TEKMS OV THIS "AJIKKICAX.' HENRY B. MASfKR, J Puiihkh Ann JOUHPH BI8M.Y. J I'soraicTORs. orrtcs is MiHRkT sTmi.kt, nlar THE - AM EK(GAV' iTjiubMicd every gstur rtsy s TWO DOLLARS per nnm K be paid half yearly (n advance. No paper tlisccntin Med till ALt arrearages are paiJ. No subscriptions received for less period than win months. All communications or letters on btisinrss relating to the office, to insure attention, must be TOST PAID. AN. piticra or Am xnTisixo. t mpisre I insertion, 0 (0 1 dr 1 d . . . 0 TS I do S d.l . I 00 Kvry iubiwaurnt insetlii n, . 0 8R Yearly AdfrtisTienrs. fwiih the rtiNnV nt ltprattori) tin fnlurnn $25 J half Col urn n, i8, three irt, $14 1 two squnrrs, f9; one square, $f, Withrtnt the privilege of altt ration hlxral difCWtnl will I msdrs Advertisements left wlthntit dirrrtinns sa ti tire lemjth of time Miff t hfl rrublMwWI, will he continued until ordered oat, ar.ii charged accord trifcty fj'Utofn lim mVa I square. American Tailors, The New York Sun contains the rolbwlrijj broad hints to our "Knighta of the Shrara." A grod tailor is certainly a rare article, and to scarce have they always been in this country, that the name of a certain "Prof-swoT of tho H K U Y A Ml I " AND SHAMOK1N JOURNAL. Abfolute acquiescence in the derisions of the majority, the vital principle of Republics, from which there 1' no appeal but to fotce, the Vital p-in. iplo and immediate parent of drip .tisin. Jarraaso. Kiintur-, ivortliutiittrrlttml t o. lu. SUtmttiij, ltlniiWr Is, Is It. !. II--o. Lord Byron's Trlbnte to Washington. fn Byron's relcbra'cd Ode to Napoleon, as pub. Khed, two or three stnnns of the original, it is well known, were omitted by Clifford, or his bookieller, Marry; the manuscript having Iwn entrusted to them jointly. One of these Manias was the fol. lowing noble rornenition of Washington, and it is easy to perceive that foar of offending English Roy alty prompted its suppression: Where mny the wearied eve repose When gtizing on the grent; Where neither gailiy g'ory glows, Nor dt'sp cable state ! Yrs one the first the Inst the best '1 he Cincinatus of the West, Whom envy dared not hite. Hequeath'd the name of Washington To make man blush there was but one t Byron's pariality tow.itJs our countrymen i well "known, but prihnps never mure strongly ex pressed than in the annelid extract from a letter to Moore, "I would rather have a nod from an American, thin a snutT-box from nn Emperor." ' P 6 K T K V . Will any body doubt that there is only one step from the sublime to the ludicrous after reading the following : From the ( 17.) Spirit of the Age. There's beauty on thy changing chetk, And in thy h.tr.el eye, There's beau y on thy laughing lip, Like summer in the sky S There's beauty in thy tairy step, There's bounty strange and rare. When til' sunlight gleams tike gold upon Your tangled, earrul hair ! Thou lov'st me yet, though time and tide Have somewhat chanced the boy ; And I am not exactly what I was in childhood's joy ; Thy heart has known no other tie, But true affection's law ; Surh love as that is excellent, Like oysters, sletced or raw .' And I have loved thee well and true ; While time along has flown, I've turned, in joy, or gri f, to thee, My beautiful, my own ! Blent with your love, I still am young; Though age my brow assails, There are no m irks except a fw, Made by your Jiiigrr nails ! A correspondent of a village paper, in thii State, apjieuds the following to a marriage notice : And now, dear youth, since you've essiy'd, The matrimonial ro.id t.i (re id, May truth und virtue 1 arrayed, To guide and gaurd each heart ami head. K. Whereupon the bald of the opposing paper thus ref p mds : And now, denr"K," sinre you've rseay'd, The road," 1'nrnas-ius-ward, to navel, None would have known, ha l you not hray'd How great an .l.i was "xeiatching eravel." Timothy Kouhi.m, This beats little Peddlington all hollow. 1'rnlse. The li.vc of praise, howe'er roneealed by art, Keigns moie or less and plows in every heart, The proud to gain it, toils on toils endure, The modest shun it but to muke it sure. TI1K VAXKKK'S VISIT. I recently took up a number of the Ixndon United Service Journal, in which I found the article below, The Yankee's Visit to Sir Jo- fckIi Banks.' It bear internal evidence of truth, and I therefore send it to you for inser tion. At what period lc v's 1 place 1 cannot tell, but it must have been as much as five and twenty years ago. Mr. Shackford, the Yankee, is, I believe, now living in the west ern country, and used to possess all the marks of eccentricity ascribed to him in the inter view. His son now commands a thip from this port. Previous to the visit to Sir Joseph, he built or purchased a small vessel, in which he embarked alone for, and navigated to Great Britain, and the manner in w hich he describes the voyage is the same winch 1 heard from his townsman. When he arrived in port he was supposed to be a pirate ; that he had murdered the crew of the vessel ; and was arrested. lie produced his shipping papers, whioh con tained one name only, and other documents to prove his character, ai.d it was not until some persons in England were found who knew him in this country ; that he was set at liberty. He made his return voyage to America in safety, and is supposed to be the only person who ever crossed the ocean without a companion. TIIK YANKEE'S VISIT TO SIR JOSEPH BANKS. Sir JWph Banks, hearing that there was a mnn in Ijondon who had crossed the Atlantic in a boat alone, was desirous of seeing him, and got some American to go to the hotel, and con trive a way to bring him to his house. This was easily effected. Shackford in company w ith t'ppt Fellatibber, paid Sir Joseph a visit. They were asked into a room devoted to Natu ral History. Shackford looked around and was pleased to ax e so many things that were preserved to wen At mi nianv ciniwuino. - !ut lie saw a crocoJile in a tub of water, and took notice of him, as ho appeared, now above, tww below the surface. Sir Joseph soon made his appearance. 'Is this Mr. Shackford, who crossed llic Atlantic in an open boat J' inquired Sir Joseph, lcssir,' wast ho reply, 'I have dona that, sir.' 'What were your sctisat ions in lltrj middle of the ocean, alone t' was the next inquiry. U'hy, sir, t suppose yon mean to ask mo how 1 felt on my voyage. I was sometimes dry, and I ilrnnk ; I was sometimes hungry, and I ate; I was sleepy, and I doted a little ; that was easy, for I had a nice rubby, nnd I fixed a tiiler there, and slept with my helm in my hand and there was no great difficulty in that.' MYhat mathematical instruments had you V was the next inquiry. 'Why, a compass and an a.xc, a pair of pistols, and a sword that Gen. Pulaski gave me.' 'How was you sure you was riirht in your course!' 'I was not sure, but guessed I was right, as I steered cast when I got pretty well up to the north, and that I knew would take mc to England, or some where thereabouts, and that was right enough for one whose time was his own, and who owned the crall he was in, and plenty of provisions on board. You have, sir,' said Shackford, 'a fine omnium gnthcruni here; what are you going to do with the crocodile you have here !' 'I am about preparing a paper to read before the so ciety, upon his habits and nature- which 1 shall read to-morrow. Do you know anything a botit the animal, Mr. Shackford !' I lived three years in the West Indies, where they are as thick as grasshoppers.' 'Have you ever heard their moans to entice and allure travel lers to coino to them, (as writers on natural hit-tory have mentioned,) that they may secure tnein as their prey !' inquired the philosopher. 'An, tney never um any such tiling ; tor a good reason, they have no tongue to make a clear sound with, and they can't make a noise, except one of bringing their jaws together. They move their upper jaw, and somehow bring it down with great force, and a singular sound proceeds from this ; but how can a thing moan without a tongue ! Look into his mouth, and you Nvill find he has no more tongue than the great elephant I saw the other day in this Ce ty.' 'You don't mean,' said Sir Joseph, that an elephant has no tongue!' Yes I do,' replied Shackford, 'mean to say that an elephant has no tongue ; and what does he want one for, as he has such a thing at the end of his nose, by which he can feel a thing as nicely as a lady's finger could, and then use it as a sledge ham merto knock one's brains out with. 'How do you know that to be a fact,' inquired Sir Joseph, 'that it has no tongue !' ' ll'hy, in the best way in the world ; I looked into his mouth until I was satisfied of the lact; and then it stood to reason in my mind, that he did not want one, with so fine a tool as he has, for the purpose of hands, tongue and sword.' 'Well,' said Sir Joseph, not a little mortified, 'the crocodiles are very ferocious und dangerous.' 'W hy, said Slmrklord, 'they have a "rood larjjc mouth of theirown, and an ugly looking set of teeth but they very seldom attack a man ; a very slight splash in the water jrenerally frightened them off. Once in a while they reach young negro in the water ; the old ones don't mind them no more than musquitocs.' Sir Joseph's iwiiirr would not do. All his argument of that wonderful moaning and fierceness, at last had opposers. To end the conversation, hie ofl to the Tower, or Kxetet Exchange, to 6ce the elephant, was evidently Sir Joseph's wish ; but Hiacklord seemed in no hurry logo. Sir Jo- seph, in trying to hide his impatience, made several hasty inquiries. 'Did you ever sec a collection like this be fore!' 'No,' said Shackfnrd, 'the nearest like it is my barber shop, the other side of the wa ter.' 'Mr. Shackford, what honks do you carry w ith you on your voyage and travels !' 'The ltilile, sir, Wutt's Psalms and llyums, and Kohinsori Crusoe. Not ninny cithers. 1 look ed around and read the Ixxik of nature, and generally picked up something worth remem bering,' was the reply. 'I should think,' said Sir Joseph, 'that you would find many things that would puzzle you in your researches.' 'I do,' said Shackford, and so docs every man 1 ever saw. Now Sir Joseph, let rue make plain what I mean. Can you tell mc what animal that is of the Nile which is born with a tail, without legs, and dies, if he comes to his growth, with four leg and without a tail!' Sir Joseph pondered. Why,' said Shackford, 'it is a frog. When a polywog, he has a tail ; but when a frog he has four legs without a tail. I placed his birth on the Nile, which deceived von, learned Sir, but you know t'.uit tlio frog is found in every mudpuddlu in creation, as well as in the Nile, Now,' said Shackford. 'I have a great love for learned men, but they don't know every thing.' Sir Joseph was glad to get rid of the maniac, who had crossed the Atlantic alone in a boat something more than Cook had done, when j the navigator and philosopher had quarrelled far utariST. from the Runner nnd Pioneer. IHtiteiiicnt. What do vov tmisk or 1f.li;ioI'3 Ex riTEMENf T TJic bible presents ninny cases of excitement, nnd the history of the t nurch, ns well as the experience of every Christian will bIiovv that religion is an exciting subject. If there is no contest, no struggle, no difficulty, no excitement, why did the Saviour say, Strive to enter in at the strait gate ; for I say unto you many will seek to enter in, nntl shall not be able I Why arc we required to forsake all, father nnd mo thcr, brother and .sister, houses and land, and to take up the cross and fol low Christ. Can all this be done with out excitement I "I speak as to wise men judge ye what I say." To let go all, to give up our carnal reasonings, to come out from the world and to em brace the Saviour requires sacrifices too grent, nnd a change too wonderful to be effected w ithout intense fueling. Can the heart be pierced with deep an guish at its own ingratitude nnd depra vity f Can the sinner see and feel that he is working out bis own destruction with greediness, and yet feel no excite mcnt for bis undone condition ? Will he not, with the deep emotions of the publican smite upon his bosom, and in the anguish of his heart, cry out, "God he merciful tome a sinner! hen like the jailor they see themselves lost, will they not cry out, "What shall I do to be saved !" or can all these things exist without anv excitement of mind ? Those who discard nil feeling and ex citement on the subject, will find it a difficulty to reason themselves into reli gion and heaven; sooner or later they will reap the fruit of their doings. While you look on and pass through revivals with indifference, we would exhort with the apostle to "beware, therefore, lest that come upon you, which is spoken of in the prophets, behold, ye despiscrs, and wonder and perish : for I work a work in your days, a work which ye shall in no wise believe, though a man declare it unto you." Religion, in its very nature, is exci ting; its declaration of our immortality, its denunciations against the wicked, its exhibition of mercy through the peaec speakino blood of Christ, its invitations, its consolations, its joys and its pros pects beyond the grave arc all spirit stirring and exciting truths, well calcu lated to strike the sinner's heart with consternation; to fill the Christian's heart with great joy, and to woo an angels love and admiration. We arc ' a it ii onuoscil to nil morum excitement, to exhibitions of mere animal feeling; we regard these as the eflervessence of an anient and excitable temperament, that is injurious to religion; but we arc the friends ol that excitement which is pro d uced by the influence of the true and undefilcd religion mon the heart, which humbles the heart, exalts the Saviour, and brings the soul into a statu of union and communion with the Redeemer. We t an then truly say, "Did not our hearts burn within us, while he talked with us by the way, and while he open ed to us the Scriptures." We fear that the opposition of many to all religious excitement h;:s its origin in the deep depravity of the human heart. They do not oppose the excite ment of the chase, of the social circle, the cotillion party, the theatre and other amusements which are kept alive solely by excitement; they like to hear or read a spirit-stirring adventure, and throw aside that matter ol lact book cal led th5 Riblo, for the plays of Shaks pearc, the works of Scott, or some o ther novelist ; they love not only the excitement produced by the realities of life and intellect; but even that which is imaginary and solely the work of fic tion ; they admit that life would be di-.'l and dreary without something lo ex cite and invigorate the mental faculties. Yet in religion, the spirit-stirring truths of the Gospel must not excite their kin dred emotions in the sou. Look at the practical influence of your reason ; cool reflection and oppo sition to excitement, has it made us or any of our friends Christians? I think not, and if no other influence is exerted upon our hearts, we shall reason and reflect until we ore lost forever lost I On the other hand, look at the influence of the ardent and devoted Christian ; their hearts arc excited with love to God and their fellow men, and as the fruit of their zeal, their prayers, and their labors of love, God has brought their children and fiiends to know the tord f?o mnrh, then, for tbc influ ence of religious excitement Is it os sible, however, for us i.ocaje the ex citement T I think not, unless we die, ni the fool dictb our carnal reason and cool reflection will forsake us, when the world shall fade from our view, and e ternity begin to dawn upon us unless reason has forsaken her throne, we shall feel deeply excited when we take the fearful leap into nn awful 'eternity. "In that dread moment, how the frantic soul Haves round the walls of her clay tenement ; Runs to each avenue, ad shrieks for help But shrieks in vain, The fbo, hike a staunch murderer, steady to his pnrpoe, I'orsues hint close through every lane of life, Nor misses once the track ; but presses on, At nitre he Kinks in everliistiiiix i Hin." If we escape the excitement of the dying hour, wo cannot escape the ex citement, the creat excitement of the judgment day ; nn acrtiunt of that day may be loutid in the Olh chapter of Re velation: "And they said to the moun tains and rocks, fall on us, and hide us Irom the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb." Now the thought. Both of lost luippiness and lasting pain 1 orinents lain. Kouuu no throws hi baletul eves. That witness huge affliction nnd dismay. Regions of sorrow, doleful shades, where peace And rest can never dwell, hope never comes, hut tortures withontenu. llcTiiitiiiil i:trarl. I have seen the infant sinking down, like a stricken (lower to the grave; the strong man fiercely breathing out his soul upon the field of battle ; the miser able convict standing upon the scallolu with a deep curse quivering on his lips ; I have viewed death in all its forms of darkness and vengeance, with a tearless eye ; but 1 never could look on woman, lading away Irom the earth m beautilul and uncomplaining melancholy, with out feeling the very fountain of life tur ned to lears and dust. Death is al ways terrible ; but when a form of an gel beauty is passing olf to the silent land of the sleepers, the heart feels that something lovely is ceasing from exis tence, and breathes with a sense of ut ter desolation over the lonely thoughts that come up, like spectres from the grave to haunt our midnight musings. , It cannot be that earth is man's only abiding place. It cannot be that our life is a bubble cast up by the ocean of eternity, to float a moment upon the wave, and then sink into darkness and nothingness. Rise why is it (hat the apirations which leap like angels from the temple of our hearts are forever wandering abroad unsatisfied. Why is it that the rainbow and cloud come o ver us with a beauty that is not of earth, and then pass oil', and leave us to muse upon their faded loveliness I Why is it that the stars w hich hold their festi val around the midnight throne, are set so far above the reach of our limited faculties forever mocking us by their unapproachable glory ? And finally, why is it that briuht forms of human beauty are presented to our view, and then taken from us, leaving the thou- sand streams of our a flection to flow back in cold and alpine torrents upon our hearts ! We are born for a higher destiny than that of earth. Theft is a realm where the rainbow never fades; where the stars will be spread, nut be fore us like the islands th:t clumber in the ocean, and where i',ic beautilul be ings that here pass before us like visions, stay in our presc.ice, forever. Height creature of my dreams ! in that realm I shall see theo ngain. liven now thy lost imag': is sometimes with me. In the mysterious silence of midnight, whcri ths streams are glowing in the lij'i't of the many stars, that image comes floating upon the dreams that linger around my pillow, ami stands be fore mc in its pale, dim loveliness, till its own quiet spirit sinks like a spell from heaven upon my thoughts, and tho grief of years is turned to dream of blessedness and peace. Geo. D. Pren tice. Thk Yaxkek Pauuv. The excava ting machine now in operation in Iliook lyn, is called tho Yankee Paddy. Air. Cochran, the inventor of the Repeating Cannon, is the agent for this machine, which is Kaid to perform wonders. It is stated that this excavator, with the attendance of four men, will excavate and place in carts 1000 cubic yards of earth er day. The machine lias been in operation about two years, and cm. ployed on the Western Railroad, w here it has given great satUfaction. The ll.ilttt otrMMlllHtftoii. The following account of the Duke is from Rlackwood's Magazine. Theoni.t Mas kxow.n to London. Thousands and tens of thousands of in dividuals are known in London, but it is curious enouirh that there is only one mnn now in existence know n to W j don; to the city, the west end, Mary le bone, Soulhwnrk every point in short, of the metropolitan compass. Much of this notoriety the illustrious individual in question owes to U'u glory, and much also to his nose; nor would he, perhaps, with all bis victories, have ever been enabled to achieve this signal conquest over the indifference of uni versal London, if his features were not in some sort the heralds of his fame. When this distinguished person appears out of doors, there is a general commo tion well dressed people, forgetting their business or pleasure, run after him like little boys trolling at the heels of a showman: "Hats off," is the word wherever he makes his way; carria ges stop without orders, that the ladies, coachman, and John may have a stare : "There he gocc," you II hear the people say, but nobody asks who goes there, for to every body be is as well known as the monument. When he goes down to tho House, crowds assemble to wait his coming, and crowds await patient ly to see him coming away. How he looks is the general topic of discourse, and he is the only person in London or the world, who, for twenty-five years, has occupied the same large portion ol the public eye without fatiguing the sight or escaping the memory without diminution or decay of a respect as uni versal as extraordinary. IS'ccd we say that there must be more than popularity in this? When we said that the illus trious person in question is as well known as the monument, we forgot for the moment that he is a monument him self a living, moving trophy of the might and majesty of England of her bravery and glory. We do not name him ; to name him were todetract from that universal fame that accompanies his footsteps ; let it be enough that eve ry one knows, and no one can mistake him. lie is the single solitary excep tion to the rule we have laid down, that no living man is large enough to fill the universal eye of so vast a body as Iondon. Xnioli oii' Marrallrc of Human I.lfr. Never was there a conqueror who fired more cannon, fought more battles, or over threw more thrones, than Napoleon. But we cannot appreciate the degree and quantity of his glory without weighing the means povFc.wd and the result which he accomplished. F. nough for our present purpose will be pruned if we set Ix.'fure us the mere resources of flesh and blood, which he called into ploy from tho rupture of Amein? in ISO! down, to his eventful exit. At that time he hail, as he declared to Iiord Wcntworth, an arr.y on foot of -iMXrO. Hero follows a detail of the diflercnt levies made from l")i till lSlt. Total of men, J,!MVi,rH.l This detail, which is derived from XapoleonV Journal, the MonitcUr, under the several dmes, is deficient in the excess which wa raised beyond the levies but even if we ''.eJnct the casualties as well as the 800,00o men disbanded in 1-1.", we shall be tinder the mark in affirming that he slaughter! S.-WOO,. 000 human boinirs and those all r renclimen. Hut we have to add thousands and tens of thou sands German. Swis, Pole?, Italians, Nepoli tahs, and lllyrians, whom he forced under his eagles, and at a milente computation, those cannot hive fiilleii short of.WVN0 It is obvi ously jnst to nnstime that tho number who fell on the side of his adversaries was equal to that against which they fought Here thenareour data for asserting that .the hitler years of hia glory were purchased at no less expense than O.tWiO.U'O bun on lives. This horrible inroad (ti the fairest xrtion of the population of Eu rope, resulted in the abandonment of every conquered terntoiy, the bringing of foreign enemies twice within 24 months under the wall of Paris and the erazure of his name from the records of dominion Paris paper. Hot Water is supplied to the Loco motives instead of cold, on the Doston and Providence railway. It is kept aU ways boiling nnd ready for use by using the refuse Anthraeite coal under a largo boiler at the watering stations. This saves the necessity of carrying much of the fuel ordinarily used : and the speed of the engine is not retarded, be cause the water when thrown into the boilers, is in the act of conversion into steam. I have, seen this simple and highly useful improvement nowhere I else. Maine Cultivator. Art" in Plulidelphia was a few years since an Miliar to well dresred men in Borton, Charles, ton, or St. Louis, a? it was in Chesnit street Ooiso arR'ad roa pHFss. The Baltimoro American Stateathata French tailor, lately on a visit to Philadelphia, carried horrm with him to Paris six hundred orders nn American A count. This i scarcely to be wondered at. In nine cases out often, the tailors of this coun try spoil garments instead of making them, and charge a great deal more for putting upon a man's back a coat that would as well becomO his grandfather, as in Paris he can have an en tiie suit made fur. In no branch of business is reform more loudly called for than in tailor ing, and we hope its professors will prick up their enterprise as well as their ears when such announcements as the above are made to them. . Pliny's Wifp, Whatagood wife Pliny must have had. She was one of the right stamp, though she lived long before any of our modern improvements in female education. She cared not fur parlies, pic-nirs, and icecreams; her thoughts ran on other and better themes. She knew where her happiness lay in whom and converted liwr willing dependence into a source of happiness. Let our Indies catch tba lessnn which her low, so truly conjugal and becoming, teacheth. Of his wife, Pliny says, 'She loves science because she loves me. She carries w ith her writings, she reads them, she commits them to memory. Stic sings my versos, she compofcs her own melodies to them and needs no other teacher than love." A good wife that of Pliny! North American. "ItEKToRE thk Dead thou Sea!"' Thcro arc five hundred vossels wrecked annually on the coast of England, and property sunk worth $'20,(100,000. Who, alter this will say with Middleton, "The trfssures of the deep re not so precious As are the concealed comforts of a man Lock' J up in a woman's love." Da. Johnson and Mildcb. When Dr. Johnson had finished the copy of his Dictionary,' which had weaiicd Miller, the bookseller, ex. ccedingly, the latter sent the following card to the doctor : "Andrew Miller sends Lis compliments to Mr. Samuel Johnson with the money for the last sheet of the copy of the tlivtionary, and thanks God lie ha iloue with him." The doctor ser.t the following brief reply t "Mr. Sarr.nol Johnson sends his ccmplimeots to Andrew Miller; ho has received his note, and is happy to find that Andrew Miller has the yraee to thank Gd for any tuino." StRtPTlRIS AlTltolUTY. A Quaker was married by a Vicar, to a lady of the Church of Eng'and, The Vicar demanded a fee of five shillings. The Quaker was astonished, but said if the Vicar would prove that five shillings was the proper fee, he would pay it. The Vi car directly turned to the putsig", 'A v.r'.uotH woman is a crow n (.V.) to her husband'.' 'Thou art right.' replied the Quaker. ''olomon was a wise man.' So saying, he paid the five shillings, nnd presented the Vicar with a pair of new gloves, besides. Not Vrhy Particii.ar. A writer in the 'Demosthenian Shield,'' conducted by negroes, in Philadelphia, says, "If a white girl is virtu, ous, pretty intelligent, and doesn't get drunk he would just as soon marry her as a black girl. Pittsburg Chron. Goino In. "You treat tne worse than you do a haunch of venison," said a young clerk to his employer the other day. "How so!" demanded the merchant with surprise. "The venison is taken into your family I Nicvm am," replied the young man. "Sup with the young ladies this evening, if you like," said the merchant, "they will rir You VP worse than I do venison." "Are you not going to educate your children!" it was asked of an old German farmer in Penn sylvania. No, my olJcst sxn loarnoj to writ and lie forged tny name." The reasoning of the firmer was just, if learn ing be the whole of education. A Convenient Day. When Charles Tot stopped payment, hiscreditors had a meeting, as is usual, and desired him to name a day when he would be able to settle w ith them. Theyoftered him his own election, and lie c We the day of judgment 'That,' ssid the creditors, 'will be too busy day w ilia us.' Well, then,' -aid Tox, Met us naino the f after J that'll suit all prties No man fares better than a tailor, for ho haJ noi toot every dsy.