Aj r . , • E3 O . A • . •., - • •4414 4444.11 41414-..:4 4.40c 1 ,A 14, 4. , 11 , ! 0444144,g44(.0 nott4 Ito 41444i4 4 . 1 .);1 Warr , 1( . 4: 1110:414: ~t! • off t41*:,,p,...'1 t -lob oil/ 4:114 , 1 944'1 Y D. A. & C. H. BUEHIAR4 =.--. rl 1, varit, , ffilir . len takt Wl' itiglialift4(4 4 4 . .f, ... . tr • iiii evil: ' WiIINING YINN. . ' , t.mi‘atai l se*Latutlist. • "'theft* tk elt4M.t Hu gone *Pail Yotuleg Noe hisk, i hr4 / 43174i a, ard:rri.4 That dersi mi stbotnelPhill igl 411 nn if The thander v agmpiwbap loud: Ham l 4 o. thew Thotelltager 1. with MVO' Cithllll4 81 PPX1 0 1 1 441,4,0bri11ft 4 1 1 01.04 OW. ; ; Though I have bmrd them Inuly a time Tlmem rang so sweet before. s i aefesti upon tha • ' Vitimbitemi pervade* Moth. lice bey' belie sie &tit. indatllt - And boweil'al if iu *rt. 904 int& titisea ltiesthlois Wee, O'er earth, 5e11.% eel' sky and Me; A still low voila bit enigma yam. Yak* we* 00 011 °. E s Gad. of Thom , The Wlikeresing,leavee, brook. lbsepege, yemble fainter grown, The hive bemsdi bee. Ile bowman/pa* AU there 'their *abet men the.biding Ulm, ,Thaeßer's last feeble sound, The gown gpowskenal by the breeze, All,llmoe ONO Allihmoo more PeeKoliod• The twilight takes' deeper lamas. T'hediuder pathways darker grow, A,pd,allenewrelosaln glen and glade, While all is mete !Opt , . And Ohm eamefili sweet as this - Will seep vow as calm a dity ; Tiemorhildwg down the deep abyss. X - I , l ,t g%ta :set, be swept away, op le gained— _ eesorilliout More, That 'lollies foresee reigned, Mellen! ne more. Now naltim.einlosln soft repose, A Ilvlpg eemblanes of the gave; The dew Opella noleeless on the rose, The boughs have *Jam% owed to ways ; The silent ell, the sleeping earth, tned,lneatitain, stream, the humble sod.— All ell Iran whom' they hod their bleb, • And try, »Beheld a orl THE PRATtIiOF HABAKKUK ITsaidof r. Franklin, thatunng his long residence in Paris, being invited to a party of the nobility, where. Most of the court and courtiers were Present, he Produced a great eensatiolt by one of his bold movements , and gained , great applause for his ingenuity. According to the custom of that age and cOuntry, the nobles after the usual cere monies of the evening were over, sat down to a free and promiscuous conversation. Obriatitinity was 'then the great topic. The church was always redieulnd. add the Bible, was treated with unsparing severity. Gro4ing Wartnel and' iirlititer le their ear- eat* remarks, pita great lord commanded. for a moment, universal attention, by his asserting in a round voice, that the bible was not only a piece of arrant deception, but totally devoid of literary merit. Al though . the,entice. company of Frenchmen nodded a hearty assent to the sentence, Franklin gave no signs of approval. Be ing at that time a court favorite, his cont.: panions could not bear even a tacit reproof front's man bf hfs) Weight of influence:— Trig aft appealed hits fbr his opinion., ( Vrenltlia,' in t one of his peculiar wiys, replied that he was hartily prepared to give them a suitable answer, as his mind Waimea rustling on the merits of a new book of rare -exellence, •which he had just happened to fell in with at one of the city book stores; 'and u they had pleased to, make allusion to the literary 'character of tit r e ilicde perliapi it might interest theta to compere with that old volume the merits of. his 'new prise: .If so ,he would,resd, them a short section. All 'Were eager to .have the bettor read` theta' a portion of `• very greet, and sla vers manner, he took ;n old 'book from his coat r cket,,iand with propriety of terance read them a poem. The poem had its erect. The admit'. ing listeners pronounced it the bost,theY beft•Olter ,I . lB u is t Preli7;, skid *L. **Whet is sublimityt," said inother. l ."ft his taA iteriptiribtinthb "held," was They ill wished Vie i* pf_the_npW work, and 'whed"r th 4 W" of iu.cowl ; teats. mCerteinly. gentlemen," Amid • the popp,militic, et Aigk ! iurpph;i;ao6i Nlc r #44o,• - 40'10erl 4144.10ciifigheo . frAgl)iim Bible .; aimr*ii4ilip;you4too of, vile pro: iphet.itibrAuk." • ' s444kr .94rerliiitets wisdom from 044 1 Ftin u; Alipteciate the 711,AblisPirkia.ei ItlxTenn.—The Duke ,pf Ideate/lee inesikkithidrist. Amery ettw orig. Ufa Pade ll in which , be contrived Wpiti• liiii.:44 W iain m amuseent, he had .e:de -4,014144pg-giiss;impendetl in hie kaw ippgpeons,ao that all the noble guests,dlet dlitdeciati - tti dine at the Montague Valise weritaitimed; by passing the treacherous .1( icivad O ! , .+ ~.-n ~ ust . ,thew . wigs . tidi awry. i n. itiat gp i rkfulkireased wig was as essential as 01 0 ,11nessed mat; and his grace's dinner 4 ,cinly presented an assemblage 4 . . Oi d iaith their perukes dragged SWOrk4llllllll,‘ right eye, each wondering 111111$110400411es disorderly appearence.and r ..., himself that in setting his 444,,A0 ;i4o,drawing-room he had ,es.- it * t en t rqql Ale absurdity disfigurini Am limoittpalpy. r FACIWY •OY • •FiNnnNO Fatnoir.—s ,itidieblemest be a !Orr easy 'thing, for Wee . matey Ttrting pen taco) in it who •never succeeded in any.thinetisc. !.1' 4 1}t f;; 11' ", : f.., ;;;', If* 79,01 1 4.4 8 11 4 4 ;P , i StiteLttfigli tint ; kit* mist`' ludi tette' ilighiffeihr Addrreile WRNS thit Officer, atid Stulliinbl lot Btrlingtoti 001. legs On 'The 4th of , Sult, which' has pet peen' poblishedi.- It is fitly' ioddribbd to Major . General Scott 9 a medal of the Men to nuke ,a fiate." .1 IS is a, brief his goo, full of practical Imes, tersely enfOrr. cad. "The men to make a State," It Je `held, meat be..iotelligant alett: l ! boor est," " brave," and religious men ;!' they must lie,made by t 4 Faith,'. ; ' b r ,. Belf neuiel,", by "Obedience :" and ingenuous. earost, reverential boy s bier' the intik' of men . to inkli,l WState;'" We cite a few paSsages naWspaper.eirculation : " The liters, to . Woke a &ate, muse be inteniVni•lten , Ido not . mean, .that they must know that two,and two Male. four ; or that gluier cent. a year is half per cent. a month. . I take a wider and• a higher range. I limit myself to no mere utilita rian intelligence. This has its place.— And this will come, almost unsought.-- The contact of theroughiandzsgged world will arcs men to it id self-defence. The lust for worldly pin will drag men to it, for seiraggranditetnent. But men, so made, will never make a State. The in telligence which that demands, will take a wider and higher range. Its study will be matt. It will make history its cheap experience. It will read , hearts, it will know meh. It will, first, know itself,-,- Who else can govern men T Who else can know the men, to govern men 1 the right of suffrage jeefintrfut thing, It calls for wisdom, and discretion, and intelli gence of no ordinary standard, It takes in, at every- exercise, the intetest'of all the nation. Its results reach forward, through time, into eternity. Its discharge must beimcounted for, among the dived respcno. eibilities of the der of judgnient. Who will go to it 'blindly ? Who will go to It passionately 1 Who will go to it, as asr chophant, a tool, a slave ? How many do ! These are not men to make a State. The men, to *nuke a State, must be hon. eat men. Ido not mean, men that would never steal. I do not mean, men that would scorn to cheat, in making change. I mean men, with a single face. I mean men, with a single eye. I mean men, with a single , tongue. I mean men, that con sider, always, what i• right; and do , it, at whatever cost. I mean men, who can dine, like Andrew Marvel, upon a neck of mutton; and whom, therefore, no king on earth can boy. Men, thatare in the mar ket, for the highest bidder; men, that make politics their trade, and look to of , fice for , a living; men, that will crawl, were they cannot climb : these are not men to make a State. The men to make a State must be brans men. Ido not mean the men that pick At quarrel. Ido not mean the men that carry dirks. Ido not mean the men that call themselves hard names, as Boun cers, Biller', and the like. I mean the' Men that walk with open face and unpro tected breast. I mean the men that do, but do not talk. I mean the men that dare to stand alone. I mean the men that are to-Joy whets, they were yesterday ; and will be there to-morrow. I mean the men that can stand still and take the storm. I mean the men that are afraid to kill, but not afraid to die. The man , that calls hard names and uses threats ; the man that stabs in secret • with his tongue, or with his pen; the man that moves a mob to deede of violence red-self-destruction ; the Man that freely offers his last drop of blood but never shads the first these are not the men to make a State. , Tho,noon, to make ,tx Slate, are 4em selves made by obedience:- Obedience is the health of human hearts; obedience to God ; obedience to father arid mother, who ire, to children, in the place of God ;• obe dience to teachers and to masters, who are in the pine of father end 11304011+ obe dience to spiritual pastors, whim* God's ministers,' aiiv'to the • powers that be, iihiohnkeOntiiinednt God, ObOkenCe 4 ‘PS suP•P ' f , l in• aciitin a44.th4 elm never govern inas, who dote not gov.• inporilitt,llintolilf. .0017 amok mu tan ma k e - igu it i.o, •• • • •• i • ..; ' - 11EMI1'IFULJNOIUNTIo A few days before the child'. iliness;* buttertlysvety. tarp *ad. 941pritar bulgy, was found hovering bribe room where she was at plays quite fascinating her with its grecefulincititina and b miabt 4toti, snt after being several tirttea thruit out, eying har* at last, and resting on the 'infant's forehead• For a moment the beautifulin sent ,rerenined' there, expanding its brat liant .wings .to the great delight of the child, then suddenly, as if it had accomplished its . purpose, 104 its departure and was soon out of sight.. 'rho child sickened ; and, again, but a few i hours before its death, the butterfly 'wall SCIAI guttering and seek ing entrance at the window of her . cham ber. It matters not to otir faith, whether, as the innocent superstition.of another-land would tell us, there was a message thus borne front the holy world, that this young life was needed these. and must be taken sway. lint at least while we remenalow that this frail , insect is the emblem, not oil ! y of a fleeting existence, but of a resurrec- • ~41111140.1i441 EVENING, AUGUST io, 1849. oft ' 4 *o*-kfia hulked *a, tb' 144 i 4 thp inoiddat aW illuttatios 01.0 chalk Week ne of thin' °Wilber tenon • which tan niver Week it toes . pa*irittlity t ititit!thir tpitt, '6( *604: the' 44 * 6 l lll ill her% hui,c(rfmerlintalhOill • _et 44 010 1 011 in heave where ear Wks, *nosh not, et* I Carer can folkror ite.a.goe. -preen& Wo Vette nsil WWI *MY manic/tinnier the.bitth of s darighter is tegaided ethically, Mid ah tieeletlort of sorrow, In Sunni fetnale ate immediately exlieeea tO certain that their futienta may *Wheys the trokSW of bringing them nit. liVrittlethe *gine, is Awed 'to 11;i; die is iegerded air sa ideal& being ; ftaWne4 'PRO , pare eta and othet - relation' ; 1101 d 10 40 highest bidder in market; and then boo comes the slave of her husband. As se. 'Teeth elitxtittedyithetaterarely be-said• to hire a choice ; them given or sold to those Who are millet to take het.' Mach is the disgrace of calamity iu gindostan, that many woman have been known to marry deorepid and dyitig old, melting' be fore they drown themselves in the Ganges. Many women are hurried alive with their deceased husbands, or consumed on the funeral pile. In Chine, women have been yoked With an ox or en ass, while the husband held the plow and sowed the seed. In HisdoOtao, it is said that until recently, not one female in twenty millions was acquainted With the commonest tudi , mesas of flintiest' lemming. The Muer , lean missionatiels of that in the lelend of Ceylon, when they first Visited it, not a single woman in a population 'of two hundred thousand could read ; and that it was considered pernicious, if not ab solutely impossible, to educate a female and heavy calamities were expected to be fall the woman that dared to aspire to , the distinction of being able to read and write. Among the aboriginal tribes of our -own country, the women do the drudgery I and the men spend their tittle in war, hunting, and idleness. In many pagan countries, the life of the woman is at the mercy of the husband, and if she offend him he may kill her with perfect impunity, or at most, at the expense of a small fine, As might hate been expected:Atder such degrading oppression and wrong, the women of pagan and mahomedan nations are generally low, sensual, vicious and unworthy of confidence, UMBRELLAS. It is not *hundred years since a Very eccentric Englisheian named Jonas Ilan , way, having returned from his "travels in the cut," (the record of which is stilt pre served in voluminous quarto. fermi with that title, in some old libraries,) appeared on the streets of London op a rainy day' (it does rain in England sometimes) with a queer notion imported from China, in the shape of what is now called an umbrel• la. It was the first ever green or used in England, probably the first in Europa—, It attracted such curious and indignant no. nee that the eccentric Jonas was soon sur rounded by a finious English mob; and was boldly pelted with mud and other con venient missiles for his presnmptous au dacity in thus attemptingto screen hie bead end figure from the rain, which all true born 1 Englishmen, (row time immemorial had allowed to beat upon them without resist.' mwe, as an "inevitable Visitation" from the , powers above Upon all, who'ehoose to lease the shelter of a roof in a storm or a short ere The incident made a noise, and in wile of ridicule, the "outlandish, I new fashion ed noliou". blgan to take iimighfily' s , vriM the extensively bedriziled people ot Eng land, and as the new machine wee lona* to be as effectiv* in protecting the grown against the says of the auulsner's sun, as a gainst the &Wag •tain r ehodisarned condes cended to borrow sl name for. it from. the Latin dimintitive bf Ift!uk,de—::o6mbrillir—Liilitde`shiidk' Poor /epee so les a! ft!!!!s,Plerely Illtnirknitat rage it is to I Allan 10.bcitiraw.y4wilk* vane:,o l . o !NP11,",77-11Trf,:rkpf#91 tettt Within' kin • tillitivitei.. l .Ther folloaltig , anicdatii `*air. Mated is by it lieeiar of the ' prisoni6te weie.poatiaed. He hudbemihforiltittiii 3 Ot . in , a Most delimitate; "slaw , Ba 11 : mg, berore . ' been confined in a cell where` bf months no one. esetel.'lclAnlell'e t4 l 4ind etbut men at last brought him to Hartford ' county prison. In ei.kw.slsia 4 hi` keeper endeavored to use his utmost skill to Buts due him. Ile adopted titriollbering egg pedient : told hie little child, who was then scarcely strong enough to walk,to go to the cell and offer the Mule man an apple. Day alter day the 'Child' went to the cell, and, calling the man by name, said, "'rake an apple, sir." 'rite maniac turned away in a rage. She continued the practice, and her mild, sell voice, again and again urged the distracted man to Accept her M lle gift. Ile seemed inexorable. Dip eye coultl not be caught ; for little can be ac. eumplislicd with any man until the eye is 0 , 1 { MPEARiciSB ANT) FREE secured. Ond ady , *elide child stood at the iron grating adtletHeapple in herhand, saying, "Come, itlr.--4.:-. nor accept my ' i lintit 4 hand'' apple—do take t nit Her Mild, sob; 'Orin/LASS nibil at laet toothed it tender chbni iti t f ind ahltradted sight. It ifibrated to the getitliiiiin' ti 'of the infant tpice. LigitiltiOlisAtititit?thiaittioned t o mind. Gradtudix t iu, o,swer,gielde to the beams of the list fito, and: throws 'open' it. petals to its. ref ing itifittpeene. do did the' soul of . Open toitho sweetinfluenalf tit that . fiat. 'Herloolo• ed upon ter ; She on h r and; retAluir out his hand. iiitieSif ''' the' ittils'iokiti of &Action, and a% #4, '.',. ' ili l 'f r, c 3" once. Gradual/Y.4ml. ' Wait t; t. 1 4 . keeper. delighted •with: . • ltrfairlto l 4cAlt last took him oncost letting ibex child tesd'him to one of thesilleets of the city. and he War introduced*Oblr.- .-6.. • Slid - the min, sie This any ' tide to' thet Mt .---, when yon 'hark ' fined iut i n nia iiiiii 1" "Olt yearif -- .' 'Ake keeper, "he is 4 very near Mativele;. litifid tr.o-tii 4 l , innocetudeeeption he , Making ;,,..110 is very nest!, relatediltiAs the umn him. self r lied it-ihuntk* that : mitmentb it; the men would not - 11,' t berfit'intittinif= priced, end they. were of roihiniinio ' thestres(L . J 1 1&411(1,0°1'Id them ._ that 1 there was nut the losit.thinitr• "LW Ili Short conversation, sheltered•tee,m. with a the keepet tett the , returned bulk to the prieom Here was moat wonderfbi ineance otitis powe r' ~ ve. The man wu eubsequently res old to society. . Prisoner's ,Flietui. . ; •,,.;: A WELSH ItARRIAati4ND WilbblNG A marriage And la wadding in Wales ars very different this's. !hare may be , a it i marriage without *a 'tiris ' mgr The. wed ding - occasionally Mints lace some con siderable time, after die . arriage, and the same could.), if they be to two distant neighborhoods, may iiialta two tstiddings, $ 4l But these tariations.do I affect the man net and object of these ding festivities I sttall, therefore, oonfi myself to the or dinary dtistom. When a marring"! has been determined and a day fixed upon,thepirtiee employ a professional man, called Gwahorldwr to go through all the yeshrt and imylte the people to the weddlngThit inqiciftent personage 'marches forth with a stout oak stick in his hand end a bag along on his shoulders. When he is seen approaching, all the *Omen and children flock to the door, He removes his hat and makes a reverential bow. Then, leaning forward on his long statT, he delivers bin message, or rather half sings it in rhyme. . The song is a very exaggerated description of the good'clreer they will enjoy on the day appointed if they will be so kind as to honor the young people with their pre , sence, He looks as sober ae the grave, , while hie audience are in a roar of laugh ter, When he bee done.. he receives to, quantity of meal for hir song, sad away be hastens to the next holies tolepeatihe same ceremonies. At length the important day itrivea; and the friend. of., the bridegroom and ,of the bride resort only to their respective abodes. Between eight and nine o'clock the bride.. roon'a party, 'some oa hornbook• and sounrcm' foot, go .to the bride's .house..— , Thee' rattle it a' rout, the heriniennd then making the; boat oi, thelc pray the top of then speed- Hoon.attior they . beve l aM arrived, both portinsisow mein& move in el regaled pont:Anion to ther Pairiollbbt rob. Fointedited ivetklirig pronsidOno neat al; wilYI ge' Wo B 4_ , d miins r 04410, ate ' I'M "I t church, it be eye, ea , Ividdl , 4 for, ahoeld.thsy, petne4W loner, go by say o th er w tiny, it is, said: beinmellionco publib mad In those days, marriages tteAdd fie odors nized only Id the ppiseopid ehoreh. &me zeaPoil Prjesti*efuVsi to oltelata:if the young peephe were heathen" 4.,c-, bad ddren 4r. cover bowoortroamie4 • bxitri;iklat.apti received, ably sign,, oo tbeirotfeknineellem Therefor": if clemfbutig peopieweee wow 11.AlopeOteliefrellkfieis p i iiißoWiorintild le4tgoetze4. 4 4,. 4044, OW ,rtirl.l. ll /4. to iho,foul t to,loo, mode 11t0 k 11.41 God sad , inheriene of duos king 4 lloo,ol boa, "ere belle , thereteloottrettitlW - woe tiefore'lii ilett"'"' r ' ' `'-'"'' ""' ' ' .1 10.114 i iiii'44l6edsalliaisitt4eith WiTeli, tiln.i*.,, Rei.:4 l :4 o ili4o!;:i4r i l , Olt the 1 4430 0 * !he dailikto Pf a BaPl tin deacon who lived in the parish. , had nevelt been. christened. refined to; enemy her Mildew she should submit to the ordi- Mince Of the churih. Her father address eta ' the priest and said the law did not re , quire what lie insisted upon. The rector bade him instantly hold his tongue, and immediately brought a suit against hint for profaning the holy place with his uncon• secrated lips. Though, after many trials, judgment was given against the priest, yet, not before the deacon, who was a very rich man, had been stripped of every cent. Nineteen years ugo last January, I met him at the Baptist Chapel in Pont Land:t ell. lie was there begging.. The tears flowed down his manly face as he told liia story. Yon might know thee that he was not a beggar by profession. ,' When the lawsuit began," said he, I owned tWo extensive farms, and they were fully stodk ed. f might have made my pence *ith the parson Without cdsting me much,— Rut I Was determined to satisfy myself, Whether such persecution was legal. The ecclesiastical courts decided against rne, end I had to pay ruinous fines: But the milt wits tarried up to a higher tribtinal, and it was at length decided that the priest httd no fight to make a christening a pre fetseisite td marriage/ But my entire ,propOrty le gone and my Wife and child ish& belie adtually suffered this winter from Ilakedneinieudtanger.". VHS inertia's ceremony is perk/Pined thirerhatloel. The:priest. in his 'cr. , Pliem stands „within the • railing, and the Alerkilotatbehied hitii,ltiiay the “Antin," When the cetentony has proceeded some distancei , thw ring Is , talked , fori and the bridegroom , lays it 'down on thd book be: - Ibis' the minister; along with a handful of ;Bret. •Thse•priest' puts, the lion's shire In bis•towntsicket, 'give a piece , to the cletkosidrite remainder to the,bride. .An soon, Ase - the ,parder and a, lbw , witnsues. have rstorded their name* itt, tbe. patrols a• stilh iminitde.bj.lits aim for the bride and , bribe , women lac the Amide.; Ammo tworder•to carry ithein opt it► lheir ems irons the ebaroth., ,Whett,.bsiddowtt They look like phickees in therein. . Their clothed ire , disarranged and ionictiMei 'silly torn/ Net thstmtwl take it goOd.partiand prowoltiwery,osio who tip., paned to hire. bad hold ; of gook toiAlt,ll Ole" of ribbtm whisk is !ore. in .09010 conppicuoue place for the.reetof the day' One-bridegreoeir .1- knew. who, *ben he found theself_el liberty. end eetel4o,ol the church; exehtiaked heerabh. lief,.!' The warmth,. *Ow glen" , If he . Was•not Amite of another Mind Wore Mid , Was because he had no ridding. ,o'eut Lbw church. du! proneasion moves to Me plane. appointed to 11014 the marriage feast. If the young people:lira otneh-ro. 'rued, of have influential eountletions, the gatherihg' at the bowie...and neighbor. ing houses, too, if there- are any, within convenient:.distance, ate erowdlidi All sorts of people assemble—clergymen and grave-deacons as well as alnimeleas gates., ; Peeks have beeti spent preps., I flog foritqs day. Rut how can peitple do ordinary ciecuiustances 'afford it! 11, 9 , do not afford it at all. 'l 4 he company Must pay, for, everything they *nut. 'Vast quantities of burley have been enttlrSittni into ale, and , of flour Into oak,. Tipplers ynder various preterieett Use been visiting the !tonne: for some tvie or three Weeks, in order It ' taste ,of ,the good things. One great purpose of a wedding , is to sell ale and cake: the ntiMifi l irm themselves, into ,(soin#,43li and irivite the ladles to sit with thaw. 4 4 110 .n1e,‘161 , 4 like rivers all the afternoon sad evading* Thacaltes, form and'sika resenibling ersekers, fly as thidk "as I snniAlaltMi s :=— , These the women pot into their bags* end, froanihe number each one leeeiveih, they, infer what'the Went thhik of their - W*6w and worth 1 The Omen do net for it would he as trinctit.oixt, of chara cter for theta, an that day* to look floobod anal to stagger: as it , would he for the men. to wick Airtight. Brit' how they cad. endure, foi hopn tbi:afflori t it of the find' die dense clonds ; of tcdiseno smoke, i t rithoist, making them sick * is more thanAniaitell. The de that is first drawn is' 'ensseedingly Pernon'tinsectititnnied to sOsetiyoverpowered.l3 t drin ,tpx i t u Wein the °lroning and,mwarda midnight, if the isoiripm7 is not broken up sooner, person% akin Will be iit More . daufer than his twilit*" ' There 41 mit loclietdable amount, or sin committed, on ;that day. AU hell is let loose' tcl Wnjota holiday. The !awe of God, bir Sod 'conient, are anspended.-- I Good atid.avil exchange places—drunken. near beermlist a. stride s and temperance a fiaintifand aliment commit the same eoo'g}ide .the One from a sense of duty 'MI the'other' from glove of the sin. The newirmarried couple, with their assist -1 OAS; g o' from company to company * end inisenetheat with - their heartfelt thanks roe oajOrig 'thatpsajves beastly for their benefit.. Toward nightfall a procession goes front rocity to room. headid'by the young gen. thalami' and ,lady in waiting, with empty Aitia i, their hands, followed by the bride and bridegroom, and the rear is brought up by two gentlemen with writing materials. Every man and woman de posits a sum of money in the plates, and the'scribes record the names of donors and i the amount of the sums presented. These slims are called Puwthott. 4 "rhey are not given, but loaned, without interest, to be paid back at their own weddings, or their children's. The object of this cus tom, as well as of the eating and drinking, is to give the young people a setting out in the world. It is not often that their pa rents can give them much, and wages are so low that the best can do but tittle more than live. The purpose of the weAtling tiorft:". mendable , but it was doing a emit amount of evil, in order to accomplish little good. As they used to be celebrated; their decal was fearfully demoralizing. Thdy exerted n most haneftil influence on. the Churches. Ministom anti members could not become spectators of such bacchanalian orgies without degrading their profession much less could they step out before the world and kiss the right hand of his hellish maj esty, though (or such a good end, without doing incalculable Nut) , to the. cause of Christ. Yet evangeliefil churches acted as though they thought that their minister Wat; as mtloh in the path of duty when ho talked thielcond their members *hen they staggered al a wedding, as whett they la bored in any other way to promote the public goddi—Spirit of the Rgee LOVg ALL—Froitt the nt C D. , /Tall/AIM. Love all ! There is ho living wag • Which God has not created ; Love all ! There is no living (hide 'Which God has ei•er hated ; His love suetaius the meanest, ... Whilifer does liVe or , perish— And main they not disdain to love What God hat loved to Cherish. Lova For hate begetteth hate. And loire through love increanctii • Love all ! For hate shall faint and While love like God ne'er cesseth Love - Wile ; liar, the lireadpreme, • ' trite goal where ail are tending; ,the: hats shell, die, the strife bitall celse, Sue' love Is net•er ending. • fliClOßEllji .01 NEW ZEALAIND radii Takla* tote ColliktitClAL ADVIIRTISIM It iirWithih the tnemoty ofeven the "ri sing gidteratioti" that NeW Zealand was a land of the . mmpletest barbarism ; the in habitants ignorant, ferodottigiven tip to war, ignorance and cannibalism. Ad idea of the wondrous change that has been wrought, in a day as it were, is afforded by: the . flillowing extracts from a hook late ly published in London by a Mr. Power, who passed two years in the country on duty in the commlssartal department dr the British 'service. In the beginning of the Volume, which has the journal form. he thus describes the datural features of a cer lain. district : "This is the wet* country I ever saw for field. operations. The forest Is so thick as to be' almost impenetrable : It id every *here a mass Of evergreen trees and shrubs, mattted' and twined together with supple jacks, creepefs, and wild vines. In the *hole district there- is not one single road. end thertracks by which communication is 'kept , op bettveen the different posts are scilicet,' tuned enough for one man to pass; they are-every where. obstructed by rodts, fillest,tosts, and gullies, and are generally knee deep in mud. The whole of the eiguntry in this neighborhood appears to be a ducceiSion ef precipito es hills, end deep, tde'k, ravines, covered every where with a vegetation mord dense ego than d trdpieslinngleg iitri bet 'ffilernerning, dh horseback s for Wellington, over the most eitecrable day's steeple , me w% 'Alcolftnt, 00 6 Xe On, so much trou-, of mote risksof • Within the first 4 4 , 00 1k 5k 1 R opily hissi horpe fl quick 'll4o,ll, end WO Id dieser/mit to pull him out : for tillAinilsefOrtber there wag scarcely any ,tooting, and it was a succession of plunges, jumpigiip slipping, stumbling, and falling zaniest interlabed rootb, fallen trees, deep holes,' bog!. strittung and gullies. Several .titnei, pullecl, up, believing it impossible fora liglad‘uped to got over some of the 'plates t, but, on seeing tracks on the other ' o w e , I put my hotse at it, believing that 'what had been ddue mice might bo done again ; besides, 4.Bhouli I wade no mote, lfteturuing iies le4iue dig( The,!last few miles are bra narrow and j broken path at-the edge of the preoipieel with mountain stream leaping and brawl ing at the bottom." 1. 5 'w0 years later he found the same. ' tract in this condition write following morning I got a horffei ! and on it sped quickly and comfortably to j Wellingtun, The whole of this once! dreadful road is now a fine highway, and, As I cantered along, I could scarcely believe ! that it was the same grotind that I had toil ed along so slowly and painfully lees than two years ago. Gardens, cottages, and cultivations are seen springing up on all sides ; large patches of cleared land are making deep inroads into the forest, and the whole aspect of the country is being rapidly changed. I did not find the town of Wellington much altered, but it is ! pleasant place enough, and at any rate the ! inhabitants cannot be charged with inhospi tality, for dinner parties, dancies, and soi -1 rees succeeded one another daily. The polka, cellarious, and valse a deux temps have already found their way to the antip odes, and are danced to some purpose, as the Wellington balls rarely break ult after daylight ; and "to go home jth the girls in the morning" is is generally part of one's duty." Of the pediple and the change wrought in them, he says : ."Fhere is a wonderful change in 0 taki I l ives r , At t h at u „, man i the *Milli a since I was here two years ago. It was p o tted hot , ayes alt a rei .„ tr o' o 4 ber,hpi then the limit of our pursuit after lt,angi- I hand. me was ~,„„yB,l k o mm,. sod i t . been', and I thought h the most'savageind now t o it o reaman o, ir i bu r botra ,Pluee bad ever "tin; The our iaurnnutt taunt *Malt" ii , 6* ,, wlt# fortified part has been deserted and Al l° W 7 I trig 4;(14, ed to go to ruin. and the quondast:talabl.l los . . ol b o ij m oriugstrAy 1.1104 14 444 1 1 1 1 1 4L 1 , 1 tants have settled themselves in the qudst d oe gi„ have bete pittuselenlYhaltlV 41 1 S10 11 of their cultivations.- Their Ituuiesi ao#. (grave runt 4iiiroWi TWO MALAWI .1,11.1/ IN W StRIEFL-NO., ly built, are in the midst or well ' -tent l / 4 4' gardens; and there is abundant proof ,( prosperity in the number.of pigs, attile# knd horses feeding abont—evidencia of t thriving population, which give good pr 64. misc of eontinned iroprdt , emeni. Sevettili of the chiefs have accounts with the bat* of Wellington, amounting id anme instan; ces to two or three hundred pounds. An. , officer on his why through Otaki to W.I. iington, a short lime since, Vas much it: Mused at being applied to by one ot , out' Chiefs for any spar° money fie had aiMnt him, the applicant saying that he *nold, tint trouble him bin that he had immediate neeeseity for the inoilev, and would be 's obliged if he would take a check for itie amount. The request was immediately complied with to the infinite 4 - ratification at the Maori, who was delighted at being able to make a practical use ()rids credit..'' ' "•The first house we paid a visit to was Tommy Hauperabies, who was exceed- ~ ingly shocked at heing caught in a reit' blanket and slippers, and Speedily peered, in a dress got up regardless of ex- He was vexed that We had not demanded his hospitality, instead of going In the whaler's, which he evidently thought • infra dig : and he insisted nit our staying • td breakfast, though lie regretted .that" hie hens Were not lay ing. 4 Whil• the breakfast Was preparing we took a stroll teen(' the tillage td bee the ithprovenientst Raking whith, and not the least, WAS ely neW house. It was buifi . partly on an English anti partly ono Mai. orii with English windows, doors, and otb er comforts. * * * at Waikanahi we called tit lfe, warre of a Maori, who, with an eye to bos 7 ' . iness that does infinite credit to his judg ment, has recently set tip a sort of public house for entertitin ing the Mimics belonv ing to working panes in the neighbor-, hood, A weekly ordinary is held On . Pil brdays. after the Week's work is done and paid for, which is usually very well attend- ed. ltd provides a dinner df pork, pont. - toes, brdad and coffee, for Which he de., Mande the sum of one shilling a head.— At first lie gave every bne as much as , lin could cat for his charge, but he soon found; to his cost, that hitt countrymen were licit so easily to be dealt with ; for most of them:, by way of getting as much as possible for • their shilling, made a point or eating noth- • ing the *hole (lay before ; so that they cstind to the scratch as ravenous as wolves'. He has now arranged to give every mart' two pounds of pork, as much of potators# and a pint of coffee with sugar; which may fairly be suffitiont to satisfy any refl..: sonable appetite, and is by no means a had shilling's worth. The Maoriesare.making such rapid strides in civilization that I hard no doubt we may shortly hear of their ha ving public dinners to promote social and:, political objects, when, under the ence of full stomachs and open heat*, great things may be expected from-thein.. They have a very natural aptitude that way, as even in their aboriginal attne,they , wore much given to heavy feasting. arid long-winded speeches ; and they •only wanted the formalities of presideht and vice, common-place toasts, noisy eleeriy, and the bill to pay, to complete a resew:, blance to similar entaininents in the most, civilized society. In alluding to itinoriv Lions and iniprovements, I must tint forget to nientibn that t prospectits has been cently issued for the, publication of , a *sake, ly newspaper in the ?dam language, to contain all the news, scandal, and gossip of the , ooantry, political, domestio; fie, and literary." PICIGNAIVRO. BORIALO.—:-WO are assured ) that the followings true in every puticfcst. , lar: A poor man, residleg• tiO uritst7e: part of the city, left lenne hour some days since to peril:win ly labor, and on returning in the aftertioort found that his wife had been'seized'ilth the cholera during the forenoon and itM• . veyed to the hospital in Oth street. He , immediately went there, and as he entered the place six collies were carried out bibs' conveyed to Potter's Field. The peer fellow proceeded to the roots and inquired for his wife, when he was, informed dud . bile was dead, and that one of the COSOA! he had passed contained In.r betty, but which of them they could not tell, es no marks are placed upon them to distingtiish . one from the other, The mo t in the agony of grief, starti•A in pursuit of the c.otsrey. ance, and vecomPanied it to Potters Field. when 'ne pleaded so hard to be perniiiiell to took once m'ort Upon the face of,!rits wife, that perndssion was givenoitel the collies wore opened. W hen , the'body of the woman was exposed, he seined it tically in his arms tictl pressed it finultY.,lp his bosom. For u moment befit:44,4 felt the beating of her heart. and. eeiliirnir her wrist, he exe!siiiietl,-ok4,4oits .r; , •:? , :i ioloom vlitnii”l4 oir via 41 0 ,W1