"11,1"eisrAi. , • ANNABEL LEE. itno•it •. POl It.onsmeny and many a year ago, In kingdom by, the sea, 'That a Maiden there lived whom you may know By the name of Annabel Lee; • Aadibis maiden she lived with no other thought Than to love and be loved by me. / was a chili:Land she was a child • • In . thiiitingdom by the sea, loved with a lore that was more than love— , And spay Annabel Lee— With a love that the winged seraphs of bosun Covethel her end rue. And this was the reason that, long g 4,.. 1n title kingdom by 'the sea, wrod their' out of a'cloud, chilling My beautiltd Annabel Lee; . Bethel tertighboresitieseaen-oseth And bore her away from me, . shut her up in a sepulchre In this kingdom by the sea. Thri rrgoli,not hall so merry in heaven, Went envying her and mo— ires l—thetivie the reason (as all men know ' In this kingdotu by' the see) That !hawked came out of the cloud by night, • , Chilling and killing my Annabel Lee. But our love:was stronger by far than the love .Pf thee" who were older titan we— Of many far wiser than we— 'And neither the angels in heaven above, ' Nor the demons down under the sea, Can etler Mswever my soul from the soul Of the beautiful Annabel Lee. For the moon never beams, without bringing me dreams, Of the beautiful Annabel Lee ; And the stars never rise, but I feel the bright eyes Of the beautiful Annabel. Lee : And so, all the night tide. I lie down by the side in darling—my darling—my life and my bride, In her sepulchre there by the sea—. In her tomb by the sounding sea. THE TREE THAT NEVER FADES A STORY FOR CHILDREN "Mary," said George, "next summer I will not have a garden. Our pretty tree is.dying, and I won't love another tree as long as I live. 1 will have a bird next summer, and that will stay all winter." " George, don't you remember my beau tiful canary bird, and it died in the middle of the summer, and we planted bright Ilow 7 ers in the ground where we buried it 4,l„third did not live so long as the tree." We don'tsee we can love anything. Little brother died before the bird, or tree, or flower. Oh, I wish we could have something that wouldn't die." "George, let us go into the house. I don't treat to look at our tree any longer." The day passed. During the school hours, George and Mary had almost for gotten that their tree was dying ; but at evening as they drew their chairs to the table where their mother was sitting, and began to arrange the seeds they had been from day to day gathering, the remem brance of their tree came upon them. "Mother," said Mary, "you may give those seeds to cousin i John ; I never want another garden." " Yea," added George, pushing the pa. pets in which he had carefully folded them towards his mother, "you may give. them all away. If I could find some seeds of a tree that would never fade I should love to have a garden. 1 wonder if thereever was such a garden, mother 1" " Yea, George, I have read of a garden where the trees never die." “ A real garden, tuother 1” Yes, my son. In the middle of the garden, I have been told,, ltere runs a pure river of water, clear as crystal, and on each side is the tree of life,—a tree that never fades. That garden is Heaven. There you way love, and love forever. There 'wdl be no death, no fading there. Let your treasure be the tree of life, and you will have something to which your hearts can cling, without fear, without disappoint ment. Love the. Saviour here and he will prepare you to dwellln those green pas tures, and beside those still waters." Tama or rr.—liow idly and flippantly - the word of death is said ! Who can tell what a day will bring forth f We are here to-day, and to-morrow numbered the dead I Your fathers, where are ,the,! To use a correct figure of speech —seventy grains of sand taken from the Mighty ocean, represent the usual number years allotted to man. But what mor tal tart compute eternity I , —the sands of the boundless deep—aye, and of countless worlds, is the immensity of space—all would be,eximusted, in computing annual 'periods; and time, similar to this material Reader,paise Every pulsation that beats' in the inner man is a quick step towards eternity. Be therefore prepared for the spiritual world, and an endless eternity either for better or worse. MARRIAot wmtorr Lose.--The worst of all mocketies is a marriage without love, a yoking together, but • without a union; bnidage Without a bond; a multiplication of 'all tbe burdens of life for both parties with . old& 'mutual life interest; and like the of fering of a whole family of felsegmle, whose dedandti are never aatisiled, because, what liVer 'the a'acrfice; there le no atonement. Too many ma pare made in con fusion, thaji')'eve 'no faith in, their com mama, an .therefore,an abundance of in. There may he sincerity enough in them, but too liken iittbere 1064litre:3. • 'Ph, mom temiekhusrtud •moo we ever paw 'IP 4I ,kt!ttli 4 st. Who ttltNaYS shut SiAttinit tthiitt4). Wbta be ran bia awl into a shoe. [rrotn the Nineteenth Century UNIVERSAL EDUCATION. BY HORACE GREELEY. Universal Education ! Grand, inspiring idea I And shall there come a time when the delver in the mine and the rice swamp, and the orphans of the prodigal and the fel on, the v* 'xlffering of shame, shall be truly, sy,itopuatically educated ? Glorious consumtnittion twilight ofo the milleni urn ! Who will not labor, aid court sa cri6cra, and suffer reproach, if he may hasten,by dean stionucti as tr day, its bles sed coaling Who will not take courage itum.lbe contemplation of what the last .century has seen accomplished, if not in absolute results, yet in preparing the ap proaches, in removing- impediments, in correcting and expanding the comprehen sion of the work to be done, and of the feasability of doing it. Whatever of evil and of suffering the future may have in store for ue, though the earth be destined yet to be ploughed by the sword, and fer tilized by human gore, until rank growths of the deadliest weeds shall overshadow it, stifling into prematnre decay every plant most conducive to health or to fragrance —the time shall surely come when true and universal education shall dispel the dense night of ignorance and perverseness that now enshrouds the vast majority of the human race : shall banish evil and wretchedness almost wholly from the earth, by removing or. unmasking the mul tiform temptations to wrong-doings ; shall put an end to robbery, hatred, oppression, and war, by diffusing widely and thor oughly a living consciousness of the broth erhood of mankind, and the sure blessed ness, as well as righteousness, of doing ev er as we would have others to do to us.— "Train up a child in the way ho should lio, and when he is old he will not depart from it." Such is the promise which en ables us to see to the end of the dizzy whirl of wrong and misery in which our race has long sinned and suffered. On wise and systematic training, based on the wi dest knowledge, the truest morality, and tending ever to universal good, ns the on ly assurance of special or personal well being, rests the great hope of the terrestri al renovation apt) elevation of man. Not the warrior, then, or the statesman, nor yet the master worker, as such, but the teacher, in our day, leads the vanguard of humanity. IVhether in the seminary or by the wayside, by uttered word or 1 printed page, our true king is not he who best directs the siege, or sets his squad rons in the field, or heads the charge—but he who ran and will instruct and enlight ens his fellows, so that at least some few of the generation of whom he is shall be wiser, purer, nobler, for his living among them, and prepared to carry forward the ,work, of which he was an humble instru ment, to its far grander and loftier con summation. Oh, far above the conquer or of kingdoms, the destroyer of hosts by the sword and the bayonet, is he whose tearless victories redden no river and whi ten no plain ; but ho who leads the un derstanding a willing captive, and builds his empires not of the wrenched and bleed ing fragments of subjugated nations, but on the realms of intellect which ho h , discovered, and planted, and peopled with beneficent activity and enduring joy ! The mathematician who, in his humble study, undisturbed as yet by the footsteps of monarchs and ministers, demonstrates the existence of a planot,before unsuspect ed by astronomy and unobserved by the telescope ; the author who, from his hum ble garret, sends forth the scroll which shall constrain thousands upon thousands to laugh or weep at his will; who topples down a venerable fraud by an allegory, or crushes down a dynasty by an epigrani, he shall live and reign over a still increas n g dominion, when the pasteboard kings, whose steps are counted in court circulars, and timed by stupid buzzes, shall have long since mouldered and been forgotten. To build out into chaos and drear vacuity ; to render some corner of the primal dark ness radiant with the presence,of an idea; to supplant ignorance by knowledge, and sin by virtue, such is the mission of our age, worthy to enkindle the ambition of the loftiest, yet proffering opportunity and reward to the most lowly. To the work of universal enlightenment be ',cur lives henceforth consecrated, until the blick clouds of impending evil are, irradiated, and dispersed. by the full effulgence of the di vinely-predicted day when "All shall know the Lord, from the leaetuntii - thgreatest," aedwbett wrong and woe shall vanish for ever from the presence of universal know ledge, purity antdblissi • • - OL D Aort.--There 14 nothing more mis. stable:than an, old man that would be young again. It was an. answer worthy the commendations of Petrareh ; and that, which argued a mind truly philoletlhical of /Asir • when • h friend bemoaned blame ,appearing; in his white. temples, telling him ho woe sorry to see him look so old, reptied;,"Nay, be sorry rather, Writ ever I wait'!.outtg,' to be a'fool.” • Tholtahomeattai dell a tariiiiifittintat a worfflOpper of tiro GETTYSBITILG, PA. ißlDir'"g. VEXING, NOVICi!PEII A SOLDIER'S FIRST DUTY. NAPOLEON. AND THE SOLDIER. A French iteran, with one arm, wits seated before the door of his neat cottage one pleasant evening in July. lie was surrounded by several village huts, who with one voice entreated him to commence his promised story. The old man took his pipe from his mouth, wiped his lips with therback , I .;s remaining hand, and began thus t In my time, bays, Frenchmen would have scorned to fight with Frenchmen in the 'street as they do now. No, 'no; when we fought it was for the honor of France, and against her foreign enemies. Well, my story begins on the Bth of No vember, 1812, a short time after the bat. Ile of Wiazma. We were beating a re. treat, not before the Russians, for they kept at a respectable distance from our cantonments, but before the biting cold I of their detestable country, more terrible to us than Russians, Austrians, and Bava rians together. For the last few days, our officers had been telling us that we were approaching Smolensk°, where we should be sure of finding food, fire, brandy and shoes; but in the meantime we were perishing in the ice, and perpetually liar assed by bands of Cossack riders. " We had marched for six hours, with. out pausing to draw breath, for we knew that repose was certain death. A bitter wind hurled the snow4lakes against our faces, and now and then stumbled over the frozen corpses of our comrades. No sing ing or talking ! Even the gru:nblers ceased to complain ! and that was a bad sign. I walked behind my captain ; he was a short man, strongly built, rugged and severe, but brave and true as his own sword-blade. We called him Captain Positive ; for if once he said a thing, so it was—no appeal—he never changed his mind. He had been wounded at Wiazma, and his usually red face was now quite pale ; while the pieces of an old white handkerchief which he had wrapped round Ins legs were soaked with blood. I saw him first move slowly, then stagger like a drunken man, and at last he fell down like a block, Marldeu I captain," said I, bending over him, " you can't lie there." " You see that I can, becaase I do," he said, pointing to his limbs. " Captain," said I, " you musn't die " and raising him in my arms, I managed to place hint on his feet. He leaned on me, and tried to walk ; but in vain : he fell once more, dragging me with him. " John," said he," "'lie all over here. Just leave me and join your column as quickly as you can. Ono word before you go. At Voreppe, near Grenoble, lives a good woman, eighty-two years Old, my—my mother. Go to see her, embrace her, and tell her that—that—tell her what ever you like, but give her this purse and my crass. That's all." " Is that all, captain 1 " " I said so. Good by, and make haste." " Boys, I don't know how it was, but I felt two tears freezing on my cheeks." No, captain," cried I, " I won't leave you :--either you shall go with me, or I will stay with you." " I forbid your staying." " Captain, you might just as well forbid a woman talking." " If I escape, I'll punish you severely." 44 You may place me under arrest then, but just now you must let me do as I please." " You are an insolent fellow." '• Very likely, captain; but you must come with me." 4. Ile bit his lips with anger, but said no more. I raised him, and placed his body across my shoulders like a sack. You may easily imagine that while bearing such a burden I could not move as quickly as my comrades. Indeed, I soon lost eight of their column, and could perceive nothing but the white silent plain around me. I moved on, and presently there ap peared a band Cossacks galloping toward me, their lances in rest, and shouting their fiendish war-cry. .. The captain was by this time in a. state of total unconsciousness ; and I res olved, cost what in might, not to abandon him. I laid him on the ground, covered him with snow, and crept under a heap of my dead comrades, leaving, however, my eyes at liberty. Soon the Cossacks retch ed us, and began sulking with their lances right and 'left, While their horses trampled the bodies. Presently • one of these rude beasts placed his foot on my left arm and crrutthed it in plecet,,..—ttoys, I did not aay t :word, I did'not move, ttave to thrust my right hand into lily [Doti* to keep down the cry of torture ; and in a few Winkle the Cossacks dispersed. “'When the lent ofifient had ridden 011; inept out and managed to disinter the captain. lie showed, few sigt i ts ,t o f life; nevertbegss COntay.t:d,with one hind to drag him towards a rock, which titiont ed a,:sort of ,shelter, and thou Jar down nett him. wrepping my espote'araulid IA ; Night was cloying in, old the snow con NIPVARLBI3B , AND FREE." a. tinned to f.cill: 7. t fifinest of the resr-guard had long disappei4 and the only sounds that broke the stihmtp were the whistling of l distant bullets, ettd , llte nearer howling of the wolves, which wire devouring the dead bodies. 'God knee* hat things were fu sing through my d that night, which I felt assured would' my last on earth.-- But I remember ed prayer my mother had taught me la ago when I war a child by her sid e.; d kneeling d o wn, I said it fervently. • ,;:t ii Boys, it did mti: member that wino* do you good too. when I resumed fain. Bat time ; and always re rnest prayer will • Wonderfully calm ;lace nest the esp . on, and I was be -whealsawa par pprosushing. Before them, the foremost, sed in a fur pelisse, ying— coming quiteini • ty of French o cr• I had time to add a low sized many 41 stepped towards m " What are you you stay behind g here? Why did Regiment 1" • • poine• n, and then to my " For two gi ing lint to the ega, bleeding arm. "The man speakilithe truth, sire," saki one of hie followeriq "I saw him march ing behind the coluiatk carrying this offi cer on hie back." '4 i - t "The Emperor—r, boys, it was he! —gave me one of th:se looks which only himself or an Alpine . ia(/ could give, and said— " well. Yes have done very well." "Then opening hQ pelisse, he took the cross which, decors d his inside green coat and gave it to . That moment I was no longer cold ti, l hungry. and felt no more pain in my vtriOhan if that ill-natur ed beast had never toiched it. " Davoust," added te Emperor. addres sing the gentleman:who had spoken, irn "cause this man and.l is captain to be pla. ced on one of the a unition wagons.— Adieu 1" t., " And waving his tiand toward me, he passed on." Here the veteran 'paused and resumed his pipe "But tell us about ihe cross, and what became of Captain 4 3 4itive," cried sever al importunate voices. "The captain dill lives, and is now a retired General. ilut the best of it was, that as soon as he rumored, he placed me under arrest for fifteen, days, as a punish ment for my breach d discipline I The circumstance reached 'Napoleon's ears ; and after laughing }mainly, he not only re leased me, but promoted me to be a ser geant. As to .he deciration, here is the ribbon, boys; I wear this in my button hole, but the cross I carryaext my heart!" And unbuttoning his cent, the veteran showed his young friendtihe precious re lic, enveloped in a little sain bag suspend ed round his neck. SOUTHERN CHIVALRY:4 late Norfolk (Va.,) paper contains the nllowing adver tisement. Presuming M. Hollady has sold the girl, we publish ha adVertisement merely to show how alp* degrades and brutalizes the human mind : NOTICIL—For nlo, a colored girl, of very superior gualificaions, who is now in Mr. Hall's Jail id Norfolk. She is what Speculator; call, a Fancy Cirl—a bright Mulatto, fine figure, straight black hair and very black eyes—remarkably neat and cleanly in her dressand person. I ven ture to say, that there it not'a better seam stress', cutter and Utter if ladies' and child ren's, dresses in Norfillk, or elsewhere. or a more fanciful kititter of bead Inige, money purses, &c. I dny lady or gentleman in Norfolk or Portsmouth, who may Nish to purchase a girl of this description, (whom I consider the most valuable in Nlrginia,) may take her and try her a month or more al my risk, and if she does not suit and answer the description here given, way return her to Mr. Hall. The cause of offence for which I intend (though reluctantly) to sell her is, that she has been recently induced, by the persua- i i of some colored persons, to make her escape with them to the North, iu which she failed, and is now for 'tale. Apply to the • subscriber in Suffolk, or to James Murdaugh, Esq., or C. C. Robinson, of Portsmouth, for further information. ' JOUPH FIOLLADY. An Irish gentleman, seeing a heap of rubbish in hiacourt-yardicalled a servant and asked him why he dbinet cart it away. "You have no cart, your honor," repli ed the servant. "Then dig a hole in dm comer of the court anti put it into that." "And Whir 17411 , x put the dirt that I am going out of the hole 7" , said the servant. , ”Whys..,,you blockhead, *take , st .hole ,large enough to , hold the , distimd rubbish too," replied the Irish gertilertrert. - The Witt of good laminity is marked kty Ilto abssnee of, personalities,. Among well-informed persons, there,are plenty Of l'opies to drowse, without Pain to any one . pretietit—witheat bulonitting to 'set 114 part of's but. of still pourer creature,. the wag that plays upon Ituu. THE . 1147 Mt STROP 'SAN. any•Of our shy Pendent wilt nimainber Smith, the raztoqiirop man, ehs ‘ ettnitsted crowds at' the canter orSprutie and can'-streets, and at other rider; te *ideas hie add' was rinnir s uie anddisOibig tif his wares. He Is a 'itatfie and at one time, we believe, was addicted to the intemperate use of spiritous liquor.; but having taken the Tempandos pledge, he became a sober Plani and, occasionally a Temperance leohltem , We learn from the Lutheran. Observer, that after travel ling Red 'Notillr %WV h now on hit rettirn, 'end fe . r r iEri ragliernh or two, has been attiring Witness in BalMeete The Obs rver i ti Y "Every afternoon he *Pepe lie _budget in North Street, in frOthorrhel Peel USN+ where he is sum to. Bad an audience .aad purchasers, The prieipal artiste, of sale are razors, strops, ,ahaving amp, die. Last evening we stopped , a minute to NW what. was going on. We found him strop ping a razor, and in a few- moments he tested the edge by cuttings hair with 'Now, gentlemen, said be, you see what a smooth, keen edge this razor has; you moat admit that it is , o teputti thing, or so little stropping - would not give . it such an edge; or if you' doubt , this,' then, you must admit that the 'strop is first-rate. You can buy either, 'or both, or half& do zen of each at the low pries &e;" - " But Smith sometimes packs his razors &a., up, and delivers a temperance speech, and here is one of then% : "Some folks say that it is right to drink alcohol, because it is a good - creature of God. Well, grant that it is so; so is cas tor oil, and so is vinegar a good creature of God; but it that a sufficient-msen fora person to drink it three, four, or a dozen times a day? A dog ire good creature of God ; but suppose a dog gets triad, and bites a man or a woman, would you let him alone because: l 'as you say, he Wass good creature? Would you be satisfied with cutting off his ear, or his„tail; or would you knock him on the head, and pitch him headlong into the street? Now, alcohol,is more than a mad dog, fora bite from a mud dog only destroyslife, while a bite from achy destrOys reason, repu tation, life, and every thing else, besides dragging down the family of the bitten man to poverty and want. : , But alehy doson't bite a mouthful, at I first. When he first snapped at me, lie only tickled me a little, I liked it first rate, and was anxious to get another and still another bite. The old rascal of a tyrant kept nibbling away at my heels as though he didn't mean to harm me, while I, like a poor fool, kept coaxing him on, until at last he gave me a snap in earnest, and took the elbows right cut of my coat I Next he took the crown off my hat, the shoes off my feet, the money out of my pocket, and the sense out of my head, until at last I went raving mad through the streets, perfectly a victim of althiphaia. But I signed the pledge and got cured; and if there is any man whO his been bitten sa I was, let him take this tetotal medicine, and I'll warrant him a speedy . cure. “But allowing alcohol is a goodeireature of God, are there not other good treater**, too, such as beef,, pork, puddings, pin, clothes, dollars, and filly others of 'the same sort?' Now, shall a man cling to the one good creature, and leave the nine ty and nine untottehed t Shall a man drink whiskey because it is a good creature and gg without a good handsome wife and good, well-dressed children ? No-ttit‘ee As for me give me good, beef and pud ding, good pork and sausage, good friends, good clothes, a good wife, and good child ren, (or bad rather than miss, and I'll try to make 'ern: good.) and old king alehy may go to Texas, for. all I care. • 4•Some say that wine is a %rood creature,' because our Savior once turned water in= to wino. Very good ! but then he didn't turd rum, gin, whiskey, logwood, indigue and ceek-roaehes into wine, like some 'people do. 1k turned water inlb wine. Now, if any wine bibling apologist will take a gallon ,or a ,bartel pf. . pure Fil ter, and by praying over it, or in any oh. er way, , without mixing any othet stuff with it, convert it into first-rate wine; I'm the bey at trill go infor a *Wig Of it ! Such wine must be good, and I go in foi that kind and clothing else. But as for your nasty, filthy, druclken stuff, which is sold in your grog-shops, *it conter felt, and a blasphemous .libel on our tie. viour to liken it ib the, pyre beverage he made. , - 4, Naw, you * 'such as prefer one good creature, of ,COod's to all the rest, go and drink rum or whiske3r until you get picked as bars ass .sheepes backs after it has crawled throagh a briar patch ; but you as prefer the ninety and nine good creatures, gd right straight and sign the pledge.— . .6004104 have been saved by putting their names to that precious document and still there is room for a 'few more of the s4r9p sort.'" A-little . girl, hearing it remarked that all people had been ,oneti.childreie; arideealy inquired :-•••••• , 'Who took care .of the t,ie CHEMISTRY FOR GIRLS. 11011 0tHHOO: THAT. EVERY WOMAN SHOULD This is properly styled a utilitarian age, for the inquiry, What profit ? " meets us every where. It has entered tho temples of learning, and attempted to thrust out im portant studies, because their immediate connection with hard money profits can. not be demonstrated. There is one spot, Into which it has not so generally intruded itself—the female academy—the last re fuge of the fine arts and fine follies.— Thither young ladies are tee frequently pent merely to learn how to dress tasteful ly and walk gracefully, play, write French, make waxen plumes and silken spiders— all pretty, bat why notinquire, what Profit t" • IF I take my pen, not to utter a dissertation on female • education, but to insist that young ladies be taught chemistry. They 'irillAberefore be better qualified to super ' intend dementia affairs, guard against ma iza*dents to which households are sub ject, and perhaps be instrumental in saving life. We illustrate the last remark by re ference merely to toxicology. The strdng acids, such as nitric, mud talc, and sulphuric, are, virulent poisons, yet freque . ntly need in medicine, and the mechanic arts. Suppose a child, in his rambles among the neighbors, should en ter a cabinet shop, and find a saucer of aqua-fortis (nitric acid) upon a bench, and in his sport, seise and drink a portion of it. Hs is conveyed home in greet agony. •The , pbysiciania.sent for ; but before he arrives, the child is a corpse. Now as the Mother retiree the cold clay to her hrinith, and lips for the Lase, time. how will bee,anguish be eggravated no. know that in her inediaine elmsti.er drawer, was some eitleittedlmagnesia: which if timely admin. istered,*Vuld hare gaited lilt. lnyelys par chance ,her Area, and only ltoy. Oh, what are all the bouquets and finetimeses in • the world ts her, compared with such know ledge t 'rake another case. A husband ream ing home, on a summer afternoon, desires some acidulous drink. Opening cup board, he sees a small Golf, latelledit salts or lemon,";ind-Makinga*ditim44bis. he drinka Presently;!he feels distress, sends for his wife, and ascertains that he has drank a solution of oxalic acid, which she has procured to take stains from linen. The physicianis sent for; but the, unavoidable delay attending his arrival is fatal. When he arrives, perhaps he sees upon the very table on which the weeping widow bows ber head, a piece ot chalk, which. if given in time, would have. cer tainly prevented any mischief froth - the poison. • - Corrosive sublimate is the article gen. crafty used to destroy the vermin which sometimes infest our conches.. A solution of it is laid upon the floor in a tesvoup, when the doihasties golfoin to Mei' lasso ing the children up stairs to play ; tha in fant crawls to the tia-cup, and drinki.— Now what think you would be the mo ther's joy, if, bottling studied chemistry, she instantly called to, ecollectiod the well. asbenained fact, that there's in the' bares nest ea antidote to this poison I She sends for some eggs, and .brialting them, administers, the whiter: tier Child meow j ere, end she Weeps for yy. ' 'Falk to her of novelswasil little book of natural soi• once has beau worth to her more than all the novels in the world,- Physic:fines in the oomtry randy carry scales' with thein, iolieigh their proscrip- Signe. They, administer• medicines by guess, from wtea-gporen Or the point of a knilb. Supposes eghimori Mule, A pby sleian in - a hurry leaves an Ovit,rdoil of tartar-emetic,. (ruerally•tbe PreleriP lion in cases of bilious fever4and pursues his way to another patience tantalite dis tant. The medicine is duly 'adniiniatentel and the man ii poisoned. ' Whentiie case becomes alarming, ,one meisengeris dis patched for.the doinoromeiwnother to will in the neighbors'to leg the sufferer die.— . Novi there is, iwg 6adister in 'the cup board, and on s , tree air4 ll .m by . t he door, a regiedy for thweliaireae and alarm —et sure means Of saving the elicit man friioi "deistb. A strong decoc tion of young hyson tea, oak bark, or any other astiingenevegebible, will change tar tat-emetic into , a harmlesscompound. frindierif copper, Often give rise to poi imaging, Though this metal undergoes but' litde cheese in a dry atmosphere, it is rusted if moisture he present, and its sur face becomes covered with a green sub. stance--,carbonate or the protoside of cop per, a poisonous compound. It has some times happened, that a mother has, for want of knowledge, poisoned her family. Sourkrout, when permitted to stand for some time in a copper vessel, has produced death in a few hours. Cooks sometimes permit pickles to remain in copper vessels, that they may acquire a rich green color, which they do by absorbing poison. Families have often been thrown into disease by eating such dainties, and many have died, lo some instances without sus pecting the cause,. That lady hes certain. ly some reason to congratulate herself up. un her education, if, under such mem TWO DoLLAltilEll ANZfIIM.), INEW SERIES-NO. 145, stances, she knows that pickles reutdere d green by verdigris are poisonous, that the white of an egg is an antidote. illttit". lions might he multiplied, but our, spats forbids. Enough has been shown, we hope, to convince the utilitarian that know. ledge of chemistry is an important element in the education or the female sex; out it they are imperfectly qualified for the duties devolving aim them in the domes, tic relation, and poorly prepared to meet its emergencies. E. TLIONPBON, M. D. , CURING BACON WITHOUT BMOICL Oh, the trouble folks have taken d if To smoke end erotic shalt baceeN To make the best bacon, fat your hogs early and fat them well. By fattening early you make a great saving in food, tote well fattened pork makes better bacon than 'lean' pork. Then kill art early as the weather will allow, and salt as soon as the animal heat is gone, with plenty of the purest salt, and about half out►oe of salt. petre to one hundred pounds of pork. As eson as the meat is salted to your test, which will generally be in about tire weeks, take it out, and if any of kiwi beep covered with brine, lot it drain a little.— Then take good black pepper finely ground, and dust on the flesh side, and on the hock end us much as will stick—then hang it up in a good, clean, dry, airy place—if all this is done as it should be (it ought to be done now) you will have no further trouble with it, for by fly time in the spring your bacon is so well cured or dried on the outside that flies or bugs will not disturb it. Curing bacon is a little like the Irish• man's mode of making punch. He said, "put in the sugar, then fill up with whiskey, and every drop of water you put in after that spoils the punch." Just so with cu• ring bacon : after following the directiois given above, every 'drop' of smoke you put about it "spoils" the bacon. THE BINETINO OF Tug WATERS.—. -Tile New York Mercury tells the following im probable Story : ,We .at down upon a curb stone and laughed some, the other night, we did—to Witneis the operations of Tommy S. with a pump, which he mistook for a ft rrnar filitid,of his, and with whom he was ant• tonal° make friends. .", Hollow!" said Tommy, addressing the wooden faithful servant of the public; I thought it was you when I first seed you a standing here on the corner. You paint nothin agin me, have you I Did I ever injure you in the least ? Have I ever said anything agin your character as a roan and a good citizen ; You don't say yes,or no, eh ? Now look here, Frank, let us shake hands and make up." With that he caught the handle of the pump. and with a perpendicular shake, caused a few dreps of water to trinkle down from its spout. wits a trying time, I know," said Tom my ; 64 but there's no use sheddin tears on the 'castor. We're just as good friends as ever we was." Partially' recovering from our laughing fit,' WO rose and begged of him to cease molesting a harmless, u.noffending pump. "Then fiat's a pump, is it ? " remark ed Tommy, with evident surprise : well skin me, if I didn't begin to think that it we* a d—d pump, and nobody else!" ADVICE GRATIB.--000 of our ezehan• ges says;—lle content as long as your mouth is full and body covered—remem ber the poor--kiss the pretty girls—don't rob your neigh-bor'e hen roost—never pick en editor's pocket nor entertain an idea that he is going to treat—kink doll care to The duce—black your own boots,—. sew un your own buttons, and be sure to take a paper and pay for it. Good prae deal advice. DRATII ACLRaP.—We SO converse avv err night with the image of death, that every morning we find an argument of the resurrection. Sleep and death have hat one mother, and they have hut one name in common. The pitying tears and loud smiles of Women are like the showers and sunshine ofoSpring ; alas 1 that, unlike them.ihe should often miss her merited reward—the sweet flower of affection. Opinion may be considered as the she& ow or knowledge. If our knoWledge, be ancurate, our opinion. will be just. It ,is very important, then, that we do got adopt an opinion too hastily. Does not the echo in the sea-shell Jell of the worm which once inhibited it? end shall not man's good deeds lire after him and sing his praise More money is expended in the eityof Boston for education than by the Goverment for the education of he &ma teen millions of people IN TO NlL—Judge Jeff:lee, wain r the bench. told an .old fellow with. a lOW beard that be supposed b* bads 4010110 . • ae long as his beard. Doss your lo,dohip," replleti *lf A* man, "m assure, conic fences by—beselllsi so, your lordship lies none** Every Anson shock! he IO;t• "pea for 'boar prexent.