J u L? '. " " ' 'J' ' ''t'-----'' - - 11,'", ! r ' " ii ii i ii wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimmmmmmmmmmmmmmm m nrrrijrr-rp.T ftr--rrr-xrjg rr.-.r- A-vr . :.r v:.--.-..--: - - -- - ' - V- - - - r 0 Ml- - - . , .. ii '.. . I At ,uo -Sv V:i-;jOV ea- X3ji,3 T'Li orfi 1 inn .:.?.; ,-,.au .? i i.-.: :, V .;.,;;) . . , ; ' ' ; -T- ' -:. : ' 'l'-- ; - ' ' ;-i .': .. . . ; .. ;. - ; - -. !" "'"-" ' iwv-.rJ el ,!;,. tfi fteijf.-.w j t"ra,-;r.r' tift v-i j::- s.i; t:i :.s-Ji;:,i vM-n -s.rii.?.".'i "A3 TI1iIvVINI. AX1 AMKUCAX'TO THE GOltK. :' " ;,-.:". o--'t ..- : - i ' i.- - ; 'z. .-;r . .r ..; ., . ,t ' - -- " " "' '".-"".r; VOL. : 2.-N0. 21. -TOTAL, 7$; 1 S'4 irrora UiLi4on-Ath'eoisril t' ; v 'eM Z MYPnU-OSOPnr.""- in " fathfr? leWttolaftS of their lutttvitvi to srfttln .oM;.a?ifnH-nVy;.j,V? i.i--i. hna .n-ni.ti gcieuti worship -their Crentor according: to What though tLo suE50er4."v-ju? rr.iJis- si jiibuA uotS4 h WMkhtui-j'-.i.i ,ifv? Learns nsiho lishti,! h,t j 'ilLVlt, "TAIH0: :; God knows bow dorp thry l:o, .fdv hto"r.-':I Tn-th?TtWs. - t ... ''! -A'H ,1fjD4fut;ia aevci dio .-oIkj'(o Ruff Jt..r., ' . . 'u''hWv2Afpvver h. :'T-!.'; iscciition nntl tyranny lVonV that moment desi lykc ctiililsc'od'a timj If? rbynj-: "r .'may .it please J"bnr worships, permit m lotn .Vji ailVr HFPV-if i a i.J-j quira'ouce more, for whr.t are theso men 'about 3-;.--Ay,i nlM-Brf aa'i.cjiwpsr.j Lv: j to to tried ii Thu paper says for pleaching ';'tLfV1-:JItr:'; ;---;-v;;1Ueatioun'd Lis' head. The court and -ar.di--sT a :VTr-'- '. ' . ,'o i enee were now wrought p to the. msiit intense -.ct ' float on' tftJ ; - . -t ' ' - " ; pitch of excitement. The face of Hie prose- E'en to tho last, ;',.'1.fW'Klf pyttiRR,.? ' J 'z?f? -a. '!-? i ff.15c,5;".9-.v'n? t - .; fSaUb tny r liiioiophy . . , ? r4ik3 ,f our icCkn.:,! :? --'l ivffdafor nye; - -" -i-r-:c- : ..! - :! tj!f Kvrc?'. r:iiicifS ncre? - s :. v' flsy wKshlad : . ,f!Bit2p?y tl.gnjht or drsaia, . VJV ,lrf'Jro a"day arlieft boana, , i !: LtiLiuili f fior,tl3 air eamn ;5s'.. 1 t;e loio tfU-tlc. 4; :yt"C. jiili taaseii.i; paS bycTiT t-:5.tat- $ tf,fl,fe.tiVf- r-i ".lit I :i TV .-!. -C en tho'ih tbey f .me. J" . I f . -.. . yrom the Ciiptist lic?iisterj:- 'lvlti?JiICK ITlUfllYJ .1 !.! Engirt, urcli'Iiiviiyi, .t je n ;altii-f M byaiv iw.VtiInitV-l-'tv.tu ;fj ail UC4 es-; t2r4Ssh:n?n f !f:t- 'exceedingly :in io4ut t;Kiir C-t;'crse!t'?: W' prosecution ' tlf-s,? syit'a ;pf 'cjv"ci'ily!i thivo; Bapit cldryait hal liecn ' l-ldic'id,i .,Fyudericka- Tin'ri, for frenching th'-' Jspel -of ta. Scn-tl jfjod contrary' tytXe'l.Mule'"nenrj-;j hearing arrvHcc in defeiic.-of ihe- op)es-i Jl -en- w13 cape,-j t() the bar in . 1826. . In the same Th-A'onrf,'-'beii?'nnkiifctrB-t-i: present '; j -,8 Ks!tiy on Milton." ..appeared in the . 't'sve tl.;j-ifi.af to baf-whiie the fwRcV- -rit?dVibnrgh-Revi.w and out of Lord rtfccn t..i-w;s beiR3:'.J 1:, 3'l9 'jIrO 'Jeffrey's ndinir.it ion of that paper, a -we. -Vt'; th Jur wKtil tUfciJuall:5? v.-ia ,: finished, an intimate friendship. Macan'.ay, - visiting ftlij lv f gsH ttorney Jiai concluded some Scotland soon afterward, went the circuit with "jvm-iiks in defeVce "-bf fhe pros'ectitroihti, pjfr; Jofirfty. : His connectiou with tho "Edin he sirose,.reaca;j2yJi! hij'-1 .for the p?per,; i'.bnrgh Heyiev.- Ikts continued at iutervals ov a iiMfii'ii mora-'ceBctJ(ny, proceeded .with jer'slnec. "' '. .'.! '' "fi'e j!i)!cvir!g 6i'??eh :': - 1 r'.:r'J t.-nj) tha Whig administration Mr, Macajila'y .' .V'M.y ' il 'please d' wufH ipj I 'think l: j? wis appointed commissioner of IJnkrnpts. He 4ter.r read by 4Uet i.rosUtor,7a? T ' eatered 'commenced . his ' parliamentary career about - tMs'l-.tvt r.'J, 'lh:pjHsr I now hold in my J:.'id. i. Same period, as member for Colne in the iri have r'liilv :tirnlcrstoo.T the' King's :at-i k-reform Parliament of. 1SC2, and' again for itlpuly of iho'coiimy'has framed an j'ndibttneiit ofor the purpose-i'f arr.igniitjr and : punuslung -toy ifnri's')nmnt, ' three iuoiTensiro' -persons tlWli ir of this court, for a crrroe of i gre.U jnagnit'udjUsI disturbers t?f the'1 pence. -Here he read. Did I bear. aa . expression as if a crime, that these men, hvhom your worslups :.rrf atiA'it to try for misdemeanor; arc charged Vw'itij-Tr-wliat .and.oonti p u ijig 'witt A loH- apf lenan tone, '-pcejicUng thagolsplof Souf :coq.neSt ff , thc GovernoV-general," Lord "Wil- ' Qk1 V.' ' PatiRiBg 'amidst -the most.- profound j Ham1 Bentick, he became President of the " "'silence aDl1fcrtthieSS.Wpnishm of five appointed to frame. a penal 17 waved the rapctjrreu'n'es round his hoad,1 coda for India; and the principal provisions ;tfvbenj lij'mg ii handstand -eyes. tp..leaverf,jipf this code'have'b'ecn attributed to him. O'.ie ; ;jvjtW'poctTr;! ad expressive energy,-he? qx iFof its enactments .particular, was so unpop- v$itfaiv&ilYsxt ?'' :'Jhe '.cxclaniatiftt f ular among rho Khglinh inbalitauts, as to re Itthe VvrflVeliaSfVqmlie -.au'dicnccyrece'lvi or the '-Black Act."i fit. iVTrrrhoweri'n -.MrilenVy resnmedvj . ; laboiisheii the-right; of appeal from the Local '-it'3fy:it'y!e.'ts yb'nr worships t: Da a day liKC Courts to tlic , Supreme Cpurt at the rrcsiden 'f iMs-Lyikhn trli'tlf' is about to break her fetters ! cy, hitherto exclusively enjoyed by Europea ' 2. j .hia-ikmd are about to be' aroused ' to I ans, nd put them on the same footing with UsiaimnataBdMi -e Volte of 'oppress! dn,'tliat Uas-reached the wil- peal to the highest Provincial Courts. 'Incbn aerness"orXnierlca,"and the' ""nnatnral alli-'f-vt-nience and delay of justice had been caused H'lZsi. "- r' Vliastic'al d 'civil power, fare ' j,y the original practice, even when India was .''-about to bo dissolvedat such a perio'd,.when t-.irfiiKK-fw ir.f - Miseiynceja -.'about, toi rawakeroni he.r V.-iJdie reason' of, sach: charges as I, pmt .exhibited -H here to; day - in ;tiiia -indictment J."j '.Another tarful p'ansej -"while? th5 -speaker 1 alternately nfastjifs sharp piercing ' eyes '' upon' the ' courf ,-t aitd jthe prisonei-. and resumed , "If I.aninof iideceivedT' according to the ,eonicnts of the pa '',TrCTJT Trbflr'.bold.in oiiy hand,' these men are ac- '-'r'rt pteacbirg. theljjospeV of the oon oi i : - ( i J i pause, vM&K, iiga'n L wstved th paper around ,his n;,1v..vilT.b:la dAf:per hnpresston was made on ihs XiStirt Pesuhang" hi'speccij : :"May MjvorsbsJLIrearW periods ip- it . T- ..fn-a'-avhea yeurnintioa acd do, f - v j ! y, vy-u-iT lig ue. laser the himvan char- ikdl rfir, Jilut man stnits un-.irr wc igu vi me ')nnQtVr' i.n:'di'cooes his servile' atnect ' :'lave) 'h licks the'h:.ud that fPes him' i he r" ..ImV-i r; 'i'iifi t--' '.he mandates of . Iheespot ; and in tUUiZ -- v. t . -. . . , . . ' nnnnat?e. . ""-iBiwrsw perpetna ' '- ' Buttnty it please your worships. -suVX' ay I ' l : 1 2uiiMssM'ityTf Froailfcbtt period when our L-' '..? ' : ., i .,' ' -3 ; - :Wjre Itrokn and . iieavvp -.UecrcpcL tt nian shonld'ho" free free to i'wuj-sliip' Gol x.ccor- t6h6 Di6lV. Vttcro'MV not for" tins f Vrin. jugite'thii Oe :vrid, if )ve, -tJsir tuisprhig, ) riiiist-3trirb- oppressed and persecuted. But. the gospel "of f oirr-Siviwur to Adam's fallen race-". And ta tones of thunder lie "exclaimed tWhai't hoi-c ' they .viol icd ?"'., YiUUi tie thiid timo, in a low, digni(i,'d manner, he lift ed hi3 eves to heaven, and -waved tlio indict- cu.tliij; sttorney was pallid ivA njlhistly, smd j ho lpt,carcdanconscious:'th:it.i'.ia whole frame' with alarm; while thejud-c, in a f .tretfetilonroio, pal an end to tho scene, now j l.ceoWing excis5ively painful, hy the authora '' lis . dechiritloa, -.cherii Jlschargo these uii. te "fetch of T. B. Iacaul?.y. ' -Thomas Iisl-NGT05 dACAir.Avis the son cf i -Zacbarv MacanNy. well known as the friend of -j Wllberfeice, 'ac,' iovgh himself an African racrchaat, em'i' of the uiost ardent abolifioni.-t ! of slavery.. In 181S. T. 13. ITacaulay became la member 'of Trinity College, Cambn lnce, where he took his Bachelor's degree in 122. lie "distinguished, himself as A 'student, -havjng obtained a scholarship, twice gained theChan- s medal for English verse, . and also . . Kaiue,i the. second Craven Scholarship, tho jjCTiieSt iionor in classics which the Umver f sity confers. Owing o his dislike of'Lahe iics, he-' did not compete for honors at gra Tjniver- iuation,. but nevertheless he obtained a Fcl low,shipnt the October competition open to graduates of Trinity, which he appears to have revlined before his snbssqnent departure for ia'd-ra.'. He 'd jvoted much of his time to the fUpion5 Debating Sociely, where he was reck oned an do'pient speaker. ' Mr. Ma'caulav stndied at Lincoln's Inn, f.nd Lce!s la lbotj lU which tims he was secreta- VV t'o. the 'India JJoarrt Jns seat was, However, soon relin'Mshcd, i'or in the same year ho was appointod Member of the Supreme Coun cil in Calcutta,--under the .East India Compa-j ny's hew charter. ; ' ' t Arriviag-in Calcutta,'. Ill :;;rddtibbv. 183 Ij Mr. Macaulay assumed an important f lust in addition to his seat at the Council. At the j closed against Europeans in general, 'but such practice was obviously : incompatible with the rihts and tronortv of the natives under the ij - new system of opening the country to gener presort. This mgaSnre- of equal justice, how over, exposed Mr. Macaulay, to whom it was universally attributed, to outrageous personal attacks in letters, pamphlets, and . at public raeetings ,n ThOiVarious reforms and changes instituted bv Lord W.' ' Bentinck : and Lord Auckland, 'lyera advocated in general by Mr. Macaulay. die returned to.Englaud m 1 . , ; - - Mr Macaulay was elected member for Ed ihbnr"-hf on the liberal interest in 1S30 ; and bring 'appointed Secretary at u ur,u re- . w ..'til--.'.. . ITT. j . 1. . lieWd the following year, bu -o"',.-- 1 geneial election in 1811. ho review of 'bis political career fsircre iHtended ; although in i relation to literature, it should be mentioned i:that he ormosed Mr, Sergeant lalloura s copy Ri-ht Bill, and was the priucipal agent lu do- f ' i ' .' en'oalrpf ' he' usually disnlavs extehiVve information,' close reason inz. and elooaence ; and has recently bid fair to ri.vaif the great'esf naioes "tsmoh? onr EngTi; ! '. i i .-' 1 i '! - : . ' ; Jorators." His conversaflon Irs p'riyata is ei'jal 1y hiTlant and ihsir'uctive!.' ' ' ' tj '?.Iacaulay,1 niay. fairly he .regarded as the ifirst'crfticaT. and historical 'vsnvist of the time. It is not meant tp he inferred that there are no other writers who disnlav'as much nnderstan ding and research as great, perhaps greater capacity of appreciating excellence, as nuch acuter.ess and hnnior, and a more subtle pow er of exerting';,' or of mciisuring, the 'erorts' oi the iiilcUe'ct niil pha imagination, besides pos sessliignn eijnal mastery of language in their own peculiar style ; hut there is no other wri ter, .who combine's so large an amount of all those (juah'tics, with the addition of ama:;t;ry of stylej at once highly classical and most ex tensively popular. "His style is classical, he-, cause it is so correct ; and it is popular he cansri it must he Inte'ligil.le v.ithout efiort1 to every educated umlerstandiug. PcreiTssldii or -Fulminating Powder. If the word - "diabolical" can be. properly applied to any substance that ' chemical arti fice has produced, it eprtainly belongs to fhis, which from the terrific power and force of its explosion, deserves that' tit;'. . Tho extraor dinary power of fulminating mercury, or, as it i3 commonly termed, percussion powder, pro hibits its use as a projectile, because we -have not mr.ie any cannon capable of withstanding its force, in any quantity at .'once. Sufficient to jiroject a ball or a bomb-shell, would com pletely shatter a cannon on the instant of ex plosion. It is a strange mixture that produ ces fulminating powder, such r. combination &s none but a true chemist would think of ma king. Fulminate is prepared with nitric acid, (that is, spirit of wine,) and mercury. The.e substances are the 'rcr;sentativos of the at mopp'.vric, the-1 atonic, and "min:-rjt portions f the world; and although they are here uni ted, they bave little affinity to each other, and nro waiting to Sy asunder at the slightest call. The fall of a feather upon pure fulminating powder will cause it to explode. We would tlescribe the method of Its manufacture did we not fear to do so, lest some - of our ingenious readers s'jculd attempt to . produce it. Xone but persons of the-greatest experience should ever touch it. ' Not long ago the principal op erator of Apothecaries' Hall, a man extreme ly cautious, and of profound experience, was shivered to peices while drying an ounce of it. As a means of. igniting gunpowder, it has proved in warfare of great service, as it addx to the force of the powder. Eight and a half parts of powder fired with percussion caps are quite equal in force to ten parts of gunpowder, fired in the old way by means of the "gun and flint.' ' One ounca of fulminate is more 'tha:v onongh for charging .a .thousand caps. In charging the caps, tho fulminate is mixed with a quarter of its weight of water and half ts weight of gunpowder; (he whole is then ground together with a wooden muller upon a marble slab. Percussion powder; like gun powder, owes its terrific force to the concen tration into a solid form of the elements of air n the immediate juxtaposition of combusti ble materials, which, when fired,, assume in stantaneously the air, shape and bulk, which is, by the licit developed at the instant of ex plosion, fearfully increased in size. All sub stances that co;iain a great deal of oxygen, will explode, more or Ichs when ; in contact with -combustibles; although not included in the category of warlike stories. Thus, ..at Gateshead, during the late fire there, dreadful explosions took .place, although no gunpow der was present. ; Some ; of the; warehouses contaided vat qxiantitiea of nitrate, of .soda, a substance of timilar composition to nitrate of potash (saltpetre.); The napha and the- sul phur being mixed with , this formed a com pound precisely to although not identical with, gunpowder. ; Chemists are however, acquaint ed with many substances far more explosive than fulminate, such as chloride of nitrogeon, a pound of which would annihilate the strong est fort in the world. By the time the chem ists have taught us -to control this frightful power, let" n:s hope that the peace of nations u til invfl rendered it useless. Scientific Jimr- lean. -. . . Pretty--Very- "In nassina: up the street the other day,' says the FalLKiver Monitor, "we met two lit tie girls of seven or eight summers, who seem cd to be enjoying vacation finely, and all to themselves. . Passing through the streets un mindful of what was going on, they seemed as happy as two larks, and looked as beautiful as they seemed happy. Stopping at "one of pur .it,.4i- divrw nno nf tlioni made, a ourchaso of buuuj --. . some caudy-i-a large nice . looking stick and breaking it gave her companion half, saying as she lid it . with the utmost simplicity, tm aginable ''Here, Mary,, you may have tue largest half, as you are tne smallest." iear, artless child, what a lesson of unselfishness was contained in thy simple words! God bless you, and enable you through life to manifest the same gentle and sweet spirit, "Hero Mary, you may have the largest half, as you are the smallest" What teachers children sometimes are!" :' . . - ' - ' ' ' ' A"Smaxl Potato." A sweet potato has i. in -Rnft'tnnrf. conntv. Va., this lWUL IttlJbU 1 . ' season, which is said to measure five feet eight inches in length, and nine inches in diameter i All Who -remember how' the 'heti "fever raged when' it first broke or.t hereabout, will apj)feciate a story related in the Flag of Our Union, by the''01d fJn, concerning one Sap ' Green, a chicken fancier. Sap was fairlj- wild m the subject of chickens, and snapped up cv-' ;c'ry- thing cin the shape of a big fowl which came' along,: let' it ' cost what it might. One day a 'sailor-man' came along with an egg he lad brought from the 'E-atingics.';. lid called . it the 'Gigantic Pagoda Hen' said they grew as 'big as all out. of J doors: and wanted forty; dollar3 for it.. - -The forty dollars were instant ly paid, and the 'Old UV goes on to say : O, how he watched the egg hatching ma chine while that extraordinary egg was under going the process. He begrudged the time exacted by eating and sleeping, but his vigils were rewarded by the appearance in due time of a stout young chick, with the long legs that are- proof of eastern blood. The bird grew apa'cs indeed, almost as rapidly as Jack's bean stalk, or the prophet's gourd. But the saiior was "mistaken in one thing it ate vero ciously. . Moreover, as it increased in size and strength, the Pagoda exhibited extradinary pugnaclty. ' It kicked a dozen of comrades to death in one night ! It even bit the hands of the feeder. Soon it was . necessary to confine it in a separate' apartment. ..Its head soon touched the ceiling. What a pity it had no m.ita ! Sp wrote to a correspondent in Calcutta to ship hirn two pair of the Great Pagoda birds, witiiout regard to cost, ed the growth of his , Meanwhile he watch single spe-cinfbu. He kept its existence a profound secret. It was under lock and key, in a separate apartment, lighted by a very large window in the roof. Sp"s man of all work wheeled daily two bu-.-.l.oU of corn and a barrel of water to the door of the apartment, and Green fed it when no one was lookiug. Even this supply was scan ty, but out of justice to his family Sap was was compelled to put the monster bird on al lowance. 'Poor thing!", he would say when 1?jf.iw" the" ilreatufe devouring broken glass and even bolting stray nails and gravel stones "it cuts me to the soul to see it reeuced to such cxtremiy. But Its eating me out of hopse and : home. Decidedly that sailor must have been deceived about being moderate feeders.' When the bird had attained the enormous altitude of six feet, the proud proprietor sent for the celebrated Dr. Ludwig Ilydrarchoa, of Cambridge, to inspect him and furnish him with a scientific description, wherewith he might sstcnith his brethren of the Poultry associa tion. Iho Doctor came and was carcuulv ad mitted by Green to the presence of the Great Pagoda Hen. The bird was not accustomed to the sight of strangers, and began to mani fest uneasiness and displeasure on seeing tho man of science. It lifted first one foot and then then the other, as if it were treading on hot plates. 'Hi J hi!', said Green, soothingly, 'Pagy, Pagy, come now ; be quiet, will you ?' 'Let mo out, I say !' 'I never knew it to act so before,' said Green, fumbling at the lock. whirl ! a rush ! a whizzing of the wings of the bird was down on the doctor treading on his heels, and picking at the nape of his neck. 'Pagy ! Pagy !' supplicated tho owner. But the' angry bird would not listen to reason, and Sap received a thump on the head for his pains. And now both rushed for the opening door, stumbling and falling prostate in their eagerness to escape. The monster bird dan ced a moment, ou their prostrate bodies, and thendarted forth.' It rushed through a cou ple"of grape houses carrying destruction In its progress. .It coursed, through the flower beds, ruining the bright parterres. ' " Mrs. Green, who was walking in the garden with her child, saw the horrible apparation, and stood paralyzed with terror. In an instant she was thrown down and trampled under foot, shrieking and clasping her infant in her arms Green beheld this last atrocity, and his conju gal affection overcame his love of birds. He caught up his fowling-piece and fired at the ungrateful monster i the shot ripped up some of its tail feathers, but filled to inflict a mor al wound nothing short of a field-piece could produce an impression on that living mass, Away sped the fowl1 to the railroad track, down which It run with headlong speed But its career was brief an express train, coming up in the opposite direction, struck it full in front, and rushed on, scattering feath ers, wings, and drumsticks In the air. 'Tell me, doctor,' gasped Green, 'what do you think of my great Pagoda V 'Great Pa goda!' said the professor in "indignant dis dain. .'That was a Stiuthio Greek, Strolhous in other words, an ostrich ! If yon hadn't be longed to the genus 7sz'uas, you'd have known that, without asking me. 'Good morning Mr; Green.' 'Where is the monster ?' cried Mrs. Green. 'I believe the poor child is killed O, Sapl I didn't expect this of yon ! 'Be quiet, my dear, said Green, it was only an experiment.' "'An experiment! Mr. Green !' retorted the lady sharply, 'your wife and child nearly kil ledj and you call it an experiment ! Nurturing ostridges to devour your offspring ! 1 wonder you don't take to : raising elephants !' 'Xo danger of that, Maria,' replied her husband meekly. - ' . I have seen the elephant. .And to-morrow I shall send my entire ttock to . tho; auction room Shanghies, Chittagongs, Brahma Poo Iras, Cochins, Warhens and Warhoos. They'ro idee birds," great layers, small caters, but they Gold and Cornan Eloquent Parallel. J I The Hon. Edward Everett was a leading speaker at, the recent Agricultural Fair in Boston, and in tho course, of his remarks, he made the following contrast between the gold of California and the gold of .Agriculture:' "The grains of California gold are dead in organic masses, How they got into the grave; between what mountain millstones, whirled by elemental storm-mills on tho bosom of oceanic ' , torrents, the auriferous ledges were ground to powder ; in what Titanic hands the coveted grains were sown broadcast in the placers, hu man science can' but faintly conjecture. We only know that those grains have within them no principle of growth 5r reproduction, and that when the crop was to be put in, Chaos must have, broken up the soil.. How different -the grains of our Atlantic gold, sown by the prudent hand of man, in the kindly alteration of seed-time and harvest, each curiously, mys teriously organized hard, horny, seeming lifa lcss on the outside, but wrapping up in the In terior a seminal gerni, a livlngprinciple- Drop a grain of California gold into the ground, and there it will lie unchanged to tho end of time, the clods on which it falls not more more cold and lifeless. Drop a grain of corn, of our blessed corn, in the ground, aal lo! a mystery.' In a tew days it softens, it swells, it shoots up wards, it is a living thing. It is yellow itself, but it sends "up a delicate spire, which comes peeping, emerald green, through the soil; it ex pands to a vigorous stalk, revels in the air and sunshine, it arrays itself more glorious Solomon In its broad, fluttering, leafy robes, whose sound, as the west wind whispers thro' them, falls as pleasantly on- tho husbandman's ear as the. rustic of his sweetheart's garment, still towers aloft, spins its verdant skeins of vegetable floss," displays ' its dancing tassals surcharged with fertilizing dust, and at list ri pens into two Cr three magnificent batons like this (an ear of Indian corn)," each of which is studded with hundreds of grains of gold, eve ry one possessing the same wonderful proper ties as tho parent grain, every one instinct with the same marvellous reproductive pow ers. There are seven hundred and twenty grains on the ear which I hold in my hand. And now I say, sir, of this tratscsni uit gold of ours', the yield this year will be at least ten or fifteen times that of California. But it will be urged, perhaps, sir, in behalf of the California gold, by some miserly old fo gy, who thinks there is no music in the world equal to the chink of his gui ncas,that tho' one crop only of gold can be gathered from the spot, yet once gathered it Issts to the end of time ; while (he will maintain) our vegetable gold is produced only lo be consumed, and when consumed is gone forever. JJut tms .would be a most egregious error both ways. It is true the California gold will last forever unchanged, if its owner chooses; bat while it so lasts it is of no use; not so much as its val ue in pig iron, which makes the best of ballast, whereas gold, while it i3 gold, is good for lit tle or nothing. You can neither eat it, nor drink it, nor smoke it. You can neither wear it, nor burn it as a fuel, nor build a house with it ; it is really useless till you exchange it for consumable, perishable goods ; and the more plentiful it is, the less its exchangeable value. Far different the ease with onr Atlantic gold; it docs not perish when consumed, but by a nobler alchymy than that ot Paracelsus, is transmitted in consumption to higher life- "Perish in consumption," did the old miser say 1 Thou fool, that which thou sowest is not quickened except it die. The burning pea of inspiration, ranging heaven and caith tor a si militude to convey to our. poor minds some not inadequate idea of the mighty doctrine of the Resurrection, can And no symbol so cx pressive as grain. , It may chance of wheat or some other grain. To-day a sensele3 plant, to-morrow it is human bone and muscle,vein and artery, siuew and nerve ; . beating pulse, heaving Inngs, toiling, and sometimes over toiling brain. Last June it sucked from the cold breast of the earth the watery nourish ment of its distending sap vessels, and now it clothes the manly form with warm cordial flesh, quivers and thrills with the five-fold mystery of sense, purveys and ministers to the higher mystery of thought. Heaped up in yonr . granaries this week, the next it will strike in the stalwait arm, and glow in the blushing cheek, and flash in the beaming eye till we learn at last to realize that the slen der stalk which we have seen bending in the corn-field, under the yellow burden of the har vest, is indued "the stair of life," which since the world began, has supported the struggling and toiling myriads of humanity on the migh ty pilgrimage of being. .... .... r Yes, sir, to drop tho allegory, and to speak without a figure, it is this noble agriculture, for the promotion of which this company is as sembled from so many parts of the Union, feeds the human race, and all the humbler or ders of animated natnra dependant on man. With the exception of what is yielded by the fisheries and the chase, (a limited th" an insignificent source a ' is tho BtewT'., ... uiv aoreau- - - . .j. aanj man .beings, by accurate computatien, woKe this very morning in the United States, all re quiring their "daily bread," whether they had the grace to pray for it or not, and under Pror vider.ee,' all looking'to 'the "agriculture of the- country for that daily bread, and the food of the domestic animals depending oij thm- demand perhaps as great as their own. ; Mr. President, it is the daily duty of yonrfir mers to satisfy the gigantic appetite; "to fill the mouths of these h,urgry millions, I migbi say, for if by. any catastrophe tho supplywas cut otT for a few days, the life of the country,. hm.nti .inklHlf n . . r --w 1 Vul ATT IHf " T UU11JUU AUMUi Ultt , C .ji Tho Old 7oman's Speech. 4 ., "Would to God that the Jklaine Law could have passed fifty years ago!'.. We turned 4 to find an old lady on the seat immediately back of us, venturing her wish in the midst of an earnest discussion between a Maine law Yan kee and a red nosed member of the bottle fra-. tornify. "Yes," continued tho old lady, 'flf-- ty years ago. A husband would not then hare gone down to a drunkard's grave, my daugh ters married drunkards and lived lives of sor row, or my boys have died in jail and the mad house. Look at me," aud with something of fire kindling up' in her old eyes, she laid her bony hands upon the arm of the liquor dealer, and see a wreck of your accursed business. I wis young, had enough of this world's goods, and my heart was fall of happiness and hope. My God! air, how they have poured desolation into thU old heart. I am often bitter, and do you wonder I Such as.ya - robbed nic of all my children, and at eighty years of age, I am alone do you hear aUne t And let me tell you tnis nana never wronged tue least of God's creatures. But you wronged roe. You, sir, talk about the Jamicil, and say it's sacred. God forgive me; but I remember the d.iy when my home was entered by the consta bles and skinned of all.' I remember wheu the Bibli my mother gave me was taken away for driuk.I remember the "time when my first born was laid in my arms from a drun ken husband's- hands aud his little life blood ran warm into my bosom from its woundst ... . i ...... . w Why, sir," and the old woman half raised, io her seat, "in God's holy name did you' come iato my house to rob and to kill 7 Was thai constitutional? I have one child living in the assylum a maniac. It's all the work of your hands. There is Hood ihert 1 Blood iir ! Better, sir, have a mill stone around your neck than to sell rum..,. Tho curse of the wid ow is upon you. It will follow you- The ser pents you send ont wiil return and destroy you and yours.' Give me that boitli.": Invol untary, as it almost seemed, the liquor dealer handed the old lady the bottle he beld ia?Lia hand. She dashed it -out of the car window and slowly resumed her seat., The people who had crowded around while the train was stopping, todiear the conversation, slowly and thoughtfully dispersed to their scats, and the now cowering liquor dealer looked the very embodiment of humiliation and shame. With a deep sigh we turned away, our own faith made stronger by tho Maine Law, sermon we had listened to. . Ah! how many. In cur land would have escaped the bitterness of life had rum been banished in their day. Cayuga Chief. The Sweabee Eebcked. On a certain Occa sion General Washington invited a number Of his fellow officers to dine with him. While at the table, one of them uttered an eath.' The General dropped his knife and fork in a mo ment, and in his deep undertone and charac teristic dignity and .deliberation, said "I thought that we all supposed ourselves gentle men." He then resumed his knife i and ork and went on as before. The remark struck like au electric shock, and, as was , intended, did execution, as his remarks, in such cases, were apt to do. No person swore at the table after that. And after dinner the officer refer red to remarked to his companion -'that if . the General had struck him over the head with his sword, be could have borne it but the buiue thrust which he gave him was too much. It was too mnch for a gentleman. And it,-la hoped that it. will be too much for any one who pretends to be a gentleman. . . . . d" Oliver Millikin is as much of a wag as a musician, and to make his waggery lb e: more successful, he affects the dress and manner ' of aci 'rgymxn. ".With his wlnta carvat and so ber black coat he makes not a bad imitation. Ho 'was at one of the 'hotels In Springfield a few weeks ago, and his decidedly clerical ap pearance attracting the attention or the ' com pany as they set dowIT to dinner, he was called upon to ask a blessing. He did uot refuie, and got on very well for a sentence or two; but when he came toward " the conclusion, ; he found, as it was bis first attempt; that he :Waa utterly unable to remember the usual' manner of closing such an exercise.' After' hesitating a moment, he recollected the usual subscrip tion of his letters, and ho brought his petition to a close by . adding with great solemnity, "Yours truly, Oliver Millikin!" ' '- - An edif- ' "'' " - 4Wehopeoutu-: briber, i " " ? 7" fot tne past two wee- for the pa nt. i - , . .o-rvr a Di ou r' f ie-