, bath bent He has not lived in vain ; and, while be given Thelma*. to Him w.holn. he mores and lives, , With thankful heart He gazes backward, and with hope before, Knowinir that from hie work. he never more • CU benoefortd part THE ATHEIST IT AAAAA a ' l•ta. The Atheistin lib garden staid, "At twilight's pensive hour," 116 littlelsughter by his side Wu piing gone flower. pick that blossom, Ps,. (r mc," The link prattles said, the fairest one that blocrths Witidtt that lowly bed." The tither pluck'd the chosen flower, And give it to his child; With parting lips, and sparkling eye, She seized the gift, and Oh, Pa! who made this pretty flower— This little viola bluel Who gave it such a fragrant smell, And such ajovely hue?" A change came o'er the father's brow, His eye grew strangely wild, New thoughts within him had been stirred By that sweet artless child. The truth flashed on the father's mind The truth—in all ha rower: "There is a God, my child," he said, —Who' made that - tittle liner!" THE VOICE ON MOONLIGHT I=! I have buret through the rent of a broken Cloud, And Pve dmiik of the mea‘low strewing; Whore the deer gloom of midnight tho mountains khrord, I have laughed out my pearly bams. And rye roamed along thmugh the forest glade, Where the nightingale's song waft musie made With the plaint of the breeze, and the distant rush Ufa dashing wild cascade. hive eilvereil the erect or a milling wave, And sailed out it safe to the shore; ,And I tremblingly erupt through a ooldilark ease, Lisfiting to the rude wind', roar. As the wild storm rose o'er the fathomless deep, And the spray of the waves made my bright eyes woep, A ud the tierce thunders marched down the quaking sky; I laid on & abiding to alerrh THE SOLAR SYSTEM _ ..• ft our young readers will Memnon to memory Cie following lines, they will ever afterlisve a cor rect idea of the arrangement of our Solar System. It will fix kin the nunnery like the length of the months by the old 'Thirty they. bath September,' Ate. ,Poised in the centre hangs the glorious Sri. Bound which the rapid MaRCVICT doth run; Next in due order V sines wheels her flight. And then the and Moos, her satrlite ; Nest fiery Maas pursues his round einem; Beyond, the circling Aerriaines appear; The belted Jur:Tint remoter flies, With his kur moons attssubuet, thro the skies ; The beltginged Straus rants more distant still, With seven swill moon! ho doth' his circuit fill ; With the sir satellites, that round him roll, Ilaariam slowly eireunnolves the whole. But far beyond, unecanned by monsll'art, In widening spheres, bright suns and systems lie, Circling In measureless infinity ! Pause sr The Mighty scene, 0 man, and raise Vim tathle voice to the Cs saeritie's poise pLEASAKT DOCTRINE. Ovr skinkr preaches, and Inborn to mom, 'Ti. Any duty, my nviettooT,to clicanth and lon ; In, vetch doottlne I hops to improve wont sod more, For young Harry Itutherfoid liveth neatdoor Esucartoth—'l l he innitimde think that td'edetrate , a child is tocrowd into his Mind tt given 'emuunt of knoirledge ; to load the methtiry with words. No wonder that they think every body fit to teach. The true end of education is to unfold and di rect aright our whole nature. Its flUce is to call forth powers of thought, affection, whl end outward• actions, •powers to ob tterveto reason, to judge, to contrive— power to adopt good counsel lind to per sue them, to govern, ourselves and MlN enas•others, to gain and spread happiness. The intellect wait created not: to receive passively a few words, dates'and facts, but to be active for the acquisition of truth.-- Education should 'Wapitis a profound love of truth, and teach the. Process of investi gation. A Bonn& logic, by which we mean the science and art which instructs us in Merin. laws of 'leasoning and evir dente, is an essential part of a good educe lion."--C/untning. thiSPECT DOES NOT FOLLOW tXTRAV 4iioic*,-,The man who takes care of his Outings is far more respected than ho who squamiors all in "riotous living." So with the young lady. - Although she may spend her last dollar in the purchase of a new dress or a costly shawl, and follow the .whims of fashion as closely as does the fashionable belle who had thousands at her disposah'sbe cannot Make people believe shit is richer than site really is : and is more likely to incur suspicion as to her rdstititile of character, and keep away keit young men as make good husbands, from her oriety, than if she lived prudent ly ahrdressed plainly. Somebody thinks that the Sons of Tempe rance should try and reform - the money market, because it has such a habit of get ting Timm NOM 11 PooPle's Journal HOLY: LAND 'ailtassiritairrimnuv. stir—JAcOlea 'WILL AID TIE thAYAIIIITAINi Our last view .oflinti'was very fine. 'We looked back from a ridge 011 the northern road, and saw it lying, brigh t , and swath an its everlasting : ; ~b ut it looked lower than from most other point, of view, from the Moab mottnuthie,forming its lohy baCk'ground. Vtre aesconand the slope before us, and last sight of the holy City forever. Again we were ptxuck with the vivid coloringof thescenery. All this (lay, the weredreisea to brilliant hues-=the soil,,red, grey, and brown; the tilled per (ions of the brightest green, and the shad ows; purple or lilac. All the hills show traces of having been once terraced; and they were still completely so in the neigh borhood of our encampment this evening —the terraces following the strata of the stone, which all lie slanting. This gives a ihigular air of wildness to the most cul tivated spots. Ilan and there were ba sins among the hills, the red soil drop ped all over with fig and olive trees, or full of corn; and the upland tracks, wind ing among , slopes all strewn with clines, iris, cyclamen,, and anemones, and hug with tall flowering hollyhocks. On we went, past deep old wells yawning in the hollows, or stone cisternsyhere the cattle were crowding to drink; past a few cancels here and there, browsing in the dells; past groups of Arabs with their assess, carrying corn to the city; past atone villages crowning the steeps, till, at 0 I'. M., we encamped beside a beautiful old pool. We are under the shelter of a rock, whose moist crevices were fringed with delicate Carnet While dinner was preparing, I went back on our road—the narrow, stony road which wound round the verdant promontory opposite our rock —to find a honey suckle which I had seen climbing and blossoming to a great height; and I brought back a charming handful of flowers. • While we were at dinner in the tent, a sound of scuffling was heard outside ; and when our dragoman next entered, he was out of breath. We afterwards heard the whole story, and were amused to find how zealous our Mohammedan servants could be in the cause of Christians. Some A rabs, with their loaded mules, had come ivith trli3 into llon of encamping beside - the pool; and on finding the ground partly oc cupied, though there was plenty of room left, they became abusive, and wondered aloud what business these cursed Christ ians had in their country. Our dragoman resented this, and threw the speaker down over the tent-ropes. There was then a stout scuffle, and our cook coming to help, and the Arabs falling upon one another o ver the tent-pegs in the-dark, they had the worst of it, and went off vowing vengeance. We heard no more of them, however. 'lime next morning we saw the Mediter ranean, like a basin of deep blue water be tween two hills. We were not going to. wards it, however, but to Nahlons, the an cient Sychar, where lies that Jacob's Well at which the woman of Samaria was wont to draw water. Our road lay through a most fertile. val ley, now called Hawarrah, where the crops were splendid for miles; and the villages were thickly planted on the hills. The ground rose in a series of table land*, of which there was a succession of three, when we• were leaving the rich Hawarrah valley. The roads in this part Ofthe Holy Land were mere lanes, full of stones, be, tweets'walls, or tracks through olive grounds and meadows. or paths running along shelvei of rocks, with a bit of rocky staircase at each end, about ascending or descending which our good horses made no difficulty. , Before entering the valley where old Sychar lay between the mountains Ebel and Clerizim, we came to the fine, fertile parcel of ground which Jacob. bought.— The valley opens out into this wide basin; and near the junction of the valley and the baein is the old well which is the.sopposed scene of thri conVersation I:sf Jeans with the Samaritan womon. Some of our par. ty wound round the base of the hill to the well ; and some (and I for one) rode 'by the upper path, Om the shoulder of the hill, and came down on the other side. •!I lied thus a finer vjpW of the whole locality; of the valley where the city narrow rally, rich with fig and,olive groves, and o verhung by the rooky bases of Ebal - :ind Gierisim, where the square black entrances• of tombs dotted the strata of the rooks.--.- From .this height, Jacob's land.lotoktßl beautiful expanse. The well is a mere rough heap of stones, with a hole in the middle, nearly ,closed up. Nirhat there is below ground, I cannot say ;, but this, is all that is to be Neon on thesyrfacc. It itatto; a well likely to be it; use now, for there ere many' springs and 'shallow cisterns (though no well) between this and the town which lies about a toile and s half off. Everybody'knows that the Jews had no friendly dealitiewith the. Samariums in the time of Jesus. The quarrel had then last ed above five hundred years. How many suns had gone.down upon their wrath ! The:Samaritans, had wished to assist the Jews in rebuilding the temple of Jerusa lem : butAhe Jews hated them as a mixed ratio, and would not admit that they had any right to share in temple worship or any other Jtiwish privileges. It really was a most serious objection to the Samar itans, that they were of a mixed race ; not only because the Jews believed that they held the promises ii pn the very ground of the parity of their race ; but because the intermarriages of the former Samaritan Is raelites with Assyrians and others disposed them to idolatry, or at least to a worship as mixed as their race. So the Samari tans were excluded from the rebuilding of the temple, above live hundred years 13. C. And not being poimitted to help, they did all they could to hinder. About ono hun dred years after, they obtained leave from the Persian Court (to which both the Jews and they were subject) to build a socoud temple to Jehovah; and they built it on Mount This was a shocking . , .... . ~. . .. H . ___. GETTY.1.8.11411,...:P4..:..Y#1,1)At-,..1.”N.1N.G,.:.''' impiety is the sight 'of the Jews ; arid it was the occasion of a bomber `of lax4riind ed Jews, who had broken the law, by mar rytig heathen wives, or otherwise, and yet who wished to worship Jehovah in his temple,.-sesorting to Syslue,4ojoinAhn Samaritans, and render their race yet more mixed. This was the quarrel which. the woman of Samaria referred to, when she spoke of, the question,. whether, "men. ought to worship in this mountain ar,,ip Jerusalem !" and, thus is explained her wonder that Jesus , being a Jew, should ask water of her, who was a Samaritan.— There was also a quatral about their ficrlP tures ; the Jews insisting, to this day,that the filandavitanis- had-ralterad-two-ev.three texts, relating to these two mountains, E. bal and Gemini: in their own sacred copy of the books of Moses; the Samaritans, insisting, of course, that theirs was' the true copy m my early youth. I had taken a strong interest : in this old quarrel., feeling sympathy with both parties, and , a keen de light in the. wise and soothing words °rile sus concerning it. What a truth it was for both parties to hear, that God was now to be worshipped everywhere . ; and that all plaive were henceforth to be as sacred as the Jerusalem temple, or the mountain at Sychar i l And what a kappa in liberali ty it was to the Jews, when he gave hanor to the Samaritan in the parable, en aedoutit of his goad works, above the sacred priest and the servant of the temple at Jerusalem. Both parties were, of course. • wrong in their fierce anger; but each had much to plead on his own side. Thi Jews were bound to keep their race and worship pure; and held, as an essential matter of faith, that Jehovah would have but one ,dwelling place ; which was their view of their temple. And the Samaritan. were surely right in their endeavor to worship Jehovah in- accordance with the laws of Moses, as they did not believe in strange gods; and, if the Jews could not admit them to wor ship in the temple at Jerusalem, they could not be blamed for building on e for th4;a: selves. • Such was always my view of the mat ter; and, such being . my view, it was with indescribable interest that I looked this day upon Mount Gerixim, and remember ed that somewhere in the city we were ap proaching was treasured that sacredxopy of the Samaritan Pentateuch, (Books of Moses,) which the possessors believe to be the true one, and to be 3.1500, yeas old.— The most learned men among the -Christ ians do not believe it to be near so old as that ; but they have a high opinion of its value, and would follow it sooner than any other, I believe, excepting instances where where the disputed texts about Ebal and Gerizini are concerned. Vie present inhabitants of the city 'hate the Christians as heartily as the old inhab itants used to hate the Jews. The present inhabitants are Mohammedans of the most bigoted character; and they would admit neither Jews nor Christians within their gates, till within a few years ; when the Government of the country (then ggypt ian) compelled them to better manners.-- They dared not refuse us admission ; but they behaved with great insolence. We had to ride from end to end of the city, our tents being pitched on a green OR the other, side. Our horses had to go as slowly as possible through the narrow street, which would not hold two abreast, and was pav ed with large slippery stones. As we rode along, one behind another, at this funeral pace, all the people came out to stare, , and many to mock. Three times things were thrown in my face ; men and women laugh ed and sneered. and children thrust out their tongues. I felt what a lesson this was to intolerance about matters of opinion. These people hold a faith which is very noble and beautiful. Few of us know how noble and beautiful is the Mohammedan faith. And there tit, no need to say what their visitors thoughtof the Christian faith, as they hold it; and yet, what a scene of hatred and misunderstanding was here!— And thus it is, but too:often, , in the streets of other cities, where Men ought to know better than Id . despise each other for wor shipping the s ame God in it different man ner. In the streets or other eines, bleb take upon theinselvei to pity tituLdesidse one another, *Mite better knowledge; in reality, of one another's views and feelingsi than these Mohammedans had of ours, or we of thairt. At' last, we were thmugh I and gla was •to ilium from die' gate it`thnlarther end. Bute sad eight *Waited us lucre crim Patty 'Or le pert Were' indei the trees, ciying out to ns for charity; and stretching out their maimed hands . Iris a! terrible eight, which we see ukroftenin diet coon= try.:v :It saddened us at Jerusalem;:almmit every,day, Our tents were pitched eke weedy plot ofground, among gartienaor,cbards, and xipplintatreams, and looking , up l to Ebal en the one aide, and Veriziet,ort the other. Eballit still the etetuer+aolting mountain Of the two ; but Gerizim has lost much of its fertility. 'Both 'have tombs and votive buildings on them, which shOw' them to have been places of pilgrimage. ' After dinner, we ascended a height, past the Mohammedan cemetery,' whence we had a fine view, in the last sunlight, of this most beautiful city. It was once the cap ital of Hamaria : and it is still, and must ever be, from it situation, a very striking place. It completely tills the valley, from side to side, and ascends a little way up .the skirts of Gerizim. Its houses, with t their flat, white roofs, are hedged in by the groves which surround the town ; vines spread from roof to roof, and from court to court: two or three palms Spring up in the midst, and higher aloft still, a graceful minaret hero and there. Then, to my delight, we deeended to seek the Samaritan Synagogue. We were guided to it, and I saw nearly all the Sa maritans of the place; good looking people, the men wearing the high. helmet-like turban which We set' in the portraits of Jo sephus and other old Jews. They said their number was sixty in this place, and about forty more elsewhere ; ohly a hun dred in the whole world. They declared their chief priest and the rest of their sect to be at Genoa. They keep three great rFEARLESiI, AND FREE." rennin in thti )tedr,'lning up Geriziin u the Jews used to go,uo to the Temple. The synaingtie *ke a small, ordinary looking chapel, within a cticialned rece.st ottilileh Ii kept thiold coprof the Penta tench._ . It'Was,`44l4ll te 'net after entreaty on . oiir'part"but I *Mad 'it was impossible` that l'cOld be allowetim tench I felt' ft 'ii greit'eireht to" have seen it.--J It ip written oot sort of delium, in the BA , niaritan text, clmd.:Adtall, find moon. The vellum id' tatteredi"but it Is Well Mounted od parchnient. 'The *lest himdelf darer not touch' the 'MS. without edreful puriftia thin i and he holds:li% by the etids of ihe' rollers' onirbich. it.lslited. at a Acroll, liket the copies bf the AeWish law in eynagoguiti. We. were lightdd' itiroagh the arch*trtS" of the street, Otid way home, mid down' dal hill; lir d .d' !idle, which' hurtled i tti steadily tit 'the 's Air. ' ' Our employment this evening wet read itig aloud the Minor of the Jewish and 81r. , martian controventy. and the fourth chapter of the GOspel of itihn. While we wire thus reading in 'ottitent„ the jackal was'in full cry on the slope of Gerizim. '" ' THE USEFUL AND THE ORNAMENTAL. The great erroref modern times, in .the eZucation of female", ; , is in giving price-, dance to the ortuuneplal branches of learn- ing rather than the useful. Both are per, but the eubstantial virtue:. and duties, of life ought alwaypto be telpwded as nf, in-, comparable ,more.importance than; lite mere embellishraenta. A young iniafFnay, be sent to a.faishionable boarding school and instructed in a thousand glum, with-: out learning one - ot, the :many necesaary vocations which ,w4l alwaYs .derdtle cla the wife and mother. Those accompliithi menu which are,deemed so s indlepensahle in fashionable society, ere not much better. often much worae than,aaelissa, at, the do mead° fireside tti the family circle. We could by no means condemn or undervalue fashion, fashionable society, or fashiena ble accomplishments. They are ally well, enough in their way. They arm indeed among the acquirements tobe desired when therare coneidered only as additinnalgta-, ens to a mind well cultivated in , the domes-, tic "arts and sciences," which enable yr°, man to fill the imereating,.,place assigned • her in the scale , of being, with dignity and honor to herself, and advantage to 24 to whom she may steed in the relation of mentor or guardian. It has been said that -"the-woman-witty-reigns queen of ball room is seldom found capable of gov erning her own children." Withoutdraw ing any argument from t his against the ball room, we may make the remark a fit instru ment in enforcing borne upon the mind in important truth :-..Persons seldom excell in more than one line.of virtues of qualifi cations. Those who select music, dam eing, feasting, parties,Ad., as the, sphere in which they will bine conspicuously, will seldom be excellent in any depart ment of life, Where all is sober reality in stead of amusement and excitement. Too much pains is takea to mak efemalesertistical instead , of useful. The former nut); dazzle and captivate us for a moment, but sooner or later the illusion vaniehee, and nature, true to herself, sighs for a natirralttcnirmin ion. Says a judicious writer : , "the system of female eduestiomasit now 'elands, aline only at embellishing a few years of. lift.; 'which' are itutheinsetres so full of grace and happiness, that they rarely-want it, and then leaves the rest or exietenee misemble of toidle insigni ficance/ No (woman of undexstanding and reflection can possibly conceirenhe, is do ing justice to her children by such kind of education. The object is to give to chil dren; resources that will endure eta , life emdureer—habits that will einelitsetei not oestrey-r.-eeimpation , that will reader sickness tolerable, solitude pillusaM o lege venerable, life• more dignified end useful, and therefore death less terriblecend. the compensation which is offered lor the .9- mitsion of *hie, is a short4ived blaze, little temporary _effect, which bet no Alter Consequence than to deprive the, remain& er of life of all taste and relish.", • Paacocm- arsizscr, , 7 —flawing Waieheil the giiiWth of.t)te .ytql:ml9o a 0.40410' am lasi and 'leas icy love with preamty, , indeed, pettftea a mere I i i4"1 0 0 , 44 . P t C ai lt!e . , 4 6 .a.stf 9T4 very Alm hu%viTy weak nerronii.etgatti zation. Tour young '„lrescttiesS,:gnd:ali youi wortdefii, or that in the feeblest' of common-pi4q ; Theo is no law, however, precise eat) absolute in the Metter. , , The difference o age at which. men..attain maturity of intellect. and even, iMagination, is very The tumultuous heat of.youth, has certain ly even birth to nianyof the noblest things in maitre, painting and poetry ;' huinCless fine proditatiinia haie sprung fitin.tholtipe;• nese of yesrs.' , Ohaiterton •wititeill his beautiful things;•withausted all , hopes'of life, and daw.aothing better than death - it . the early. spref• eighteen. Buna.and: Byron , died in their thirty-seventh year, and I think the strength of their,genius was , over. Ra phael,afterfilling the world with divine beau uty, perished also. at thirty-seven; Mozart earlier. They might have produced still greater works. On the other handllandel was for ty-eig lit before he "gave the world as surance of a man." Dryden, came up to London from the provinces, dressed in. Norwich drugget, somewhat above the age of thirty, and (lid not even then know that he could write a line of poetry. Yet what towering vigor and swinging ease all at once in 'glorious John !" Milton had, indeed, written his Comus at twenty-six; but blind. and "fallen on evil days and evil tongues," he was upwards of fifty when he begun his great work. Cowper knew not his own might till he ' was far heymul thirty, and his Task was not written till he was near his fiftieth year. Sir Walter Scott was also upwards of thirty before he published his Minstrelsy, and all his great ness was yet to come.—.llird's Old Bach- The World, says a shrewd satirist, is a mongrel—half spaniel, half wolf. Lash it often, and when you require it, n whistle will bring it to your feet. Show the slight est symptom of fear. and it will turn round upon and worry you even unto death. 11 5AAgY(Rff lia*4 foIt . COVERNING CHILDREN. Exercise your authority as seldom as possible, and instead of it employ kind 'persiaasiitin and deliberate reasoning, but when yea exercise it, make it irresistible. careful how you threaten, but lip. Threaten seldom, but 'never fail to execute. The parent who is open- Mouthed to threaten, and threatens hastily, is Irreablute to punish, and when the child iit•not Subdued by the first threat, repeats it , a lag dozen times, with a voice of in creased violence, and with many shakes sed,twitehes of the little culprit, will cer tainly,fossess no authority. ,li t ,Avoid tones and gestures expressive afrikotatio for trivial matters, indicative ono depravity, and exhibiting only heed letisttesa ,or forgetfulness of children, for Oliiing is Mora‘common to all young ani malsOlian to love to use their limbs. In sualiiiases the tones should be kind and petinasive, rather than authoritative; and even the gravity of authority should be re eeMideXclusitrely for eases of disobedience oritipravity; or for the prevention of se rious evil. ;A •perpeuaal ,fretting at chil drett.for little things will inevitably hard en.sheir,haula,...and,totally destroy paren tal. 1 409 1 ' 1 1y and Influence. : Thar never WA" * fle4oll Paranh .w.ho,ofieu threatened 1 7 1 tridAIR 41094%4 -91111...114 A,P.attic (O. . o u gloat, goyernment. TKO PROS . ,; HearY responsibility reels upon throe 'Vihei write for the public: Tutowt‘of the world,"they msy not lighdy sesame not thoughtlessly disahlairto a very 'import ant office.' Every line ;found , wentiter in moral tone should he loatandyensed. calaulablaeril may felloW iterpublication-w for .in that the, deprived • litttheonatenallee• and the -VIRg tralln114;11 1 id nnenaralke mem. witheet,el i orr:nay,,he groggi l y culpable, who ft eag : with i the society, ornegiec' dogoodivhen, OPportenity is pretiented.. A. bainhgtOt uttered in print,. is'ikit'aildreseedlinellig •gle Individtial, but ib the Whole goninitini4 important, then, that those who &ditty' the elevated•:Ptisiiiim of editors. should be dignified and virtuous : , . 6.. Let me Write the' ballads - of betide," said. a wily, politician •Of ' the olden, timet .4andi care not who writes its lame, was uttered before that mighty eng.inei the Pratt*, .had.assugned its, present _ all,portwfr Jul sway —built)! sentiment is not thetas, true in our day. Deinagoguism has not ceased-lobeseirtutmerid-ercitementlindi c iously.administered will atill drive to frenr zy the masses. One mischief:maker:nay mar the peace of a whirilei community ; our ry discord into ispailies,gleetrey, lannefnent light the torch of the ion,endiary, ittal the town over to pillage and ,bleedithed r ,-- Powerful for weal or for woe is the pen ; it is sharper, thug s. twoi-edgod'aWord— etronger than triple We l ocutteel, atul for then the never-tiring I:10 of , .1?)t t ye, who use it, talgegnq sore Oct .yo, tlo not abuse your vocnitir. lte, jealously guarded in thooght intik action, glwayr aim ing to enlighten end etevele., The unperaHiled' inertitige In' the' notee. pit per press of ibis! anditriumphant pronf'or'groWing MUM genes, domestic prosperity; and ideiskhiq petals. • These canoes folio* -eseh-other as-plainly,- es-tillently ; 44e11-- se-itimntifidly as day followa With theieW/1 of light, comes the news - paptowoghtelirst il lurpinates the world of matter, the last that of Mind: Whitt' Weir prtiorii !Wanted of high morel tone; •ittimyir the Offspring of civil, gad religious , freedeozi than thalami that, we have mom newspapers, than the whole world peg Mgedgegi Is , nog the boast a prottd,oo t., Iloilo our, exultatign let us remember that, ‘ .taithout integrity, thit press pity be tlisested fr o m its legiti mate,porpuse; and a vehicle et foul wrong end oppression, Make truth the hailifbf the'structere----then work with as siduity until the cap-ittinetisses the blush ing A skies I Cottrows—eouroge, brethren of tha,'pressithe shouid work bravely who has the good of the world at heart! "Let bid one thought from out the womb of tiino ' ifeneeforth,hor sky, nor clime, Norladdi nor sea, not king, nor serf, can stay hots, rmy.ur.ragh ip nommen) way h is Lad shall be--'tillthe heavens shall roll rvedier in a' vast anti flaming scroll— And on thadaeroll, b words of living Are, 1341 Diane ttift thought,--'till time keel( expire !" ftiilizitiarentS should consult "thOleraitilly dentist' at least two or three tither fat' us often at least as they may perceive the least deran&ement in the .mouthq : of .their children. Iliere are few parents wIo acquaint themselves sufficient ly with the dental organs to know when The fititt set Of teeth loosen and come out, or When the'seeond make their appearance, at 'which time the teeth should be careful- Ly so that the first symptoms of decay may be detected and eradicated be fore A has proceeded too far; for, upon the preservation of the first four permanent double teeth; (two of the t i pper and two of thelnwer javi, which usually appear be tween the fifth and sixth year, depend in great measure, the symmetry of the lower part of the face. MENDLESCIIIN. TITS Co3o•Mit ' .- The German journals give v ery interesting par ticulars relative to the death of Mendelsohn. Mendelsolui was brought up with a sister, who married an artist of the name ()ilium'. eel. Ile himself married, about ten vears ago, the daughter of a senator of Frankfort. These two families were inseparable.— Mendelsohn and his - sister, Fanny linen sel, formed but one soul. This remarka ble woman was herself a good composer. and directed the steps of her brother in his musieal'eareer. About nine months ago, Fanny Ilaensel composed a symphony, the performance of which she conducted herself: at the commencement of the fifth part Madame 11:iensel dropped dead of an apoplectic at. Since that time Mendels solin wandered about like a shadow among the living. In a letter addressed to his wife, he says.—" Our common soul has taken her flight to heaven. I greatly (ear I shall shortly go to meet her. for Fanny always. promised she would come and take rue from this world, should bhe die be fore me." Two months :ate r, Mendell solin died of an apoplectic tit. WHAT mar. WOULD DE A. QUEEN t—dl is said that her Majesty the Queen of Spain is subject to fits of melancholy, and ex treme depression of spirits, and that these sad periods come on suddenly, and form a striking contrast with occasional sallieta the moat buoyant Faiety. She remains,' we are told, sometnnes for hours, sitting alone, and is often surprised in tears, with out being able to account for her grief.— ller appearance in public is much less fre tient than formerly, and it is remarked that she has become much thinner than before, and that her face has acquired a sad and care worn expression. • * Change is also said to have been made in the medical treatment of the Queen. A professor .of the homeopathic doctrine, of the name of Nunez, has been entrusted with the care of her majesty's health, and the skill and ex perience of the usual attendants almost, if not entirely. superseded, In noticing the opening of the Cortes by the Queen, next day, the writer says :—On her majesty passing through the streets, every one re marked how thin, care-worn, and even haggard, she looked;,and, though, when she entered the chamber, a flush overspread her countenance, yet an expression of sad ne,sa was still observable." 130DU.1 • EXERCISE IN EARLY LIFE. ---.TO fetter the active Motions of children, as eopti atirthey have acquired the use to their liu?bs, is barbarous opposition of improv iitg their minds and manners, is an insult to common eeits6. It may, indeed, be the way to train up puppets for short-lived Foredigiett of• learning; but never to formi healthy, well-informed end arromplished men . and 'women. Every feeling individ- Ual math behold, with flinch heart-felt eon cells; pedr little puuy- creatures of eight, temi.or twelve years of age exhibited by theirsdly parents as proficients in learning, or as distinguished for their curly proli. eienny in language, elocution, music, or even' some frivolous acquirement. The .seretigth-Of the mind, as well as the body isdixliantited.i.and the natural growth of beth isHebteked. by , such untimely excl.- , 31 •I:.!NyirtutiOnt PosTacitki4.The -Legisla ture of Ohio has adopted, without a ths rating. NRicer illyrosolution requesting the Peleinitict l y,frum Mgt State in Congress to I(o,4,for,agi,ameadment to the Post Otliice Wt which shall permit newspapers to go ifhlim mails frp,c of postage within thirty tpi4.. of, Ow fpubl lea ti p' RATION epos, ,A MARE UNDER THE itxr(t.itr*?fcF, OF PHOLOROFOlUl,—Yestertlay 'Zi4„ . bpyttcm, veterinary surgeon, Mount ffirect.loneryed a mare while tinder the flOtalWO of .oholoOform , with complete s,nefess. Two small sponges were soak i;tifinthe cycolorotorrn and secured in the , nnstriut nth piece of tape. In about twa,minutes,the two staggered and fell, 'The„o,p,erati?n , was then performed. The ma,,,tt wits. no, wit) , secured, and lay perfect- V n tik(wlio nerve was cut down upon, awl with the exception of a slight twitch y,liett,tlte nerve was divided, she did not cvippObe slightest feeling. The sponges tfpFethett i retnovoti, 'and in about six min izi. 49 g 44 up all right. :.3o satisfied has Nk.,Yliftvsott been with the result in this tpt4ce,,that he intends to apply the chlo rocuem in painful operations.--London , PILLS AND POLITICS•--TIIC celebrated Dr,Beletrittwrit is one of the members of the fiew York Hunker Imeofoco Central Conintittep. and their harmonious confer aci, the liarn-burners, style the proceed ing's of the Committee, "the Brandreth movement." The Evening Post says of it "It is rumored, we know not on what grounds, that Dr. Brandreth has serious thoughts of calling a preliminary conven tion of quack doctors. to advise what shall he done in the ease of a patient who obsti nately refuses to take the medicines direct ed by his physician. Unless some meth od is devised to bring these recusants'to compliance, we do not see what is to be (mine of the Brandreth Convention." ASBACII vsErrs.—Gor. Briggs' Ad dress to the Massachusetts Legislature re veals a remarkable state of prosperity.— The receipts during 1847, including $B,- 629 of a balance on hand, on the first day of that year, amount to $508,990 ; the ex• penditures to $478,756; leaving a balance in the Treasnry of $40,535. The State owes only $1;147,300, being for its stock in the Western Railroad, which is n very valuable and productive investment. There is no State tax imposed upon the people, because there is no need of it. All the e conomical, educational and benevolent in stitutions appear to be in the most prosper ous condition. There are said to he 9000 applic . ations, resulting from the Mexican war, for boun ty lands and Treasury scrip, so that the Pension Office is overwhelmed with busi ness, and on increase of clerks is necessa ry. There will be land and scrip enough to satisfy all these claims, but what shall compensate for the broken hearts and des olated hearths which have been caused by this war! THE COLD TUESDAV.—Tuesday, the 11th of January, 11348, will hereafter be reeordeditiihe New England calendar as the cold Tuesday. , We learn that in Bris tol, N. 11., the mercury fell to twenty-six degrees below zero on tint day. At Lytne, N. IL it was thirty-three below ; at. Ilun. over thirty-four; at St.. Johnsbury, Vt., the mercury fell to forty, and froze ; and at Franconia the mercury frozoso hard that it is thought it will requim i t , lon g spell of moderate weather to, thaw. it 1 — Boston Journal. STATE DETITS.—The different States U of the Union w bleb, arc in debt, amounting, in the aggregate, to considerably' over two hundred millions of dollars, are now, we believe, all parin . ; the interest, in full nr in part, except the following, whore debts 1841 were aboot is annexed, via; INis sissipiii, 67,600,000 ; Arkansas, 113,590,-1 000: Florida, $1.850,000 ; Tvatas, $ll,-; 00,000. 'fowl, $20,-630,0ti1), TWO DOTIAVOI MINITIfi MEW SERIES---NO. 30, MAJOR GENERAL SCOTT. It gives us pleasure to transkr to our columns the, following very earnest tribute by the '•Hart ford Times," '(a I)emocratie paper,) to the military merit of the General commanding the artny of the U. Statee . THE COMMANDER OF THE FORCES:-41 seems to its that the merit of Gen. Scow, ' in gaining the late astounding victories be fore Mexico, not vet received its fit ting tribute from the public press. His political opinions must necessarily. ever debar him from receiving the suffrages of the Democratic party for the Chief Magi* , tracy of the Union. But the circumstance cannot prevent us from seeing that this great soldier has deserved exceedingly well of the Republic, and acquired a very strong tide to the fervent gratitude of his coun trymen. Perhaps, indeed, to a mail whoa^ hairs are already silvered in the service of his country, the due appreciation and a knowledgir,ent of that service may prove a more acceptable reward than the highest office that could be transferred upon him. At al! evedts, the least that can be done is to award just homarand praise, in no stint ed or niggardly measure, to those who. have no other remuneration to expect foe' their brave deeds. The battle of Contre ras and Chnrnlinsco certainly rank among the most brilliant military achievements of the age. A. hand of eleven thousand an ' dacioum invaders have defeated, with im mense slaughter, an army of thirty thou sand troops, drawl* up in a position of their own choosing, on their own soil, to defend their altars and hearths, in the very heart of their country. But it was hot a lone 'the indomitable valor of our troops which distinguished these battles. They were to an equal degree marked with all the skill, science, and foresight of a mas terly strategy. In turning the rocky and most impreg nable passes of Peron and Mexicalcingo,' fortified with terrific batteries, upon which the enemy' had expended the labor of months, Gen. Scott displayed the most' consummate 'generalship. It Was not the mere avoiding or evading these formidable posts which constituted its merit. It W.V., that his cool . and practised eye discerned at a glance that a passage could be cut through dense forests and tangled defiles, and heaps of tinge rock, where the enemy never dreamed that Suck an exploit was conceivable. It mvas a repetition of the same skilful out-Banking mananivre by which he had before spared so much vain able life at Cerro Gordo ; a movement which rendered all the laborious prepara tions and defence of the enemy useless, and whieh Santa Anna himself pronoune ed to be nuisterly and worthy of Napole on. It has been the crowning merit of Seolt, that while he has been every where victorious, he has also every where Ims-; banded his forces. Daring and intrepid to the lust degree, wliere these qualifies were coiled fur, he has, at the same time, been careful never wantonly to waste the lives of hie troops in unnecessary stormings or reckless assaults. Under almost any oth or general, his mere handful of troops would long since have melted away from repented collisions with inert but over whehning masses. With a humanity nor less conspicuous than his bravery, Scott has always abstained from any indiscrimi nate slaughter, even of a sanguinary and merciless foe. it was a great thing to have mastered the renowned fortress of San Juan de Mott —a second Cibraltarc—with so trifling a lost; of life. The victory over Santa Anna at Cerro (Aordo, in the manner as well ati in the magnitude of the achievement, was a daring and masterly exploit. It was al -80 a great thing—a sight, in fact, full of moral grandeur—when four thousand two hundred tattered and way-worn soldiers, under his co In timid, entered the magnifi cent city of Puebla, and, with all the eon lidence of conquerors, stacked their arms and laid themselves down to sleep iu the great square, surrounded by a hostile pop• illation of eighty thousand. But, last of all, and more admirable than all, has been the care with which be has nursed and kept together his little band of eleven thousand, mid the alumna iubuluus audacity and still more incredible success with which he has pushed them, step by step, to the very heart of u civilized nation of seven millions, and to the gates of capital of 200,000 souls, the renowned seat of a legendary and mythic magnificence. and the most aneient and best built city on the continent. If modern warfare has any parallel for this great feat of arms, We know not where to look for it. The SIICCCSSIVe triumphs of Vera Cruz. of Cerro Gordo, of Puebla, and of Mexico, undimmed'as they have hitherto beon by a single reverse, have unquestionably rais ed the reputation of the commander to a very great height, and placed it, to say the least, folly on a level with that of the great est generals of his ulna. Nor is there,auy denying that those victories have been of such an order that, while they elevate, the successful leader, they oleo, to at least an equal degree, exalt the character and ex tend the renown of his c,ountry, ilence we cannot bring ourselves to make any a pology for what appears to he a just notice of Gen. Scott, on the score of Ins hell a Whig. A sense of gratitude for los, is. tinguished services in this war would not permit us to say less. The fame of a irie torions general cannot justly be ,held to be long to any party. It is the property of the whole nation. RECALL or V 0 Litti T A ER H.—Gen. a letter to a friend at Pittaburg, gives it as his opinion that the Penns)"lva: nia volunteers will shortly be' reesdled...L.:. 1t is also said that the South Carolina Reg inent will have leave to redeye hottie.. „ 11 7 DISTRESSING C ASLTALITT• - l/oaturwy week, whilst with a parly'of boys guitoil. William L. Sumpter, a fine loath about ten yetirs of age. the oldest spit pf Ms. Benj. E. Sot»pter, of Lynehtiuri;;FOO Was by the accidental diairienf One of the party. The anfortinsitr,ifot received the contents in his Moil,' tritital. nd Lee, ran a few yards, fell, eild'itstinel , iiiatelt exeir(4. When is a chicken's neck like a When it's rung fur dinner.