VOLUME 1. The Alabama. Having permitted two days to pass without interrupting the natural exulta tion which followed the news of the de struction of the Alabama, we now turn critically to some features of the contest demanding a more careful consideration than has yet been given them. It is stated in The Londou Daily .Ae«'s that the Deerhound is regarded as having been the tender or consort of the Alabama. The view is correct. \\ hatever relation Mr. John Lancaster, owner of this "neu tral" yacht, may have previously sustained to the pirate, it is at least certain that his appearance upon the scene, and his acts when the engagement was over, made him the accomplice as well as the rescuer of Semmcs. Wo do not know, and it is immaterial, whether the report of his agreement to be present in order to inter fere if the fight went against tha Alabama, be true or not; the fact being that he ac ted just as, in case of such a bargain, he would have been expected to act. The law of the case is beyond question. The Kearsarge had engaged and defeated the Alabama, and the latter, with every thing and every person on board, was the lawful prize of thevieior, unless the Keat earge had herself been so much injured as to be unable to take possession. That she was not unable, is evident from the quick arrival of her boats. Mr. Lancas ter alleges that he was requested by Capt. Wins low to aid him in saving the drown ing crew, as if this afforded a justification for his proceedings. If Captain Winslow made such a request, lie showed a human ity not generally exhibited to pirates; but, in any event, he made it with the expec tation that the Deerliaund would put on the decks of the Kearsarge whomever she picked up. But Mr. John Lancaster took another view of his duties as a humanita rian neutral; and, having first rescued Semmes, and then lied to the Kearsarge boat concerning him, made off to (.'owes. The interference, the violation of neu trality, the insult to the American flag, arc hardly less flagrant than if the Deer hound had ranged up unseen to the Kear sarge while the fight was going on, and poured in her broadside, supposing her to have had one. Our Government has a clear right to ask an explanation of this net of a British subject, and to demand the surrender of Semmes from English soil, to which lie was thus illegally trans ferred, though his rendition now may be quite impossible. Nor arc we yet informed as to the mo tives which influenced ('apt. Winslow in permitting the escape of the Decrhound with liis prisoners. When that vessel had taken the pirate Sciumcson board, she was still under the guns of the Kearsargc. Mr. John I .ancaster says he expected to be brought to hy a shot—proving his own guilty consciousness 'hat he was doing an illegal act. Capt. Winslow must have known that the Decrhound had somebody on board; nor is it easy to conceive how an officer who had been in command ol the Kearsargc and excluded irom all cour tesies in British ports, eotild have trusted to the honor, or good faith, or of justice, of an Englishman. It *ould have been quite easy for Caj>t. Winslow to have detained and examined the Deer hound. In the two dispatches published yesterday, the subject is left untouched. It appears further that those of the crew who were picked up by the boats of the Kearsargc have been paroled at Cherbourg by ('apt. \\ inslow. The effect of such au act is to recognize the Alabama as a Confederate ship of war, and her captain as an officer in the Confederrtc service. Should our Government not be prepared to make these admissions, this mavbe disj •rowed and recalled by the Navy Depart ment. It has surprised nobody that the Eng lish journals should have sought to belit tle the exploit of the Kearsarge by extoll ing her superiority to the Alabama. It is natural that British pride should •be touched by the del'eat of a British vessel. 'I he inferiority of the gunuers trained on the British practice ship Excellent was rather too plainly demonstrated. But the facts exist, and although it is easy to mis represent them, they cannot be altered. There has been no naval fight on more equal terms than that between the Kear sarge and the Alabama. Captain Wins low says : " Ihe ship were about equal in match, the tunnage being the same, the Alabama carrying a 100-pound ritio, with one heavy 03-pounder aud six broadside 32- pounders; the Kearsarge carrying four broadside 32-pouuders, two 11-iach and one 28-pound rifle, one gun less than the Alabama." The weight of metal at a broadside of either varied very little. A distinguished naval officer said to us on Satuarday, before the news of the fight was received, that no vessels could be AMERICAN CITIZEN. more nearly matched than the Kearsarge and Alabama, that no naval officer would desire a fight on more even terms; but that, if he were Secretary of the Navy, he should scarcely deem it just to the great commercial interests depending on the destruction of the Alabama to leave but a single vessel like the Kearsarge to take care of her in case of a fight. This opinion, being professional, and coming from an officer unusually capable and well informed, is entitled to be accepted as con clusive.— N. Y. Tribune. " State Eights" Rampant. For weary months the Uebel sympathi zers in the loyal States have been contriv ing and conspiring to produce a collision between Federal and loyal .State authori ty. Hence the attempts to serve writs of habeas corpus in Fort Lafayette, bucked by the State Militia: hence the grave de cisions of Judges Woodward. MeCunn, kc.. that the Draft act was illegal; hence the proceedings whereby Gen. Dix is ar rainged before Abraham D. Russei. Gov. Seymour is denouueed and detested by the oracles of Fernando Wood's "Peace'' party as having shown the white feather in failing to order the arrest of the T T . S. Marshal and other Federal functionaries concerned in "arbritrary arrests," and to order out the entire Militia of the State to enforce his mandate. Hut for Sey mour's cowardice, the Jeff. Davisites among us believe that they would have had New- York out of the Union and in the Con federacy before this time. Hitter have been the dissapointments, fierce is the smothered wrath, of the more advanced Copperheads in view of Seymour's recre ancy. Hut The Daffy Xeics at last proclaims the joyful 1 Eureka ltissound? There is to be the long-desired collision— if not here in New-York, then certainly in Lou isville. Here the gleeful announcement! "TROUBLEBREWING IN KENTUCKY.— News of a startling character has reached this city from Louisville, Kentucky. From private and trustworthy sources we learn that a collision between the people of that city and a colored regiment which had been stationed there was imminent The officer in command of the negroes was ordered by the young men of Louis ville to withdraw his regiment within twelve hours, and, iu the event of his non compliance with their demand, they would be driven out. Our informant states that he had not heard the result. The young men were arming with the intention of carrying their threat into execution, in the event of the colored regiment not being withdrawn. We also learn from the same authority that Gen. Boyle and Provost- Marshal Mundy, both of whom had up to within the last six or seven weeks been stanch supporters of the Federal Govern ment, have been arrested on a charge of using treasonable language. They had, it appears, resiipie.il their positions upon being ordered to tin front." We arc nit advised JUS to which of "the Resolutionsof '9B" theyoungbloods of Louisville propose to operate under; but no matter. In war, law is silent ; and as the young Copperheads of Louisville ' are arming,' it would not set them back any if the Resolves in question afforded them no more excuse for their Rebellion than the Constitution does. These gents will not fight for the Union themselves— they scorn the idea—and they are equally stern in their determination that the Blacks shall follow their courageous and patriotic example. We can only advise them, while arming, to be thorough about it. If they were to attempt the driving out of Uncle Sam's black regiment and get the worse end of the fray, they would not only look crest-fallen, but ridiculous. As to " Gen. Boyle," we consider his resigning " upon being ordered to the front," characteristic and appropriate. Had he seen lit to resign two years ago, he would have rendered the Union more service by that act than by bis entire Mil itary career. When the service in Ken tucky shall have been thoroughly purged of such men, Rebel raids will be less fre quent there, and the young Copperheads of Louisville will be impressively taught to mind their eye and let all who fight and die for the Union.—A r . 1". Tribune. fcajf There is not a better hotel in all the coal region* of Butler county than that of Maj. Wm. Adams, in Fairvicw. He uot only keeps an excellent house fur nished and supplied with every thing nec essary for the comfort and convenience of travelers, but is himself an accommodating and obliging gentleman, and dispenses his hospitality iu such a manner as to make every guest feel at home iu his house. Persons going to the coal regions will make their home at Maj. Adams'. — Mercer Whiy. A man died of hydrophobia in Middletown, Connecticut, last week, hav ing assisted iu skinning a cow that bad been bitten by a mad dog. JWf The British government has grant ed a pension of £6O a year to Miss Mul och. the author of John Halifax. "Let us have Faith that Right makes Might; and in that Faith let us, to the end,dare to do our duty as we understand it"- A LINCOLN BUTLER, BUTLER COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1804. t'OMMI'XItATIOXB. RESACCA, June 15, 1804. M KSFSHS. KDITOBS: —I think I for warded my other communication, from Chattanooga, which I presume you have received. I will now begin about where I left off. My stay at Chattanooga was somewhat short, on account of the number of Dele gates, sdmc a little sick in consequence of which they were returning, and stopping to work in the rooms or hospitals, as they could stand it. I would prefer Chatta nooga to any place I have been yet. We don't expect to stop here; our wound ed, are being sent North ; Camp Hospital here is ready to break up as soon as cars come for the sick and wounded ; then we will move to the front. This is a very strongly fortified place. No danger is ap prehended. But anything farther might be contraband. A great battle is expected, or a surren der, which will be better. On last Sabbath before leaving Chat tanooga. I received a letter from a man in the Military Prison, directed to his moth er with permission to read and make what ever use 1 might see proper of the facts it contained. I copied the letter and the readers of this paper shall have the bene fit of it when I return. This man is a PennsyTvantan ; has a wife and children; his regiment was taken to New York to quell the riot of 1863. While there, ho was made drunk, and induced to desert by a copperhead from Connecticut, who strip ped off his uniform, put him in the cars, and paid his passage to a certain port. 1 have the coppers name, residence. &c. — This man ought to be free, and Mr. Cop perhead in his place. The weather here is pretty hot. Wheat is ripening, but the country generally wears a desolate appearance. The house in which we are stopping, is somewhat rid dled with shot and shell. Not a family lives in the town, except refugees who are scattered round inside, and about the pick et lines. I cannot help but notice the pe culiar appearance of the people who come into trade; both men and women, have a different look from Pcnnsylvanians; tall, stoop-shouldered, fiat-breasted, homely, &c., describes briefly the majority of the Georgian; that 1 have seen gathered in squads along the Rail ltoad—they watch with peculiar expression the boys of Un cle Sam coming and going, while the boys scarcely locse an opportunity to cheer them as they pass. Hut I must close. ENOS WOODRUFF. Remember Fort Pillow. Doctor Hunt, formerly of the Buf falo press, now in the service, writes from Memphis to the Buffalo Express. He says: A correspondence is going on here under a flag of truce, between Gen. Washburne (in command here) and Gov. Forrest, of Fort Pillow inassa • rememory. The negro regiments, of the late unlufky Sturgis expedi tion, took a solemn oath that they would neither give nor take quarter, if they met Forrest. They kept the oath, took no pris oners, lost none, came back in excel lent order, without losing 'heir arms, and fougt with such tenacity and un heard-of fatality, that Forrest is now anxious to come to some terms as to future interviews that he may have with "the inferior race." Gen. Wash burne's reply is said to have inform ed Forrest that he believed such an oath to have been taken, without his knowledge or order, and that he had no doubt it had been kept, as Gen Forrest alleged, that such con sequences were inevitable upon the Fort Pillow crime, and that had he the power to control the colored troops in that matter, he could not honorably exert it—could not ask those good soldiers.cf the Union to practice all, while they receive none, of the amenities of civilized warfare. So stands the negotation, except that Forrest has already begun to back down. Prisoners from colored regiments in his hands, he thinks, should not be killed (as they were by his orderfiand in fulfillment of his threat six weeks ago) but should be returned to the " normal condition"— slavery. lie must come down from that. The treatment given at Libby and Belle Isle, to the best and bra vest sons of our Northern hillsides, was " bad enough for any nigger," and the negro has already made his choice of alternatives —"Give me Lib erty or give me Death." Said a seeesh to me a day or two since: " Its hard for a gentleman to be 6hot down by his own slave." He gritted his teeth and looked unutter ably when I replied that "we did not propose to allow our enemy to dictate our weapons or to choose by whom only they, in their dignity, are to be shot down." That ended the discus sion, bat true to the policy of all the resident rebels here, he came around ten minutes later to ask mo to lake a drink. Did I? BOTH SIDES. A man in his carriage WM riding along, A gsily-drtsMed wife h) his side; In *atias and laces she looked like a queen, And he like a king in his pride. A wood-sawyer stood on the street as thej pause 1, The carriage and couple he eyed, And said, a* he worked with his «aw on a log, " I wi-h I was rich aud could ride." The man in his carriage remarked to his wife, "One thing 1 would give If 1 rould— -1 would give all my wealth for the strength and the health 01 the man who is cawing the wood. WIT AND WIBDOM. TATTLING is mean. LAZINESS is shameful. VULGAR, language is disgusting PROFANE swearing is abominable. INSCRIBE injuries on sand, and bene fits on marble. A ROMANTIC young man says that a woman's heart is like the moon—it chang es continually, but always has a man in it. IF you want to kiss a pretty girl, why, kiss her—if you can. If a pretty girl wants to kiss you, why, let her—like a man. IF your lips would keep from slips, five things observe with care—of whom you speak, to whom you speak, and how, and when, aud where. AN unromautic doctor says that tight lacing is a public benefit, iuasiuueh as it kills off all the foolish girls, aud leaves the wise ones to grow to be women. IN a discussion with a temperance lec turer, a toper asked: " If water rots your boots, what effect must it have upon the coat of your stomach?" A SHREWD little fellow, who had just begun to read Latin, astonished his mas ter by the following translations: " 1 ~ir, a man; gin, a trap—Virgin, a man-trap." "ISN'T it strange," remarked a lady,' " that the Miss Smiths arc so gross?" " Not at all," was the reply, " their fath er was a grocer." A COUNTRY editor, praising a success ful politician, called him "one of the cleverest fellows that ever lifted a hat to a lady, or a boot to a blackguard." AN author of a love story, in descri bing his heroine, says: " Innocence dwells in the dar't clusters of her hair." An unkind reviewer suggests that a fine-tooth comb would bring it out. THE love of country and devotion to the national cause is a natural instinct of all true manhood. To attempt to violate that instinct is to violate human nature in its teudcrest sensibilities. " IT is remarkable that you are always forgetting my name," said a quasi-ac quaintance named Flint. ." Why," said Quilp, "it is a deuced hard name to remember!" PRENTICE says girls will differ. One of them lately broke her neck in trying, .to escape being kissed, and a great many of them are ready to brake their necks to got kissed. AN Irishman remarked to bis compan ion, on observing a lady pass, " Pat did you ever see so thin a woman as that?" " Thin," replied the other ( " bothera shune, I have seeu a woman as thin as two of her put together, I have." THE following is taken from the report of the proceedings of tlu Connecticut Legislature- "Hill to tax geese and bach elors. There is a tax already laid upon a goose, and any man who lived twenty-five years without being married could be tax ed under that section. The bill was post poned." A IIOOSIER paper contains an editorial notice that marriages and deaths will not be published unless authorized by seme known name, and prefers that they should be delivered in person! It may be ex pedient, therefore, for those who wish their obituary notices inserted, to hand them in the day before-liand ! AN old toper who had attended some polytechnic lectures, where the learned professor caused a number of explosions to take place from gas produced from wa ter, said : " You don't catch me putting any wa ter in mv licker after this. I hadn't any idea, before, that water was so dangerous, though I never liked to take much of it." A YOUNG lady of extraordinary capa city, addressed the following letter to her cousiu : " We is all well, and mother's got the his Terrix ; brother Tom is got the Hu pin Kaugh and sister Ann has got a ba bee, and I hope these few lines will find you the same. Rite sune. Your aphec tionatc kuz/en. A LADY with her husband, visited the camp of the Michigan Sharpshooters at Camp Douglass. " What does M. S. S. on the caps mean ?" said she. Her spouse said, knowing no better, that it meant Manuscripts. The lady, suspecting a shave on the part of her lord, indignant ly replied,— " Well, it's better to be a manuscript thanjeonsoript, ain't it ?" £ rtucationat Uqmrtmcnt. Parental Co-Operation. BY D. W. KLDER. In discussing the subject of the co-op eration of parents with the teacher, it is usual for teachers to urge the parents to visit the school. " Visit the school," say they " and see how your children are pro gressing." " Visit the school, and by so doing, you will encourage both the teach er and the pupil." I shall not urge this point. I think that enough—perhaps too much, has been already said upon it. I doubt whether much good would result from such visiting. If parents understood the proper meth od of conducting schools, and were wise in their manner of making suggestions, no doubt their visits would bo useful. Put prrcnts in general are ignorant of the business of teaching, for the same reason, that one mechanic is ignorant of the trade of another —because he never learned it. But want of knowledge docs uot prevent men from criticising. It is a weakness of human nature to find fault with what we can not understand. If it were customa ry for all the parents to visit the school, many of them would make criticisms and suggestions, which would at once display their own ignorance and embarrass the teacher. Not a few of them would find fault with the teacher's rules in the pres ence of his pupils, by which their respect for their teacher would bo diminished,and his usefuluess impaired. If all the par ents should visit the school frequently (as some teachers recommend) the presence of so many spectators, and their frequent entrances and exits, would distract the at tention of the pupils from their studies, and destroy the order of the school. Such visiting would probably prove a visitation to the teacher, and an injury, rather than a benefit, to the school. Besides it is not really necessary. The law has provided for the visiting of the schools by the Board of Directors, and if the people do their duty by electing the right kind of men to that office, the schools will be suf ficiently visited. I shall endeavor, then, to show how par ents can co-operato with the teachers, if they see fit, without ever entering the school room. The word " co-operate," if defined ac cording to its etymology, means, to work with or, in aid of. The parent co-ope rates with the teacher, when his labors aid the efforts of the teacher, and render them more effective. This implies, that there is such a thing as working against the teacher, as when the labors of the pa rent counteract those of the teacher. I shall first show how a parent can work against the teacher, and then it will more clearly appear how he can co-operate with him. First, then, if you wish to work against the teacher, be sure to speak disrespect fully of him in the presence of your chil dren. Be careful to let them know, that you consider h*m entirely unfit for his po sition. Ridicule his mode of teaching, find fault with his rules for the govern ment of the school, and, in every possible way, make your children dissatisfied with him. Listen to the reports they bring from school, and comment on them as unfavorably as possible. If the teacher should exercise any authority over your children, resent it as an outrage. Give your child instructions like these : —" If the teacher orders you to do so again, tell him,l said you shouldn't." In this way you will excite a spirit of rebellion in them. But do not confine your efforts to your children. Speak against him to your neighbors and endeavor to excite them against him. If he should sometimes give way to angry feelings in the school room, and speak or aot imprudently (and who does not sometimes act imprudent ly?) be careful to turn the circumstauces to account. l)o not goto him and tell him his fault privately. Retail the story to your neighbors; exaggerate it a little; and then put the significant question—ls such a man fit to teach our children ? If the teacher is a female, make the assertion in the presence of your chil dren, that no iconut i is fit to teach school, Make your boys think it is degrading for them to obey the orders of a " woman." Teach them to be rude aud impudent to her; and if she should punish them, go and make a mighty fuss about it Be careless whether your children are provided with the necessary books or not Send theui to school irregularly. Let them go one day, and then keep them homo two. Detain them half an hour af ter school opens in the morning, and send them with orders to come home at recess. i Of course, they will learn but little in this way, and then you con triumphantly point to thoir want of progress as a proof of the incompetency of the teacher. If you faithfully follow these directions, you will, in a great measure, counteract the labors sf the teacher. If you are rich and influential, you will probably succeed in ousting him altogether. At all events you can give him a great deal of trouble If you wish to co-operate with the teacher, you must pursue a course direct ly the reverse of this. He careful not to find fault with the teacher in the presence of your children. If they bring home evil reports and exaggerated complaints, (as children often do,) correct their er rors and prejudices, and discountenance their complaints. If you have good rea son to believe that the teacher is in tlffi wrong, goto him like a christian and tell him his fault betwixt him and thee alone. If you do it in the right spirit, and the teacher is a man, the wrong will be right ed. But if he will not hear you, tell it to the Directors, and have him tried in the regular way. Hut do notbfc guilty of the meanness of secretly undermining his rep utation by circulating charges against him, which he has no opportunity to an swer. But it is not only in the government of the school that parents may co-operate with the teacher. They can do so in giv ing instruction. It is, indeed, not to be expected that parents will form their chil dren into classes, and convert their fami lies into schools, but they may do much by way of suggestion and by exciting in quiry. For instance: You are reading the evening paper, and you learn that," " the situation at Chattanooga remains un changed." Ask John (who is studying Geography) where Chattanooga is. If he does not know, send him to his atlas to find it. You may ask a dozen questions about it, as, in which State it is ! On what river? What is its-population,&c. You need not tell John that you know all about it yourself, and only asked him to see whether he knew. Lot him believe that you asked for information, (and ten chances to one but you will need to ask for information) and John will make the | examination with alacrity, and will be • proud to bo the instructor of his father. J These questions may be multiplied indefi nitely. A single number of a daily pa per will suffice to keep John in exercise a whole evening. Again: You are reading a political ar ticle, in which there occurs a word "of learned length and thundering sound," j the meaning of which is not very obvious. Ask John what it means. If lie docs not know, scud him to the dictionary.— You and he will probably both be the wi- j ser for the examination. You hcaran ex- j pression which you think is not grnmmat- ; ical. liefer it to John, and if he cannot give a prompt answer, let him study on it, and report when he is posted on the sub ject. Again: Youhavemadeabusiuesstrans action. You have bought or sold a cer tain number of articlesataspecifiedprice, State the case to John, and let him com pute what the articles come to. By such a course you will not only stimulate your children to greater efforts, but you will also give their studies that practical direction, which, it is complain ed, the schools do not give. And, here, let mo remark, that a thorougly practical education cannot bcohtaincd in the school S room. First: Because the teacher has not time enough to devote to practical il lustrations. Very often he has scarcely time to teach the theory. Secondly : Be cause he has not the material. If the pupil is to become skilful in measuring aud estimating wood, boards, masonry, &c., he must practice on the material it self. No mere theorizing will ever make , him expert in it. But the teacher has no wood yard, board yard, nor brick or stone walls to exercise his pupils on. He has no grocery ordry goods store, iu which to traiu his pupils iu business. Scarcely any man in the community has less means to give practical instruction, than the teacher. Farmers, mechanics and trad ers, have the means, and, if they would use them, they would render their chil dren practical scholars, and make them , useful to themselves. The teacher is expected to give some attention to the manners of his pupils.— In this department, his efforts will avail but little, if they are not seconded by pa rental training. Good manners must be learned in the home circle. The influ cnco of parent#, in this respect, is incal culable. If you are rude and vulgar in your family, you must expect your chil dren to follow your example. If you are disorderly and uncleanly in your habits, you have no right to expect order and cleanliness in your children, Ifyou walk into your house without cleaning your feet, and stick your muddy boots against the mantel, and squirt your tobacco juice on the furniture, how can you hope that your hoys will not do the same'( Perhaps, in no respect, is the neglect of parental training more strikingly shown, than in the almost total want of politeness NUMBER 31. in the youug. Our land is cursed with a whole generation of rude, impudent and ill-behaved children. And is it any won der? wheu their rude behavior aud un civil answers, are praised and admired by their ignorant parents and shown off to visitors as smartness! Is it any wonder they pay no respect to age or station,when they are allowed to contradiot and insult their own father aud mother? Father, and mother? Young America uses no such terms. He calls his parents, " the old man," and " the old woman." It is a burning shame, that the ehildreu of re spectable aud religious people, give no higher title to the authors of their exist ence. If the teacher make a.iy effort to cultivate good manners in his pupils, you as a parent can co-operate with him, by using your instruction, your authority and your example in training your children to decency and good behavior. The teacher is expected to exercise a watchful care over the morals of his pu pils. Here, again, parental co-operation is indispensable. The influence of the parent, in this respect, is far greater than that of the teacher. Children do not come under the influence of the teacher, until they have already acquired somo degree of character. They are under his care, only for a limited time and for a lim ited purpose. Teachers are often chang ed ; hence their influence is transient aud temporary. But that of the parent com mences at the first moment of tho child's existence, and continues till the charac ! ter is formed. It is constant and perma- I nent. It extends to every department of | life, and moulds the character in all of them. If the moral influence of tho teacher is great, that of tho parent ui IH eitimable. Our legislators have taken great pains to prevent immoral persons from becom ing teachers in the public schools. A good moral character is an essential rc | quisite to a certificate, without which no i person can be employed as a public school I teacher. If the holder of a certificate should prove to be immoral, the Superin* ; tendent can prevent him from touching by annulling his certificate. And lest im moral conduct in the teacher should es cape the notice of the Superintendent,the local Boards of Directors have power to remove a teacher, at any time, for iuiwo | rality. Wo .do not complain of these restric tions. They are wise aud just. But is ; it not strange, that, while our Legislators have thrown so many safeguards around | tho responsible office of teacher, tlieyhavo neglected to place any at all around the still more responsible office of parent ? To enter that office, no qualifications, eith er moral or intellectual, are required. The most ignorant, worthless and vicious persons may contract marriage, aud thus legally assume the parental office, and neither any law of the Stato, nor any rulo of the cliurch will hinder them. The State recognizes the coutract—the minis ters of religion solemnize it, and with up lifted hands invoko the blessing of God on tho union—a union resulting in a fam ily of profligates and pests to society. Great efforts have been made to raise the standard of the teacher's qualifica tions. Associations have been formed for mutual improvement; lectures have been delivered, and volumes have been written on the subject. But no efforts are made to raise the standard of parental qualifi cations. . There arc no parents' institutes} (why shouldn't there be ?) 110 books are written, nor lectures delivered on paren tal dudeg. Even the pulpit is silent on this subject. You do not hear a sermon on the training of children once in seven . years. In some churches, on baptismal occasions, a kind of formal lecture is read to the parents, tho burden of which is t " Be careful to make your children com mit to memory the shorter catechism," even if they do not understand a word of it. But, instruction in that training, which parents should give their children, j to fit thera for the ordinary duties of life, |is practically ignored. In this respect, tho ministers of our land are guilty of gross and criminal negligence, for which they must answer at tho bar of God. Since, then, parents are neglected alike by Church and State, how important is it that every oue should make an effort for himself, to give good moral instruction and present a good example to his chil dren. What a stinging reproach to a pa rent, that the hired teacher of his chil dren exerts a better moral influence on them, than does he their heaven-appoint ed guardian and instructor. We conclude, then, that tho man best co-operates with the teacher who sustains him in the preper exercise of his author ity; who seconds his efforts by encourag ing his children in their duties; and who trains them to good manners aud morals. Such a man though he may never hold the office of School Director, nor ever vis it the school, is the teacher's true friend' and fellow laborer.