: 41 nrk ..• ' L :0, h'lApwr :0,1c0•r4.,.1 7p " XXVII . ; , 5,.;- , 1;, ••;i11 , , , :. t+9 •• Joust : By nis. • -Juneorith its Wises—June! The 'gladdest month of our .capricious year, Wilhite thick foliage and.its sunlight clear ; Aid with the .drowsy tune Oft a bri g ht leaping water., as they paw . tatighin lon a mi d the ' a rot 'it 8Y s P g grass Earth at her joyous. co mg, IgMiles as she puts her gayest mantle on .end Nature greets her with a benison ; 'While, myriad 'voices hit:unlit% Their welcothe Sprig, breath drdmy music rimnd' • Till seethe the air an element of sound. ' The Overarching sky - • • ' Wearethii Wier title,' a lovelier blue, ' • As if the light of heaven were melting through' • Its sapphire home on high;...• • Hiding the sunshine in,their vapory , breast, , • The deeds float on:liite spirits to their rest. . A. deeper melody, , • . Poar'd by thcbirds, as o'er their callow young Watchful they , hover,to tie breeze is Bung-r Olif*tutt, yet not Of glee— Music hearacitu, like that ;which mothers sing Above criulled infanta ilumberibg: On the warm hillside where , . The sunshine lingers latest, through the grass Peepeth the Ituteloiiii strawberry l As they pass • Young children'gambol there, - • Crushing the gathered- fruit in playful mood, And staining their bright faces pith its blood.. A &Mier blush is given To theheiFnpened cherry, aa the sun • Day after day pours warmth the trees upon, • Till the rich pulp is riven ; The• truant schoolboy looks with longing , eyes, And perils limb Sod neck, to win the prize. ... , The farmer;in his Draws the rich mouldarountl the tender maize; While hope, bright pinioned, points to corning da When all his toil shall yield An ample htheit, and' around his hearth, There shall be laughing eyes and tongues of / Polio on his rainbow wing, • - The butterfly, whose life is but an hour, Hovers coquettishly fiom flower to flower, A gay and happy.thing ; • . • • Born for the sunshine•and the simmer day, Soon passiug, like, the beautiful, away I .• These are thy pictures, Juno l• Brightest of summer• mouths-Ahou :month of First-born of beauty, whose swift-footed hours Dance to the merry tune Of birds, and waters, and the pleasant shout - Of ehildlhood on the sunny hills peen out. feel it were not wrong, To deem thou art a type of bearan'a Only. Suit there the eloiids and storms of time • Sweep' not . the sky along; • The• lloifora--40—.-!)eautl-700110-71611 are But brighter—purer---lovolierr-more divine! I.stsil ---77— b of God; The The most gigot6l'mi and remarkable typkititrodueed into the divine ordinances, as well as into' Istaerebigiory and, ritual, was the , lamb. Li oven . meets us at 'the , threshold of Paradise, in the Sacritlco of Abel, as an 'object particularly acceptable in the sight of God. Later on, . the lamb; . with its blood, consearales the commence• meat of the history 'of the Israelites. The crinkling cif the door:poste 'with 'the blood of lambs was the meeast of ier . ael's meet. ender' in Egypt from ' , the sword 'of the destroying angal,,and thideparture of the eople from ~PharaOh's house of bondage. From that tithe the Lamb continued to be the moat prominent figure by which God typified the future Messiah to the Obiddren of Abrahain. Eleacefaiverd it acquired an abiding footing Tsrael's sacrificial rites, in goners!, and in, the yearly passover in 'particular. In the litter, each house was enjoined by the.Mosaie law to brinf, 'a male lama, without blemish , or infitimty, to the sanctuary, there solemnly` winless their trausgrolgtons over it, then beteg `it;" typically burdened, with •their gins, to the -court, of the temple to "be glain ;,and after it was ,roitated'consume it entirely in fit.; tiro ecmeaunion, with joy and 'thanlisgiii. I ing to , so pro.l phetleally typical to this toramonY Was's° , apparent , thrit even the most sinful mted (maid not mistake Evers 0941' only etteeepible 9f tkat r1 . 310h was divinely symbolical felt impressed with the idea 'that'ibis divine' didininee itouldhaire -other airti`then to , :koep Israel; Jong witb•tbe remenglownet.of the promis -ed Polivepr,,the oottililettee. Iku4 !tope, in John the Baptist appears liaise; and 'the firsfgreetigg•Vrith Which he welootnes jeapi, Which was I renewed when, ever he saw hie, is, 4 ' Behold , ltio 14aPh: of (4441.,F4ialli.,tAlketh pw t ty the. sip of, ,the world I'' thereby 'dlieolinipthe attention of the lehole world Usiosus,, if,there were thencefort4 .nothing Also, worth,seeing in .107.0 13, Pr _ea . earkh this Laltl4 God sad by. so, doing,ho,oertsiuly directs us to the gresteat sod • most beautifying of all mplarigh and; to the pith and marrow of the eattro Gospel. . For if Christ had been only,tbe, "Lion of the tribe Judah; ' acid itot Ist the ism° time the "Lamb," what weuld,tt have availed us ? As the Lamb. he ,thaslasire Of all nations, the star of hor,t:° 4 .exilee.froet Eden, the tun of YMUSPOI3II in the night of sorrow to ebose„ wheat, the law condoning, and the Ileayenly. lamp ~to the wanderer in the gloomy _isle of death.77Krtsawnacher. . , „,.., , o _ ' ly i lMT . 11' nvax Alm' THINK OF 04t4toxt,se,7A.:olergymari of our denoini amicia who visited a settlement , in 'lowa, for the purpose of organising a church, fflOoif , McOsy morning a gentleman se {,el me, and in tho name of the ceno- ApyowniCg the plot, offered a lot for a 'Band a personal'' subscription of foie i t op red dollars, towards its • erection it we ~y 1 t io'Cip'Vith:ii: Ido not pretend, Sir; Bal birill ' dii . aq Motives are the same as yours; I am not a religious man,' . but I litqlr,thatifot - d•dollar given for suoh pur- iiblitli Is over lost.* Whatever builds up Ilithiibrils of a community buildsoup ev -erYttitig else."', " , 4Vhitt animal has the greatest quantity of bdtiris ,The hog, of course, for he ices 1 hogshead full. Wild. Beaata add theirWoredeir.; The Zoological •Girdonh in London are wOrid.famottseandjustly 14, forrthey eon. sain--inoomparablr the ',finest °lineation ,of: animals in .the 'world.:: , At this, Moment thirteen hundred , livingg :arisaturee'-live •in the • green slopes the sh'sded•avenues, and Nunn) lemmata that , , pleaiant plaint and: since the Ghtrdens were'established—twen. tyaix years ago—,no- lest than fouiteen thousand specimens have been exhibited , within its inolosures. The Gardens, as most ,of our , readere. know: .area large park, in which each animal is kept se far as possible; in the circninslanties which surround it in its native wilds.• Thus, the bear. eve poles to climb; the otters , poolt. in- wbioh to•swim; the! vultures rooks to• ' perelyupon,, the'• beaiers . 'a running stream to dam; the weal, a• lake. to swim in: The-Quarterly Revive continues its se* rise of articles UpOn what De' Quincy , call• ed lithe Nation of , Vondon,7 by , a very de: lightful paper no these marvelous Gardens, the,writer'of which displays= that happy , blending °faecal*. observationand lived ly fancy which, bus rendered the series an popular: • From this article we extract some passages }which ono need. not be a naturalist to appreciate. , A VIEW OW TEICOARDENB PEOE AN ZEE • ' VATION. From this elevated situation the whale plan of the'soutb side of the grounds is exposed. To his right, fringing a still pool whine traislizent waters mirror them atiltheititand, ' the speetator sees the col: leetioh of Storks and cranes ; more imme diately' in front of ' him softly tread the limas and alpacas—the beasts of burden of the NeW, woad ; farther, again, we "see the', deer in 'their 'paddocks, and beyond tbe sedgy pools of the water fowl, set in the midst cif graceful shrubberies which close the gardens in from the landscape of the Regents Park. Passing over to the northern side of the terrace ho sees the eagle aviary, tenanted by its royal and and solitary ,hibking, occupants, ; , the otters swimming 'their , merry, ro und, and: pet * obi the seal flapping beside his and while 'the' monkeys, with incredible rapid ity and constant ehatter, easing' and asap about their Wire enclosure. 'lmMediately teneath him the. Polar bears paee to' and fro,tir, swaying their beach', Walk back ward with a firmness which a lard,' chain berlairi Might elttlywith avantage ; and Oleos at band, the long neck of ' the' "ship of theAo'4)itieu.iiilfug out from the of pro* naafi-house: 'my the dreadMonarith of the forest and thi Other'sfgreat Cate" 'are beneath his feet, he iiMade aware by ,angry growls end the quivering ,sound of shaken iron bare as thekeeper goes round with his deity beef barrow. No one can help feeling a^ cer tain Sense of istran'gqiesa at seeing these creatures ef, all climes scattered amid a flOariahipg , garden—to wittiest beasts, en sanguined in tooth end claw, impatiently peeing 'to' and fro betiveen banks of scarlet geraniums or beds brilliant with the count leas blckniss of early dahlias—or; still more oddly, to witness birds of prey' which love to *career in the storm, surrounded' by monthly - roses. • • NEEDING - THE GREAT SNAKES IN THE , ittpink, The 'reptiles are offered food once a week, !but will not always feed'even' at this inter • val. One huge python 'fasted the almost' 'incredible time of twenty-two mouths, ins probably prepared himself for his ab stinence by. a splendid gorge. After 'a fait of Seven days, however, the majority Of the serpents regain their appetites.— Three o'clock ie the feeding time, and the . reptiles Which are on the look Out seem to knew full well the errand ' of the man who enters 'with the basket; againat the aides of which they heat: the . fluttering wings' of the feethereirViatims,,andlhe short stamp of the doomed rabbits. The keeper opens. the door at the batik of the den of the ve:- leMinous verienti on our 'right—foe - Of these there is 60 'fetir—'—takes off - their blanket, and drops in upon the (glittering pebbles a scampering who bhp, featu side AO HMO, 'adrickti to inspect his 'hew habitation; 'presentlf'Satiified, he Sits'on his haunches, kludieleirely begins taviash his face. ". the 'rook snake glides over the stories', tinouiling hii hugelolds, which like a Oahle'sciem to Move 'as though by Sorritrageboy !Wrr inthouf;looks for an insist& upon his unconscious victim; and 'she next'-has aPised him with his cruel jaivs. His 'eonatrioting folds are twisted as'swiftly as a ivhip-laSh around ing'p'rey for ten minutes .the serpent lies still, maintaining his mortal knot until his prey is dead, when, seizing him by the ears, he draws him through his vice-like grip; crush ing ' every bone, and elongating the body preparatory to devouring it.— The boa and the' rock-snake always swal low their prey head•foremost. how is that fine neck and delicate head to make room for that bulky 'rabbit thinks the spectator. Presently he sees the jaws gape; and slowly the reptile draws Mur al' over, rather than swallows, his prey, as you draw a stocking upon your ler— The huge lump descends lower and lower beneath the"speckled scales, which seem to stare with distenaien, and the monster coils himself up once more' to digest his meal in quiet. HOW TUE VENOMOUS SERPENTS KILL THEIa VICTIMS Thesnakestrikesat the guirtenig; again and again ho dashes at it but misses his aim; now ho hits it, but only to drive the poor frightened creature with a score of flying pebbles before him; when at last he succeeds in. piercing the sides of his vie• tim, tete* spasms immediately commence, and it dies convulsed in a few seconds -- It is said by those , have watched, the venomous snakes, that the manner of dy-, ing,exhibited by their stricken prey disel o sea the nature of the rooile that infliet'ed the poisoned, wound. It is scarcely ne• oessary to ataie that the popular idea that thti tongue darts Jerk the vonotu is a fill - 149 y. _The poison is, ocu44tuled in glands f s" whkib• lie it the foot of the hogi on' either side,'and,' by the' vompieision • of the pow erful:Muscles which Mike the. head itp peer so'broad and, fist, it is , forced into the fine tutd which runs at the sides of the fang ; land finds'iti exit near the' point by oring: The tobralt present in the eel mien, with its skin of glossy black andyellosr, its eye black and angry, its , motions agile and •gracefulp seeme,•to be the very, personification of India. ~As ' Wii,wittok it when ready to spring, we de* temeMber.that onl y a film of it 1999 'stands` between us and "pure destb."-ii But there'll, nothing to fear;, the python a the adjoining,oOm, whiSh weighs 'ono hunfired and twenty pounds; being incensed on his first arrival at being removed ,from his Vox, &fried with all his force at a epee latot. fhe o pain of glass had strength enough to bring him up, and lio fell back so bruised.abOutthe head and, muzzle ',14 the itolliiion that he could not feed well for several months. The cobra that we see is the same that destroyed its,;keepor. In a fit of drunkenness the man, agamst express orders, s took the reptile out, and placing its head inside his waistcoat, al levied it to glide round his body. When it had emerged from under his clothes at the other side, apparently in good humor, he squeezed its tail when it struck him be tween his eyes; in twenty minutes his Consciousness, wits gone, and in less than three hours he was dead. NNAHES SWALLOWING ONE ANOTHER Every one has heard of the snake . who swallowed his blanket, a meal which ulti mately killed him. A python rho had lived for years in a - friendly manner with a brother nearly as large as himself, was found ode morning soles. as the cage was - seoure,, the keepers were 'puzzled' to know how i she serpent had escaped ; at last it was observed- that the remaining ibmite had swollen remarkably during the night, when the horrid fact became plain euough ; thefratricide had succeeded in mellowing the ebtire person of his brother ; it was hie last meal however; for in some menthe he died. A friend• informs per'that he 'once saw in these Gardens a rawanake of Cey lon devour'a common orderer natrix. The rat•anake, however; had not taken the mea- sure of his victim, as by no effort could he dispose of the, last four inches of his tail: which stuck. out rsther jauntily from the. side of his mouth, with very much the 'oak of a cigar. After a quarter of an 'hour the tail began to • eihibit a retrograde motion, and.- the. Jewallowed.Zsdake: , waa, dieworge4 notatugtheivoisiffrem - tne-rivingaepurener, with' the exception or the wound made by his partner' when first he seized him. THE ECCENTRICITIES OP THE HIPPOPOTA- The hippopotamus surges Into his hath in:the enclosure as we pause, and there is a rush of visitors to see the mighty , brute perforniing his ablutions. Ho no longer gives audience to all the fah and fashiona ble folks of the town. Alas for the great nese of this world I the noldier-scrab aud thelsop prawn now draw better 6 houses." Whether or no this desertion bas embitter. ed hie temper, we can not tray, but ho has certainly lost hie amiability, notwithetand, ing that. he,etill retains the humorous curl.' up of the corners of his mouth which Doyle used to hit off so inimitably. At times, in. deed, he is perfectly furious, sad his vast' strength has necessitated the reao,neirue, tion of his house on a Stronger plan.— Those only who lave seen him rush with extended jaws , at the, massive oaken door of his apartment, returning again arid again to the charge, and making the solid beams, quiver as though , they were only of in. deal,, can understand the dabgerous fits which now and then are cribited by a crea ture who was so gentle when he, made ,his I debut, that he could not go .ttislacip With oat having his Arab keeper's fed to , lay, his neck upon.This` affectien for , his nurse has undergone a great change, for on Hanle ea co un trym e aand en adj utorbleliam ned, ,making,his neeond appearance . with the young female hipPopotammi, Obeyed', very near killed him . in the oleaao. of his, rage., He has ,a peculiar dislike' to:the, eight of working-men, especiallY itthey are employed in doing any jobs about Ina a partment, The smith of the establiahnient:, happening to be passing the other day, a, long the 'iron gallery which rune acme one side of his bath, the infuriated animal' leapedont of the water, at least eight, feet and: would speedily have pulled .the whole construction , down bad not the Man fun rapidly out. of his eight. We trust hie' , temper will improve when' his f,i 6 Ang 4 09' in the adjoining minis presented to him but ehe is as yet but a baby behemoth, al though growing fast. The, enormously strong iron railings in frOnt of hie apart ments are essential to guard against the, rushes he sometimes makes at persons he doca not like. Look at the .bugh mouth. opened playfully, to receive knicknace : What is a bun or a biscuit to him ? Down that huge throat goes one hundred pounds' weight. of provenner daily. Surely the dragon of Wantloy had net such a gullet. The giraffe, in spite of his mild and mel ancholy look, ~which reminds us forcibly of the camel, yet fights ferociously with his kind at certain seasons of. the year.---.. Two males once battled hero so furiously that the horn of one of them was actually driven into the head of the other. Their method of fighting is very peculiar; stretch. ing out their fore and hind legs like a rocking-horse, they use their heads, as a blacksmith would a sledge hammer, and swinging the vertebral column in a manner calculated, •one would think, 'to break. it, they bring the full force of the horns to beat; upon • their antagonist's skull.'• The blow is severe in the extreme, and every ' precaution is taken to prevent these con flicts. • The fitet rhiuodoros cost ; Xl l OOO • the . • four praifs, groo, wad' their earring!, an , additional 471:10. The elephant and, calf wore bought - in 1851 for £BOO ; and tbe EVENING, JUNFr 13, 1866. ROW GIRAFFES FIGEIT. PRICES OP WILD BEASTS giFEARLESS, AND,FELgE." hippopotamus, although a lift, was 'not brought home• and hound atlas than £l,- 000—a sum which he more han realised in the famous Exhibition spasm ' when the receipts wars XlO,OOO aboveth e previous Yet4'. The llon Albeit was , pirobased for £l4O ; a Ca) , in 1852 foi gzoo. Tho .valne of so rilit of ,the smaller birds will ap pear, however, more startling; thus, the pair of blacir , neoked swans were purchas ed (Or £BO (they are now tOt,c seen in the three-Island pond )' ; • a pair of crowned pigeons and , iwo'maloos,' '1.0) ; a pair of Victoria pigeons, 480.; fair mandarin ducks,£7o., It wo uld be *possible from thee prices, however, to juflge of the pfes eat value of the anittials. 'Take the rhi nenetos, for example , ; the' frst specimen oost,Xl,ooo, the second, vile as fine a brit°, • only £B5O, 'Liana, range again from £4O to £IBQ, and tigersfrom £lO to A2OO. • - The price is generally' rilee by the State of the wild beast market Mit )y the intrin sic rarity of the cresture.4 tAtfirst appear ance in Europp,of course htlilely,to draw. and is. therefore, at the t o p price ; hut it is wonderful how detiOnd s protimes supply. Lei any rare animal' bringit ,trowd to the Gardens, and in a twelve-moath nuitbors of his brethren .will, he, geserally in the market. lb° ignorance tilitittayed by some persona as to the value of ~ e ll-known: ob. jeets is something Marvelells. ' We hive already spoken of the ~saalittptain who ititde mended 4600 for a 'pair python and at last took .240 ! Oct ado lir occasion an American offered the Sects,''ii grisly bear for 22,000 ; to be delive in the United States ; and more laughs le .still, a mori bund walrus, which had; been fed for nine weeks on salt pork antfroetkl,,was offerea for the trilling aunt of .4700 yr ' 4 i N WILD-BUS- —Ea 11A TS. 'We have said that the'yaioe .. of animals &Pond: upon • the state afibi''Avild- beast market. "Wild-beast metket.l" , exelaims the reader; "and whore put that be ef— Every oneknows that London can furnish any thing for money, .0,1r..iy lady or gentleman Wants lions or 'tigers, there are deafen in Ratcliffe Highaiity and the adja cont'parts who have them.on the promisee 111311, sell them at five minute!' n6tioe.— They "talk as familiarly of s lions as ladies do of puppy dogs ;" and a gentlewae who purchased a bear of one etthem; lately in r forineitus that the oulesigg(coolly pro posed that he should tako,,Airri home with him in a cab I._ * • 0 4*,. One wild. jillerchattlinfortue4 skoilso dip! e • was - iiiVairenen by 'nil wife, who drew his attention' to a noise in • the back-yard, where he had placed two lions on the pmy along evening. On pitting his head ,out of the window—his room was on, the ground floor—there were the lions, Aortae, ,and, with their paws on the window-aill, looking grimly in upon him. A good whip and a determined air consigned Leo to his cage again without further trouble. On anoth: er occasion ibis same` man; hearing a noise in his back prey:hies ' found, to his horror ' that an elephant with his pick , -look trunk. had let out a h yena and. a allghan from their oages, and was busy undoing the fait tenings of a den full of Itous•I The same resolute apirit, however. vont: restored 'or dor. Amateurs have not the same courage or self-Possession. and they ilAMO diatoly have reeourse to the Girded 'folks to get thorn out of their ditfienitiei, as a house-jceeper would send , to: the • station house on fiuding a burglar. accreted in his cellar.. Oct one occasion a gentleman, who hid offered a rattlesnake 'and its young to the Gardens at a high price, sent suddenly to theumperintendeni taimploreimniediate assistance, as•the 'said snake, with half a score venomous offspring. had esospedfrom their box and scattered'themselves io his grounds. • • ' ' A lilliiiii?rtatlcka 41111 . . . The spicy corresliondent of, the. Paw tucket. Gazette thus "lets shimsalf out" on the expansiie subject of hoops in ladies' dreseasi "And talking of the ladies, they, are , positively , getting bigger aid , Ole - petticoat mania .riges They'fill Up . the sidewalks.; as they brush 14., : i0u, you feel born:ls—whalebones, I mean, for, there ire no, others : within a half of You." What 'dreadful re versal of the order of nstureis all this. 1 dp not,ebjeci to plumpness; and rotundity in tho,proper places; but ; 'whit lonia is their in being 'sir tremendoullyorbienlar a-, bodt the feet? • Between you and me,, MM. P. T. has, 'fallen into this fashion , and 'maugre remonstrances,' has pur chased one of t ate mostmostrous of these inventions. I examined it with, much awe, the other night, after she had gone to bed. 0, Roberto, it is, "fearfully and wonderfully made." It is an institution. In size it is like a small country law of fice. I think it must have been raised like a barn. It is latticed and corded and stiffened with the utmost ingenuity.-- When she has it on. my "gads wife" is (to to speak) like Hamlet's father, '.clad in complete still." She is just as safe as if she were in a convent. , She is entirely shut from this vain world, Quoad the earth, she has nothing in it but a large skirt. So much for the safety of the con trivance. The question of beauty is an other matter." Two CCINUNDRIMIS.—Why is a man who gets knocked down at an election, like the world we inhabit ? Because he's "flattened at the polls." The yoang man who perpetrated this left for the West on Wednesday. He trev.elled oh', the wires. Why, is a man willing to learn, like. a man under indictment Because he's pen to" coniiction; There is a sentiment as beautiful asjuat in the following sentence "lie who forgets the fountain from which ho drank, and the tree un dor whose shade he, gamboled,,in tho days of his youth, is a stranger to the sweetest. impression's of the human heart." 41i 'Affecting' Scene In a Western Log cabin. It was nearly midnight of Saturday night . that a passenger came to Col. S -,"requesting him to go to the cabin of a setter, 'some three miles down the river, and see his daughter, a girl of four teen, who was supposed ,to be dying. Col. S awoke me and asked me to accompany him, and I consented, taking with me a small package of medic mos which I always carried in the forests; but I soon learned there was no need of these, for her disease was past cure. "She is a strange child," said the Colo iel ; "her father is a strange .nun. They live together on the bank of the r iver.— They 031138 here three years ago, and no one knows whence or why. He • has money and is a keeti Athol. The child haa beep wasting away 'for a year past.-- I have seen her often, and she seems gifted with a marvolouit intellect. She 'seems sometimes. to 'be the• only hope of her father." ~• , - • • • We had reached the hut of the settler in leas -than half an hour, and entered ' it reverently. , _The scene , WWI COlllll7i be easi ly forgetton, There . were looksand evi denees ofluxUry and taloa kying , cin ride table' flair 'the mien' Vrindo*, 'and the bed • furniture on • which ihe, dying girl lay was as ; SOU as the coverng of SI sleeping cpieen. 1 was of , course startled, never having heard of these peopla before ; but knowing it tO • be no Uncommon - thing for inittanthropes: to go into' the Woods 10 live and..die, , I. was content, to ~.ask no explanations, more,especially 4,s the tleath hour was evidently near. „ She ;was (air child,. wit - ft Masses long, Welt hair lying over the' pillear.--= Her eyiis were dark and pieroing;‘and they naet mine they, started slightly, but smiled ,and, looked, op,ward. spoke a few, words to' herfather, and turning to hoe,•ailied if she USW' tier 'Condition "I know , that my. Redeemer' -liietit," said she itn a voice minim melody , like the .sweetest tones of an /ERlittri.—r Nod may imagine` that her answer startled me, and with a Yew words of like tropnrt: I turned from her: ' A heir in' hour after and she 'spoke in the same melt:idiom" •'Father. 1 am, cold ;lie- down beside me.!:. the old ;man luy down by hie dying child. and alui twined tier ertuteiaiell arme around hie 'neck, and murmured in a dreamy voiety '4.Dear' father, dear father." 7 7 ' Ulkirrolutte,'' , errittritos,,idyuranr-“--alotb flopiteeem lieep, to thee t" "Nay 'tither, my soul is siieng." "Seest thou the opposite shore?"' "I,see.it, father, and,ita battha are green with iminorial,verdere.". ' "nearest thou thei voices of itst taniti!" "I hear them; father, 'ea the'vaiSet of from'efsr -In'•the stilLand solemn night time, and . 'they toc.4- Mother's • Snieti,.tivii .fitliet--Oh,' I heard it then!" "Mth' !the speak tO thee?" -"She speaketh in tones ewes heavenly," "Doth she striae?" , • .-• 'Aril angel smile , But. eat. cold— cold—acid ! Father, there's it mist*, the roem.') You'lrbe 'timely. -Is this' death. father?' • ' • The Pin and the Needle; • A pity aid neeille`being.. neighbors" in a work basket, and both being begin to' quarrel, is idle fofka are apt to "I phould like to know." said' the pin "what you are good for, and how,you ex peel to:get - througli the. world . without a head I" ' ..What.iti the ttee of your head," repli• ed the needle, Tether eharplyogif yOu have no eye 2" - ' • "What is the nee of an eye," said the pin, there te 11111VaylP aonnethingin it j" : "I am el way/ active; and can go through more work than you mut," said the, nee= dle. ' • • • "Yes ; but you w.il not live long." t, . not r ,;, "Because you have: always a each in 3'our said,the • "You'ro , a imor,, crooked' creature," said the needle.. , . , , • "And you are so proud that you Can't benti , without breakingyOur back: , "I'll pull your. heati . off if you•. insult me again.'' put'your eye out if you touch me ; remember., your life. hangs . on' it'single thread," said the pin. . • While .they were thus conversing., a little girl entered, and, undertaking to aew, she . very soon broke oil the needle at ihe eye. ' Then she tied the thread around the neck of the pin;and attempting to sew 'with it, she pulled its head off, and threw it into the dirt by the sine of the broken needle. "Well, here we are," said the needle. ' "We have nothing to fight about now," said• the pin. "It seems misfoitune has brought-us to our senses." "A. pity we had not ,coma to them sooner," said the needle. ' "How much we resemble human be ings, who quarreled about their blessings till they lose them, and never find out that they were brothers till they lie down in the dust together,- us we do." Queen Victor Woo Children. The Queen of England may not be a great sovereign, but she undoubtedly de serves the higher praise of being a true woman. Considering the force which is added to her example by her exalted posi don, it can hardly be doubted that she con fers a greater benefit on her subjects by the model she exhibits of all the womanly domestic virtues than would result (ruin great capactty for atraire of State. The Toronto Globe has taken pains to collect from •the English, papers an account of the manner the Queen brings up her chil dren, from which we make the following extract: '•lt would stem that the whole house hold is u$ betimes, that the young people breakfttst at slight and dine itt one ; which hours some people think decidedly vulgar, During the forenoon they are kipt to theft books..—Then the boys are drilled in mili tary exercises, while the girls, we Suppose, practice calisthenics. After this ' they have an hour of music and dancing. By this time dinner is ready, and when 'its toils are surmounted, the children go to the riding school, from which .they pro.. ceed. the prince'sses to draWing and musk, and the princes to a carpenter's shop, where they hammer and saw, and turn, till -they are tired, alter which they oc casiunly spend some time m a laboratory fitted up for their peculiar use. The school is now ended, and while the girls go out to 'play or ride, the boys go out to walk, play, ride, or shoot, till tea time. l'hon comes, the preparations for the lea sons to-morrow, and then to bed. according to the English papers, is the daily life of the Queen's children; and when we add that, morning and evening, they. are trained in the4ruthii of religion, wo,belie.va we, have,befciiet us the lam that the first family in the empire le regulated in a" fashion, which it were well for a good many other lainilies if they would tnikimitate." The Baby,. I have been to see the baby; And ita face was very red, , And the down was very beauty , On its funny little head. •• ' • ' ' It had a little tuns up nose, • And eyes, and'ears, and paws ; These latter: looked for Au the world Justlike a chicken's claws. , Tbeparenm showed the object up ' , With seeming pride and pleagurer -- No doubt they prize'thelittle imp'• Above sill earthly , treasure. - • .• a I surveyed it at distance / . - • Asked what might be,-- • Fearful lest they might have namd it Seth, in compliment to me. . , ‘'lstit'it 'a pretty baby?"' ••• "Yes'imleed," was my reply '• Wenn% it a dreadffil ply'• • To have to tell such a lie. ? ' SO9 the thing became' uneasy:, •4 ' • Squirmed and Squalled ask in pain So I 'bade my friehds good morning, • Promising to call again. 4 • • • • ~ • Preaming - that same night I fancied 'l'bat, the baby. , was my sou • • I awoke, with terror trembling, . • F elt—and found I was alone. . • • Then a while lar there Musing, On ray bliss dna others' woe, ' Till I found the placid sluintier '•••• .•• . And ever since when I refleet On such sacene as that, I thank r my stars I ue'er iraS jilessed With wife or little brat. : ; • , •. Count them. Count what? , Why count the mercies which have been. quietly' falling in your Dill through every periud of your history: own they come, every . Morning' and ev er'''. evening, is'angel messengers'lrOni the Father of lights, to' tell of, your. best 'Friend in ,heaven. Have you lived these years, waisting mercies, treading them he: neath your tees, and consuming them et , . ery day, • and never vet realized from Whence they came ? If you have, Hear. en"pity you. You have murmured undei' affliction ; but Who has. heard you rejoice over bless. lags Do you ask what are these met cies Y Ask the sunbeam, the rain drop, the star or the queen of the night. What is life but mercy ? What hi health, "trench: friendship, social life, tile gospel of Christ, divine worship? , Had they the power of speech. each would say, "1 ant a reercy. o Perhaps you never regarded 1 them as such ; if not, you have been a dull student of nature or revelation. :• What is the proprlety of stopping to play with a thorn bush when you. may just . as well pluck 'sweet flowers, and eat pleasant lruit, Yet we have seen .enough of menr to know that thEy have a morbid (appetite for. thorns.• •If they • haae lost a friend they will murmur at the lose, if God has hair given the m a score of new • ones.— And , aotnehow, everything assumes a val ue wheat its gone, which man would not acknowledge when he had it in his pos session; unlesr„indeed, some one wished to purchase it. Happy is he who looks at the bright sido of life, of providence, and of revela tion. Who avoids thorns. aml• thickets. and sloughs, until his Christian growth is such that 'he can improve them, he may pass among them without injury.— Count mercies before you complain of af flictions.—Religious Telescope. . , The Sailor and the 'Widow. or Nothing lost by Kindness. Nearly half a century ago, when it coach run daily between Glasgow and Greenock, by Paisley, one furenocM, when a little past Bishopton, a lady. in the coach noticed a boy walking bartfooted. Seemingly tired, and struggling with tender feat. the de. sired the coachman , to take him up and give him a seat, and she would pay for it. . When they arrived at the inn in Green ock, she inquired of the boy what was his' object in coining up there. He said he wished to be a sailor and hoped some of the captains would engage him. She gave him a half crown, wished him successotnd charged him to behave well.. Twenty years after this, the coach was returning to Glasgow in toe afternoon, on the same road: When near Bishopton, a sea captain observed nu old widow lady on the road, walking very sloWly, fatigued and weary. He ordered the coachman to put Ler in the coach, as there was an empty ' seat, and he Would nay for her. Immediately after, when changing !ter se& at Bishopton, the passengers "wore sauntering about except the captain and the old lady, who remained in the teach. The lady thanked him for his kindly, feeN ing toward her, as she was now unable to pa for a seat. He said, uHe always . 1110 aympathy for woody pedestrians, sum lut himself was in that state when a bo.j.iwan., iy )ears ago, near thii'very place ,. when-al • TWO DOLLARS PER , ANNADic, NUlll3k . leader hearted lady, for but el:Sidman. to take him up, and paid Itta seat. "Well do I remember 'that incident." said she. "I am that lady, hut, my life is changed: I was then independent. Now I am reduoed to''poverty, by.tbo do ings of a prodigal son."' ' • "How happy am I," said the (*Alin, "that I have been successful my enter prise, and am returning home to live on ray fortune ; and front this day I shall bind myself and heirs to supply you with' twin ty-tive pounds por allows till your deatb. --Briiish Workman. Republican Meeting.: t At a mass meeting-of theltepublim As sociation of New, Oxford,. Adams cotuttyp,Pa., held in pursuance , of a public call, 99'0%4. day, Stine 6th, 1868—the grerident called the meeting to order, and briefly', but 'for'ai bly,• stated the object of the'meeting to among other ,matters, the, election of Dele gates to represent the County of Adamd, &c. in the State • and National Conventions to be held at Philadelphiti on the 18th and 17th. days of June inst. .' John T. Pfeiffer was appointed Secretity On motion, Wm. Wright, John Ellis, and Ambrose W. Staub, were, appointed, a committee to draft resolutions titxpressive the sense of the meeting. In' the absence of the committee, the, meeting was addressed in an able and inter esting manner by It. G. GuEsAY, f.;sq., of Gettysburg, and Dr. M. D. • G. PFTIFFIat of . New Oxford. , ildr.•Ehtis from the Committee otillein lutionsi repor ted the following, which were: unanimously adopted : .; t Whereas, The, presentoind unhappy po sition of public affairs is abundantly , cousin.' oing to all trini friends of their country, that the Blare power 'by their arrogant assumP tion.of tyrannical authority; by their enact ment of unjust and unholy laws; by degra ding and protesting the altered name of Lib erty; by their high-handed infraction o4hase covenants ever held to ,he sacred the' entire' North; by their brutality and ruffian ism, sided,'consoled and suPportati•by the present wicked and corrupt adudnlstratiom , T rrbeyend all question or cavil, have forced upon the heretoforo unresisting North, that amount of endurance, beyond which des . pair itself fails not to re-act, and stiniulate 'with convulsive energy, all that remains of sowid bodily, and mental Fewer, and ha ve , wickedly ia„rautonly.fo r aed upon „ the country, to , the eXollision of all other considerations, the single ' 'solo, issue of freedom and equalityids political position and• power, or the dill establishment of the . vindictive and tyran nteal authority, and supremacy of theae "Lords of 'the South,"---the Slave Arilifoo , • racy ; And whereas, the Repubiicans, having no other object in view than the real mid substantial welfare of the , nation, declare and urge that the truly public mid patriotic: Principles which they eapouse,, if , hrouglit into authority, will effeetually secui4 the management of the affairs' of the natiuh with wisdom and firmness; with- dignity, with fairness, and with credit :—ThesofOre Resolved, That as Republicans, are, bola and liver it to have been the desire, aim and intention of the founders dour goVerinnfinl, that the arts and sciences of urilllixed•life should receive their highest scope, that civil and religious liberty should hare • fiettrisb, unchecked by the cruel hand of evil ,or eceleaiastical tyranny; that'geniul, lip all the improvements of former ages, ahoWd be exerted in harmonizing ; mankind. iti,ex pending and enriching their minds with mil gious, political & philosophic:4k newledge, in improving and,perpetuating afonn of go verntnent which should iavolve all the'ekeel- 'armies of former goverinnents, and' protect and preserve the just rights of 'manhunt: Resolved, That the Slave Aristeontoy, by the tyranny of their horrible and deicstatile proceedings,' have well nigh plunged the country in a civil war with 'all its horrtint and revolting enormities, and• that• Attie and the weighty considerations involved ,in the issue before us, call for thetuned'- ate action, for the, prompt interposition o the fiat of the Freemen of this nation: Resolved, That the time lusk arrived for a thorough and effective political reformation, by which wo mean an ovelanow of .that oligarchy from which the colrutry Juni suf fered and is suffering afflicting grievances, and a full deliverance from that foul and paltry dough-faceisna which fails=to repre sent the honest bait of the ,Nortli,:and bows in base submission to the blolookot' Slavery. , Resolved, That'freedom of speech; of this yreas, and the free exercise 'of religionetili 'lief, are certain inalienable' righta which' should ever be hold sacred, and preserved inviolate. „ Resolved, That the late , brutal rufflen-like and cowardly attack on Charles Sumnei, the Senate Chamber, furnisheti but' an- evi= donee of the extent to which the Slaver, pnapagandists design ,to carry their Wein dons towards the North. • Resolved, That the roped of thia Mlistouri Compromise sustained at its inception; at it was, by the united waive of Mr. Motiluseti cabinet, by:the united *Moos ;of, Eleuthera - Senators, and a majority of Southern , pre l setatives, was a bold, bad, infraction' of 0, covenant ever held to bo sacred bylle . mtticti North. - • • - . • Resolved, "That_ it is the , ,Benee And tlui , determinatien of this meeting, tap Me Mt no inan'for the Presidentiy,:other than, one who can present an unspotted page Re. publican history. • • .... I Resolved, That the ..proceedinga of thio , meeting be published us .the "Sentinel." h a a tonOtisint The meeting% en,proeee e_ and elect delegates as aforesaid, which r stilted in the unanimous choleie of Winisle Wright, John. R Hersh,. and John CPIOIIO, sa RelefSeg fo th" Coovontioo4,l,4l l rlgt to 4ront. imistitl4.4.l.E34 Ift Att Clqrsk ThePresideit then ad'iiiisid meth*, 4 raAt ;. , 0 0 7„ , Tafillta 4,2). • • ;. • ..- • ,!• [cossigiaCALit3)4,