;: ,*.it,iit, : ..g;.o, : iii*g. ;FAligyiT4 , l9 : ' , ,lslP.gNtlt Bummer fading ithe broad leaVes that grew, 6o.fresbly-green ivberilJune . witel4oung l are And, all the'whisper-hattuted , prest through 'The restless liiras sitAdened totr-sare.call ' From rustling hazle copse' and tangled'dell ; • sweet Fragrant, fruity Summer ,"' ' • - • 'et larewell I" . ' - Upon thp ff ndy bills, In many a field, The hu,' bees hum slow above the clover, Gleaning he latest sweets, Jts blo. soms may Yield, " And,ktloWing that their hiiirvest time is over, Ring, halt a lullaby an d half :a knell; "Farewel , sweet .Summer, - Honey-laden Summer, Swel2t larewell1": The little brook hat babbleh 4 mid the terns,, O'er twisted roots Sandy shallows . play- Seems .fain to linger; ill its eddik..d turns \ And with a plaintive, Purling i voice is say 'Sadder and sweeter than My song ban tell : "Farewell 4 sweet : Summer,. Miami and dreamy Sumner, Sweet farewell !" The fitful breeze sweeps . down the wioding With gold and crimson leaves before it fly ing I Its gusty laugl4r hag no sound pfdn, But in the lulls it sinks to gentle sighing, And mourns the Suminer' l S early broken spell 11 .14 . ftrewell, sweet 'Sulminer, Rosy, blooming Sitinmr, Sweet fikreWell!" • So bird, ani bee, and brook;attd bret.ze'make moan,, ' • With irielaileholly song their loss complain t. ing, , - • 1, too, must join them, as,rwalk alotio Among • the sig4,s tounds of Summer waning; 1, tbo, have loVed the si , ason , pussing well So farewell, SuMm-ert, , Pair, but tuded :Summer, Skeet fareWol , l::. • THE ItEb-Hl RED 13(:).7. A New York' .erchant, who - i a. Sunday School •teLcLier, Says Dr. Newton, was called upon for a speech at a great Sunday School meeting out West. He paid : . ' uni tell you a little story of a beagar boy,— I started out .one Sunday morning" to' ge) up some recruits tOr , my At the corner of , the street• tteet a barefooted boy, - without hat or coat. I • - • ' His hair was fie .y red, and looked as if it had never been combed, I asked the.boi , if he cCtuld come.to school." ' • ". "No, sir," was the sharp reply. , . "You ought to go to Sunday School," 1 Said, kindly. "What tor," he asked; ' "We teach boys to be good," ilsaid. A .!`B4t 1 don't vkTatit lobe good," he'Nsaid. , "Why not 'want to be good ?" I aiked\earn estly. "Because I acd•hungry,' was his quick reply. "It is now nine o'clock," I said,' looking at' my watch ;, "haven't ',yUu . had any breaktiist yet ?"-- sir." ' "Where do you live ?" "VI) in the alley = there with aunty. Sire's sick" "Will you eat some; ,iogerbread andscrack ers, if I go to the , bakery and g 4 some ?"- "Yea, sir.. that I will; and be iglad :to get them." i.. "I bought a lot and set I them' before bim.— He ate thili in a way whiph showed ho* keen ly hungry he waa. I asked hid if . he would like a little more." • "A little chore,lf you please,, sir," said the "I got a fresh supply an d set before hiut I waited till he had done eating I then I said : , "111 y hoy,will you go witl me to Schoolpow "1 on have been so kind to me, sir,"#,,id he, "I'll go anywhere , with you. Please wait till \ I take what's left of4be gingerbread round to aunty, and then go with you." "He returned directly ,to the side Walk - where 1 was waiting for him, and went with me to school, bad 'never, been to school amore,-- He thought of .school as a Place where boys tad to hold, out,their hands to be slap lied with , a ruler,and have their 'hair pulled ate their tars pinebed; But when he found' inmself in the hands tit a ,plesant looking sottiitlady, who treated liiiii:bindly,aad said iiiitbingahotit his shabbi clothes, hawaagreatly surprise& "He became a regulat; attendant. He told all ,t4s boys_ of ,his Acquaintunce about the school, and piusuaded- many of thew to attend. About two years s i fter. this., alot Imys from York were sent out West, and distributed . among the farmers. lekr I red-haired boy was sent among them. - I used to hear of him for a while, that he watt getting on and doing well. I have lost sight bf bhu for yeaFs now, butil have no doubt be' is doing good wherever be The sentlenian then 44 ' wor ds A bout the importance of getting the poor and negiec , ted• children of our. large ..eft,* into fbuiday dhoola, - and then Sat.down. In a moment, a tail, goo4loctiting. gentle man with-red halrstoOd tip in the titeeting and said : "Ladies and gentlemeni I am the zed-haired beggar boy of New YOrk . , who ate Oat gentle. mak* gingerbread, I have irr,the , West , for pea7o4o;i: an( now a rich maa. , pirrry iMndied acres of as good land AS the Sun abinen*k; **a** 4 04 car -400*4*, 4so4; l 9:_iiiitdiiiin 't‘eiting - is. Over attali he, yang - .4,0 take my old friend to iny hoine l where he,will he weleonie to stay as long as he plOases, :`T :am II Member bf.. 4.01 aveli,r,ad a SupprintenOent 9f a,Sabbath ; and I. owe all that I haie in this world,and al6l hope, for 'lithe next; to : what was tattht ineln the Sabbath School." - . • .dar• DECISIVE BATTLES Or THE' WORLD. The Decisive Battles of the World, those,of. which, to use,Halitn'swords r a contrary , event would have esientially varied the . drama of the woild in all its subsequent seeneS, tire:number ed Its fifteen by Profeßsor • Cresay, who, tllls the chair of Ancient and - Modern History in the University of London, They are the grand subjects of two volumes .by jtist from Bealay's press. N.These hattles.are 1. The' battle of Alaratln;n, fought 490 a C.'„-ittwhich the Greeks under Themistocles de feitted the Persians under Darius, thereby turn= ing back a tide of Asiatie invasion, which else would have swept ?,ver EurOyte. -2. The, battle of SyracuSe, 413 B. C., in which. the Athenian power,; was broken - and the 'west of Europe saved from Greek dotnina 3. The battle of - Arabello, 331 B. C., in which Alexander, by ; \ the defeat of Darius, established his. Tower in Asia, and by the introduction ofl European civilization pro duced an effect' which as Yet may be traced • there. • 4. The battle of Metaurusf y fought 207 B. C., in which the-Romans under Consul Nero, de feated tile Carthagenians under Hannibal:and by Whieh the , supremack of the great Republic wst:S . eStablished, 5. The victory.of Arminuis, A. D., 9, l over the Roman legion under 'Venus, which (secured Gaul from Rotinan domination. 6. • The , . bnitle ot•- Chain)* A. D.; 451,' in, def4tred_AttiL,l the Min, the soli "Scourge' of God," ant.} sayqd. Eur \ opo froni.nntire devastation; "- • The.hnttlefoi, Toilra, A. D., in' which Charies'illattel,-by ,the - defeat of the . Saracens, aVotiod y'oke from Europe. •••• Ca Ni)rrnandy Was victorious' OVer:the a1:1(1'413 . e results of which ,w as forinution .of .the. Angle Norman nation which now is.doininantin the World . : „ - 9. 'Elie battle of Orleans, A. D., 1429, - in ivhich the ELglish were deteated,.and the inde pendent existence of. France secured'. 10. The defeat of the Spanish Armada, A. D.,.1588, which crushed the hope's of the Papa dy in 'England. 11. The, battle of Blenheim, A. D.,1704, in which' Marlborough, by the defeat of Tallard, broke the - power And crushed the ambitious schemes of 'Louis. XTV:. 4 12. The defeat of Charles XII, by Peter the great at Poltowa, A. D., 1709, which secured ,the stability of the Muscovite Empire. , 13. the hattle,of Saratoga, A. D.,1777, in Which Gen. Gates defeated Gen. Buigoyne, and which . decided `the late of the American Revo. lutionists,"by making . France their, ally, and other. European •powers friendly to them. 14. The battle of Vaimy, A. D. 1792, in which the continental allies, under tha Duke of Brunswick ' . were defeated by the French under Pumouriez, without Which the French Revolu tion. would have been stayed. 'l5. 'The battle of • Virtiterkn, A. D., 1815, in ,which the Duke of Wellington hopeles3ly de feated Napolean, and saved Europe from his grasping ambition\ ---r w QVALITIES FOR LEADERSHIP. AU great leaders have been inspired with a great belief. In nine cases out of ten, failure is born of untaith. Toinyson sings,‘ l Faith and unfifitli can ne'er be eciusa powers." •To be a great leader,*and so always master of the situa tion, ont must of necessity have been a great thinker, in action. An eagle was - never yet hatched from a goose's` egg. Dante speaks with nitteri sarcasm of Brancs d"Oria, whom he placed among the dead, when he says, "He still eats and sleeps; and puts on clothes." In a case of greater emergency, it took a certain general in our armY several days to get his per - serial baggage ready: _Sheridan rode into Win cheiter Without even a change of stockings, in his saddle-bags. When the admiralty, in a case of pressing need, asked •Sir CharletNapier, in London, when he would be ready to start for India be replied, "In half an hour, gentlemen, if necessary.". Insight, foresight, and knowl edge.are what the World demands in a great leader—men who have tim power to transmute; Calamity in greatness. To a real commander, 'nothing exists which cannot be overcome. "Monsieur," said ildiraheau's secretary to him NOne day, "what you require is impossible."-- "impossible;" cried Mirabeau, starting from his'ehair, "never name to me again that block . head-01, a wor • d" • , , One of the ancients said that an army of stags with -11.1 ion tor their vOmmander isms more thin an army oflions led by a stag. 'here are men who will pluck the very spear out of . their:Wot:mcie awl turn round and, slay their adversaries with 'the Same Weapon and you will never find such men . as these - irnding home the,: cowardly' ispatch of a French marshal. "We have met the enemy, and we are theirs" So long as Epaminondas Was their general the Theban army neverliad a panic.. . A gallant young officer who fought 'in the, Wilderness told me, the other day, that there was always such encouragement in his general's denleanor when he went into battle that, the most desponding took fire from him an 'went: in for victory on the Alit onset,' be. cause they knew that - Gen. Grant'never made up his mind to be beaten anywhere, They who acbieye great victories have dist learped how w ennticer, and opinions that have life itt theniVrillalmoit always come to tke fiont'ori. Ilaikdeon seemed to'have been born with ideas butte was never idle for a moment afterke started' on his stupendous career. • It an alums tai' the bait when do 00 AgiPtia be secoid best e'Sme from? i" , • W r 0, ro C O .1 r td • . J 3 O w --.%; i•-- , ,::' , . ,-;',,_;'.',-. :-::?;- ~:, .. r r-. , . ': 111111111111111 *l4 provia :ifitisfactory becauise, N !. • . Cti CIM 1-4 = to( gi • = l 2. 1 .11 . 0 1 i•om 4 , -, 00601.0± oft 4 1 CA %Nl* 0 P P:111 • ~•-, ;,.., ~,,' ''..:,;"-f;',,,,:..;•...,`'.!,1•-f:i..:, .:z•:',..: , ! LAVERY- . :CR,OUNSE liamfactory at §pringrile, and Repository on Utak Avenue, hiontros.c. Pa. It yOn desire is pnr chase, examine our stock, and it none '*re on band-to suit,we can make to order at samiprlee SEARLE, Proprietor. Q z 7< RUCK: MEDICI . Lyon, Druggits, MONTROSE, MIMS 1 , Dealer In WI kinds so Pure Dregs,Redleinee. Chemicals, Dye WoOds, Dye , • ; - ' Rath, Paintai 0 1 / 1 . varnishes. . £ .... . ol ..1 PoketßOoks, Cafabsileiv Perflonery t -Toile onpA.-Brusia_poNiolino G oo dli etrolife. •• - - - • - ratikee NOtionsOrats. i l until eigi Totison - 64 Tabli Cuttiory,' Fine Solid „ Spoo , listet,Spoons, Solves and Forks, G tois, iron, Shoulder...M=4o. Trains, 1 Inonia Ws,/ DootalAtiktOtinlo Lampe and OW in, Teas, Spines; iinii,l4 Powder, Sec *Olio ireiri soheOlniinOsTllPNealetektVi& .', ‘" -- ',Dali'to PoitrAlo kw !minds.' Thome 4thOlniih to buy PatatailettOtt i ,a would doe s , to examine on, Stock of White Lem& mitt° Zin litzed Ottemicalratets, ,before purfluttog eleew r -AU kintinot toieled valets to ens of Dom one titre: plods esels,' , ostsed; : ; • ; 1 . /outcome, . , 11:73:10011.0 rta 2 f% t 2' a lirti ano i l ft i*MirigiVag=4-IFtitlitigempuirlisibe • j&E -114111104 nmerrinis. 40111 • - IN& a) =1 C:em 1.11 E.* ~.~_-~-_ m m 4 tt c-f -0 11 (D CD 4 CI) NES, 0133111:10Alk. N1N.m..4. se 1 2,1 Am. 03 w 0 0 rl2