M S: J$. liOW. CLEARFIELD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 18-50. VOL. 2.-M). 27. ii fi :trip ligiitly over trouble. Trip lightly 'over trouble ' ' " . - Trip lightly over wrong;- : . '-' ' "We only make grief double . ,, ' '- By dwelling on it long, ' ' ' ' t a tt ny ciasp woe s nana so iigoiiy : , AVhy sigh o'er blossoms dead? ; "Why cling to forms unsightly ? Why not seek joy instead?.' i: c Trip lightly over sorrow; Though this day may be dark, ' ;The sun may shine to-morrow, ' And gaily sing, the lark; Fair hope3 have not departed. ! ' Though roses may have fled; ' Then never be down hearted, But look for joy instead. : Trip lightly over sadness, . '! Stand not to rail at doom; " "We've pearls to string of gladness, ? On this side of the tomb; "Whilst stars are nightly shining, , And Heaven is overhead, Encourage not repining, 'list look for joy instead. - From the Scalpel. SKETCHES OF VILLAGE PRACTICE ,, " . ''It is not all of life to live, : Nor all of death to die." 1 Sabbath in the country ! The serene, peace Jul Sabbath ; the time of rest, God-given to nyn, for purification and prayer J In the city the day never seems so truly good; so infinite ly holy as in the country. The sweet sound of distant Tillage bells; the sight of cattle releas ed from labor, browsing in contented herds in the quiet of green fields; the very chirp of the countless insects, and the innocent song of the myriads of birds, all breathe of a Sabbath morality, which in the great cities is lost en tirely. The noise of active lifo ceases; naught meets the car but the lingering echoes of those calm church-bells, as they float on the unadul terated, healthful air, to the distant farm houses. 'God made the country, man the town." It is not unnatural to suppose that a greater blessing rests with the Divine work, than with that of mere, however glorious, art. J - I had bcea a resident of M some three or four weeks, but had been detained from at tending church each Sabbath by violent storms; and, to confess the truth, I did not regret this as much as I should, from the fact that I dread ed my first meeting, as their sole and newlv- established aristocratic inhabitants of that " pretentious village. I shrank nervously from the unavoid able introductions, and the criticism which I knew must as inevitably follow. However, one morning I was bereft of my excuse ot bad weather, and awakened betimes to find the day most obstinately clear. There was' not a cloud in the heavens that I could reasonably persuade myself was the signal of coming rain ; therefore to church we went, my wile and I she all a-glow, with expectation, and looking, as I thought, unusually charming in her pink ribbons, and I (I acknowledge it can didly) somewhat oppressed with an indefina ble sense of doubt and dismay. .It was a small, fantastically designed build ing, of ah antique style of architecture, that would have puzzled the wisest to determine ; yet it was striking, artistic, and displayed de cided and refreshing originality. Ivy and oth er vines crept in thick masses over the rough-ly-hewr stone walls, and darkened, with their close embrace, the low, arched windows. In ternally everything was plain and simple, as all houses of true worship are, yet there was not wanting a certain air of quiet elegance. The pulpit was strongly indicative of classical simplicity in its own form, and had few adorn ments; opposite it,at the other extremity of the church, was a small, veiled gallery, containin an organ and accommodations for a choir of Bingers. 7e were early. I seated myself quietly, and having nothing to occupy my thoughts, half unconsciously I watched the. entrance, one by one, of the villagers. Among them I 6aw a face, which, as I beheld it then, has haunted me for years. It was that of a man in the prinio of his life, handsome, well bred, and intelligent, hut so inexpressibly sad, so indicative of evident stagnation and despair ing dissatisfaction, that I turned away in hor ror that anything made by God should dare to carry a countenance like that. The services began with slow, sonorous notes ot prelude from the mellow-toned organ Throughout the aisles of the little, antique church, up to tho very rafters, floated that rare sobbing music, penetrating all hearts, sensitive either to good or evil, with that del icate sorrow which Longfellow sa53 is not akin to pain."; J Tt faded as the burden changed from sadness .to jubilant hope, and ended in sudden staccato chords of triumphant joy. All eyes were then jtcmed towards the pulpit, and all heads rever ently bowed, as the minister, an aged man, arose and uttered a brief and impressive pray- er. It was one of the most solemn thinjrs to which I ever listened. Its beauty lay in its naturalness, undefiled, as it was, by the arts of showy rhetoric. It seemed to pass from the venerable clergyman's lips up to heaven, as the sincerest language in which man could ad dress and adore his Creator. By contrast, the cold brilliancy of the sermon that followed, lost all effect ; it could not touch me like that simple, honest supplication for Divine mercy. All the after services of the day were nothing to me ; I had poured out my whole soul with that prayer, and had no further powei or de sire" to worship. I was. satisfied. : I discerned no lack of eloquence or minis ferial learning in that aged divine's exhorta tion, and although, as we left the church, heard many - speak of it with expressions of lively pleasure, I felt assured that he himself was discontented with the discourse. It was like thin, fitful sunlight, veiling a lowering December sky; or, like snow, blinding tho eyes with glitter, yet in its actual self, very cold and unsubstantial. I perceived that there was that beneath all this sparkle of words which few present understood. Was it private grief? "Was it some hidden agony warring against unnatural restraint? I recognized the evidences of insincerity, but whether tem porary or habitual, I could not discover. When he ceased, I felt merely the silence; there was none of that strange sensation at the cessation of impassioned, nobly earnest deliv ery which I had experienced often before. 'Certainly," thought I, "that man is either very heartless or very miserable." Tha congregation was pouring itself quietly out, when in the usual organ voluntary, came an abrupt but slight pause, followed by deep stillness. Immediately a human voice, a full and rare man's voice, commenced chanti that celebrated solo from Felix Mendelsskon Bartholdy's "Messiah," "I know that my re dcemer liveth." Perfectly in time and tune, although with no further accompaniment than tho few opening chords, the voice issued from the choir, bearing to world-weary listeners consolation and peace. It was not tho noble words, nor yet the nobler music, it was the ex pression gathered by that fine voice from the two, uniting in one glorious whole, till the very atmosphere seemed to thrill with its wealth of melody. On the last notes of the solo, as it faded magnificently into silence,the organ's accompaniment ' recommenced, prov ing by the purest unity ol the two sounds the successful intonation of the unknown vocalist. Many curious eyes were directed towards the gallery, but the curtains weie tightly drawn, and the mystery still remained mysterious.- Some casual movement, however, momentari ly displaced a portion of the floating screen, and revealed" to me a glimpse of the dark, handsome face I had before noticed; and it was fvSeSIerdrte" h.or f iffe'lrsl'lft wonder, if that soulful singing and that mo rose, unhappy countenance belonged to one and the same individual. The close of this Sabbath day was destined to reveal to me a strange fragment of the life- history of this very man. The night foil, dewy and starry, but with an oppressiveness of atmosphere that was not, in that part of the country, an uncommon con sequence on long continued rains. The ground was almost destitute of moisture, and the grass of that harsh, vivid green, so de structive to vision. The air was heavy and breathless, the very stars seemed to blink with the universal drowsiness. "We were just seat ed at our plainly furnished tea-table, when there camo a startling peal from the little pri mitive knocker on the hall door. "A visitor," said my wife, settling her cap. "A patient," said I, rushing from the room, just in time to upset a black boy who ran vio lently against me. Alternately rubbing his bruised sides, and grinning from ear to ear at the adventure, he informed me that "massa was took sick in a great hurry," and then scampered off, having first pointed out a large and conspicuous house, quite near to my own, as the residence ol the sick man. I had often before noticed it for tha elaborate arrange ment of its extensive gardens. In a few moments I was in the chamber of the first pa'ient to whom 1 had been called du ring my residence in M . The room was large and brilliantly lighted; bouquets of deli cate flowers were scattered over it evidenllj-, illness had been totally unlooked for by the master of the dwelling. As I entered, the face ol my patient was hidden from me by the pillows in which it was buried, lho wile, a young, slight thing, half sat, half reclined be side him, her head bowed on her bosom, her pale hands tightly locked one in the other. She raised her eyes as I entered, and on see ing me, a sudden gleam of something which, if it were not hope, had all its beauty, passed over her features. "Doctor!" she cried wildly, advancing to meet me, "Doctor, save him save him!" Before I had time to answer, a voice from the other side of the bed uttered in a low, so norous, but self-possessed tone : "It is too late !" . Glancing quickly that way, I saw the gray haired minister. On his hands were great red spots of blood ; the pillows, the sheets wero marked with it; and on the white dress of the young wife glittered also fresh crimson stains "He is dying," said the old man, reverently kneeling at the bedside ; "human aid is of lit tie consequence now.- Again I say, it is too late. Abner, my boy, do you hear me you are dying !" , I approached the bed, and as I did so, tha sick man raised his head, and I saw before me the beautiful, despairiug facejof tho morning The dark eyes were fiercer and brighter, and deeply sunken in their sockets, while the hea vy masses of hair and beard gave the ghastly complexion a still more unearthly hue. He had ruptured a . bloodvessel.- - At a glance I saw that the case was hopeless, and that the little I could do, were almost as well undone Life was fast ebbing away mortality verging into immortality. I caused his face to be bathed, and the clotted blood washed from his nostrils and beard that was all. Meanwhile the old man sat there on the bed's edge, clasping one of thoso colorless hands in his own. He kissed the almost life less forehead, he bent over that dying man with the anxiety which none but a father could feel at such a moment. "Abner, Abner," he whispered, "do you can you hear me ? ' If you can, for God's sake give me some signal ?" The eyes, gradually assuming a dull,dreamy look, closed wearily, and opened again very slowly. A low wail burst from the wife. The old clergyman turned upon her quickly, and said, with bitter imperiousness : "Be still, I must speak avith him!" Then bending again over the bed : "Abner, have you thought of Death ! Shall we pray have you made peace with God ?" There appeared to be a sort of convulsive effort on the sick man's part to attain a sitting posture. For a moment ho seemed possessed of perlect consciousness and perfect strength "God!" he echoed hoarsly; "father, how dare you name Him ! God! You, who made me what I am ; you, who goaded me to sim, and allfor money, money ! Was it so precious to 3-011 that I must sell myself, body and soul, marry lor it Don't speait to me ot God ! There is none no God no God !" lie sank back on his pillows exhausted. Blood burst anew from his mouth, .lie tried to say more, but the words wero drowned In the warm tide that bubbled over his chest. And she, tho wife, stood there in marble calm ness and heard that which was to blast the rest of her young life. Her hands wero clasped jain, her eyes fixed unflinchingly on the oor. She neither moved nor spoke. Look ing at her, you would have felt your very heart melt with compassion, so wild, so for lornly miserable was tho expression ot that sweet, girlish face. " Abner, Abner, my son," was all the father spoke With his blanched quivering lips. The momentary "flush faded froni thesick fnS'TolTohThTs mouth, and I knew that in a few moments all would be over.' There was no struggle, but there was that gathering shad dow on his forehead which is so terribly un- lerstandable. Seeing thio, the intense de spair on his wife's face grew a trifle morestat- sque, and her hand3 locked themselves in voluntarily tighter, till blood gushed from the smooth palm that came in contact with the finger-nails. Not a word was spoken, not a sound broke the deep stillness of the chamber, but the indistinct and oppressive breathing of the dying man. I thought it grew fainter and slower, and I bent down to place ray finger on tho wrist, and to listen more intently ; but the old man waved me fiercely, jealously away. "Touch him not," he said, "for ho is deadl" And I thought, indeed, that it was so ; for even as he spoke, the faint respiration sudden ly ceased, and the pallor of an everlasting un consciousness crept slowly over the still features- But in another moment, I saw that life was not yet extinct. The eyes again partly unclosed in the same powerless, dreamy way as before, and an indcscribable.radiance for an instant lit up tho pale, handsome face hand some even then, but with an unearthly beauty. "God!" the colorless lips muttered, "God there is a God!" and a smile, whose titter serenity I have never seen equalled, flickered around the mouth. Then the shadow deepen ed, fell, and ho expired . It seemed as though tho soul had been half freed, and, returning, gave evidence of that eternity which it but partially had entered ! - A woman's voice, sobbing, at last broke the dreary silence. The old man rose, and ap proaching his dead son's wife, said feebly : v "Esther, be comforted; God is over all V ' She drew her hand lrom his clasp wiih a ges ture of unequivocal abhorrence. , v "Comfort !" she echoed, with a great defiant flash of her black eyes ; "comfort! you preach to me of comfort! Hypocrite '."she hissed the word from between her closed breath, w ith startling, . indignant energy. "It is all clear to me now. "Who was it plotted and schemed to bring us together ? "Who tempted him into marriage whero there was no love on his side none, none, O my God but for money? Answer me'that!" Her dark hair had become disentangled of fastening, and now fell, in wild, confused grace, over her bare shoulders, ner white, upraised arms glittered in the bright light of the lamps, tho scarlet ornaments floating from the sleeves, falling over them in vivid con trast. Never shall I forget the impression created by. that indignant appeal, and the tra gic, excited beauty of this injured woman. All this was many years ago, yet I never recall that Sabbath night without a shudder. Fre quent as are terrible or touching scenes in the life ol a physician, I remember nono that own power so to unman me as the memory of this. And the sequel was no less sad. Within a year another grave was made for the poor, de ceived wife. On tho death of her husband, she sank into a stupor from which nothing could arouse her, and which terminated at last in rapid consumption. It is strange that I should recollect the day she died. It is as new in my mind as yesterday. White, freshly fallen snow lay on the ground. It had come early that year, and many leaves were still hanging enmsoraed on their boushs. Tho trees were loaded with light fleecy fragments of snow, among which these brilliantly-dyed leaves gleamed out in the sunshine like blood on a woman's fair face. LIFE IN A NUNNERY. FEOST MISS BCNKLSV'S NEW BOOK. It will be readily imagined that the unnatu ral state of things prevailing under the conven tual system is calculated rather to promote than prevent tho rising of those petty jealous ies and dislikes which must be incidental to such an association. "Without the strong tics of kindred or friendship to bind them one to another, it is not likely that tho poor prisoners of a convent will spend in perfect harmony the tedious hours and j-ears of their compulsory seclusion. A single incident may let the read- der into the realities of that relationship which Rome pretends to constitute among the un happy inmates of a nunnery, and which she deiignates by the deceptive name of "sister hood." Having been sent one evening to work in the boarder's refectory instead of that of the sisterhood, while standing near ono of the ta bles at which the boarders wero seated, I took up a "basket and carried it to the scullery for some bread- Scarcely had I entered the room and handed the basket to the sister who had charge ot the department, when I felt myself seized by the arm, and, looking round, saw the angry countenance of the sister who presided at the boarders' tabic. She asked me, in a passionato tone, by whose authority I had ta ken the basket for bread, and whether I had been appointed waiter by the Superior. I an swered no, and that I would not have taken the basket had she not ordered me, the night be fore, to do so when she had said that bread was wantod upon the table. The sister told me that I had no authority of the kind, and that she would report me to the Superior, and have mo brought before "tho council." I replied that I was not conscious tJne. I dreaded the "sacred council," and went at once to the' novitiate, and told the mistress of novices what had just occurred. She answered me that I had "many a cross to bear." That evening, while on the way to my cell, I noticed in one of the cloisters a sister lean ing against the wall. She beckoned me to her, and then made a motion for me to follow her. I soon found it was the sister who had 11-treated mc in the refectory. I became a- larmcd, as she was leading me to a balcony be yond tho cells. I w hispered that I must go to my call that I would be missed. By this time we had reached the balcony. She insist ed that I should wait, closing, at the same time, the door after us. Just then, hearing a noise near by, as if some one was crossing the porch to the infirmary, we walked on a few steps to escape observation. The sister then fell on her knees, asking my forgiveness for having abused me, and begging mo not to speak of what had occurred should I have an interview with Superior priest. I would here state that, in those interviews, a sister is ques tioned as to any difficulties she may have had with others in the community. I promised secresy, and went to my cell. Wearied and exhausted with my duties in the academy, bes:des my evening work, an ir resistible oppression of soul weighing down my powers of mind and body, I tried in vain to sleep. 'I thought of my ill health, caused by the laborious exercises I had to perform, and the sufferings and sorrows I had under gone since my reception in the community. Hooked out upon tho future: it appeared to stretch before mc, even into eternity, a drear path ou which no beam of sunshine would fall to cheer, and in which no voice of kindred love would breathe its music of consolation to my heart. I sighed for my home. In deso lation of spirit, I mourned for its remembered love. But the fearful consciousness came to me that I was severed eternally from all that made life dear. "At length I rose, dressed, and groped my way along the cloister lead ing to the choir, and from thence down the narrow flight of stairs into the chapel. It was dark, save for the few rays that streamed from the solitary light which burned dimly in the sanctuary. Kneeling before the alter, I fas tened my eyes, upon the crucifix ahove it. Long and earnestly I gazed, but the feelings that filled my soul were too deep to find re pose in the contemplation of any material ob ject. I bowed my bead upon the railing, and wept. Ere long, the image of nisi who had suffered aroso to my view.; the pure and holy Savior of the' world, whose mild, benignant eyes, in their pitying tenderness, penetrated to tho depths of my wretched heart, and shed a blessed hope upon its gloom. I prayed prayed earnestly, and from the heart ; my de sires flowed from its inmost depths. "With streaming eyes and unutterable groans, 1 ask ed Him, the Savior of the world, to deliver me from this prison, this den of .cruelty and hypocrisy. I believe it to be the only time I prayed from my heart while in the institution With this outburst of emotion, this pouring forth of my grief to God in spirit and in truth, I found relief, and became composed and calm I know not how long I had been kneclin when I was startled by deep drawn sighs and sobs, proceeding from the direction of the 'seven sorrows' altar, which is at one side of the chapel door, under tho choir. Fearing ob servation, I arose, and hastening down one side of tho chapel, reached the stairs leading to the choir. As I entered the choir, I saw a dark figure glide past me, and go into a small passage behind the organ. Probably this per son was in search of tho poor heart-broken creature whom I had left weeping so bitterly at the foot of the 'seven sorrows' altar For tunately 1 escaped notice, and, softly closing the door behind me, reached my cell just be fore the bell rang for morning prayers in the chapel. A Discovert is Perc. The Hon. Thomas jw Dans, in a leuer to mo national intelligen cer, communicates some interesting informa tion in relation to recent discoveries in the ex cavation of Peruvian tummuli. It was re ceived by Mr. Ewbank from W.Evans, Esq., engineer of the Africa and Tackna railroad, in Peru. Mr. Evans states that in making exca vations for the railroad at Africa, hundreds of graves are demolished, in which are numerous Indian relics. Tho excavations are seventy feet deep, and as the soil is loose sand, and as the work proceeds, everything from the top comes sliding down dead Indians, pots, ket tles, arrow heads, &c. Among other interest ing mortuary relics, an Indian was stirred out of his resting place, rolled up in a shroud of gold. Before Mr. Evans had knowledge of the incident, the workmen had cut up this magni ficent winding sheet, and divided it among themselves. With some difficulty, Mr. Evans obtained a fragment, and dispatched it to Mr. Ewbank. Mr. Evans notices as a very remark able fact, that in hundreds of Indian .skulls which he had examined, not one has contained a decayed tooth. Mr. Ewbanks thinks the weight of the entire shroud must have been eight or nine pounds, and had it been pre served would have been the finest specimen of sheet gold that we have heard of since the time of the .Spanish, coaauest- In . r.ni cnirs of the departed, and the fulifily ol at tempting to secure the great dead from con tact with their native earth, Mr. Ewbanks says it is the foim or features and not the body or substance of the dead that should be preserv ed, and adds : . "The mummies of Egypt are quarried for fuel, and whether those of the Pharaohs, their wive3, their priests or their slaves, are split open and chopped up with the same indiffer ence as so many pine logs. The guns and balsams used in embalming them have made them a good substitute for bituminous coal; and thus the very means employed to preserve thm have become the activo agents for their dissipation. So it is when materials of coflins have a high marked value, they are then seiz ed as concealed treasure, and their contents cast out as rubbish. Like heroes in the East ern hemisphere, tho descendants of Nauco Capoe were sometimes, if not always, entomb ed in such, and with considerable treasures besides in vessels of gold and silver: hence we learn how the Spanish conquerors sought, often found, and as often plundered rich In can sepulchres." AToccnisa Scene. A correspondent of the Elmira Republican says that in a recent trip over the New York and Erie Railroad, an in cident occurred that touched every beholder's heart with pity. A comparatively young lady, dressed in deep mourning her husband hav ing recently died was travelling southward, having in her care and keeping a young daugh ter of some six years. The little girl was mild-eyed as an autumnal sky, and as delicate aa the hyacinth her emaciated fingers trans parent as the pearls of Ceylon. Touchingly beautiful was the affection of her heart for the mother, whose solicitude for the daughter's comfort was unceasingly manifested. Lock ing ever and anon from the car window, she turned to her mother, saying : "Mother, I am wearywhen shall we get home ?" After a time she fell into a slumber, then awakening suddenly a radiant smile overspreading her features she exclaimed, pointing upward: "Mother there is papa hoino at last V and expired. It was yet many weary miles to the mother's home, but the angels pitying the lit tle sufferer, gathered her to the paradiso of In nocence. - Harry Erskine, of facetious memory, was retained for a female named Tickle, against whom an action had been brought. On the trial he commenced his address to the court "Tickle, my client,the defendent,my lord." The audience amused with the oddity of the speech, were driven into hysterics by the Judge replying : 'Tickle, her yourself, Harry, you are as well able to do it as I.' Ox the Outside. A man with an enormous ly largo sucker, called on a dentist to have a tooth diawn. After tho dentist had prepar ed his instrument and was about to commence operations, the man began to strain and strech his mouth till it got to a frightful width. Say sir," said the dentist,"don't trouble yourself to strech yow mouth any wider, I intend 10 stand on the outside of it to draw your tooth." WINTER IN ST. PETERSBURG. To defend one's self from tho weather tho most constant and minute precautions are re quired. In October tho Russians, and all who have been in the country, assume fur clothes, and keep them in continual wear until the month of April, after the ice has broken up on the Neva. Stoves -are lit everywhere, and each family lays in a stock of birchwood, tha braise of which is moro abundant than any other wood. There is a servant especially- appointed to attend to the stoves, and his dnty is to keep up, as much as possible, an equal heat throughout the honae. The best stove keepers, whose fame procuros them a high salary, are generally from Moscow.' Twenty degrees of cold do not appear astonishing to an inhabitant of St. Petersburg, though he then casts a curious look at tho thermometer. At 3 or 21 degrees, constant rounds arc made during the night to prevent the police and sentinels from falling asleep on their posts. Should the cold bring on drowsiness, and the sufferer not bo able to prevent him self from yielding to its influence, he must perish, as he can only wake from his sleep in tho other world. At 25 degrees, the theatres are closed, and all those who are obliged to go out on foot, hurry along with their utmost speed, most anxiously looking at the noses of all those whom they meet in the street. If a sudden paleness of which no intimation is given by any physieal feeling should appear on that part of the face the passer-by rushes forward, and commences rubbing the afflicted feature of the alarmed passenger, with snow, to produce animation. The same thing mar occur to tho operator himself before the hour is over. At 30 degrees of cold, the poor pop ulace alone go out doors; entire families shut themselves up; and not a single sledge of any appearnnce or fashion is seen In the streets. Yet even then the military reviews aro net in terrupted, and tho highest dignitaries, up to tho Empcrcr himself, repair to them without a cloak. It must be evident that, with cold of such intensity, the sufferings of the poor must be dreadful; yet it may be affirmed with out exaggeration, that the lower classes, . in. large town of the caapire public establish ments, heated by large stoves, where every person that pleases may take refuge. Tram n Russia. Singular Physiological Fact. The trans ference of vitality which appears to take place when young persons are habitually placed in contact with the aged, is cot a nursery fiction. It is well attested by very competent authori- ies. "A not uncommon cause,"obscrvcs Dr. Copcland, "of depressed vital power, is the young sleeping with the aged. This fact, however explained, has been long remarked, and it is well known to every unprejudiced ob server. I have, on several occasions, met with the counterpart of the following case : I was, a few years ago, consulted about a 6ickly and thin boy, of about four or five years of age. He appeared to have no specific ailment, but there was a slow and remarkable decline of flesh and strength, and of the energy of. the functions; what his mother very aptly termed a gradual blight. After inquiry into the his tory of tho case, it came out that he had been a very robust and plethoric child, up to hit third year, when his grandmother, a very aged person, took him to sleep with her; that he soon afterwards lost his good looks, and that hecontinued to decline progressively ever since notwithstanding medical treatment. I direc ted him to sleep apart from the aged parent, and prescribed gentle tonics, change of air, &c. The recovery was rapid. . But it is not in children only that debility is induced by this mode of abstracting vital power. Young fe males married to very old men, suffer la a sim ilar manner, although seldom to so great an extent; and instances have come to my know ledge where they haTe suspected the cause of this debilitated state. These facts are often well known to the aged themselves, who con sider the indulgence favorable to longevity, and thereby illustrate the selfishness which, ia some persons, . increases with their years. Every medical practitioner is well aware cf the fact, and parents are generally advised not to allow their infants to sleep with aged persona. John Randolph was one of the most sarcas tic men that ever lived. One time a young man attempted to make his acquaintance." He obtained an introduction and among the first remarks faid: "I passed by your house lately Mr. Randolph." "I hope you always will!" waathcreply. Another once twitted him as to his want of education. "The gentleman reminds me," sail Randolph in reply, "ofthe lands about the head waters of tho Montgomery, which are poor by naturo and cultivation ha entire ly ruined them!" The Size of Lokdoh. London is now the greatest city in the world, and far surpasses all the great cities of antiquity. . According to Gibbon tho population of ancient Rome, in the height of its magnificence, was 1,200,000; Nineveh is estimated to have had 600)00; and Dr. Medhurst supposes Pekin to - have 2,000, 000. The population of London, according to recent statistics, amounts to 2,600,000 414,-. 722 having been added to it during the last te. years. The census shows that it contains 307 722 Inhabited, and 19, 389 uninhabited fcwse. 0