El a '•••• THE tizAinvo juizist. Whip ago, has cfst, Its shadtrwa O'er lifo's dealining'wev,• . ° • ' ' And the evening twltightgatheri , • Itouud out departing- day; Then we shelliat and ponder On-the-dbmand!bliadow_y_past - -Within the heart's Still cliarnbers,' - The File* • will gather fast:''' • • . r,. . . . ' . The Mends In yuutliswe cherished • . . conic to its onr.9.naie, Agai}i to hohr couint u u jolt • . Ai in the days of yote. • • . They may be stern And onibie ; , Their iniiY - ta bright and fah.: slut the heart will lcre' itsehniaers - The guests will gather there. ••• lbw-oml] it be, my sisfers . / - Who, then, shall ho our guests?; flow shall It_be,iny- bn?therii, . Whin lifo's shadow onus rests? - ind:7inidst the sil7nee, 'ln'arFentg: soft and IoW,. :Then hear familiar coires: - And words of long ago? ISE Shall we not see dear faces, Sweet smiting as of old, • .Till the mists s o'f that - stilkchamber Are sunset clouds of, told;•-, When ago has cast 10 shadows declining way, Arid the_eveuMg4wilight gatiMrs 'Round our departing day? • • ' i EL,p_,a From the. London Tinire SIR ISAAC.NEWTON. The' common idea of Neivtbn is veyl , vague. .? IrCirritfing.-to the earliest of .Irii • biographers ) . Pope exPres.ed n, desire to' 'Jaye) some " we. •• woirs and clorraQer of him as a private imp." Thp desire might still be eipretnied. 'We have no intimacy with Netaco. Few "person's, it asked to describe the character of the mitti, Jjatifd say more "than this—thirst he was exceed- ingly absent,. and that be was imperturbable, almoil' to stupidity, perhaps quoting as an illustration of the latter characteristic the apocryphal story of •the philosopher and his dOg, . is, .not- . saying_ much, and yet the . half of it isincorreot. ;The ootemporaries of Newton desorihe him as'any . thing but imperttirhable on bertain,-,rocoasions. •Locke.deciared "that "he was' men to. deal with," but "a little too :to to raise in .. himself suspicions -where-there-is-no-ground." Flamsteed,always "found him insidious - , ambi , tious, and excesevely covetuona of praise and ' impatient of contra • tion.." z Whision,,dOscrlbes hi s equally impatient. _ and.of the_most,fearful,-oautious and suspicious' temper that - be ever ' knew. D'Alembert gives the French idea of when he says:. "In •i England, people were content with NeWtonls , being the :greatest genius, of his • age; in France.one would have wished him to be Jim , fable." If Newton was. really anamiable,. It was chiefly a negative unamiability. He was • uneocial, be was reserved, be was absent, he was silent; in the course - of five years his secretary, Humphrey Newton, never saw him laugh but once, nhd that once it' was impossi• ble, to comprehend- why-t---Worst—of---alli-to-a -• Frenehman i • he had none of the graces—could not, like Pcintenelle, begin a treatise on'astro nomy beauty of , day to a blonde, and the beauty of night toabrunette: The 'Only qualities in NLWton that were positively; unamiable were, his snspicious temper and his' impatience of contradiction. • All,siso was negatives his goodneeke.veu was neptive, with the excep- tion'of his piety and veracity. He Was good — ,' becaus's he was passionlese ; and ho was not lovable betause he was, voidsotemotion pishop Btirnett says that Newton had the whitest 'soul he ever knew. '• We epn well be ' lievadt_4o.____Newicua,s_utterly Unworhilx ant the unworldliness of the tnan who lint; content ta . v , ipe about his .chint?er his little garden from , morning to flight, when-he-turned out-for-half-an hour _to,see•if anybody would listen to him as Lucusinn professer, must have astonished the bustling, courtly. Scotch Bishop. Then be was pine as ; his niece tells: us that he broke an ' acsituaintanoeif the greatest : :intimacy with Vigairbecause the ItaliUn . cheMist told him. 'some loose story . of Bishop Burnett's remark, however, is true in_a much ; more stringent sense 'than, Perhaps, he ever contem plated': Newton, bad the Whiteet soul he ever knew, Omply:l)ecauee, his emotional. nature the sbeet of white.paper which the meta . physicians of .that ~p eriod were contintially, talkirigAbont: Sir I)tivid Breweter-:.hae ' , done . hie :Meet to "'prove the contrary. evert }nuclei that he Las dloootired . Sir Itiaac-iniove.:: loaaci in love! Fanny fhe st7datelitensieiif 'dd pro essor.a reps -lug Lady Norris, like ono of those fops . called . pre e110wv,".7 whom-Steele—Alertly. aft. warddeatirized in 'the Tatter: " Can you re solve to wear a widow's habit 'perpetually r' he -writes. , 41 1 iThether you.. ladyship should go constantly in' the melancholy dress of a Or — flotirish `once ` -- more among-the ladiee"—that4tiihe hOestion, and that is the style eyos open, end 0 - 11 his bripfuat. ! eptteal,-rertation, - attributes to- whose soul wale fixed ort,,otiti:jde&F-',:tfiti;.inilieasti7orgriiylttin - :' versely:as td,}ll43iiinare of . thed.istatie4, Sir. _him', We. mak& bold to eay - i : never had & though . t bf • ."." ' In comparison With'Newtori,. Uncle: Toby's . , behavior_iiiLthe_widow—liradniati r: Nini, tremo of gallantry and ii.ientiminet • It. bo romernhered that, Newfon .Was a god, and Alexander the Greatiuhed.to say that ''two hal/ sitiCt hrta things nded him .that he was &mOrtal, and not:a god— loVe,, sleep and food. These three things. proved Ella the divinity of . Sir Nano, forhe never spent R thOught on love, tr.ok very little.sieip, and as for lisdinner, he neveroared for it,.and'Often •.never ate it.: - "He kept neither dog or oat in . hie . ohainber,." . says._ Humphrey Newton, which maile well for the old woman, his bed maker, she faring much the 'better for it, ,for in a Morning she „has sometimes found both. dinner and supper scarcely .tryted of, 'which the cil4.wotnatt . has very .pleasantly anti nium pinkly gone away wieth." - . While speaking of , fond, we; may' .mention 'in passing,-as a set off. •to the negations:o Ne:wton's - animnl tniture, his own. physical. en joycnont.. .1•1 e liked frtiii, And eoUld eat ariy quantity of it. • As' aboy, we find_ _ Ids account book, spending tis Money on cherries and martualade". This latter.. taste .se . extia, to ha - ve grown 3vi.t him, for he was always very EMI .fond of a-small roasted quineerfor supper.,, • lie was as fond of orange peel • as Johnson,: and Ifsedto . taite it. bOiled in water for his . hyealtiAt; iiStead f tea. Apples, „toe ; appear to hmwe trkett a - favarite : fehtt of his ; one of his.. letters exhibits hint lotiging after cider, and Making greate s ndeaversctoseeere smite vitro ..ofgenuine . •" red - streaks." Perhaps: it was one of ,those favored streaks" that, . falling from the tree; 'suggested . the SysteinV the world--the pniversality'of the law•of Ration. - •- • , Other enjoyments Newton had DWIC were: not purely intellectult).:4veny;as a boy, he'never joined in the games and emus - molts ~ of his companions, '-We find him making . diale and water-crocks and win..,‘drilitis; and on the d'a'y of thtfgiyut starni-uf-d 458,-- T whe riLiCrom— icelf-Was drawing his last bieath.inls'hitehalic and Goodwin qtood "by Lis bedside, 'fissuring him that his soul was safe, and 'hates 'went soft nal sad from room to room, and the trees in St: James's:-Park--Were—uprooted -hy--the templet, Newton his sixteenth year was jumping' about in the. gate to measure the fore, OU he Wintt—ln—m-ors—advancott—ioars his amusements were still more severe. 'When ,:,-,weziry_:of_hiiL_other studies, • the. differential Calculus and the iiregularities of the moon, he refreshed himself with chronology and all the, dry details of Lustrum's cllympiads, and the expedition of the Argonauts. • • . -With such plenauree it will not be surpris ing that We return to negation, and say • that hie testhetioal nature was utterly blank. Jfe had a perfect horror of poetry, and would have echoed the sentiment of his friend Bar- .rovr, , that it is an. " ingenious kind of non . Boise."' !le showed his rtkgard for Sculpture, witeli he - ea - id — of - his - friend, the Earl' of Pem broke, that be was a " lover atone\dollei:" -Mid his opinion uf• painting is expressed in an anecdote which we do'not prOfess to--cont-; prebend; but'which, according to the iaterpre .- tation -suggested by. Sir David Brewster,. im p:ire that he considered:pictures nothing but " dirtY .„ . . As. we look farther into Newton's character, we find every hero the same absence of, colcir, —the-.same-whi n_ess_thadlishap . Burnett_ , :-Served: One ur: ut.eoitnen of it is pre:. stinted in a- etttr of advice to his young' • ft:lend, Franc s Aston, - who was about--to-set his travels, If you be affionted," wrote thej -. hiloso Tlier, - ‘itrid - b - eTtter, in a -- forraine'countri - to —pass it by in silence, or 'with a jest,' than to -- fndertior revenge ;nor in the first case your credit's !o'er the worse when-you return , ; to Engl44, or coma into - boinpany that not heard of the quarrel. • But in the second case, you may bear the marks , of the quarrel while you liVe, if you outlive it at all." IlSrs; is a lilly liver with . a vengeance—dissuading i Young friend from a quarrel on, the ground noeof high Christian principle, but of unmanly fear. If the truth Jl3 9st•be spoken, Newton was'a coward: It is the mot amazing thing to lead bow. frightened ho-^4as to face - the could:ivy/9r bear Publicity': This was partly the -re'sult'of a timid disposition which-made him ebrink from criticism, but partly also, it was the resqlt of a self-absorbed and upseeiahlS - nature,that was all in 'call • to , itself, and felt no, need of humaO sympathy. When, shortly after writini thb above letter to.Friroiii'Asten, he was asked„for►permission - ' - toliiiblisf;!oPP - TOjfM t tlie ri r, 'ca/ Transactionch,r4oo his couSepi on bon that his name should be wiihheld. For I see not," lib writes,,:. what there is disirable in pulilio 'esteem, were I 'able to se-. qinrelt, and maintSin•ii. It •would; perhnie, • 'increase ,in acquaintance— the thing, which I chiefly study to :decline," This appalling EOM ' . :."4,15',*1,,1:#144 : 1, ,Q.O.V•il', )3,.1.:..:.:.::,,,,,,,...., , 1 . ' Ihnheo4t,oir i without a parai_lt in the r. hi 1:11;:thp:- - hUmnu . min 5., , Aft 'lreit'clolliroihtfi in a triftini l iiiiiahl with rid/iitoir.pbjeioitin of thinaicia?o,f:Lin:us:i be ‘ ii?trAtettais - follOws to one-of !Ms frientio &lef rhavi innde.myself ri : eiti;ie to p 6 liseo.- pliy~; loutif get free 'of gr. Linue' - business; I wilt resolutely bid adieu to it eterpfillYl . bo s pting what,..; do for my, pfivate aatipfaotio' br i loot out,' after ,That aaftz statide 'railratienta Sir Itaittc to the 4ife. 411 . ,bie , Pnrsnits,were for his - . own p , rivato sittisfaution-; he alkohned Mankind,-and there ba,not_one discoveries 'that' , would' ever have.been published.if it had not been dragged , into-the:light .his friendo, while he looked on,,frOtting,and muttering at, the intrusion.—. Of him it may, be said with truth, what never was truly said.of Milton': " . Ills soulwas line a star, and dwelt apart:": Dwellini'thus-nparf; ankvie+g with sin gular apathy all thiitMen most prize in . public' esteem-and ,irivato sympalliT,Tlirii37 l l=r , : •that Newt2n ShOUld jiqoli With stoicahconteni on all th'e'o ects,ot, • homan ambitien ! ': Love . •he,needed , honor.he sought not, ahoVertill' things he espiSe& wealth. Master of tire. Nlint,lneney bad no.chartk . 3 for,hitn. ' Speen.; , lum Metal, far his reflectmg telesdbpe, was to him . the.most preic ions- of meteli. The . burst . lug ofd soap bubble,. When pursuing' . his ex- • periruents on color, gave him more couc - ern - than --- - -------- - We nii ,thonsaii - d PO - iiiidS . , -- 6 - 4 -- . the, bursting.of the _South Sea pub,ble._ nisi indifference was' extended to his latest .biog,-. rapper, who has not condescended to hi . atnt the loss: . - Sir Isaac. thought .more of a • fete and a prima' than ofnll tlnkingots at the Mint and' all, the diamonds at .Ansterdam. - He parted .with hislitteney freely—se freely, in• deed, that his biog'aphers have regarded it , es. 'a proof:ot' singular generosity. It -was_n_Oth , ... iug of the kind :,it was' do more generosity than is thiatcCof the poor savage who gives away.inestimable:t treasures for a glasshead-or _ .• a piece of .mirror. . . ._ 'What cared he, for wealth? - :lie-. had no in tere sktti;di urn tin slif6 ;' linnd - no sublunary plea sureswhich money could purchase; except - pippins and redstreaks; Ile gaie-it!away to - anybody - who asked im fur it. 'ln one:,Of his ~,,,it absent fits he had hi - pockets •picked of - more -thattftiv.o thousandp unds, -- and -suspected a nephew Of 'the colebrad Whisfoitt - 4 --- made . i ii k. no effOrt•to recover his ' hill, and when asked 4or_tkuchyeh lost; only . -replied,• "Too - mucia." He wits so . far-intposed , upot -that-be-.paid four-thousand-pounds-for-an.-es , tate in .Wiltshire' worth only half of that aunt ; ; he was told that he might vacate ,his bargain -in--equity T and-teleclined_theAspuble. "I have seen, says henestilumphrey Newton, 6 .1 have eteetta,stnall'44ltelmarti 1p DX in his study Set against, the oliTiul windort,:boless - , -- tia - one .. might suppose, than one thousand guineas in it, crowded edgeways. ..Whether', this was suspiciatuor, careleseness I cannot 'say ;-per-:- haps to try the - fidelity of those aboulhan. ~ • Zit ' was certainly - carelessness; but poor Humphrey (how vividly he remembered it - ,11!) felt very sorely, letup_ted when he saW, one mightstippose,"—lor ho Was. tad - limiest to Count them—" no less thtth one thousand guineas crowded edgeways," and it wns a telp to.his fidelity to believe that tha trial was , intended by his. master, fo whom; when at tits head or the Mint, a Duchess in vain offered six thousand pounds.. At one period of his. life Sir Isaac Newton - gave some study - to • Alchemy,rand - we . might- suppose,- from one of the sentences in the letter to Francis Aston, frOth which we have already . quoted,,thitt he had thought of - transmutatiop as a 'uiehns , of . money making. ,Ile recom.' mendsids_yonng friend to inquire on . the Con tinent a tio kir tra nsm u • illies-elfeilfg-ttit most Luciferous, end many times the most /urifirour experiments, - too; - in -philosophy''—',-- ( This letter, it •Must be, remembered, how ever, was written not long before his ciroutn stat WCI"Q tifgive - him-some - aaste-- ty,and ho wasAglad to 'escape his weekly pay ments as" a'meinbec of the Royal Society.— If ever' he'thought of money-making, it was einly - to.pay - his - frugal - b,uttery, book, buyiputtY_ for his lenses, andorangeS'forhis sister. -,1-16 gave away: his money' without' concern; he was evenioffensive in his liberality, and guar ,. relied with persona s who refused. to use Mk' purse. Think ofAlir Isaao taking a handful of guinea& at random out of his pocket' and offering it as afee -to a - physioian like Ches. olden. VPe hove not said anything of the contro versies which brought Newton into, contact wito his fellow Men, nin.l.--put his manliness to the test, and we west leave it; to others to ad just all the tnicroseapio details of authorship and oopyright.4l4ch these - tiontroversies in volve. Vat it is impossible to pass without , reprehension the unfairness with .WhiehNew,. ton treated his opporientsjiuygens and 'Hooke, TelFfilliarid'Flaznstead. It is .n just retriim. -lion that Newtcin'it.cerpusoular theory of light has sucourabed before the undulatory theory defended-by Huygens an oc , ra law of double refraotioa ,haa, been 11i4pladea s by Ilia of Hdygepa ; that his thepry, of the Inflexion of light has been, forgotten i'oi• that of liooke i• and that hie method 'of fluzions, th .-.. a . • alb; has k • wi, 0 , r4s,ti -the greatest dinof 'iltppytntol l , A lt e : differential -baiooifktor ..el.bi3lizi• I For, oite . .ihifig)OlteSe; 'o64trOvot- , el ieiy We day. be Wild iif:ll,ewtori: 'pls . jeal 'Quint, was absurd,-all,generdeity was , forgotten, :but y " -- -he'..-tie;ter , deSeeilided - - Acy tlie,. stroclots: sr‘u do which'_diSgrecet his opponents, I3er-, stoat; Leibnitz and.Wolf:7 • . , sneliwits Nowien iiiiiMTiiii: lirei.iiiiiii'''l nlib Intellect, witiOa piety rather intellectual. tbanrdevotional, hi wai etolo without the' merit s ,,of o', stoi9t: fo'r_ile ,had no . feelings to contend' with:. It is very saddening to_ find that the . two most splendid ,nainpo whiob science pan boast of, belong Id mkt seJleft. cient in their moral , natures as Lord Baku end Sir 'boots Newton. :It) the former Pr d ftpd a po'sitive moral. obliquity,.'whibb!WoUld.:alia , ken pity, were it not joined to so majestio an incelleekhat , it exeites terror and despair, of huoian nature. In the latter we, find simply a vacuum—iron intellek on-every side, stir ro "ritittrund-tnititAaining4he,--tremendous ga i Within. We haie no distil) to - moralize on , the foot. We have slimily-endeavored to give'd 41 faithful repreAntatiowif Newton'p chore - 0• ter, believing that no possible good can result, fram the fulsome flatteries whili are heaped, ? on hie name. When the c tempornries of Newton hailed hiin as a god, they declared in I very brilliant phrase - that he wos not a man; The Cradle of liatieleon's Future-Heir. _ We . translate • from% the .corresperndenee of Ltd ` enci * Bilfle tho . followieg . description" of th . .e. Ale which . the city- of Paris is, aboiit I. o er,to .the future heir of Napoleon 111. • " This cradle is a real chef - d'a:uvre, in the decoration. of which all the hrts seem to have" vied with each other. It far.surpoSles the cote- % bratedCradle of the young King of Roiao, and a tiescription of it may not prove Uninteresting to (Mr readers. * _ • "The cradle is , in the form of 6,014:4 which ° is the principal emblem in a coat - a - arms of the city of Paris: At. - the brow, a silver eagle, witli_stkngs outspread, - hi the_act of flying.-- : On the .stern, the city of Paris; crovvned with towers, sustains above the an-imperial drown of silver, to which are attached the curtains. The figure is flanked by two others representing children, the one wearing a met;th - ti r other a crorn•of:olive-brattches,_per -,7- : sonifying Peace and War; the three statutes are ofsilv * er and half the size - of •life. " The little. vessels_repcises.on two supports formed euclf 4 - Yr1.943 - . - Ministure --- ColuMns, --- and placed One atthe end • of the cradle. The supporters are joined together by a . lohg bal -ttster.—Thz_tremeti,es of thersupports, and the baluster that joines theM, ars of s - solid The body of• the cradle is entirely of rosewo d, so sou iturcd as receive ;the branelirs •o rel and silver ornaments that cover it almost eu ly. On each side of the cradle aro two medallions of blood red jasper, richly framed in silver, and destined to be wrought into enibleratical devices. "Below the rosewood handrail that corn -pletely surroundrthe upper part of the cradle ship, extends an open•work gallery of quaint architecture, and' covered with..silver orna ments. This gallery . is intersected on , each side by a silver itirtouilLbearing the cyphers of their ninjTity's on a groundwork of enamel. From this odrtough depend garlands of silver , flowers, which descending to the middle of the ships hull, 'pries below several medallions of ,jatiper - , and wind, the ~ene around• the prow, the other around the: seern, relieving the uni formity, of the.iitssel. , ' " • - .._. . 44 Behind the stern house of which the Angola • H of silver, are adorned with .winged sirens of t' rich silver Oartouch, surrounde with -- branch-. Cs of laurel andiiliVe — itiliptirta — c he—alma—of tflo city of Paris—enameled and -surrounded by the mural crown. - Around those olive'and lautel-bianohes _ia rolled the device of thy city, written in letters of gold on an enameled bandint — Thti - Uouble curt mina — of ---- the — orttaltt are milde.of Alecort lace and blue .silk; em.." broideted with glAd.` ' • - -- - ',Thiel'? OY "CONSCIENCE IN — TURKEY.—The_ Now York Observer contains a letter from the Rev. C. N. Righter, a presbyterian missionary nt ConstantinoPlc accomparried by one from the HMI: Carroll Spencer of Baltimore, the American Minister in Turkey, appealing for the Abolition.throughout the Turkish domizt-, ions of the-death penalty avast: Mahotacto.us who have turned Christiana. It appriars - from thclet ter of Mr.- -Righter,- that - a deputation on ' behalf of the Evangelical: conference of Paris, embracing Evince, England, Germtinyi . and Anterior*, recently waited _upon the Su ltan and the Minis* 'of Foreign: Affairs • vriqi memorial praying for liberty , of conesierice the Turkish doesinions, and also 'repeal,; of -the Trit-kish 'which Inflicts ,theirenPritY -of death -upon ntliratiiie. liorn 11fussulniatis, • yhP embrace the Clirrititian:faith.-:, They w,ero yew kindiy.reosived and assured that; the • trubject • r • • rive duo oonsideration., -, Mr..*Aigh- ter giies several instances ,Wherei o ae, ¶Lurks who, have embiticed the •Christian religion have been ° banishedor severely, pun- iithed. mom e ; U:The " • ' l.' We find the following ribtioklor in an .ex. change :" •', • •• • ‘••, • • Speaking of gongs; •a: trio of old ladies, delegates to the Woman's ;Rigbts Cionvention, . • lately stopped at .the'Burnett Hoise; Cinoin 7 nati.. - They.neverheard, A gang, -au . eft gige•Mrs Trodwell's own dosiription of it : 1 1 Wbicadn't beeti lipuf.own •ioom very jong, jetpiny•oritniny,•Of all OM noiSes - thwteve'r, tfinuderi'Pa i ,, rucbiin' up An, one infernal mites of. , a - We thought , the' day of •insurreotiOn -had 'come, sure ennuelii; all were 'awfully frightened. Miss flfhcfk vowed. dila it- was 'Gabriel bloWing his last trump, and Iblit he was ti little 4ioarse. 11Ifse Skinflint, .she bounced into' her" bed, . -- e'rying• feathets is non-oonmfotors,! the all-grnd howliut thing shut up, and then. there was ti• sound;of folks runnin` doivn stairs 'fit to breal( their neelia—... • 6 , We were all making. for the EIKE too,. when something, knocked*, the door.— : ,We were afraid to open, but at last, Miss Sof.: Fran, bold •as n lion, advanc'ed_ and_ lieepe(k, ' firough a key-hole. Thera she stood, shiVer ss}ug.with fright—jusa'at this moment th 4 door opened, and, what in the•name of ilbggins do i t yoU think it was? Why, nothing :but a poor; . •,, mean, good for nething,'dece ful yeller nig. ger; wanting to knowif .tie ad come 'to stip:. , per. '.Has the telegraphielnagtietiff explo - d; ed?' asked Miss Skinflint: , Ma'am?' says_ .. heagain. ;Then; - says; I; 'what was 4.ltat infernal howling ftbout, you groat, • stupid, • silly nigger.?' . '`That noise just new ? oh, ' . nothing but the gong, I reckon;' said he, and ..., the critter;went off grinning. What a gong was we couldn't telt, but • from its voice, we i \ guested t was some astonishing savage beast • - the/liati.tatned and let loose about ( the house io skeer decent people out of iheii-eguses." • • Tkir" Traveller for perllitienl", said Mrs. P . ,artingteav turning round. in State Street, as , a little boy wits proclahniug" in dismal tongs that he bad, the t-Traveller—fonrth . editior.4 l , ' forsele. It was evident that ahe had misun dersftiettliim," Poor child !" said she, 'with a benignity that.siould haVe • furnished - the capital - stock for four Samaritan 'societies, " and are you really in so bad away as that? . I knewed there was a_good many going that • _ road this neighborbeed, - but shouldn't , think ,yoa was one, of 'em, so young, But' people begin in sin airly in 'Boston, and - hers• you are at your age,,ealling yourself a .trav eller- for perdition!" The 'Old lady's voice trembled; there ;VASA tear good for a dime in . her ye; her hand was in her spacious rea -1 • search-for the coin-;-t-he- littie—bay 'stood selecting the 'paper from the number _uxler_lis_atint;_hasy,nierchants_eteod buying •and"selling all around her, and ijusy__lt-erip/ i were shaviiig note's and shaving ieachNotber within so . nii4 of her voice... The 'search for . the dime vat on, but,not one cent could :she 'find, and with a benediction on thO4 Bll P - Pointed,boy, she . left him. Hearing himel ancholy voice in the distance—" Here's 'the traveller for perdition r —she sighed deeply, and in her abstraction Wandered into a snow- • bank, where biq bad miechie,yously led her. ' A .DE.tru 8ra,r,..-4 story is told Of the ousting - of - the - bell - for the church of - St - Mag- -- -- dalen Breislao. When the metal was ready to . pour into the'mould, the chief founder went to dinner: and forbade his apprentice - under penalty of death, to touch the vent' by which the metal was conveyed . The Youth,.curious , - to see the operation,,disobeyed orders, andthn . whole of tke metal ran into the mould, and the enraged-master, returning from, his meal, slew himfon thi spot? Oa breaking away the., - mould,-he,fouutLhe_.haLbesn_too• fiasty_ for the bell was cast as perfect ite possible.- -When-it-was hung in its place, the master had . been f aentenced.,to death by thsnwOrd• for the, • murder of hisapprentioe,•and henntreated the authorities-that-he might :bellowed--to-hear it - once beffire he died. Elia petition was • granted and the bell has' since been rung at every execution. '*lllsleAtro — dtigeroui - in - some plum-- Read mkt .tremt;let - : In New "York, a,day er twi t aince,.a full-rigged lady , waT'lialking • up, Belidwdy, *hen one of the hoops with which, her cirountambientkwere inflated, the • enda of,, which had not been atrongly eicured together, auddehly broke loon, and_ flying bank with great fofie, tdie completely through the older • garment and struck a , small 'boy - who wait - ,standing on 'the aitiewalk, about-twenty -feat from I the lady. The Biwa • boy wat taken • home senseless; it is feared be will not fa cover. •- The hoop is already recovered. = ufajoung--ArntOloa is growing •.rapidi r j : Eary day ; e Teat with .proofs of this enponr agibg state of faCts, tleriis one of the lity,t,-- - hoitances of rapid 4ovolopment : Have you been Telli es 'Astoir;tihrary -asked a youth of his father - a4ow da.o Ago: No 'I have 'not " TC lied the fasher:, "You had_ bettor call arlitnee•it," the youth ooutiuubtl "Just nieution my name .to, , the -aidlArario t c ho will shityrjon. ‘nveis utten . tioi," oor. to MI 1 .8. _L.